Indiana Hoosiers Dominate the UCLA Bruins
Well, that was a good old-fashioned woodshed beating. The No. 2 Indiana Hoosiers didn’t just defeat the UCLA Bruins; they systematically dismantled them in a 56-6 rout that felt over before the pre-game snacks were gone. For a UCLA team that had been riding a three-game winning streak and generating some feel-good buzz, this was a brutal return to reality. The game in Bloomington was less a football contest and more of a 60-minute highlight reel for Indiana.
Indiana’s Immediate and Unrelenting Dominance
If you were running late to your couch, you missed the opening salvo. Less than a minute into the game, Indiana Linebacker Aiden Fisher, channeling his inner Odell Beckham Jr., snagged a one-handed interception and took it 25 yards to the house. Just like that, it was 7-0. It was the kind of play that deflates a team, and UCLA never managed to reinflate.
The Hoosiers just kept throwing haymakers. Every time UCLA thought they might get a stop, Indiana would convert a crucial third down. Quarterback Fernando Mendoza was practically setting up a picnic in the pocket, carving up the Bruins’ secondary. He found E.J. Williams Jr. for a 62-yard touchdown in the third quarter that was so wide open, Williams could have stopped for a chat with the mascot before waltzing into the endzone. By the time Indiana led 49-3, the only suspense left was whether the hot dog vendors would run out of mustard.
A Tough Day At the Office For UCLA
Let’s be honest, nobody expected UCLA to win this game. They came in as 24.5-point underdogs. But you hoped for a fight, a spark, something to build on. Instead, we got a regression to the mean that was painful to watch. The Bruins looked like the team that started the season 0-4, not the one that had strung together three straight wins.
Quarterback Nico Iamaleava had a day he’ll want to forget. His first pass was the aforementioned pick-six, and it didn’t get much better. He was under pressure all day, finishing with a season-low 113 passing yards and another interception for good measure. The Bruins’ running game, a recent source of strength, was completely neutralized. It was a total system failure. The offense sputtered, penalties piled up, and missed tackles were a dime a dozen. It was the kind of performance that makes you question everything.
Looking ahead, things don’t get any easier for UCLA. They have a winnable game against Nebraska at home, but then it’s back on the road to face No. 1 Ohio State. If they play like they did against Indiana, they’ll be nothing more than chum in the water for the sharks of the Big Ten. It was a sad Sunday for Bruins fans, a humbling reminder of just how far they still have to go.
