College football is in the middle of an identity search. With Nick Saban’s retirement, the sport has been loud, with debates everywhere about who should be the next face of the game. Names like Georgia’s Kirby Smart, Notre Dame’s Marcus Freeman, and Ohio State’s Ryan Day dominate the conversation. All excellent coaches. All proven winners. But maybe the answer isn’t found at a traditional powerhouse.
Maybe it’s the guy no one saw coming, from a school that no one ever thought capable of becoming one. Indiana’s Curt Cignetti.
Indiana’s Rise Brings the Power of Belief in Curt Cignetti
A Nick Saban disciple in mindset, if not imitation, Cignetti has emerged as the most compelling figure in college football today, and it’s happening right in front of our eyes. What he’s done not just for Indiana, but for the sport as a whole, has been nothing short of revolutionary.
Cignetti reshaped how the rest of college football thinks. He made people believe.
Not just in the Hoosiers as a program, but in the idea that anyone can do this. That dominance isn’t reserved for a select few logos or zip codes. That if you establish the right system, demand accountability, and build a culture rooted in toughness and discipline, everything else follows.
That belief matters. In fact, sometimes it’s half the battle. College football has long been ruled by intimidation, the idea that fear sets in when a team gets off the bus. The uniforms, the history, the trophies. Many teams lose before they ever step between the white lines.
Cignetti doesn’t coach scared. If anything, he looks fearless to a fault. And that’s where the Saban parallels become impossible to ignore.
A Saban-Like Mindset
Nick Saban built his dynasty on a no-nonsense, non-complacent mindset. Buy in or get out. The standard is the standard. Cignetti operates the same way.
There’s no pandering. No emotional overreaction to wins or losses. His teams are disciplined, accountable, and brutally consistent. If someone doesn’t like the culture? That’s fine, they don’t belong in it.
While Cignetti is very much his own coach with his own style, the mentality feels unmistakably Saban-esque. It’s hard not to believe he absorbed that approach somewhere along the way: focus on the process, dominate the details, and never let success soften you.
In his first season at Indiana, Cignetti went 11–1, led the Hoosiers to the College Football Playoff, and delivered the best season in program history. That alone would’ve been remarkable. But that wasn’t enough for him.
In Year Two, Indiana is 15–0, Big Ten champions after taking down Ohio State, and rolling through the CFP with wins over Alabama and Oregon. One game away from a national championship. One win from a perfect season.
This is Indiana football. A program without a recent tradition of success. Without a powerhouse roster waiting to be unlocked. Without momentum. And yet, Cignetti flipped the perception of the Hoosiers almost overnight.
Complementary Football, Saban Style
Like Saban, Cignetti doesn’t favor one side of the ball. He coaches like a CEO, overseeing everything, demanding balance, and ensuring all phases complement one another.
Saban’s Alabama teams from 2019–2023 never posted an offensive impact grade below 84.2, nor a defensive grade below 83.3, according to PFSN. That consistency, year after year, is what made Alabama relentless.
Indiana mirrors that model.
This season, Indiana boasts the top-ranked offense and defense in the nation according to PFSN impact grades, an almost unheard-of combination. The Hoosiers’ defense owns an elite 97.9 grade, while the offense isn’t far behind at 93.5. That dominance shows up on the field as well.
Defensively, Indiana has forced 26 turnovers, the sixth-most in the country, and allows the second-fewest rushing yards per game, a clear sign of control in the trenches. Offensively, the Hoosiers are just as physical, averaging 220.7 rushing yards per game, which ranks 11th nationally and reinforces their identity as a complete, line-of-scrimmage-driven team.
That’s physical football. That’s line-of-scrimmage control. That’s exactly what Saban preached for decades.
In just two seasons, all Curt Cignetti has done is win, establish a hard-edged culture, and prove that success doesn’t have to look traditional to be real. He doesn’t get too high. He doesn’t get too low. He doesn’t chase narratives.
If you didn’t know any better, you’d think Nick Saban came out of retirement, or was reincarnated in Bloomington.
Curt Cignetti is next. The next man up. The next standard-bearer. The next face of college football. And unlike others, he wouldn’t run from that responsibility. He’d embrace it.
