O'Gara: As an Indiana graduate, I still cannot process what's happening in Bloomington
I’m an Indiana graduate but not an Indiana football fan.
Let me explain. I want my alma mater to have success at everything. Roughly 8 different times during the first Saturday College GameDay for football, I got chills watching from my couch in Orlando. At one point, I’m pretty sure I fought back tears as the GameDay crew explained how to play “Sink the Biz” at the locally famous Nick’s English Hut, where my wife (also an Indiana graduate who studied far more than I did) and I hosted our rehearsal dinner when we got married on the outskirts of Bloomington in 2016.
The 2024 version of Indiana football has brought me immense pride nearly a year removed from admittedly Googling “Curt Cignetti” for the first time (I confirmed before he said his signature catchphrase that he does indeed win).
But to be considered a fan of anything, one must endure the suffering, as well. An Indiana football loss has never ruined a Saturday for me. My fall happiness isn’t dependent on what the Hoosiers do on a given fall Saturday, so it would be stolen fan valor to liken myself to those who truly bleed crimson in the fall (IU basketball is a different story).
I prefaced this “I can’t believe this is actually happening” column with that disclaimer because while some might assume I can’t be objective about this personal subject, I can assure anyone reading this that I have 16 years of experience in that department.
Would that have been different if IU had a rich history of football instead of getting constant reminders amid this historic season that no Power Conference program has lost more games than the Hoosiers? Uh, yeah. Duh. But for so many Indiana graduates like myself, we learned long ago why years like this are almost inconceivable. Or at the very least, they’re only conceivable if you’re elite at the College Football ’25 video game.
Does that make us haters? Or does that make us fair-weather fans? I guess it depends on how you’d define that.
You see, some elements of Indiana football might not come up on the old Google machine like beyond the fact that IU football hasn’t won a bowl game since 1991. (The Hoosiers have only played in 6 since.)
One is that for so many of us during our college experience, going to football games is a fall tradition. Or rather, tailgating across from Memorial Stadium — in one of the more underrated scenes for such festivities — is a fall tradition. Actually stumbling across 17th St. and going into the stadium was a freshman tradition. For the rest of us, tailgating until kickoff, then going home to sleep and/or watch bigger college football games was our tradition (there was no better accidental alarm clock than when those drums would drop at 3:30 on CBS).
There was another not-so-flattering tradition for Indiana football that even the most diehard Hoosiers might not be aware of. If you ever wondered how a team that rarely filled its stadium would get full crowd shots for any sort of media guide cover or weight room wall, thank Ohio State for that. When the Buckeyes would come to town and fans would purchase their cheapest road tickets of the year, they’d fill the stadium … and provide the perfect setting for that aerial promotional picture of Memorial Stadium because red and crimson look pretty darn similar.
Cignetti changed that overnight.
My cousin, a current senior at IU who goes to every game now, will text me weekly videos of the scene from Memorial Stadium that looks like a venue on a different continent compared to the venue we saw my senior year when IU went 1-11 (13-35 without a bowl berth was my college experience). The headline “IU has sold out the rest of its home game tickets” was the type of thing that often couldn’t have even been written sarcastically ahead of the Old Oaken Bucket game (the regular-season finalé), much less in mid-October with 3 home games left.
It’ll be surreal to see a sold-out Memorial Stadium on Saturday at 3:30 ET on CBS as No. 8 IU looks to improve to 10-0 as a 2-touchdown favorite against Michigan. I can’t decide which part of that sentence is most unbelievable. All of it? IU has never won 10 games in any season, much less the first 10.
One of my most vivid sober college memories was in 2010. At the time, I was one of the football beat reporters for the Indiana Daily Student. That morning, I walked up Indiana Ave. from our 5-bedroom college house off N. Dunn St. I had an extra pep in my step because on that hazy, early-October day, 3-0 IU was set to host No. 19 Michigan (I was a bit too proud of the “Defending Denard” Robinson preview section headline that I came up with months earlier in anticipation that slowing down Michigan QB Denard Robinson would be a tall task).
The tailgate fields were packed and there was a certain kind of buzz because IU had lost 16 consecutive games against Michigan. But if IU could indeed defend Denard, it would perhaps earn an AP Top 25 berth for the first time in 16 years. As I got to the press box that day and eventually looked around at the sellout crowd of 52,929 fans, I had a realization that people rarely felt on a fall Saturday in Bloomington.
“This is what big-time college football feels like, huh?”
Unfortunately for IU, it didn’t defend Denard. Robinson’s 5-touchdown, 494-yard performance led Michigan to an all-too-familiar 42-35 victory, which was the first of IU’s 7 consecutive Big Ten losses that season. As it stands, the last time that IU beat Michigan in front of its home fans was in 1987. The “in front of its home fans” is a key distinction because naturally, IU ended the Michigan losing streak in 2020 … when COVID prevented any fans from witnessing it.
