INDIANAPOLIS — There was a lot of losing over the last 80 years — the third-most losses in the sport's history — but Curt Cignetti has brought Indiana football to the top of college football.

It was far from perfect, but the Hoosiers clinched their first outright Big Ten championship since 1945 in their first championship game appearance and in front a predominately Hoosiers crowd at Lucas Oil Stadium. When Ohio State kicker Jayden Fielding's 27-yard attempt was pushed wide left with 2:48 to play, it left the ball in Fernando Mendoza's hands.

Mendoza threw a game-clinching 33-yard pass to Charlie Becker on third-and-6, leaving Ohio State with all but one timeout spent and a chance to run out the clock. They punted it and pinned Ohio State without timeouts at its own 14 with 18 seconds left, and the defense took care of the rest.

Here's what I liked and disliked, and what the Hoosiers' historic win means.

What I liked in IU football's win vs Ohio State in Big Ten championship game

  • Pressure. Julian Sayin hadn't seen it like this yet in 2025. Ohio State's quarterback entered play Saturday night having taken just six sacks all season, and two in a game just once (Purdue, Nov. 8). Indiana rolled up three in the first half alone, plus more productive pressure, hurrying Sayin enough to get and largely keep him out of rhythm. It was a big part of the reason why Indiana actually outgained Ohio State in the first half.
  • Mendoza dialing it up deep. Indiana tried a pair of deep shots in the first half that Fernando Mendoza couldn't quite find. That didn't stop the Hoosiers trying to take the top off Ohio State's defense and eventually it paid off, first with a pass interference penalty and then with a 51-yard third-quarter gain to Charlie Becker that set up Mendoza's first touchdown pass. The willingness to stretch the field kept Ohio State honest to such an extent that it backed pressure off and let Mendoza get comfortable.
  • Tough running. The Hoosiers could not pop the explosives that have defined their most dominant performances. But they did not abandon the ground game, to their credit. More than once, a commitment to the run, even in the face of Ohio State's defensive strength, flipped a field or extended a drive. It might not have been flashy, but the willingness to commit to it added up.

What I disliked in IU football's win vs Ohio State in Big Ten championship game

  • Special teams miscues. Nico Radicic's first-half miss, his first on a field goal attempt all season, hardly paralleled the sins of last season in Columbus. But the margins are so painfully thin against this Ohio State team. The difference between needing a touchdown and needing a field goal might not feel so seismic in the second quarter, but it will in the fourth. Couple this to a handful of first-half penalties, and Cignetti will have wanted to get some fundamentals cleaned up at halftime.
  • Injuries. Mendoza got a scare early, on a hard hit from Caden Curry. He was fine, but just plays later Omar Cooper Jr., IU's leading receiver, limped off for the rest of the evening. Mikail Kamara continued to battle an assortment of problems as the evening wore on. Both injuries and apparent performance shuffled Indiana's offensive line. It was a bruising evening in Indianapolis.
  • Finishing drives. Hard to beat the best with field goals, something IU learned Saturday. More than once, an explosive play opened the door to a touchdown Ohio State's smothering defense promptly closed. On an evening when the finest details mattered most, those missed opportunities ratcheted up Cignetti's stress.

What IU football's win vs Ohio State in Big Ten championship game means

History. For the first time since 1945, the Hoosiers have an outright Big Ten championship. The College Football Playoff committee had essentially locked IU into a bye and then Cignetti claimed nobody had earned it.

His Hoosiers earned it, and the No. 1 seed and a Rose Bowl berth Jan. 1.

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This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Indiana football score today vs Ohio State in Big Ten championship