BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — The Indiana Hoosiers were ready to party Tuesday night, and hundreds of loyal fans joined them when they arrived back on campus in Bloomington.
Turning out in freezing temperatures and brutally cold wind chills, fans, players and coaches celebrated college football's implausible national champions. The heartwarming scene reminded fans how Indiana's journey emulated the Hollywood version in "Hoosiers.''
''Hoo, hoo, hoo, Hoo-siers,'' fans chanted as six team buses pulled into the south side of the team's practice facility.
At traditional football powers such as Alabama, Michigan or Ohio State, mid-January scenes like this can be an expectation. Bloomington is different.
Here, success is measured in banners rather than trophies, and athletes are expected to pride themselves on playing for the name on the front of their jerseys. Here, fans embrace tales of the work ethic of players from the small dots on their state map and pride themselves on the notion that in 49 other states, basketball is just, well, basketball. In Indiana, it's akin to a religion.
Coach Curt Cignetti and his football Hoosiers are upending those traditions.
In two seasons, they created a compelling story — a rags-to-riches tale of college football's losingest program capturing its first national title. Indiana beat Miami 27-21 Monday night on the Hurricanes' home field — the pro-Hoosiers crowd made it feel like a game in Bloomington — and sealed the milestone with an interception by the nephew of a former Miami player.
How inspirational was this season?