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How to watch indiana high school basketball


‎IHSAA TV on the App Store

Description

The IHSAA TV iOS app gives you quick and easy access to your favorite IHSAA live and archived events. With broadcasts produced by the IHSAA, IHSAA member institutions, and regional broadcasts, IHSAA TV is the go to destination for high school athletics in the state of Indiana. IHSAA TV is a partnership between the IHSAA and BlueFrame Technology.

Version 4.0.5

Performance improvements and bug fixes

Ratings and Reviews

460 Ratings

Hoosiers Hysteria

I love this being a Hoosier I get to see the tournament games. As a person who can’t afford these high priced cable companies it works nicely for me!

Glad we could provide you a good experience. Thanks for using the app and letting us know how you feel!

Lebanon vs. Zionsville livestream

This was so bad, I would like to ask to get a refund. The downs and yardage were never correct, the score was wrong for about 6 min in the 2nd half, the announcers rarely knew what was going on, and it said that streaming was lost with 4 min left. When it came back, the ball was on the 5 with 35 sec, and they lost streaming again. If the producing school does not know what they are doing, the game should not be streamed. Also, every time the camera showed the announcers, they were not 6 ft apart and did not have masks on. This was awful compared to the Lebanon production last week against Mooresville which was quite accurate.

Issues streaming

The over all app is set up well and I appreciate the access to the content! I wish the streaming service itself was a little better - it constantly resets to the beginning of the stream even though the feed is supposed to be live.

Hmmm, that's strange. We've not seen that issue with testing, but we will make sure to look into it and get an update out to resolve that issue. Thanks for taking the time to write a review, we appreciate it.

The developer, BlueFrame Technology, LLC, indicated that the app’s privacy practices may include handling of data as described below. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.

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The following data may be collected and linked to your identity:

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The following data may be collected but it is not linked to your identity:

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Privacy practices may vary, for example, based on the features you use or your age. Learn More

Information

Seller
Blue Frame Technology LLC

Size
92.9 MB

Category
Sports

Languages

Age Rating
4+

Copyright
© 2020 BlueFrame Technology, LLC

Price
Free

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Indiana High School Sports Athletic Association Has Streaming Media Apps Covered

Cypress, TX – March 30, 2016 – Berry Center: Portrait of Yogi Ferrell (11) of the Indiana University Hoosiers prior to the 2016 State Farm College Slam Dunk and 3 Point Championships (Photo by Phil Ellsworth / ESPN Images)

By Malika Andrews

The Indiana High School Athletic Association has partnered with BlueFrame Technology on new IHSAAtv apps for Amazon Fire TV, Android TV and Roku to provide fans with streaming access to IHSAA live and archived games and events.

IHSAA had also rolled out its Apple TV app last fall and now with the new apps, members of the organization “believe IHSAAtv’s presence now represents the most comprehensive offering in all the high school athletics.”

“We are excited to now offer even more ways for high school sports fans to watch all of our IHSAA Champions Network broadcasts, and the broadcasts of our affiliates, on any of their streaming devices.” Heath Shanahan, the Director of Broadcast Operations and Executive Producer for IHSAA, said in a statement. “With these new apps, we are confident that Hoosiers around the globe will have the opportunity to watch their team play live.”

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IHSAAtv broadcasts can be viewed on desktop, on mobile, and now on Internet‐connected TV devices.

Since its launch in 2010, the network has added a self-produced game each week as well as broadcasts of state championships. In 2016, the IHSAAtv platform was opened to network affiliates that provide regular coverage of local teams.

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Copyright 2020

Films about high school basketball

Tag / Tag: high school basketball 30

The films in this selection reconstruct one of the most important sports - basketball in high school. These are the stories of school basketball teams, players or a talented coach.

The life of the heroes of these films is literally a game in which the key is not to break down and bring victory to your own team. Here it is possible to see both sports anger, and a provocative spirit of rivalry, and true friendship, and an unimaginable awareness of each other's team members at a distance.

