Indiana
Notre Dame’s Misery Could Be Indiana’s Opportunity — Here’s Why

Indiana made quick of Indiana State on Friday night, routing the Sycamores 73-0. One night later, roughly 200 miles north of Bloomington, Indiana, in South Bend, Notre Dame dropped another thriller. This one was a 41-40 loss to Texas A&M that dropped the Fighting Irish to 0-2.
Aside from the obvious in Texas A&M, Indiana may have just been the biggest winner in college football because of that.
Indiana Football’s Current Setting
Indiana sits at 3-0 after Friday’s drubbing of Indiana State and is now preparing for No. 9 Illinois in one of the biggest games in the history of Memorial Stadium. Both the Hoosiers and Fighting Illini have realistic College Football Playoff hopes, and Saturday’s showdown will go a long way in determining who has a step up.
A win by Indiana Saturday would put it in the driver’s seat for a College Football Playoff spot ahead of Notre Dame, even if the Irish win out and finish 10-2.
Beating No. 9 Illinois on Saturday night would mean Indiana has a top ten win to its name, something Notre Dame is almost guaranteed to not have all year, as it sits 0-2 and only has one game remaining against a team that is currently ranked (Oct. 18 vs. No. 25 USC).
Indiana’s Remaining Schedule:
Coaches hate looking ahead and understandably so. However, we’re not coaches here, and can look ahead without getting punished for it.
Of its nine remaining games, Indiana figures to be favored in seven. Only trips to Oregon and Penn State would appear to make the Hoosiers underdogs at this point.
College football rarely goes as we expect it to far out, but what happens if Indiana simply beats the teams, it should, with Saturday’s game against Illinois included in that?
Indiana would finish 10-2 and feature a top ten win. The best Notre Dame could currently do is run the table and finish 10-2, but that would almost certainly come without a win over a top 15 team, let alone a top 10 one.
College Football Playoff Outlook:
Would the College Football Playoff committee agree? It can say it doesn’t favor brands over resumes all it wants, but sometimes the evidence is too strong against that. Notre Dame losing its two games by a combined four points only would be part of its case, but should margin of defeat even matter in CFP cases?
Indiana didn’t even play Saturday night but depending how the rest of the regular season goes, it may have just been the biggest winner in all of college football Saturday night, short of Texas A&M.

Indiana
Are Caitlin Clark’s Air Force 1s the key to Indiana Fever’s playoff success?

Can Fever win without Caitlin Clark?
USAT’s Meghan Hall and Sam Cardona-Norberg highlight how the Fever’s depth has shown out in the playoffs, and what it means for Indiana’s future.
Sports Seriously
Caitlin Clark may not be able to play for the Indiana Fever, but she’s clearly trying to influence her teammates with her shoe game. The All-Star guard, who is out with a right groin injury, has worn black Nike Air Force 1 sneakers for the last three games of the playoffs.
The Fever’s record in those three games: 3-0.
It started when the Fever were down 1-0 in their best-of-3 first-round series to the Atlanta Dream. She walked out on the court with the shoes, which exude toughness, and got a big reaction from teammates.
“I fear you, you mean business,” Fever All-Star center Aliyah Boston joked before Game 2. “Black Forces?! Them (refs) better watch out.”
BE LIKE CAITLIN CLARK: Buy black Air Force 1s
Ever the superstitious type, after the Fever won Game 2, Clark wore same outfit and Air Force 1s for Game 3. After the Fever upset the Dream, they celebrated the shoes on the court.
“I mean, they’re working, so,” teammate Lexie Hull said following the Game 3 win. “We told her she’s bringing them in her bag, wearing them every day.”
For Game 1 of the semifinals against the Las Vegas Aces, Clark wore black and white Nikes to the Michelob ULTRA Arena. Indiana’s Sophie Cunningham was concerned, asking about the black Air Forces. Clark said: “Don’t worry, I’ve got them.”
Clark wore all black for the game, including the Air Force 1s, and the Fever stunned the Aces to take a 1-0 lead in the best-of-5 semifinals.
