Sports
Indiana’s Curt Cignetti has ignited a fire: ‘This guy is just different’
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Four words came to Curt Cignetti’s mind as he tried to follow along from 800 miles away the path of a tornado that was closing in on his youngest child.
“What have I done?”
It was April 27, 2011. Cignetti was at a function at Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP), where he had recently started as head football coach, taking a 60 percent pay cut from the $250,000 he was making on Nick Saban’s staff at Alabama. His family was still back in Tuscaloosa finishing out the school year. Son Curtis was an Alabama student and was bunkering down on campus as the tornado — which would end up killing 64 people, six of them university students — passed nearby.
Cignetti’s wife, Manette, was three and a half hours south in Mobile for daughter Carly’s high school state tennis tournament. That left the youngest, daughter Natalie, at a friend’s house in a neighborhood that was about to be hit directly. Manette got Natalie on the phone and screamed at her to take cover. She and her friend’s family did, in the basement, under a table, as the house was moved off its foundation — a few hundred yards from a house that was completely obliterated.
“You’re just sick to your stomach, you’re helpless,” Manette said. “Meanwhile, Curt has to be present at this event and is just about having a heart attack trying to figure out what’s going on.”
The Cignettis were safe and soon reunited. But the scare was just the latest prompt for those four words: “What have I done?”
A coach approaching 50 doesn’t leave a job as a recruiting coordinator and receivers coach at one of the top programs in the sport to take over a struggling Division II outfit. That’s a sharp detour from a steady climb in a tough business, as the pay cut suggests. Manette rejected the idea out of hand.
But Cignetti always wanted to be a head coach, like his father, and believed he could win at IUP, like his father. He took the dubious leap. And those early doubts, intensified by the realization that IUP’s football resources had gone backward over decades, soon gave way to validation.
As Cignetti’s Indiana Hoosiers prepare to host Nebraska at sold-out Memorial Stadium on Saturday, in the program’s biggest game in years, he sits at 160 games coached. He has won 125 of them. When he was introduced as IU’s coach in December, after successful stints at James Madison, Elon and IUP, four words came to mind after a question about the difficulty of succeeding at historically hapless Indiana.
“I win. Google me,” Cignetti said.
So far, that’s all he’s done.
Cignetti’s teams usually win because he usually outperforms the coach on the other sideline. For as blunt and confident as he can be, he won’t say it quite like that. But those who have seen him do his work will.
“He and his coaches give you all the answers, so you just know you’re going to win on game day,” said Todd Centeio, a quarterback who transferred from Colorado State to James Madison for his final year of eligibility in 2022 and won Sun Belt Offensive Player of the Year.
“I don’t know how he does it, I just know that I trust it,” said Indiana tight end Zach Horton, one of several prominent Hoosiers who followed Cignetti from James Madison.
“Just highly intelligent and raised in the game,” said Duke coach Manny Diaz, who worked with Cignetti at NC State.
“He has an absolutely incredible football mind,” said Jeff Bourne, the athletic director who hired Cignetti to James Madison from Elon, and whose retirement preceded Cignetti’s move to IU. “Watching his scouting of an opponent and preparation of a game plan was just really remarkable. You’d go into some games feeling like, ‘Well, I’m not sure about this one,’ and then we’d win and you’d realize how much it had to do with the preparation of the coaching staff. The way he analyzes opponents and finds ways to beat them, I saw it so many times and it was absolutely amazing.”
He saw it from the other side on Oct. 6, 2018, when Cignetti’s Elon Phoenix came to Harrisonburg, Va., as massive underdogs against FCS No. 2-ranked James Madison and pulled a 27-24 shocker. A couple of months later, JMU coach Mike Houston was off to East Carolina and Cignetti was Bourne’s choice to replace him and lead JMU’s successful transition to the FBS.
