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EUGENE, Ore. — Just outside Autzen Stadium, inside a small, crowded visitors locker room, every one of Indiana‘s players waited to celebrate. The man of the hour had yet to arrive.

On the field, Indiana coach Curt Cignetti couldn’t help but soak up the moment. His team had just waltzed into one of the most impenetrable road environments in the sport and emerged with the first road victory any team has had in Eugene since 2022. The 30-20 win over No. 3 Oregon left a stadium once packed with yellow-clad Ducks fans empty but for a small sea of red-wearing road fans eager to chant his name.

“Cig! Cig! Cig!”

Cignetti flashed a wry smile. He conducted a postgame interview, during which he said he didn’t care about Indiana’s doubters, using cookies and brownies to make his analogy. Then, as he went on the CBS Sports postgame set to further relish the win, he continued to be serenaded. Hoosiers fans trickled onto the field, took selfies with athletic director Scott Dolson and followed Cignetti out of the stadium as if he were a rock star who had just wrapped up his show.

Even though Indiana had come into the game undefeated and ranked seventh in the country, this was as big a statement as any team has made this season and the biggest win of Cignetti’s tenure in Bloomington.

“We’re a real team,” quarterback Fernando Mendoza said. “We’re not just a one-hit wonder.”

When Cignetti finally made his way to the locker room, it was time for his players to chant his name and begin the celebration in earnest.

“We want Cig! We want Cig!”

After surprising college football last year with an 11-1 regular-season campaign and a College Football Playoff berth, it was unclear whether Cignetti and the Hoosiers would replicate that magic in 2025. But through six games this season, Indiana has produced an encore with even more confidence and swagger than last year.

“We’re primed for games like this,” linebacker Aiden Fisher said. “This is why we play this game. That’s why you come to Indiana.”

Even though Cignetti said Saturday that the vociferous approach he used to defend his team’s place among the sport’s best last season has evolved into something more reserved, his players are still quick to credit him for their conviction.

“You want to play for someone like Coach Cig, who is so confident in himself that it flows to his players,” Fisher said. “A lot of people ask, ‘Why [did] you follow Cignetti [from James Madison]?’ This is why. Nothing but complete trust in him. He’s better than anyone in the country. That’s why people want to play for him.”

In a game that featured two sudden NFL draft darlings at quarterback in Mendoza and Oregon’s Dante Moore, who both attracted a row full of pro scouts to watch them, what transpired was not a shootout nor a showcase, but a battle of attrition that Indiana won on both sides of the ball.

For most of the game, every yard and completion seemed to carry more weight than normal. Possessions were few. Touchdowns were even fewer. Perhaps nothing shed more light on the struggle in this game than Oregon coach Dan Lanning — who has gone for it on fourth down 17 times this season (four in this game) — facing a fourth-and-2 on the Indiana 16-yard-line and opting for a 33-yard field goal that tied the score at 13 in the third quarter.

Every point mattered, but in the end, the Ducks did not have enough on offense to hold their ground. Their sole offensive touchdown came in the first quarter.

“Our defense really took it to them in the second half,” Cignetti said. “Our guys wanted it. They showed they wanted it on the field.”

After Moore threw his second interception in the fourth quarter that sealed the result, the rare silence that hung in the air inside a stadium that started the day as loud as ever had gone from concern to resignation. Even if Cignetti shied away from responding to any doubters postgame, his players were happy to take the baton and do it for him.

“I think there was someone in the media that said our D-line was too small for this team, so you lit a fire under our team,” Fisher said.

There is, as Cignetti made sure to point out postgame, a lot of football left to play this season. This puts the Hoosiers in a good position going forward, he said, but it all depends on what they do with it. Last year’s dream season ended against Notre Dame in the playoffs, but if there was any doubt about whether Indiana belongs among the sport’s playoff contenders, Saturday’s win on a gloomy, rainy afternoon in Eugene erased it.

“We passed that test. It’s a great win for our program,” Cignetti said, smiling again. “I’m looking forward to enjoying this one.”

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Mariners shut down Jays’ bats to steal Game 1

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Mariners shut down Jays' bats to steal Game 1

TORONTO — Bryce Miller overcame a shaky first inning and gave the tired Seattle Mariners the start they needed in the AL Championship Series opener.

Miller pitched six sharp innings, Jorge Polanco hit a go-ahead single in the sixth and the Mariners beat the Toronto Blue Jays 3-1 Sunday night as they returned to the ALCS for the first time in 24 years.

“The year, personally, didn’t go how I had planned and how I had hoped for but we’re in the ALCS and I got to go out there and set the tone,” Miller said. “I felt great.”

Seattle slugger Cal Raleigh added a tying solo home run, his second homer of the postseason after leading the major leagues with 60 in the regular season.

“That was a big lift,” Mariners manager Dan Wilson said of Raleigh’s drive in a two-run sixth.

George Springer homered on the first pitch from Miller, who then escaped a two-on jam in a 27-pitch first inning.

Anthony Santander singled in the second for Toronto’s only other hit, and Seattle pitchers retired 23 of the Blue Jays’ final 24 batters. Miller, Gabe Speier, Matt Brash and Andres Munoz combined to throw just 100 pitches less than 48 hours after the Mariners needed 209 pitches to outlast Detroit over 15 innings.

“The job Bryce Miller did tonight was phenomenal,” Mariners manager Dan Wilson said. “After that first inning, he went into a different gear. You saw him getting ahead, using all his stuff.”

Miller, the winner, struck out three and walked three in six innings, throwing 76 pitches. The three relievers each had eight-pitch, 1-2-3 innings, with Muñoz getting the save.

Raleigh tied the score in the sixth with his ninth homer in 14 games at Rogers Centre. Kevin Gausman had held batters to 0 for 16 on splitters in the postseason before Raleigh’s homer.