Best films category :

Coach Carter (2005)

Hurricane Season (2009)

His Game (1998)

New (recent) films :

Endless Night (2019)

Offside (2020)

Wolves (2016)


TOP movies tagged with "high school basketball" : Indiana Boys (1986), Sunset Park (1996), Big Shot (2021), High School Musical (2006), Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1992), Alien Judgment (1982), Suzie Q (1996), Bachelorette Night Massacre (1982), The Hill One Tree (2003), Soul of Silence (2005), Radio (2003), Pleasantville (1998), Love Costs Nothing (2003), Die John Tucker! (2006), High School Musical 3: Prom (2008), His Game (1998), Half-Nelson (2006), Classmates (2010), Coach Carter (2005), Urotsukidoji: Legend of the Superdemon (1989).

A list of films sorted by the degree of accuracy with which the tag characterizes the film.
Yes Not Agree Disagree that this movie matches the tag

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Netflix released a documentary about the massacre of NBA players and fans in Detroit.

We have collected for you all the highlights from the movie - Don't play basketball - Blogs

A new look at Malice at the Palace.

Netflix has released a new documentary, Untold: Malice at the Palace, about the 2004 fight between athletes and NBA fans at the Auburn Arena. Hills. The film repeats the already well-known plot of the brawl between Indiana basketball players and Detroit players and fans and reveals some details of the event that have been hushed up until now.

The most interesting stories and quotes from the documentary are in our text.

Main characters

Ron Artest is the main anti-hero, master of defense and uncovered gestalts from Indiana. The man who lay down on the referee's table received a shower from a glass of drink thrown into him and went with his fists to carry retribution to the stands.

Stephen Jackson is his faithful squire. A walking quote book of boyish publics and the owner of the most prominent jaw in the NBA.

Jermaine O'Neill - a guy who wanted the best, but under external influence did as always.

Reggie Miller is a living Pacers legend whose last season was overshadowed by a couple of partners with an exaggerated sense of their own greatness.

Ben Wallace is a tragic Detroit representative whose morale has been damaged by the recent death of his sibling.

Pistons fans is a hostile environment drunk on the Pistons' championship last season.

David Stern - NBA Commissioner. An arbitrator who single-handedly made decisions on the fate of the guilty.

***

Location and time - Detroit, Auburn Hills Arena, November 19, 2004.

Part 1: Team Building

The 1999-2000 season proved to be a peak season not only for Reggie Miller, but for the entire Pacers franchise. Never before and never since has Indiana reached the NBA Finals. And although in the main series of that championship, the team led by Larry Bird still lost to the Lakers, fans from Indianapolis sincerely believed that the club would soon again claim the highest places.

It took four years to wait for a new efficient team. During this time, the Pacers changed head coach twice: Byrd kept his promise and left immediately after the final, his place was taken by Isaiah Thomas, who was replaced by Rick Carlyle already in 2003.

Dale Davis left the roster to bring in Jermaine O'Neal, who was drafted 17th overall by Portland in the 1996 draft straight out of high school but never made it to the Blazers.

O'Neal: "After signing the contract, I walked into a sporting goods store in downtown Indianapolis and was like, 'And we traded Dale Davis for him?' That's how they reacted. I was only twenty. I was never considered a main team player, although I literally dreamed about it. But I was ready to do anything to get into the first team.

Ron Artest joined Indiana during the 2001/02 regular season.

Miller: “I remember the first training session after he showed up, it lasted three hours. Jermain came up to me and said that he had never trained like this before. He was right, we ran for glory.

O'Neal: “I have rarely met a workaholic like Ron. He was one of the most talented defenders of those years. Perhaps the most talented of that decade."

Indiana General Manager Donnie Walsh spent several years achieving the main goal - the creation of a single team. Then it seemed to him that he had practically translated his plan into reality.

For Reggie, new boyfriends didn't seem like a problem. He decided not to pay attention to personal performance and statistics. And even prepared to transfer the management of the team into the hands of Ron and Jermaine. After all, his main goal was to win the championship.

Miller: “Our best under rim was Jermaine and our best perimeter was Ron. At times, their playing seemed to be a real art.

Artest: “If someone managed to beat me, Jermain covered him. We were both considered completely out of control. Although, I must admit, he still had some kind of brake.

The Pacers finished the 2003-04 season with 61 wins - the best record of any team in that regular season - and advanced to the Eastern Conference Finals, where they were waiting for the Pistons, recently strengthened by Rasheed Wallace.

