Women's soccer team remains hopeful for upcoming games
The women's soccer team enjoys pressure. The Hoosiers like to put it on their opponents, and they like to put it on themselves.
The women's soccer team enjoys pressure. The Hoosiers like to put it on their opponents, and they like to put it on themselves.
If women's soccer coach Joe Kelley is on a recruiting trip, there's a good chance he wound up in his hometown of St. Louis. Just look at the history.
The football team is second in the Big Ten in total offense and scoring offense. That's not surprising at first glance.
It's a thankless job, freshman volleyball manager Jeremy Evans said. But somebody's got to do it.
Some great scores, some not-so-great scores, but not enough good scores. It proved to be the downfall at times last season for the IU women's golf team, and the first tournament of the season was no exception this past weekend.
They scored in bunches. They made big plays on special teams. And most importantly, they stopped the opponent from scoring.
Men's soccer coach Jerry Yeagley said that if he knew what was causing his team's lack of offense, he'd bottle it and sell it. The trouble is the Hoosiers haven't solved their offensive problems.
Finally, in post-game interviews Saturday, Mandina, a senior defensive tackle, got his wish. He was asked about how much the defensive unit that he leads improved from the first two games of the year. At last, the defense had improved as he had promised it would.
The Roy Griak Invitational this weekend gave the men's and women's cross country teams their first encounter with nationally-ranked competition.
EAST LANSING, Mich. - The final score to the men's soccer match read IU 1, Michigan State 0, but the Hoosiers' didn\'t have much to celebrate Sunday at Old College Field.
COLUMBUS, OHIO -- The women's soccer team needed to score. And they needed to win in the worst way.
The field hockey team survived its battle against rival No. 4 Michigan by playing a game of cat and mouse.
The women's volleyball team hoped to usher in the Big Ten season by making a statement with an opening weekend sweep of Northwestern and No. 14 Wisconsin.
The men's tennis team competed in the unscored Tom Fallon Invitational in South Bend this weekend, giving players a chance to compete and coaches a chance to see where the players stand.
The rugby team is on a mission. After narrowly missing a run at the final four of the national rugby championships last year, the team is working to avenge the loss.
It is the biggest stage in football. Everybody watches, and everybody who plays knows a national audience is watching and wants to perform to the best of their abilities.
It could be harder for IU field hockey. They could be playing one of the top three teams in the country, but instead the Hoosiers must face No. 4 Michigan at 3 p.m. today in the John Mellencamp Pavilion.
A weekend of firsts awaits the women's cross country team as it travels to St. Paul, Minn., to compete in the Roy Griak Invitational Saturday. Along with being the first time in IU history the team has participated in the meet, it will also be the first time this season the women will participate in a 6K race. This distance holds new significance this year, since the 2000 Women's NCAA Championship race will be a 6K, rather than a 5K as in previous years.
Wisconsin sits near the top of the Big Ten heading into the opening weekend of the volleyball season. Northwestern idles in the league cellar. Indiana hovers between both, not expected to contend for the conference crown, but not expected to join the Wildcats in the basement.
In a move she called a coup, former IU basketball coach Bob Knight's secretary, Mary Ann Davis will be reassigned within the University, athletics director Clarence Doninger said Thursday. Davis said she was forced to leave against her wishes by Doninger.