Iowa
Bohnenkamp: Petras, Iowa Offense Expecting Jump Forward
IOWA CITY, Iowa – Spencer Petras figures he’s seen all of it in two years, occurring three, of being Iowa’s beginning quarterback.
He is aware of that, beginning with Saturday’s season opener towards South Dakota State at Kinnick Stadium, he’s in a very good place as all eyes watch to see how a lot enchancment he created from final season.
“I feel with expertise, every thing will get higher,” Petras stated this week. “I’m proud of how I’m throwing the soccer proper now, how I’m processing the offense. There’s clearly the psychological facet of it — it will get simpler as you go. As a senior now, as a third-year starter, I’ve been via all of it. There’s not a lot that would occur when it comes to ups and downs in a season that can be new.”
Final season was extra down than up for Petras, who struggled with inconsistency and a late-season harm. The offseason was an open competitors with Alex Padilla for the beginning job, and Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz stated he favored how each quarterbacks improved.
“It is a lengthy analysis, and we consider every thing, we inform our guys beginning in January,” Ferentz stated. “Simply the time on the sphere, I feel Spencer has out-performed Alex a little bit bit at this level. He is additional forward and offers us a greater likelihood to achieve success. That is to not diminish what Alex has finished. Each have improved. Now the factor is can we put this entire factor collectively and be a little bit bit extra productive offensively.”
Iowa’s offensive numbers from final season mirrored the dearth of manufacturing. The Hawkeyes completed 99th nationally in scoring offense at 23.4 factors per sport, one hundred and first in speeding offense (123.6 yards per sport), 109th in passing offense (180.1) and 121st in whole offense (303.7).
Petras didn’t should be reminded of the struggles.
Petras identified how Iowa’s protection and particular groups performed the most important position in Iowa’s 10-4 season final 12 months that included a Massive Ten West Division championship.
“Nobody on the offense desires to be third fiddle,” he stated. “We wish to be contributing and profitable video games.”
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Iowa’s passing sport could have some patchwork to it for the opener, particularly with the accidents at vast receiver. Nico Ragaini is out, and Keagan Johnson continues to be getting back from well being points throughout fall camp. In order that place group feels prefer it’s in whoever-is-available mode.
“We have had some harm conditions that make it a little bit bit irritating, however I feel collectively if we will get 11 guys on the market that we wish on Saturday, that’ll be good, initially, after which I really feel like we’re additional alongside,” Ferentz stated. “Normally it comes down to 2 issues — dependability or availability, after which additionally the advance that the blokes make.”
Petras is aware of he could also be throwing to gamers he doesn’t have quite a lot of expertise with in sport conditions.
“We might clearly like to have everybody,” he stated. “Soccer is a sport of accidents, sadly. That’s in all probability one of many dangerous issues about this sport, that folks get injured. I’m actually excited for the blokes we have now. They’ve finished a fantastic job up to now, and I’ve the utmost confidence in them.
“They wouldn’t be on the sphere if we didn’t belief them to execute, from a psychological standpoint and a bodily standpoint.”
However Petras additionally is aware of there’s a easy technique to outline Iowa’s enchancment on offense.
“How we do it’s by executing the sport plan,” he stated. “I feel we have now a stable sport plan. The trick proper now could be go and execute.”
The offseason for Petras was about getting higher. The season, now, is right here.
Requested if he seems like he has one thing to show, Petras stated, “I’m not likely taking a look at it from that lens, per se. I’m simply excited to get on the market and compete with our guys. It’s been an extended street to get right here as a group.
“It’s time to go on the market and play.”
Iowa
Hippo Campus brings a 'Flood' to their native Midwest
Jake Luppen, Nathan Stocker, Zach Sutton, Whistler Allen and DeCarlo Jackson are the forces behind Hippo Campus. This Twin Cities band has found significant success since their 2017 debut full-length, Landmark. “Buttercup” and “Way It Goes” are featured on that first album, and both boast over 100 million streams on Spotify.
Their latest record, Flood, came out Sept. 20. Their fourth album explores introspective themes of growing up and existentialism, all while maintaining Hippo Campus’ signature upbeat sound. The thirteen tracks on the album are just a few of the songs they’ve written over the last few years.
“We spent a lot of time on [Flood]; we were really serious this time. I mean, every record we approach, we kind of try to have a new sort of idea going in. And this one was just to be less focused on the computer side of things and just try to focus on the songwriting,” Allen said. “So we spent about three years writing over 120 songs… we had about ten albums worth of music but had to cut down to 13.”
