Five incompletions in two playoff games: Fernando Mendoza’s 86.1% completion rate has turned Indiana’s long-shot season into a one-game shot at history.
Fernando Mendoza didn’t just win the Heisman Trophy on Dec. 13—he’s spent every snap since making the trophy look like an understatement. Against Alabama and Oregon, the Miami-born senior completed 31 of 36 attempts, tossed eight touchdowns to four different receivers, and has yet to throw a postseason interception.
Those numbers translate to an 86.1% completion rate, the best two-game run by any quarterback in College Football Playoff history with at least 35 attempts. His lone blemish in the Rose Bowl and Peach Bowl combined: five off-target balls, three of which came after Indiana was already up three scores.
From Big Ten Afterthought to National Headliner
Mendoza arrived in Bloomington as a three-star recruit whom Power 4 programs south of the Mason-Dixon line viewed as a system fit, not a franchise changer. His first two seasons—14 touchdowns, 11 picks—backed up that projection. Then head coach Curt Cignetti installed an RPO-heavy attack that turned every read into either a layup throw or a numbers-advantage run.
The pivot paid off overnight:
- 2024: 2,614 yards, 22 TD, 8 INT
- 2025: 3,349 yards, 41 TD, 6 INT
That 41-touchdown total paces the FBS and shattered Indiana’s single-season record of 34 set in 2013. More importantly, it bought the Hoosiers a No. 1 seed and a neutral-site championship game in Mendoza’s hometown.
Why the CFP Jump Mattered
Quarterbacks often regress after awards season; defenses get a month to dissect every tendency. Mendoza instead compressed his release by 0.12 seconds and added a silent cadence that has produced five free-play touchdowns since mid-December.
Against Alabama, he targeted cornerbacks on vertical routes 40% of the time—double his regular-season rate—exposing the Tide’s single-high looks. In the Peach Bowl, Oregon blitzed 43% of drop-backs and still allowed five scoring passes, the most it surrendered all year.
The schematic wrinkle: Indiana motioned Elijah Sarratt into stacked alignments, forcing Oregon to declare man or zone. Mendoza’s post-snap read became binary—slant vs. fade—and he’s 12-for-13 for 176 yards and four touchdowns on those concepts in the playoff.
Championship Implications vs. Miami
Monday’s opponent, No. 10 Miami, fields the nation’s most productive pass rush (48 sacks) but ranks 62nd in passer rating allowed when the quarterback releases under 2.3 seconds. Mendoza’s average time to throw in the CFP: 2.18 seconds.
If the Hurricanes can’t muddy the pocket early, they’ll face the same math that buried Alabama and Oregon: a 77% completion rate on quick game, 11.8 yards per attempt off play-action, and zero forced turnovers.
Translation: Indiana’s path to its first national title runs directly through Mendoza’s right arm, and the sample says that arm rarely misfires when everything is on the line.
Bottom Line
Five incompletions, eight touchdowns, zero interceptions. Mendoza isn’t just riding a hot streak—he’s executing a quarterback masterclass that has already produced the two most accurate games in Indiana history. One more, and the Hoosiers won’t just make history; they’ll redefine what a “Cinderella” season looks like in the 12-team playoff era.
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