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Kazmir gets call by Giants, in majors for 1st time since ’16

SAN FRANCISCO — Late Friday night, Gabe Kapler called old teammate Scott Kazmir with wonderful news: The veteran left-hander was needed in San Francisco to start the next day.

The Giants called up the 37-year-old Kazmir from Triple-A Sacramento to make his first big league appearance since 2016, when he went 10-6 with a 4.56 ERA over 26 starts for the Los Angeles Dodgers, who just so happened to be his opponent Saturday at Oracle Park.

“It was actually pretty gratifying to be able to deliver that to him and actually through the phone I could tell that he was smiling,” said Kapler, who played with Kazmir for Tampa Bay in 2009.

Kazmir quickly surrendered a two-out splash homer to Max Muncy in the first inning — the ball into McCovey Cove beyond right field traveled an estimated 423 feet with an exit velocity of 108.2 mph.

But Muncy was the only batter for the World Series champions to reach base in the first three innings against Kazmir, who struck out two in that span.

“It’s been a long journey for him and really kind of proud,” Kapler said. “He and I were teammates a long time ago and I know that the journey hasn’t been the easiest one for him. It’s a pretty cool story.”

Highly touted when he was drafted in the first round by the New York Mets in 2002 out of high school in Houston, Kazmir is now with his seventh major league club in 13 years.

A three-time All-Star, Kazmir pitched in independent ball last year, determined to make a comeback.

Plagued by elbow injuries that derailed him in 2011 and had him pitching in independent ball in 2012, Kazmir made 32 starts in 2014 for Oakland and 31 between the Athletics and Houston the next year.

He pitched last year for the Eastern Reyes del Tigre of the Constellation Energy League in Sugar Land, Texas. Kazmir went 2-1 with a 4.20 ERA over four appearances and three starts.

Kapler wasn’t sure how deep into the game Kazmir might work in his return, though he had been built up to about three innings and somewhere in the range of 55-60 pitches.

Kazmir was 1-0 with a 2.84 ERA in two outings with one start covering 6 1/3 innings for Sacramento.

The reports Kapler received are that Kazmir has reached 91-93 mph on his fastball, which Kapler notes is “not Scott Kazmir circa 2005 but also not far off where he was toward the end of his last major league stint. His changeup and delivery have been solid, and he’s “strong and healthy,” Kapler said.

Kazmir led the American League in strikeouts with 239 for the Rays in 2007.

At 37 years, 118 days, Kazmir became the oldest Giants pitcher to start a game since Tim Hudson on Oct. 1, 2015, at 40 years, 79 days.

“It’s going to be a bit of a whirlwind for him,” Kapler said.

The Giants admire how Kazmir stuck with it over years to give himself another shot — and Kapler certainly appreciated the pitcher’s work ethic during spring training. In fact, Kapler recalled Saturday the first bullpen Kazmir threw in Scottsdale, Arizona, three months ago resembling Kazmir at his top 2016 form.

“It’s a fantastic story, it’s a story of perseverance and one of resilience,” Kapler said. “It’s a testament to his drive and his determination and his willingness to kind of go through some difficult stretches. It’s not easy to be an established major league pitcher with a long career, a lot of service time, made a ton of money and then go back to independent ball to try to get another shot.”


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Stoneman Douglas, site of 2018 shooting, wins baseball title

FORT MYERS, Fla. — Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School has another Florida state baseball championship to celebrate.

The school from Parkland, Florida — with a roster that includes some players who were at the school on Feb. 14, 2018, when a shooter took the lives of 17 students, teachers and staff — won the Class 7A state crown on Saturday by defeating Spruce Creek High 5-1.

The Eagles took a 1-0 lead in the fourth, only to see Spruce Creek tie the game in the top of the sixth. But the Eagles scored four times in their half of the sixth, then shut the door in the seventh to finish off the title.

It’s the second state championship for Stoneman Douglas; the Eagles also won the title in 2016. The Eagles finished this season 28-2.