Here’s guessing the black AF1s will be back for Game 2, Tuesday in Las Vegas.
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Indiana
Knicks Hope to Be in Pacers’ Shoes

The New York Knicks hope to do what the Indiana Pacers were able to accomplish this past season by winning the Eastern Conference Finals.
The Pacers stunned the Knicks in six games to advance to the NBA Finals, where they pushed the champion Oklahoma City Thunder to a Game 7 despite losing star point guard Tyrese Haliburton to a torn Achilles midway through the final matchup.
The Pacers should be different without Haliburton in the upcoming season, opening the door for the Knicks to take over as the top team in the East. Even though Haliburton won’t be on the court, the Pacers should still have a solid team.
Andrew Nembhard is expected to have significant duties as the team’s point guard while Bennedict Mathurin will likely be his partner in the backcourt.
Aaron Nesmith, who torched the Knicks throughout the entire Eastern Conference Finals, will likely be the team’s starting small forward. Pascal Siakam will be expected to lead the team in scoring from the power forward position while the team has question marks surrounding the center spot.
Myles Turner won’t be with the Pacers for the first time in a decade after he signed a contract with the division rival Milwaukee Bucks over the offseason, so the team needs to figure out what it will do to replace him.
“By far, the biggest question with the lineup is the center position. There is no guaranteed starter, although Isaiah Jackson is the favorite. Jay Huff and James Wiseman will likely back him up,” Indiana Pacers On SI contributor Ryan Stano wrote.
“There’s a chance that Indiana changes who they want to start at center at some point during the season, so that is a fluid spot. Tony Bradley will fight Wiseman for the third-string minutes.”
The Knicks should be favored over the Pacers during the season, but this is a team whose core was one win away from winning the championship just a few months ago.
Therefore, the Knicks have to take the Pacers seriously if they want to overtake them in the Eastern Conference hierarchy.
Make sure you bookmark Knicks on SI for the latest news, exclusive interviews, film breakdowns and so much more!
Indiana
He tore both ACLs, now this Zionsville alum is big part of No. 1 Indiana men’s soccer
BLOOMINGTON — Each and every day, in Todd Yeagley’s world, No. 1 leans ever heavier on No. 99.
When Yeagley’s Indiana men’s soccer team ascended to the top of the United Soccer coaches rankings this week, they did so on the back of three straight clean sheets, including ranked wins over Oregon State and Saint Louis, and a 1-0 victory at Notre Dame.
Those results brought into stark relief the impact of the Hoosiers’ new No. 1 keeper, who wears a number as far from what is convention for his position as is possible.
Holden Brown, whose 6-foot-4 frame fills all of the purple adidas shirt IU’s keepers wear, transferred from Virginia last year. He did so knowing he’d have to fight for his place — in fact, that was part of the Hoosiers’ appeal — and he unexpectedly missed last season through an injury he hardly even knew he’d suffered.
But now, handed the proverbial No. 1 shirt, Indiana’s No. 99 (Brown’s actual number) anchors a back five that hasn’t conceded in a goal in its last 358 minutes of soccer. Brown found what he wanted in Bloomington. Handed his chance, after waiting so long, he’s seizing it with both hands.
“Whenever you become a consistent starter for so long,” Brown told IndyStar, “the game just kind of becomes a little bit of a job. That pressure becomes a privilege, but you get used to it.
“Sitting on the sideline makes you just appreciate the moment more.”
A Zionsville native, Brown began his career with another college soccer powerhouse. He spent four years seasons (2020-23) with the Cavaliers, starting between the sticks for two-plus seasons.
In 2021, Brown led the ACC in saves, and in 2022 he was third-team all-conference, and made the All-ACC tournament team.
Then, midseason in 2023, he tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee. Brown lost the rest of that campaign, before transferring into a two-year graduate program at IU.
He knew the Hoosiers better than most — Brown was close friends with Grant Yeagley, one of Todd Yeagley’s three sons, growing up, even spending time at the Yeagleys’ house when he was young.
But family ties didn’t bring Brown to Bloomington.
