IU baseball the No. 3 seed for the Big Ten Tournament
The Hoosiers came to Lincoln, Nebraska, with a chance to win the Big Ten regular season title.
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
The Hoosiers came to Lincoln, Nebraska, with a chance to win the Big Ten regular season title.
For the third time in four years, IU has a chance to win the Big Ten regular season title.
The Hoosiers were winning against the No. 5 team in the country.
On a day built to honor seniors, IU’s offense was powered by freshmen.
It was a frustrating start of the year for senior starting pitcher Evan Bell.
Caleb Baragar didn’t try to change anything.
Senior starting pitcher Kyle Hart firmly believes if he would have thrown a fastball away to Illinois first baseman Pat McInerney in the top of the fourth inning, IU would have 30 wins.
A season ago, the Fighting Illini were leaders of the Big Ten while the Hoosiers were fighting to land a comfortable seed in the conference tournament.
Each time IU got knocked down by Kentucky it responded.
He thought he was going to be bunting.
When IU arrived in Minnesota for a three-game series, it was a half game out of first in the Big Ten.
The thought of mentioning IU and first place in the Big Ten in the same sentence in early April was illogical.
A sweep took place this weekend at Bart Kaufman Field as the Hoosiers (26-16, 11-4) downed the Northwestern Wildcats (10-33, 2-16) by slim margins.
Everything was going off the rails.
BLOOMINGTON — He knew the second the ball started rolling toward the wall where he was going to end up.
On a day where the Hoosiers were supposed to score runs at a premium, they instead leaned on their pitching, defense and timely hitting to carry the club to victory.
It will be a tale of two teams on the pitching mound this weekend when IU (23-16, 8-4) welcomes last-place Northwestern (10-30, 2-13) for a three-game conference series.
Senior shortstop Brian Wilhite isn’t really sure why he’s made an incredible leap at the plate from a season ago, but he won’t question it.
It was a game of missed opportunities Wednesday for the Hoosiers, who failed to string together quality at-bats in key situations as Notre Dame shut out IU for the second time in three games.
INDIANAPOLIS — He couldn’t quite put into words how he was feeling.