Column: Roars are back in golf, and so is Phil Mickelson

The roars were always going to come back at some point because nothing screams major championship golf more than well lubricated fans urging every shot to get in the hole on a Saturday afternoon. Phil Mickelson’s return to form wasn’t nearly as certain, though it gave spectators even more reason to ditch their masks and plead for him to make some history in the PGA Championship.

Their fondness for Mickelson wasn’t enough to keep Phil from being Phil and, true to form, he stumbled on the back nine just when it looked as if he was on his way to a runaway win for the aging. No worries, because he’s still got a one-shot lead and on Sunday there will be even more to scream for.

Though probably not for the people Steve Stricker came upon pounding down vodka lemonades early in the day.

“They keep going with that today, they’re going to have some problems,’’ the Ryder Cup captain said. “But it’s good to see them.’’

That’s pretty much the sentiment around all sports, where a return to semi-normal reunites players and fans who never realized how much they would miss each other. It’s especially true in a sport where quiet is the order of the day — until a swing is made and it gets real noisy.

Thousands swarmed the fairways and greens of the Ocean Course to get some fresh air and see some golf. They got the added bonus of being able to scream for a 50-year-old they were sure was looking their way behind his big aviator sunglasses.

The pandemic may not be officially over, but things sure look a lot different than the last PGA Championship, played in near silence in San Francisco last August. Not only are the fans back in limited numbers, but they seem determined to make up for lost time.

“You can tell people have been pent up too long,’’ Stricker said. “They’re even a little more boisterous than they were before the pandemic If feel like. People are excited to be out and they’re having a good time and they’re drinking, they’re talking, they’re just full of life it looks like.’’

The crowds weren’t massive but they were big enough to make a difference. They seemed even bigger as the noise levels mounted just as Mickelson began a run that gave him a 5-shot lead walking off the 10th green.

Every shot brought roars, and every missed putt some groans. They went wild when he made a short putt for par on the ninth hole , and they celebrated just as much when he hit a layup from the junk on the par-5 16th hole.

What better way to celebrate a return to normalcy than watching Mickelson make an improbable run for a major at the age of 50?

Knowing all along that maybe your voice had something to do with his success?

“I’m very appreciative of the way people have been supportive,” Mickelson said after spending more than four hours in the middle of a Phil lovefest.

For some, Mickelson was just a bonus. They came early, hours before he teed off, and they stayed late to watch him steady himself enough to take a one-shot lead into Sunday.

As the libations flowed, they got louder as the day went on.

“It says limited fans but doesn’t feel that way,’’ Jordan Spieth said. “Today was pretty fun. It was good to see a really nice crowd out there for teeing off four and a half hours before the leaders. Kind of seemed like I could feed off some of the momentum with fans kind of pushing for more and more birdies.”

That momentum is something Spieth will need if he is to come from seven shots off the lead to contend Sunday. Both Spieth and Rory McIlroy say the return of fans helped them return to the winning circle in recent weeks, and on Sunday the intensity figures to go up yet another notch on both sides of the ropes.

Still, there’s only so much a crowd can do, as evidenced on the 18th hole when Mickelson hit a chip and someone yelled loudly for it to get in the hole.

The ball rolled just by, though it did elicit the loudest collective groan of dismay heard in golf this year.


Tim Dahlberg is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at tdahlberg@ap.org or http://twitter.com/timdahlberg

7 In a Row / Bull Dogs blank Lancers for another sectional title

Columbus North’s Ashlie Wilson accepts the sectional championship trophy from North athletics director Brian Lewis at Columbus North High School in Columbus, Ind., Friday, May 22, 2021. North defeated Edinburgh to win the sectional title. Mike Wolanin | The Republic

Edinburgh was riding a hot streak coming into Friday’s girls tennis sectional final after avenging regular season losses to both Hauser on Wednesday and Columbus East on Thursday.

The Lancers were no match for host and fifth-ranked Columbus North.

The Bull Dogs gave up only one game in the five matches and captured their seventh straight sectional title with a 5-0 victory. Columbus North moves on to face Bloomington North on Tuesday in the Bloomington South Regional Semifinal.

