Indiana
Indiana men’s soccer poised for rematch with Notre Dame in NCAA Tournament quarterfinals
Indiana men’s soccer looks to continue its positive streak against No. 3 University of Notre Dame. The Hoosiers will travel to South Bend to face the Fighting Irish in the Elite Eight on Saturday.
The Hoosiers and the Fighting Irish faced each other for their first game of the season on Aug. 24, also in South Bend, and the game ended in an uneventful 1-1 draw.
In the previous encounter, Notre Dame opened the scoring after some miscommunication between senior goalkeeper JT Harms and senior defender Hugo Bacharach on a set piece. However, Indiana responded quickly after freshman forward Collins Oduro slipped through the defense and scored on the one-on-one with Notre Dame senior goalkeeper Bryan Dowd.
“We’ll definitely look at [the earlier matchup between both teams] a little bit, and then we’ll heavily look at the last five games,” Indiana head coach Todd Yeagley said Wednesday. “Different teams, so not a lot of looking back at that game because of some personnel changes.”
Being the first game of the season and having many players debuting, Indiana played a safe game and didn’t suffer much danger in the back.
Despite the relative lack of chemistry with the new players, the Hoosiers exhibited their main style of play early on — pressing the Fighting Irish on their own half and switching formations when things didn’t work out.
The Hoosiers are on an eight-game win streak and have won 12 of their last 13 games. On top of that, the team has scored 27 goals in the 13-game stretch, averaging two goals a game.
The recent stream of goals can be attributed to the good form of Indiana’s offense. Fifth-year senior forward Maouloune Goumballe has a goal contribution in each of the last eight games – five goals and three assists – and senior defenseman Hugo Bacharach’s three of four goals this season have come in the postseason.
Yeagley previously called Goumballe “Mr. November” as a reference for his good form later in the season.
“Someone needs to step up in some capacity and Maouloune was the epitome of a guy that stepped up,” Yeagley said Wednesday. “He said ‘I’d like to be [Mr.] December too.”
Indiana led Wake Forest 22 to 12 in total shots.
Collectively, the team averages 16 shots per game while holding their opponents to eight shots per game. In addition, Indiana averages only 0.8 goals against per game all season.
Indiana is 33-10-4 against Notre Dame overall, including 16-4-2 on the road. The Hoosiers haven’t lost to the Fighting Irish in seven games, and their last defeat was in 2016 in a 0-4 away game.
Indiana has advanced to the Elite Eight in four of the last six seasons, which shows the tradition and winning culture that has become part of the program.
“I think players that see what we offer are also very attracted to it, and they want to be part of it,” Yeagley said. “It just continues to feed the positive energy and the culture that we’ve been able to develop through the years.”
Notre Dame finished the regular season with a 12-2-5 record, including 9-2-2 at home. In the postseason, they have beaten University of Kentucky 2-0 and Western Michigan University 4-2 on penalties.
The Wildcats missed a penalty, and the Hoosiers missed a wide-open goal.
The Fighting Irish average two goals and only 0.6 goals against per game this season. Additionally, they average 14 shots but allow 12 shots against per game.
Individually, Notre Dame has two players with double-digit goals this year. Junior forwards Matthew Roou has 10 goals and three assists and Eno Nto has 10 goals and one assist.
However, sophomore midfielder KK Baffour – who leads the team in assists with seven – will not play due to suspension after being shown a red card in the last game.
“He’s a guy that can create and open things up for Nto and Roou,” Yeagley said. “But this is probably the deepest Notre Dame team I’ve seen, and, although they may not have a player like him, they’re pretty darn deep so I don’t think it’ll have as big of affect as what you might assume.”
Now, Indiana goes back to South Bend in hopes of getting a better result. Kickoff is scheduled for 5 p.m. Saturday at Alumni Stadium and the game will be streaming live on ESPN+.
Indiana
Pacers Injury Report: Crucial Indiana Forward Remains Out vs Cavaliers
The Indiana Pacers have slowly but surely started to get healthy this season. After losing both backup centers, a starting guard, a starting forward, and a reserve guard to injuries, they have mostly gotten back to being healthy.
These injuries were the primary reason why the Pacers started out just 6-10 on the season. They weren’t able to win games with regularity because they didn’t have any continuity in the lineup.
Now that they do have continuity, the Pacers are playing much better basketball. They have won five straight games as well as 11 of their last 14.
