This is one of those questions that, for most college football fans, doesn’t even require a Google search, especially if you’ve followed Indiana football over the past several decades. Known nationally as a basketball school, Indiana’s football program has long struggled to escape the basement of the Big Ten. Still, the research confirms what many already assumed.
Indiana football has never won a national championship.
Hoosiers Football on the Brink of History
The Hoosiers have been playing football since 1899, yet across more than a century of competition, a national title has always remained out of reach. Even conference success has been rare. Indiana has won the Big Ten just three times in its history, most recently during the 2025 season, highlighted by a landmark victory over Ohio State.
When it comes to national contention, Indiana has seldom been close. The program’s best historical moments include a loss in the 1967 Rose Bowl and a first-round College Football Playoff exit in 2024. Those games represented high-water marks, but not breakthroughs.
That’s what makes the present moment so stunning.
If Indiana were to win the 2025-2026 national championship, it would mark the program’s first-ever title, and the first time since 1996 that a school captured its first national championship. That year, Steve Spurrier led Florida to its inaugural title, forever changing the program’s trajectory.
At the center of Indiana’s transformation is Curt Cignetti. In just his first two seasons as head coach, Cignetti already owns the two best winning-percentage seasons in program history. That alone speaks volumes about how dramatic this turnaround has been. Indiana football hasn’t merely improved; it has evolved into something unrecognizable from its past.
What was once a punchline is now a national powerhouse.
Why Indiana Can Win It All
The optimism surrounding Indiana’s 2026 team isn’t blind faith; it’s grounded in dominance across every major metric. Offensively, the Hoosiers boast the best attack in the country, posting an elite 93.5 PFSN offensive impact grade.
Defensively, they’re even more impressive, ranking No. 1 nationally with a 97.9 PFSN defensive grade. At the center of it all is Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Fernando Mendoza, who led the nation in passing touchdowns, threw just six interceptions, and earned a 93.3 QB impact grade, the second-best in the country.
Mendoza’s dominance has translated beyond the college game as well. PFSN’s 2026 NFL Draft Consensus Big Board lists him as QB1 and a top-five overall prospect, underscoring just how special his season has been.
Simply put: Indiana has everything a championship team needs.
All They Do Is Win
The Hoosiers sit at 15–0, with a chance to become the first 16–0 team in college football history. Winning has become the standard, not the goal.
Cignetti’s now-famous phrase, “Google him”, has become symbolic of his rise and his mindset. He isn’t satisfied with relevance or moral victories. Just making the national championship game isn’t enough anymore. This program expects to win it.
And that expectation has filtered through the entire roster.
So yes, the bad news is simple: Hoosier Nation has never celebrated a football national championship. Not once in over a century.
But the good news?
That opportunity has never felt more real than it does right now. Against all odds, Indiana football has arrived, and now all that’s left is to finish the job and become the first Hoosier team to ever raise the trophy.
The moment is here. And so are they.