Indiana is 6-0 and outscoring opponents by 32.7 points per game. (James Black / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Elon went a modest 14-9 in Cignetti’s two seasons there — but that was a turnaround from 12-45 in the previous five seasons. Cignetti’s formula has worked everywhere, and it starts with an eye for the game and a willingness to use both eyes until the lids get heavy to find an edge.
“He’s always in his office, always watching film,” said Indiana linebacker Aiden Fisher, another JMU transfer making an immediate splash with the Hoosiers.
Cignetti said the film projector is on “98 percent of the time” when he’s in that office. Then he goes home to the teal recliner that has survived all 35 years of the Cignettis’ marriage.
“All he does is sit in his chair and work,” Manette said.
That’s part of the formula. So is frank, honest talk, which Cignetti has found works with recruits and players alike. That’s where his late father, Frank Cignetti Sr., is apparent in his coaching style.
“He was a great man, a great leader, an up-front guy,” Cignetti said of his father, who passed away in 2022 at age 84. “He’d always tell you what was on his mind. You may not like it, but he would tell you. Usually, to be your best, you’ve got to hear things you don’t like sometimes.”
Frank Sr. grew up in Pittsburgh, his parents having moved from Italy, his father a coal miner.
“Everyone was a coal miner or in the steel mill, that’s what everyone did where I was from,” said Cignetti, the oldest of four kids of Frank Sr. and Marlene. “Athletics was the way out.”
Frank Sr. was an NAIA All-America end at IUP, and his coaching career wound from the high school ranks to West Virginia, where Bobby Bowden hired him to coach the offensive backfield in 1970. When Bowden left for Florida State in 1976, Frank Sr. succeeded him as head coach.
In 1978, Frank Sr. hired a young West Virginia native named Nick Saban to coach defensive backs. He also battled a rare form of cancer, had his spleen removed, was given chemotherapy and last rites twice, and ultimately survived. In 1979, he welcomed his eldest son as a quarterback on the team and was fired after the season with a 17-27 record in four years.
“Let’s face it, I’ve got a little chip on my shoulder and some of it is that I had to go to IUP to be a head coach, that I’ve been underestimated my whole life,” Cignetti said. “But the Cignetti name drives me too.”
Cignetti stayed as a backup at West Virginia for his final three seasons of eligibility under Don Nehlen, who he said “was great to me,” and then his coaching career got going as Frank Sr. found his sweet spot. After several years as athletic director at IUP, he took over head coaching duties in 1986 and had a tremendous 20-year run — 182-50-1 with several deep Division II playoff runs, two to the championship game.
Frank Jr. played for his father at IUP and embarked on a coaching career that has included several NFL stops and two stints at hometown school Pittsburgh. Curt started at Pitt as a grad assistant in 1983 and then coached quarterbacks and tight ends there in the 1990s for Johnny Majors and Walt Harris. Manette, who met Curt in her hometown of Indiana, Pa., while in pharmacy school, shared in supporting their young family as a pharmacist.
Pitt is where Cignetti’s recruiting skills — evaluation and relentless pursuit — got him his first recruiting coordinator gig. He carried that to Chuck Amato’s staff at NC State and also coached Philip Rivers there.
“Cig is just one of those coaches that checks every box and you could see all of it back then,” said Noel Mazzone, who worked with Cignetti as Amato’s offensive coordinator in 2003 and 2004.
The Saban connection came back around when he left the Miami Dolphins for the Alabama job in early 2007. Saban had stayed in touch with Cignetti over the years and now wanted him to coordinate recruiting and coach receivers for the Crimson Tide. That meant pursuits such as eventual Heisman winner Mark Ingram, coaching players like Julio Jones and winning a national championship.
“My experience with coach Saban, I can’t even begin to tell you, like, even just after a year with him, how much I learned about running an organization,” Cignetti said. “From A to Z. Every day was like a doctoral class. It was so structured, so organized. He had a philosophy on everything. Everything was just airtight. I learned a ton.”
One thing he learned: Saban liked to look outside to fill coordinator openings, such as when he hired Jim McElwain from Fresno State to be OC in 2008. After four seasons, with his 50th birthday approaching, Cignetti was feeling the urgency.
