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Friday, May 22
The Indiana Daily Student

IU's Jocelyn Moses fights with two Illinois defenders during IU’s 1-0 victory Sunday at Bill Armstrong Stadium.

1st Big Ten win comes vs. No. 25 Illinois for women's soccer team

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It took four scrappy, heartbreaking weekends, but the IU women’s soccer team was finally able to pick up important Big Ten Conference points. Coming into the weekend 0-6 in conference play, the Hoosiers had received zero points. After this weekend’s play, the Hoosiers (6-10-1, 1-6-1) now have four points after tying conference leader Purdue on Friday night 1-1 and getting their first conference win Sunday afternoon, defeating No 25. Illinois 1-0. “We told them destiny is in their own hands, and they need to start getting points and winning games,” IU coach Mick Lyon said. “There are no passionate rah-rah speeches from the coaches. It’s turned over to them.”


Senior IU defensive end Ryan Marando, right, walks off the field ahead of IU head coach Bill Lynch following IU's 55-13 loss to Illinois on Saturday in Champaign, Ill. In two straight games, the Hoosiers have allowed 103 points.

Football team outclassed in 55-13 drubbing

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CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — The IU football team's latest defeat – a 55-13 whooping – came at the hands of border-rival Illinois (4-3, 2-2). The Hoosiers (2-5, 0-4) were outgained 563 total yards to 313. SLIDESHOW: IU at Illinois


The Indiana Daily Student

Time to change up the approach

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CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — IU coach Bill Lynch said it, as he so often has. “We put together little drives, but we didn’t finish anything,” Lynch said after his team’s 55-13 loss to Illinois on Saturday night. “We give up way too many big plays. Teams have really done a good job taking away our big plays.” Try this – snag some pages from Illinois coach Ron Zook’s playbook, because, boy, that guy knows how to conduct a productive offense. And with IU’s season becoming sickening to watch, now would be an appropriate time.


The Indiana Daily Student

Women start Hoosier Hysteria with a punch

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With the lights turned down and music blaring, several figures in white robes and two with red boxing gloves emerged from the tunnel. These fighters were not your average boxers, but instead the coaching staff for the women’s basketball team.


Defensive end Ryan Marando (right) and IU coach Bill Lynch (left) walk off the field Saturday at Memorial Stadium in Champaign, Ill. after a 55-13 defeat to the Fighting Illini. The loss was the fifth straight for the Hoosiers.

Hoosiers fall in 5th straight

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — The IU football team was outplayed in seemingly every facet of a football game possible Saturday, as they dropped their fifth straight contest. This defeat came at the hands of border rivals Illinois (4-3, 2-2), a 55-13 drubbing. The Hoosiers (2-5, 0-4) were outgained 563 total yards to 313. It is the fourth time on the skid IU allowed more than 40 points, while it has scored only 29 total in their last three games. The Hoosiers were without starting quarterback Kellen Lewis who suffered a high-ankle sprain against Iowa last weekend. Replacing him was sophomore Ben Chappell. In his first collegiate start, Chappell was 12 for 29 with 172 yards and no scores. The Bloomington native was sacked 4 times.


IU men's basketball coach Tom Crean waves to the crowd at Hoosier Hysteria on Friday night at Assembly Hall.

Hoosier Hysteria kicks off Crean era Friday

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Montages, surf boards, hula hoops and yes, even a little basketball were all part of Hoosier Hysteria in Assembly Hall on Friday night. About 8,500 fans came to greet their brand new team – 12 players donned the Cream and Crimson for the first time in front of a crowd Friday – as well as pay tribute to Hoosier basketball legends of the past seven decades.




The Indiana Daily Student

Glass to the past, eye on the future

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Hold hands, deep breaths – let’s get hysterical. That’s right, Hoosier fans, as though you needed me to tell you it was coming: It’s Hoosier Hysteria time again. Time to blast off on another year of ruckus and roundball down on 17th Street.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dynamic offense awaits skidding 2-4 Hoosiers

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A missed block, a missed assignment or pouncing for the ball at the wrong time. That’s how the option can kill you.IU was on the losing end of that formula when the Hoosiers (2-4, 0-3) played Illinois (3-3, 1-2) a year ago at the Bloomington version of Memorial Stadium. Rashard Mendenhall, quarterback Juice Williams and wide receiver Arrelious Benn thoroughly exposed the IU defense, running for 288 yards.This time around, expect more of the same.


Senior wide receiver Brandon Walker-Roby takes a hit from Iowa defensive back Amari Spievey in front of a thinning Memorial Stadium crowd during the Hoosiers 45-9 loss to Iowa Saturday afternoon at Memorial Stadium.

IU might be without QB Lewis Saturday against Illinois

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Halting the negative momentum a four-game losing streak carries will not be easy for the IU football team (2-4). Making the task more difficult will be the possible absence of the Hoosiers’ offensive catalyst, Kellen Lewis. During practices this week, Lewis wore a protective gray immobilizing boot around his right ankle, nursing what IU coach Bill Lynch called a high-ankle sprain. “(We) went through halftime, got it re-taped and all that, and we thought that it would loosen up and we’d get him going in the second half, and it never loosened up," Lynch said of Lewis' injury sustained against Iowa. “Some athletes bounce back pretty quickly. He really hasn’t been hurt much, so we haven’t really been through this in terms of how quickly he can bounce back. Certainly, we’re hopeful that a guy like that can bounce back quicker than our 300-pound guys, just because of his body type.”


IU freshman forward Carly Samp takes on four Ohio State defenders as she pushes upfield for a goal attempt on Sunday, Sept. 28 at Bill Armstrong Stadium.

Hoosiers look to snap skid against in-state rival Purdue, Illinois

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The IU women’s soccer team will return home this weekend, enjoying the comforts of Bloomington for the first time since Sept. 28. The Hoosiers (5-10-0, 0-6) have been on the road the last four games, narrowly losing each game by a one-goal deficit. “I think the kids are going to be excited to get back on their pitch,” IU coach Mick Lyon said. “You know, with short, fast grass, instead of this thick, mush stuff they have up north, that’s definitely going to be to our benefit.”


IU freshman Lexie Woodson, No. 14, sets the ball as Ball State's Jennifer Boyd, No. 12, watches from across the net during the TIS Bookstore Invitational on Friday, Sept. 19 at University Gym. IU swept Ball State 3-0.

Newly refocused team to ‘fight for now’ after rough start

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The women’s volleyball team took a step backward last weekend on the road against Minnesota and Iowa, putting them 1-5 in the Big Ten with only 14 matches left. “We just didn’t show up,” said senior captain Erica Short. “We didn’t enter the building. I don’t know who played last weekend. It wasn’t an IU program at all.”