“I’d like to give credit to Edinburgh. To lose to those teams in the regular season, and then to come back, that was nice wins for them, no doubt about it,” North coach Kendal Hammel said. “They were overmatched with our players versus their players, but they did a great job getting there. If anything, I was pleased we didn’t let down in any of our games.”

Edinburgh coach Rachel O’Brien was pleased with how her team finished the season strong. It was also the first time in her coaching career to make it to the sectional final.

The Lancers finish the season 7-11.

“We turned it around after losing to Hauser and Columbus East in the regular season, and then beating them and getting here, we were at our high. It was nice,” O’Brien said. “We definitely finished stronger than when we started, for sure.”

Ashlie Wilson topped Annelise Lollar 6-0, 6-0 at No. 1 singles. Kathryn Wilson downed Bethany Burton 6-0, 6-0 at No. 2 singles. Siri Poludasu defeated Jessica Walsh 6-0, 6-0 at No. 3 singles.

At No. 1 doubles, Jaline Tay and Tiffany Fu defeated Peyton Bryant and Alyssa Funkhouser 6-0, 6-1. At No. 2 doubles, Leah George and Sydney Cooper won against Gracie Myers and Zoey Sida 6-0, 6-0.

Ashlie Wilson said it felt good getting back and playing for a sectional crown after not having a chance to play last year due to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“It’s really fun just being a part of the team, and going through this experience with everyone else,” she said.

Edinburgh loses Lollar, but will return the rest of the lineup next year, and it hopes to make it back to the sectional final.

“We’re all coming back, so we’ll have a lot of seniors next year,” O’Brien said. “We’ll do some work over the summer, and we’ll be better next year.”

The Bull Dogs (17-2) now will turn their attention to Bloomington North, who they defeated 5-0 last month. The winner will play in the regional final on Wednesday.

Columbus North will be the heavy favorite to make it out as the regional champion.

“We’ve played Bloomington North before, so we should be OK there,’ Hammel said. “Honestly, Seymour gave us a little bit of a push. So we’ve got to be ready for Seymour, too. I don’t think we will (look ahead). This team will take it one match at a time and get themselves ready for that next match each time after that.”

Ashlie Wilson said the team has to be motivated and ready to play next week.

“We’ll have to practice hard until then and also be cheering for everybody and making sure everyone is motivated and ready to go,” she said. “We’ll play our game and be confident.”

Exhibitor’s Handbook

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IU requiring vaccinations for staff, students

Beginning with the fall 2021 semester, the COVID-19 vaccine will be required for all Indiana University students, faculty and staff, including those attending IUPUC.

“This requirement is part of IU’s ongoing successful response to and management of the COVID-19 pandemic on its campuses and will allow the university to lift most restrictions on masking and physical distancing,” an announcement by the university system said Friday.

A spokesperson for IU confirmed that IUPUC — as well as all other IU satellite campuses — will be following the same guidelines.

IU will require that all individuals on its campuses have their first dose of the vaccine no later than July 1, and must be fully vaccinated by Aug. 15 or when returning to campus after Aug. 1 (whichever is earlier).

A person is considered fully vaccinated two weeks after having all doses of a vaccine (two doses for Pfizer, Moderna; one dose for Johnson & Johnson).

All current students, faculty and staff will use IU’s COVID-19 vaccine report form to report all doses of the vaccine. Those receiving a two-dose vaccine will complete the form after each dose.

Incoming students will complete the self-report form once they’re enrolled in classes for the fall semester.

IU has outlined “strong consequences” for those who choose not to meet the COVID-19 vaccine requirement and do not receive an exemption.

For students, they will see their class registration canceled, CrimsonCard access terminated, access to IU systems (Canvas, email, etc.) terminated, and will not be allowed to participate in any on-campus activity.

Faculty and staff who choose not to meet the requirement will no longer be employed by Indiana University, officials said. The university also said that working remotely and not meeting the COVID-19 vaccine requirement is not an option.

Approved exemptions will be extremely limited, with full details on the process to be shared by June 15.