Needless to say, that’ll be a different story if IU can avoid a letdown on Saturday against the defending national champs. And sure, there would be a certain “this is why IU football can’t have nice things” if that letdown occurs. But the first 9-0 start in program history is a nice thing that won’t be taken away even if IU can’t beat Michigan in front of its home fans for the first time since the Ronald Reagan administration.
Maybe the only “letdown” of IU’s season will be failing to play a 60-minute game against Ohio State in Week 13. For some, that’ll be the only true measuring stick game for the Hoosiers’ 12-team Playoff credentials and they’ll ignore a 9-0 start with nothing but double-digit victories. Fair? I haven’t fully processed whether that’s fair because I still haven’t fully processed these first 2 months in Bloomington.
I can’t imagine IU students like my cousin making the walk up Indiana Ave. and tailgating before a potential home Playoff game at Memorial Stadium. I’m sure it felt that way walking up to the South End of Memorial Stadium to take in College GameDay. For plenty of graduates like myself, there was probably a pessimistic thought that IU’s season would peak that morning. Instead, Cignetti led IU to a pair of wins by a combined score of 78-27.
This isn’t just historically different; it’s inconceivable. Big-time college football in Bloomington? In November?!?
You don’t have to Google anything to process that. Just watch CBS on Saturday afternoon.
Well I guess Indiana is down south now. What a joke this sight as become.
Down South of Canada, I suppose. What can we expect from persons from a conference that can’t count ? They need to pull off their shoes and socks in order to count how many teams that they represent. They need also to realize that ‘B 1 G’ doesn’t represent anything .
Tough to argue that Texas, Oklahoma, and Missouri (the states) are in the southeast. Cal, Stanford, SMU in the ACC? I think its safe to say that conference names really don’t matter much in the modern, directionally challenged world of college football.
Indiana is more southern than Missouri.
Absurd… I know both states very well and Indiana is virtually the same as Illinois and Ohio culturally… I assume you think those states are more southern than MO too?
Indiana is WAY more conservative than Illinois
Nope. About one third of Missouri is south of the southernmost border of Indiana. And Indiana’s territorial footprint extends well north of Missouri’s. Check a map.
“Check a map.”
Misery is west of Illinois, pedo. It’s funny though that you actually think I’m talking geography. People in Indiana act more southern than people in Misery.
“I know both states very well and Indiana is virtually the same as Illinois and Ohio culturally…”
Indiana and Ohio are conservative states, she/her.
Have you ever been to southern Indiana? It’s basically Kentucky
Yep.
It’s more Louisville-y/midwest
He means down in southern Indiana.
This is the best college football site on the internet by far. I grew up near Gainesville and I suffer. My daughter went to IU and it is nice to see them win after decades of futility. There is more to college football than Georgia and Alabama.
Cool story… What’s this have to do with SEC football?
IU!
Hope they show out.
Everyone outside of UM will be an IU fan Saturday.
“They don’t play in the SEC! They wouldn’t win one game in this conference! It just means more! Richard effin’ Petty PAWWWL!”
I laughed out loud at this
I consider Indiana a southern state.
Let me help you process it….. it’s called being overrated and it’s a result of playing nobody.
Someone is mad because their team is hot garbage. Wasn’t that long ago Kentucky FB was in the same boat (i.e a laughing stock). Indiana may just transcend heights Kentucky could only dream of
Says the guy trolling around for gaslighting opportunities… ever heard of projection?
I pointed out the truth, it happens every year, come back and see me after IU plays an SEC team
Well I know exactly what what would happen if they played Kentucky…
I don’t troll anybody. Make stupid statements win stupid prizes
as of this post, half of the comments are sharing a level of frustration that o’gara went outside of the sec footprint with this article. geez.
it’s a cool story. iu is 9-0. they’re a 2-td fav against a team that we all know skirted the rules last year. it’s newsworthy…and the impact of this game…and the remainder of games for iu will play a big part in the ultimate selection and ranking of the cfp. there….there’s your relevance to the sec.
You know, “new rope” and all…..
Right? It’s one of the biggest stories in CFB. But don’t write an article about it cuz, geography….
What are the odds Cignetti stays at Indiana? If I’m the Florida brass I’m doing everything in my power to land him. If they wait until next year time unload CBN it may be too late
Whose more neck?
Indy Anna, Mizz w-hore- e, or Ill in noise?
ha ha.
Makes sense why the writing on this site about the south has been going even more downhill. Yankee