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Fernando Mendoza's Bruises Shown in Postgame Photo
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The Indiana Hoosiers were ready to party, and hundreds of loyal fans joined them when they arrived back on campus in Bloomington.
The 2025 season has come to a close, and Indiana has won the national championship. As they built a roster with major help from the College Football Transfer Portal, other teams will surely look to copy the success. With the transfer portal slowing down, it is time to look at who won and who lost in the portal this year.
Indiana and its brash coach made their most emphatic statement yet on Monday night with the national championship win
Only two years ago, Indiana winning a title was unthinkable. Then, it seemed inevitable the Hoosiers would win.
The 2025 Indiana football story was so good that it canceled out the merely excellent ones. There was Alabama, trying to return to glory after Nick Saban’s retirement, Oregon’s endless quest to join the sport’s real powers and Miami’s Cinderella run through the College Football Playoff on the way to a national championship game in its home stadium.
After Indiana's improbable national championship run in Year 2 under Curt Cignetti, several programs are aiming to replicate the blueprint
Completing one of the most unbelievable turnarounds in sports history with their gutsiest performance yet, the Indiana Hoosiers won their first national championship in college football Monday night.
Indiana's run wasn't based on stars or luck. It won with discipline paired with a sport reshaped by NIL and the transfer portal.
The college football season has finished with Indiana as national champions. How did the rest of the US LBM Coaches Poll Top 26 shake out? Here it is:
Led by Heisman Trophy-winning QB Fernando Mendoza, Indiana topped Miami to secure the school's first ever college football national title on Monday. Eric Edholm provides three takeaways with an eye on the 2026 NFL Draft.
Indiana’s season is going to stick with fans for a long time. Not just because of how it ended, but because of how fast everything flipped. Under Curt Cignetti, the Hoosiers went from college football‘s biggest losers to national