On Jan. 19, quarterback Fernando Mendoza soaked in the glory of leading Indiana University to its first national championship, but he directed the attention elsewhere: “This moment is bigger than me,” he said afterward. “First, I want to thank God.”
Minutes earlier, under the bright lights of Hard Rock Stadium in Florida’s Miami Gardens, Indiana University stood on the edge of something it had never touched before.

Early fourth quarter. Fourth-and-four at the 12-yard line. The Hoosiers led Miami, 17-14, in the national championship game. A punt would have been safe. A field goal cautious. Instead, the call went in: quarterback run.
Mendoza, the 2025 Heisman Trophy winner and a devout Catholic, took the snap and went straight into traffic. He absorbed a hard hit at the 5-yard line, stumbled, stayed upright and kept moving. Miami defenders swarmed him again as he leaned forward, refusing to go down. Two more hits followed as he dragged himself across the goal line, the ball extended, the stadium roaring. It quickly became one of the most-watched touchdown runs in college football history — a moment replayed endlessly on social media, stripped of context but heavy with meaning.
For Indiana, it helped seal the first national championship in school history, a 27-21 victory that completed a perfect 16-0 season. Two years earlier, Indiana had gone 3-9 and had more losses historically than any other college football program.
Indiana’s transformation began with a gamble. After the 2023 collapse, the program hired Curt Cignetti, a builder with a reputation for changing cultures. In 2024, the Hoosiers jumped to 11-2 and a No. 10 national ranking. After that season, Mendoza transferred from the University of California, Berkeley — a quarterback with talent, toughness, and a career shaped by near-misses and limited opportunity.
Rated a two-star prospect out of Christopher Columbus High School in Miami, a Catholic school run by the Marist Brothers, Mendoza saw his recruiting window nearly vanish during the COVID-19 pandemic. He received only one scholarship offer. He stayed patient. He stayed disciplined. And, by his own account, he stayed grounded in his Catholic faith.
Mendoza directed the offense with calm precision, finishing this season with virtually every major individual award in college football. On Dec. 13, at the Heisman Trophy ceremony in New York City, he was named the nation’s top player — the most prestigious individual honor in the sport.
Yet even on that stage, his message did not change.

“First, I want to thank God for giving me the opportunity to chase a dream that once felt a world away,” Mendoza said, his voice breaking. He spoke of teammates and coaches, then turned to his family — especially his mother, Elsa, who has battled multiple sclerosis for years.
“Mami, this is your trophy as much as it is mine,” he said. “You’ve always been my biggest fan. You’re my light. You’re my ‘Why.’ You’re my biggest supporter. Your sacrifice, courage, love — those have been my first playbook, and the playbook that I’m gonna carry through my side through my entire life.
“You taught me that toughness doesn’t need to be loud. It can be quiet and strong,” he said. “It’s choosing hope. It’s believing in yourself when the world doesn’t give you much reason to.”
He honored his Cuban heritage in Spanish and embraced his brother Alberto, Indiana’s 2025 backup quarterback, calling him his “lifelong teammate.” Faith, family and football blended seamlessly — not as performance, but as testimony.
Those close to Mendoza say the public moments reflect private habits. He reportedly prays the rosary every Friday, listens to online Mass before games and avoids hype music to stay grounded. He attends Mass regularly and makes frequent use of the sacraments.
Dominican Father Patrick Hyde, the pastor of St. Paul Catholic Center at Indiana University, has witnessed that consistency. “Fernando backs up his talk on TV by giving glory to God at Sunday Mass,” Father Hyde, who congratulated Mendoza on the field after Indiana’s 56-22 semifinal win over Oregon Jan. 9, wrote on X.
“He shows up out of love for God, not human praise,” Father Hyde added.
On Christmas Eve, Mendoza brought his Heisman Trophy to St. Paul Catholic Center — not for display, but as an act of gratitude.
More than a month later, on Jan. 19, he stood on the biggest stage of his sport once again. After the final whistle, confetti falling, history secured, Mendoza embraced his mother at midfield. Both were in tears.
“I want to give all the glory and thanks to God,” he said again.
In a season defined by dominance, Mendoza’s faith never felt rehearsed. It was steady. Lived. Verified by habit and witness. From overlooked recruit to Heisman winner to national champion, he returned to the same source — and never looked away.
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