Indiana Hoosiers football program looks to bounce back from letdown 2021-2022 season
Indiana was 0-9 in Big Ten games last season with 2 total wins
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Indiana linebacker Cam Jones and quarterback Jack Tuttle took matters into their own hands this offseason.
They called their teammates together to discuss the goals and aspirations of the program, the need to always play with an edge and to break down precisely why things went wrong in 2021.
Now they're using the lessons from a players-only PowerPoint session to avoid a repeat this fall.
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"It's never good going backwards," Jones said before acknowledging his team needed a real heart-to-heart to move forward. "I think if you have wrong mindset, that if you wake up with the wrong mindset, you're day is going to be bad. I think if you have the right mindset, you'll have a great day."
Or in this case, perhaps, a great season.
Of course, that was the Hoosiers' plan last fall, too. But after opening the season in the Top 25, a string of injuries and embarrassing losses ensued. The result: Two wins, none in Big Ten play, a humiliating 44-7 season-ending loss at rival Purdue and months of reflection.
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It led to a flurry of changes.
Starting quarterback Michael Penix Jr. left for Washington while Connor Bazelak, the 2020 co-SEC freshman of the year, arrived from Missouri. Bazelak and Tuttle will compete for the No. 1 job.
Indiana's three most productive runners are gone, though two experienced transfers — Shaun Shivers and Josh Henderson — could provide an immediate solution.
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Defensively, the Hoosiers need to replace four starters.
Coach Tom Allen also shook up the coaching staff, firing offensive coordinator Nick Sheridan, hiring former UMass coach Walt Bell and reclaiming the signal-calling duties on defense after coordinator Charlton Warren went to North Carolina.
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"Last year was something that was really, really hard and it’s something I never want to go through again," Allen said. "At the same time it makes you appreciate how hard it is to be at a certain level."
Allen also knows the turnaround begins inside the locker room. He believes the work by Jones and Tuttle already has made a difference.
"Man I was fired up. I knew right then that things were going to be different," Allen said. "It’s never big things. But I’m telling you there’s just some little, subtle stuff that I feel they recognized and they saw and noticed we talked about. I don’t think I can put a value on it."
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QB Battle
Allen isn't likely to name a starting quarterback publicly before Indiana's Sept. 2 opener at home against Illinois.
Tuttle has made four starts in 14 career games and has been a steadying influence since coming to Indiana in 2019. But Bazelak completed nearly two-thirds of his throws at Missouri, passed for 5,058 yards and 23 touchdowns while throwing 17 interceptions in 24 games, and he may have the edge with a new coordinator.
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"I would say experience, just a calmness and a coolness, doesn't get frazzled, not real emotional," Allen said when describing what he's seen from Bazelak. "The thing that out to me is just experience — been there, been in the big games, played in the big venues."
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Changing Times
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Indiana lost two players after reporting to camp last season: Running back Sampson James left for Purdue in mid-August and Tim Baldwin Jr. entered the transfer portal in October.
Allen, like other coaches, is hoping college officials do more to to prevent in-season transfers. On the subject of names, image and likeness compensation for athletes, though, Allen is doing his best to keep the Hoosiers competitive.
"It’s not going away," he said. "The programs and alumni bases, fundraising that can figure it out and get people involved, are going to be the ones that thrive. Who knows what the future holds, but I know we have to embrace it. We have to continue to grow the participation in it."
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He's Back
Injuries forced the Hoosiers to use four different starters at quarterback last year but the most devastating absence may have been cornerback Tiawan Mullin.
In 2020, he was named first team all-conference and also received national honors. Last year, he missed five games with injuries and only made four starts. Now he says he's healthy and ready to go.
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"It was very frustrating," he said. "It was just a freak accident, a guy just fell on my ankle. We're just ready to bounce back and I'm ready to bounce back."
The Schedule
The Hoosiers need to build momentum with a strong start and it all begins against a Big Ten foe in the Illinis under Friday night lights.
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By late September, the usually challenging schedule kicks in. Indiana visits Cincinnati and Nebraska in back-to-back weeks, and then plays at Ohio State and Michigan State in consecutive weeks in November. Michigan, Penn State and Purdue all visit Bloomington this year.,