“I was trying to get bat on ball, really just trying to put something in play,” Raleigh said, wearing a T-shirt with the words: “JOB’S NOT FINISHED.” “I didn’t want to punch out again.”

Polanco hit a go-ahead single later in the inning and added an RBI single in the eighth.

“He’s been huge from both sides of the plate,” Raleigh said .

AL West champion Seattle traveled to AL East winner Toronto on Saturday after a 3-2 home victory over the Tigers on Friday to win the Division Series, the longest winner-take-all game in Major League Baseball history.

Seattle, the only MLB team to never host a World Series game, held Toronto to two hits after the Blue Jays had 50 hits and 34 runs in their four-game Division Series against the New York Yankees.

“We’re a really good offense,” Blue Jays manager John Schneider said. “Today it just didn’t work out.”

Toronto’s Vladimir Guerrero Jr. went 9 for 17 with three homers and nine RBIs against the Yankees but finished 0 for 4 Sunday with three groundouts.

“This is going to be a hard-fought series, man,” Schneider said. “These guys will be ready for it.”

Springer’s 21st postseason home run broke a tie with the Yankees’ Derek Jeter, moving him into sole possession of fifth place on the career list.

Raleigh’s homer was his fourth in 15 at-bats against Gausman, who took the loss.

“Up to that point, I’d been throwing the ball really well and had the game right there,” Gausman said. “This one’s on me.”

Gausman allowed two runs and three hits in 5⅔ innings.

“Great hitters capitalize on mistakes,” Schneider said. “That split from Kev just kind of leaked back over the middle a little bit.”

Raleigh hit a one-out single off Gausman in the first and advanced to third on Julio Rodríguez’s base hit but was thrown out at the plate by third baseman Addison Barger on Polanco’s grounder.

Polanco, who had the game-ending single Friday, singled against Brendon Little to drive in Rodríguez, who had chased Gausman with a two-out walk.

Polanco added another RBI single against Seranthony Dominguez.

Eugenio Suarez doubled off the top of the right-field wall against Louis Varland in the seventh. The 395-foot drive would have been a homer in 15 of 30 big league ballparks, including Seattle.

Toronto outfielder Nathan Lukes left in the fourth inning. Lukes bruised his right knee when he fouled a pitch off it in the first inning. Schneider said X-rays were negative and said Lukes might return Monday.

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Jays’ Springer leads off with 21st postseason HR

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Jays' Springer leads off with 21st postseason HR

TORONTO — The Blue JaysGeorge Springer homered on the first pitch from Seattle‘s Bryce Miller in the American League Championship Series opener Sunday, moving past the New York Yankees‘ Derek Jeter into sole possession of fifth place on the career list with his 21st postseason home run.

Springer’s 385-foot drive to right field on a fastball at the outside corner put Toronto ahead with the first postseason leadoff home run in Blue Jays history. Springer has 63 leadoff homers in the regular season, second to Rickey Henderson’s record 81.

Manny Ramirez hit a record 29 postseason homers and is trailed by Jose Altuve (27), Kyle Schwarber (23) and Bernie Williams (22).

However, also in the first inning, Blue Jays outfielder Nathan Lukes fouled a ball off his right knee, falling in pain. He stayed in the game and drew a 12-pitch walk, then flied out leading off the third and was replaced by Myles Straw for the start of the fourth.

The team said he bruised his knee and was being further evaluated.

Lukes went 4-for-12 with five RBIs in Toronto’s division series win over the Yankees, including a key two-run single in the Game 4 clincher. He also made a diving catch in Toronto’s Game 1 win.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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L.A. to start Snell in Game 1, Ohtani later in NLCS

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L.A. to start Snell in Game 1, Ohtani later in NLCS

MILWAUKEE — The Los Angeles Dodgers will start lefty Blake Snell in Game 1 of the NLCS against the Milwaukee Brewers on Monday night while righty Yoshinobu Yamamoto will get the ball in Game 2. It means Shohei Ohtani will get just one start in the series, during the middle leg back in Los Angeles.

“He’ll pitch at some point, but we just don’t know which day,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said on Sunday.

Unlike in previous spots, the Dodgers are not concerned with pitching Ohtani before a day off, choosing to maximize rest for the other starters as the team embarks on its first best-of-seven series this postseason.

“Not as important,” Roberts said. “I think just appreciating having four starters in a potential seven-game series and who can pitch potentially twice, and that’s kind of the impetus, versus Shohei having that day off after a game.”

Ohtani is hitting just .148 this month with a 4.50 ERA over six postseason innings. Roberts was asked if the pitching plan for him was related to his slump at the plate.

“No, not at all,” Roberts answered. “I think it was just kind of Shohei’s going to pitch one game this series. So, it’s one game and then you have two other guys that potentially can pitch on regular rest.”

The Brewers are likely to counter with an opener in Game 1 before handing the ball to a starter for “bulk” innings.

“Game 1 looks, ‘OK, who on our team that can give us length,'” Brewers manager Pat Murphy said. “[Jose] Quintana, [Quinn] Priester, something like that — give us bulk.”

Murphy indicated righty Freddy Peralta would start Game 2 and then they’ll figure out Game 3 after that. He wasn’t sure yet if rookie Jacob Misiorowski would start a game or pitch multiple innings out of the bullpen.

“I don’t know,” Murphy stated. “I really don’t know. That hasn’t been concrete yet. There’s a possibility he’d start.”

Rosters don’t have to be turned in until Monday morning, but the Dodgers are considering carrying just two catchers as Will Smith‘s hand injury isn’t a big concern. He caught the entirety of Games 3 and 4 in the NLDS.

“I have a couple of conversations to have shortly,” Roberts said. “But yeah, that’s a good thought.”

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