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NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Top 10 Finishers

NASCAR  Sprint Cup Series

Top 10 Finishers in the Quicken Loans 500

DRIVER STARTING POSITION LAPS LED

  1. Dale Earnhardt Jr.
  2. Kevin Harvick
  3. Joey Logano
  4. Kyle Busch
  5. Jimmie Johnson
  6. Jeff Gordon
  7. Kurt Busch
  8. Denny Hamlin
  9. Brad Keselowski
  10. Aric Almirola

Sunday’s victory for Dale Earnhardt Junior is his third of the season and the twenty-sixth of his career – three of which have come at Phoenix International Raceway. The first two were back-to-back in 2003 and 2004 … Among active drivers, “Junior” is now third on the track’s win list behind Kevin Harvick (seven) and Jimmie Johnson (four).

Chevrolet has won five straight Sprint Cup Series races at P-I-R and six of the last seven … Johnson started from the pole, led the first forty-four laps and finished fifth in Sunday’s race.

Thus far, all nine post-season races this year have been won by drivers who were on the original sixteen-man Chase Grid.

Statesmen End Year at #23

Oskaloosa–The William Penn football team finished the 2015 campaign in the top 25 as the NAIA released its final rating Sunday.

The Statesmen (7-4, 3-2 North) fell four spots from last week to 23rd with 38 points (Faulkner is tied with WPU).  The navy and gold unfortunately could not extend its season to the playoffs, while the Heart of America Athletic Conference will be represented in the NAIA Football Championship Series by #2 Baker (Kan.) and #3 Grand View.

Morningside (340 points, 14 first-place votes) enters postseason action at #1, while Baker, Grand View, Saint Francis (Ind.) (final first-place vote), and Montana Tech round out the top five.

NAIA Football Final Rating – November 15, 2015
(Number in parentheses is first-place votes)
1. Morningside (14)
2. Baker (Kan.)
3. Grand View
4. Saint Francis (Ind.) (1)
5. Montana Tech
6. Marian (Ind.)
7. Southern Oregon
8. Tabor (Kan.)
9. Doane (Neb.)
10. Kansas Wesleyan
11. Campbellsville (Ky.)
12. Reinhardt (Ga.)
13. Lindsey Wilson (Ky.)
14. Dakota Wesleyan (S.D.)
15. Montana Western
16. Saint Xavier (Ill.)
17. Point (Ga.)
18. Dickinson State (N.D.)
18. St. Francis (Ill.)
20. St. Ambrose
21. Benedictine (Kan.)
22. Arizona Christian
23. William Penn
23. Faulkner (Ala.)
25. Georgetown (Ky.)

Story provided by Wade Steinlage

Service Providers Fear Fee Cuts Under Medicaid Privatization

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The plan to privatize Iowa’s Medicaid services beginning in January includes a new payment scheme that cuts reimbursements for some organizations helping people with physical, mental or developmental disabilities. Some care providers say the loss is enough to force smaller organizations to close, leaving the people they serve scrambling to find services.

Mental health centers and organizations providing services for people with physical or intellectual disabilities say the Iowa Department of Human Services new payment plan is unworkable for some.

A mental health center in Creston expects to lose $150,000 and a nonprofit provider in Burlington faces a loss of about $168,000.

The DHS says the new pay structure simplifies reimbursements and is not intended to cut payments. The agency says it will work with providers facing lower reimbursements.

Next Stop Phoenix International Raceway

Next stop Phoenix International Raceway for Sunday’s Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500, the next-to-last race of the 2015 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and the final stop in the three-week Eliminator Round. For the eight drivers remaining in the title hunt, there are just 312 “Miles-2-Miami.”

The twelfth edition of the post-season Chase will conclude November 22nd at Homestead-Miami Speedway, at which time only four drivers will remain in championship contention …With his victory November 1st at Martinsville Speedway, Jeff Gordon has assured himself of a spot in The Championship Four in South Florida. But at least two of the remaining berths will be filled based on the post-season point standings and right now, Martin Truex Junior and Carl Edwards are separated by just seven points in a fight for fourth place.

Five of the eight drivers remaining in the Eliminator Round of the Chase have won at least one Cup Series race in Phoenix: Gordon (in 2007 and 2011), Edwards (2010 and 2013), Kurt and Kyle Busch (both in 2005), and Kevin Harvick – who’s won the last four races on the one-mile desert oval and five of the last six dating back to the end of the 2012 season

Holiday Hours Announced For MHP

MAHASKA COUNTY— Mahaska Health Partnership (MHP) announced Thanksgiving holiday hours as follows:

MHP Medical Group, Home Health and Hospice Services and Public Health will be closed for the holiday on Thursday, Nov. 26, and will be open for normal office hours on Friday, Nov. 27. A nurse will be on call Thursday to assist with any home health and hospice needs.

Behavioral Health Services will be closed  Thursday, Nov. 26, and resume normal hours on Friday, Nov. 27.

Please call the switchboard at (641) 672-3100 for emergencies or to reach the on-call therapist.

The New Sharon Medical Center will be closed Thursday and Friday, Nov. 26 and 27.

They will resume normal business hours on Monday, Nov. 30.

For more information on Thanksgiving holiday hours, call (641) 672-3100. From the MHP Family to yours, have a happy Thanksgiving!

Central With National Aspirations In Men’s Cross Country

PELLA— The No. 20 Central College men’s cross country team, vying for a fourth straight national meet berth, will try to use its home course to an advantage, hosting the NCAA Division III Central Region Men’s and Women’s Cross Country Championships for a second consecutive year.

