
To say that there haven't been a lot of great moments in the history of Indiana University football is more than an understatement. In 108 seasons of football the Hoosiers have won exactly two conference titles. Not to put too fine a point on it, but the University of Chicago has seven Big Ten football titles, and they quit playing big-time football in 1939.
Terry Hoeppner looked to be the one who could turn it around. He was that rarest of breeds, a proven college coach who didn't consider a stint in Bloomington to be an act of violence against his professional reputation. Hoeppner arrived from Miami University in 2005 and quickly installed self-confidence in his Hoosiers. He wasn't able to get them to a bowl game in his first two seasons, but anybody who followed the Big Ten had to figure it was just a matter of time.
Time, unfortunately, was running out. Hoeppner had a brain tumor and, following a rigorous course of treatment, the university announced that he would not coach in 2007. A few days after IU's announcement, Hoeppner died.
There are times you just wish the clock could stand still for a few days or weeks. But it doesn't, ever. The Hoosiers had only a little time to grieve for their coach. Most of us quietly wrote off Indiana's upcoming season, figuring the Hoosiers couldn't recover from the tragedy. We were wrong, of course.
Troubling news out of Bloomington today, as incumbent starting quarterback
Gholston will be a major loss. The Detroit junior was a terror all year long -- if OSU hadn't busted three coverages at the wrong time he would have made an enormous impact on the national title game -- and perhaps the best defensive end in the Big Ten since Simeon Rice. OSU has a lot of talent, but guys like Gholston are rare no matter how many hyped recruits you've reeled in.
After five and a half months in interim limbo, Indiana University has decided it can live with Bill Lynch as its head football coach. According to the Indianapolis Star,
So much for a close one in Madison Saturday.
For Indiana football, these are heady times. The Hoosiers haven't qualified for a bowl game since 1993, when Bill Mallory roamed the sidelines in Bloomington, and Trent Green was the starting quarterback. Cam Cameron couldn't generate a turnaround, and Terry Hoeppner
Frustrating home loss for Indiana today, unsuccessfully defending "The Rock".
Any thoughts of contending for a Big Ten title (in a year where Ohio State and Michigan rotated off the conference schedule) appear to have gone away for Iowa.