Indiana Hoosiers

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Indiana Hoosiers
University Indiana University (Bloomington)
Conference Big Ten
NCAA Division I
Athletics director Rick Greenspan
Location Bloomington, IN
Varsity teams 24
Football stadium Memorial Stadium
Basketball arena Assembly Hall
Mascot None
Nickname Hoosiers
Fight song Indiana, Our Indiana
Colors Cream and Crimson

             

Homepage IU Hoosiers

Indiana University's athletic teams are called the Hoosiers, and their colors are cream and crimson, though red and white have been used at times in the past. From its humble beginnings with baseball in 1867, the Hoosier athletic program has grown to include over 600 male and female student-athletes on 24 varsity teams. Sports sponsored by the university include cross country, track, baseball, golf, tennis, rowing volleyball, soccer, football and basketball. The Director of Athletics is Rick Greenspan.

The Hoosiers became a member of the Big Ten Conference on December 1, 1899. Indiana University's national affiliation is with the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). National team titles (24 NCAA, 1 AIAW) have been won in six men's sports and one women's sport, including seven in men's soccer, a record-setting six straight in men's swimming and diving, and five in men's basketball. Indiana student-athletes have won 133 NCAA individual titles. Indiana University student-athletes have been named to the Academic All-Big Ten squad 2,280 times. Overall, IU student athletes have won more than 3,000 academic awards.

Contents

[edit] Basketball

Kent Benson of the 1976 NCAA Championship team scoring in a Big Ten game against Illinois in 1977
Kent Benson of the 1976 NCAA Championship team scoring in a Big Ten game against Illinois in 1977

[edit] Men's basketball

The basketball teams play on the Branch McCracken Court in Assembly Hall in Bloomington, Indiana.

As of 2007, the school has won five championships in men's basketball (1940, 1953, 1976, 1981 and 1987), the first two under coach Branch McCracken and three under Bob Knight. The Hoosiers' five NCAA Championships are the third-most in history, trailing only UCLA (11), and Kentucky (7). Their eight trips to the Final Four ranks seventh on the all-time list. The Hoosiers have made the trip to the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament 32 times, fifth in NCAA history. In those 32 appearances, Indiana has posted 52 victories, the sixth-most in NCAA history.

In 1975-76 Knight led the team to an NCAA championship without a losing a game (the last men's Division I squad to achieve this feat). [1][2] His 1981 team was led to the title by Isiah Thomas, and his 1987 team by Steve Alford. The 1987 championship game was capped by Keith Smart's jumpshot with five seconds left to play over the Syracuse Orangemen. Knight's volatile temper, though, often brought as much controversy to the school as success, and eventually led to his dismissal in 2000 by then-University President Myles Brand.

Many students and alumni protested the Knight firing, and several players threatened to transfer unless Knight assistant Mike Davis was chosen to replace Knight. Davis ultimately got the job and took the team to the 2002 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship title game. After this initial success, however, the team struggled under Davis. On February 16, 2006, Davis announced he would resign but remain with the team for the rest of the 2006 season.

On March 28, 2006, Kelvin Sampson, formerly a coach at the University of Oklahoma, was named the successor. On October 14, 2007, he was found to have violated a 3-way phone conversation sanction imposed on him by the NCAA while he coached at Oklahoma. Indiana University punished Sampson by denying him a previously scheduled $500,000 raise, firing one of his assistant coaches, and taking away one of his scholarships for the 2008-2009 season.

On February 8, 2008, the NCAA informed Indiana that Sampson had "knowingly violated telephone recruiting restrictions and then lied about it." After launching another internal investigation, Indiana University announced on February 22, 2008, that Kelvin Sampson accepted a $750,000 buyout of his contract and resigned as the Indiana University men’s basketball coach. On April 1, 2008, Indiana hired former Marquette University coach Tom Crean to succeed interim head coach Dan Dakich.

[edit] Women's basketball

Indiana women's basketball began in 1975. IU has compiled a record of 227-101 for an overall winning percentage of .692. The women's team has entered the NCAA tournament three times.

