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View From The Cheap Seats: Whelmed

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View From The Cheap Seats: Whelmed


Almost nothing about Saturday’s win over Michigan State felt good and, to be candid, I spent most of the game trying to figure out how much bile I was going to spill in the wake of a loss to a team that had fired its coach 4 days before gameday and been outscored 72-16 in its previous two outings. Thankfully, Cooper DeJean had other plans:

“DeJean, dangerous and deep.” Noah Eagle is not my favorite play-by-play man, but he was right on the money there. I don’t believe in prescience, but that followed mere seconds later with “the crowd can sense it” may just be the single most amazing piece of commentary I’ve ever experienced in real time. I know I got a tingle when I saw that line-drive come off of MSU’s punters foot.

Now, before I dive into any further commentary, I want to provide some stats from this classic B1G West showdown:

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IA v MSU

Team Yards / Carry Yards / Reception Total Yards YPP Turnovers Points off Turnovers
Team Yards / Carry Yards / Reception Total Yards YPP Turnovers Points off Turnovers
Iowa 2.26 7.72 222 3.76 2 10
Michigan State 4.88 7.72 349 3.76 4 7

I’m not sure I’ve ever watched a game that exemplifies the B1G West more than this one. Two bad offenses duking it out to see who wanted to lose more than the other. Two good defenses (one just a little bit better than the other) doing their best to drag their offensive brethren across the goal line, and two special teams units doing just about everything possible to keep their team in the game.

I watched the 30 minute version of this game about 5 times while writing this column and I’m not sure I can find a word, or a combination of words, that encapsulate watching these teams beat each other up for 60 minutes. B1G West fans may need to create a new word to describe the vast array of emotion that occurs during games in this division.

Anger, elation, rage, happiness, apathy, relief, fury, joy, hope, despair. A B1G West fan routinely experiences all of these emotions during a football game, and Iowa fans routinely experience all of these emotions in the span of a single 3 & out finished by a spectacular punt or field goal.

Let’s put it this way, I’m pretty sure most of the plays included in the “full game highlights” were 3rd downs that failed to convert (Iowa and MSU combined to go 5/28 on 3rd down), punts, field goals, and plays that led to turnovers. Yes, my friends, this was an ugly, ugly, game.

Offense

Let’s be honest, there weren’t many positives from the offense Saturday night, but I’d be remiss if I didn’t include the 2nd Quarter drive where Eric All took over the game and willed Iowa to a TD:

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All had a solid game (aside from a not so great drop), and watching him drag MSU defenders across the goal line made me very, very happy that he chose to follow his friend and former roommate to Iowa City.

I’d include negative highlights here, but who wants to watch any more bad offense? I will say that I thought Brian Ferentz called a halfway decent game. Sure, there were some bad calls (mostly in the running game), but Saturday was, truly, the first game this year where I felt like poor execution cost us more than play-calling (6 drops, and several really bad choices/throws from both Cade and Deacon). Everyone that has been clamoring for more WR targets (18) got their wish, only to see the WRs have 5 drops and total 6 catches. But for the first time this year, WRs received the majority of the targets (56.25%). Of note, Diante Vines had 3 catches and 3 drops on 9 targets. Not great, Bob.

Defense

The Iowa defense was good, but not great, Saturday night. They forced 4 turnovers, didn’t allow a rushing touchdown (they are 1 of 2 teams in all of Division 1 that has yet to allow a rushing TD this season), and didn’t allow a single play longer than 20 yards. They also failed to record a sack (they have not sacked a single P5 QB this year), had problems setting the edge in the run game, had some noticeable coverage lapses, and allowed Nathan Carter to post a 5.4 ypc average on his way to 108 yards on the ground.

The biggest play of the game for the defense, in my humble opinion, was a glorious stuff on 4th and 1 with 9:50 left in the third:

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This is a play that Iowa used to make with some regularity, but as of late the line has not been able to hold on QB sneaks. Seeing Higgins dive in over the line (who managed to get incredible leverage at the point of attack) made my heart happy.

The Doughboyz got the job done leading the team in tackles by a 33% margin, creating 3 turnovers, and keeping MSU from hitting on anything deep, but they weren’t perfect. The big issue Saturday was the DLine. They routinely failed to set the edge, couldn’t get to Kim all night, and put on a pretty good display of how not to tackle running backs as they run through the line, not to mention Quarterbacks:

I do want to acknowledge the hit Jay Higgins made to cause the MSU fumble with just under 4 to go because it was a thing of beauty, a pure form tackle. I hope that Tre Mosley is okay, because he definitely wasn’t after that hit.

