Indiana
THE GHOSTS OF INDIANA FOOTBALL PAST
Fans of Indiana University football are haunted during each and every Saturday in the fall.
Not in the traditional sense, of course. They watch the Hoosiers duke it out throughout the Midwest and, lately, the team comes up short. But before or after that they have the wide world of college football at their viewing discretion. Within this sport lie several familiar faces, most of whom are experiencing great success.
They are the Ghosts of Indiana Football Past.
PENIX AND DEBOER
Penix is likely the greatest Indiana quarterback in years if not decades, with the only other contender being Nate Sudfeld. He who vanquished Penn State with a now-iconic stretch for the pylon, felled mighty Michigan and gave eventual national runner-up Ohio State a run for their money in the Buckeyes’ own stadium.
Those iconic moments, memories of a dream 2020, wouldn’t have come about were it not for him.
But everything wasn’t always so bright.
Penix never finished a season fully healthy during his time in Bloomington. He never started a game against Purdue, having not been named the starter at that point or having suffered an injury along the way.
In no season was this more true than 2021, when the Hoosiers rode a wave of hype that crashed down to a disastrous 2-10 record.
Indiana went through countless quarterbacks. None could get the offense going be it Penix, Jack Tuttle, Donaven McCulley or Grant Gremel taking snaps. Fingers were pointed, blame placed.
Was it the play calling? The porous offensive line? Something else?
Whatever it was led to the firing of offensive coordinator Nick Sheridan, who recruited Penix, following the season. He was the only staff member let go.
Into the portal Penix went, finding refuge in Washington with another familiar face: Kalen DeBoer. Legendary former head coach at Sioux Falls hired by Tom Allen as offensive coordinator in 2019.
That year too was among the best in recent memory, with Indiana reaching a bowl game and hoisting the Old Oaken Bucket. But DeBoer was not long for Southern Indiana, taking his offensive innovation to the head coaching job at Fresno State before ending up in the Pacific Northwest.
Now Washington (with Sheridan on board as tight ends coach, a position he held in 2019 for Indiana by the way!) is a bonafide College Football Playoff contender and Penix looks like a favorite for the Heisman Trophy with 12 passing touchdowns in just three games thus far.
It’s a weekly, brutal reminder of what the program has lost. We’ll have much, much more to say about this later, but the departure and subsequent emergence of Penix can’t be called anything but a colossal failure by Indiana.
To be extra clear here, this blog always has and always will root for Penix’s success. Go Husky,
KANE WOMMACK
The success of 2020 also doesn’t happen without wizardry in the defensive play calling. Enter Kane Wommack.
Wommack wasn’t always the vaunted up-and-comer he is now. He went through a few growing pains in Bloomington but boy was his final year something. The defense was a wrecking crew, creating turnovers and havoc on what felt like every snap.
There was the secondary maintaining a no-fly zone in the backfield or flying in out of nowhere to send the quarterback into the Earth’s mantle. The linebackers directing it all and flying in themselves.
All led by Wommack donning a blue vest on the sidelines as an homage to coach Phil Dickens. Now Wommack is a head coach in his own right preaching the LEO message to South Alabama.
His most recent work? Absolutely D E S T R O Y I N G Oklahoma State on the road, 33-7.
He’s a guy who got a well-deserved opportunity, but it’s been difficult to watch the defense try and regain its footing without him. Indiana has had three separate play callers in as many years since his departure.
CHUCK CAMPBELL, OTHERWISE KNOWN AS CHUCKY BOMBS
Campbell was a bright spot through the past few years of Indiana football.
Get in field goal range and he’ll get points on the board. He’s the reason they won a few games, most notably the victory over Western Kentucky in 2022, nailing a field goal in the closing seconds of overtime to avoid a loss.
Campbell is from Tennessee, so his transfer to Rocky Top this past season was a bit of a homecoming. It’s not exactly ideal to lose a kicker as consistent as Chuck Campbell was in Bloomington, and we have yet to see how that position can perform under pressure as he did.
Like the others, the blog only wishes success to Campbell moving forward. Chucky Bombs for life.
THE WOLVERINES
This was particularly sour.
Indiana lost its top tight end, AJ Barner, and a capable quarterback, Jack Tuttle, to a conference opponent in Michigan. Barner had a few big plays (probably could’ve had more too) in 2022 and Tuttle led Indiana to its first win over Wisconsin on the road since 2001.
With the Wolverines on track to win the Big Ten for a third consecutive year and perhaps break through for a national title, each could earn rings that’d be an impossible achievement in Bloomington.
Both were praised, endlessly, for their quality of character as teammates in Bloomington. Their departure is another cause for concern with the program.
Indiana
Dangerous cold across central Indiana Tuesday night
Below-zero temperatures are in the forecast Tuesday night, so protect your family, home and pets. But there is a day in the 40s in the seven-day forecast.
