Indiana
Meet the Coaches: Walt Bell, Indiana Offensive Coordinator and Quarterbacks Coach
Editor’s Observe: Indiana has 5 new soccer coaches this yr, together with two new coordinators. In our five-part ”Meet the Coaches” sequence, we’ll introduce you to all of them, beginning with new offensive coordinator Walt Bell.
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — One thing needed to give after Indiana completed final within the Massive Ten in yards per sport and second-to-last in factors per sport in 2021, and main modifications on the offensive facet of the ball needed to be made. That began with the person in control of calling performs when Walt Bell was employed in December as Indiana’s offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach, changing the fired Nick Sheridan.
Bell began his teaching profession as a graduate assistant at Memphis in 2007 and made stops at Energy 5 colleges reminiscent of Oklahoma State, North Carolina, Maryland and Florida State alongside the best way. After 12 seasons as an offensive place coach or coordinator, Bell obtained his first shot to be a head coach in 2019.
Bell served head coach on the College of Massachusetts for 3 seasons, ending with a 2-23 report. Bell was fired with three video games left within the 2021 marketing campaign after a 1-8 begin to the season.
Indiana turned the suitable match for Bell after preliminary conversations with head coach Tom Allen revealed similarities in the best way the 2 method soccer and likewise what’s vital off the sphere.
“(Tom Allen) is a world-class man and about all the proper issues,” Bell stated. “Hopefully I might help rating factors and assist do the job and do it in a method that satisfies him and the best way he needs this system run.”
Throughout Bell’s introductory press convention on Dec. 12, Bell stated his No. 1 offensive philosophy, irrespective of which degree of soccer he’s teaching, is the flexibility to successfully run the ball. In Bell’s thoughts, this begins with creating advantageous matchups the place his gamers can “dent” the protection.
And as soon as a productive run sport is established, Bell’s second philosophy is a fast, environment friendly, well-protected cross sport that may create explosive performs. When choosing the proper man for the job, he stated all of it comes right down to evaluating winnable instruments. Bell defines this as a quarterback who is a good distributor, can prolong performs, wins third downs along with his toes and runs situationally.
Whereas Bell has coached a variety of skill-sets at quarterback at eight totally different colleges, Indiana represents the primary time he’ll actually decide the participant he needs beneath heart.
Scroll to Proceed
And at Indiana, there is no such thing as a scarcity of choices. After proficient however oft-injured quarterback Michael Penix Jr. transferred to Washington within the offseason, a real quarterback battle developed, and Bell stated this competitors has introduced the most effective out of everybody.
Bell and Allen will consider and select from a gaggle of signal-callers that features Jack Tuttle, a redshirt senior switch from Utah who has began 4 video games for Indiana within the final two seasons, Connor Bazelak, a redshirt junior switch from Missouri who has began 20 video games throughout three seasons and threw for two,548 yards, 16 touchdowns and 11 interceptions final season, and Donaven McCulley, a sophomore who needed to begin 4 video games as a real freshman after accidents to Penix and Tuttle.
Different quarterbacks on campus embrace Dexter Williams, a redshirt sophomore who missed all of 2021 with a torn ACL, and Grant Gremel, a redshirt junior who began the 2021 season finale at Purdue.
All through Bell’s analysis course of this spring, he stated McCulley is an unbelievable athlete, he acknowledged Tuttle’s reliability, stated Bazelak and Williams each have sturdy arm expertise and observed that Gremel does the suitable factor with the ball.
Outdoors of the quarterback place, there’s loads of analysis left for Bell, too. Stephen Carr, Indiana’s main rusher in 2021, graduated and backups Tim Baldwin Jr., Chris Childers and Davion Ervin-Poindexter every entered the switch portal.
And as for weapons on the skin, Ty Fryfogle entered the 2022 NFL Draft and Miles Marshall transferred, leaving D.J. Matthews, who’s coming off a torn ACL, as the one receiver with vital expertise.
This leaves Bell able with loads of newcomers to guage as spring soccer nears an finish.