Hippo Campus brings a ‘Flood’ to their native Midwest
Flood was recorded over just ten days at Sonic Ranch, which is a sizeable secluded recording studio on the border between Texas and Mexico.
“We went down there with Caleb Wright and Brad Cook producing, and they’re both wizards. Yeah, it’s a magic place. It’s the middle of the desert, and it’s real hot, real sweaty, real and surreal, real surreal… you have to set aside a lot of distractions when you’re in that environment, in that space, and that allows the music to kind of just step forward in a way that it wouldn’t otherwise,” Stocker said.
The members of Hippo Campus met while attending the Saint Paul Conservatory for Performing Artists. Multiple members have a history of studying classical forms of music, like lead singer Luppen, who started out in opera.
“I think our technical training informs our musicianship as individuals, which allows us to sort of communicate with our instruments in a way that is arguably easier than communicating with our words sometimes,” Jackson said.
The band has had a pretty extensive history of touring, including a multitude of festival performances, headlining shows and opening for bands like Modest Mouse and My Morning Jacket.
“We started this band opening for those bigger names like Modest Mouse. It was completely unexpected, like, never in a million years would we ever share a stage,” Stocker said. “But as far as influences go, it seems like we draw a lot inspiration from the smaller bands that we see kicking around. As we sort of age up through the scene, there’s… a new class entering, those bands come here like the most inspiring sometimes.”
Despite having accomplished so much, Hippo Campus have their eyes set on even more success. They anticipate playing with even more of their favorite acts, including MJ Lenderman, who they almost played with in Iowa this year.
Hippo Campus played a wonderful set at Hinterland, which included songs from their now-released album. One of those songs is “Paranoid,” a track that’s been getting heavy rotation on Studio One. Despite traveling the world, the Midwestern natives still enjoy coming back to the region where it all began.
“[We’re] honored to be back. The rest of the world is great, but Iowa’s where we want to be, the Midwest,” Allen said.
Iowa
3 things to watch as No. 22 Iowa women’s basketball closes non-conference vs. UNI
IOWA CITY — After four days off for the always-tricky in-season finals week, No. 22 Iowa women’s basketball is back in action Friday for its last non-conference test of Jan Jensen’s inaugural season.
It’s an important one inside Carver-Hawkeye Arena, where the Hawkeyes (9-2) will face Northern Iowa (5-5) for a chance at another proverbial “state title.” Iowa has already toppled Drake and Iowa State this season, eyeing yet another in-state sweep.
Tipoff is set for 6:30 p.m. on BTN+. Here are three things to watch ahead of Friday’s matchup.
The in-state games have been in Iowa’s favor recently. Can the Hawkeyes finish off another sweep?
A win Friday would give Iowa its sixth in-state sweep in the last eight seasons, with its only neighborly losses in that timeframe coming at Iowa State in December 2021 and at UNI in November 2019. The Hawkeyes haven’t suffered an in-state loss at Carver-Hawkeye Arena since Dec. 19, 2006, against the Panthers (83-62).
That’s the only time UNI has won in Iowa City, an impressive streak for the Hawkeyes given how pesky these in-state foes can be. Panthers coach Tanya Warren has leaned even heavier recently on in-state talent, and plenty of high school overlap will be on display again Friday.
Even as Iowa ascended into premier status the last two seasons, no one inside the program ever diminished the importance of these in-state matchups. Another tense matchup is seemingly on deck.
“It wouldn’t be a big deal to be a state champ if you were walking away with it and winning all these games by ease,” Jensen said. “I think that’s what makes the state championship in the state of Iowa more fun.”
After late defensive struggles at Michigan State, can the Hawkeyes regroup with super scorer Maya McDermott on the other side?
While Sunday’s 68-66 loss at Michigan State looks like a game without defensive struggles, Iowa’s inability to get stops in the fourth quarter initiated its downfall on the road. Thirteen of the Spartans’ 19 fourth-quarter points came from one player, as Nyla Hampton came somewhat out of nowhere to ignite the Michigan State rally.
The Hawkeyes can’t afford a similar one-woman takeover on Friday. Because if one does materialize, it’ll likely be Maya McDermott spearheading the charge toward another in-state upset.
The fifth-year guard from Johnston is clearly operating with that inevitable end-of-career urgency. McDermott enters as the nation’s ninth-leading scorer (21.9 ppg) and ranks 21st overall in 3-point percentage (46.43% on 26-for-56). Her teammate Kayba Laube, another in-state player from Marion, sits ahead of McDermott at 52.17% from deep (36-for-69), good for fourth nationally. UNI has more than enough offensive firepower to make serious noise Friday.
