One hundred eleven seconds to play out there in Happy Valley, and the detractors had their knives out. You could hear their gloating even over the 747 roar of the home crowd, which was all jacked up because a precious moment of redemption was right there for the downtrodden Nittany Lions of Penn State.
Who led the unbeaten (and untried, the detractors said) Indiana Hoosiers, the No. 2 team in the land, 24-20.
Who in turn were 80 distant yards away from escape velocity with 1:51 to play.
See, I told you they were a fraud ...
Got fat on a pile of cupcakes ...
Losing to a 3-6 team that's been playing out the string since its head coach got the gate four games into the season ...
Gloat, gloat, gloat.
And then ...
Well. By now you know all about "and then".
You know Indiana's quarterback, the great and powerful Fernando Mendoza, first took a sack, then completed a 22-yard pass, a 12-yard pass, a 29-yard pass and a 17-yard pass.
Then he hoisted a throw toward the back of the end zone, where Omar Cooper Jr., leaped, caught and somehow pas-de-deuxed a toe inside the end line. There were 36 seconds to play, and the Hoosiers were still unbeaten.
"Most improbable victory I have ever been a part of," Indiana coach Curt Cignetti said, after the 27-24 W went final.
It was also the first time in program history Indiana had beaten Penn State in Happy Valley, having gone 0-for-13 until Saturday. Now they're 10-0 for the second straight year, Cignetti is 21-2 in Bloomington -- and the detractors still claim it's all a trick of the light.
Because Coach Cig's Hoosiers had almost lost to a 3-6 football team.
Because the Hoosiers blew a 13-point second-half lead and were outgained 336 yards to 326 by that 3-6 football team.
Because the Big Ten is a poser conference and Indiana is the biggest poser of all.
On the other hand ...
On the other hand, the great escape the Hoosiers made yesterday came against a team that returned virtually everyone from a team that went 13-3 last season, won the Fiesta Bowl and reached the CFP semifinals before losing 27-24 to Notre Dame. And whose 2025 season imploded only after the then-No. 3 Nittany Lions lost 30-24 in double overtime to defending Big Ten champion and then-No. 6 Oregon -- a game that wasn't decided until Oregon defensive back Dillon Thieneman intercepted Drew Allard in the end zone in the second OT.
Oregon is now 8-1 and still ranked sixth -- its only loss, of course, coming against Indiana.
In other words, all those players who took the Nittany Lions to the natty semis and fought to the end against the defending conference champs were still around yesterday. And Indiana still found a way to beat them.
"Yeah, but ..." the detractors insist.
Yeah, nothing. Close call or not, Indiana still has 10 wins and zippo losses, and their average margin of victory in those 10 wins -- even with yesterday's three-pointer -- is an FBS-leading 32.4 points. Poser conference or not, no one else in it is beating people like that.
And so ... onward.