Miller: “Two teams with the best defense in the league met. I knew the winner of the series would be the NBA champion."

After five games, Detroit led the series and was ahead by one win. In the sixth game with 3:57 left in the final quarter of with the score even, Artest played hard under the basket and elbowed Rip Hamilton. The referees called for an unsportsmanlike foul and awarded the Pistons two free throws and possession. Many considered this moment to be the key one, which ultimately led to the defeat of Indiana.

Carlisle: “Artest's foul affected the game. We had a hard time."

After the match, Miller talked about the high cost of a playoff mistake. Even the excellent physical form of the Pacers did not save them from mental unpreparedness for victory. Reggie admitted that Detroit looked stronger.

The Pistons made it to the Finals and, of course, became NBA champions.

Part 2. Scandal at the match

The off-season turned out to be a difficult time for Artest. The forward suffered from depression, lost his taste for basketball, studied music and did not want to start the championship with the team.

Artest: “A real man does what he really wants to do. So if I decide not to play and take a month off, that's exactly what I'll do. I don't see anything wrong with that."

Jermaine O'Neill was annoyed by what was happening. The last straw for the big man was Ron's next trick: Artest told about the death of a family member, left Indianapolis and soon ... ended up at the music awards ceremony.

Miller understood that discord did not bring the team anything good. But he couldn't influence him.

General manager Donnie Walsh decided that the arrival of another charismatic guy would help change the situation. And he invited Stephen Jackson, who spent last season with the Hawks, to the Pacers.

Artest: “We seem to have grown up in the same area. They always argued, almost to the point of a fight, who would keep the opponent's best player. I usually gave up. The dude was crazy."

Jackson: “I am a loyal person and stand for any movement. To any offer - to go to a bar or somewhere else - I agree. You can rely on me. The team missed me. Everyone said I was the missing piece to win."

Reggie still remembers that year as the only time Indiana was 100% confident in winning the championship. Even despite all the internal contradictions.

But soon the Pacers faced a new challenge: just 16 days after the start of the regular season, the team traveled to Detroit for an away game, where their offenders from the past playoffs were waiting for them.

Miller was eager to prove the new status of the club - the main contender for the final from the East. However, the attacking defender did not take part in the game: with a broken finger, he could only be next to the team in a strict business suit.

But even without the leader, "Indiana" performed much better than the opponent. Ron scored 24, Jermaine 20. Some of the fans from the bottom rows began to leave the stands to get to the parking lot faster. Their seats were taken by excited fans descending from the top of the stadium.

When the game was nearly done, according to Stephen Jackson, point guard Jamal Tinsley urged Artest to retaliate and foul his offenders.

With 45 seconds left, with a big difference in the score, Ben Wallace got the ball in his mustache, left Stephen's guard and made a lay-up. Of course, Artest did not like this development of events, and he severely violated the rules on the center. It was enough for Ben, who had recently lost his brother to brain cancer, to flare up and push Ron.

Wallace: “I was filled with emotions and energy that could not be released anywhere except in the game. I was like a powder keg."

And then…

At first, the brawl took place exclusively between basketball players. The partners kept the Pistons players away from Artest, and Ron, feeling his own impunity, lay down on the referee's table.

Artest: “At that time I was undergoing treatment. To calm down, we practiced the “count to five” technique. If something happens, count to five to think it over again and cool down. I was surrounded by my guys and felt like a huge powerful dog. I believed in them one hundred percent. I knew Jermaine wouldn't let Ben near me. No way. Not to mention Stephen Jackson. So I was calm and enjoyed the moment.”

It is unlikely that anyone appreciated such an act of the forward. Wallace thought he was absolutely idiotic, the worst thing Ron had ever done.

But soon something else caught the attention of basketball players. Out of the corner of his eye, Miller saw something fly from the stands towards the referee's table. Like in slow motion.

Miller: "Bam!"

Artest jumped up and attacked the guy who was higher in the stands with his fists. The basketball player thought that he was the one who threw the glass of drink so accurately. Then the striker did not yet understand that he was mistaken.

