MIAMI — He had to start somewhere. So, when coach Curt Cignetti started his rebuilding project at Indiana, he turned to what he knew.
Cignetti recruited 13 players from his old school, James Madison, over to his new program with the Hoosiers. They formed the backbone of at what he called ''one of the greatest sports stories of all time'' — the rise of college football's losingest program into a national champion.
Former James Madison players Elijah Sarratt, Kaelon Black, Aiden Fisher and Mikail Kamara were among the baker's dozen — some call them ''Cignetti's Dozen'' — who contributed to Indiana's undefeated season and the national title.
The players came in dribs and drabs, starting shortly after Cignetti accepted the job on Nov. 30, 2023.
''They understood the program, the culture, and they had that championship attitude,'' Cignetti said. ''They were able to answer questions for the guys to decide to return and the right guys returned. And the new transfers, too, they could answer their questions and lead, and they were good players.''
In a testament to what Cignetti built during his five years at James Madison, it was the Dukes of the Sun Belt Conference who snagged the fifth and final automatic bid to this year's College Football Playoff under his successor, Bob Chesney.
Chesney recently got hired away by UCLA, and at least seven players from the playoff team have followed him to Westwood.
The Indiana story is a super-charged version of what's happening across college football these days. The transfer portal has allowed players who don't get looks from the big programs in high school a chance to start small, get better, then maybe get their chance at the big time.