Indiana athletics reported a rare deficit for the 2024 fiscal year despite bringing in a record $173.5 million in revenue:
Jamier Johnson was a holdover from Tom Allen's time as Indiana football coach. But the starting cornerback is no longer with the Hoosiers.
Tight games, controversy, great performances and two titans on the sideline defined two decades of the Indiana-Purdue rivalry.
The first of a three-part series on Indiana’s history playing on the home court of arch-rival Purdue. Mackey Arena highs and lows through the years.
In 2019, fresh off a College Cup appearance and an undefeated Big Ten regular season record, the Hoosiers lost four of their five members in the backline — the reigning Hermann Trophy winner Andrew Gutman, 2018 Goalkeeper of the Year Trey Muse and Second Team All-Big Ten members Rece Buckmaster and Timmy Mehl.
BLOOMINGTON– Lilly Endowment Inc., through the eighth phase of its Giving Indiana Funds for Tomorrow (GIFT VIII) initiative, has awarded a $7,834,000 Community Leadership
The council on Wednesday passed a local law that makes the closing of all five blocks between Walnut Street and Indiana Avenue the default — though the city will determine annually which of the blocks actually will be closed, depending on construction and other concerns.
Like many of the sports-addled kids of his generation, Tony Kale would dial in distant radio stations or tune into one of the three network affiliates and listen intently to one of the voices of his youth.
Indiana lawmakers consider bill to mandate public colleges enroll at least half of first-year students from in-state.
Indiana football head coach Curt Cignetti heads into the offseason with still some more recruiting targets ahead of National Signing Day
Indiana started the dual strong, winning its first two matches by technical superiority. Graduate students No.18 Jacob Moran and No. 27 Angelo Rini delivered a 1-2 punch at 125 lbs. and 133 lbs., dispatching their Wolverine opponents in dominant fashion, winning 17-2 and 18-3, respectively.
Bryant Haines was the first assistant in Indiana football history to make more than $1 million a year, and he delivered results that drew interest from CFP teams.