IU can't find offense in 58-43 loss to Iowa
The Hoosiers had a chance for a three-game win streak Sunday, but they lost in a low-scoring affair to a Hawkeye team with only one previous conference win.
The Hoosiers had a chance for a three-game win streak Sunday, but they lost in a low-scoring affair to a Hawkeye team with only one previous conference win.
The IU track and field team will look to continue its record-setting season when it plays host to the Gladstein Invitational, starting from noon to 8:30 p.m. today and concluding Saturday with events from 10 a.m. to 2:35 p.m.
Despite missing two players, the IU women’s tennis team will play its first road matches of the spring season Saturday. The team will travel to Miami University (Ohio) for a 9:30 a.m. match, then relocate to Ball State for a 6 p.m. contest.
The Hoosiers have not been favored for a single moment in Big Ten play under IU coach Tom Crean. That might change Sunday in Assembly Hall when IU faces a Hawkeye team without a road win this season.
Like a slow-cooker, it took time. But after 22 months, one coaching change and 40 minutes, IU got its first Big Ten road win since Feb. 23, 2008.
The IU wrestling team will not be allowed to ease into the Big Ten season. The No. 11 Hoosiers will open up their season on the Big Ten Network at 8 p.m. today when they travel to No. 19 Wisconsin.
On Wednesday, IU coach Tom Crean told members of the media that Penn State’s 0-5 Big Ten record and 8-9 overall season performance was “misleading.” The Nittany Lions had lost a number of close games.
The No. 12 IU women’s swimming and diving team will battle another ranked opponent in No. 22 Purdue on Saturday at Counsilman-Billingsley Aquatic Center. The Hoosiers’ match with the Boilermakers is one of only two remaining dual meets before the Big Ten and NCAA championships.
When Northwestern rallied to within two points of the lead to begin the second half, the IU women’s basketball team leaders did not flinch.
The IU men’s tennis team will play in its last tune-up competition this weekend. The Hoosiers are in Blacksburg, Va.for the Hokie Challenge, which begins at 4 p.m. today.
The Hoosiers plan to accomplish two things when they head to Ann Arbor, Mich., this Sunday: win back-to-back conference games for the first time this season and complete a season sweep of the Wolverines.
Led by a Dumes off the bench and Watford's board-crashing, the Hoosiers held off Talor Battle and the Nittany Lions, keeping Penn State winless in the Big Ten.
Halfway through the season, the Hoosiers have seen almost everything. A victory at Madison Square Garden. A loss to a nationally ranked opponent. And this past Sunday, an overtime conference win. But an away win? That’s yet to happen.
When IU fans last left the Assembly Hall stands in the 2006-07 season, a D.J. White-led team had defeated the No. 2 Wisconsin Badgers.
Unlike most other teenage basketball prospects, Capobianco was never a kid of just a few words.
Following Sunday’s 81-64 loss at No. 5 Ohio State, IU women’s basketball coach Felisha Legette-Jack said her team wasn’t where it needed to be defensively.
Multimedia editor Sean Morrison talked with the Centre Daily Times' Jeff Rice about Penn State's Big Ten woes, Talor Battle and the Lions' plan of attack against the Hoosiers here.
IU coach Tom Crean said his team will look to improve its frontcourt defense against Penn State at 7 p.m. today in University Park, Pa.
IDS sports editor Ryan Winn responds to your comments and votes on the IU men's basketball team from the past week.
"My primary goal in all this is to get as many people in Assembly Hall as possible," said Athletics Director Fred Glass. "What this does for us, is the people in and around Assembly Hall, primarily students and faculty and staff, can watch pretty much the entire Colts game, and still get to our game. So hopefully that's significant. We appreciate the cooperation of the Big Ten Conference, the Big Ten Network and the University of Iowa."