Advertisement Cignetti’s wife, Manette, was three and a half hours south in Mobile for daughter Carly’s high school ... A couple of months later, JMU coach Mike Houston was off to East ...
“They believe that they’re going to win,” Cignetti said, referencing the several JMU transfers Indiana announced during the December signing window. “They think like champions. They ...
As the man himself said, “I win. Google me.” Cignetti’s record is impressive, especially considering an added degree of difficulty when JMU transitioned from FCS to FBS in the middle of his ...
“They believe that they’re going to win,” Cignetti said, referencing the several JMU transfers Indiana announced during the ...
More:Lee Corso, 1979 Holiday Bowl reunion 'means the world' to IU's first bowl winners Corso sat next to Cignetti on the set and wanted to know about the former JMU coach’s demeanor in the fourt ...
McAfee first met Cignetti when he hosted a live show on JMU’s quad last year amidst the program’s 10-0 start. Cignetti roasted the NCAA throughout that interview much to the enjoyment of the ...
Cignetti had no intention of moving on from JMU, but was convinced by the situation at Indiana. “I loved it (at JMU). I was going to retire there. I had a long-term contract. It was three hours ...
He beat cancer and lived 43 more years.” Corso sat next to Cignetti on the set and wanted to know about the former JMU coach’s demeanor in the fourth quarter of last week’s blowout win over ...
Curt Cignetti had been running his own programs for 13 years — his process so refined he could more or less write it up as a manual — and for 13 years, all he’d done was win. Dolson was ...