TERRE HAUTE, Ind. -- It used to be a source of pride at Indiana State. I mean, it was only 1967 when the school became the first place to put AstroTurf in an outdoor stadium. Back then, that was moonshot-age stuff, a symbol for Indiana State football.But decay and deterioration hit. Neglect, too. That was the worst part. You're supposed to replace the stuff every 10 years. They didn't, and in the 1980s, it got hard. It was something to overcome, a badge of courage. And the teams won big.
"I still have marks all over my body from it," Trent Miles, the current head coach and former player from those glory days said after Wednesday's practice.
He rolled up the outside of his shorts to show a big burn mark.
The turf lived on for years, but the program did not. Indiana State is now the worst college football team in the country. The. Worst.
Its 28-0 loss at Youngstown State on Saturday ran its losing streak to 31 games. Before that, it won one game, which ended a 24-game slump.
Among Division I programs, only Prairie View's 80 straight losses, mostly through the 1990s, Columbia's 44 and Northwestern's 34 have been worse.
In fact, Indiana State was so desperate to break the streak that it paid tiny Quincy of Illinois to come in for the season opener. Students rallied to see the streak end -- usually about 1,500 fans show up; this time, it was 7,000 -- and the Sycamores jumped ahead 17-0. At halftime, Miles couldn't believe what he saw: his team looked defeated.
The coaches tried to pump up the players. It was hopeless. They lost in overtime, after fumbling near the goal line late.
"They don't know how to win," Miles said.
The fans aren't coming back.
Miles, 46, was a ball boy at Indiana State in the 1970s with current Baltimore Ravens offensive coordinator Cam Cameron. Miles' father went to school at Indiana State, and so did his brother.
He played receiver in the 1980s, and then went on to a successful college coaching career, mostly working with receivers, at several places, including Notre Dame under Ty Willingham. He was still with Willingham at Washington when Indiana State called and asked him to come home."I had a real good job," he said. "But I wanted to fix this."
This is his second year. He's 0-17.
How do you make losers believe that they're winners? That's the immediate task. He already has run off 41 players, retooled mostly with freshman and sophomores. Only four players, Miles said, have ever won a college football game. Imagine.
Miles put in all sorts of new rules. Players must sit in the front row in class. No iPods in class. No cellphones. Pull up your pants. Show up on time. Players must perform three acts of community service per semester, such as reading to kids or visiting kids in hospitals.
"We blew this program up," Miles said. "I've got good vision. I can see the future."
Unfortunately, this program is living with both feet stuck in the past like cleats in the open seams on the old turf. But at least it's searching for light instead of assuming there isn't any.
That old AstroTurf had gotten dangerous. And the Memorial Stadium lights, which were mostly burned out, were yellow. The locker room looked like something from a 1960s YMCA, with 50 years of wear. It's all being renovated now. Finally.
So Miles took me on a tour after practice Wednesday. The team is still moving from old digs to new, trying to move to the future. "This was the coaches' locker room," he said in a dark, tiny space with a small table.
"This was the players' locker room. Here's the shower. It doesn't drain well so the standing water gets this high."
He held his hand to his waist. "If you're not one of the first ones in there ..."
I'll bet it wasn't like that when you played.
"Yes it was," he said. "They just never did anything to it.
"Here's the toilets. No doors. Military style."
We went down the hall.
"Here's the equipment room. Notice the duct tape holding the shelves together."
That still is the equipment room.
"We had no laundry room, so they did laundry in a meeting room. We actually had meetings in our laundry room."
He opened the door to the new laundry room. And then to the new equipment room, which is going to have "a belt coming around with clothes on it, like in a dry cleaners. Not a closet with a bunch of shelves in it."
The new locker room has those nice big wooden lockers like pro locker rooms. It has two 50-inch flat TVs, compliments of former players and donors.
"They gave me the money," he said, "and I went and bought them."There's a folksiness to this place, and not just from the ancient-looking Dairy Queen on Wabash street near the stadium.
An assistant coach knocked on Miles' door. Apparently, Miles' wife was taking their 4-year-old to see the Wizard of Oz at a local theater. Miles was supposed to babysit their two younger kids, but told the assistant to fill in for a few minutes.
"It's OK," Miles said. "He's their godfather."
Back to the Astroturf. Even after Miles' playing days were over, they still didn't replace the stuff. The coach's recruiting budget was cut from over $50,000 a year to $13,000. They team started traveling by bus. It became impossible to overcome, as its peers built new facilities.
The more that turf wore down, the more it defined a program. It wasn't until 2000 that the school finally gave in and bought a new turf. But it tried to install on the cheap, and put it in wrong. The seams ripped apart and strips came up. Coaches used to take hammer and nails to practice.
Still, little gaps formed around the field, and last year, freshman linebacker Aaron Archie stepped in one and blew out his knee.
"My body went this way and my leg went that way," he said Wednesday. "But I'm 100 percent now. More than 100 percent."
That's the funny thing. In talking with several players, they seem more hopeful than anything. It has to do with the changes, including purging all the trouble players.
Miles said that many of them would show for weightlifting, sign in and leave. Many wouldn't go to class. Last year's quarterback was Tasered by police.
"You've got to get that cancer out of your body," Archie said. "You can't have that."Senior defensive end Dan Millington, who grew up in Terre Haute, said he has never felt anything but proud to play for Indiana State. Second-year quarterback Travis Johnson said, "It's coming. Everybody can feel it."
There once were glory days here in sports. Larry Bird played here, and then football was good, and then baseball.
