Indiana won the Big Ten title with its No. 1 receiver invisible and a tight end carrying the offense — and the math says Don't try this twice · Gridpex
Indiana won the Big Ten title with its No. 1 receiver invisible and a tight end carrying the offense — and the math says Don't try this twice
What the 13-10 Big Ten Championship revealed: a perfect, top-ranked offense can win a championship by throttling all the way down to one improvised answer — and that survival looks nothing like a blueprint.
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Indiana walked into Lucas Oil Stadium 12-0 and ranked No. 1 in the country, an offense that had been pouring in 44.3 points a game and had just buried Purdue 56-3 a week earlier. Ohio State, also unbeaten at 12-0 and ranked No. 2, brought the nation's stingiest scoring defense — 7.8 points allowed per game — and the expectation, encoded even in our own model, that the Buckeyes would win this thing by about a field goal. For one night on a neutral floor, the points the country expected from Indiana simply never came. The Hoosiers scored 13. They won anyway. And the way they did it is far stranger, and far less repeatable, than the final score lets on.
Indiana, the No. 1 scoring offense in the country at 44.3 points a game, was held to 13 — and won as roughly a 4-point underdog. Ohio State's offense graded out in the 14th percentile of its own season, a real outlier for a unit that lived in the elite tier all year. Indiana's leading receiver wasn't a wide receiver at all: tight end Charlie Becker went for 126 yards, his biggest share of a game all season. And Omar Cooper Jr. — the Hoosiers' clear No. 1, with 961 yards and 13 touchdowns on the year — finished with a complete box-score zero.
13-10
Final
Indiana · Lucas Oil Stadium
#1
Indiana entered
12-0, 44.3 ppg
10
Ohio State held to
vs 37.0 season avg
258
Julian Sayin
passing yds, 1 TD
Head to head
IndianaOhio State
Points
13
10
Scored on % of drives
33.3%
22.2%
Three-and-out %
11.1%
22.2%
Yards / drive
38.3
39.6
How the two sides actually played on the night.
When
Team
Play
Q1 06:51
Indiana
(06:53) Nico Radicic field goal attempt from 29 yards GOOD (H: Mitch McCarthy, LS: Mark La
Q1 00:46
Ohio State
Julian Sayin pass to Carnell Tate for 9 yds, for a TD (Jayden Fielding KICK)
Q2 10:08
Ohio State
(10:10) Jayden Fielding field goal attempt from 30 yards GOOD (H: Joe McGuire, LS: John Fe
Q2 02:47
Indiana
(02:50) Nico Radicic field goal attempt from 32 yards GOOD (H: Mitch McCarthy, LS: Mark La
Q3 08:02
Indiana
(08:07) Shotgun Fernando Mendoza pass complete short left to Elijah Sarratt caught at OSU0
How the points were scored
Team
Passing
Rushing
Receiving
Indiana
Fernando Mendoza 222, 1 TD
Kaelon Black 69
Charlie Becker 126
Ohio State
Julian Sayin 258, 1 TD
Bo Jackson 83
Jeremiah Smith 144
Leaders
A game that throttled both perfect offenses to the floor
Start with the thing nobody predicted: this was a defensive grind that dragged two of the most explosive teams in the sport down to almost nothing. Indiana's offense played 44 percent below its own season standard by our per-play efficiency measure. Ohio State's played 64 percent below its standard — the 14th-percentile night referenced above, a real statistical outlier rather than a tidy postgame narrative. Neither side could breathe. Both opening drives of consequence ended in interceptions inside the first quarter — Louis Moore picking off Julian Sayin at the Ohio State 35, then Davison Igbinosun returning the favor on Fernando Mendoza in Indiana territory. The game that was supposed to be a track meet became a knife fight over field position and money downs.
The scoreboard crawled. Indiana opened with a 29-yard Nico Radicic field goal in the first quarter; Sayin answered with a 9-yard touchdown to Carnell Tate to make it 7-3 before halftime arrived with the teams trading short field goals. Everything about the night said this would come down to a single possession — and the model had quietly warned us it might, pricing a one-score finish at better than 30 percent.