INDIANAPOLIS — Dangerous cold is in the forecast overnight with lows going below zero and wind chills near -15 into Wednesday morning.
Forecast
Tonight: Clear and very cold — Lows minus-10 to 0 degrees.
Wednesday: Sunny and cold — Highs 15-20 degrees.
Thursday: Mostly cloudy with a few flurries and snow showers — Highs in the lower 30s.
Friday: Some sun, more mild with highs near 40 degrees.
Remember your home, family and pets need extra attention when it gets this cold. School delays are possible early Wednesday.
You will need all of the layers on Wednesday. It will be sunny, but it will be cold with highs in the teens.
We are tracking a gradual warming trend for later this week and the start of the weekend. Forecast highs are in the lower 30s on Thursday. A few flurries and snow showers are possible on Thursday, too.
The big weather story on Friday is forecast highs near 40 degrees. Friday will also be a dry day.
Our next weather system arrives Friday night and brings rain and snow chances.
More cold air is in the forecast for early next week.
Indiana
Chicago weather forecast: Light snow coats city, NW Indiana on Tuesday
Tuesday, January 14, 2025 3:02PM
Video captured by ABC7 shows drivers slowly moving down I-80 in Indiana as snow coated the corridor.
CHICAGO (WLS) — Light snow coated the Chicago area and Northwest Indiana on Tuesday.
ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch
ABC7 meteorologist Tracy Butler said the snow would be an inconvenience during the morning rush.
However, the snow was forecasted to clear out by midday in the Chicago area.
Snow could linger in NW Indiana until 10 a.m.
Butler said the highest total seen by 9 a.m. was two inches.
Some areas in Indiana could see up to three inches by the time the front passes through.
Video captured by ABC7 shows drivers slowly moving down I-80 in Indiana as snow coated the corridor.
As the snow winds down, temperatures are likely to drop a bit and so will the wind chills, Butler said.
Illinois State Police said they are on the Emergency Snow Plan,
Cook County Radar | DuPage County Radar | Will County Radar | Lake County Radar (IL) | Kane County Radar | Northwest Indiana Radar
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Indiana
US man charged with stalking WNBA and Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark
Clark told police she feared for her safety and had altered her appearance in public after receiving the messages on X.
Police in the US state of Indianapolis have charged a man from Texas with a felony for stalking Women’s NBA superstar Caitlin Clark.
Michael Thomas Lewis is accused of repeated and continued harassment of the 22-year-old Clark beginning on December 16, the Marion County prosecutor’s office wrote in a court filing on Saturday. Jail records show Lewis is due in court on Tuesday.
Lewis posted numerous messages on Clark’s X account, according to an affidavit from a Marion County sheriff’s lieutenant.
In one, he said he had been driving by the Gainbridge Fieldhouse – one of the arenas where the Fever play home games – three times a day, and in another, he said he had “one foot on a banana peel and the other on a stalking charge”. Other messages directed at Clark were sexually explicit.
The posts “actually caused Caitlin Clark to feel terrorised, frightened, intimidated, or threatened” and an implicit or explicit threat also was made “with the intent to place Caitlin Clark in reasonable fear of sexual battery,” prosecutors wrote in the Marion County Superior Court filing.
Lewis could face up to six years in prison and a $10,000 fine if convicted.
The FBI learned that the X account belonged to Lewis and that the messages were sent from IP addresses associated with an Indianapolis hotel and a downtown public library.
Indianapolis police spoke with Lewis on January 8 at his hotel room. He told officers he was in Indianapolis on vacation. When asked why he was making so many posts about Clark, Lewis replied: “Just the same reason everybody makes posts,” according to court documents.
He told police that he did not mean any harm and that he fantasised about being in a relationship with Clark.
“It’s an imagination, fantasy type thing and it’s a joke, and it’s nothing to do with threatening,” he told police, according to the court documents.
In asking the court for a higher than standard bond, the prosecutor’s office said Lewis travelled from his home in Texas to Indianapolis “with the intent to be in close proximity to the victim”.
The prosecutor’s office also sought a stay-away order as a specific condition if Lewis is released from jail before trial. Prosecutors requested that Lewis be ordered to stay away from the Gainbridge and Hinkle fieldhouses where the Fever play home games.
Responding to the threats, Clark told police she feared for her safety and had altered her appearance in public.
“It takes a lot of courage for women to come forward in these cases, which is why many don’t,” Marion County prosecutor Ryan Mears said, according to The Indianapolis Star.
“In doing so, the victim is setting an example for all women who deserve to live and work in Indy without the threat of sexual violence.”
Clark, 22, was the number one overall pick in the 2024 WNBA Draft after a celebrated career at Iowa. She earned All-Star and All-WNBA honours and was named the WNBA Rookie of the Year in the 2024 season.
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