Indiana
How To Watch Indiana Men’s Basketball As It Travels To Northwestern
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Indiana men’s basketball faces Northwestern at 7 p.m. ET on Wednesday. As Hoosiers On SI wrote on Monday, Woodson will try again for his first win against the Wildcats.
It’s a strange record, made all the more bizarre by the dominance the Hoosiers have had over historically better programs like Michigan and Ohio State in the last three years.
Indiana has played twice in Evanston during the Woodson era. One of the games was in Woodson’s first season, with five Hoosiers suspended for the game. Indiana lost 59-51 in 2022. The other was in 2023 when the game came down to a final possession in which Indiana nemesis Boo Buie hit a game-winning shot to help Northwestern earn a 64-62 victory.
While Woodson hasn’t beaten Northwestern, it hasn’t been that long since Indiana tasted victory at Welsh-Ryan Arena. The Hoosiers won 79-76 in double overtime in Evanston in 2021.
Here’s a list of the last time Indiana won at Big Ten venues:
• Ohio State: Friday, when the Hoosiers earned a 77-76 overtime victory over the Buckeyes.
• Penn State: The NCAA counts Indiana’s 77-71 win on Jan. 5 as a “road” victory – even though it was played off-campus in Philadelphia at the Palestra. Indiana’s last victory in State College was a 78-75 win in 2017.
• Minnesota: The Hoosiers defeated the Golden Gophers 70-58 at Williams Arena on March 6, 2024, part of a late-season five-game win streak.
• Maryland: In the game before Indiana won at Minnesota, the Hoosiers prevailed 83-78 on March 3, 2024, in College Park.
• Michigan: In the 2023-24 Big Ten opener, Indiana held off Michigan with a 78-75 victory at Crisler Arena on Dec. 5, 2023.
• Purdue: A 35-point effort by Jalen Hood-Schifino led Indiana to a 79-71 win at Mackey Arena over No. 5 Purdue on Feb. 25, 2023.
• Illinois: Trayce Jackson-Davis had one of his best games in an Indiana uniform as the Hoosiers won 80-65 on Jan. 19, 2023. Jackson-Davis had 35 points, nine rebounds and five assists.
• Nebraska: Indiana earned a 78-71 victory over the Cornhuskers on Jan. 17, 2022.
• Northwestern: The aforementioned 79-76 double overtime win took place on Feb. 10, 2021.
• Iowa: One of the biggest wins in the Archie Miller era was an 81-69 victory at Carver-Hawkeye Arena on Jan. 21, 2021, as the Hoosiers dropped the No. 4-ranked Hawkeyes.
• Michigan State: With five Hoosiers reaching double-figure scoring – led by Romeo Langford’s 19 points – Indiana took down No. 6 Michigan State 79-75 in overtime on Feb. 2, 2019, at the Breslin Center.
• Rutgers: Indiana prevailed 65-43 on Feb. 5, 2018. The Hoosiers have only beaten the Scarlet Knights three times since, with all of the victories taking place at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall.
• Wisconsin: Indiana’s troubles with Wisconsin are notorious as five different coaches have tried and field to win in Madison. Indiana’s last victory was a 69-59 triumph on Jan. 25, 1998, in the last game of the series played at Wisconsin Field House. Andrae Patterson led Indiana with 23 points in a game that featured Bob Knight vs. Dick Bennett in the coaching boxes.
• The west coast Big Ten schools: Indiana is 2-1 at UCLA, but hasn’t played in Westwood since 1960. The last victory was in the 1940-41 season, when the Hoosiers prevailed 51-26 in Los Angeles.
Indiana defeated Southern California 42-39 in Los Angeles during the 1937-38 season.
Indiana has never played on-campus at Oregon or Washington, according to Indiana’s media guide.
*** LIVE BLOG: Once the game starts, CLICK HERE to read our live blog, including live updates, highlights and thoughts on the game.
How To Watch Indiana at Northwestern
• Who: Indiana Hoosiers (14-5, 5-3) vs. Northwestern Wildcats (11-7, 2-5)
• What: Indiana travels to Northwestern for its second straight Big Ten Conference road game.
• When: 7 p.m. ET, Wednesday, Jan. 22.
• Where: Welsh-Ryan Arena, Evanston, Ill.
• TV: Big Ten Network.
• Announcers: Brandon Gaudin (play-by-play), Robbie Hummel (color), Andy Katz (sideline).
• Radio: IU Radio Network (Bloomington: 105.1 WHCC-FM; Indianapolis: 107.5 WFNI-FM or 1070 WFNI-AM, or see media guide for other radio affiliates).
• Radio announcers: Don Fischer (play-by-play), Errek Suhr (color), John Herrick (pregame, halftime, postgame).
• Recent results: Indiana was 1-1 last week. The Hoosiers lost 94-69 at home against Illinois on Jan. 14. Indiana then won at Ohio State 77-76 in overtime last Friday.
Northwestern played two overtime contests last week. The Wildcats defeated Maryland 76-74 at home on Thursday and fell 80-76 at Michigan on Sunday.