“To me, that’s what spring actually is,” Bell stated. “Making an attempt to determine what finally goes to permit us to be at our greatest on sport day on Saturday within the fall.”
Associated tales on Indiana soccer
- POWER INDEX RANKINGS: ESPN launched its soccer energy rankings, and Indiana is deep down in the course of the pack. Listed here are the rankings from No. 1 to No. 131. CLICK HERE
- SHERIDAN OPENS UP ABOUT FIRING: For the primary time since he was fired in December, former Indiana offensive coordinator Nick Sheridan sat down for a prolonged interview about what went incorrect final season and what led to his firing after two years on the helm. He is now reunited with former boss Kalen DeBoer in Washington. “Once you go 2-10, nobody can say they did job, and that features me,” Sheridan stated Sunday in Seattle. CLICK HERE
- INDIANA 2022 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE: Indiana’s 2022 soccer season begins on Friday, Sept. 2, with a house video games beneath the lights in opposition to convention rival Illinois. Right here is the Hoosiers’ full schedule. CLICK HERE
Indiana
Report: Quarterback Tayven Jackson Enters Transfer Portal
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – When Tayven Jackson announced his intention to transfer to Indiana from Tennessee before the 2023 season, it caused a ripple of excitement.
In the end, it didn’t work out for Jackson at Indiana. After two years with the Hoosiers, Jackson is expected to move on.
On3.com’s Pete Nakos posted on X on Saturday that Jackson entered the transfer portal.
Jackson played in 13 games for the Hoosiers during the 2023 and 2024 seasons. He threw for 1,300 yards, six touchdowns and six interceptions during his Indiana career.
Jackson compiled the majority of his production during the 2023 season when he started the first six games of the 2023 season. Brendan Sorsby started the games in the second half of the season for the Hoosiers.
Sorsby transferred to Cincinnati after the 2023 season, but Jackson stuck with the Indiana program when 2023 coach Tom Allen was replaced by Curt Cignetti.
Cignetti recruited Kurtis Rourke out of Ohio University from the transfer portal and Jackson never seemed to be seriously considered as the starting quarterback. Jackson did settle in as the No. 2 quarterback ahead of Tyler Cherry and Alberto Mendoza.
Jackson played in four games in a reserve role before he got the chance to start against Washington on Oct. 26 after Rourke injured his thumb. Jackson led Indiana to a 31-17 victory over the Huskies as he completed 11 of 19 passes for 124 yards, one touchdown and one interception.
Those proved to be the last passes Jackson threw in an Indiana uniform – though he did appear in two more games and had three rushing attempts in the regular season finale against Purdue.
Rourke is also out of eligibility so Indiana is in the market for a quarterback.
Indiana
Social media reacts to Indiana, SMU’s decisive losses in College Football Playoff
Matt Leinart on CFP, NFL draft prospects and the Heisman winner
Football legend Matt Leinart sits down to talk all things college football and reveals details about his partnership with Abbott and raising awareness about blood shortages in the U.S.
From the moment the inaugural 12-team College Football Playoff bracket was revealed, a debate raged over who was and wasn’t included in the field.
Should SMU, despite a loss to Clemson in the ACC championship game, have earned the final at-large berth over Alabama? Was Indiana, even with a gaudy 11-1 record, worthy of a spot despite what ended up being a softer-than-expected schedule in the Big Ten?
The start of playoff games this week didn’t end those arguments. If anything, it only intensified them.
The Hoosiers and Mustangs both suffered double-digit, largely lopsided road losses in the first round of the playoff. On Friday night, No. 10 seed Indiana fell to No. 7 seed Notre Dame 27-17 in a game it trailed by 24 with two minutes remaining while No. 11 seed SMU was drubbed by No. 6 Penn State 38-10 Saturday afternoon.
People from across the country who follow the sport — broadcasters, writers, analysts and even coaches — reacted to the results, with some using them as a justification for their belief that the playoff selection committee made mistakes on who it allowed in the field. Many of the loudest complaints came from the SEC, which had the second-most teams in the field, with three, but had three three-loss teams — Alabama, Ole Miss and South Carolina — among the first teams left out of the playoff.
