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  • The 5 plays that defined Indiana’s national championship game win over Miami

    We are living in a world where Indiana is the champion of the College Football Playoff.

    The Hoosiers capped a 16-0 season with a 27-21 win over Miami in the national championship game on Monday night. It’s simply one of the most improbable stories in modern sports history. Indiana was recently the program with the most losses in college football history. Now the Hoosiers are on top of the world.

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    Here are the five plays that defined Indiana’s championship in the order they happened.

    Mikail Kamara’s blocked punt

    The Hoosiers led 10-0 at halftime but Miami snuck back into the game early in the third quarter on RB Mark Fletcher’s 57-yard TD run. The Hoosiers punted twice after Fletcher’s score, but Miami didn’t come close to taking the lead.

    And then the game officially got wild. Kamara easily got around his blocker to get his hand on Dylan Joyce’s kick. The ball bounded into the end zone, where it was recovered by Isaiah Jones for a TD.

    It was the second straight playoff game with a blocked punt for the Hoosiers. In the Peach Bowl, Daniel Ndukwe blocked a punt in the fourth quarter as Indiana was blowing out Oregon.

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    Kamara and Jones are two of Indiana’s key players on defense. But Indiana coach Curt Cignetti isn’t afraid to use his starters on special teams. And that decision paid off handsomely Monday night.

    Fernando Mendoza’s TD run

    It’s impossible to overstate the importance of Mendoza’s touchdown run in Indiana football history. It’s the biggest play ever for Indiana and it’s not even close.

    Ahead of the title game, the defining moment of Indiana’s season and Mendoza’s Heisman Trophy was his game-winning TD pass to Omar Cooper Jr. against Penn State. Now, Cooper’s toe tap in the back of the end zone has been surpassed by the image of Mendoza diving headlong into the end zone.

    It’s an individual effort that stands out in its own right. But the context adds even more greatness. Mendoza’s run came on a designed QB draw on fourth down after Indiana called timeout for the second time in the second half.

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    With 4 yards needed for the first down, you couldn’t have blamed Cignetti for kicking the field goal for a likely six-point lead. A fourth-down failure could have been a big jolt for Miami. Undeterred by that possibility, Cignetti left his offense out on the field after using the timeout and Mendoza broke multiple tackles before stretching the ball out across the goal line for a 24-14 lead.

    Malachi Toney keeps Miami in it

    Mendoza’s TD could have been a backbreaker for Miami. It put the Hoosiers up 24-14 with less than 10 minutes to go.

    Instead, Miami cut Indiana’s lead to three. Again.

    Malachi Toney accounted for 71 yards of a 91-yard drive for the Hurricanes. The eighth and final play of that drive came when Toney took a short pass from Carson Beck and ran 22 yards for a touchdown.

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    It was the third time Miami had cut Indiana’s lead to three in the second half. It was also the final time. The Hurricanes never led at any point during the game.

    Toney, meanwhile, finished with 10 catches for 122 yards to cap off a stellar freshman season. A player who could still be in high school, Toney reclassified to enroll early at Miami and was the team’s leading receiver as a true freshman in 2025.

    Charlie Becker’s back shoulder catches

    Sophomore receiver Charlie Becker emerged as a reliable target for Mendoza over the second half of the season. And he continued to make clutch catches on Monday night.

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    Just look at this fourth-down grab just plays before Mendoza’s touchdown run.

    Becker then made a similar catch over eight minutes later that nearly clinched the game for the Hoosiers.

    Becker caught a 19-yard pass on third-and-7 with 2:30 to go to put Indiana at the Miami 33-yard line. Had the pass fallen incomplete, Indiana would have been punting from midfield and Miami would have had all three of its timeouts while trailing 24-21.

    Instead, Indiana kicked a field goal to go up 27-21. And by the time that Miami got the ball back with 1:42 to go, the Hurricanes had used all three of their timeouts.

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    Jamari Sharpe’s game-sealing interception

    Miami nearly made it incredibly interesting though.

    Thanks to a roughing the passer call on the second play of the drive, Miami got across midfield with just over 50 seconds to go and a short completion to CJ Daniels put the Hurricanes at the Indiana 41-yard line.

    But with the clock running after a first down, Carson Beck tried to go deep to Keelan Marion with a safety closing in from the middle of the field. The ball was underthrown and Sharpe, the corner trailing Marion on the play, was able to easily make the interception.

    After kneeling down inside the 10-yard line, Sharpe was penalized for taking his helmet off in celebrating. But after two quick plays to run out the clock, the field position didn’t matter. Indiana had won its first national title.

  • Fernando Mendoza’s epic fourth-down TD run powers Indiana to its first national title ever

    Indiana is a college football national champion for the first time.

    Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza’s incredible touchdown run in the fourth quarter provided the game-winning points for the No. 1 Hoosiers in their 27-21 win over No. 10 Miami in Monday night’s College Football Playoff national championship game.

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    Indiana is the first team to go 16-0 at the top level of college football in over 125 years. The sport barely existed when Yale went 16-0 in 1894.

