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Report: Indiana alum Mark Cuban helped fund Fernando Mendoza deal

By Thomson Reuters May 6, 2026 | 10:53 AM

Indiana football fans apparently can thank Mark Cuban, one of the school’s wealthiest alums, for playing a key part in the Hoosiers winning the College Football Playoff championship this year.

Cuban donated the remaining money Indiana needed to ​secure quarterback Fernando Mendoza, the billionaire and former majority owner of the ‌NBA’s Dallas Mavericks told Front Office Sports in an upcoming episode of Portfolio Players.

The exchange resulted from a conversation between Cuban, Indiana athletic director Scott Dolson and university president Pam Whitten at the school’s first-round College Football Playoff game against Notre Dame in December 2024.

“[Dolson]’s like, we’ve got this quarterback that ‌we really, ​really like that we think would be great in (coach ⁠Curt Cignetti) Cig’s system, we ⁠just need a litttttle bit more,” Cuban said, per Front Office Sports. “I’m like, ‘How much is a little bit?’ And so he told me, and I’m like, ‘OK, you know, we’re on a roll, I’ll put up the money to get this quarterback.'”

Indiana lost ​in the first round of the 2024 playoff to Notre Dame, 27-17. One season later, the Hoosiers capped their undefeated season with a 27-21 win over Miami.

Cuban, 67, ⁠already had some connections to Cignetti as well ⁠as to Mendoza’s brother and Indiana teammate, Alberto, who as a ​Miami Heat fan would interact with Cuban when the Mavericks visited the Heat.

The extra money helped ​Indiana lure Mendoza away from Cal, where he reportedly made $1.6 million. His ‌transfer to Indiana netted him $2.6 million, per Yahoo Sports.

Mendoza went on to win the Heisman Trophy. The Las Vegas Raiders selected him with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft in April.

The previous philanthropic efforts of Cuban, who according to Forbes ⁠is worth $6 billion, had been focused on academics, with his recent donations to Indiana athletics his first forays into the sports side of the university.

Though his first donation was directly related ⁠to the Mendoza signing, Cuban ‌said he lets Dolson — a fellow Indiana alum — decide what ⁠to do with the finances.

“I just give Scott money, and it’s ​up ‌to him,” Cuban said. “We talk a lot, we talk about approach, ​understanding how ⁠to put together a team. Because I did it for 20-something years. So it’s not like I have to direct him to something specific. I understand how they’re approaching things.”

Cuban would not reveal exactly how much he has committed to Indiana athletics other than to tell Front Office Sports in a January email, “Let’s just say they are happier this year than ​last year.”

–Field Level Media