Now, new offensive coordinator Troy Walters, a former NFL receiver, said "When I was with the Colts, coach [Tony] Dungy always said 'Keep pounding the rock. Keep pounding the rock. You never know when it's going to break.' "
This year, they put in a beautiful $750,000 FieldTurf. Miles credited school president Daniel Bradley and other school officials at least a half-dozen times. And the recruiting budget has been raised, but Miles wouldn't specify by how much.
The bulbs in the stadium lights have been replaced, too. Last year, they nearly won, but then lost after a Hail Mary with Indiana State fans already running on the field to celebrate. In the past 11 quarters, they have been outscored 99-3.
You wanted a happy ending? They're doing the right things, but years of neglect can't just be torn up and thrown away like an old worn carpet.
E-mail me at gregcouch09@aol.com




















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 4)
9-24-2009 @ 4:50AM
delphinias said...
Uh, I used to work at that Dairy Queen across from the ISU stadium.....the ice cream was really good....even better when you were stoned....like most of those ISU football players that loved losing.
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9-26-2009 @ 11:17PM
Danny said...
I agree that Indiana State should stop their 80 game losing streak sooner than later.
9-27-2009 @ 10:26AM
mdterrapin04 said...
And hopefully you didn't graduate from college to infest America with your THC ridden urine. What a loser!
9-24-2009 @ 9:11AM
mcsame2008 said...
I predict a win. It was just a couple of weeks ago that fanhouse declared Washington was the worst team in Division 1. So with this ringing endorsement from fanhouse, things will look up for Indiana.
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9-24-2009 @ 2:44PM
mojo said...
okay so they have the longest losing streak in the country. losing by a large score get your heart pumping. i used to check yeah i still do check columbia's fate every sunday morning. during their losing streak they lost way more games by less than a touchdown than they lost by a big score. they had such a following in the tri-state area that when they finally won people wanted the losing team to be tested for drugs. the cry around the bronx was break up the lions/ butthey started another streak the next week. the sobering fact was the coaches reply t6o a reporter saying we don't give scholarships to men who want to play football, we give them to young people who want to be doctors and lawyers and such
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9-24-2009 @ 4:15PM
htc6600 said...
Couch obviously hasn't seen a Gopher's game recently.
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9-24-2009 @ 5:40PM
Steve Miles said...
they suck..........................
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9-27-2009 @ 1:11AM
Lil Weezy said...
Co-Sign
9-24-2009 @ 6:00PM
Sarah Scofield said...
I graduated from Indiana State in 1992. I never went to any of the sporting events. After Larry Bird, Kurt Thomas, and Bruce Baumgartner graduated they went downhill. Then ISU dropped wrestling, gymnastics, tennis, and several other winning sports. Even basketball has not been a complete success. Ask people in Terre Haute what ISU stands for and you will be told "I screwed up".
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9-24-2009 @ 6:06PM
jer99anr said...
NM Lobos are the joke of the west.If they had all high school opponents they wouldnt have a .500 record.
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9-24-2009 @ 6:51PM
J said...
Sounds like they are on the right track. No one expects success overnight. They just expect you to try for it as hard as you can.
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9-24-2009 @ 9:37PM
cooltwox21 said...
Actually to make a correction Indiana State is a D 1 AA school not a so it is a medium school.
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9-25-2009 @ 1:59PM
WhiteWolf0514 said...
I go to ISU now and I am at every home football game. From last year to this year you can tell there is a major difference. It will take time, but I bet within a few years the football team will be on it's way up from the dumps
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9-25-2009 @ 3:59PM
gflskatrombone said...
If you have been to ISU in the past few years the campus has gone through amazing changes as well as athletic fields. We are getting a new baseball stadium that is being built as we speak. I am proud to say I go to ISU and the school's reputation is a lot better than it used to be. I'll be at the game tomorrow. I even drove 3 1/2 hours to see them at Louisville. They are getting better and they need our support. They will get there. Like I said this will be my 4th ISU game this season. So if you live in the Terre Haute area, please take 3 hours and go to the games.
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9-26-2009 @ 2:56PM
Sarah Scofield said...
In my humble opinion it is too little too late. I hated getting around campus, as it was in no way shape or form handicapped accessible. I don't know if that situation has improved on campus, but the football games were not. I suspect that Trent will be out of a job at the end of the season, and it's not his fault but the result of years of neglect.
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9-26-2009 @ 8:15PM
charmcook said...
ISU? sports... sports really don't matter. it is a school so let the student get their education rather than to dwell on sprts and things that are irrelevant
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9-26-2009 @ 8:39PM
Mr. Holmes said...
If they want a win, all they have to do is play Alcorn State.
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9-26-2009 @ 8:45PM
susan said...
Since you are in last place, you have the opportunity to get real about sports. They should be a fun way to enrich a persons life,,,,,,,especially at a University. I think the rich, fat old alumni (whose endowment money the school wants) is what makes football so important. Somebody has to be last and somebody has to be first.....do the simple math. There's also the option that you rethink the WHOLE thing and realize that the game is driven by old men's dreams of battle and young men's testosterone.
Put all that money and energy into world hunger and everyone would win!
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9-26-2009 @ 8:50PM
papam11 said...
Imagine how much money has been wasted on football scholarships at Indiana State over the years. Maybe the school really does have some "STUDENT/athletes", huh? I never did go for that "scholarship" crap. The word "scholar" should never be used when giving an athlete a "free ride." It should be "athleticship."
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9-26-2009 @ 9:11PM
jmetcalf1955 said...
why would you go to ISU? is the tuition free?
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