Indiana football finished Bucket win
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Curt Cignetti reasserts Indiana’s rise, reflecting on signature wins and redefining urgency ahead of the Hoosiers’ rivalry finale vs. Purdue.
Whatever happens in Big Ten championship game or the CFP, this season has changed so much about Indiana for the foreseeable future. Maybe for good.
The Hoosiers did something the rivalry hasn't seen since the 1890s. But neither coach expects the dominance to remain.
Indiana football coach Curt Cignetti discusses the state of the rivalry against Purdue after winning the Old Oaken Bucket game 56-3 on Friday night.
Curt Cignetti says Indiana won't take Purdue lightly despite the 2-9 record. Why he "respects what he sees" on film from the Boilermakers.
Indiana is on track another playoff appearance under Curt Cignetti. Other teams probably won’t find a coach like him.
Amid rumors the Indiana head football coach could be a replacement for the fired James Franklin at Penn State, Cignetti and the Hoosiers agreed to an eight-year contract extension that will pay him an average annual value of $11.6 million. He said he plans on retiring as a Hoosier following this deal:
In Curt Cignetti's 43 years coaching football, he's never seen a player turn short catches into long gains more often than Indiana tight end Riley Nowakowski.
"Have fun." Indiana football players didn't get a typical Curt Cignetti halftime speech at Wisconsin, here's why:
Indiana didn’t need a resume boost this year, but still got one by beating the Boilermakers by more points (53) than the combined margin of victory of Notre Dame (26) and Ohio State (24), two fellow postseason contenders.
The Hoosiers have Big Ten and national title aspirations, but coach Curt Cignetti is doing his best to keep them focused on Saturday's game against Purdue.