“I really didn’t want to be another 58-year-old assistant coach bouncing around looking for another job, you know what I mean?” he said. “I’d seen those guys. I’d grown up in the business, I’d followed careers and I didn’t want to be in that situation eight to 10 years from then. I wasn’t a coordinator and I felt like to that point I was always the next guy. I’d been passed over. But I always felt like I could be a good head coach. I wasn’t not going to be a head coach.”
IUP called in December 2010.
“I said, ‘No, you can’t take it,’” Manette said. “I just wasn’t going backward.”
Cignetti turned it down. That was that. Except weeks later, the job still wasn’t filled. Cignetti got another call.
“He looks at me and says, ‘I just really want to be a head coach,’” Manette said. “What am I gonna do? Keep him from his dream? He gave me that look and it was, ‘Oh crap. OK. OK. Let’s go. Let’s do it.’”
It was a much easier decision when Indiana came calling after last season after James Madison finished 11-1 to bring Cignetti’s five-year record there to 52-9.
The Indiana of Pennsylvania move meant Manette resuming work as a pharmacist, in advance of both daughters following up college with medical school — both are doctors now — while Curtis got into medical sales. He and his wife, Amy, have provided the Cignettis with their first two grandkids, Sophia and Isabelle.
Indiana football is a family affair for the Cignettis. (Courtesy of Manette Cignetti)
The Indiana of Bloomington move meant Cignetti’s salary multiplied by nearly seven times — from $677,000 last year at James Madison to $4.25 million per year at IU before bonuses. He’s a 63-year-old coach who has never been a coordinator for a power-conference school and has just two FBS head coaching seasons under his belt. And he was the easy, clear No. 1 choice for Indiana athletic director Scott Dolson.
“From the first time we talked, it was, ‘This guy is just different,’” Dolson said. “People don’t believe me, but I don’t think he’s cocky. He’s really not. He just tells you exactly how he feels.”
That meant frank conversations about administrative support during the interview process and a feeling after talking to IU President Pamela Whitten that it was strong. Cignetti already knew the Big Ten’s media rights deals would extend IU’s resources edge over most athletic departments in years to come. And that a hapless football program isn’t an option for any institution that wants to stay in that neighborhood.
Dolson knows that, too, which is why his department launched a study to help direct the revival of Indiana football while Tom Allen was still the coach. The focus was on “like schools,” Dolson said, that had found football success. Put another way, basketball schools: Kentucky, Kansas, Duke and North Carolina.
There are major differences among that group, but all have found varying measures of success with good coaching hires. Though Kansas is struggling this season, Lance Leipold has given the program energy and fits the profile of an older coach who worked his way up at lower levels. The “do-everything” nature of those jobs can be an advantage, as Dolson observed this season when Cignetti had a full travel plan ready early in advance of a win at UCLA.
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The study produced several traits of an ideal coach, including someone who was currently a head coach; a proven evaluator who had been a recruiting coordinator at some point; and an offensive-minded coach known in particular for developing quarterbacks. Cignetti was an obvious choice before they spoke. Then they did.
“It was like he had our blueprint and our plan literally in front of him when I was talking to him,” Dolson said. “Everything that was important to us was important to him.”
Still: Indiana?
This is the program with the most losses in Division I history, 713, and the worst winning percentage by far in Big Ten history at .421. It is to the Big Ten as Vanderbilt is to the SEC, though Indiana does at least have two conference titles to its name — in 1945 and 1967.
Allen provided a brief burst of hope with his 14-7 run in 2019 and 2020. Terry Hoeppner had the energy to change the narrative in the early 2000s before tragically dying of brain cancer after two seasons. Bill Mallory had some solid teams in the 1980s and 1990s. Lee Corso brought personality. No one has gotten out of the place with more wins than losses since Bo McMillin managed that feat in 1947.
