New York Post

Loss to Hoosiers reminds that RU a work in progress

- By ZACH BRAZILLER zbraziller@nypost.com

If Rutgers’ stunning seasonopen­ing upset victory created unrealisti­c expectatio­ns, then Saturday’s home debut provided a harsh reminder of reality.

It’s not going to happen overnight for Greg Schiano and the Scarlet Knights.

“Well,” Schiano said, “what a difference a week makes.”

Coming off the thrilling win at Michigan State that snapped a 21game Big Ten losing streak, the Scarlet Knights returned home looking to build on that momentum. But that positive energy, in front of only family members at near-empty SHI Stadium in Piscataway, N.J., lasted about a quarter. Dynamic quarterbac­k Michael Penix Jr. and No. 17 Indiana (2-0, 2-0 Big Ten) outclassed Rutgers (1-1, 1-1), scoring 24 unanswered points in a commanding 37-21 victory.

Rutgers quarterbac­k Noah Vedral was intercepte­d three times — two in the span of 1:43 in the second quarter, when a one-point Scarlet Knights lead quickly turned into a 13-point deficit. A week after producing a whopping seven takeaways, Rutgers’ defense was unable to generate any, and the offense struggled to consistent­ly move the ball.

“We’re running out of firsts. We had our first win together, today we had our first loss together, and I do love the way we compete,” Schiano said. “Certainly not one ounce of giving in, but it’s about winning and losing.”

But Schiano’s team didn’t stop fighting. The Scarlet Knights got within eight, 23-15, after their best drive of the game, a 10-play, 80-yard possession that was capped by Kay’Ron Adams’ 37yard touchdown run, their longest play of the game.

Penix responded quickly, however, ripping through the Rutgers defense, and pushing the lead back to double digits with his second touchdown pass of the game, a 2-yard strike to Peyton Hendershot with 3:56 left in the third quarter.

Even down 16 points in the final minutes, the Scarlet Knights kept fighting. They nearly produced a touchdown for the ages, an eight-lateral 65-yard score on fourth-and-32 with 1:31 left that immediatel­y went viral on Twitter. The play, however, was reviewed and overturned when Shameen Jones’ lateral was ruled a forward pass.

“I didn’t come back here to lose, and I’m not saying we’re going to win every game or we’re going to win them all right now, but we’re going out there and we’re playing to win,” Schiano said. “So if it means going on fourth down, if it means going for two, whatever it means, that’s what we’re going to do.

“I promised these kids that, and as hard as they work, they deserve that.”

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