Indiana coach Curt Cignetti knows just enough about Notre Dame and playoffs to make Hoosiers dangerous in CFP
Cignetti’s brash style has Indiana playing with confidence heading into its CFP first-round game vs. the Fighting Irish
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – The most experienced coach in the College Football Playoff knows exactly who is next on the schedule.
“We were Catholic,” Indiana coach Curt Cignetti reminded CBS Sports of his humble upbringing in Pittsburgh.
That’s one hint of the next chapter of the Hoosiers’ turnaround.
When “Indiana” popped up on the TV screen as the team playing Notre Dame in the first 12-team College Football Playoff bracket there could have been an audible gasp around the Hoosier State.
This is really going to happen.
The worldwide brand in northern Indiana is forced by the CFP to meet the underling from the Big Ten. The schools separated by 200 miles and decades of tradition have met only 29 times, none since 1991. Indiana hasn’t beaten the Fighting Irish since 1950.
But in his office on Sunday, Cignetti was his usual deadpan self with the hype building around him.
“I’ve played them five times,” Cignetti said of the Irish. “Three and two.”
“Cig” is referring to his record against Notre Dame as a graduate assistant and assistant coach at Pittsburgh, Rice and NC State in a stretch that started 40 years ago.
That’s all about to change in the first game in the CFP’s 12-team era the night of Dec. 20 at Notre Dame Stadium. Indiana – 11-1, ranked No. 8 in the CFP rankings and a 10th seed in the bracket – has accomplished a lot this season, but Notre Dame is the program that comes complete with its own ghosts, legends and intimidation.
That’s where Cignetti and his Hoosiers think they’ve got this playoff thing whipped. At least on the mental side which is part of how Indiana shocked the nation this season.
“First of all we’ve got a bunch of guys who have a chip on their shoulders for a long time,” Cignetti explained in what has become a common refrain.
“Because they were good players in a G5 [conference] making all-conference wondering why they weren’t recruited by a P4 [conference].”
Cignetti already has accomplished what is arguably the best year-over-year turnaround in the history of the transfer portal. He was left with 40-odd players due to the usual attrition after a coaching change. Ten starters alone on defense left. From there he brought 31 new faces, approximately half of them from his old employer, James Madison.
“Then they picked us 17 out of 18,” Cignetti said, referring to the Big Ten preseason media poll. “Every week you had a chip.”
If you’ve been around these guys long enough, you start to figure out that playing at Notre Dame, No. 5 in the CFP rankings and the seventh-seed in the bracket, is the latest “what’s-the-big-deal?” on the calendar.
“It’s a place I haven’t played before,” Indiana quarterback Kurtis Rourke said dryly.
Cignetti has the most playoff experience of any of the 12 coaches in the field, but that label needs an asterisk. He has coached 18 postseason games in Division II and FCS from 2012-2021, taking JMU to the FCS championship game in 2019.
“The odds of us making the College Football Playoff … were pretty darn low,” Cignetti said. “The odds of us winning the next four [playoff] games are probably significantly higher than they were making the playoffs in the first place. So we’ve climbed that mountain.”
Cignetti says he has a day-by-day plan for the program from now until Jan. 20, the date of the CFP National Championship Game. Those are the kinds of things that are assumed from the likes of Georgia’s Kirby Smart. At Indiana he has a long-term plan “in my head, not on paper,” Cignetti said.
But the thought of answering that question before the season would have gotten you laughed out of the football facility. The turnaround has been so dizzying, Cignetti had to be reminded Sunday that it was 53 weeks to the day he was introduced as Indiana’s new coach.
That’s when he elbowed his way into the national consciousness telling a questioner to “Google me. I’m a winner.”
The 63-year-old has a brashness usually reserved for someone half his age.