Mike Lopresti: Indiana’s magical season, by the numbers
Indiana football has rarely, if ever, been the subject of nationwide conversation among college fans.
Indiana football has rarely, if ever, been the subject of nationwide conversation among college fans.
In their combined 98 seasons of coaching, Holmes and Keefer thought they had seen it all.
The idea of Indy hosting all of March Madness is thrilling. Let’s make it the ultimate showcase of our state’s favorite sport.
Let the record show that as of Veterans Day, 2020, Indiana and Purdue were a combined 5-0 in the Big Ten, while Penn State, Michigan, Michigan State, Iowa and Nebraska were 3-11.
George Washington had wicket, Ford excelled on the gridiron and Reagan was a swimmer. White House occupants have a history of playing and watching—or trying to influence—the sports Americans love.
The Big Ten plan will play eight games in eight weeks to determine its final standings. Good luck on that one.
This could be the year of an all-Chicago World Series between the Cubs and White Sox. The only other time that happened was 1906.
Krzyzewski and Belichick haven’t been the only thorns in our side.
Oddities abound, including the Colts playing a game on the first day of the Masters.
Tipoff is nearing. The Indiana Pacers face the Miami Heat in a playoff game in an hour and all is ready for the TV broadcast team of Chris Denari and Quinn Buckner. There’s the huge screen before them, plus additional smaller monitors. There are the chairs each man will use—12 feet apart. The crew is […]
By now, however, we’d all probably like to have something in the world of sports that we can count on.
It’s July, and the diehards are camped outside ballparks listening to what’s going on inside.
The monikers we associate with our favorite teams have interesting origins, among them are children, fires and passing thunderstorms.
It took years for Rajeev Ram to win a major, but that victory makes an uncertain future for tennis easier to endure.
The struggling Indiana-Kentucky series is on pause because of the pandemic, but its new leader has pledged it will return.
From the Mannings to the Unsers to the Griffeys, Hoosiers have been fortunate to witness some famous family acts.
Mel Rojas Jr. was born here and played for the Indians at Victory Field. Now he’s thriving in the KBO League, the only one on the planet playing baseball.
The Speedway and other venues paused for more than one season as World War II monopolized priorities and resources.
Our college and pro teams would like do-overs of some of their most heart-breaking defeats.
Pandemic throws a new challenge at city’s time-tested ability to host giant sports events.