First Road Test Passed
9/27/2025 8:33:00 PM | Football
IOWA CITY, Iowa - Sometimes, if you're the unbeaten Indiana Hoosiers, you find a way.
Sometimes, if you're quarterback Fernando Mendoza and get knocked down, get rocked, get bloodied, you make a play, a big play, the biggest play.
Sometimes, if you're receiver Elijah Sarratt, you make the catch, the biggest catch, the winning catch.
And so, the No. 11/12 Hoosiers (5-0 overall, 2-0 in the Big Ten), pushed as they haven't been pushed all season, playing on the road for the first time, overcame Iowa 20-15 Saturday at Kinnick Stadium.
"It was a gut check," head coach Curt Cignetti told Voice of the Hoosiers Don Fischer during the post-game radio show. "We were persistent, resilient. We were good, bad, ugly, but at the end of the day, when we needed to make a play, we made it."
In a physical, back-and-forth game, Mendoza beat a fierce blitz to hit Sarratt for the game-winning, 49-yard touchdown pass with 1:28 left in the game.
"We knew it would be tough," defensive lineman Stephen Daley told Fischer. "We knew it would be a great atmosphere. Iowa is a physical team that would chew up a lot of the clock.
"We did what we needed to do. At big moments, big-time players make big-time plays."
IU had dominated its first four opponents, but Iowa (3-2, 1-1) presented a formidable challenge, especially at sold-out Kinnick Stadium and a Homecoming crowd of more than 70,000.
"We needed a game like this, to go on the road, to be challenged, to have it go back and forth," Cignetti told Fischer. "At times, it didn't look too good. We were struggling and part of the reason was because of Iowa. We found a way to get it done."
Mendoza finished 13-for-23 for 233 yards, two touchdowns, and his first interception of the season (he has 16 touchdown passes). Sarratt had six catches for 133 yards and the game-winning touchdown. Running back Roman Hemby rushed for 86 yards.
The defense had six tackles for loss, got interceptions from defensive backs Amare Ferrell and Louis Moore, and held Iowa to 284 total yards. IU blocked a punt for the second-straight week, this one by linebacker Isaiah Jones.
It did that without All-American cornerback D'Angelo Ponds, out with an injury. Ryland Gandy replaced him.
"The defense would not let them in the end zone," Cignetti told Fischer. "We forced turnovers. We blocked a punt."
IU couldn't have started any better. Kicker Brendan Franke's unreturnable kickoff led to Ferrell's interception and then to Mendoza's 14-yard touchdown pass to Omar Cooper Jr. for a 7-0 lead in less than two minutes. Iowa countered with a field goal and then a touchdown run.
Late in the second quarter, the Hoosiers went 47 yards in three plays over 22 seconds to set up Nico Radicic's 46-yard field goal for a 10-10 halftime score.
Mendoza was 6-for-9 for 93 yards and a touchdown.
Jones partially blocked a third quarter Iowa punt to set up the Hoosiers at midfield, but they couldn't take advantage. The third quarter ended with that 10-10 score.
The Hawkeyes' 54-yard field goal early in the fourth quarter gave them a 13-10 lead. Radicic's 44-yard field goal tied it at 13-13 with just under 10 minutes left.
Then Iowa quarterback Mark Gronowski hurt his knee and left the game. Backup quarterback Hank Brown was intercepted by Moore off a tipped pass.
IU drove into Iowa territory on a 25-yard pass to Sarratt before the Hawkeyes intercepted Mendoza and returned it to the Hoosier 29-yard line. A missed field goal kept the score tied and gave IU a final chance.
It took advantage with Mendonza hitting Sarratt with a 24-yard pass before the winning score. The Hoosiers ended the game by taking a safety to run out the clock for the final score.
IU gets a bye before playing at top-10 Oregon on Oct. 11.
"We have an off week and we'll have a chance to get some rest," Cignetti told Fischer. "We can we look at some areas that weren't real good in this game. We'll look at our tendencies.
"I'm proud of the players, the coaches, and this team. It's great to be going into the break 5-0."
Sometimes, if you're quarterback Fernando Mendoza and get knocked down, get rocked, get bloodied, you make a play, a big play, the biggest play.