Exemptions will be limited to a very narrow set of criteria, including medical exemptions with physician documentation, and documented religious exemptions, IU said.

Those wishing to schedule a vaccine should visit ourshot.in.gov.

For more information on the requirements for this upcoming school year, visit https://www.iu.edu/covid/prevention/covid-19-vaccine.html.

IU requiring vaccinations for staff, students

Indiana University-Purdue University Columbus student Abby Sallee walks past the Columbus Learning Center on her way to class in Columbus, Ind., Wednesday, Oct. 10, 2018. The learning center is shared by IUPUC and Ivy Tech. Mike Wolanin | The Republic Mike Wolanin | The Republic

Beginning with the fall 2021 semester, the COVID-19 vaccine will be required for all Indiana University students, faculty and staff, including those attending IUPUC.

“This requirement is part of IU’s ongoing successful response to and management of the COVID-19 pandemic on its campuses and will allow the university to lift most restrictions on masking and physical distancing,” an announcement by the university system said Friday.

A spokesperson for IU confirmed that IUPUC — as well as all other IU satellite campuses — will be following the same guidelines.

IU will require that all individuals on its campuses have their first dose of the vaccine no later than July 1, and must be fully vaccinated by Aug. 15 or when returning to campus after Aug. 1 (whichever is earlier).

A person is considered fully vaccinated two weeks after having all doses of a vaccine (two doses for Pfizer, Moderna; one dose for Johnson & Johnson).

All current students, faculty and staff will use IU’s COVID-19 vaccine report form to report all doses of the vaccine. Those receiving a two-dose vaccine will complete the form after each dose.

Incoming students will complete the self-report form once they’re enrolled in classes for the fall semester.

IU has outlined “strong consequences” for those who choose not to meet the COVID-19 vaccine requirement and do not receive an exemption.

For students, they will see their class registration canceled, CrimsonCard access terminated, access to IU systems (Canvas, email, etc.) terminated, and will not be allowed to participate in any on-campus activity.

Faculty and staff who choose not to meet the requirement will no longer be employed by Indiana University, officials said. The university also said that working remotely and not meeting the COVID-19 vaccine requirement is not an option.

Approved exemptions will be extremely limited, with full details on the process to be shared by June 15.

Exemptions will be limited to a very narrow set of criteria, including medical exemptions with physician documentation, and documented religious exemptions, IU said.

Those wishing to schedule a vaccine should visit ourshot.in.gov.

For more information on the requirements for this upcoming school year, visit https://www.iu.edu/covid/prevention/covid-19-vaccine.html.

IU requiring vaccinations for staff, students

Beginning with the fall 2021 semester, the COVID-19 vaccine will be required for all Indiana University students, faculty and staff, including those attending IUPUC.

“This requirement is part of IU’s ongoing successful response to and management of the COVID-19 pandemic on its campuses and will allow the university to lift most restrictions on masking and physical distancing,” an announcement by the university system said Friday.

A spokesperson for IU confirmed that IUPUC — as well as all other IU satellite campuses — will be following the same guidelines.

IU will require that all individuals on its campuses have their first dose of the vaccine no later than July 1, and must be fully vaccinated by Aug. 15 or when returning to campus after Aug. 1 (whichever is earlier).

A person is considered fully vaccinated two weeks after having all doses of a vaccine (two doses for Pfizer, Moderna; one dose for Johnson & Johnson).

All current students, faculty and staff will use IU’s COVID-19 vaccine report form to report all doses of the vaccine. Those receiving a two-dose vaccine will complete the form after each dose.

Incoming students will complete the self-report form once they’re enrolled in classes for the fall semester.

IU has outlined "strong consequences" for those who choose not to meet the COVID-19 vaccine requirement and do not receive an exemption. 

For students, they will see their class registration canceled, CrimsonCard access terminated, access to IU systems (Canvas, email, etc.) terminated, and will not be allowed to participate in any on-campus activity.

Faculty and staff who choose not to meet the requirement will no longer be employed by Indiana University, officials said. The university also said that working remotely and not meeting the COVID-19 vaccine requirement is not an option.

