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Atlantic School Board approves Brummer as Head FB Coach

News, Sports

March 24th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic School District’s Board of Education, Wednesday evening, unanimously approved Joe Brummer as Head Varsity Football Coach. Brummer succeeds Mike McDermott, who announced his resignation in January. Superintendent Steve Barber asked the Board to approve Brummer, based on the recommendations of Activities Director Andy Mitchell.

Joseph Brummer

Barber said they received 17 applications for the position, after Mitchell sent out advertisements highlighting the District’s new Athletic facilities and important demographics for applicants to consider. Barber said “Mr. Mitchell outlined the parameters, expectations and characteristics he was looking for in the next head football coach. He involved three different groups in the interview process.” Joe Brummer, Barber said,  “Rose above everybody else in that interview process.”

Brummer teaches 8th Grade Science for the Atlantic School District. He’s a graduate of the Harlan Community School District and Morningside College. Brummer was an assistant coach under McDermott.

Other contracts approved Wednesday evening included Tori Dolch as 4th Grade Teacher, replacing Mrs. Janet Hascall. The school board accepted the resignations of Ethan Pruisman, High School Vocal Music Teacher, and Heather Lundquist, Middle School Literacy Teacher & TLC Facilitator.

Police: Inmates killed 2 Iowa prison staff in escape attempt

News

March 24th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say inmates used hammers to attack prison staff members during a failed attempt to escape an Iowa prison, killing a nurse and correctional officer and severely injuring an inmate who intervened. The victims of the attack at the Anamosa State Penitentiary were identified as staff nurse Lorena Schulte, 50, of Cedar Rapids, and officer Robert McFarland, 46, of Ely.

Both had worked at the prison in the city of Anamosa in eastern Iowa for more than a decade. An investigator says each died of blunt force trauma to the back of the head when they were attacked with hammers during Tuesday’s attack. Inmates Michael Dutcher, 28, and Thomas Woodard, 39, face murder and kidnapping charges.

Otzelberger signs first recruit at ISU with Washington State transfer Kunc

Sports

March 24th, 2021 by admin

AMES, Iowa – Iowa State head men’s basketball coach T.J. Otzelberger has announced the signing of Washington State transfer Aljaž Kunc (Ollie-ahj Coon-ce), a 6-8 forward from Ljubljana, Slovenia.

Kunc, who goes by Jaz, is the first to sign under Otzelberger, who was named head coach last Thursday. He is a graduate transfer and will have two years to play.

“Jaz is a skilled frontline player, who has proven at the Power-5 level to have the ability to knock down threes and stretch opposing defenses,” Otzelberger said. “Defensively, he competes and has a high activity level and is able to rebound outside his area.”

Kunc battled an ankle injury most of last season and averaged 6.3 points and 4.3 rebounds in 23 games.

Once healthy, Kunc saw his minutes increase to 30 per game and averaged 8.9 points and 7.4 rebounds, reaching double figures in five of the season’s final eight contests.

Kunc scored 15 points in the regular-season finale at Arizona State and had a career-high 14 boards in a win at Arizona late in the season.

He is a career 79.5 percent free-throw shooter after hitting 87.2 percent of his shots at the charity stripe in 2020-21.

Kunc graduated from Elevation Preparatory Academy in Sarasota, Florida in 2018 after coming to the United States from Slovenia to complete his final year of high school. He has international experience playing with Slovenia in the 2016 FIBA U18 European Championships.

IHSAA releases Sectional and District golf sites and assignments

Sports

March 24th, 2021 by admin

The Iowa High School Athletic Association announced their postseason golf assignments on Wednesday. Sectional Tournaments will take place on Friday, May 14th with most District Tournaments slated for Friday, May 21st.

Check out the assignments at the links below.

Class 1A

Class 2A

Class 3A

Hudgins named NABC and D2CCA Division II Player of the Year, Hawkins also D2CCA First-Team All-American

Sports

March 24th, 2021 by admin

KANSAS CITY, MO. (March 24, 2021) – The National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) announced today that Trevor Hudgins of Northwest Missouri State University has been selected as the 2021 NABC Division II Player of the Year powered by ShotTracker. He was also named the 2021 Division II Conference Commissioners Association Men’s Basketball Ron Lenz National Player of the Year.

Hudgins is leading the Bearcats into the NCAA Division II Elite Eight championship in Evansville, Ind., with a 25-2 won-lost record.  The six-foot, 180-pound junior guard from Manhattan, Kan., has started every game in three seasons at Northwest Missouri State, which has a 94-3 won-lost record since Hudgins arrived. He earned MIAA Player of the Year honors for the second straight season, averaging 20.1 ppg, with 127 assists and 36 steals while hitting on 54.5% of his field goal attempts, 52.5% of his three-point attempts and 89% of his free throws.

