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Hoiberg, Cyclones Top Iowa Sports in 2013 (Year in Review)

Sports

December 25th, 2013 by Jim Field

by:  LUKE MEREDITH, AP Sports Writer

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — It was the game of the year — won by the team of the year in Iowa sports.

Iowa had the ball and a 3-point lead with less than a minute left of a thrilling matchup with the rival Cyclones at Hilton Coliseum on Dec. 13. But Iowa State, helped immensely by a raucous home crowd, rallied to beat the Hawkeyes and highlight a fantastic 2013 for Fred Hoiberg’s surging program.

The Cyclones made back-to-back NCAA tournament appearances for the first time in 12 years in March, where they blasted Notre Dame before Ohio State’s Aaron Craft broke their hearts with a buzzer-beating 3. The Cyclones soon reloaded behind transfers DeAndre Kane and Dustin Hogue and became the last unbeaten team in the Big 12 to start this season.

Iowa State will enter 2014 as a legitimate contender for the conference title and a deep run in March.

The Cyclones certainly weren’t the only team to make news in Iowa this year, though. Here are some of the other top stories in Iowa sports in 2013.

2. HAWKEYE REVIVAL: After finishing 4-8 with six straight Big Ten losses in 2012, most thought Kirk Ferentz and the Hawkeyes were due for a .500 season at best. But after some early stumbles in league play, Iowa reeled off three straight wins — capped by a 38-17 waxing of Nebraska on the road — to finish the regular season at 8-4 and 5-3 in the Big Ten. The Hawkeyes defense blossomed into one of the best in the country, sophomore Jake Rudock had a promising debut season and Iowa wound up with a berth in the Outback Bowl against LSU. Next year could be even better for the Hawkeyes, who return a majority of their starters and appear to have a much more manageable schedule in 2014.

3. HOOPS TOO: Iowa’s basketball team was also on a major upswing in 2013. Though the Hawkeyes narrowly missed the NCAA tournament, they made a run to the finals of the NIT and started this season at 11-2, earning a spot in the Top 25. Iowa is one of the deepest teams in the country and looks ready to compete for a Big Ten title in the weeks ahead.

4. CYCLONES STUMBLE: Things weren’t nearly so rosy for coach Paul Rhoads and the scuffling Cyclones. Iowa State lost its season opener to Northern Iowa and things only got worse from there. The Cyclones lost nine of their first 10 games as quarterback Sam Richardson struggled through injuries and their young defense got lit up by a number of high-powered Big 12 offenses. Though Iowa State closed a dreadful season with a pair of wins, offensive coordinator Courtney Messingham was fired less than 24 hours after the final game of the year. The Cyclones have already signed a number of junior college recruits in an effort to fill immediate holes, and they’re hoping that Grant Rohach can solidify their quarterback situation.

5. WRESTLING’S OLYMPIC FIGHT: Perhaps nowhere in the United States was the International Olympic Committee’s recommendation that wrestling be dropped from the Olympic program felt more than in Iowa. A state with a long and illustrious history of supporting the sport was thrust into the fight to preserve its future — starting with the NCAA Championships in March. Sellout crowds in Des Moines helped start the push to save Olympic wrestling, which survived two rounds of IOC voting and was reinstated in September.

6. STEWART CRASHES IN IOWA: One of the biggest NASCAR stories of the year originated in Oskaloosa. Three-time NASCAR champion Tony Stewart broke his leg and missed the rest of the season after flipping his sprint car at the Southern Iowa Speedway in early August, again raising questions about safety in the sport. Stewart remains optimistic he’ll be ready to return for the Dayton 500 in late February.

7. SPEEDWAY SOLD: The NASCAR story most pertinent to Iowans broke just before Thanksgiving, when it was announced that NASCAR had purchased the Iowa Speedway in a near-unprecedented move. NASCAR called the purchase a “strategic play” — but it also said it has no plans to bring the top-tier Sprint Cup Series to Newton in the near future.

8. MR. 138 GOES FOR 180 IN TWO GAMES: Grinnell’s Jack Taylor made headlines when he set the NCAA scoring record with a staggering 138 points in late 2012. Taylor missed the second half of last season with a broken wrist, but he let the world know he was healthy at the onset of 2013. Taylor opened the season with a 71-point effort, which he followed up by scoring 109 points — third-most in NCAA history — in a 173-123 win over Crossroads on Nov. 18. Taylor is averaging a national-best 44.6 points a game, over 14 more than the player in second, as the Pioneers won seven of their first eight games.