“Going to a place ready to compete was really important to me,” he said. “I didn’t just want to step in somewhere and be that annoying fifth-year senior that steps in and (takes the job by default).”
Indiana had an established keeper, JT Harms, and with his ACL tear mended, Brown was ready to push Harms for playing time.
But through the course of the summer in 2024, he started to notice a new pain, this time in his right knee. It was never sharp or unbearable. Brown can’t even pinpoint exactly when it started. It wasn’t extreme to the point that he stopped working out, or coaching other goalies. Just persistent enough for him to eventually get it examined.
“I finally pulled the trigger on the MRI, thinking maybe I’d sprained my MCL or something,” Brown said.
Tests confirmed what Brown never realized — he’d torn the ACL in his right knee.
“It was definitely a blow,” he said.
That planted Brown on the sideline for another year. He passed a lot of training sitting on Jerry Yeagley’s golf cart, getting a crash course in IU soccer history and culture from the former coach still affectionately referred to within the program as The Godfather.
Brown also spent that time studying his new team, and his new teammates. The goalkeeper is the only player on the pitch who plays with the entire game in front of him, and his role as a communicator and organizer is crucial to not just defensive success, but team success.
Once he was cleared a second time, Brown spent the summer directing what he calls “a makeshift goalies union,” working out with Louisville transfer AJ Piela and Dani Jacobson, the starting goalie for IU’s women’s team. When the rest of his teammates gathered for preseason, Brown might have been new to some of them on the pitch, but he needed no time bedding in.
“Hanging out with the guys for the whole year, them seeing me as a human being off the field, and then being able to prove myself on the field, I think that combination of both has been really helpful,” Brown said. “Even though I am a transfer, it doesn’t feel like it.”
That alone didn’t hand Brown the starting job, out of a keeper group Todd Yeagley has suggested is the deepest he’s coached at Indiana.
“This group,” Christian Lomeli, a former IU keeper now on staff, said, “it’s crazy to say, and I’ve never felt this way, in my time here: I could have picked the name out of a hat and every one would have been capable of starting in that (season-opening) Clemson match, and the season moving forward.”
In particular, Brown split time in the preseason with freshman Judewellin Michel, who came to IU from the CF Montreal academy setup.
Michel got that start against Clemson, a 2-2 draw that remains the only one of six regular-season games thus far IU hasn’t won. Brown came in Matchday 2 against San Francisco, and he’ll admit now this season might have taken a different direction for him had the Hoosiers not erased a 2-0 deficit in a 3-2 win.
But in the four matches since, he’s conceded just once, in the second minute against Green Bay. Those blanks thrown up in three impressive nonconference wins contributed to the Hoosiers rise to No. 1 this week.
Lomeli still pushes his veteran keeper to improve his game.
He wants Brown to keep honing his ability to communicate as a keeper, and to trust his big frame to command his 18-yard area, and come for crosses and free kicks as boldly as former Hoosier and current FC Cincinnati netminder Roman Celentano once did. When the Hoosiers have leads to protect — as they have recently — Lomeli knows more opponents will resort to throwing long balls into the area Brown can come clean up aggressively.
“We need to have a commanding keeper that can manage his box well,” Lomeli said. “That’s an area we need to just grow his confidence.”
And Brown knows September success means little for a program with December ambitions. The Hoosiers open Big Ten play Saturday against Michigan, starting their journey toward the first of three trophies they aim for annually.
Brown was part of an experienced team last year whose collective trophy cabinet was stuffed with conference honors and NCAA tournament wins. This group, turned over by attrition and leaning on both freshmen and transfers, can’t claim so much silverware.
If No. 99 has his way, No. 1 is just the beginning for Indiana this fall.
“No. 1’s great. Undefeated’s great. But we haven’t won any trophies,” Brown said matter-of-factly. “That’s what the guys want, and that’s what we’re gonna hunt, starting with Michigan on Saturday.”
Want more Hoosiers coverage? Sign up for IndyStar’s Hoosiers newsletter. Listen to Mind Your Banners, our IU Athletics-centric podcast, on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Watch the latest on IndyStar TV: Hoosiers.
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