Michigan's Nimari Burnett (4) and Morez Johnson Jr. celebrate after defeating UConn in the NCAA college basketball tournament national champio…
The first correction of Indiana's spring did not wait for a whistle.
The wind was cruel. The crowd was loyal. And history, once again, showed up wearing crimson.
Of all the accolades to come Curt Cignetti's way after Indiana's first national championship, a three-word nod from Google might be the most viral.
You can have your five-star factories, your recruiting czars with laminated hashtags, your headsets piped into power rating podcasts. College football crowned a champion Monday night, and his name is Curt Cignetti, a man who once waxed staff tables at Indiana of Pennsylvania and now owns a perfect season at Indiana of Indiana.
It was a packed house Monday night as the university's official watch party, perhaps the biggest besides watching it live in person at Hard Rock Stadium, kicked off.
This is a new situation. I never figured I’d be covering a college football national championship game. No offense to Louisville or Kentucky. I guess I never ruled out Louisville getting here one day. I figured they’d make a playoff, and then you never know.
What else is there to say about Fernando Mendoza? I’ve written about his rise, his family, his efficiency, his mindset. And somehow, I’m still not sure we’ve said enough.
Indiana football touched down in Miami on Friday night and the world tilted just a little on its axis.
"I've got to thank the man above for allowing me to be in this position because there were a lot of times where I didn't know what was going to go on with my football career."