9. DRAKE FIRES PHELPS: The Bulldogs gave Mark Phelps five years to try to replicate the success Keno Davis had in just one season in Des Moines. But after just 77 wins and 86 losses, Drake fired Phelps after last season and replaced him with Ray Giacoletti. The Bulldogs have taken to the change thus far, winning seven of their first 10 games.

10. IOWA, IOWA STATE MAKE NCAA TOURNAMENT YET AGAIN: The women’s basketball teams at Iowa and Iowa State make the NCAAs so often that it’s easy to forget how consistently strong they really are. The Hawkeyes made it to the second round in March, their sixth consecutive appearance in the NCAA tournament, and the Cyclones also won an NCAA game in their seventh straight tournament trip. Both Iowa and Iowa State will finish 2013 in the Top 25 and in great shape for yet another NCAA bid.

MABEL ANDERSON, 76, of Lewis (Svcs. 12/29/13)

Obituaries

December 24th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

MABEL ANDERSON, 76, of Lewis, died Tue., Dec. 24th, at Alegent Mercy Hospital in Council Bluffs.  Funeral services for MABEL ANDERSON will be held 2-p.m. Sun., Dec. 29th, at the Lewis United Congregational Church in Lewis. Duhn Funeral Home in Griswold has the arrangements.

An open visitation will be held at the Duhn Funeral Home in Griswold, where the family will be present from 3-to 5-pm Saturday.

Interment will be in Oakwood Cemetery at Lewis.

MABEL ANDERSON is survived by:

Her children – Jean (Donnie) Cohrs of Lewis, Chuck (Diane) Anderson of Griswold, Teri Leighton of Atlantic, Lauri (Lee) Wyman of Griswold and Sheri (Mark) Walter of Atlantic.

Her sisters and brother – Betty Jane (Duane) Anderson of Lewis, Judy (Gary) Ireland of Iowa Falls, and Rick Sanny of Lewis.

11 grandchildren, 12 great grandchildren with another on the way.

HELEN RECHTENBACH, 88, of Des Moines (Svcs. pending)

Obituaries

December 24th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

HELEN RECHTENBACH, 88, of Des Moines, died Mon., Dec. 23rd,  at Parkridge Specialty Care in Pleasant Hill. Funeral services for HELEN RECHTENBACH are pending at the Steen Funeral Home in Fontanelle.

Jurors reject Deere’s patent claims against rivals

Ag/Outdoor, News

December 24th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) — Jurors have ruled against tractor maker Deere & Co. in a lawsuit that alleged rivals were infringing on its patent covering the design of heavy-duty mowing blades. Federal jurors in Davenport found last week that rotary cutters marketed by Bush Hog Inc. and Great Plains Manufacturing Inc. didn’t infringe on Deere’s patent.

The trial centered on competing brands of rotary cutters, which are pulled behind tractors and are used to cut through fields after harvest and clear weeds and brush. Deere filed the lawsuit in 2009 contending the Bush Hog and Great Plains brands infringed on a patent issued in 2000 that covers a deck design meant to keep the blades clean by stopping debris from accumulating.

Deere had been seeking an injunction and damages for lost profits and royalties.

Wind Chill Advisory cancelled

Weather

December 24th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

1038 AM CST TUE DEC 24 2013

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HAS CANCELLED THE WIND CHILL ADVISORY WHICH WAS IN EFFECT UNTIL NOON.  WIND CHILLS HAVE CLIMBED ABOVE 20 BELOW LATE THIS MORNING AND WILL  CONTINUE TO IMPROVE AS TEMPERATURES WARM INTO THE AFTERNOON.

THERE ARE CURRENTLY NO ADVISORIES IN EFFECT FOR THE KJAN LISTENING AREA.

RONALD A. JACOBS, 77, of Griswold (Svcs. 12/27/13)

Obituaries

December 24th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

RONALD A. JACOBS, 77, of Griswold, died Mon., Dec. 23rd. Funeral services for RONALD JACOBS will be held 10-a.m. Fri., Dec. 27th, at the Hoy-Kilnoski Funeral Home in Council Bluffs (1221 N. 16th St.).

Visitation at the funeral home is from 6-to 8-pm Thursday (12/26).

Burial will be in the Oak Hill Cemetery at Belle Plain, IA.

