It's one thing to set the stage perfectly; it's another to deliver under the heat of those bright lights.
For Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza, Monday night's national title game was an opportunity to write the perfect ending to a storybook season. He had already bagged the Heisman Trophy, and the chance to finish an undefeated season with the first national title in program history was enough on its own.
But this was a kid from Miami, who wasn't recruited by the hometown Hurricanes, coming back to that same city to prove them wrong on the biggest stage the sport has to offer.
He didn't light up the box score (16-for-27 passing, 189 yards, no touchdowns), but in the most critical moments, Mendoza delivered exactly what the Hoosiers needed to become the first 16-0 team in college football since fullback Frank Butterworth was toting the rock for the Yale Bulldogs in 1894.
There were a couple of back-shoulder completions to roommate Charlie Becker that kept the Canes are arm's length in the fourth quarter, but one play will live on in Hoosier football history.
Whenever Mendoza's name comes up, this is the play they'll talk about first:
A classic pocket passer, Mendoza finished the game officially with minus-8 rushing yards on seven carries. Multiple sacks from Miami's formidable defensive front erased those 13 yards on the stat sheet, but nobody will remember any of that.
They'll remember No. 15 pinballing his way past the chains on fourth down, diving with the ball outstretched, and crossing the plane while a defender speared him in the back.
After the game, Mendoza made it clear he was willing to do whatever it took to deliver a championship for his team:
"I'll die for my team."
Those are the words his teammates will remember when they tell stories about being on the sideline and in the huddle with Mendoza. Those are the words the Las Vegas Raiders will remember when they make him the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft in a few months.
Despite a roster noticeably bereft of five-star recruits, this Indiana team will go down as one of the best in college football history. Nobody does that alone, and Mendoza would be the first to praise the likes of Roman Hemby and Omar Cooper Jr. and Elijah Sarratt on offense; D'Angelo Ponds and Aiden Fisher on defense; Becker's clutch receptions and Jamari Sharpe's game-winning pick.
But when anyone talks about this team, and this game, they'll start with that play, when the quarterback called his own number and put himself on the line to deliver a championship to a program that no longer rests in the shadow of the Hoosier hardwood.
