Chris May retweetet
Chris May
1.8K posts

Chris May
@ChristopherRMay
Curious citizen of the world. Executive Director of @GiveINRush. Previously Executive Director of @HoopsHall (2009-22).
Indiana Beigetreten Şubat 2011
629 Folgt260 Follower

The unity and community spirit provided through high school sports. A great watch.
Big Ten Network@BigTenNetwork
Thad Matta dreamed of being the head coach at Hoopeston High School. He settled for 21 seasons as a college head coach 😊 The Journey spotlighted the recently retired and former @OhioStateHoops coach's legendary prep career in this 2013 segment 👇
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Such a great guy and recruiter of officials thru @RefReps. Congrats, @DavidPillar!
Jim Gordillo@JimGordillo
David Pillar honored by IBCA as this year's Mildred Ball award winner for his work as a basketball official. He is in his 27th year and was named IHSAA Girls’ Basketball Official of the Year in 2015. He has served as official scorekeeper for IU men’s basketball for 27 seasons.
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Chris May retweetet

We lost Sister Jean.
We still have Brother Gene.
No Context College Basketball@ContextFreeCBB
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Chris May retweetet

🚨 The Bryce Drew Shot 🚨
On this day in 1998, 13-seed @ValpoBasketball upset Ole Miss with @BryceDrewCoach's legendary buzzer-beater 🔥 #MarchMadness
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Most wins in the last 7 seasons.
Most conference wins in the last 8 seasons.
Longest winning streak in the last 11 seasons.
Thanks to these guys for getting @RushvilleBball back to respectability.
Rushville High, Here’s to our Rushville High. 🦁
📸 @chasenmemoriesphotos



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Chris May retweetet
Chris May retweetet

Every year or so, my wife and I (*without the kids*) go to NYC for 3-4 nights.
The daily itinerary looks something like this: get a coffee, walk, get a few pastries, walk, have a slice of pizza, walk, get some dim sum, walk, go to a museum, get a coffee, take a subway, eat, walk, eat, have a coffee, take a subway, walk.
Not a vacation in the traditional sense, but if there's a trip I can do once a year for the rest of my life, it's this.
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Chris May retweetet

Good luck @gregrakestraw and @KyleNeddenriep on today’s @IHSAA1 Boys Bball Pairing Show. @ChristopherRMay and I will keep our commentary to our 🏀 group chat. Kyle hasn’t aged a day in 8 years.

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The great @cgchase representing @RushvilleBball Class of 2000! 🦁🏀
Kyle Neddenriep@KyleNeddenriep
Rebound leaders 2000
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@KyleNeddenriep I spent about 17 years getting to as many rivalries as I could experience.
Barr-Reeve - Loogootee was right up there for me, but there’s a long, long, long list deserving of mention.
Would make for the perfect subject of your next book!
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Just when I thought @ESPNMcGee had taught me every historical nugget I didn’t know I needed to know, this morning he casually references the location of the implosion of Milli Vanilli’s career. That was a devastating event to this 7 year old!
Keep teachin’!!! #MartyAndMcGee
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Charity (Griffith) Hufnagel, 24, of Rushville, Ind., a former NCAA champion at @BallStateSports, climbed to 4-0 in high jump this year by leaping a personal best of 6-5 (1.97m) at Madrid. She ranks No. 4 in world, No. 1 in USA.
@DyeStat @IndyStarSports
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You know what they say, time is money. 🤑 Just 10 days left to apply for scholarships! 👉🏻rushcountyfoundation.org/rccf-scholarsh…
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Chris May retweetet
Chris May retweetet

On Monday night, the Miami Hurricanes take on the @IUHoosiers in the highly-anticipated national college football championship game – and Jane Pauley, a fifth-generation Hoosier on both sides, will be watching.
She reflects on @IndianaUniv's come-from-behind underdog story, from holding the NCAA Division I record for most losses, to this year's 15-0 record – IU's first perfect season in 139 years – and fondly remembers the school anthem, "Hail to Old IU." cbsn.ws/4r63bX3
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Chris May retweetet
Chris May retweetet

Curt Cignetti will soon sign a new contract with Indiana that pays him at least $12.5 million per year.
But after digging into the numbers, Cignetti might still be the most undervalued coach in college football (and not for the reason you might think).
We all know what Cignetti has done at IU is remarkable — he turned a perennial cellar-dweller into the national championship favorite just two years after his arrival.
This has transformed IU's athletic department:
• Before the 2025 season even kicked off, ticket revenue for IU's football team had surpassed $13 million.
• Indiana announced a $50 million stadium naming rights deal with Merchants Bank.
• Fundraising has hit a record high, with billionaire IU alum Mark Cuban donating to the athletic department for the first time ever.
But that's the obvious stuff; Cignetti's real impact comes in the admissions office.
IU's football team is essentially a marketing vehicle for the university — 24 million people watched them win the Rose Bowl, 18 million watched them win the Big Ten Championship, and when College Gameday visited Indiana's campus last year, more than 2 million people watched a 3-hour commercial about the school.
This publicity is worth hundreds of millions of dollars and is having a real impact on Indiana's finances.
In 2025 alone, Indiana University set school records for total enrollment (48,626 students), freshman class size (10,127 students), first-year out-of-state students (4,697), and application volume (73,400).
Indiana University Applicants
• 2019-20: 44,178
• 2020-21: 46,623
• 2021-22: 50,159
• 2022-23: 54,345
• 2023-24: 67,731
• 2024-25: 73,400
But since IU can only admit so many students each year, they leverage the additional demand to 1) rotate the composition of their student body toward out-of-state students, and 2) become more selective academically.
Out-of-state students now account for about 50% of IU's total enrollment, with the school admitting a total of 4,697 new out-of-state students in 2025 — roughly 500 more out-of-state students than IU's previous record.
This is an important distinction because out-of-state students pay $30,000 more in annual tuition – $12,000 for Indiana residents versus $42,000 for non-residents.
500 new out-of-state students
x $30,000 tuition difference
–––––––––
= $15 million annually
If you multiply that by a four-year degree, these out-of-state students are worth $60 million more to IU than their in-state counterparts.
And since football success attracts more applicants, IU's admissions office can be more selective.
Indiana's Fall 2025 class had a median high school GPA of 3.94 — the highest in IU admissions history.
This creates a virtuous cycle.
Better sports → more applicants → better students → higher rankings. Higher rankings then lead to even more applicants, and, eventually, higher tuition revenues.
This is exactly what happened at Alabama with Nick Saban, and it's a big reason why Indiana is completely comfortable giving Cignetti new contracts every year.
P.S. If you enjoyed this breakdown, join 135,000 others who learn about the business and money behind sports by reading my 3x weekly newsletter: huddleup.substack.com

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