The Western Journal

10 Must-See Moments From The College Football Championship

Indiana completed a historic title run, defeating the Miami Hurricanes in Monday night’s college football championship to claim the program’s first national championship and finish 16-0 – the first 16-0 champion as Yale in 1894. Key moments included a game-changing blocked Miami punt returned for a touchdown, a gutsy 4th-and-5 quarterback plunge by Heisman winner Fernando Mendoza, and a last-minute interception thrown by Miami’s veteran QB Carson Beck. The report highlights public displays of faith from Mendoza and teammates, a raucous crowd reaction when former President Trump was shown during the anthem, and some postgame unsportsmanlike behavior from Miami players. Coach Curt Cignetti’s leadership and the Mendoza family’s party were singled out, and the piece argues that NIL money and program realignment show how smaller schools can rise to national prominence.


For the first time in what felt like a long time, Americans watched a great college football championship face-off on Monday night. The Miami Hurricanes, who weren’t even considered playoff contenders by some, put up an impressive fight against the number one-ranked Indiana Hoosiers, but ultimately lost after their star six-year quarterback Carson Beck threw a last-minute interception.

For the first time in Hoosier history, Indiana secured the ultimate college football victory. That feat was due in large part to Curt Cignetti, who took the Hoosiers from their reputation as one of the “losing-est teams in college football” with a perpetually empty stadium to undefeated national football champions. Indiana’s win was the first by a 16 and 0 team since Yale’s run in 1894.

Here are the top 10 best moments from Monday night’s matchup.

Christ Takes Center Stage

Moments before kickoff, Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza, joined by his teammates, bent a knee in prayer in the end zone.

This kind of public invocation was not limited to the Hoosiers or the championship game. Time and time again this season, Mendoza and a handful of other players publicly thanked and glorified God before and after they played.

One very cool thing about College football this year has been how many teams centered Jesus in everything they did. Indiana was a leader in that, and so was their QB Fernando Mendoza. This is the team before they won today. Congrats Indiana! pic.twitter.com/PWLvOQ6EyT

— Robby Starbuck (@robbystarbuck) January 20, 2026

The Crowd Cheers For Trump

The crowd at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami went wild during the National Anthem when a camera spotted Commander-In-Chief Donald Trump, surrounded by his grandkids, admiring the American flag covering the football field.

Im in tears. The Crowd goes absolutely wild when they see Trump at the College Football game 🔥

President Trump is LOVED everywhere pic.twitter.com/sEEneFtNku

— MAGA Voice (@MAGAVoice) January 20, 2026

The Punt Block That Changed Everything

Special teams fly under the radar until they don’t, which is exactly what happened with the Hoosiers on Monday night. Indiana’s special teams not only blocked a Miami punt in the third quarter, but also recovered the ball for a touchdown. That particular score proved to be essential to Indiana’s championship win.

Mendoza Bulldozes His Way To A Touchdown

A quarterback run on a 4th and 5 when your team is only up by three points is, by all measures, a risky play. Yet, Mendoza delivered a charge through the defense and over the line, breaking five tackles along the way, with the precise skill and coolness that earned him a Heisman.

“My offensive linemen blocked perfectly,” Mendoza humbly recalled in a post-game interview.

Miami Brings The Heat

Miami may have lost but the Hurricanes’ performance can’t be completely discounted. Not only did they keep up with Indiana for the majority of the game, but team members like Miami Wide Receiver Malachi Toney clocked an impressive number of catches and yards.

Sore Loser City

Unfortunately, Miami’s impressive field performance was quickly overshadowed by its sore losers who threw punches and refused handshakes after the clock timed out.

Carson Beck walks off the field and skips the handshakes like the game ended on his terms.

That is not fire, that is frustration with nowhere to go.

Win or lose, you face it, you do not sulk your way to the tunnel.

If you cannot handle the ending, were you ever really built… pic.twitter.com/OktqKRe8de

— TheCommonVoice (@MaxRumbleX) January 20, 2026

Curt Cignetti Cracks A Smile

The coach famous for his sassy sideline stance, hardened look at the camera, and general confidence (It’s pretty simple: he wins. Google him) couldn’t keep up the cool and collected facade when his team crossed the finish line.

“We won the national championship at Indiana University,” Cignetti said, beaming. “It can be done.”

— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) January 20, 2026

Enjoy that beer, buddy. You earned it.

Curt Cignetti va a sacarle MUCHO dinero a una cervecera por recrear esto en un anuncio.

Sabe lo que está haciendo.pic.twitter.com/XFjI2kLfGb

— Santiago Escamilla González Aragón (@gonzalez_a90127) January 20, 2026

The Mendoza Family

It takes great people to raise great kids, and the Mendoza family’s celebration of their son’s success is almost as sweet as Indiana’s victory itself.

Talking to Fernando Mendoza’s parents after he won the national championship. Fernando’s mom told me she’s going to remind Fernando that he’s a quarterback not a running back after that fourth down touchdown run. pic.twitter.com/a1rkGc1C2i

— Arash Markazi (@ArashMarkazi) January 20, 2026

Bloomington, Indiana Brings The House Down

There’s nothing like homegrown sports, and Bloomington, Indiana went all out to cheer on their team in Miami. When the Hoosiers effectively ended the game with a last-minute interception, the crowds went wild, celebrating the clutch catch.

The Realignment

One of the best things to come from Monday night wasn’t something that could be captured on camera, but it’s still worth mentioning. It’s the hope that your favorite college football team — no matter how small and no matter what conference — can, with some donor money, hard work, and a half-decent coach, also become a national champion.

The NIL system, with all of its flaws, has turned the sport on its head. The teams, such as Indiana, that take advantage of it will go far.


Jordan Boyd is an award-winning staff writer at The Federalist and producer of “The Federalist Radio Hour.” Her work has also been featured in The Daily Wire, Fox News, and RealClearPolitics. Jordan graduated from Baylor University where she majored in political science and minored in journalism. Follow her on X @jordanboydtx.



" Conservative News Daily does not always share or support the views and opinions expressed here; they are just those of the writer."
*As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases

Related Articles

Back to top button
Available for Amazon Prime
Close

Adblock Detected

Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker