Indiana’s 2026 season is going to come with a spotlight, and Charlie Becker is one of the biggest reasons why. After the Hoosiers’ first national championship, Curt Cignetti’s team enters the new year with a target on its back, and Becker sits right near the center of that conversation as the No. 6 player in Peegs.com’s Integral 20 countdown.
What makes Becker so important isn’t just the numbers he posted in 2025, though those are hard to ignore: 34 catches, 679 yards, four touchdowns and a 20.0 yards-per-catch average. It’s the way he arrived there.
He started last season mostly on special teams and in a backup role, then turned an opening created by Elijah Sarratt’s injury into a full-blown breakout. By the end of the year, he had become one of the nation’s most dangerous vertical threats.
Becker’s path to this point was anything but flashy. The Nashville, Tenn., native was ranked No. 977 nationally in the 247Sports Composite and had just five Power Four scholarship offers.
Indiana, then coached by Tom Allen, was one of the schools that believed in him, and Becker chose the Hoosiers over hometown Vanderbilt, Ole Miss, Northwestern and Iowa. Even after Allen was dismissed, Becker stayed put and gave the new regime a shot into 2024.
That patience paid off. Becker spent his early days making an impact on special teams, where he logged eight tackles on kickoff coverage, while he kept developing at receiver behind the scenes. By the time 2025 arrived, he had climbed onto the two-deep and was waiting for his chance.
Once it came, he made the most of it. At 6-foot-4 and 207 pounds, Becker became Indiana’s classic outside target, the kind of receiver who can win above the rim and then punish defenses after the catch.
He hauled in 13 of 16 contested catches, an 81.3% clip, and led all Power Four receivers with 85.3 percent of his catches going for either a touchdown or a first down. When Indiana needed a big play late last season, Becker was often the answer.
The physical tools jump off the page. His catch radius is elite, his body control in the air stands out, and he’s been clocked at 22.5 miles per hour, giving him real downfield juice once he gets free off the line. NFL evaluators have even compared him to Indianapolis Colts wide receiver Alec Pierce, who just signed a four-year, $114 million contract extension this offseason.
There are not many obvious holes in Becker’s game, and that’s part of what makes him such a central figure for Indiana moving forward. He blocks on the perimeter, he can stretch the field, and now he’s set to operate with a bigger target share and a more permanent role. The addition of Nick Marsh opposite him should only make life harder on opposing secondaries.
His rise has been fast enough to feel almost unreal. Through the first nine games of 2025, Becker had only seven total catches, then he took off in a way that’s hard to overstate. Over the final seven games, including Indiana’s entire CFP run, there’s a strong case that he was the best receiver in college football.
The attention followed. Gus Johnson’s “CHARLIE B FROM NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE” has already become a trademark call.
First-round NFL draft projections came next, along with preseason accolades and the kind of national recognition that seemed impossible not long ago. Anyone talking about Indiana this fall has to mention Becker.
He’s also become a symbol of how Indiana has built this roster. Becker bought in on special teams, learned behind Elijah Sarratt, Omar Cooper Jr., E.J.
Williams and others, then forced his way into a starring role. That mix of patience and production is a big part of why he’s now viewed as one of the most integral pieces on the roster.
There’s still a larger sample size to come, and this fall should provide it. But the trajectory is clear. Becker’s name is already woven into the national conversation, and with Nick Marsh, Tyler Morris, Shazz Preston, LeBron Bond and Davion Chandler around him, Indiana’s receiver room has a chance to be as dangerous as any in the country.
For Becker, though, the bigger picture is even more striking. He went from overlooked recruit to special teams grinder to breakout star in less than two seasons. Now the spotlight is permanent, and the next step could be even bigger.
In Other News...
Curt Cignetti Is Chasing Indiana's Biggest Recruiting Finish Yet
Indianas 2027 recruiting class already has some real heft to it, with 16 commitments and several four-star prospects giving Curt Cignetti a foundation that would have looked ambitious not long ago. Rivals has the group sitting 29th nationally for now, but the number of pledges and the quality already in the fold suggest there is still room for this class to climb as the cycle plays out.
Monshun Sales is the name that could change the conversation entirely, because the Hoosiers are still in the hunt for the five-star wide receiver. A finish that lands him would give Indiana a recruiting headline it has never had before, and even without that final answer, the class is positioned to keep pushing upward if a few more current commits continue to rise in the rankings. [Read more 🡒]
Indiana Just Made An Early Move Fans Have Been Waiting For
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For Darian DeVries and his staff, the timing matters as much as the talent. Indiana is trying to get in front of the pack before the race for elite backcourt help gets even tighter, and the Hoosiers are expected to push for an official visit in the fall. With bluebloods and high-major programs circling, this is the kind of early move that can tell you a lot about how aggressively Indiana plans to recruit the class. [Read more 🡒]
Curt Cignetti Just Got Validation In Indianas Josh Hoover Debate
Curt Cignettis take on Josh Hoover has picked up some backing from an unexpected corner. TCU coach Sonny Dykes acknowledged that Cignetti had a valid point about the quarterbacks performance, a notable nod in a debate that followed Hoovers move from TCU to Indiana and quickly turned into a broader conversation about what a quarterback can and cannot control.
Dykes also pointed to the bigger picture around Hoovers turnovers, saying they were shaped by more than just the player himself, including coaching and changes in offensive strategy. From Indianas side, the argument has been that a stronger defense and a better run game can make life easier for a quarterback, and Hoovers rsum still carries weight as one of college footballs most productive active passers. [Read more 🡒]
