Ohio State dominates IU, 33-14
When IU coach Bill Lynch said that his team has never faced a player like Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor, he wasn’t kidding.
When IU coach Bill Lynch said that his team has never faced a player like Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor, he wasn’t kidding.
IU football coach Bill Lynch said the Hoosiers' biggest challenge Saturday will be No. 9 Ohio State’s dual-threat sophomore quarterback Terrelle Pryor, the preseason Big Ten Offensive Player of the Year.
Ignorance is bliss for the Hoosiers. While Thomas Gray certainly didn’t have the IU football team on his mind when he wrote his much-referenced poem in 1742, his words ring true in the Hoosiers’ 2009 Big Ten season.
In 1987, the 3-1 Hoosiers traveled to Columbus, Ohio, to face the Buckeyes. While this year’s game is in Bloomington, the current Hoosiers can only hope the game result is the same.
The Hoosiers’ 36-33 loss to Michigan last week in Ann Arbor was watched in nearly 2.1 million households, the second-most ever among Big Ten football telecast on ESPN 2.
Despite increasing student seating from 8,100 to 11,000, nearly a third of the normal seating, all seats for the student body for IU's Saturday matchup against No. 9 Ohio State have been sold out as of Thursday morning, according to an IU Athletics press release.
Twenty years ago on a cold Nov. 11 afternoon in Madison, Wisc., then-IU football coach Bill Mallory roamed the sidelines of Camp Randall Stadium until he reached senior running back Anthony Thompson.
The IU football team is entering the heart of the Big Ten season not knowing exactly what kind of team they have.
Here are five conference you have to tune into if you're a Big Ten fan.
If students plan to attend the Oct. 3 game against Ohio State and participate in the dedication of the North End Zone, they have to act fast.
Less than 1,000 student tickets remain and just over 5,000 reserved seats are available for Saturday's contest, slated to kick off at 7 p.m.
A late controversial interception halted an IU drive late in Saturday's game, allowing No. 23 Michigan to eek out a 36-33 victory. IDS football writer Nathan Hart examines the simultaneous catch rule in a Hoosier Hype post. What do you think? Sound off on the Hoosier Hype blog.
In the midst of an exciting Week 4 contest, there was simply a feeling IU would let a victory against the Wolverines slip away.
In the first play of IU’s final drive as the team trailed 36-33, Michigan cornerback Donovan Warren wrestled the ball out of IU wideout Damarlo Belcher’s hands as the two players fell to the ground.
IU finished with more total yards and time of possession than No. 23 Michigan on Saturday, but the Wolverines did one thing the Hoosiers could not. They capitalized when opportunities presented themselves.
ANN ARBOR, Mich. – All the parts were in place for a larger-than-life upset. After IU freshman running back Darius Willis sprinted to an 85-yard touchdown run late in the fourth quarter, the Hoosiers just needed to make one stop.
On a cloudy Saturday in Ann Arbor, the IU football team looked to make the day a little bit gloomier for Michigan fans, but came up short against the No. 23 Wolverines, losing 33-36.
IU senior linebacker Will Patterson is one of the most tenacious players on the roster – just ask IU senior cornerback Nick Polk.
Junior quarterback Ben Chappell was 5 months old the last time IU beat Michigan.
Do you remember the popular, rich and physically superior bully that pushed you around through your grade school days? If you do, then you understand how the IU football team feels when they play the University of Michigan.