    Mendoza’s daring run came on a fourth-down quarterback draw after Indiana coach Curt Cignetti used the team’s second timeout to eschew a field goal that would’ve put the Hoosiers up six with less than 10 minutes to go.

    “The coverage before — they were in the coverage where that play would work,” Cignetti told ESPN after the game. “We put it in for this game. It’s quarterback draw but it was blocked differently. And we rolled the dice and said they’re going to be in it again and they were and we blocked it well and he broke a tackle or two and got in the end zone.”

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    It turned out to be the right decision. Miami responded with an eight-play, 91-yard drive capped off by a 22-yard catch-and-run by star freshman receiver Malachi Toney to cut Indiana’s lead back to three.

    Toney scored with 6:37 to go. And Indiana came oh-so-close to preventing Miami from not getting the ball back. A false start on second-and-1 with less than two minutes to go gave Miami the opportunity to get the ball back with 1:42 remaining and no timeouts while trailing by six.

    But the Hurricanes’ chances of a miracle win were short-lived. Just after Miami got to midfield, Jamari Sharpe intercepted Carson Beck on a deep throw to seal the win and a third straight national championship for the Big Ten after Michigan’s win in January of 2024 and Ohio State’s a season ago.

    Beck’s interception was the first turnover of the game for either team.

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    Indiana’s blocked punt was massive

    The Hoosiers blocked a punt for the second straight playoff game on Monday night. And it put them up 10 in the third quarter.

    Edge rusher Mikail Kamara got his arm out to block Dylan Jones’ kick and Isaiah Jones recovered the ball in the end zone. The TD gave Indiana a 17-7 lead after Miami running back Mark Fletcher Jr. had broken a 57-yard TD run earlier in the third quarter to get the Hurricanes on the board.

    However, Miami didn’t disappear. A punt on the next possession could have been devastating for the Hurricanes. Instead, Miami marched 81 yards in 10 plays as Fletcher scored his second TD of the game to cut the lead back to three points.

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    But that was the theme of the game for Miami. The Hurricanes were always chasing. Despite averaging over two yards a play more than Indiana did, Miami had more penalties and was worse on third down (3-of-11 compared to Indiana’s 6-of-15) along with the special teams blunder.

    Mendoza’s relatively pedestrian stat line

    Mendoza finished the game 16-of-27 passing for 186 yards and failed to throw a touchdown pass. It was just the second time all season he didn’t throw a TD pass. The first came in his first game at Indiana, when he was 18-of-31 passing for 193 yards in a Week 1 win over Old Dominion.

    He had a rushing TD in that game, though. And his run for the touchdown on Monday night is immediately the biggest play in Indiana football history.

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    The likely No. 1 pick in the 2026 NFL Draft had an incredible season in Bloomington. He finishes with 41 TD passes, 48 total touchdowns and just six interceptions while completing over 70% of his throws.

    In Indiana’s first two playoff games, Mendoza had thrown eight touchdowns with just five incompletions.

    Mendoza hasn’t officially declared for the draft, but that’s likely a formality as Indiana has already signed former TCU QB Josh Hoover in the the transfer portal. With Oregon’s Dante Moore coming back to school in 2026, the odds are overwhelming that Mendoza will be the Las Vegas Raiders’ choice to begin the draft in April.

    Carson Beck gets Miami so close to a national championship

    Beck’s move from Georgia to Miami was the highest-profile transfer of the 2025 offseason even as the QB recovered from the elbow injury he sustained at the end of the first half of the SEC title game.

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    Despite being unable to throw in Miami’s spring practices, Beck hit the ground running with the Hurricanes as Miami knocked off Notre Dame in Week 1 — a win that ultimately snuck the Hurricanes into the CFP field.

    On Monday night, Beck’s arm helped keep Miami in the game in the second half until the interception. He was 19-of-32 passing for 232 yards and a TD as the Hurricanes averaged over 12 yards a completion.

    See how it all played out below:

    Live coverage is over73 updates
    • Yahoo Sports Staff

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      We end the night with a quick look at our first shot at the 2026 college football Top 25 because it’s NEVER TOO EARLY!

      Here’s who Yahoo’s Nick Bromberg has as No. 1: Way too early Top 25

      MIAMI GARDENS, FL - JANUARY 19:  A detailed view of the trophy after the Indiana Hoosiers versus the Miami Hurricanes College Football Playoff National Championship Game Presented by AT&T on January 19, 2026, at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, FL. (Photo by David Rosenblum/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

      Now that the 2025 champions have been crowned, let’s look ahead to 2026. (Photo by David Rosenblum/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

      (Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      Fans gathered at Assembly Hall in Bloomington to watch the national title game. Here’s what it looked like when they secured the win:

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      Fernando Mendoza said the team liked running a QB draw against Miami’s coverage, though it wasn’t a perfect look.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      Mark Fletcher was see throwing a punch at an Indiana player after the game. He also seen embracing Indiana QB Fernando Mendoza postgame, so it’s not clear when or what set him off.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      https://twitter.com/YahooSports/status/2013467766427128214

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      Ed Reed, one of many famous Miami alums in attendance, was seen comforting Miami players after a painful loss.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Indiana QB took a subtle shot at Miami for once declining his walk-on tryout.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      THIS GAME IS OVER!!!