Approved exemptions will be extremely limited, with full details on the process to be shared by June 15.

Exemptions will be limited to a very narrow set of criteria, including medical exemptions with physician documentation, and documented religious exemptions, IU said.

Those wishing to schedule a vaccine should visit ourshot.in.gov.

For more information on the requirements for this upcoming school year, visit https://www.iu.edu/covid/prevention/covid-19-vaccine.html.

State: 683 additional Hoosiers diagnosed with COVID-19

A sign marks the COVID-19 testing site at the old J.C. Penney store at FairOaks Mall in Columbus, Ind., Tuesday, Sept. 22, 2020. Mike Wolanin | The Republic

INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Department of Health announced today that 683 additional Hoosiers have been diagnosed with COVID-19 through testing at state and private laboratories. That brings to 739,626 the number of Indiana residents now known to have had the novel coronavirus following corrections to the previous day’s dashboard.

To date, 13,136 Hoosiers are confirmed to have died from COVID-19, an increase of six from the previous day. Another 417 probable deaths have been reported to date based on clinical diagnoses in patients for whom no positive test is on record.

A total of 3,474,640 unique individuals have been tested in Indiana, up from 3,470,790 on Friday. A total of 10,308,003 tests, including repeat tests for unique individuals, have been reported to the state Department of Health since Feb. 26, 2020.

Bartholomew County reported 8,114 positive tests (up four) with 156 deaths (no change) as of Saturday.

Surrounding counties reported:

  • Jackson County: 5,050 positive cases (up three) with 74 deaths (no change).
  • Jennings County: 2,319 positive cases (up one) with 49 deaths (no change).
  • Decatur County: 2,871 positive cases (up one) with 92 deaths (no change).
  • Shelby County: 4,968 positive cases (up four) with 96 deaths (no change).
  • Johnson County: 18,138 positive cases (up 17) with 382 deaths (no change).
  • Brown County: 1,030 positive cases (no change) with 41 deaths (no change).

To find testing sites around the state, visit www.coronavirus.in.gov and click on the COVID-19 testing information link.

Hoosiers age 12 and older can receive a COVID-19 vaccine; individuals younger than age 18 are eligible for the Pfizer vaccine only. To find a vaccination clinic near you, visit https://ourshot.in.gov or call 211 if you do not have access to a computer or require assistance. Appointments are preferred, but walk-ins are accepted at most sites.

Patients with an appointment at a state-hosted public vaccination site can get a free UBER ride. Call 2-1-1 or (866) 211-9966 to receive a voucher to cover the cost of an Uber ride to and from your vaccination appointments.

As of Saturday, a total of 4,997,447 doses have been administered in Indiana. This includes 2,583,119 first doses and 2,414,328 individuals who are fully vaccinated. The fully vaccinated number represents individuals who have received a second dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines and those who received the single Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

CPD’s ‘Hook a Kid on Fishing’ event set for June 11

Addi Perkins concentrates on her line in the water during the annual Hook a Kid on Fishing event at the Fraternal Order of Police Earl L. Brown Lodge in Columbus, Ind., Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2020. Children paired up with officers from the Columbus Police Department and the Bartholomew County Sheriff's Department to learn how to fish. Mike Wolanin | The Republic

COLUMBUS, Ind. — Columbus Police Department and the local Fraternal Order of Police will host the annual Hook a Kid on Fishing Day at Ceraland on Friday, June 11th.

The event will allow children ages 9 to 14 to learn to fish with a Columbus Police officer. According to the announcement from the department, if a child already has a fishing pole they are comfortable with, they should bring it. But there is enough fishing gear to go around and it will be provided at no cost to the participants, along with sun screen and bug spray. Lunch will also be provided.

Kids should be sent to the event with weather-appropriate clothing and shoes.

The Hook a Kid on Fishing event will be from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Ceraland June 11th. Children will have to pre-register to attend. Contact Officer Greg Ross at gross@columbus.in.gov or call 812-350-4015.