The one moment the game actually turned
The swing — scoreboard margin by quarter
IND aheadOSU ahead
Cumulative margin after each quarter (lead change). Above the line = IND ahead, below = OSU ahead.
It turned early in the third quarter. With 8:02 left in the period, Mendoza found Elijah Sarratt on a 17-yard touchdown — a short throw to the left that Sarratt carried into the end zone for a 13-10 lead. It would be the last point either team scored. Everything after was Ohio State trying, and failing, to answer.
The Buckeyes had the chances. They drove deep into Indiana territory late in the third and came away with nothing, stopped on downs. They threatened twice more in the fourth quarter and stalled both times, the last gasp a Sayin throw that fell incomplete near the goal line inside the final three minutes. Ohio State out-gained Indiana per drive (39.6 yards to 38.3) and got marginally better starting field position, yet scored on only 22 percent of its possessions to Indiana's 33 percent. The Buckeyes kept arriving at the door and leaving empty-handed.
The receiver who wasn't there
Now the part that makes this game genuinely odd. Indiana won a championship while its best player vanished from the box score. Omar Cooper Jr. — 961 yards and 13 touchdowns on the season, a quarter of Indiana's entire passing output, with a 207-yard, four-touchdown afternoon already on his 2025 résumé — caught zero passes for zero yards. His only on-field trace was a single deep incompletion in the first quarter. Be careful here, because the box score will not tell you why: his last appearance was early, which points toward an early exit, but it could also be coverage or game plan. We're not going to pretend to know. What we can say is that he was gone, and Indiana had to win without him.
That is, on its face, a losing signal. When a team's elite season receiving leader — 900-plus yards on the year — gets held under 15 yards and somebody else leads the team, that team has won only about 41 percent of the time across the two seasons of game logs we can check. The No. 1 receiver disappearing usually travels with a loss, not a win. Doing it the way Indiana did — winning as a neutral-site underdog with that star erased — happened only a dozen times across two full seasons of FBS football. This sits in the rarest, hardest corner of the whole pattern. Treat it as proof that this offense can survive one bad or short night from its centerpiece against a great defense — depth insurance — and not as evidence that Indiana doesn't need Cooper. It does. The sample is tiny, position-blind, and the reason for the zero is unsettled.
A tight end carried the whole thing
With Cooper gone, the ball funneled to an unlikely place: tight end Charlie Becker, normally Indiana's third option behind Cooper and Sarratt. Becker caught 6 passes for 126 yards — a single-game career high in team share, accounting for 56.8 percent of Indiana's 222 receiving yards. His season norm is a 14.5 percent share. On this night he was the entire passing game. The Hoosiers found him deep twice when it mattered most, a 51-yard strike down the middle in the third quarter that set up the go-ahead score, and a 33-yarder in the fourth that kept Indiana's clock-killing possession alive.
Charlie Becker: receiving yds per game, all season
receiving yds per game — each bar = number of games100th percentile
Each bar is one regular-season game (official box). Charlie's 126 receiving yds in the title game was a season high — the 100th percentile of his own year.
Who beat their season average — and who didn't
Fernando Mendoza (passing)
222 yds (+0% vs avg)
Kaelon Black (rushing)
69 yds (+6% vs avg)
Charlie Becker (receiving)
126 yds (+123% vs avg)
Julian Sayin (passing)
258 yds (+0% vs avg)
Bo Jackson (rushing)
83 yds (-1% vs avg)
Jeremiah Smith (receiving)
144 yds (+51% vs avg)
Key players' yardage vs their per-game season norm.
Here is where the depth lives. Funneling a passing game onto a non-WR1 like this — a team's game-leading receiver who isn't its season leader, taking half or more of the team's receiving yards — has happened in 123 team-games across the last two seasons. Those teams won just under 59 percent of the time, barely better than a coin flip. And it almost never stuck: among the close wins built this way, the same secondary receiver led the team at that share again the very next week in only a handful of cases. The median recurrence was a single game. This is, in the most literal sense, a one-off — a one-game answer to a specific defense, here Ohio State erasing Indiana's top wideouts, rather than a new identity. In a small, two-season, position-blind sample, it reads as a well-executed bailout, not a winning formula.