RONALD JACOBS is survived by:

His wife – Luella “Lu” Jacobs.

His children – Susan (Mike) Leeman, Scott (Angie) Morris, Debbie (Roy) Rogers, Randy (Pauline) Jacobs, Jill Jacobs, Kim (Neal) VanRaechel, Larry Jacobs, and Ronnie Jacobs.

His step-son: Cliff Boling.

His sisters – Patty Burgess and Linda (Virgil) Barr.

His brothers – Alan (Charlene) Jacobs, and Steve (Shirley) Jacobs.

Numerous grandchildren and great grandchildren, other relatives and friends.

 

Latham says congress will write a budget now for 1st time in 4 years

News

December 24th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

Republican Congressman Tom Latham says the budget deal he voted for earlier this month which cleared the U.S. Senate last week is a major breakthrough. “We’ve been going on with ‘Continuing Resolutions’ which just extend funding from year to year to year for the last four years and the bureaucracy has become extraordinarily arrogant because there’s no way to rein them in if you’re not doing appropriations and put limitations on their activities,” Latham says. “And so that’s what I’m going to be really focusing on, certainly, is to try to get the appropriations, the process going, to have congress actually function again.”

Latham is a member of the Appropriations Committee in the U.S. House. “I chair a subcommittee — Transportation, Housing and Urban Development — on Appropriations,” Latham says. “We will actually have numbers agreed to between the House and the Senate so that we can write bills for this fiscal year and next fiscal year, so that’s going to be a huge part of what my time is going to be consumed with.”

Latham announced last week that he will not seek reelection in 2014. Latham made his comments during a weekend appearance on the “Iowa Press” program on Iowa Public Television.

(Radio Iowa)

State medical director says stay home from holiday gathering if you are sick

News

December 24th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

Being left out of the family dinner, opening presents and other Christmas activities is not a lot of fun, but the state’s top doctor says it’s important to stay away if you are sick. State medical director, Patricia Quinlisk, says it’s better to be safe instead of spreading something that will make everyone ill. “Think about your family, don’t go to Christmas dinner if you are really sick,” Quinlisk says. “Tell them that your Christmas gift to them is that you are going to stay home and keep your viruses to yourself.”

Quinlisk says you may spread your illness to some of the people who are least equipped to handle it.  “Especially grandma, grandpa, or even that new baby that your sister has — or something like that — because babies actually are most likely to be hospitalized with the flu out of all the groups we have in our population,” Quinlisk explains. Keeping away from others is one of the three C’s that Dr. Quinlisk advises when dealing with illness.

“Contain your viruses — so if you get sick stay home. Clean your hands…and when you do cough, cover that cough with your elbow or a Kleenex so you are not coughing the virus out into the air for someone else to pick up and get sick,” she says. A recent report raised concerns that antibacterial soaps and sanitizers may be doing more harm than good in preventing disease. Quinlisk says her instructions have always been about the amount of time you use to be sure you are washing away germs.

“And that’s really the answer, is you need that friction, you need rubbing, you need the warm water, running water to wash those germs off,” Quinlisk says. “They type of soap you use is really not as important as the fact that you actually do it with warm water and soap.” She always advises that you should spend the amount of time washing that it takes to sing the song “Happy Birthday” twice before you finish.  “If there’s not warm water and soap available — you can use the hand gels — just be aware that those hand gels do not work very well. In fact, may not work at all against some of the viruses that do spread around — including norovirus — which is the number one cause of diarrhea in Iowa,” Quinlisk says.

Family gatherings can have people confined into small areas, especially if it’s cold outside, and Quinlisk says that makes it easier to spread viruses.

(Radio Iowa)

Backyard and Beyond 12-24-2013

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

December 24th, 2013 by admin

Lavon Eblen continues her discussion with Judy Marnin of Anita about getting to know about gypsies.

Play

Car stolen in 1999 turns up in northwest Iowa pond

News

December 24th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

ORANGE CITY, Iowa (AP) – A car stolen in 1999 has turned up in a northwest Iowa pond.  Sioux City television station KCAU says workers excavating the pond near Orange City found the car on Dec. 5. A member of the Sioux County dive team got into the icy water to hook a cable to the vehicle so it could be pulled out.

Jim Pottebaum, of the Orange City Police Department, says investigators aren’t sure how the car got into the pond but have learned that it was reported stolen at Dordt College in Sioux Center 14 years ago.