2010 Indiana Hoosiers

whiteathlete33

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Indiana had 12 white starters in 2006, 8 in 2007, 9 in 2008, and 9 in 2009.

Here are the projected white starters for the 2010 season. It looks like a gain of two white starters this season for a total of 11 white starters.
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QB-Ben Chappell
TE-Max Dedmond
C-Will Matte
G-Marc Damish
G-Aaron Price

Defensive tackle-Adam Replogle
LB-Jeff Thomas
WLB-Chad Sherer
MLB-Tyler Replogle
SS-Mitchell Evans
CB-Matt Ernest
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Edited by: whiteathlete33
 
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How about IU Hoosiers CORNERBACK Matt Ernest taking a pick 56 yards to the house??? He's a converted WR who also pitched for IUs baseball team last spring. Played WR and safety in HS. When has a white player EVER been switched to CB from another position?

Here's to hoping Matt Ernest, one of the very elite few white men who get play CB on the Division 1 level, has many more interceptions, forced fumbles, tackles, passes defended, and sacks!


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http://www.courier-journal.com/article/201009012317/SPORTS04/309010123?odyssey=mod_related_topix

Indiana football's Matt Ernest OK with switch to defense
Ex-WR starting at CB for Indiana

By Terry Hutchens "¢ The Indianapolis Star "¢ September 1, 2010

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. â€" Matt Ernest was in his comfort zone as a receiver.

Now the Indiana University junior will be trying to make opposing receivers as uncomfortable as possible, beginning when the Hoosiers open the football season at 7:30p.m. Thursday against visiting Towson.

Switching from receiver to cornerback is almost a natural progression at IU. Nick Polk, Ray Fisher, Mitchell Evans, Colin Taylor and Kyle Dietrick have done so in recent seasons.

Receivers coach Billy Lynch said Ernest was a perfect candidate.

"When you're 6-2, you're a decent-sized receiver, but when you're 6-2 and 189 pounds, that's a big, long cornerback,"Â￾ Lynch said. "He's got great speed, great feet, tremendous ball skills, and he can play the ball in the air.

"When you add all of those things together, we just felt he had the makings of a great corner."Â￾

And Ernest was well aware of the logjam on offense. Tandon Doss, Damarlo Belcher, Terrence Turner, Duwyce Wilson and Dre Muhammad were in front of him.

Last year Ernest caught seven passes for 69 yards in 12 games. The year before, as a redshirt freshman, he caught three.

Switching to defense was an easy sell in spring practice, but no one realized how much the new position would agree with Ernest.

He beat out five others for one of the starting jobs.

Ernest played the position in high school but concisely summed up the differences between then and now: "Everything."Â￾

"In high school you could just pretty much be more athletic than the people you were covering,"Â￾ he said. "You could just backpedal, stare at the quarterback and not really worry about the route the receiver was running. But here it's a lot more detailed. There's a lot more to think about."Â￾

Good cornerbacks think before the play and react during it. Defensive backs coach Joe Palcic said Ernest has been a quick study.

"He is really fast, and he's very rangy,"Â￾ he said. "He has good ball skills, he can change directions quickly and he has quick feet. We knew right away during winter conditioning with the way he performed in the agility drills that he would be a good candidate for corner."Â￾

Ernest is happy to help.

"I think I can play different places, but the most important thing to me is to play and contribute,"Â￾ he said. "Hopefully I can get comfortable at cornerback and at the same time help out on special teams, too. Whether I'm a receiver or a corner, the only thing that matters is winning football games."Â￾




http://www.journalgazette.net/article/20100902/BLOGS08/100909870/1085/SPORTS03

Last updated: September 3, 2010 12:49 a.m.
Evans, Ernest look comfortable on defense
LaMond Pope | The Journal Gazette

What can we take away from Indiana's season-opening 51-17 victory against Towson?

Mitchell Evans and Matt Ernest had little trouble adjusting to playing defense. The two converted wide receivers had interceptions. Ernest returned his third-quarter pick 56 yards for a touchdown.

Indiana's defense gave up a couple of big plays, but did force three turnovers in the biggest season-opening victory since a 55-7 win against Indiana State in 2007.

Offensively, Darius Willis showed that he was healthy. The sophomore rushed for 102 yards and two touchdowns. He averaged 7.3 yards per carry, with his long coming in the form of a 49-yard touchdown run in the second quarter.

IU jumped on Towson early, turning two turnovers into touchdowns. The Hoosiers led 17-0 at the end of the first quarter.

That is what Indiana is supposed to do against a Football Championship Subdivision school.
Edited by: Electric Slide
 

referendum

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According to Rivals' updated depth chart, Faulkner is gone, but there are now two white guards starting Marc Damish and Aaron Price, as well as Matte on O-line.
Also, on defense Jeff Thomas is listed as starting LB, to go with Reploge and Sherer to make up a snow patrol. This, combined with Ernest as CB, makes for an amazing six whites on defense, and 11 total.
 

whiteathlete33

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Thanks, Referendum. It looks like Kevin Bush has also lost the starting DE job to afflete Darius Johnson. That makes another half white team!! Great news!! I'm sure Colonel will be happy.
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Colonel_Reb

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You got that right, wa33! This is great news! Hopefully this team will do better this year than the last few.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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got a link for a stream to watch the game, SuperSpeed?

what are the names of the two White corners? is Ernest one of them?Edited by: Jimmy Chitwood
 

Jack Lambert

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Yeah, Ernest and Greg Haben. With Mitchell Evans at SS, that gives them 3/4 whites in the secondary.
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Haben must be starting for the injured black starter, but he's only a sophomore. Next year, both Ernest and Haben should be starting! Indiana is suddenly one of my favorite teams, especially the way their recruiting is going.

