Stone-faced Cignetti vows ‘I am happy, at times’

Stone-faced Cignetti vows 'I am happy, at times'

ATLANTA — Despite what he looks like on the sideline, Indiana coach Curt Cignetti is enjoying the College Football Playoff ride.

Cignetti’s demeanor during games — furrowed eyebrows, steely eyes — has made the transformative Hoosiers coach into a meme, popularized during the team’s postseason run that continues Friday against No. 5 seed Oregon in the CFP Semifinal at the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl. But Cignetti says he is having some fun with Indiana’s historic rise, just not in front of the camera.

«There’s a lot of times I am happy. I just don’t show I’m happy,» Cignetti said Thursday at a joint news conference with Oregon coach Dan Lanning at the College Football Hall of Fame. «If I’m going to ask my players to play the first game, first play to play [No.] 150 the same, regardless of competitive circumstances, then I can’t be seen on the sideline high-fiving people and celebrating, or what’s going to happen, right? What’s the effect going to be?

West Virginia and Indiana University of Pennsylvania, was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2013, Curt could not attend because he was coaching at IUP. Thursday marked the first time he visited the Hall of Fame, and before the news conference he saw a video kiosk that displayed his father’s accomplishments.

«I learned so much from my dad,» Curt Cignetti said of Frank, who died in 2022. «He was a great leader, and he led by example, and he was a role model, and he was a strong man. He had a little John Wayne and Clint Eastwood in him.»

Lanning also confirmed that running back Jay Harris, who entered the transfer portal Wednesday, will be available for the Ducks on Friday night. Oregon’s running backs room has thinned out following an injury to Jordon Davison, who leads the team with 15 rushing touchdowns, and the transfer portal entries of Jayden Limar and Makhi Hughes, who are no longer with the Ducks.

Harris, a transfer from Northwest Missouri State, has 116 rushing yards and a touchdown on 26 carries this season.

«I think he’s an exceptional back,» Oregon offensive coordinator Will Stein said. «He’s got great balance, he can run, he can really catch the ball. So I think he’s at a spot now to really flourish, given the opportunity.»

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