Sometimes, if you're receiver Elijah Sarratt, you make the catch, the biggest catch, the winning catch.
And so, the No. 11/12 Hoosiers (5-0 overall, 2-0 in the Big Ten), pushed as they haven't been pushed all season, playing on the road for the first time, overcame Iowa 20-15 Saturday at Kinnick Stadium.
"It was a gut check," head coach Curt Cignetti told Voice of the Hoosiers Don Fischer during the post-game radio show. "We were persistent, resilient. We were good, bad, ugly, but at the end of the day, when we needed to make a play, we made it."
In a physical, back-and-forth game, Mendoza beat a fierce blitz to hit Sarratt for the game-winning, 49-yard touchdown pass with 1:28 left in the game.
"We knew it would be tough," defensive lineman Stephen Daley told Fischer. "We knew it would be a great atmosphere. Iowa is a physical team that would chew up a lot of the clock.
"We did what we needed to do. At big moments, big-time players make big-time plays."
IU had dominated its first four opponents, but Iowa (3-2, 1-1) presented a formidable challenge, especially at sold-out Kinnick Stadium and a Homecoming crowd of more than 70,000.
"We needed a game like this, to go on the road, to be challenged, to have it go back and forth," Cignetti told Fischer. "At times, it didn't look too good. We were struggling and part of the reason was because of Iowa. We found a way to get it done."
Mendoza finished 13-for-23 for 233 yards, two touchdowns, and his first interception of the season (he has 16 touchdown passes). Sarratt had six catches for 133 yards and the game-winning touchdown. Running back Roman Hemby rushed for 86 yards.
The defense had six tackles for loss, got interceptions from defensive backs Amare Ferrell and Louis Moore, and held Iowa to 284 total yards. IU blocked a punt for the second-straight week, this one by linebacker Isaiah Jones.
It did that without All-American cornerback D'Angelo Ponds, out with an injury. Ryland Gandy replaced him.
"The defense would not let them in the end zone," Cignetti told Fischer. "We forced turnovers. We blocked a punt."
IU couldn't have started any better. Kicker Brendan Franke's unreturnable kickoff led to Ferrell's interception and then to Mendoza's 14-yard touchdown pass to Omar Cooper Jr. for a 7-0 lead in less than two minutes. Iowa countered with a field goal and then a touchdown run.
Late in the second quarter, the Hoosiers went 47 yards in three plays over 22 seconds to set up Nico Radicic's 46-yard field goal for a 10-10 halftime score.
Mendoza was 6-for-9 for 93 yards and a touchdown.
Jones partially blocked a third quarter Iowa punt to set up the Hoosiers at midfield, but they couldn't take advantage. The third quarter ended with that 10-10 score.
The Hawkeyes' 54-yard field goal early in the fourth quarter gave them a 13-10 lead. Radicic's 44-yard field goal tied it at 13-13 with just under 10 minutes left.
Then Iowa quarterback Mark Gronowski hurt his knee and left the game. Backup quarterback Hank Brown was intercepted by Moore off a tipped pass.
IU drove into Iowa territory on a 25-yard pass to Sarratt before the Hawkeyes intercepted Mendoza and returned it to the Hoosier 29-yard line. A missed field goal kept the score tied and gave IU a final chance.
It took advantage with Mendonza hitting Sarratt with a 24-yard pass before the winning score. The Hoosiers ended the game by taking a safety to run out the clock for the final score.
IU gets a bye before playing at top-10 Oregon on Oct. 11.
"We have an off week and we'll have a chance to get some rest," Cignetti told Fischer. "We can we look at some areas that weren't real good in this game. We'll look at our tendencies.
"I'm proud of the players, the coaches, and this team. It's great to be going into the break 5-0."
Players Mentioned
FB: Aiden Fisher - at Iowa Postgame Press Conference (09/27/25)
Saturday, September 27
FB: Fernando Mendoza & Elijah Sarratt - at Iowa Postgame Press Conference (09/27/25)
Saturday, September 27
FB: Pat Coogan - at Iowa Postgame Press Conference (09/27/25)
Saturday, September 27
FB: Week 5 (at Iowa) - Curt Cignetti Post Game Press Conference
Saturday, September 27