Cignetti had no use for that history. But he felt it almost immediately.
“I could tell this place had been beaten down in terms of a lot of people just didn’t think it was possible,” he said. “I was just shocked at how everybody on the outside thought it was impossible to get anything done here.”
That’s the genesis of the Pittsburgh-accented “Google me.” Cignetti had heard enough chatter about the hopelessness of Indiana football by the time he got to his introductory presser.
“That just killed me — that’s typical, straight Cig, right?” Mazzone said.
“He really is humble, but he had to light a fire,” Manette said.
“I just had to set an expectation level that this is who we’re gonna be, and we’re not gonna permit anything else,” Cignetti said. “We’re winning here. There are no self-imposed limitations. I had to show that confidence, not just to the players, but to the fans.”
Then it was on to quickly fixing a roster that had just lost several defensive starters and all but one offensive starter. Cignetti brought in 22 transfers, 13 from James Madison. He leaned on those guys, several of them instantly some of IU’s best players, to get everyone else ready for what was coming.
Practices would be short and relentlessly efficient. Life would be good for those who do the right things and prepare. These coaches would have the formula for winning, weekly.
“It didn’t take long for everyone to get on board,” Horton said, and the Hoosiers have won all six games, the best start since 1967, entering a moment of revelation against Nebraska.
The schedule gets much tougher from here, with Washington, Michigan and a trip to Ohio State coming up soon. But the quality of the football — spearheaded in large part by Ohio transfer quarterback Kurtis Rourke — is undeniable. The Hoosiers are inventive and explosive on offense, and they stop the run and get after the quarterback on defense, with JMU transfer Mikail Kamara already at five sacks. The response from fans and boosters, Cignetti said, has been “over the top.”
“The NIL has grown very significantly from what it was, and it needed to,” he said. “I pushed that hard. I pushed the envelope on that, and people responded.”
Already, this program has better facilities than some may realize — both stadium end zones were enclosed in the past 15 years at a combined cost of $91 million, plus $2 million in locker room renovations in 2019. Indiana athletics had $166.8 million in reported revenues in the most recent budget year, No. 13 in the country and No. 5 in the Big Ten. Indiana University has the second-largest alumni base in the country, about 900,000 people.
So there’s money to be found in case Cignetti’s salary needs to double or so, soon after it got multiplied by seven. As more of college football finds out who he is, his team is in position to contend for a spot in the first 12-team College Football Playoff. The Hoosiers should have a reasonable shot at every game on the schedule but the trip to Ohio State.
Hoosiers fans may need to see more to believe something like that is possible, but so far in 10 months, they’ve seen nothing to declare it isn’t.
“When that time comes to get into that Playoff bid, we’ll look up and see our logo up there,” Fisher said, “and then we’ll get to preparing for that game just like it’s another game week.”
That confidence. That’s what Cignetti’s done.
(Top photo: Michael Hickey / Getty Images)
Sports
Tom Izzo explodes on former Michigan State player in wild scene: ‘What the f— are you doing?’
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Michigan State head coach Tom Izzo has been known to get visibly angry with his players over his years in East Lansing, but what happened Monday night against USC was different.
Izzo let loose his frustration on a former player.
During the Spartans’ blowout over the Trojans, 80-51, Izzo was spotted unloading on former Michigan State center Paul Davis, who played for the team from 2002-06, after he caused a disturbance in the stands.
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Head coach Tom Izzo of the Michigan State Spartans reacts to a call during a game against the Nebraska Cornhuskers during the first half at Pinnacle Bank Arena Jan. 2, 2026, in Lincoln, Neb. (Steven Branscombe/Getty Images)
Referees pointed out Davis, who was a spectator, from his courtside seat after he was among many in the building who disagreed with a call in the second half. Davis stood up and shouted at referee Jeffrey Anderson.
Anderson responded with a loud whistle, stopping play and pointing at Davis. Then, Anderson went over to Izzo to explain what happened, and the 70-year-old coach went ballistic.