[edit] Football

IU began playing football in 1884. The 52,180-seat, open-air Memorial Stadium was built in 1960. There have been many renovations since the original construction, including installing artificial turf in 1970, the replacement of wooden seats with aluminum, installation of sound and lighting systems, and laying of a new Astroturf surface in 1986, which was subsequently replaced with natural grass in 1998. In 2003, AstroPlay artificial turf was installed. Plans went through on September 22, 2006 to enclose the north endzone of Memorial Stadium. This addition is part of a $55 million overhaul of Indiana University's sports facilities. In the University's Facility Enhancement Plan the following was stated:

"The Memorial Stadium North End Zone Project will house a new, state-of-the-art strength development area used by over 600 Indiana student-athletes. In addition, coaches offices and meeting space for the football program, a Hall of Honor which will spotlight successful student-athletes and teams throughout the history of IU athletics and athletic administration offices will be a part of the plan. The project also calls for the removal of the north and south end zone bleachers."

The Hoosiers are coached by former offensive coordinator Bill Lynch, who replaced Terry Hoeppner in June 2007 due to Hoeppner undergoing brain surgery. Hoeppner died on June 19, 2007. The team has made the following bowl game appearances.

Indiana's most successful football coaches to date were Bill Mallory and Bo McMillin.

[edit] Soccer

[edit] Men's Soccer

Indiana faces the University of Tulsa in the NCAA Men's Soccer Championship in 2004
Indiana faces the University of Tulsa in the NCAA Men's Soccer Championship in 2004
Fans at an IU soccer game at Jerry Yeagley Field at Bill Armstrong Stadium in 2004
Fans at an IU soccer game at Jerry Yeagley Field at Bill Armstrong Stadium in 2004

The Hoosiers have won seven national championships in men's soccer: 1982, '83, '88, '98, '99, 2003 and 2004 - the first six teams led by six-time national Coach of the Year Jerry Yeagley. After leading the Hoosiers for 31 years, Yeagley retired after the 2003 season and was replaced by long time assistant and former Hoosier All-American, Mike Freitag. He was an assistant to Yeagley for 11 seasons before taking over the head job. Freitag added the program's seventh national title in his inaugural year in 2004. It marked the third occasion in which IU had won back-to-back national titles and it was the program's record 17th appearance in the College Cup.

In the program's 32 seasons, Indiana owns more wins (563), has appeared in more College Cups (17) and has a higher winning percentage in both regular season (.821) and post-season play (.768) than any other school in Division I soccer. Its last NCAA Title came in 2004 when it beat UC Santa Barbara in penalty kicks 1-1 (3-2 PK's).

In addition to being a six-time National Coach of the Year, Yeagley also was the recipient of the prestigious Bill Jeffery Award, in recognition of his outstanding and unique contributions to intercollegiate soccer. In 1989, Yeagley was inducted into the United States Soccer Federation Hall of Fame.

IU players have won six Hermann Trophies (including Ken Snow twice) and three Missouri Athletic Club Player of the Year awards. The Hoosiers have had 13 United States men's national soccer team players, six Olympians and six World Cup players. In addition, Hoosier players have earned All-America honors 52 times.

Every year since the NCAA began tracking men's soccer attendance in 2001, the IU program has ranked among the top three in average or total attendance. Indiana led the nation in average attendance in 2004 and 2005 and in total attendance in 2003.

On September 2, 2007, the No. 8 ranked Hoosiers defeated the No. 1 ranked UCLA Bruins in front of a crowd of 7,243, the largest ever at Jerry Yeagley Field at Bill Armstrong Stadium and also the largest to ever watch a regular season college soccer game.

[edit] Women's Soccer

On November 18, 2007, the Hoosiers defeated Purdue University in the NCAA Second Round to advance to the NCAA Third Round for the first time in program history.

Three Indiana Hoosiers played during the inaugural WUSA season: Wendy Dillinger, Atlanta Beat, Tracy Grose, Carolina Courage and Kelly Wilson, Bay Area CyberRays.[3]

[edit] Swimming & Diving

Under former coach James Counsilman, the men’s swimming and diving program won 140 consecutive dual meets, 20 consecutive Big Ten titles and an NCAA Division I record six consecutive NCAA Championships (1968-1973). A writer for Sports Illustrated in the early 1970s said, "a good case can be made for the 1971 Indiana swimming team being the best college team ever--in any sport." [1]

The Hoosiers have won the fifth-most NCAA Championships and their 23 Big Ten crowns ranks second in the conference's 90-year history. Indiana University has produced 79 individual swimming and diving champions, 191 Big Ten swimming champions, 24 conference diving champions and has won 45 Big Ten relay events. The 79 national champions ranks third among Big Ten schools while the individual Big Ten diving, relay and individual swimming crowns all rank second among the 11 conference schools. The success goes well beyond the Big Ten and the NCAA Championship as is evidenced by the eight straight U.S. National Diving Championships that Indiana divers have won.

