Indiana’s 38-3 blowout victory against Alabama in the College Football Playoff quarterfinals on New Year’s Day was the latest step for a program that’s enjoying an unprecedented rise.
It’s a remarkable story — one that the Hoosiers’ coach thinks is worthy of something more than just on-field success.
Shortly after his team’s 35-point win in the Rose Bowl, the second-year Indiana coach Curt Cignetti said in a postgame interview with ESPN that his team’s journey to becoming the No. 1 team in the sport would “be a hell of a movie.”
Hired away from James Madison after the 2023 season, Cignetti took over what had been the losingest program in FBS history until earlier this season. After a stellar debut season, with an 11-2 finish in 2024 that ended with a berth in the inaugural 12-team playoff, Indiana has gotten even better this year, with a 14-0 mark following the throttling of Alabama. It’s a program single-season record for wins. Thursday’s bowl win was Indiana’s first since the 1991 Copper Bowl.
A Rose Bowl victory would have been unimaginable for the Hoosiers as recently as 24 months ago. Over 21 seasons, from 1994-2014, they made just one bowl and in the 27 seasons before Cignetti got there, Indiana went just 113-204. In 82 of the program’s first 126 seasons, it finished with a losing record.
It didn’t just beat Alabama, but manhandled it, outgaining it by a 407-193 margin and scoring touchdowns on five of its final six full drives.
“Why should (the moment) be too big? Because our name’s Indiana?” Cignetti said in a postgame interview with ESPN. “We’ve got a lot of veteran starters who have played a lot of successful football in their careers. They have a lot of character. We’ve got great leadership and character on this football team. We’ve come through in the clutch moments. I’m proud of the way that they responded and prepared and met this challenge.”
With their latest win, the Hoosiers will take on No. 5 Oregon in the playoff semifinals at the Peach Bowl in Atlanta on Jan. 9.
Before he and his team head back to Indiana, Cignetti may even be able to take a quick detour from Pasadena to Los Angeles to pitch his Hollywood-worthy underdog story.
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