      Indiana’s Jamari Sharpe took advantage of an underthrown ball by Carson Beck and sealed the national championship for the Hoosiers!

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Canes got a roughing-the-passer penalty on one of the first plays of the ensuing drive and they’re now out past midfield after another first down with less than a minute left.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Hoosiers got inside the red zone and were facing a second-and-1 before suffering a devastating false-start penalty and they ultimately had to settle for a field goal to keep the door open for the Hurricanes.

      Indiana 27, Miami 21

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Hoosiers were facing a third-and-7 and Fernando Mendoza went to Charlie Becker on yet another back-shoulder throw and the receiver makes yet another clutch catch.

      Indiana is now in scoring range as the national championship game hits the two-minute warning.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Hurricanes get that TD right back on a quick-hitting drive capped off by a 22-yard backfield pitch-and-run from Carson Beck to Malachi Toney.

      We have a good one down the stretch!

      Indiana 24, Miami 21 | 6:37 left

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Hurricanes aren’t going away just yet.

      They just had a couple long catch and runs by Alex Bauman (22 yards) and Malachi Toney (41) and Miami is back in scoring range just like that.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Hoosiers were facing another fourth-and-5 and Fernando Mendoza scrambled for a 13-yard TD!

      What a call by Curt Cignetti and what a run by Mendoza!

      Indiana 24, Miami 14

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Hoosiers are over midfield and in the red zone after Fernando Mendoza found Charlie Becker for a 19-yard gain on fourth-and-5.

      What a call and conversion by Indiana.

  • Indiana QB Fernando Mendoza admits Miami’s coverage alignment caught him off-guard before his iconic TD run

    Fernando Mendoza admitted that he was a little confused about the coverage Miami presented on his incredible fourth-down touchdown run.

    The Heisman Trophy winner put the Hoosiers up 24-14 with less than 10 minutes to go in Indiana’s 27-21 national championship game win when he dove into the end zone on what immediately became an iconic play.

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    As Indiana faced a fourth-and-4, Mendoza took off up the middle and broke multiple tackles before leaping across the goal line.

    “The coverage before — they were in the coverage where that play would work,” Indiana coach Curt Cignetti told ESPN after the game. “We put it in for this game. It’s quarterback draw but it was blocked differently. And we rolled the dice and said they’re going to be in it again and they were and we blocked it well and he broke a tackle or two and got in the end zone.”

    Mendoza said it wasn’t that straightforward. When asked about the play on ESPN’s “SportsCenter” after the game, Mendoza said that the play had an option component to it. If Mendoza saw a different type of coverage than what Indiana was anticipating, he could have thrown the ball.

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    “We called the quarterback draw and we were hoping they’d do a [cover] 2 Tampa drop eight where they basically kind of like defend in front of the line, it being fourth-and-5 and us likely to throw the ball in the red zone,” Mendoza said. “We were anticipating them, ‘Hey let’s drop back, let’s make Mendoza throw in a tight window to one of his stud receivers’ which, you know, is a good thought. However they didn’t come out in that.

    “They came out in something that was a little bit of that, a little bit not and … play clock rolling down, I’m like ‘Screw it here we go.’ I see half the field going zone, half the field going man I’m like ‘Wow, if it’s man I’m supposed to throw it, if it’s zone I’m supposed to run it so I’m like, ‘you know what, screw it, I’m gonna run it myself, I’m going to die on that field’ and we got in.”

    In fact, Mendoza said that the run-pass option was the same play that Indiana had used in a critical moment once before when the Heisman winner had thrown a pass.

    “Nearly a throw. Nearly a throw,” he said when asked if he really did have the option to pass on the play. “It was a very similar play — it was basically the same exact play we won when we came back at Autzen Stadium in Oregon.”

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    Indiana beat Oregon 30-20 in October after Mendoza found Elijah Sarratt in man coverage for the go-ahead score in the fourth quarter.

    Miami defensive coordinator Corey Hetherman told reporters after the game that he and his staff knew before the snap that Mendoza could take off with the ball like he did. However, the coaches couldn’t communicate that to the players in time.

    Miami quickly cut Indiana’s lead back to three points again at 24-21 following Mendoza’s touchdown run, but the Hurricanes’ chances of a win ended with less than a minute to go when Jamari Sharpe picked off Carson Beck. It was the first turnover of the game for either team. And since Miami had no timeouts remaining when Sharpe intercepted the ball, Indiana just needed to run two snaps to end the game.

  • Carson Beck’s college career concludes with heartbreaking interception in CFP title game on pass his receiver never saw

    Carson Beck will have plenty of fond memories to look back on from his college football career.

    But it ended Monday in heartbreak.

    With a chance to lead Miami on a drive for its sixth national championship, Beck threw an interception that sealed Indiana’s fate. His intended target on the play, Keelan Marion, never saw the ball in the air.

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    With the clock ticking under two minutes, Miami’s defense held Indiana to a field goal that gave the Hoosiers a 27-21 lead. Beck then led the offense onto the field with 1:42 remaining, in need of a touchdown that could seal a national title on Miami’s home field.