In March 2006 the Hoosiers won the Big Ten title again, this time under coaches Ray Looze and Jeff Huber.

The Counsilman-Billingsley Center in the Student Recreational Sports Center is a 44,651 square foot aquatics center used by Indiana's varsity swimming and diving programs. It features an eight-lane Olympic-sized pool spanning 30,512 square feet with depth ranging from seven to eight feet to allow for greater speed. The Billingsley Diving Center, complete with one of the country's few indoor diving towers, features two one-meter and three-meter springboards as well as one-, three-, five-, seven- and 10-meter platforms.

[edit] Cross Country

[edit] Men's cross country

Men's cross country began on the IU campus in 1910. Since the inception of cross country as an NCAA sport, Indiana is one of only nine schools in the nation to have won more than two men's national titles, and is one of seven programs to win at least three national titles. The school's three team national titles came in 1938, 1940, and 1942. IU's 29 NCAA men's championship team appearances are tied for ninth-most in the sport’s history. Indiana has found itself in the top five at the NCAA Men's Championship on nine different occasions. A Hoosier has captured the men's individual crown three times, making Indiana one of only six schools in the country, and the only Big Ten school, to have more than two individual NCAA men's cross country champions. The three individual titles rank as the fourth-most by any school.

[edit] Women's cross country

Women's cross country began in Bloomington in 1978. The NCAA began sponsoring the sport in 1981. The women have had a pair of individual national champions, something only three other schools in the nation, and just one other in the Big Ten, can claim. On four occasions, the Hoosiers have competed for the NCAA crown as a team (1988, 89, 90, 2002). The 1988 season saw Indiana winning an individual men's and women's national cross country championship, a feat that had never happened before in the sport, and has never happened since.

[edit] Rivalries

See also: Indiana-Purdue rivalry

The Hoosiers' biggest traditional rival is the Purdue Boilermakers. The West Lafayette (Purdue) and Bloomington (IU) campuses are the largest in the state of Indiana and are flagship campuses of the Purdue University and Indiana University systems respectively. IU and Purdue have competed for the Old Oaken Bucket in football since 1925, a series which Purdue leads 68-35-6. In basketball, IU's 20 Big Ten Championships are second only to Purdue's 21; however, since 1936, IU leads in this count 18-12. The Boilermakers also lead the men's basketball series 107-83. Since the 2002-03 year, IU and Purdue have also competed for an all-sports trophy called the Crimson & Gold Cup. Purdue currently leads the series 3-2.[2]

IU also has a heated border rivalry with the Kentucky Wildcats. The annual basketball game between the two often carries national significance as they have combined for 12 national championships. Since 1991 the game has rotated between neutral sites in Indianapolis and Louisville. This neutrality ended during 2006 when the game was played at Rupp Arena in Lexington, Kentucky with the 2007 game played at Assembly Hall in Bloomington, Indiana. Basketball games between the Hoosiers and Wildcats have at times drawn over 30,000 fans. The rivalry also spreads over into a very competitive football series with Indiana leading all-time 18-17.

[edit] Little 500 Bike Race

See main article Little 500

What began as one man's idea of a bicycle race to raise scholarship money has become annual IU springtime tradition. The Little 500, which was first held in 1951, inspired the 1979 Academy Award-winning film Breaking Away. Sports Illustrated and USA Today have featured the race in their pages, and it has been covered on national television by CBS, ESPN, Fox Sports, the Outdoor Life Channel, and live in high-definition television by HDNet. Seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong called the Little 500, which has raised more than $1 million in scholarship money, "the coolest event I ever attended." [3]

[edit] Olympic Participation

Prior to the 2004 Olympics, at least one IU student-athlete had medaled at every Summer Olympics since the games hosted in Los Angeles in 1932. Mark Spitz captured seven swimming gold medals in seven world record times at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, a record that has never been matched. A total of 167 IU athletes have competed in the Olympics, and these individuals have represented 14 nations. On 12 occasions, Olympic coaches have come from IU. The IU medal count is 84 including 48 gold, 16 silver and 20 bronze.

