IU ‘very close’ to AD decision
The search for the next IU athletics director is nearing its end, IU spokesman Larry MacIntyre said Sunday.PODCAST: Hoosier Headlines
The search for the next IU athletics director is nearing its end, IU spokesman Larry MacIntyre said Sunday.PODCAST: Hoosier Headlines
The search for the next IU athletics director is nearing its end, IU spokesman Larry MacIntyre said today. IU trustee Philip Eskew Jr. said the University announcement could come as early as this week.
For the first time since September, the IU football team and its fans know what it is like to win. The Hoosiers (3-5, 1-4) ended their five game losing streak on Homecoming, defeating Northwestern 21-19 after suffering a heartbreaking loss in Evanston, Ill., a year ago. Sophomore quarterback Ben Chappell, starting in place for injured junior Kellen Lewis, led the Hoosiers by running and throwing for a touchdown. Chappell spread the ball around well but completed the majority of his passes to freshmen Tandon Doss and Damarlo Belcher.
The hope Hoosier fans had for IU football in 2008 has slowly subsided over the team’s last five games, all losses. Now with five games remaining and seemingly no shot at going to a second-straight bowl game, IU will attempt to break out of its skid against Northwestern on Saturday.PODCAST: Hoosier Sidelines
How do the Hoosiers initiate change? Glad you asked.
The IU football team has been having a rough go at stopping opposing offenses lately. The Hoosiers (2-5, 0-4) have let up an even 100 points in their last two games, and an average of 40 points per game on their current five-game skid. “I think we got banged up a little bit mentally,” junior safety Nick Polk said. “But the guys have come together, and we have said we are going to stick together and pull through this.” Slowing the landslide of points won’t get any easier this Homecoming weekend, when the Hoosiers welcome to Bloomington the Northwestern Wildcats, a team with two dynamic facets to its offensive attack. The first head on the Wildcats’ offensive front is tailback Tyrell Sutton. Sutton comes into Saturday’s contest averaging just shy of 100 yards on the ground per game. But Sutton also comes out of the backfield to make big catches for NU. The Akron, Ohio, native has 28 grabs for 262 yards so far this season, with two touchdowns. Sutton is a smaller back – at 5-foot-9, 205 pounds – than the last two backs to run over the Hoosiers: Shonn Greene of Iowa and Jason Ford of Illinois. Greene had 115 yards and a score in Bloomington on Oct. 11, and Ford had 172 yards and three scores last weekend against IU. But senior safety Austin Thomas warned Sutton is bigger in person than what paper shows. “Wait till you see this guy’s legs,” Thomas said. “He’s a thick guy. He is a little quicker in space than Shonn Greene and Ford, who we played the other night. But he’s quick; he’s a good back.” Sutton helps to distract defenses from quarterback C.J. Bachér, who is equally formidable. After Bachér lit up opposing teams for 3,656 yards, seventh-most in Big Ten history, Sporting News named the California native the Big Ten’s “Best Player Under Pressure.” In seven games, Bachér has tallied solid offensive numbers, including a 112.6 passing efficiency, 1,545 yards through the air with 10 touchdowns. Bachér can also run – he has two rushing scores and 180 net yards.
IU coach Mick Lyon has never missed a Big Ten Conference tournament since he began coaching the Hoosiers, but this year he and his team are in danger of breaking the streak.
With two consecutive wins against top-15 teams, the IU men’s soccer team hopes to continue the momentum when it travels to Ohio State in a critical conference battle Sunday afternoon.
This weekend, the 6-0 IU club hockey team will take on the team that beat them in the American Collegiate Hockey Association Division II National Championship game last season. The Hoosiers will face off with Davenport, a team that heads into Friday’s game with an 11-0 record.
On Wednesday, the Indiana Daily Student had the chance to sit down and talk to IU’s first-year coach Tom Crean. Here is the interview in its entirety: Q: What are your plans for homecoming this weekend?
This weekend, the 6-0 IU club hockey team will take on the team that beat them in the American Collegiate Hockey Association Division II National Championship game last season. The Hoosiers will face off with Davenport University, who will head into Friday’s game with an 11-0 record. Both Friday’s and Saturday’s games will take place in Grand Rapids, Mich. The game is the first between the two teams since the title game.
Every day for the past week and a half, junior quarterback Kellen Lewis’ high-ankle sprain has listed him as questionable. Improvement in the injury has given the Hoosiers a case of optimism, but for now, they stick to the alternative: Ben Chappell. The sophomore and Bloomington South product started against Illinois last week and has filled in occasionally for the oft-injured Lewis. For most teams, the loss of a dynamic player and leader like Lewis can be irreparable. But having Chappell at the reigns is not new to this team.
I did it. Guilty as charged. I take all the blame. It was 100 percent my fault. I know what you are thinking, and you’re wrong. No, I didn’t rob a bank. Nor did I shoot the sheriff. I didn’t even cause the IU football team to lose again. Rather, I am guilty of planning a party I should have never planned.
NASCAR instituted the Chase for the Sprint Cup system to determine the season champion in 2004 in an effort to create more excitement in late-season races. At the time, no one would have expected a single driver to dominate the system as handily as Jimmie Johnson has. After last Sunday’s race at Martinsville Speedway, which Johnson won, the No. 48 is in prime position to score his third-straight title thanks to a commanding 149-point lead over second place Greg Biffle.
IU’s student section at men’s basketball games could be getting smaller, and its fate rests in the student body’s wallets.With the first home exhibition game just more than two weeks away, IU coach Tom Crean expressed concern about student season ticket sales in a one-on-one interview on Wednesday with the Indiana Daily Student.AUDIO: Tom Crean interview