Illinois coach Bret Bielema didn’t need much time after Indiana’s blowout win last September to figure out what he was dealing with.
The 63-10 loss in Bloomington was the kind of game that leaves a mark, and Bielema said it pushed him to deliver a blunt message to his own staff. On the Pardon My Take podcast earlier this month, he said Indiana’s coordinators were operating on another level.
“I told our coaches on Tuesday after our first practice (following the loss to Indiana), these coordinators, in my opinion, in 17 years of being in this business, they know what you’re gonna do before you know what you’re gonna do,” Bielema said earlier this month on the Pardon My Take podcast.
“I think (Shanahan and Haines), offensively and defensively, are the best I’ve ever seen in all of college football.”
That kind of praise helps explain just how complete Indiana’s rise has been. Under offensive coordinator Mike Shanahan and defensive coordinator Bryant Haines, the Hoosiers have piled up elite production on both sides of the ball and turned that into the sort of lopsided results that became familiar during the 2025 national championship season.
Keeping both assistants in place was a major win for Curt Cignetti and his program. Around college football, coordinators at top programs usually don’t stay put for long, but Indiana made retention a priority. Shanahan and Haines have each received multiple raises over the last two years and are now among the highest-paid assistants in the sport.
Haines is set to enter his 12th season with Cignetti in 2026, while Shanahan is heading into year 11.
“They’ve been together a long time. They don’t leave for a reason, I think,” Bielema said.
“They like what they’re being told, and how they’re being told what to do and the guy that’s leading them. Eventually, they’ll become head coaches, but I think their coordinators are extremely special.”
Bielema also pointed to another familiar face on Indiana’s staff: former Wisconsin assistant Bob Bostad, now the Hoosiers’ offensive line coach. He said Bostad helped Indiana establish its identity up front.
And when it came to the architect of the whole turnaround, Bielema didn’t hold back there either.
“He has talked the talk from the day he’s walked it,” Bielema said of Cignetti. “I like people who represent who they are every day.
I think the greatest thing you can bring an organization is consistency and communication. And that guy has been the same guy every day and he communicates very, very well.
And I think that’s a part that I really respect in what he does, and obviously nobody could even question what he did this year, it’s truly special.”
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A June 22 arrest in Bloomington has drawn attention around Indiana University after police said a woman pointed an unloaded firearm at three cyclists near Second Street and College Avenue. Officers responded after witness reports and video evidence surfaced, and the case quickly moved from a tense street encounter to a formal criminal matter.
The arrest led to charges of intimidation with a deadly weapon and pointing an unloaded firearm at another person, and the suspect was taken to Monroe County Jail. For IU fans, the detail that makes this especially hard to ignore is how close the incident landed to campus life and downtown traffic, turning an ordinary stretch of city pavement into the latest uneasy headline connected to the programs broader community. [Read more 🡒]
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Indianas 2026-27 roster has been constructed mostly through the transfer portal, which makes Trent Sisley a little more important than a typical returning sophomore. He is the lone holdover from last season, and after an uneven freshman year he enters the offseason as more than just a familiar name. He has also added weight and looks more comfortable in the system, two quiet signs that his role could grow if the development keeps trending the right way.
The frontcourt picture still points first to Aiden Sherrell and Samet Yigitoglu, leaving Sisley in line for rotational minutes rather than centerpiece status. Even so, his place in the mix could matter more than it seems at first glance, because Indiana does not have many returning pieces to lean on and every bit of growth from a player who already knows the program helps settle a roster that is otherwise being remade. The question now is whether his offseason progress turns into the kind of dependable production that earns a steadier place in the rotation. [Read more 🡒]
