MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — One program long lived with the distinction of losing more games in the history of college football than anyone. The other has enjoyed its fair share of glory and contempt — albeit all of it old enough to be packaged in grainy documentaries, or retold among the tall tales of an era long gone by.
Indiana and Miami are playing for the national title Monday night, and if that has you scratching your head thinking ''Who?'' or ''What?'' then you are not alone.
Even though a new world of paying players and rapid-fire transfers from school to school has shuffled the deck in college sports, nobody thought it would get mixed up this much. And even though both schools have been trending upward of late, both were listed as 100-1 long shots to win the championship at some point this season.
''When I got here,'' explained Indiana's second-year coach and turnaround artist Curt Cignetti, ''I was trying to figure out if the fan base was dead or just on life support.''
Who could blame them?
Before Cignetti's arrival to start the 2024 season, the Hoosiers had compiled 713 losses over 130-plus years of football. For some, buying seats for football was a wallet-squeezing requirement to gain access to tickets for the basketball games coached by Bob Knight and a string of successors — a much better team and better draw.
Cignetti, whose resume looks like a Delta Airlines departures board, arrived with virtually zero fanfare, at least on a national level.
Asked different versions of the same question time and again at a signing-day news conference in his first season that surprised many for how good it was, Cignetti landed the punch that will end up on his tombstone: ''It's pretty simple. I win. Google me.''