    Roughing penalty helps Miami advance to IU territory

    Miami overcame a delay-of-game penalty with a pair of first downs that put them over midfield. The first first down of the drive arrived courtesy of a roughing-the-passer penalty that resulted in the back of Beck’s head hitting the turf.

    With the Hurricanes facing first-and-10 at the Indiana 41, Beck decided to go for it all with 51 seconds remaining. Marion ran a go route down the left sideline, facing man coverage from cornerback Jamari Sharpe and safety help over the top.

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    Beck launched a deep ball that never stood a chance.

    The ball was short and thrown into double coverage. Sharpe pinpointed it for an interception at the 15-yard line as Marion continued to run toward the end zone.

    With Miami out of timeouts, all that was left for the Hoosiers to clinch the national championship was to run out the clock. They did just that for a 27-21 win.

    Beck will finish his college career with two national championships as a backup at Georgia, but none as a starter.

    Beck talks late hit, fateful interception

    The turnover was the first of the night for either team on a night when Beck completed 19-of-32 passes for 232 yards with 1 touchdown and the late interception.

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    Beck was asked after the game how he was feeling on the last drive after the roughing-the-passer hit.

    “My ears are ringing,” Beck said, per ESPN’s Pete Thamel.

    Beck also spoke with reporters about the game-sealing interception.

    “The guy made a really good play,” Beck said. “They were in cover 2 and he sunk with no flat threat, made a really good play on the ball.

    “So again, a lot of credit to them and their defense. They played really, really well tonight.”

    Marion, in tears, says he never saw the ball

    Per Thamel, Marion was in tears in the postgame locker room with a towel over his head. He said the interception was his “mistake” and that he didn’t realize that Beck had thrown the pass.

    “I didn’t even know he had threw the ball,” Marion said. … “I got to look for the ball and make that play for him. So that’s all on me.”

    Here’s a look at the Marion’s route from the sideline near the end zone. Marion didn’t look back for the ball until he crossed the 20-yard line after Sharpe had made his break. By then, it was too late.

    Beck’s long college career comes to an end

    The interception concludes a college career for Beck that started at Georgia in 2020 and featured five seasons including a redshirt campaign with the Bulldogs before he utilized his extra COVID-19 season to transfer to Miami.

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    Beck’s teams lost just six games that he started over his college career. And Monday night’s loss ended like four of those six did.

    Miami didn’t win the ACC with Beck at quarterback, but was granted a controversial berth in the College Football Playoff. Beck and the Hurricanes ultimately proved the selection committee correct by winning three playoff games to advance to Monday’s championship game.

    They had a chance at the end to upset a historic Indiana team that surged to the top of college football with dominant units on both sides of the ball following decades of irrelevance.

    It’s a lot to be proud of. But it’s not likely to soothe the pain of how Monday’s championship game was lost at the end.

  • How Fernando Mendoza, Curt Cignetti and Indiana authored the greatest run in American sports history

    MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — About half an hour before Curt Cignetti stood on a stage and lifted a trophy, before Mark Cuban put on the T-shirt they hand out to the national champions, before tens of thousands of fans sang ABBA’s “Fernando” in unison as red-and-white confetti fell on the field at Hard Rock Stadium, there was a moment that defined all of it.

    With 9 minutes, 27 seconds remaining on the clock, the greatest turnaround story in the history of American sports was wobbling toward the finish line. Indiana hadn’t put Miami away, and the Hurricanes were starting to claw back their momentum.

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    In that moment, it felt very much like four yards could be the difference between a championship that will be remembered forever and a lifetime of second guessing.

    Initially, Cignetti sent his field goal unit onto the field. Taking a six-point lead would have been the safe, by-the-book play. But it wouldn’t have been the right one. Carter Smith, Indiana’s left tackle, watched Cignetti tell his kicking team he changed his mind.

    “Get off the field! We’re going for it!”

    It took Indiana football 139 years to get here, and if there was a gravity to the biggest coaching decision of Cignetti’s coaching career and the biggest play of quarterback Fernando Mendoza’s life, it had already been defied by the time they exited their timeout huddle with 9 minutes, 27 seconds remaining in the College Football Playoff championship game.

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    It was only one fourth down in a game with a lot of big plays left. But if you’re trying to describe how the program with the most losses in the history of college football ended up two years later as the first 16-0 national champion in the sport’s modern era, it resides somewhere in between Cignetti’s decision to pull his field-goal team off the field and Mendoza bullying through the line of scrimmage, cutting back to his right when he saw a defender closing in and stretching to the end zone for the touchdown and a 10-point lead.

    “A big constant we’ve had is to bet on ourselves,” Mendoza said. “Whenever they called that play, we knew we’re going to bet on ourselves one more time in the biggest stage of the game. It wasn’t the perfect coverage for it, but I trusted my linemen and everybody had a gritty performance today. It was the least I could do for my brothers.”