Hudgins (Manhattan, Kansas) is the second Bearcat to capture the NABC NCAA Division II Player of the Year Award. Justin Pitts won the award in the 2017 season, which saw the Bearcats capture the program’s first national championship.

Hudgins stands atop the D2CCA Men’s Basketball All-America Teams that were voted on by the NCAA Division II members of the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA).

Hudgins is joined on the first team by two other repeat first-team honorees in Daemen senior center Andrew Sischo and West Texas A&M junior guard Qua Grant. Hudgins’ teammate and senior forward Ryan Hawkins also garnered first-team accolades as did Northern State junior forward Parker Fox.

Hawkins, a two-time MIAA first-team All-League selection, is averaging 22.0 points and 8.5 rebounds while Fox, the NSIC North Division Player of the Year, produced nearly a “double-double” with 22.3 points and 9.9 rebounds per game for the Wolves (19-2).

The No. 2-seeded Bearcats (25-2 overall) will match up with the No. 7 seeded West Liberty University Hilltoppers (18-4 overall) in the Elite Eight tonight at 6 p.m. in Evansville, Indiana.

Senate Republicans propose $4 million spending increase, to hire more prison guard

News

March 24th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Senate Republicans are proposing a four MILLION dollar budget boost for the Iowa Department of Corrections, to hire more correctional officers. Senate Republican Leader Jack Whitver of Ankeny says Republican senators had settled on that increase before yesterday’s (Tuesday’s) attack by an inmate that killed a nurse and a prison guard.

“The incident in Anamosa is an unspeakable tragedy for Iowans and the two Iowa public servants that lost their life,” Whitver says. “Our thoughts and prayers certainly go out to them and their families.” Whitver says he and his fellow Republicans in the Senate will work with the agency’s director to see if there are additional steps that should be taken, beyond more money to hire prison staff.

Whitver today (Wednesday) unveiled the overall spending plan Senate Republicans have drafted. It would be a nearly eight billion dollar state budget for the next fiscal year and includes about 100 MILLION dollars in new tax cuts. Whitver says it’s a starting point for negotiations with the governor and House Republicans.  “The sprint to the finish will start today with these budget targets coming out,” Whitver said.

There’s no agreement among legislators yet on one of Governor Kim Reynolds’ priorities — spending 150 million dollars in each of the next three years to expand broadband in Iowa. Whitver says the Senate G-O-P’s proposed budget is focused on ongoing state operations rather than one-time initiatives.

“We just wanted to keep broadband as a separate conversation that we’ll continue to work with the House and work with the governor to make a significant investment in broadband,” Whitver says, “and so this budget target should in no way reflect that we’re not going to make a significant investment into broadband.” Whitver indicated lawmakers could wrap up all their internal negotiations and conclude the 2021 legislative session in the next few weeks.

Supreme Court hears oral arguments in Branstad case

News

March 24th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa Supreme Court heard arguments today (Wednesday) in the appeal of the discrimination lawsuit verdict against former Governor Terry Branstad. The jury found Branstad pushed out Workers Compensation Commissioner Christopher Godfrey in violation of the Iowa Civil Rights Act because Godfrey was gay. The attorney for the state, Debra Hulett, says Branstad reduced Godfrey’s salary because of performance in the job and was in his right to do so.

“The Legislature didn’t prohibit a governor from reducing a political appointee’s salary within an authorized the governor’s salary establishing decision,” Hulett says. Hulett says there was no evidence that Branstad was not allowed to make the salary decision. “The plaintiff’s case at trial was focused on proving the governor’s rational wrong — as if there is a right or wrong answer to the governor’s salary establishing decisions,” Hulett says. Justice Appel asked, “Didn’t they attempt to show that it was based on sexual orientation. Hulett responded, “If you want to get to sexual orientation, there is no evidence in the record that the governor knew the plaintiff’s sexual orientation.”

Godfrey’s attorney, Roxanne Conlin, says the defense reading of the statute is too broad. “The governor of the state of Iowa could announce that all public officials — everybody that I appoint — is going to be a white male. There would be no legal remedy. That cannot be the law of the state of Iowa,” Conlin says. Conlin says Godfrey was in his position when Branstad was re-elected. “The governor did not lower his salary because of performance. The governor didn’t know a thing about his performance. All he knew is what some of his big contributors said about decisions that they lost,” according to Conlin “The governor lowered Chris Godfrey’s salary by one third in order to force him to bludgeon him, to make him leave.”