TD Indiana! Ben Chappell!
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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are you watching the game, Jack? got a link to a stream?
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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since i've no video to see as of yet, i'm following the Northwestern-Indian game via the ESPN gamecast, and it seems like the Hoosiers secondary is playing very well. is this accurate?
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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how many White athletes does Northwestern have on defense? if i recall correctly, they had a talented duo at safety to begin the year.
 
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They have one white safety whos starting and another who should be but i think hes sharing time with a black saftey. The defense is majority white though, not sure of the exact number.
 

Jack Lambert

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A quick update on Indy's defense.

Greg Heban starts at the other CB spot, and Mick Mentzer starts at DE.

Jeff Thomas starts at MLB, and Tyler Replogle starts at SLB.

Chad Sherer doesn't start anymore.
 

Jack Lambert

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I hope this doesn't affect the white athletes at Indiana. Sadly, I think the new coach will want to "show" the fans he's committed to winning, so naturally he probably won't play all those white overachievers.

Indiana Fires Coach Bill Lynch</font>
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- After a promising start, Bill Lynch's tenure as Indiana coach ended with the Hoosiers in their familiar spot at the bottom of the Big Ten.

Lynch was fired Sunday with one year left on his contract, a day after Indiana reclaimed the Old Oaken Bucket from Purdue to earn their only conference victory in a third straight losing season.


Tough call for Indiana
Indiana AD Fred Glass looked at his options and made the only decision he could in firing Bill Lynch. Blog

"My view was that, given the circumstances of the last three seasons, that extending the contract was not a viable option," athletic director Fred Glass said. "It would send the wrong signal of what merited an extension at Indiana University."

Players insisted that Lynch wasn't the problem.

After Saturday's 34-31 overtime victory at Purdue, Indiana's first win in West Lafayette since 1996, senior quarterback Ben Chappell acknowledged Lynch took most of the blame for the failures of the players.

But that wasn't what Glass had to consider.

He saw Lynch's 19-30 record over the past four seasons, three conference wins in three years, the failure to reach another bowl game after his first season and the likelihood that other coaches would use Lynch's uncertain future against him in recruiting over the next year. That gave Glass three options: Extend Lynch's contract, let him fulfill the final year of the deal or start over.

Glass opted for Plan C despite being one of Lynch's most public supporters.

When the Indianapolis attorney took over as athletic director in January 2009, he said Indiana needed to make a stronger commitment to honoring contracts. In August, Glass again offered support to Lynch when he told reporters at the Big Ten meetings that Lynch had the program moving in the right direction.

Three months later, he reversed course.

"My experience is that a lot of things, the right thing to do is often times the hardest thing to do," Glass said. "Unfortunately, this is one of those times."

The constant speculation about Lynch's future with the program -- and the struggles this season -- had Glass staying relatively quiet in recent weeks.

Until Sunday.

Lynch took over as interim coach in 2007 after coach Terry Hoeppner died from complications of a brain tumor and led the Hoosiers to their first bowl bid since 1993. This was supposed to be his best season since then.

During an interview last summer, Lynch looked and sounded like a confident man, explaining that "I've done this a long time, and when you do it long enough, you know the difference between a good football team and one that has holes."

Instead, the big expectations fell flat again.

While Indiana won all four of its nonconference games, it lost the first seven Big Ten games and four of those by double digits. Until Saturday's overtime win at Purdue, the Hoosiers had lost 12 straight conference games and 15 straight league games away from their home field.

Any lingering hopes Lynch had of keeping the job, however, evaporated during a two-week span this month when the Hoosiers were blown out 83-20 at Wisconsin and then lost 41-24 against Penn State. The second loss eliminated them from bowl contention for the third straight year.

Glass said the loss to Wisconsin accelerated the evaluation.

Players thought they might save Lynch's job with a strong performance at Purdue on Saturday. But even a victory that brought the Old Oaken Bucket back to Bloomington for the the third time since 1997 wasn't good enough. Glass said he will meet with the team on Monday, and he expects the players to be disappointed.

"I'm confident that they are unhappy," he said. "They're Bill Lynch guys. They believe in him. They wanted to win for him."

But Glass had decided weeks ago that he would make a decision the day after the game against Purdue.

"I thought it was really important that whichever way this went, Bill wouldn't be twisting in the wind," Glass said.

Lynch's seven wins ins 2007 were the second most by a first-year coach in school history. James M. Sheldon won eight games in 1905. Lynch leaves with a career record of 100-97-3 at four different schools -- Butler, Ball State, DePauw and Indiana.

Glass said he appreciates Lynch's contribution to the program. He said he will make the decision on a successor by himself and he won't rush to make a move.

"It's more important that we get it right than get it fast," he said.

Among the names that have been bandied about during the past month are former Ball State coach Brady Hoke, now at San Diego State, and former Texas Tech coach Mike Leach.

Glass said he does have a short list though he did not provide names, and that he would consult with Colts president Bill Polian and former Colts coach Tony Dungy before making a decision.

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