More Pacers: Pacers’ Andrew Nembhard Explains Why Young Players Need to Follow Pascal Siakam
As healthy as they are right now, there is still one player who continues to be out. That is starting small forward Aaron Nesmith.
Nesmith has played in just six games this season due to a severe ankle sprain that he suffered. He has been slowly working his way back to the court.
As the Pacers get ready to face the best team in the NBA, Nesmith remains out. He is the only player who is in the rotation listed on the injury report for the Pacers.
There is still no firm timetable for his return. All Rick Carlisle will say when he is asked about Nesmith is that he is making progress.
Read more: Pacers’ Johnny Furphy Makes Case for More NBA Time With Dominant G League Performance
Nesmith has been a crucial player for the Indiana Pacers, especially last season. He emerged as their best perimeter defender and one of their best 3-point shooters.
Indiana has back-to-back games against the Cavs coming up. This will be a great litmus test for them to determine if they need to make a big move at the trade deadline or if they can stand pat.
Because he has been hurt for most of the season, there’s a chance that Nesmith could be in a trade package for the right player. Any move the Pacers would make would likely be closer to the deadline.
Aaron Nesmith is averaging 9.2 points, four rebounds, and one assist this season. He’s also shooting 52.8 percent from the field and 54.5 percent from beyond the 3-point line.
More Indiana Pacers news: Pacers Must Go All In Ahead of Trade Deadline Following Strong 14-Game Run
Pacers ‘Recently Held Trade Discussions’ for Rival Star Forward: Report
Indiana
The Minute After: Iowa
Thoughts on an 85-60 loss to Iowa:
Iowa City is a long way from the Bahamas.
But tonight’s game from Indiana could have fit right into its Battle 4 Atlantis performance.
As Iowa began to pull away early in the second half, the Hoosiers completely folded. They failed to compete. The body language was poor. They couldn’t defend. They couldn’t score. They looked like a team that had given up.
Iowa got up by as much as 30 before settling on a 25-point victory. That 25-point defeat for the Hoosiers? It’s the largest loss during regular season Big Ten play in the Mike Woodson era.
Iowa entered this game 121st on KenPom in adjusted defensive efficiency but held Indiana to just .83 points per possession tonight. That’s Indiana’s lowest output of the season. The previous low? The .85 points per possession it scored against Louisville in the Bahamas.
The Hoosiers have played well against zone defense this season, but that wasn’t the case tonight. Iowa’s 2-3 zone turned them into jump shooters. The Hoosiers just couldn’t find a consistent rhythm against it. On paper, Indiana entered this one as the far superior rebounding team. It’s an area that’s helped the Hoosiers succeed during their three-game conference winning streak. But the Hawkeyes snagged 29 percent of their offensive rebounds tonight, while the Hoosiers rebounded just 24 percent.
Iowa also absolutely feasted off Indiana’s 16 turnovers. The Hawkeyes scored 24 points off turnovers on a night the Hoosiers turned the ball over on 22 percent of their possessions. Indiana was particularly poor with the ball in the first half and entered the locker room turning it over on 32 percent of its possessions.
Oumar Ballo had a rough start. Iowa doubled him from the get-go and Owen Freeman poked at him, too. The Arizona transfer had four turnovers by the 14:38 mark in the first half when he was yanked from the game by Woodson. Ballo has been a dominant force for Indiana of late. And while he still posted a double-double — 10 points, 13 rebounds — Freeman bested him tonight. The sophomore can play out on the perimeter and his quickness and array of moves made him a tough matchup for the bigger Ballo. Freeman finished with 16 points (8-of-13) and 12 boards. He also defended the paint well, racking up a game-high four blocks while also adding three steals. Ballo didn’t block a shot this evening.
Mackenzie Mgbako played only 16 minutes and scored six points. He’s 2-of-14 from the floor over his last two games.
Iowa hit 11-of-24 (46 percent) from 3-point range. Indiana made just 4-of-16 (25 percent). After heating up in the second half, Payton Sandfort led all scorers with 23 points.
“When you go out on the road in the Big Ten, you can’t turn it over, you gotta rebound with your opponent and you gotta make shots,” Woodson said after the game. “We failed in all three areas tonight.”
Fail Indiana did tonight. The start of its toughest stretch of the season was a disaster. With better teams just over the horizon, the Hoosiers need to forget about this one and not let it affect them.
We’ll soon see how they respond with the Illini coming to Bloomington for a Tuesday night bout.
