Both Lou Holtz and Bobby Knight strike a monolithic pose in Indiana, with legacies that extend beyond their mastery of amateur athletics. Outside the boundaries of the Hoosier state, few similarities spring up when comparing the sports icons.
Now the men, Holtz an example of class and composure, Knight an outspoken hothead known for throwing chairs across the court, have found common ground amid the 2016 presidential election: Donald Trump.“There’s nothing but winners in Indiana,” Holtz said Monday during his video endorsement, while wearing the gold Notre Dame football helmet on his chest. “The main reason I’m endorsing [Trump]: I’ve played his golf course, I’ve stayed in his hotel — he does nothing but go first class in everything. He wants this country to be first class as well.”
The tenets of Holtz’s reign at the helm of the Fighting Irish were of discipline and structure. Holtz managed to out-coach his football rivals, who often boasted superior talent to what Holtz could bring to South Bend due to the stringent academic requirements of Notre Dame.
The Irish faithful expected their alma mater to contend with schools with a more open recruiting process. Never was this more apparent than the infamous “Catholics vs. Convicts” game, where Holtz managed to best the Miami Hurricanes during the height of their controversially “vibrant” behavior. Holtz spent a decade in South Bend and led the Irish their last National Championship in 1988.
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Knight, on the other hand, has become a folk hero to an aging generation who more vividly remember a now-dying era of college athletics. Despite winning three national titles at Indiana, and putting together the sport’s last undefeated season in 1987, Knight was known for berating his stars to get the best out of them. His long rap sheet of confrontations with players and administrators culminated in him being dismissed in 2000 when footage surfaced of Knight choking a player during an argument in practice.