Jackson and other representatives of the Pacers followed him towards the audience. Somehow they managed to fight off and calm Ron. Artest went down to the parquet and believed that this would be the end of it all. But suddenly a fan in a Pistons jersey appeared on the court in front of him.

Artest: “When I saw him, I was surprised that I saw an alien: “Does he want to fight?” By that point, I had calmed down, but the dude just got into my personal space.

Ron started hitting the two unfortunate fans. Soon Jermain joined him: the 116-kilogram “big” swung to slam the fan in the face with all his might, but at the last moment he slipped on the liquid spilled all over the parquet. The impact was tangential. Miller is confident that if O'Neal had hit, the fan would have died immediately.

The organizers of the match did not care much about security: only three police officers were present at the meeting. Later reinforcements were called to the stadium. The police tried to take the players to the premises under the stands, though they almost used a gas spray against Ron.

Jackson: “That really pissed me off. The police do nothing, and there are fifteen thousand of us against thirty thousand.”

The fans surrounded the passage where the players were being taken and began to throw at them all the available items: from drinks and food to ... chairs! But the athletes managed to get to the locker room.

The fan who was hit in the face on the floor was Charlie Haddad. Auburn Hills COO Timothy Smith said the arena had long planned to cancel the season tickets of some particularly aggressive fans, including Charlie. But did not have time to do it before the fateful match.

Haddad was taken away in an ambulance. Someone heard how other fans wanted to hit themselves in order to sue the athletes.

At this time, the basketball players were already in the locker room.

Artest asked his teammates if they were in trouble now. This finally pissed off O'Neal, and he attacked his partner. At that moment, the police entered the room. They wanted to take Jermain to the station, but he refused to follow them. Somehow, the staff of the club and the arena managed to beat off the basketball players and put them on the bus.

Players have fled the stadium.

Part 3. Punishment

In the following days, all the criticism came down exclusively on basketball players. Not on the leadership of the arena, not on the raging fans, but on the athletes.

O'Neill: “We were literally called criminals. Everyone supported them: "Yes, it's all rap." A dress code was introduced immediately. TV was putting pressure on the league."

Two days after the brawl, NBA commissioner David Stern announced the sanctions. They turned out to be much tougher than the players expected.

Ron Artest received a suspension until the end of the current season. Stephen Jackson was suspended for 30 matches. Jermaine O'Neal - 25. Ben Wallace was suspended for only 6 matches.

Stern: “The decision to disqualify was unanimous. "1" - for, "0" - against.

The media supported the leadership of the Association and called the sanctions "unprecedented". But not everyone agreed with the decision.

O'Neal: “Of course I don't consider myself completely innocent. But a 25-match suspension is not normal. Because I acted in self-defense."

Artest: “I'm sorry I didn't give an interview right after the game. Then people could judge whether I'm right or wrong. But the conclusions were made on the basis of the video recording and punishments of the players. And we had to keep quiet.”

According to the basketball players, public opinion, like the commissioner's decision, was based on the edited ESPN video. They were made extreme in the interests of the Association.

Oakland County Attorney David Gorsica was assigned to the stand riot case. However, the specialist did not plan to punish only the players. He considered his goal to establish the responsibility of all those responsible for what happened.

Together with his colleagues, Gorsika studied video recordings from all available cameras and began to identify the offenders. First, law enforcement officers found the guy who threw the chair. His actions were regarded as a criminal attack. Then the prosecutor figured out that fan Charlie Haddam and his friend deliberately went down to the site and thereby threatened the safety of Artest. All that remained was to identify the man who had thrown the glass at Ron.

Luckily, the perpetrator turned out to be John Green, a friend of Gorsika's neighbor. The prosecutor was very lucky: Green did not even deny his guilt.

Later, the fan admitted that he felt relieved when Artest ran into the stands and began to beat the person next to him instead. Ron reacted to the guy with his hands up, and he just rejoiced at the successful hit of his friend John.

Green was eventually charged with assault with violence.

The results of the official investigation allowed O'Neill to appeal for a reduction in the period of Ineligibility. And the athlete got his way: the federal court found that Jermain acted in accordance with the circumstances. The ban on participation in matches was relaxed by 10 games.


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