Indiana
‘Definitely caught my eye’: IU football’s new running backs have impressive spring game
BLOOMINGTON — Indiana football coach Curt Cignetti has expressed confidence in his new-look running back room throughout spring practice.
They rewarded that confidence with a strong showing on Thursday night in the team’s spring game. The offense won 34-25 over the defense in front of fans at Memorial Stadium. The running backs scored two of the team’s five offensive touchdowns.
“I think that group definitely caught my eye,” Cignetti said. “I just think our running back room is faster, more dynamic, good at pass pro, good at catching the ball out of the backfield, can break tackles.”
Last year, Indiana’s rushing offense ranked No. 102 in the country out of 133 FBS teams with 120.1 yards per game. The team’s 3.3 yards per carry ranked even lower (No. 120). The Hoosiers put up pedestrian numbers on the ground going all the way back to the 2018 season.
Cignetti made retooling the running back room one of his top priorities after taking over.
Indiana had four backs with 50-plus carries last year and none of them are still on the roster. Their leading rusher last season Trent Howland was the most recent departure after re-entering the portal during the spring window.
David Holloman, who has 17 career carries, is the only running back still on the team from last season.
While Cignetti told offensive coordinator Mike Shanahan “to throw it 65, 75 percent of the time” on Thursday night, Indiana’s new group of running backs had some standout moments. The game also presented a glimpse at what the rotation will look like come fall.
More: Why Indiana football coach Curt Cignetti followed a new trend during spring practice
‘We have more speed and athleticism back there’
The biggest play early in the game for the first-team offense was a 23-yard run from Kaelon Black.
He bounced it to the outside with a quick lateral move and got a nice block from Myles Price to seal the edge against Amare Ferrell. Josh Sanguinetti completely misjudged Black’s speed and couldn’t do anything as the running back got into the second level. Black finished it off with a spin move to get a few extra yards.
In the second quarter, Black ducked under defensive tackle Robby Harrison’s arm to get through the line of scrimmage and convert a third down. He showed off a quick burst on the next play with a 9-yard gain up the middle.
Black led James Madison last year with 637 yards (4.5 per carry). He forced 18 missed tackles and had 18 runs of 10-yards or more on 133 rushing attempts, according to Pro Football Focus.
A finger injury late in the year limited Black’s touches, but both numbers would still have led all of IU’s running backs last year. He had 11 designed runs go for 15 yards or more while the Hoosiers combined for 14 as a team.
Fellow James Madison transfer Ty Son Lawton also had a nice night.
On his first carry, he showed nice patience going off the left side behind Drew Evans to convert a third and long.
He also prevented the first-team offense from going three and out late in the first quarter. He sidestepped a blitz on third and short and hit the hole for a short gain. Lawton made a nice blitz pick up off the edge on the next play.
One of the best plays of the night for the offense was Lawton’s 15-yard touchdown run at the start of the second quarter. He knocked Sanguinetti back with a stiff arm to get to the outside then lowered his shoulder at the goal line to power past Ferrell.
Black finished the game with a team-high 39 yards on just four carries while Lawton had four carries for 25 yards with a touchdown.
More: Indiana football RB Trent Howland announces plans to transfer ahead of spring game
Indiana’s running back rotation takes shape
Cignetti will likely feature at least three running backs in prominent roles on the offense this fall.
Wake Forest transfer Justice Ellison, who had three carries for 12 yards with a touchdown in the spring game, and Black appear to be the frontrunners to start with Lawton taking over as the team’s primary third down back.
Ellison has the most experience of all IU’s running backs with 43 career games played and 427 carries. He’s rushed for more than 500 yards each of the past three seasons against Power Five competition. He’s averaged 4.5 yards per carry during his career.
“All three of those guys just love football,” Cignetti said, after the game. “They’re football nuts. Tough guys. They’re tough guys.”
North Carolina transfer Elijah Green, who was a late addition out of the portal in the winter, will provide some added depth. He was the Tar Heels starting running back for a six-game stretch at the end of the 2022 season.
He had nine carries for 25 yards and worked with both the first- and second-team offense in the spring game.
Michael Niziolek is the Indiana beat reporter for The Bloomington Herald-Times. You can follow him on X @michaelniziolek and read all his coverage by clicking here
Indiana
Where to watch Phoenix Mercury vs Indiana Fever on June 22: TV channel, start time and streaming
The WNBA has returned with a brand new collective bargaining agreement and a league full of loaded rosters as the 2026 season tips off.
A rookie class headlined by Dallas Wings top pick Azzi Fudd, Minnesota’s Olivia Miles and Washington’s Lauren Betts is ready to make a mark in the pros while the defending champion Las Vegas Aces look to keep their dynasty alive with a fourth title in five years.
As the the season gets going under a new media rights deal, it can be tough to figure out which channel each team is playing on every night. Here’s everything you need to know to tune in when the Indiana Fever host the Phoenix Mercury on Monday.
What time is Phoenix Mercury vs Indiana Fever?
Tip off between the Indiana Fever and Phoenix Mercury is scheduled for 8 p.m. (ET) on Monday, June 22.