(Photo credit: Big Ten Basketball on X)
Filed to: Iowa Hawkeyes
Indiana
How to watch Indiana vs No. 23 Iowa women's college basketball: Schedule, streaming info, game preview
Conference play in women’s college basketball gets started in earnest this month and on Sunday afternoon, the 11-4 Indiana Hoosiers visit the No. 23 Iowa Hawkeyes (12-4) for a Big Ten matchup at 3pm ET on Peacock.
Indiana has just one conference loss this season — they fell to No. 1 UCLA 73-62 on Saturday, January 4th. But they bounced back with a 68-64 win over Northwestern their last time out to improve to 3-1 in the Big Ten. It was the program’s 900th win all-time, but it was also a hard-fought win against a Wildcats team that isn’t a barnburner in the conference (Northwestern is 7-9 overall, 0-5 Big Ten).
“Winning is hard,” Indiana head coach Teri Moren said after the Northwestern victory. “It’s hard at home, it’s hard on the road, and our margin of error is really small, and so, we’ve got to be much better, but we’re happy that we’re going to get out of here with the win tonight.”
For Iowa, there’s been plenty of questions and plenty of scrutiny in the post-Caitlin Clark, post-Lisa Bluder era. The Hawkeyes have kept the momentum going with their devoted fanbase: Iowa has sold out women’s basketball season tickets for the second straight season, and the team has played in front of 28 consecutive sellout crowds, the longest streak nationwide.
The Hawkeyes started off the season 8-0, but have struggled more recently, going 4-4 in their last eight games. Longtime Iowa assistant Jan Jensen took over the head coaching role from Bluder, and senior guard Lucy Olsen, a transfer from Villanova, has helped to fill the void left by Clark on the court. Olsen leads the team in scoring with 17.0 points per game, and junior forward Hannah Stuelke leads the team with 8.0 rebounds per game.
For full information on how to watch Sunday’s game, including start time and streaming information, see below.
READ MORE: Big Ten, SEC each have 4 top 10 teams in AP women’s poll
How to Watch Indiana vs Iowa Women’s College Basketball
- Date: Sunday, January 12th
- Time: 3:00pm ET
- Location: Carver-Hawkeye Arena (Iowa City, Iowa)
- Streaming: Peacock
Big Ten women’s basketball 2024-25 schedule on NBC & Peacock
Date | Time (ET) | Matchup |
---|---|---|
Sun., Jan. 12 | 3 p.m. | Indiana vs. Iowa |
Wed., Jan. 15 | 9:30 p.m. | Penn State vs. UCLA |
Wed., Jan. 15 | 10 p.m. | Northwestern vs. USC |
Thurs., Jan. 16 | 7 p.m. | Illinois vs. Indiana |
Thurs., Jan. 16 | 9 p.m. | Ohio State vs. Wisconsin |
Sun., Jan. 19 | 12 p.m. | USC vs. Indiana** |
Wed., Jan. 22 | 7 p.m. | USC vs. Purdue |
Wed., Jan. 22 | 9 p.m. | Iowa vs. Washington |
Sun., Jan. 26 | 2 p.m. | UCLA vs. Maryland** |
Thurs., Jan. 30 | 10 p.m. | Minnesota vs. USC |
Wed., Feb. 5 | 7:30 p.m. | USC vs. Wisconsin |
Wed., Feb. 5 | 9:30 p.m. | Ohio State vs. UCLA |
Thurs., Feb. 6 | 8 p.m. | Michigan vs. Nebraska |
Thurs., Feb. 13 | 7:30 p.m. | Minnesota vs. Ohio State |
Thurs., Feb. 13 | 10 p.m. | UCLA vs. USC |
Wed., Feb. 19 | 9:30 p.m. | Michigan State vs. USC |
Thurs., Feb. 20 | 7 p.m. | Ohio State vs. Indiana |
Sun., Feb. 23 | 2 p.m. | UCLA vs. Iowa |
Wed., Feb. 26 | 8 p.m. | UCLA vs. Wisconsin |
Thurs., Feb. 27 | 7 p.m. | Maryland vs. Indiana |
Sun., March 2 | 2 p.m. | Indiana vs. Purdue |
Sun., March 2 | 4 p.m. | Wisconsin vs. Iowa |
Tues., March 4 | 3:30 p.m. | Big Ten Tournament |
Tues., March 4 | 6 p.m. | Big Ten Tournament |
Tues., March 4 | 8:30 p.m. | Big Ten Tournament |
**on NBC and Peacock |
How to Watch Big Ten Sports on Peacock
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