    MIAMI GARDENS, FL - JANUARY 19: Head Coach Curt Cignetti of the Indiana Hoosiers lifts the National Champsionship trophy following the Indiana Hoosiers versus the Miami Hurricanes College Football Playoff National Championship Game Presented by AT&T on January 19, 2026, at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, FL. (Photo by Peter Joneleit/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    MIAMI GARDENS, FL – JANUARY 19: Head Coach Curt Cignetti of the Indiana Hoosiers lifts the National Champsionship trophy following the Indiana Hoosiers versus the Miami Hurricanes College Football Playoff National Championship Game Presented by AT&T on January 19, 2026, at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, FL. (Photo by Peter Joneleit/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    (Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    As Indiana built to this, from the upset win at Oregon in October, to the last-second escape at Penn State in November, to beating Ohio State for the Big Ten title, to romping through the playoff with wins over programs that wrote the history of the sport, everybody wanted to figure out how.

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    Sometimes, the only explanation is watching it happen.

    All the things that weren’t supposed to happen in college football? Indiana made them happen. The Hoosiers cracked the playoff. They made blue-bloods feel blue. They won the national championship.

    And at the end, as Jamari Sharpe snagged the interception that secured Indiana’s 27-21 victory, there was little doubt about what it meant: In a sport where upward mobility has forever been slow and grueling, leading often to a dead end, what Indiana pulled off in two years is the most unlikely run in the history of American sports.

    “Ever. Ever,” said Cuban, who won an NBA title as the Dallas Mavericks’ owner and is now helping fund his alma mater’s roster. “I mean, the Miracle on Ice, I don’t think there’s anything compared to this. To go from the outhouse to the penthouse, to win 16 games in a row, I mean, who’d have thunk? I don’t think anybody could ever imagine in their wildest of wildest dreams.”

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    Cignetti had this dream early in life. The son of College Football Hall of Fame coach Frank Cignetti, who got fired after four years at West Virginia but became a legend in D-II, spent his childhood envisioning himself as “a Bear Bryant kind of coach.” But the business never handed him those cards to play.

    As he worked his way up the ladder, he too often landed on coaching staffs that lost — Rice, Temple, Pittsburgh — until Nick Saban hired him as the recruiting coordinator and receivers coach at the beginning of his Alabama dynasty.

    “That tied it together for me,” Cignetti said. “I was hitting the big 5-0 and wasn’t a coordinator, wasn’t on track to get a head-coaching job and didn’t want to be a 60-year-old assistant. I saw what those lives looked like as a kid. I took an unprecedented chance in this business.”

    He became the head coach at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, the same place his father coached. As far as he was concerned, the Bear Bryant dream was long gone. It turned out the journey was only beginning.

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    From IUP to Elon to James Madison and then Indiana — the worst of the worst. Nobody won there, and even those who had a little success eventually got fired too because nothing was built to last there. It was a graveyard. At least maybe Cignetti could make some money.

    A photograph of Indiana’s nearly-empty Memorial Stadium, taken during the first game of the Cignetti era in August 2024, began to go viral Monday on social media. It was a snapshot of what Hoosier football used to be: a program that had been dead for decades, a lost cause, a waste of time.

    You couldn’t even really call Indiana’s fans long-suffering. In basketball, the sport Indiana fans used to care about above all else, they’ve suffered. But is there really any suffering if there’s no hope in the first place?

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    “There wasn’t an emphasis on football, plain and simple,” Cignetti said. “Basketball school.”

    And then, he just … changed it. Some of the best parts of his James Madison teams came with him. He demanded investment and attitude. He out-evaluated everyone in the transfer portal, and as Indiana’s 2024 season unfolded, leading to a first-round playoff loss at Notre Dame, it was clear he was outcoaching a lot of the game’s stalwarts, too.

    MIAMI GARDENS, FL - JANUARY 19: QB Fernando Mendoza #15 of the Indiana Hoosiers runs for a touchdown in the fourth quarter during the Indiana Hoosiers versus the Miami Hurricanes College Football Playoff National Championship Game Presented by AT&T on January 19, 2026, at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, FL. (Photo by Peter Joneleit/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    MIAMI GARDENS, FL – JANUARY 19: QB Fernando Mendoza #15 of the Indiana Hoosiers runs for a touchdown in the fourth quarter during the Indiana Hoosiers versus the Miami Hurricanes College Football Playoff National Championship Game Presented by AT&T on January 19, 2026, at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, FL. (Photo by Peter Joneleit/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    (Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    Which brings us back to the fourth quarter and Cignetti debating whether to kick that field goal. They had put in a quarterback draw for Mendoza this week — not exactly the most graceful runner — because they thought they might get the right look to call it against Miami.

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    In that moment, the guts, coaching and toughness that had carried Indiana to the brink of a title was worth betting on one more time.

    “We had to block a little different than we normally do,” Cignetti said. “That was a 45-minute discussion in the staff room how we were going to call it and how we were going to do it. Fernando, I know he comes off as the All-American guy, but he has the heart of a lion.”

    That’s what the world never saw about Indiana, not until it discarded Alabama in the quarterfinals and ran roughshod over Oregon in the semifinals. After that, everyone knew it was real.

    But the beauty of college football is that you are not supposed to solve it. You’re supposed to strive and struggle, have your heart broken, come back for more. At the end of the day, the blue bloods take home the trophy.