• Home, road and neutral trends: Indiana is 10-1 at home, 1-2 in neutral site games and 2-2 in official road games. (The NCAA counts the game against Penn State at the Palestra as a road game.) Northwestern is 9-1 in home games, 2-1 in neutral site games and 0-5 in true road games. Northwestern was 22-12 and 12-8 in the Big Ten.
• Last season: Indiana went 19-14 overall and finished sixth in the Big Ten with a 10-10 record in conference play. The Hoosiers missed the NCAA Tournament and declined a bid to the NIT. Northwestern advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament where they lost to eventual national champion Connecticut.
• Series history: Indiana leads 120-56. Northwestern has won four in a row in the series, and Indiana coach Mike Woodson has never beaten the Wildcats. The four-game losing streak in the series is the longest for the Hoosiers since 1932-33. Indiana has only lost five in a row to Northwestern once – from 1913-15. Indiana last won in Evanston in 2021 during Archie Miller’s final season as coach.
Leading scorers
Indiana Hoosiers
• Guards (as officially listed): Myles Rice (11.9 ppg, 3.3 rpg, 3.3 apg), Trey Galloway (7.2 ppg, 4.1 apg), Luke Goode (8.3 ppg, 2.8 rpg), Kanaan Carlyle (5.1 ppg), Anthony Leal (2.3 ppg).
• Forwards/centers: Malik Reneau (14.1 ppg, 5.9 rpg, questionable with knee injury), Oumar Ballo (14.5 ppg, 10.3 rpg, 2.3 apg), Mackenzie Mgbako (11.9 ppg, 4.7 rpg), Bryson Tucker (6.2 ppg, 3.3 rpg, questionable with finger injury), Langdon Hatton (2.4 ppg).
Northwestern Wildcats
• Guards: Brooks Barnhizer (18.4 ppg, 9.3 rpg, 4.1 apg), Jalen Leach (13.7 ppg, 2.1 rpg, 2.8 apg), Ty Berry (7.7 ppg, 2.7 rpg), Angelo Ciarvino (4.2 ppg), Justin Mullins (3.4 ppg, 3.5 rpg), K.J. Windham (3.3 ppg).
• Forwards/centers: Nick Martinelli (20 ppg, 5.3 rpg), Matthew Nicholson (5.1 ppg, 5.6 rpg), Keenan Fitzmorris (0.7 ppg, 0.6 rpg)
Kenpom rankings
Projected score: Northwestern 71, Indiana 67.
Indiana Hoosiers
• Overall: 59
• Adjusted defensive efficiency: 49
• Adjusted offensive efficiency: 77
• Strength of schedule: 158
• Preseason: 39
Northwestern Wildcats
• Overall: 51
• Adjusted defensive efficiency: 24
• Adjusted offensive efficiency: 93
• Strength of schedule: 245
• Preseason: 50
Meet the coaches
• Chris Collins, Northwestern: Chris Collins is in his 12th season as Northwestern’s head coach. He is 188-181 and has taken the Wildcats to three NCAA Tournaments, including appearances in the last two seasons. In winning percentage, Collins’ .509 mark is the fourth-best in school history and only one coach who lasted past World War II – Dutch Lonborg – is with Collins in the top four.
Collins was previously an assistant at Duke (2000-13), Seton Hall (1998-2000) and with the WNBA’s Detroit Shock (1998). Collins, the son of former NBA player and coach Doug Collins, played at Duke from 1992-96.
• Mike Woodson, Indiana: Woodson is in his fourth season at Indiana with a 77-45 overall record and a 36-32 mark in regular season Big Ten play. Indiana reached the NCAA Tournament in Woodson’s first two seasons, peaking with a Round of 32 appearance in 2023, but the Hoosiers missed the tournament last year. Woodson, 66, has NBA head coaching experience with the Atlanta Hawks from 2004-10 and the New York Knicks from 2012-14. Woodson played at Indiana University from 1976-80, and was named the Big Ten’s Most Valuable Player as a senior under coach Bob Knight. He was the 12th overall pick in the 1980 NBA Draft, and played for various teams from 1980-91, averaging 14 points over 786 games.
Indiana
Suspects flee robbery at Chase Bank in Plainfield
PLAINFIELD, Ind. (WISH) — Suspects fled a Plainfield bank after it was robbed Tuesday afternoon, police say.
Plainfield Police Department was called at 2:10 p.m. Tuesday to the robbery of a bank in progress at Chase Bank, 807 Southfield Drive. That’s southwest of the intersection of Quaker Boulevard and Stafford Road/East County Road 450 South in the Hendricks County town.
Deputy Chief Ryan Salisbury of the Plainfield Police Department said detectives were working on the case.
The police department posted on social media on Tuesday night that no one was hurt in the robbery, and the suspects, who were not in custody, fled prior to the arrival of first responders.
Indiana
Why Sophie Cunningham turned down multi-year contract offers to return to Indiana Fever
INDIANAPOLIS — Sophie Cunningham wants to emphasize she’s perfectly happy with the Indiana Fever. She just wishes she could be locked down longer.
