BLOOMINGTON — Indiana football heads out to Las Vegas on Monday for the 2025 Big Ten Media Days.
The three-day event will run from July 22-24 at the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino with all 18 teams from the league in attendance. The Hoosiers will help kickoff the event on Tuesday along with Illinois, Rutgers, Maryland, Nebraska and Ohio State.
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Indiana coaches and players will make the rounds for interviews with various television networks and reporters from across the country.
Here’s everything you need to know about this year’s event:
When are Indiana football’s press conferences at 2025 Big Ten Media Days
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3:00-3:15 p.m. ET: Curt Cignetti at the podium
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6:15-6:30 p.m. ET: Indiana student-athletes at individual stages
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6:30-7:15 p.m. ET: Curt Cignetti at individual stages
The Big Ten Network will air Cignetti’s initial press conference live on Tuesday. Cignetti and IU players will also sit down for interviews during the network’s live special that day from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m., but times have yet to be announced. The Herald-Times will be on-site with coverage and provide updates throughout the day.
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Jul 25, 2024; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Indiana Hoosiers linebacker Aiden Fisher speaks to the media during the Big 10 football media day at Lucas Oil Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Robert Goddin-USA TODAY Sports
Who is Indiana football sending to 2025 Big Ten Media Days
Each of the league’s 18 teams will be represented by its head coach and three student-athletes. Cignetti chose linebacker Aiden Fisher, wide receiver Elijah Sarratt and defensive end Mikail Kamara to join him in Las Vegas.
They had success for Cignetti last year after following him from James Madison to Bloomington and will be three of the most veteran-most players on the roster in 2025 with 110 games (86 starts) of experience between them. Fisher and Kamara earned All-American honors last season, and all three of them made the All-Big Ten team.
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Jul 25, 2024; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Indiana Hoosiers head coach Curt Cignetti speaks to the media during the Big 10 football media day at Lucas Oil Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Robert Goddin-USA TODAY Sports
What does Indiana football coach Curt Cignetti have planned for an encore?
There wasn’t a dull moment at last year’s Big Ten Media days when Curt Cignetti had a microphone in front of him.
He talked about getting rid of “dead wood” in the portal, dissed the Rose Bowl as just an “old stadium”, took some parting shots at JMU’s wannabe rival Coastal Carolina and gave his TED talk on self-imposed limitations.
“Oh, if we got to a bowl it’s a great year, bull shit,” Cignetti said. “That ain’t the goal, the goal is to be the best.”
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Cignetti used the moment to generate buzz back at home in Bloomington as part of his quest to get fans to buy into a program that hadn’t done much to reward their enthusiasm in recent years. It was an extension of the infamous speech he gave at Assembly Hall on the day he was introduced as coach.
Indiana’s College Football Playoff appearance solidified the increasing buzz surrounding the program and resulted in record ticket sales ahead of the 2025 season.
So what now?
Cignetti doesn’t want IU to fade into the background while he eyes building a perennial contender. Big Ten Media Days will give him the platform to make sure fans across the country know the Hoosiers aren’t going anywhere.
Indiana’s Mikail Kamara (6) runs a drill during spring football practice on Tuesday, April 8, 2025.
Will Mikail Kamara have any bold predictions for the 2025 season?
Mikail Kamara likes to say he spoke Indiana’s success into existence last season.
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He was an early believer in the group Curt Cignetti assembled that included a large contingent of Kamara’s teammates from James Madison. Kamara told reporters they were destined for big things before IU even wrapped up spring camp.
Kamara echoed that sentiment as the first Hoosiers player to start openly talking about making the College Football Playoff on the heels of a 41-24 win over Northwestern that left them as one of just nine unbeaten teams left in the country at 6-0.
“The only way for you to see that future is to manifest it,” Kamara said last season. “That’s kind of always been my thing.”
Kamara will be able to reveal what he’s manifesting for the Hoosiers in 2025 on his business trip out to Las Vegas.
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Michael Niziolek is the Indiana beat reporter for The Bloomington Herald-Times. You can follow him on X @michaelniziolek and read all his coverage by clicking here.
This article originally appeared on The Herald-Times: Indiana football: What to know about 2025 Big Ten Media Days