[edit] Championships

[edit] NCAA team championships

  • Men's Soccer (7): 1982 • 1983 • 1988 • 1998 • 1999 • 2003 • 2004
  • Men's Swimming & Diving (6): 1968 • 1969 • 1970 • 1971 • 1972 • 1973
  • Men's Basketball (5): 1940 • 1953 • 1976 • 1981 • 1987
  • Men's Cross Country (3): 1938 • 1940 • 1942
  • Men's Outdoor Track & Field (1): 1932
  • Wrestling (1): 1932

[edit] NCAA individual champions

  • Men's Swimming & Diving (79)
  • Men's Outdoor Track & Field (21)
  • Wrestling (10)
  • Men's Indoor Track & Field (10)
  • Men's Cross Country (3)
  • Women's Cross Country (2)
  • Women's Indoor Track & Field (2)
  • Men's Gymnastics (1)
  • Women's Swimming & Diving (3)
  • Women's Outdoor Track & Field (2)

[edit] Big Ten championships

  • Men's Swimming & Diving (24): 1961 • 1962 • 1963 • 1964 • 1965 • 1966 • 1967 • 1968 • 1969 • 1970 • 1971 • 1972 • 1973 • 1974 • 1975 • 1976 • 1977 • 1978 • 1979 • 1980 • 1983 • 1984 • 1985 • 2006
  • Men's Basketball (20): 1926(co) • 1928(co) • 1936(co) • 1953 • 1954 • 1957(co) • 1958 • 1967 • 1973 • 1974 • 1975 • 1976 • 1980 • 1981 • 1983 • 1987(co) • 1989 • 1991(co) • 1993 • 2002(co)
  • Men's Indoor Track & Field (15): 1932 • 1933 • 1941 • 1957 • 1973 • 1974 • 1975 • 1979 • 1980 • 1983 • 1984 • 1985 • 1990 • 1991 • 1992
  • Women's Tennis (13): 1982 • 1983 • 1984 • 1987 • 1988 • 1989 • 1990 • 1991 • 1992 • 1993 • 1994 • 1995 • 1998
  • Men's Cross Country (13): 1928 • 1929 • 1930 • 1931 • 1932 • 1938 • 1940 • 1942 • 1946(co) • 1967 • 1972 • 1973 • 1980(co)
  • Men's Outdoor Track & Field (12): 1936 • 1941 • 1950 • 1957 • 1970 • 1971 • 1973 • 1974 • 1979 • 1985 • 1990 • 1991
  • Wrestling (12): 1914 • 1921 • 1924(co) • 1925(co) • 1931 • 1932(co) • 1933 • 1934 • 1936 • 1939 • 1940 • 1943
  • Men's Soccer (11): 1991 • 1992 • 1994 • 1995(co) • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2001 • 2003 • 2007
  • Men's Golf (8): 1962 • 1968 • 1970 • 1973 • 1974 • 1975 • 1991 • 1998
  • Women's Golf (7): 1986 • 1987 • 1990 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1998
  • Men's Tennis (5): 1921 • 1952 • 1953 • 1954 • 1964
  • Baseball (4): 1925 • 1932 • 1938(co) • 1949(co)
  • Softball (3): 1983 • 1986 • 1994
  • Women's Indoor Track & Field (3): 1988 • 1991 • 2000
  • Football (2): 1945 • 1967(co)
  • Women's Cross Country (2): 1989 • 1990
  • Women's Outdoor Track & Field (2): 2000 • 2001
  • Women's Swimming & Diving (2): 2003 • 2007
  • Women's Basketball (1): 1983(co)
  • Women's Soccer (1): 1996

[edit] Notable alumni and former athletes

[edit] Baseball

[edit] Basketball

[edit] Football

[edit] Golf

[edit] Mixed Martial Arts

  • Julie Kedzie, Two-time Hook n' Shoot Tournament Champion, National Karate Champion & fought in first women's MMA match on cable television

[edit] Soccer

[edit] Swimming & Diving

[edit] Track & Field

[edit] Wrestling

[edit] References

  1. ^ A perfect season. sportingnews.com. Retrieved on 28 March 2008.
  2. ^ Hoosier Historia. heraldtimesonline.com. Retrieved on 28 March 2008.
  3. ^ idsnews.com

[edit] External links

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