Long before Angelo Pizzo penned the scripts for two of America's most iconic sports movies, he and his father would make the one-block walk from their home to Indiana's football stadium.
The strolls home usually seemed to take a bit longer because even then, in 1955, losses were the norm. Eventually, the man who introduced the world to such motivational flicks as ''Hoosiers'' and ''Rudy'' accepted the reality Indiana's program may be permanently stuck in mediocrity — or worse.
Pizzo found himself in good company in these parts.
Seventy-one years later, he — like so many other long-suffering Indiana fans — has a new perspective. Suddenly, the Bloomington native is bursting with excitement, enthusiasm, even a sense of disbelief as the Hoosiers have gone 26-2 over the past two seasons and he's now heading to Miami to watch his beloved alma mater try to pull off a ''Hoosiers''-like ending by beating the 10th-ranked Hurricanes on their home field for the program's first national championship.
''One of my first memories, talk about being in my DNA, was we always lost,'' Pizzo told The Associated Press this week. ''That's kind of like, except for a couple blips along the way — certainly the (1968) Rose Bowl team, I was in school there and the boys Jade Butcher, John Isenbarger, Harry Gonso were all good friends of mine — so that was a great adventure. I thought we'd turned the corner and then it went back down. It returned to what was normal and we went back to losing.''
Storybook turnaround
Curt Cignetti promised to change Indiana's image from the moment he took the job five days after the end of the 2023 season. The no-nonsense 62-year-old coach neither minced words nor wasted them when asked at his first news conference why people should believe he'd end all this losing.
''I win. Google me,'' he famously boasted that day.