Curt Cignetti gets head-turning coaching ranking amid Indiana football CFP 'fluke' claims

Zain Bando

Curt Cignetti gets head-turning coaching ranking amid Indiana football CFP 'fluke' claims image

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Curt Cignetti is back to defend his place as one of college football's most prolific coaches while also proving last season's 11-2 finish wasn't a "fluke" as much as ESPN's Paul Finebaum claims it was.

"You had two really good teams in the Big Ten last year," Finebaum said earlier this month. "Indiana wasn't great. They were a fluke."

Finebaum's theme remained a firm sticking point before last December's season-ending defeat against Notre Dame, claiming the Hoosiers had no business making the postseason after getting trounced by Ohio State in Columbus in November. The reason being? Their nonconference cupcakes.

"I feel like the biggest con job in the playoff is Indiana," Finebaum said at the time. "You said they bought their way out of that game; their other two games were Florida International and Charlotte. They're both disgraceful nonconference opponents. They did not have a legitimate nonconference opponent."

Nevertheless, SN's Bill Bender gave the Hoosiers the benefit of the doubt as he ranked Cignetti No. 17 in the outlet's annual preseason top 25 rankings.

"Do a quick internet search," Bender wrote. "Cignetti is the real deal. He led the Hoosiers to a dream season that included a berth in the College Football Playoff, and he pieced together back-to-back 11-win seasons with Indiana and James Madison with the help of his aggressive transfer portal approach. Cignetti won SN Coach of the Year honors as a result."'

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With a new quarterback in Fernando Mendoza, amongst other key pieces, it begs a million-dollar question.

"Will Cignetti build an "emerging superpower" at Indiana?" Bender pondered. "A tougher conference schedule in 2025 will provide an early answer."

The conference schedule is anything but a cakewalk for Cignetti and Co. For one, the Hoosiers welcome a surging Illinois team to open the conference slate Sept. 20. Their schedule also includes roadtrips to Iowa (Sept. 27), Oregon (Oct. 11) and Penn State (Nov. 8). To return to the College Football Playoff may require two wins out of those three games, or all three.

It remains to be seen whether the Hoosiers can get back to the postseason. Even so, reaching a bowl berth will prove they are anything but a so-called "fluke."

The Hoosiers host Old Dominion for their season opener, beginning a four-game home stand to start the year.

Zain Bando

Zain Bando is a freelance writer for The Sporting News. He is a graduate of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism. Over the years, Bando has written about various beats surrounding Illinois, Northwestern, and Kansas State Athletics but sticks to the Big Ten as his primary expertise. Outside of collegiate reporting, Bando covers MMA and boxing for MMA Knockout On Sports Illustrated and hosts/co-hosts two podcasts as part of the Empty The Bench Podcast Network – Bando's Breakdowns and The MMA Outsiders, which air weekly on YouTube and are distributed on all podcast platforms Wednesday nights and Friday afternoons. Bando is a Chicago Suburban native and a member of the FWAA and USBWA, continuing to hone his professional skills as a sports journalist and media personality. Since June 2019, Bando's byline has been featured in numerous media outlets, including MSN, Yardbarker, Deadspin, FanSided, BJPenn.com, Bridge Media Network (Sports News Highlights), Mike Farrell Sports, Reuters, and more. When Bando is not writing, he binges on old UFC fights, spends time with family and friends, memorizes every Super Bowl, and manifests all the places he still has to travel to (even while bringing his laptop).