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    That’s how it’s supposed to be. That’s how it’s always been.

    And in the final game between Indiana and history, it was against Miami — a five-time national champion — playing in its home stadium. It was the ultimate test. And at the end, when Indiana committed an uncharacteristic false start penalty that prevented the Hoosiers from a game-ending first down, it gave Miami a chance to rewrite the story.

    Instead, it was a Miami native and son of a former Hurricane, Jamari Sharpe, who snagged the championship-clinching interception. Just one more layer to a story you couldn’t invent if you tried.

    “It’s an amazing feeling, man, coming from where I come from, always wanted to be in the national title, always wanted to play in the Dolphins’ stadium,” Sharpe said. “Tonight was my first night being able to do that, then making the game-winning play like that, I still can’t believe it. It might hit me in the morning.”

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    It will all hit us when we wake up to a reality where Indiana — yes, Indiana — is the national champion. These days, the world of college football often feels chaotic, sometimes even dark. But this felt pure — not because it was Indiana, but because of how it happened.

    The fundamentals. The self-belief. The three-star recruits who played like superstars, turning everything we knew about college football upside down.

    “I know a lot of people thought it was never possible,” Cignett said. “It probably is one of the greatest sports stories of all time. But it’s because of these guys.”

  • Fernando Mendoza shares emotional moment with his parents on field after leading Indiana past Miami in national championship

    Shortly after officially leading Indiana to its first-ever national championship on Monday night, Fernando Mendoza went to find his parents on the field at Hard Rock Stadium.

    Once he finally did, it made for quite the moment.

    Mendoza, the reigning Heisman Trophy winner, led the Hoosiers past Miami 27-21 on Monday night in the national championship game. It completed Indiana’s perfect 16-0 season, marking a stunning turnaround for a program that was near the bottom of the college football world just a few years ago.

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    Mendoza was 16-of-27 passing for 186 yards in the win. He scrambled for a huge touchdown in the fourth quarter, which he only managed after breaking a tackle near the goal line to help seal the win.

    But throughout the game, as they often were throughout the College Football Playoff run, ESPN cameras frequently spotted the Mendoza family watching along. Mendoza’s mother, Elsa, has lived with multiple sclerosis for nearly two decades. She now uses a wheelchair. Mendoza’s father is always seen sitting next to Elsa, never on his feet, celebrating right along with her.

    “I was diagnosed about 18 years ago, but of course you never knew that. You and [your brother] Alberto were so young, and I was doing fine … and mostly I didn’t want you to worry. It just felt like this impossible thing to place on you guys,” Elsa wrote in a letter to Mendoza in The Players Tribune last month. “On my sweet boys … It wasn’t until five years ago, when I got COVID, that things started to go downhill in a way where there was no more hiding it. It was during football season, and I realized I wasn’t going to be able to travel. And the thought of you wondering if I supported you any less, because suddenly I wasn’t at your games? I hated that.

    “So that’s when I knew we had to sit you and your brother down … But you’ve made it so much easier. And you’ve done that in the sweetest, strongest, most Fernando way possible — by making me feel the exact opposite of embarrassed. You’ve made me feel seen.”

    Naturally, Elsa was all smiles on the field after the win.

    “Every hug with him, I know that sounds so cliché, but this is just so special because I know how bad he wanted it and how hard he worked to get here,” Elsa said. “That hug means the world.”

  • College football bowl results: Indiana Hoosiers wrap up postseason with first national championship ever

    The 2025-26 bowl season is over and the Indiana Hoosiers are the national champions after a historic 16-0 run to the title. Here’s how the whole bowl season played out.

    Results

    Monday, Jan. 19

    College Football Playoff National Championship Game

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    Friday, Jan. 9

    Chick-Fil-A Peach Bowl (College Football Playoff semifinal)

    Thursday, Jan. 8

    Vrbo Fiesta Bowl (College Football Playoff semifinal)

    Friday, Jan. 2

    Holiday Bowl

    AutoZone Liberty Bowl

    Duke’s Mayo Bowl

    Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl

    Thursday, Jan. 1

    Allstate Sugar Bowl (College Football Playoff quarterfinal)

    Rose Bowl presented by Prudential (College Football Playoff quarterfinal)

    Capital One Orange Bowl (College Football Playoff quarterfinal)

    Wednesday, Dec. 31

    Goodyear Cotton Bowl (College Football Playoff quarterfinal)

    SRS Distribution Las Vegas Bowl

    Cheez-It Citrus Bowl

    ReliaQuest Bowl

    Tony the Tiger Sun Bowl

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    Tuesday, Dec. 30

    Liberty Mutual Music City Bowl

    Valero Alamo Bowl

    Radiance Technologies Independence Bowl

    Monday, Dec. 29

    JLab Birmingham Bowl

    Saturday, Dec. 27

    TaxSlayer Gator Bowl

    Kinder’s Texas Bowl

    Bad Boy Mowers Pinstripe Bowl

    Go Bowling Military Bowl

    Wasabi Fenway Bowl

    Pop-Tarts Bowl

    Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl

    Isleta New Mexico Bowl

    Friday, Dec. 26

    GameAbove Sports Bowl

    Rate Bowl

    ServPro First Responder Bowl

    Wednesday, Dec. 24

    Sheraton Hawaii Bowl

    Tuesday, Dec. 23

    Bush’s Boca Raton Bowl of Beans

    New Orleans Bowl

    Scooter’s Coffee Frisco Bowl

    Monday, Dec. 22

    Famous Idaho Potato Bowl

    Saturday, Dec. 20

    College Football Playoff first-round game

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    College Football Playoff first-round game

