Curt Cignetti, Indiana
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Curt Cignetti is proving to be a nightmare for college football. Not for the sport, but for his peers who have long proclaimed that a national championship requires a blue-chip roster as its prerequisite.
The old-school, blunt-spoken coach completed his masterpiece on Monday night, leading Indiana to a 27-21 victory over Miami for the program’s first national title, capping one of the most
Not even rap stars in the wee hours of a Hoosiers celebration could deter Curt Cignetti whom, pausing that celebration, was already focused on work.
Curt Cignetti has come a long way, in a short time. In only two years of big-time college football — at a previously small-time Big Ten program — Cignetti has climbed to the top of the mountain. The question now becomes whether he’ll try to climb the same mountain again, or whether he’ll look for a new mountain.
College football fans are spinning the block on Paul Finebaum's comments from October of last year when he remained skeptical of Indiana and Curt Cignetti's success. After lifting the Hoosiers to the first double-digit win season in school history in 2024,
Indiana's 27-24 win over Miami in the College Football Playoff National Championship on Monday secured the Hoosiers their first-ever football title, but it was far from the first national championship to be won by a head coach from north central West Virginia.
Mike Florio believes that NFL teams still have interest in Indiana football head coach Curt Cignetti after his championship win.
Indiana coach Curt Cignetti blasted officials for missing three "obvious" personal foul calls on Hoosiers QB Fernando Mendoza — on a single drive.