The Indiana State Sycamores football team is the NCAA Division I football program of Indiana State University in Terre Haute, Indiana. They compete in the Missouri Valley Football Conference. The team last played in the NCAA Playoffs in the 2014 NCAA Division I Football Championship. Their first season was 1896. The Sycamores' greatest season was 1983, when coach Dennis Raetz led them to the 2nd round of the 1983 NCAA Division I Football Championship and ended the season with a record of 9âÂÂ4. The Sycamores also appeared in the 1984 and 2014 NCAA Division I Football Championship playoffs. The Indiana State Sycamores play their home games at Memorial Stadium, which seats 12,764.
The 1964 Indiana State Sycamores football team shared the Indiana Collegiate Conference (ICC) title in 1964 with four other teams (Ball State, , , , with the Sycamores finishing with a 4âÂÂ2 conference record and a 6âÂÂ2 overall mark.
The Sycamores have participated in one bowl game, garnering a record of 0âÂÂ1.
The Sycamores have appeared in the NCAA Division I Football Championship three times. Their combined record is 2âÂÂ3.
The Sycamores reached the AP and United Press International Top Ten mid-way through the 1974 season; they would not return to the Top Ten until the 1983 season. The Sycamores were ranked for nine weeks of the 2014 season and an additional four weeks during the 2015 season. The 2018 Sycamores finished #25 in the final FCS coaches poll.
All Indiana State Coaching Records are available at:
From 1924 to 2023, the Sycamores played Ball State (Ind.) University 66 times; the series stands at 39âÂÂ24âÂÂ1 in favor of Ball State.
In 1940, the respective Blue Key chapters sponsored a trophy presentation, the 'Victory Bell' to reward the winner of the annual game between Indiana State and Ball State. The Sycamores lost the last game in Muncie. The game finished with a 45âÂÂ7 loss for the Sycamores
The term Homecoming was first used in print announcements for the Alumni-Varsity Basketball Game on December 9, 1916. By the year 1919, this event became known as Blue and White Day and featured dances and entertainment for alumni of the Normal School. In 1921 the events were organized around a football game scheduled earlier in the autumn. A bonfire and pep rally were added to the festivities in 1922; the Blue-and-White Parade in 1923; and in 1937, Bette Whitmore (Kappa Kappa) was elected ISUs first Homecoming Queen. The 2010 season will mark the 106th season of Sycamore football and the 91st Homecoming; the Sycamores will face conference foe, Illinois State, on October 9. This will mark the 7th time that Illinois State has been the Homecoming opponent; following a tremendous victory (59âÂÂ24) the Sycamores now own a 5âÂÂ2 mark vs. Illinois State in Homecoming games.
As of 2012; Indiana State owns a 50âÂÂ36âÂÂ2 () record in Homecoming games; the outcomes of the remaining 5 games are unknown.
A symbol of the traditional rivalry in football between Indiana State and Ball State, the Victory Bell tradition was inaugurated in 1940 when the Blue Key chapters at both schools arranged to donate a bell to be presented to the victor of the football game. The idea was to start a traditional exchange of the bell as a means of improving relationships between the two student bodies. The Victory Bell series is 34âÂÂ19âÂÂ1 in favor of Ball State, though the Sycamores won their last meeting in 2014.
The Sycamores have played football at venerable Memorial Stadium since the 1949 campaign. Originally constructed in 1922âÂÂ24, at a cost of $450,000; the 12,764-seat stadium remains a fixture at the intersection of Wabash and Brown Avenues in Terre Haute, IN.
Memorial Stadium's inauguration was on May 5, 1925, as the local minor league baseball team, the Terre Haute Tots, hosted their Three-I League rivals, the Peoria Tractors, before an estimated crowd of 9,000. Among the esteemed visitors were Major League Baseball Commissioner Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis and Charles Barnard of the Cleveland Indians.
The facility was acquired (via a 99-year lease) by Indiana State University in 1967. The installation of Astroturf made Indiana State the first university to own a football stadium with artificial turf.
One Sycamore player has had his number retired by the school. Vincent Allen is the first, with his number 26 retired by the school on September 6, 2025.
Career leaders in bold
Fifty former Sycamores have played in professional football leagues. The leagues include the National Football League (NFL), Canadian Football League (CFL), Arena Football League (AFL), the United Football League (UFL), and United States Football League (USFL). The most notable players are:
Announced schedules as of January 20, 2026.