    College Football Playoff first-round game

    Friday, Dec. 19

    Myrtle Beach Bowl

    Union Home Mortgage Gasparilla Bowl

    College Football Playoff first-round game

    Thursday, Dec. 18

    Xbox Bowl

    Wednesday, Dec. 17

    StaffDNA Cure Bowl

    68 Ventures Bowl

    Tuesday, Dec. 16

    IS4S Salute to Veterans Bowl

    Saturday, Dec. 13

    LA Bowl

  • College Football Playoff results: Indiana wins first national championship ever

    The 12-team 2025 College Football Playoff is done and Indiana has won its first-ever title after a thrilling victory over Miami.

    First-round byes

    CFP first-round matchups

    Friday, Dec. 19

    Alabama 34, Oklahoma 24

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    Saturday, Dec. 20

    Miami 10, Texas A&M 3
    Ole Miss 41, Tulane 10
    Oregon 51, James Madison 34

    The 2025 College Football Playoff bracket. (Yahoo Sports)

    The 2025 College Football Playoff bracket. (Yahoo Sports)

    CFP quarterfinals

    Wednesday, Dec. 31

    Cotton Bowl: Miami 24, Ohio State 14
    Orange Bowl: Oregon 23, Texas Tech 0
    Rose Bowl: Indiana 38, Alabama 3
    Sugar Bowl: Ole Miss 39, Georgia 34

    CFP semifinals

    Thursday, Jan. 8

    Fiesta Bowl: Miami 31, Ole Miss 27

    Friday, Jan. 9

    Peach Bowl: Indiana 56, Oregon 22

    CFP National Championship Game

    Monday, Jan. 19

    Indiana 27, Miami 21

  • Sorry SEC, the Big Ten has taken college football’s top spot: ‘I feel like we’re just getting started’

    MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Moments before kickoff here, while on the podium during ESPN College GameDay’s live segment, Nick Saban offered millions of people watching from home his theory on the Big Ten’s most recent dominance of this sport.

    In short, Saban attributed the Big Ten’s latest success to its schools using the loosening of athlete-compensation rules to coax Southern athletes — traditionally staying nearby in the SEC — to move north of the Mason-Dixon Line.

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    “You’ll never convince me otherwise,” Saban said, “because people in the South would not go to the North unless you paid them.”

    Twisting in the knife, Saban then slipped on the hat of the team he predicted would win it all: Miami.

    Four hours later, as red and white confetti rained from the skies of Hard Rock Stadium, the Indiana Hoosiers, of all programs, perhaps the most unlikely champion in decades given their past doldrums, a basketball school in the Midwest, beat up on one of those Southern programs to win the national championship.

    Indiana 27, Miami 21.

    And, in doing so, the Hoosiers — a confounding 16-0 two years after finishing 3-9 — delivered the Big Ten (those Northerners!) a remarkable and unexpected third consecutive title for the first time in 73 years.

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    “People down South … they play some great ball and they’re very physical,” Indiana offensive lineman Carter Smith said afterward, “but, you know, some people just need to open their eyes and see what’s going on up here.”

    MIAMI GARDENS, FLORIDA - JANUARY 19: Head coach Curt Cignetti of the Indiana Hoosiers looks on after defeating the Miami Hurricanes 27-21 in the 2026 College Football Playoff National Championship at Hard Rock Stadium on January 19, 2026 in Miami Gardens, Florida.  (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

    Indiana head coach Curt Cignetti has turned a historic losing program into a national champion in just a two-year span.

    (Carmen Mandato via Getty Images)

    Up here? The land of cornfields and cattle. Motown and deep-dish. The Great Lakes and the Breadbasket. The Motor City and snowplows.

    This is a place of hardworking, blue-collar folks who say things like, “You betcha” and “Uff da!” They slurp “pop” with their cheese curds and, on many weekend nights, get “schnockered” on some of the best beer you’ll ever drink.

    But on this Monday, in one of the deepest geographically southern places in America, amid a perfect 60-degree day (a brisk summer night for Midwesterners), Indiana, the place of farmland and fall foliage, polished off one of the most dramatic turnarounds in industry history.

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    “College football has changed quite a bit, the balance of power also,” Indiana coach Curt Cignetti said at the postgame news conference here.

    Perhaps a new villain of college football is emerging — a conference so dominant that many nationally shake their fists in fury.

    While the SEC failed to advance to a national championship game for a third straight year, the Big Ten three-peated — a stunning about-face in college football’s pecking order. A league that won three titles in 25 years, from 1997-2022, has claimed a trio.