How to watch Phoenix Mercury vs Indiana Fever on Monday
All times Eastern and accurate as of Monday, June 22, 2026, at 6:10 a.m.
Watch the WNBA all season on Fubo
WNBA scores and results
See scores, results for all of today’s games .
See WNBA scores, results from June 21
Odds for WNBA games today
The latest WNBA odds can be found below from the best sports betting apps . Some odds may include games scheduled on future dates.
Indiana
Indiana mother fatally shot after suspect tries to rob son during Facebook Marketplace meetup
A northern Indiana mother was allegedly shot and killed by a man her son met online through Facebook Marketplace about selling a watch, according to WNDU, the NBC affiliate in South Bend.
Jean Gragg, 40, was shot in the head on Wednesday, June 10, in South Bend, Indiana, and died the following Saturday. Police said prior to the shooting, Gragg’s son arranged to meet with an 18-year-old man he had been communicating with through Facebook Marketplace.
According to authorities, Gragg’s son arranged to sell the individual, identified as John Harrison Ford, a watch.
WNDU reported the son told police that Ford ended up pulling out a gun while he was looking at the watch and tried taking it from him. Gragg then got in between them and chased Ford away from the home.
Police said security camera video captured the 18-year-old shooting at Gragg after she turned around and began heading back toward the house. Gragg was taken to an area hospital, where she died three days later.
During an interview with law enforcement, Ford reportedly admitted to shooting Gragg. He was later charged with murder, felony murder, attempted murder and attempted armed robbery.
Indiana
US Education Department Oks Indiana Waiver To ‘Streamline’ Education Spending
U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon, left, joins Indiana Gov. Mike Braun and state Education Secretary Katie Jenner for a ceremonial signing of the state’s waiver from provisions of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act on Tuesday, June 16, 2026, at Plainfield High School. Photo by Mackenzi Klemann, Indiana Capital Chronicle.
By Mackenzi Klemann
Indiana Capital Chronicle
PLAINFIELD — Indiana K-12 educators will soon have less paperwork following the U.S. Department of Education’s approval of a waiver exempting the state from provisions of the federal Elementary and Secondary Education Act.
The state applied for the waiver in December to streamline education spending and align its new A-F accountability measures with federal law.
The waiver consolidates federal funding from portions of Titles I, II, III and IV – grants used to support things like low-income students, teacher training, English language learners and school safety – totaling $50 million over the next four years.
U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon, who visited Plainfield High School Tuesday for a ceremonial signing of the waiver, said the change frees $20 million in state and local funds from “bureaucratic red tape” so schools can reallocate money to the classroom.
The waiver also OKs the use of college and career readiness metrics like work-based learning and credentials toward high school accountability scores, a crucial component of Indiana’s new A-F system.
“President Trump told me I’d be successful in my job when I fired myself or worked myself out of a job,” McMahon said, “but his vision isn’t about me or one position. It’s about breaking up the education bureaucracy in Washington, D.C., a system that too often enriches adults while stifling progress for kids and empowering states to drive a new era of excellence for students across the country.”
She added, “We must breathe innovation into education, not suffocate it with top-down mandates, because we certainly know that one size does not fit all in education.”
Indiana is the third state approved for the waiver, nicknamed “Return Education to the States,” following Iowa and Louisiana.
States already control educational standards, curriculum and assessments. The waivers grant states greater control over how to spend federal K-12 funding too.
Indiana’s waiver consolidates funding for various education programs, which McMahon likened to a block grant, so schools no longer need to meet separate reporting requirements for each grant.
“At the heart of all this there is a simple, urgent belief: We must focus our time and energy on the work that propels us forward,” Indiana Secretary of Education Katie Jenner said. “We work to serve students, not to serve bureaucratic, outdated processes and paperwork.”
Less Paperwork, More Classroom Time
Indiana Education Secretary Katie Jenner leads a discussion about the state’s new federal education waiver. Photo by Mackenzi Klemann, Indiana Capital Chronicle.
Educators in attendance Tuesday praised what they see as a move away from bureaucracy.
“Too often these programs had differing goals and really specific requirements that might have been at odds with one another,” said Betsy Wiley, president and CEO of the Institute for Quality Education.
“There’s just no proof that, that extra bureaucracy is leading to higher standard achievements,” said Keeanna Warren, chief executive officer of Purdue Polytechnic High School.
Plainfield Community Schools Superintendent Andy Allen said he anticipates significant savings as the district will be able to redeploy office staff, many of whom are trained educators, to the classroom due to the reduction in compliance paperwork.
“Just because we have less compliance (paperwork) doesn’t mean we just do less,” he said. “Now we get back out in the buildings, we get back in front of kids, we get back in front of teachers, get connected with our community to make sure we have our best voices leading work for our kids and our community.”
The waiver could also benefit outside programs like the Boys and Girls Club’s summer learning labs.
Duane Wilson, chief executive officer of the Boys and Girls Club for the northern Indiana corridor, said the organization serves 5,800 Hoosier students throughout the state, but with additional funding the club could reach 10,000 Hoosier children next year.
The club is “moving the needle for kids,” Jenner said, but its rapid growth exceeded what the state could provide. “We’re seeing it in the short-term assessments. We’re seeing it in our state assessments.”
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