Skip to main content

Curt Cignetti had a welcome-to-Indiana message for transfer Nick Marsh: Leave the gold shoes behind

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) — Curt Cignetti is not about to let the Indiana Hoosiers put flash in front of fundamentals after their first national championship.

Newcomer Nick Marsh apparently found that out in humbling fashion before his first practice with the team.

During Cignetti’s news conference to preview the start of spring ball, the no-nonsense coach revealed during a discussion about the transfer wide receiver from Michigan State that he chewed out Marsh prior to practice for an equipment faux pas for the old-school program.

Gold shoes.

After praising the production Marsh gave the Spartans over his first two seasons in the Big Ten, with 100 receptions for 1,311 yards and nine touchdowns in 23 games, Cignetti made a point to mention he put Marsh in his place for his choice of cleat color.

“I don’t know if that happened to him very often at Michigan State,” Cignetti said. “That was a wakeup call.”

Perhaps Cignetti was simply trying to use Marsh to send a message to the entire team with a reminder that glamour — or complacency — will get the Hoosiers nowhere in 2026 after winning all 16 of their games in the 2025 season. Whatever his motivation, the 64-year-old Cignetti — who is 27-2 in two seasons at Indiana — quickly softened his tone to seemingly steer the spotlight away from Marsh’s first-day mistake.

“He’s worked really hard, done a great job for us,” Cignetti said.

___

AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football

Tavita Pritchard opens his first spring as Stanford’s football coach

STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — Tavita Pritchard's first few months after being hired to coach Stanford's football team have been spent recruiting a roster, hiring a staff and helping raising money in hopes of turning the Cardinal back into a winning program. Pritchard finally got to spend time on Wednesday doing what he really loves, coaching his team on the field as Stanford kicked off its first spring practice under its new coach. “It feels good to be back on the grass,” Pritchard said. “With all the stuff that I've done since I've been here, between portal and recruiting and talking to different donors, friends of the program, all those different things. This is a sanctuary out here to be on the back on grass and coaching ball and going through this process with our guys. Because obviously, this is where we make our hay. This is where really learn how to go, learn how compete and strengthen our connection.” Pritchard doesn't have an easy task, taking over a team that went 4-8 last year under interim coach Frank Reich and a program that hasn't even won five games in a season since 2018.
Read Next Story