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Indiana St 'ashamed' of 30-game losing streak


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TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP) -Donye McCleskey came to Indiana State dreaming of championships.

Now the senior would settle for a simple, dignifying end to the Sycamores' 30-game losing streak.

``It ruined my college career, honestly,'' McCleskey said before last week's latest drubbing, 41-0 at South Dakota State. ``As far as my social life, I don't have one. I'm embarrassed to go out. I'm ashamed.''

This is not how athletic departments envision the college experience, but it is how life has evolved at this Football Championship Subdivision school near the Illinois state line.

Indiana State, best known for producing NBA Hall of Famer Larry Bird, is back in the spotlight because it has the longest active losing streak in Division I football.

Only four other Division I programs can claim losing streaks at least as long as the Sycamores': Prairie View A&M, which lost a record 80 consecutive games from 1989-98; Columbia, which lost 44 straight from '83-'88; Northwestern, which holds the FBS (or Division I-A) record at 34; and St. Francis (Pa.), which ended its streak in 2002 and now shares the No. 4 spot with the Sycamores.

Some Web sites are calling for Indiana State to drop football - sites the players and second-year coach Trent Miles have seen. Though players insist The Streak will end some day soon, students continually crack jokes and count the number of games they've attended on one hand. Or one finger.

McCleskey is one of the lucky ones. Of the 82 players on this year's roster, McCleskey is one of four who have won a college game.

Could it be worse?

Indeed.

The only thing separating Indiana State from the ignominy of a 55-game skid is a 28-22 victory over Missouri State on Oct. 21, 2006, and the mercy of the NCAA. The Sycamores turned themselves in for using an ineligible player in three games that season, including the win that snapped a 24-game losing streak.

Fortunately, the NCAA took pity on the program. Indiana State was allowed to keep that win, though coach Lou West was suspended for one game in 2007 and the school was fined $1,500 because of the bookkeeping mistake.

The Sycamores (0-4) of the Missouri Valley Conference have been shut out the past two weeks and outscored 99-3 over the last 11 quarters. Against Eastern Illinois two weeks ago, they produced just 95 yards of offense, the Sycamores' first sub-100 yard game since the pre-streak season of 2003. On Saturday, it was worse: They finished with 90 yards.

And there was the inexplicable opening night loss to Quincy (Ill.), an NAIA program. But after taking an early 17-0 lead, the Sycamores lost 26-20 in overtime.

``We knew it wasn't Quincy that beat us,'' McCleskey said. ``It was us that beat us - personal fouls, hiking the ball over the quarterback's head, that kind of stuff.''

Maybe Miles is the man to fix the program. He is an Indiana State alum and Terre Haute native who shared ball boy duties with Baltimore Ravens offensive coordinator Cam Cameron in the 1970s. Miles has been an assistant at Stanford, Notre Dame and Washington and did a brief stint with the NFL's Green Bay Packers.

Miles' staff features former NFL receiver Troy Walters as offensive coordinator, former Sycamores star Shannon Jackson as defensive coordinator and former Indiana State head coach Dennis Raetz as defensive assistant.

But even the straight-talking Miles acknowledges the Sycamores are sort of like an expansion team.

``We had to blow up the program and start from the ground up,'' he said. ``We only had four seniors when we got here and we only have five this year. This program didn't just get this way in a few years. It's been a lot of years.''

Some hometown players, like defensive end Daniel Millington, saw it happen.

``When I was in high school, they were always fighting and competing,'' he said. ``But over the years, the mindset really deteriorated. They went from being a big, physical team to a smaller, faster team.''

When Raetz led the Sycamores, from 1980-97, he never won fewer than three games and finished with back-to-back nine-win seasons in 1983 and 1984.

Then the Sycamores cashed it in, literally.

The annual recruiting budget was cut from $58,000 to $13,000 before Raetz's departure, an administrative decision that doomed Indiana State's program for the next decade.

``That's not even enough to host kids for a weekend,'' Miles said. ``At one time, they were telling kids to drive over here on Saturday afternoon and then to drive home after the game. How do you do that?''

The economy still forces Indiana State to be frugal. Coaches have opted not to claim meals on road trips to stretch money and the recruiting budget has increased to about $50,000 since Miles' arrival.

Another problem: Memorial Stadium.

This year, Indiana State replaced the Astroturf with FieldTurf and renovated the locker rooms in the west end zone. It's the first time any remodeling had been done to the facility since it was built in 1968.

``It's a totally different level now,'' said quarterback Travis Johnson, whose father, Troy, played here in the '80s. ``You feel like you're at a Division I program with the locker room and the turf. My dad said they used to have nails coming up out of the turf.''

Miles insists he can turn it around, given time.

Sixty-seven players are freshman or sophomores including Johnson, who has made two career starts. McCleskey is the only serious NFL prospect on the roster.

``We're starting from scratch and it doesn't just happen in 13 games,'' Miles said. ``People who don't understand get impatient. We're competitive now. We've gone from losing 72-10 and 63-0 to being competitive, and if we look bad, we're still able to compete.''

But clearly winning would help - not only the image but the morale.

And at least give McCleskey the pride of being part of the turnaround.

``I've lost a lot, I've seen a lot of things, but as a team we're getting better,'' he said. ``I came here to change things. I was prepared to see us go from 0-11 to 11-0 and that didn't happen. But I see more guys here now who want to win.''Copyright © 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.

September 23, 2009 at 15:00 PM ET
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