Cunningham, who signed a one-year, $665,000 deal with the Indiana Fever for 2026, said on her podcast, “Show Me Something,” on Tuesday night that she was frustrated with the free agency process in the condensed offseason.
She shook her head vehemently when her co-host West Wilson asked if the contract was better than she thought it would be, then said in part, “It’s tough because I came off an injury … I’m not even going to lie to you, that’s a little, kind of, frustrating.”
Fans on social media largely took that as she did not get interest from other teams, she didn’t want to return to the Fever, or she was unhappy with the salary she got.
She shut those thoughts down on social media Monday night, then expounded on her frustrations with local media at Fever training camp on Tuesday morning.
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“I think Twitter kind of blew up last night about a comment I made on my podcast. But that wasn’t what I meant at all,” Cunningham said. “I think if you listen to the full clip, you really understand that I just wanted to be somewhere for more than one year. I’m almost 30 years old. I want to have a home. I want to get established. And I would love to get established in a place like Indiana.”
The Fever prioritized as much financial flexibility as possible this offseason because of the new EPIC clause, which allows both Aliyah Boston and Caitlin Clark to renegotiate their fourth-year salaries up to the max with an extension. Boston’s salary was bumped to $1 million in 2025, and she will make the supermax from 2027-29. Clark is eligible to negotiate up to the max in 2027, and both Clark and Boston could be making the supermax starting in 2028.
Only Lexie Hull and Monique Billings got major multi-year deals with the Fever out of free agency. Hull signed for $765,000 in 2026 and $803,250 in 2027, per Her Hoop Stats, while Billings got $800,000 for both 2026 and 2027. Damiris Dantas is the only other player that got a multi-year deal out of free agency, but that was for the minimum cap hit of $277,500.
Kelsey Mitchell signed a one-year, $1.4 million supermax, Cunningham returned on a one-year deal, and Myisha Hines-Allen and Tyasha Harris each signed one-year deals.
Cunningham added that she got multi-year offers from other teams, but chose to stay with Indiana on a one-year deal.
She wanted to return to Indiana, she said, because of friendships she created with her teammates and the potential they showed, even after six separate season-ending injuries on the roster. She is also closer to her hometown of Columbia, Missouri.
“When you find a group of girls who really make you fall in love with basketball games and you enjoy it, you enjoy them, not only on the court, but off the court, like, you want to hold on to that,” Cunningham said. “ … it was never about the money, it was just about the years, because I wanted to be with them. And God forbid a girl loves her teammates, you know what I mean?”
Cunningham is also coming off a major knee injury after she tore her MCL in August 2025. She was ruled out for the rest of the 2025 season and got surgery in Indianapolis, then had a six-month rehab process before she was cleared in February.
Since then, she has been ramping back up as much as possible, including playing one-on-one, three-on-three, plyometrics, and everything she does to get ready for a regular season.
Still, she said, she’ll need to actually play to get back into full basketball shape.
“Basketball shape is just different,” Cunningham said. “You can run as many suicides as you want, you can get your butt kicked however you want, but until you’re out here playing, you’re never fully going to be in game shape until you’re playing games.”
Chloe Peterson is the Indiana Fever beat reporter for IndyStar. Reach her at chloe.peterson@indystar.com or follow her on X at @chloepeterson67. Get IndyStar’s Indiana Fever and Caitlin Clark coverage sent directly to your inbox with our Caitlin Clark Fever newsletter. Subscribe to IndyStar TV: Fever for in-depth analysis, behind-the-scenes coverage and more.
Indiana
Indiana police find semi trailer loaded up with nearly 400 pounds of cocaine: troopers
CLOVERDALE, Ind. (WKRC) – Authorities in Indiana found a semi trailer loaded up with hundreds of pounds of suspected cocaine.
According to a statement issued by the Indiana State Police (ISP), 27-year-old Harmandeep Singh of Bakersfield, California was taken into custody after nearly 400 pounds of suspected cocaine were reportedly found in the trailer of a commercial truck.
Per the statement, an ISP trooper seized the suspected cocaine during a traffic stop on Interstate 70 in Putnam County, authorities said.
The stop occurred Tuesday morning near the 37-mile marker, just east of Cloverdale, after a commercial motor vehicle was observed exceeding the posted speed limit.
Police said Singh displayed several indicators of possible criminal activity during the encounter. After obtaining consent to search the vehicle, troopers discovered multiple duffel bags and cardboard boxes in the trailer containing approximately 392 pounds (178 kilograms) of suspected cocaine.
Authorities estimated the street value of the drugs at about $9 million.
Singh was taken into custody and taken to the Putnam County Jail, where he is being held on a $30,000 cash bond.
He faces the following preliminary charges, per the post:
- Possession of a narcotic drug
Formal charges will be determined by the Putnam County prosecutor.
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Indiana State Police said drug interdiction remains a priority, with troopers focusing on major highways to disrupt the flow of illegal narcotics into the state.
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