‘We’re expected to win these big games’: IU defense ready to meet Rose Bowl moment
Over three weeks ago, Bryant Haines and the Indiana defense met the moment in Indianapolis against the highly talented Ohio State offense.
The 10 allowed points put the Hoosiers on the map as one of the top defensive teams in the nation.
Now, as their window to prep in Bloomington closes, D’Angelo Ponds, Isaiah Jones and the rest of the attack-minded defense prepare for a blue-chip-laden Alabama offense.
The Crimson Tide possesses nine offensive starters who held four or five-star status in high school. Offensive tackle Kadyn Proctor and wide receiver Ryan Williams spearhead the group as the top 10 players in their respective classes.
While Indiana has five 0-star high school recruits, they’ve proven they hold the talent to compete with any team in the country.
“They’ve got talented players just as well as we do,” Ponds said. “They do have a great quarterback, great receivers as well, but I feel like we match up pretty well with them.”
Last year, Indiana’s defense watched from home after a first-round loss at Notre Dame, undone by the moment. Questions surrounded the defense’s toughness and ability to compete.
This year, the timidity is out of the building. Indiana knows it can play with anybody in the county.
“It’s a very different feeling,” Ponds said. “Last year we were kind of surprised and shocked, but I feel like this year we’re expected to win these big games.”
Belief stems from the body of work the group has compiled this season.
Indiana doesn’t blink in the face of Heisman-caliber quarterbacks like Ohio State’s Julian Sayin and Oregon’s Dante Moore. Instead, Haines’ complex scheme, full of stunts and disguises, put some of the conference’s best offenses in neutral.
The driving force behind it? Physicality.
Indiana’s defense was the aggressor in every aspect, not only in the wins over Ohio State and Oregon but also in the 11 others.
All 11 players on the field follow their coach’s mantra of “doing their 1/11th” to help the defense, no matter if they’re a starter or in for depth.
When breakout defensive lineman Stephen Daley went down with a non-contact, season-ending knee injury in the celebration of the Big Ten championship game, there was no time for doom and gloom. Instead, Haines prowled to find who could step up and do Daley’s job the rest of the way.
Though not official, Haines is increasingly focusing on sophomore tackle Daniel Ndukwe, who stepped into the defensive line’s rotation when the unit stretched thin. He appeared in 10 games, totaling six tackles and a tackle-for-loss.
In Haines’s eyes, Ndwuke’s addition to the line is part of the next-man-up mentality he and head coach Curt Cignetti preached all season long. When Kellen Wyatt went down with a season-ending injury in the Michigan State game, Daley stepped up and dominated in his new role.
“It’s the same with all positions,” Haines said. “There’s a job description that needs to be done. Find a way to get it done. And then it’s on me to adapt the scheme that fits what those guys are capable of.”
Their flexibility allows Haines to tailor the game plan without losing the identity that carried Indiana to this stage. The goal isn’t to match reputations, but to dictate terms, just as they did in Indianapolis weeks ago.
Indiana’s fate rests on the defense’s ability to turn Alabama’s discomfort into doubt and doubt into mistakes. If it does, the narrative once again tilts in Haines’s favor.
“It’s about playing to our strengths,” Jones said. “And then making sure that our strengths are, you know, what attacks their weakness.”
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