Where Becker actually won the game: third down
Drill into when Becker did his damage and it gets sharper. He was targeted four times on third down. All four converted for first downs — gains of 10, 10, 33 and 51 — and 104 of his 126 yards came on third down alone. Indiana converted just 6 of 13 third downs all night; through the air, Becker was most of them. While the rest of Indiana's third-down dropbacks mostly stalled, a player whose median game share is 14.5 percent quietly became the offense's money-down hammer.
And the historical read is the same cold caution, only more so. When a tertiary-usage receiver erupts to lead his team with 100-plus yards and a 45-percent-plus share — Becker's exact profile — those players averaged 130 yards in the breakout game and 41 the next week, their share collapsing right back toward 16 percent. Only about 8 percent topped 100 yards again. The eruption is real; the encore almost never comes, because coverage adjusts to a tight end who just showed he can win third downs. Indiana shouldn't bank on Becker being a reliable money-down weapon going forward — what it can bank on is that Mendoza found the open man when the season was on the line, which is a quarterback trait, not a play you can run back.
Ohio State's self-inflicted wound: it stopped running
Ohio State flipped the script on 3rd down
SeasonThis game
Run rate on 3rd down
42%
0%
Ohio State ran on 42% of plays on 3rd down all season; in this game, 0% (n=12 such plays) — a sharp in-game departure from the norm.
If Indiana's story is improvisation that worked, Ohio State's is the opposite — a strong identity abandoned. The Buckeyes passed on all 12 of their third-down snaps. Zero rushes. That includes both of their third-and-shorts, both incomplete, and they lined up in shotgun on 11 of those 12 plays. This from a team that ran the ball on 40 percent of its third downs all season and on 85 percent of its third-and-shorts. They had a healthy lead back in Bo Jackson, who carried 17 times for 83 yards at 4.9 a pop — and gave him zero third-down carries. The all-pass posture let Indiana tee off: two sacks and an interception on third down, just 5 of 12 converted.
This is the structural signature of a strong-running favorite trading away its short-yardage identity on the downs that decide games, and the history frames it as a real warning rather than a death sentence. Across more than 600 such team-games since 2014, these strong-run favorites still won about two-thirds of the time — but a matched set of strong-run favorites who didn't lose their power-running game won closer to 78 percent. Losing the short-yardage run, in this admittedly coarse efficiency-box proxy, roughly raised the upset rate from 22 percent to 34 percent. It was the front — the sacks, the interception — and not coverage that ended these games, exactly as it did in Indianapolis. The reassuring half for Ohio State: this kind of lost-run-identity night was almost always an isolated departure that snapped back, with power-running recovering to around its season norm and these teams winning roughly 63 percent of their very next game. It reads as a one-game game-plan misfire to correct with Jackson on the field, not a structural flaw.
What the night actually revealed
Strip away the trophy and you're left with two truths that don't usually share a sentence. Indiana won a championship-stakes game by losing nearly everything that made it the No. 1 offense — its scoring, its star receiver, its season-long shape — and replacing it on the fly with a tight end and a quarterback finding open men on third down. Ohio State lost a game it controlled in field position and yards by talking itself out of the run it does best when it mattered. Both halves of that are, by the numbers, aberrations rather than identities: the secondary-receiver eruption regresses, the No. 1 vanishing usually means a loss, the abandoned run game comes back next week. None of it is a blueprint. What it is, for Indiana, is a championship and proof of something quieter and more valuable than a formula — that when the perfect plan breaks against a great defense, this team can win ugly. You can't scheme that on a whiteboard. You can only be glad, in December, that you had it.
Gridpex's desks are model-driven, AI-assisted columns. Every figure is generated from our own data and ratings — not invented. We don't fabricate reporters, quotes, or sources. Published Sun, Dec 7, 2025 · game-engine:deep-recap.
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