Colts punter Rigoberto Sanchez will do what Chuck Pagano and Tyler Trent did before him: He will fight cancer, inspiring with grace and strength.
Author: Gregg Doyel, Indianapolis Star
Opinion: Big Ten football’s return makes all the sense in the world – and no sense at all
Big Ten football to return amid coronavirus surge because the league likes its testing protocols, or needs the money, or caved to pressure. You pick.
Opinion: Big Ten cancels nonconference games to save itself, signaling beginning of the end of 2020 season
The Big Ten’s decision to cancel nonconference games to protect itself amid the COVID-19 pandemic will crush smaller schools who lack resources.
Doyel: After chaos in the Brickyard 400 pits, a wife waits for a phone call in North Carolina
An ugly Brickyard 400 crash on pit road sent a Ryan Blaney crew member to the hospital and had his nervous wife answering the phone in North Carolina.
Opinion: A handful of people at IMS watch Scott Dixon dominate GMR Grand Prix
Scott Dixon won the 2020 GMR Grand Prix at empty Indianapolis Motor Speedway, using tire strategy to bend the field to his will.
NASCAR star Ryan Newman is promoting organ donation but not only for the reason you think
Fueled by the memory of Bryan Clauson and his own grandfather, NASCAR’s Ryan Newman has partnered with Driven 2 Save Lives and Indiana Donor Network.
Opinion: Want football this fall? Don’t be selfish. Wear a mask to slow COVID-19 spread
COVID-19 is a killer. The best two ways to slow its spread, from everything we know, are these: social distancing and masks.
Opinion: Rick Pitino skates while Louisville sweats in broken NCAA justice system
It’s the age-old problem with NCAA enforcement: The innocent keep getting punished. The guilty keep getting away with it. Fixing it would be so easy.
Crazy day in Big Ten: Coach falls ill, coronavirus concerns heighten, questions linger
As games were canceled around the country, Nebraska saw its coach fall ill and leave the game during the last basketball games to played with fans.
Doyel: Cancer won the battle a year ago, but Purdue superfan Tyler Trent might just win the war
Purdue fan Tyler Trent inspired fight against cancer, and his impact grows a year after death as researchers near breakthrough thanks to his tissue.