The 6,000-meter women’s race starts at 11 a.m. followed by the 8,000-meter men’s race at 12:30 p.m. at the A.N. Kuyper Athletics Complex course.

The Central Region features 30 women’s teams and 29 men’s teams from Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska and Wisconsin. The teams will face off in an effort to qualify for the Division III national meet Nov. 22 in Winneconne, Wis. The top two teams from each side and the top 10 individuals not on either of those teams will automatically advance.Sunday, 16 at-large berths will be given from the eight regions to complete the 32-team field.

Coach Joe Dunham is ready to show off the course to the rest of the region.

“It’s great to represent Central College to the entire region,” he said. “We are an institution set up well to host. We have a great staff and we couldn’t have put together a better team to coordinate this event.”

The Dutch runners are hoping to get a leg up running at home.

“We have been on this course multiple times training throughout the year,” Dunham said. “That should give us a little advantage against the tough competition.”

Overtaking the Oles—If the Dutch men are to win their first regional crown in school history, they have to take down three-time defending regional champion St. Olaf.  The fourth-ranked Oles took second at the national meet last season and have been atop the regional rankings all season. Central competed in the St. Olaf Invitational Sept. 19, taking fourth in the 20-team field while the Oles won the title.

Central earned national berths the past three seasons, placing 12th in the nation in 2012, sixth in 2013 and 11th last year.

Central was third in last year’s regional, behind St. Olaf and Iowa Conference foe Loras. The No. 19 Duhawks won the conference title this season, edging the Dutch by seven points and a total of four seconds at the league meet Oct. 31 at Dubuque.

The Dutch will lean on the services of back-to-back conference champion Cole Decker (senior, Des Moines/Dowling Catholic HS) to lead them back to the national race. Decker took 20th at the regional race last year.

“Cole is really confident right now,” Dunham said. “He’s feeling good and has stayed healthy. We are excited about the opportunity that he has in front of him.”

The Dutch are looking to prove they are among the nation’s elite.

“The conference race did not end the way we wanted,” Dunham said. “We have to put that behind us and focus on qualifying for nationals.”

Carleton going for back-to-back—After the Wartburg women won the Central Regional for three consecutive years from 2011-13, Carleton (Minn.) took the crown last season and is in prime position to do so again. The No. 14 Knights are the highest-ranked member of the Central Region and have been atop the regional rankings all season. St. Thomas (Minn.) and Cornell are the only other Central Region schools nationally ranked, coming in at No. 24 and No. 32, respectively.

The Dutch women will try to improve on their 15th-place finish from last year. Central is coming off a fourth-place finish at the conference race.

“Our women have really developed over the season,” Dunham said. “They have put in a lot of hard work and have set their sights on a better finish than last season.”

Sophomore Holly McKinney (Saint Charles/Interstate 35-Truro HS) has led Central in every race this season and will play a big role if the Dutch want to compete with the best. She took 14th at the conference meet.

“Holly has had a great season,” Dunham said. “She will have a great opportunity to get toward the front and compete with the best runners in the region.”

After running in sub-freezing temperatures at last year’s regional, the teams are looking forward to the high-50s forecast for Saturday.

“It should be very comfortable for the runners,” Dunham said. “Hopefully there will be a breeze to keep them cool and it will be a great day to run.”

Meet information, including course maps, are available on the regional championship website at http://www.central.edu/athletics/cross-country-regionals/. Meet results will be posted there immediately after the races.

Story provided by Alex Cooper

South Central Conference Announces Their All-Conference teams

The South Central Conference has announced their All-Conference teams, and local

athletes are all over the lists.

The first team involves three members of the state qualifying Rockets of Eddyville-

Blakesburg-Fremont. Senior attackers Karlie Taylor and Taylor Leffler were honored,

along with junior libero Haegen Boyer. Centerville had two members on the team:

Senior attacker Alyssa Barger and senior libero Amory Glosser. Finally, the last two

spots were given to two Mustangs from Davis County, as senior attacker Mallory Wells

and junior libero Hallie Owens were named to the team.

Taylor, Leffler, Barger, and Wells were all unanimous selections.

The second team had one player from each of the seven conference schools. EBF’s

McKinley Moore, Centerville’s Libby Sebolt, Davis County’s Connor Wilfawn, Chariton’s

Aubrey Richards, Knoxville’s Haley DeMoss, Albia’s Molly Spurgin, and Clarke’s Maddy

Heath make up the seven member team.

The honorable-mention squad features three players from each team in the conference:

Hannah Romanco Albia

Mary Shepard Albia

Jade Van Polen Albia

Peyton Kauffman Centerville

Alex Kelly Centerville

Mikala White Centerville

Carley Arnold Chariton

Alexis Curran Chariton

Sarah Fuhs Chariton

Baylie Balcaen Clarke

Alex Boyce Clarke

Lexy Carson Clarke

Kaitlin Francis Davis County

Jordyn Thompson Davis County

Bailea Yanke Davis County

Torie Alexander E-B-F

Emma Bunnell E-B-F

Taryn Swartz E-B-F

Jenna Kauzlarich Knoxville

Emily Wallace Knoxville

Chelsea Wares Knoxville

EBF won the conference with a perfect 6-0 record. Centerville was second at 5-1,

followed by Davis County at 4-2. Chariton was in 4th at 3-3, Knoxville finished 5th at 2-4,

Albia finished 6th at 1-5, and Clarke rounded out the conference at 0-6 in SCC play.

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