Here’s a sampling of the reaction to Indiana and SMU’s CFP losses:
Social media reacts to Indiana, SMU College Football Playoff losses
Indiana and SMU losing their College Football Playoff games by a combined 38 points in dominant fashion raised a variety of opinions, with some believing it to be an indictment of the playoff committee for selecting the Hoosiers and Mustangs for the final two at-large spots.
Others, though, countered with an argument that Indiana and SMU had pieced together playoff-worthy resumes and deserved to make the field, regardless of how they fared in their games this week.
Lane Kiffin trolls CFP committee
The loudest, or at least most prominent, voice piling on Indiana and SMU’s struggles was Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin, whose squad was the third team left out of the playoff.
Many, however, rightfully pointed out that Kiffin’s 9-3 Rebels team could have made the playoff had it simply won at home against a 4-8 Kentucky team that managed only one victory in SEC play this season.
Indiana
Indiana's Curt Cignetti Learned Valuable Lesson in Keeping Your Mouth Shut | Deadspin.com
“Don’t write a check with your mouth that your ass can’t cash.”
My mom once told me that growing up. Can’t quite remember why. Somebody should probably tell that to Indiana head coach Curt Cignetti, who did a lot of talking all season long just to get demoralized in the first round of the College Football Playoff.
Way back when Cignetti got hired in November 2023 after a successful run with James Madison University, he was asked about how he plans on getting recruits to come to an Indiana program that appeared to be rebuilding.
“Google me,” Cignetti said. “I win.”
Cignetti backed that statement up. He landed starting quarterback Kurtis Rourke in December and running backs Justice Ellison and Ty Son Lawton.
The season could not have started any better for Cignetti’s Hoosiers, as their unbeaten 10-0 record had the attention of the nation before getting curb stomped 38-15 by Ohio State.
Before his first real test against the Buckeyes, Cignetti said, “Ohio State sucks,” at halftime of an Indiana basketball game. Bulletin board material? Sure seemed that was as Ohio State quarterback Will Howard went viral for “putting out the cig” celebration after thrashing the Hoosiers in Columbus.
That should have been Cignetti’s first lesson: to keep his yap shut. He did not learn.
Indiana bounced back from that loss with a 66-0 rout of the Purdue Boilermakers. Despite Purdue’s hapless 1-11 record, that victory put the wind right back in Cignetti’s sails before their College Football Playoff matchup with Notre Dame.
“We don’t just beat top 25 teams, we beat the shit out of them.”
That’s what Cignetti actually said on the set of ESPN’s College Game Day just hours before the Hoosiers kicked off with the Fighting Irish. It’s important to note that despite Cignetti’s impressive 11-1 record in his first year coaching Indiana, literally none of those victories came against Top 25 teams.
To make things even more hilarious, No. 5 Notre Dame completely embarrassed Indiana in a game where the Hoosiers looked like they did not belong on that same stage.
It’s a friendly reminder for the new coach of Indiana to just keep his mouth shut. Every time he opened it this year, he paid the price. It’s part of what made Indiana a story for a little while, but when the lights were the brightest, Cignetti’s team wasn’t as bold as his comments to the media.
That’s never a good thing.
-
Politics1 week ago
Canadian premier threatens to cut off energy imports to US if Trump imposes tariff on country
-
Technology1 week ago
Inside the launch — and future — of ChatGPT
-
Technology1 week ago
OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever says the way AI is built is about to change
-
Politics1 week ago
U.S. Supreme Court will decide if oil industry may sue to block California's zero-emissions goal
-
Technology1 week ago
Meta asks the US government to block OpenAI’s switch to a for-profit
-
Politics1 week ago
Conservative group debuts major ad buy in key senators' states as 'soft appeal' for Hegseth, Gabbard, Patel
-
Business6 days ago
Freddie Freeman's World Series walk-off grand slam baseball sells at auction for $1.56 million
-
Technology6 days ago
Meta’s Instagram boss: who posted something matters more in the AI age