McDermott has saved some of her most dominant performances for the Panthers’ toughest foes. She ignited the Iowa State stunner with 37 points on 14-for-21 shooting, went for 29 in a one-point loss to Auburn and put up 23 points in a near upset of Creighton. Not matter how rowdy Carver-Hawkeye Arena gets, McDermott won’t be intimidated one bit.
Can these Hawkeyes show the necessary maturity to conquer the always-tough game-before-Christmas-break situation?
Every college basketball coach in the country can see it coming, the full week off for Christmas that can be just as problematic as enjoyable if not handled correctly. The game before the break can become a problem even when there’s little on-paper to suggest it will be.
Even last season’s veteran Iowa squad with Caitlin Clark at the controls needed a half to warm up against an inferior foe before the break. Iowa’s 98-69 win over Loyola (Chicago) on Dec. 21, 2023 saw the Hawkeyes lead by only five at halftime before taking off in the third quarter. Lisa Bluder’s halftime blowup that day was featured prominently on the “Full Court Press” documentary that highlighted Clark’s senior season.
What happened last season obviously has no direct bearing on this season. But if a more experienced team against a worse opponent can get somewhat tripped up on the pre-holiday challenge, the current Hawkeyes squad could definitely encounter similar vibes.
Conquer this one, though, and Iowa gets a well-earned reset without any negative cloud over the off week. That’ll be productive with a head-first plunge into a tough Big Ten up next.
Dargan Southard is a sports trending reporter and covers Iowa athletics for the Des Moines Register and HawkCentral.com. Email him at msouthard@gannett.com or follow him on Twitter at @Dargan_Southard.
Iowa
Hutchinson CC holds off No. 1 Iowa Western for NJCAA national championship
CANYON, Texas (KWCH) – In a rematch of a thriller in the season’s second week, the top two teams in junior college football faced off Wednesday night in the NJCAA DI National Championship in Canyon, Texas. For the second time in school history and the second time in the last five years, the Hutchinson Community College Blue Dragons are national champs. The third-ranked Blue Dragons fell into an early, two-touchdown hole, stormed back to take a two-possession lead in the second half and held off No. 1 Iowa Western, 28-23. Hutchinson wraps up its dream season with an 11-1 final record.
Hutchinson completed the season sweep of the nation’s top-ranked team after outlasting Iowa Western on the road, 38-37 in September. Playing for higher stakes on Wednesday night, Iowa Western threatened to put the hammer down early. The Reivers led 14-0 early and held that two-touchdown lead through the first quarter.
Hutchinson got on the board early in the second quarter on a Samari Collier 27-yard run, but trailed 17-7 at the break. The third quarter belonged to the Blue Dragons as they outscored Iowa Western 21-0 to build a 28-17 lead going into the fourth quarter. Capping the run was a Kordell Gouldsby 73-yard punt return inside the final three-and-a-half minutes of the third quarter.
In the final frame, the Reivers scored a touchdown with a little less than 11 minutes left in the game to trim an 11-point deficit to five.
The final half of the final quarter came with its share of drama. This included a blocked field goal that kept the Blue Dragons from expanding its lead and put Iowa Western in a strong position with time and field position on its side. Hutchinson’s defense answered the call and the Blue Dragons held on to bring another title to Hutchinson.
On offense, Hutchinson did most of its damage on the ground led by quarterback Collier who rushed for 109 yards on 16 carries and a touchdown. Through the air, Collier completed six of 16 passes for 80 yards and a touchdown. Backup quarterback Christian Johnson only completed one of five passes, but that completion was huge, a 34-yard third-quarter touchdown to Tre Brown.
Iowa Western quarterback Hunter Dekkers completed 29 of 51 passes for 412 yards, but in a bend-but-not-break performance, the Hutchinson defense stepped up to limit the Reivers’ trips to the endzone as Dekkers only completed two touchdown passes. The Blue Dragon defense also limited Iowa Western’s rush attack and sacked Dekkers four times, three of those by defensive end Marshon Oxley.
For the season, Hutchinson ended its magical ride on a four-game win streak after suffering its lone setback against Kansas Jayhawk Community College rival Butler Community College on Oct. 26.
Copyright 2024 KWCH. All rights reserved. To report a correction or typo, please email news@kwch.com
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