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First, he was motioning toward Davis, and it was clear he asked his former center, “What the f— are you doing?”
Davis was met by someone asking him to leave his seat, and that’s when Izzo went nuts. He shouted “Get out of here!” at Davis, who appeared to gesture toward Izzo, perhaps in apology for disturbing the game.
Izzo was asked about Davis’ ejection after the game.
“What he said, he should never say anywhere in the world,” Izzo responded when asked what happened. “That ticked me off. So, just because it’s 25, 20 years later, I’m going to have to call him tomorrow and tell him what I thought of it. And you know what he’ll say? ‘I screwed up, coach. I’m sorry.’”
Izzo quickly clarified that what Davis said “wasn’t something racial” and “it wasn’t something sexual.”
Michigan State Spartans head coach Tom Izzo protests a call that benefited the Iowa Hawkeyes during the first half at Jack Breslin Student Events Center Dec. 2, 2025. (Dale Young/Imagn Images)
“It was just the wrong thing to say, and I’ll leave it at that.”
Davis later met with reporters Tuesday, apologizing for his actions.
“I’m not up here to make any excuses. I’m up here to take accountability, to own it,” Davis said. It was a mistake that will never happen again. It was a mistake that’s not me, but, unfortunately, last night it was.”
Izzo said Davis was one of his “favorite guys” during his time playing for the Spartans. He had a breakout sophomore campaign with 15.8 points, 6.2 rebounds and two assists per game in 30 starts for Izzo during the 2003-04 season.
Head coach Tom Izzo of the Michigan State Spartans reacts during a game against the Nebraska Cornhuskers during the second half at Pinnacle Bank Arena Jan. 2, 2026, in Lincoln, Neb. (Steven Branscombe/Getty Images)
In his senior year, Davis averaged 17.5 points, a career-high, in 33 games.
He was taken in the second round of the 2006 NBA Draft by the Los Angeles Clippers. Davis played just four seasons in the league, his final one with the Washington Wizards.
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Sports
Problems continue to mount for UCLA men in loss to Wisconsin
MADISON, Wis. — Can a team be in crisis just a handful of games into conference play?
UCLA is testing that possibility given what happened here Tuesday night as part of a larger downward trend.
Lacking one of their top players with guard Skyy Clark sidelined by a hamstring injury, the Bruins also were deficient in many other areas.
Defense. Heart. Toughness. Cohesion. Intelligence.
In a game that the Bruins needed to win to get their season back on track and have any realistic chance at an elite finish in the Big Ten, they fell flat once more.
Another terrible first half led to another failed comeback for UCLA during an 80-72 loss to Wisconsin on Tuesday night at the Kohl Center, leaving the Bruins in search of answers that seem elusive.
There was a dustup with 10 seconds left when UCLA’s Eric Dailey Jr. pushed Wisconsin’s Nolan Winter after absorbing a hard foul, forcing a scrum of players to congregate along the baseline. Winter was assessed a flagrant-1 foul and Dailey a technical foul that was offset by a technical foul on Badgers guard Nick Boyd.
About the only thing to celebrate for the Bruins was not giving up.
Thanks to a flurry of baskets from Dailey and a three-pointer from Trent Perry that broke his team’s 0-for-14 start from long range, UCLA pulled to within 63-56 midway through the second half. Making the Bruins’ rally all the more improbable was that much of it came with leading scorer Tyler Bilodeau on the bench with four fouls.
But Wisconsin countered with five consecutive points and the Bruins (10-5 overall, 2-2 Big Ten) never mounted another threat on the way to a second consecutive loss.
Dailey scored 18 points but missed all five of his three-pointers, fitting for a team that made just one of 17 shots (5.9%) from long range. Bilodeau added 16 points and Perry had 15.
Boyd scored 20 points to lead the Badgers (10-5, 2-2), who won in large part by their volume of three-pointers, making 10 of 30 attempts (33.3%) from beyond the arc.
