Nolden sets tone offensively, defensively for Hoosiers
The throw that gave Will Nolden his 15 seconds of fame may have clinched IU’s victory against Louisville Saturday night.
The throw that gave Will Nolden his 15 seconds of fame may have clinched IU’s victory against Louisville Saturday night.
IU Coach Tracy Smith has dealt with people doubting his team all year.
Now that the IU baseball team has won its first College World Series game, it gets a day to recharge.
Joey DeNato fired a complete-game shutout as IU beat Louisville 2-0 to win its first College World Series game Saturday at TD Ameritrade Park.
The throw that gave Nolden his 15 seconds of fame may have saved IU's victory against Louisville Saturday night.
IU defeated Louisville 2-0 Saturday in Omaha, Neb., in its first game of the College World Series, advancing to the winner's side of the bracket in the double-elimination tournament.
IU Coach Tracy Smith was named National Coach of the Year by the National Collegiate Baseball Writer's Association Saturday morning in Omaha, Neb.
But the leadership of its four seniors — Michael Basil, Justin Cureton, Walker Stadler and Trace Knoblauch — has been integral in IU baseball’s historic ascent to its first College World Series appearance.
Juergen Sommer started as a walk-on goalie at IU, and now he is the first head coach of Indianapolis’ professional soccer team, the Indy Eleven.The team announced Sommer as the coach and Director of Soccer Operations Tuesday.While at IU, Sommer led the Hoosiers to their third NCAA Championship in 1988.He recorded 57 career wins in goal, good for third all-time in the IU history books.In 1989, Sommer guided the Hoosiers back to a Final Four appearance.He finished his collegiate career in 1990 by being named Soccer America’s Goalkeeper of the Year.“Juergen has overachieved at every level and has wonderful tactical awareness of the game,” former IU Coach Jerry Yeagley said in a press release. “But the most important trait he possesses is that he is extremely good at building personal relationships. As the coach of a new professional team you need someone that can pull everything together and create the chemistry needed to make your club a championship caliber program, and Juergen is the ideal choice to do that.”Sommer appeared in eight caps for the U.S. national team between 1994 and 1998, earning spots on both the `94 and `98 World Cup rosters.He became the first American goalkeeper to play in the prestigious English Premier League in 1995, guarding the goal for the Queens Park Rangers. He made 60 appearances for QPR.Sommer returned to the U.S. and Major League Soccer in 1998, joining the Columbus Crew, and then the New England Revolution in 2000.“The mentorship of some tremendous coaches throughout my career, including several from right here in Indiana, has prepared me for this opportunity,” Sommer said in a press release. “And I relish the challenge of serving in that role.”The Indy Eleven will begin play in 2014 in the North American Soccer League, the second-highest level of professional soccer in the U.S.— Robby Howard
According to peegs.com and the Los Angeles Times, Venice High School (California) quarterback Alexander Diamont committed to the IU football program Wednesday.
Former IU high jumper Derek Drouin was named National Field Athlete of the Year Wednesday by the U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association.
In the past three games — the two super regional games and the regional championship, arguably the three most important in IU history — Coursen-Carr has recorded either a win or a save.
For most of the year, the sign inside the Scott Rolen Clubhouse read “Omaha.”Nothing more.
Saturday will be the fourth meeting this season between Indiana and Louisville, and on the biggest stage yet.
If you were paying even the least bit of attention to IU athletics during the 2011-12 season, you were aware of Hoosier basketball’s “resurrection.” However, something of even greater magnitude has transpired during the past week.
IU will play Louisville Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Hoosiers' first appearance in Omaha, Neb.
DeAndre Herron, a 6-foot-5-inch, 325 pound offensive tackle, committed to the IU football program Saturday afternoon.
The joyous resurrection of the IU basketball program, while just cause for celebration, has nearly drowned out the quiet, yet undeniable rise of another program on campus.
Thirty-seven years ago, the crowd inside Assembly Hall roared for the girls in green.
IU clinched its first appearance in the College World Series with an 11-6 win over Florida State Sunday at Dick Howser Stadium in Tallahassee, Fla.