Justice Edward Mansfield asked Conlin — even if the governor was wrong about performance — isn’t it still his right to make the salary decision. “But counsel, doesn’t the salary act sort of set a collar on what the governor is permitted to do here? and didn’t he operate within that collar?” Mansfield says. “Yes he operated within that collar, but he operated for illegal reasons. He operated in violation of due process of law and in violation of the Civil Rights Act,” Conlin responded. Conlin also argued that Godfrey was operating in a quasi-judicial role that the governor should not be allowed to interfere with.

Hulett in her rebuttal, says the action was allowed by the law. “To establish retaliation under the Iowa Civil Rights Act, the plaintiff must establish that the decision-maker was motivated by the plaintiff’s protected activity under the Iowa Civil Rights Act,” Hulett says. “And here, the protected activity, in this case, occurred after the salary establishing decision was communicated to Commissioner Godfrey. That is when the plaintiff and his supporters objected to the decision and published his sexual orientation.”

She also disputed the quasi-judicial argument — saying Godfrey’s position was not different than many others who face salary decisions. “That is a policy-making role. That is not the role of a deputy commissioner or an administrative law judge presiding over a hearing, taking in facts, and considering the facts, and applying the law in a written decision. Final agency decisions are different,” Hulett says. Hulett says the decision on whether Branstad made the right decision on the salary is up to the voters and this case was an election issue and Branstad was elected again.

The jury awarded Godfrey one-point-five million dollars in the 2019 ruling.

Trial for 2 men charged in fatal police shootout begins

News

March 24th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

OTTUMWA, Iowa (AP) — Attorneys gave opening statements Wednesday in the attempted murder trial of two men accused of a violent home-invasion robbery that led to the fatal shooting of a third suspect by police. The Ottumwa Courier reports that Wapello County prosecutors told the jury they will hear evidence showing 35-year-old Michael Bibby and 26-year-old Dalton Cook were among three men who broke into an Ottumwa home on Aug. 3, 2018, shot and injured a man in front of the home and later engaged police in a shootout that killed alleged accomplice David Roy White of Fairfield. But defense attorneys for the men said the state’s case lacks crucial evidence to prove all the charges beyond a reasonable doubt.

 

Wallace named Big Ten Pitcher of the Week

Sports

March 24th, 2021 by admin

IOWA CITY, Iowa – University of Iowa redshirt junior Trenton Wallace has been named the Big Ten Pitcher of the Week, it was announced Wednesday by the league office.  It is the first honor of Wallace’s career.

The Rock Island, Illinois, native earned the distinction after pitching seven shutout innings, scattering two hits and fanning eight in a 3-0 victory over Nebraska on March 19 in Iowa City.  It was the second straight combined shutout for Wallace in wins over Ohio State and Nebraska.

Over his last two starts, Wallace has allowed four hits over 13 shutout innings.  He has 18 strikeouts to five walks over the span.  On the year, Wallace is 2-0 with a 1.00 ERA with 26 strikeouts over 18 innings.

Wallace is leading the Big Ten in ERA (1.00), fewest runs (2) and earned runs (2) allowed, second in batting average against (.119), tied for second in fewest hits allowed (7) and is third in wins (2) and strikeouts (26).

The southpaw is Iowa’s first Big Ten Pitcher of the Week honoree since Grant Judkins on Feb. 24, 2020.

Iowa (4-7) returns to action Friday, facing Ohio State at 4 p.m. (CT) in Columbus, Ohio.  The Hawkeyes will play two games against the Buckeyes and two against Maryland at Bill Davis Stadium from Friday through Sunday. We’ll have that Friday game on KJAN with pregame at 3:30 p.m.

Five Cyclones earn Academic All-Big 12 Honors

Sports

March 24th, 2021 by admin

AMES, Iowa – Iowa State had five student-athletes earned Academic All-Big 12 First-Team honors as announced by the conference today.

First-team members consist of those who have maintained a 3.20 or better GPA.

The Cyclones recognized included: Rasir Bolton (Hospitality Management), Nate Jenkins (Marketing), Nate Schuster (Finance), Eric Steyer (Statistics) and Solomon Young (Hospitality Management).

Iowa State tied for the second-most first-team representatives in the league.

To qualify, student-athletes must maintain a 3.00 GPA or higher either cumulative or the two previous semesters and must have participated in 20 percent of their team’s scheduled contests. Freshmen and transfers are not eligible in their first year of academic residence. Senior student-athletes who have participated for a minimum of two years and meet all the criteria except percent of participation are also eligible.