Advertisement

No. 10 Indiana used culture change, Tampa Bay connections to steadily progress

Led by a former USF assistant and an ex-Tampa Bay Tech standout, the Hoosiers share the Big Ten lead.
 
Indiana quarterback Michael Penix Jr. (9) and his teammates celebrate after defeating Michigan Saturday in Bloomington, Ind. Indiana won 38-21.
Indiana quarterback Michael Penix Jr. (9) and his teammates celebrate after defeating Michigan Saturday in Bloomington, Ind. Indiana won 38-21. [ DOUG MCSCHOOLER | AP ]
Published Nov. 11, 2020|Updated Nov. 11, 2020

INDIANAPOLIS — When Indiana coach Tom Allen reflects on that mid-October afternoon now, it all seems vividly clear.

Last season’s 34-28 victory at Maryland gave the Hoosiers a badly needed confidence boost, sent expectations soaring and renewed the motivation to defy critics of the program. At the time, Allen sensed Reese Taylor’s game-sealing interception with 82 seconds left would make an impact.

Today, he realizes it changed everything. Three games into this season, Taylor is part of a fearless secondary that has helped the Hoosiers reach new heights.

At 3-0, they share the Big Ten East lead with No. 3 Ohio State. On Sunday, Indiana climbed to No. 10 in the rankings — its highest mark since September 1969, two months after the moon landing. And Allen insists this is only the start of grander goals.

“We’ve been very specific that we want to build a team that can win Big Ten championships so we want to compete for Big Ten championships,” said Allen, who served as a defensive coordinator under Willie Taggart at USF in 2015. “We’re trying to elevate this program.”

Related: Tampa Bay connection lifts Indiana over Penn State in overtime

Indiana is off and running.

After going more than a quarter-century between Top 25 appearances and contributing annually to new punch lines, the Hoosiers are punching back and checking off goals as they take the field.

In Week 1, they beat No. 8 Penn State for their first upset of a top-10 foe since 1987. After winning at Rutgers, the Hoosiers cracked the top 15 for the first time since 1988. Saturday’s win over No. 23 Michigan snapped a 24-game losing streak in the series, a mark that was tied for the longest active skid against one team in the entire Bowl Subdivision.

Winning this weekend, at Michigan State, wouldn’t just return the Old Brass Spittoon to Bloomington for the second time since 2007, it would give the Hoosiers a school-record tying fifth consecutive conference win.

They’re still not satisfied.

“As the staring quarterback most of the time when there are big wins, you get most of the recognition,” former Tampa Bay Tech standout Michael Penix Jr. said Monday. “So I have to show the team that we can’t be complacent. Obviously, we’ve accomplished some great things this season, but I’ve got to make sure they (players) stay focused and locked in.”

Penix’s sentiment hasn’t always been the prevailing philosophy around the Hoosiers locker room.

Over the past 30 years, so many promising starts and moments quickly came crashing down. Bowl bids became elusive, even with Antwaan Randle El at quarterback. Coaches came and went. Signature wins were scarce, and every time it seemed the program was poised for an ascension, something unforeseen derailed it.

But after being promoted from defensive coordinator to head coach in December 2016, Allen created a long-term plan with a message that inspired players to put Indiana football back on the national map.

Allen traces the start of those changes to a sequence from last season.

Stay updated on Tampa Bay’s sports scene

Subscribe to our free Sports Today newsletter

We’ll send you news and analysis on the Bucs, Lightning, Rays and Florida’s college football teams every day.

You’re all signed up!

Want more of our free, weekly newsletters in your inbox? Let’s get started.

Explore all your options

“I think the first step was going on the road and winning at Maryland,” Allen said. “We had to get a stop and Reese got the interception to seal the win. Then we went on the road and won at Nebraska and then we got the overtime win over Purdue. Each one of those started changing the way we thought.”

The new attitude took time to mold.

When Allen accepted the defensive coordinator post following the 2015 season, his home-state Hoosiers were best known for their ability to win shootouts.

He inherited a defense that allowed nearly 38 points per game, 117th out of 128 in the FBS; in Allen’s first season, Indiana nearly jumped into the top 50. In 2017, the goal was to place among the top 25 and today, Allen talks about making the top 10.

While the aspirations continue to climb, Allen’s language never changed.

Not after head coach Kevin Wilson was fired weeks before Indiana’s 2016 bowl game. Not after Indiana fell one win short of bowl eligibility in 2017 and 2018. Not even after Tennessee used an onside kick to rally for a win in January’s Gator Bowl.

Instead, Allen kept insisting Indiana could turn things around with a group of confident, committed, play-making athletes — as Taylor proved in an instant Allen will never forget..

“Belief is a powerful thing, that’s why ever since I stepped foot on this campus even as the defensive coordinator, it’s always been about believing,” Allen said. “If you don’t believe then you need to just hit the road. It’s what I said to the defense in 2016. It’s what I said to our team in 2017, and we’re just going to continue to clench our fist and grit those teeth and fight and fight and fight.”

By MICHAEL MAROT AP Sports Writer