    “Just maybe another conference isn’t all superior in all the land,” says one Big Ten official, a jest at the SEC. “Just maybe!”

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    Afterward, Big Ten officials, flooding the field in celebration, held up their ring, middle and index finger.

    Three.

    Michigan. Ohio State. And, the least likely of them all, Indiana.

    The last three football national champions derive from contiguous states inside a 300-mile radius mostly incorporating southern Indiana, central Ohio and southeastern Michigan.

    “It’s unbelievable,” Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti said. “It means so much for Indiana, but it means a lot for the entire league. What Indiana has done in two years, I’ve never seen anything like it in all of the years I’ve been in sports.”

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    Said Petitti about the Big Ten’s three titles: “I feel like we’re just getting started.”

    To put the Big Ten’s stretch in perspective, consider this: The last time the league won three straight football titles, the Nazis were gearing up for a takeover in Germany, the Manhattan Project began developing the atomic bomb and the iconic film Casablanca premiered.

    In fact, it was so long ago that the Ohio State team that capped the three-year run in 1942 beat that season an independent football club called “Iowa Preflight,” and the Buckeyes’ only loss that year was attributed to a mass outbreak of an intestinal disorder from players drinking unsanitary water from a fountain.

    You betcha, the Big Ten is back!

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    “It’s Tony Petitti! He’s our guy!” Indiana athletic director Scott Dolson screamed with glee into a reporter’s recorder.

    Dolson’s quote came with intent, directing praise to a man who for many months now has been the target of national criticism for ideas (not all his but the league’s as a whole) that often rattle cages: a 24-team playoff format and the pursuit of private-equity, just to name a couple.

    Some might say that Petitti is the bull and college sports is the china shop. But behind him is a league of administrators who are supporting and encouraging the decisions.

    And now before him on the field is yet another one of his schools winning it all.

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    “The Indiana story. I don’t think there’s anything else that’s been like this,” Petitti said. “What it means for Indiana and the fans … the transformation around this. Look at the turnout and what happened in the Rose Bowl, in Atlanta and what we’ve seen tonight.”

    Despite playing in its opponent’s home stadium, Indiana fans — its red-clad legion — out-numbered Miami fans nearly 2-to-1.

    Afterward, Dolson stood shocked.

    “I can’t believe it,” he barely uttered out of his mouth.

    Five years ago, Dolson and school president Pamela Whitten made a decision: Indiana must be good in football. Whitten said the staff “realigned the whole athletic department” and raised funds to transition to the world of NIL, the transfer portal and revenue sharing.

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    The final piece happened two years ago, when the school spent $15 million to fire Tom Allen and replace him with the 60-something-year-old coach from James Madison.

    “We happened to hire the best coach in America,” said Whitten, herself a southern lady, raised in Tennessee and educated in south Louisiana. “Indiana is the best university in the country and now we have the best football team in the country.”

    The best school, the best coach, the best university.

    The biggest alumni base in the country, too (more than 800,000).

    Cignetti, his players and this crew of administrators managed to turn the losingest program in college football into the most winning in the last two seasons: 27-2.

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    “It was because there wasn’t an emphasis on football,” Cignetti said afterward, explaining IU’s history. “Basketball school. You got to be good in football nowadays. We’ve got a president that comes from the South who loves football and an AD who is a tremendous fundraiser and the largest alumni base in the country.”

    There’s one thing that Cignetti would like to get off his chest, too, he says.

    In a comment maybe directed at his former boss, Saban, or others who point to cash as a reason for the success, the coach quipped, “Our NIL is nowhere what people think it is, so you can throw that out.”

    Is the Big Ten back?

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    You betcha.

  • Indiana wins! Reacting to the Hoosiers’ first CFP National Championship

    The Indiana Hoosiers are the new kings of college football. They claimed their first National Championship, in football, Monday night defeating Miami 27-21. Andy Staples, Ross Dellenger and Steven Godfrey join each other in Miami and discuss how the Hoosiers came away with the win.

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    Then, the guys discuss Nick Saban’s comments from Monday night. On GameDay, Nick Saban made the claim that NIL is the only reason the Big Ten has been successful recently. The crew reacts to Saban’s comments. They also look at how Curt Cignetti turned this Indiana program into a national champion in just two seasons. Is Indiana the new blueprint for success? How should some of the other coaches around college football feel that Coach Cignetti was able to turn the program around so quickly?

    Lastly, Andy, Ross and Godfrey talk about the latest drama with the transfer portal. It appears Miami is trying to lure Darian Mensah away from Duke. The problem is that Mensah has a very large NIL deal to be Duke’s quarterback, and they do not appear willing to let him out of it. The guys explain the whole situation and discuss how they think it might turn out.

    Get caught up on College Football with College Football Enquirer.

    Indiana wins the College Football Playoff National Championship   Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images

    Indiana wins the College Football Playoff National Championship Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images

    (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

    0:00:00 – Indiana Hoosiers with the National Championship

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    22:41 – Nick Saban takes a shot at the Big Ten

    25:23 – Cignetti’s Indiana turnaround

    44:13 – Will Darian Mensah be Miami’s next QB?

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

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