Each time the Indiana Hoosiers tried to extinguish one eruption this offseason, another one followed.
Last season's 17-15 record made the Indiana boosters squirm, and damage control was needed throughout an even rockier summer. First, All-America power forward Noah Vonleh declared for the NBA draft, seemingly before clueing in coach Tom Crean, a signal of disconnect. Then, there was the actual eruption — a bizarre car crash in which one player (freshman Emmitt Holt) ran over another (sophomore Devin Davis). Two other players — Troy Williams and Stanford Robinson — were suspended for failing drug tests. Amid the drama, the voices calling for Crean's job got louder and louder.
Flash-forward 3½ months into the season, and while the havoc of the offseason isn't entirely forgotten, the earlier happenings certainly have been spun in a new light. Thursday, Indiana just missed an opportunity to boost what already is almost certainly an NCAA tournament campaign when point guard Yogi Ferrell's last-possession shots didn't fall and the Hoosiers lost 68-66 at Maryland.
Still, the résumé looks strong for a team that failed to even get an NIT invite last season. The Hoosiers (17-8, 7-5 Big Ten) have conference home victories over ranked teams Maryland (then No. 13) and Ohio State (then No. 22), and nonconference victories over then-No. 22 SMU (home) and then-No. 23 Butler (neutral court). They have a favorable schedule lying ahead as well — four of six at home — with the two road trips coming at bottom-dwellers Northwestern and Rutgers. The Hoosiers, briefly ranked in weeks 11 and 12, seem Big-Dance bound.
It's a position that seemed unlikely in October, when Big Ten media ranked Indiana ninth in its preseason poll.
"I don't think you can have some of the things we've had to deal with this year and not go one of two ways," Crean told the Washington Post recently. "I think this team has continued to grow up."
It's done so with one of the more dynamic offenses in the nation, and despite one of the nation's worst defenses. The Hoosiers score the most points in the Big Ten, with an average of 79.2 per game (13th nationally), using a small-ball attack with plenty of weapons.
Smooth-shooting James Blackmon Jr. (15.9 points per game) is one of the most highly touted freshmen in the conference, and his scoring trails only Ferrell (16.3 points, 4.8 assists), the junior set-up specialist with the soft touch. A deep bench allows the Hoosiers' up-tempo game to work well.