Unveiling a turnover-choked, defensively challenged performance, UCLA played as if it were trying to top its awful first-half showing against Iowa from three days earlier.
It didn’t help that the Bruins were shorthanded from tipoff.
With Clark unavailable, UCLA coach Mick Cronin turned to Perry and pivoted to a smaller lineup featuring forward Brandon Williams alongside Bilodeau as the big men.
For the opening 10 minutes, it felt like a repeat of Wisconsin’s blowout victory over UCLA during the Big Ten tournament last March. The Badgers made seven of 11 three-pointers on the way to building a 20-point lead midway through the first half as Cronin continually tinkered with his lineup, trying to find a winning combination.
It never came.
He tried backup center Steven Jamerson II for a little more than a minute before yanking him after Jamerson committed a foul. He put in backup guard Jamar Brown and took him out after Brown gave up a basket and fumbled a pass out of bounds for a turnover. Backup guard Eric Freeny got his chance as well and airballed a three-pointer.
Wisconsin surged ahead with an early 13-0 run and nearly matched it with a separate 11-0 push. The Bruins then lost Perry for the rest of the first half after he hit his chin while diving for a loose ball, pounding the court in frustration with a balled fist before holding a towel firmly against his injured chin during a timeout. (He returned in the second half with a heavy bandage.)
Just when it seemed as if things couldn’t get worse, they did. Williams limped off the court with cramps late in the first half and the Bruins failed to box out Wisconsin’s Andrew Rohde on two possessions, leading to a putback and two free throws after he was fouled on another putback attempt.
UCLA almost seemed fortunate to be down only 45-31 by the game’s midpoint, though being on pace to give up 90 points couldn’t have pleased a coach known for defense.
Another comeback that came up short didn’t make things any better.
Sports
Dolphins’ Tua Tagovailoa open to fresh start elsewhere after disappointing season: ‘That would be dope’
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Tua Tagovailoa appears to be ready to move on from the Miami Dolphins – a feeling that seems mutual between the two sides.
Tagovailoa was benched for the final three games of the season due to poor performance. A day after the Dolphins’ season ended with a 38-10 loss to division rival New England, the sixth-year signal-caller appeared open to the idea of a “fresh start.”
Mike McDaniel speaks with Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa (1) in the fourth quarter of a game against the Buffalo Bills at Hard Rock Stadium on Sept. 25, 2022, in Miami Gardens, Florida. (Megan Briggs/Getty Images)
“That would be dope. I would be good with it,” Tagovailoa said Monday, according to The Palm Beach Post, when asked specifically if he was “hoping for a fresh start.”
When asked by another reporter if he understood “fresh start” as playing “elsewhere,” Tagovailoa reportedly confirmed it.
The remarks came the same day that head coach Mike McDaniel confirmed that the team would be approaching the 2025-2026 season with a competitive mindset for the position.
“In 2026, I think there will be competition for our starting quarterback. What that is and how that looks, there’s a lot that remains to be seen. It’s the most important position on the football field, and you have to make sure you do everything possible to get the best person out there on the field.”
Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa runs off the field during the first half of an NFL football game against the New England Patriots in Foxborough, Massachusetts, on Jan. 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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“Who that is – whether they’re in-house or somewhere else, that’s something that we’ll be extremely diligent on,” he continued. “But I know there will be competition for those reins. That much I do know.”
Tagovailoa threw for 2,660 yards with 20 touchdowns this season, but he struggled with accuracy and mobility, throwing a career-high of 15 interceptions. His poor performance comes just one season after signing a four-year, $212.4 million contract extension in July 2024.
Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa speaks during a press conference after an NFL football game against the Baltimore Ravens, Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025, in Miami Gardens, Florida. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)
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The Dolphins face a serious decision regarding Tagovailoa, as releasing him next year would result in a $99 million dead cap charge. If the move is designated as a post-June 1 release, those charges would be split over two years, with $67.4 million allocated to the 2026 cap and $31.8 million in 2027.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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