No. 1 Indiana Dominates Alabama, 38–3, in Rose Bowl to Reach CFP Semifinals
PASADENA, Calif. — Indiana delivered one of the most commanding postseason performances in recent college football memory Thursday night, overpowering No. 9 Alabama 38–3 in the College Football Playoff quarterfinal at the Rose Bowl. The undefeated Hoosiers took control in the second quarter and never looked back, pairing an efficient, mistake-free offense with a suffocating defensive effort that left the Crimson Tide searching for answers from start to finish.
With the win, Indiana improved to 14–0 and advanced to the CFP semifinals, while Alabama’s season ended at 11–4 in its most lopsided defeat in nearly three decades.
The result marked Indiana’s first-ever victory over Alabama and a program milestone on one of the sport’s biggest stages. For a team that won only three games two seasons ago, the breakthrough was both stunning and symbolic—a clear signal that Indiana has arrived as a national power.
Indiana Breaks Through With a Second-Quarter Surge
The opening quarter was measured and cautious, with both defenses setting the tone early. Alabama applied pressure, and Indiana took time to settle into rhythm. That balance broke in the second quarter when the Hoosiers delivered the type of drive that changed the entire game.
Indiana marched 16 plays and 84 yards, draining nearly nine minutes off the clock before finishing with a 31-yard field goal to open the scoring. It was Indiana’s longest possession of the season by both plays and time, and it immediately established the Hoosiers’ intent: control tempo, dictate field position, and wear Alabama down.
Momentum swung sharply moments later when Alabama gambled on fourth down deep in its own territory and failed to convert. Indiana punished the mistake, scoring four plays later on a 21-yard touchdown pass to extend the lead to 10–0.
The Hoosiers weren’t finished. In the final moments of the half, Indiana engineered another composed drive—58 yards in 11 plays—and struck again with a one-yard touchdown pass with just 17 seconds remaining. Indiana reached halftime ahead 17–0, while Alabama had yet to establish any offensive rhythm.
Hoosiers Pull Away After the Break
Any hope of an Alabama comeback evaporated quickly after intermission.
Indiana opened the third quarter with a balanced, aggressive drive and finished it with a 24-yard touchdown pass, stretching the lead to 24–0 and forcing Alabama into desperation mode.
The Crimson Tide finally got on the board with a field goal midway through the third quarter, but the brief spark didn’t last. Indiana’s defense tightened immediately, keeping Alabama pinned and preventing any momentum shift.
The knockout sequence came early in the fourth quarter. Indiana broke through with a 25-yard rushing touchdown to make it 31–3, then followed with an 18-yard scoring run on another efficient possession to push the margin to 38–3. By that point, the Rose Bowl crowd had fully turned its attention to the magnitude of what it was witnessing—Indiana didn’t just win, it dominated.
Indiana’s Defense Smothers Alabama’s Offense
Indiana’s defensive performance was the defining story of the night.
The Hoosiers held Alabama to 193 total yards, consistently forced three-and-outs, and disrupted the Tide’s protection schemes with disciplined pressure and tight coverage. Alabama struggled to create explosive plays through the air and found no traction on the ground, producing one of its lowest rushing totals of the season.
Indiana finished with three sacks, a forced fumble, and limited Alabama to just 11 first downs, making every possession feel like a grind. Even after Alabama rotated quarterbacks following an injury in the third quarter, Indiana’s defense stayed locked in and gave the Tide no path back into the game.
Mendoza Delivers a Heisman-Level Performance
Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza played like a star on the sport’s grandest stage, reinforcing his Heisman résumé with one of the most efficient performances in Rose Bowl history.
Mendoza completed 14 of 16 passes for 192 yards and three touchdowns, distributing the ball with precision and staying calm under pressure. He attacked matchups, extended plays with timely movement, and never allowed Alabama’s early aggression to disrupt his rhythm.
Indiana’s offense also remained balanced beyond the passing attack. The Hoosiers surpassed 3,000 rushing yards for the season, marking just the second time in program history they’ve reached that milestone. The run game consistently moved the chains, kept the clock moving, and prevented Alabama from ever settling into a defensive groove.
A Program-Defining Moment
Indiana’s win wasn’t just a playoff result—it was a defining moment for the program.
The Hoosiers advanced to the CFP semifinals for the first time and did it in emphatic fashion, overwhelming one of the sport’s most decorated programs with discipline, physicality, and execution. They didn’t rely on trickery or fluke momentum—they controlled every phase of the game.
The Rose Bowl also delivered massive national attention, drawing 23.9 million viewers in what became a record-setting audience for the expanded CFP era.
Final Takeaway
Indiana’s 38–3 dismantling of Alabama was more than a statement win—it was an announcement that the Hoosiers are not just part of the playoff field, but a legitimate national championship contender. From Mendoza’s efficiency to the defense’s domination, Indiana turned a CFP quarterfinal into a showcase of total control.
Alabama’s season ended abruptly on a stage where it has so often thrived. Indiana, meanwhile, moves forward with momentum and confidence, now preparing for a semifinal showdown with Oregon—and carrying the belief that its historic season is far from over.