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Special Teams

I’m not sure how many of you saw the moment in the pregame that had all three presenters (aside from OSU alum and Mr. “I hate jokes” Josh Perry) actually wearing black and gold “Punting is Winning” tshirts, but I did, and I kind of loved it (especially as I too was wearing my PiW tshirt whilst sitting on my couch in AZ). I felt seen in that moment.

Obviously Coop’s punt return was the single best moment of the night, but I don’t want to leave the other two bonified stars out here, because Tory and Drew are always worthy of praise.

That, my friends, is a punt from 7 yards deep in Iowa’s end zone that was fielded at the MSU 38. Yes, that is a 69 (nice) yard punt that resulted in a 60 yard net change in field position. Unfortunately, Tory only put 1 inside the 20 on Saturday, but that’s entirely on the offense. Someone needs to tell Brian that if they’re not going to score the least they could do is get to the 40 yard line, so Tory can get those stats up. He’s never going to win the Ray Guy award if he has to keep punting from inside his own 10.

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Drew Stevens may leave Iowa City with records (especially if this offense doesn’t improve drastically over the next 2.5 seasons). On the night he was 4/4, bringing his career number to 24/27, and he has yet to miss a PAT (ftr, I just threw a pound of salt over my shoulder). That 53 yarder was good from 60+ yards, easy.

Now this next one, well, it’s the first (and hopefully the last) time that I will acknowledge, and honor, an opposing players effort. This kick from John Kim was a beauty, and if nothing else, we have to give respect where it’s due:

I know Drew could make that kick and with this offense, I won’t be surprised if he boots a 60 yarder at some point this season.

So, Iowa faithful, here we are again. It’s Wednesday and we’re all happy that our Hawkeyes got a W. I’m also sure that we are all less than satisfied with the way said game was won. The offense still sucks (this game actually brought their averages down), the play-calling is still questionable, and we’ve now lost our QB1 and a TE1 for the season (thank God we always have two TE1’s). We’re hopefully getting KJ2 back for the Purdue game, so will only be down one of our top 2 RBs, but we’re stuck with an offensive line that can’t open holes for anyone to run through. That same line showed some improvement in pass pro (only allowing one sack), but it allowed a fair number of hurries, and several QB pressures. So, nothing has improved.

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Needless to say, I am worried about next Saturday. I watched an awful lot of the beating that Purdue put on Illinois last Saturday, and while I’m quite sure that Illinois is a very bad team, I’m also fairly sure that Purdue is a lot better than their 2-3 record indicates. I’m confident that Deacon “Hamburger” Hill (my son came up with that one and I’m running with it, because Hamburger Hill is an incredibly underrated movie about perseverance and victory in the face of nearly insurmountable odds) at 100% is better than Cade McNamara at 75%, but I never know what to expect from the offensive line or the WR corps.

I’m hoping that, like the soldiers of the 3rd Battalion, 187th Infantry, 101st Airborne Division, this Hawkeye team can make it up that hill and put down an opponent that is covered head to toe in the same B1G West muck that we are. Iowa is a 2.5 point favorite as I write this, and I do not doubt that this game could be decided by a field goal. Let’s just hope that field goal comes off the foot of Drew Stevens.

As always, GO HAWKS!



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Iowa

Iowa football isn’t always pretty, but because of Kirk Ferentz, it has punched above its weight class

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Iowa football isn’t always pretty, but because of Kirk Ferentz, it has punched above its weight class


IOWA CITY, Iowa — In unseasonably warm air and beneath a blueish haze over Kinnick Stadium, Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz took a moment to himself with two minutes left and his team wrapping up a 40-16 win against Washington.

Ferentz stood apart from his team on the sideline with his headset on as his offense huddled during the media timeout. On the video board, his picture appeared. Public address announcer Mark Abbott relayed that Ferentz was about to win his 200th game as Iowa’s head coach, passing Amos Alonzo Stagg for second in Big Ten history. The crowd stood and applauded, and Ferentz acknowledged them with a wave.

GO DEEPER

Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz earns 200th career win as Big Ten coach

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Tight end Luke Lachey gave him a hug, as did running back Kaleb Johnson. Backup quarterback Marco Lainez III shook his hand. With 33 seconds left, Ferentz walked to the TigerHawk at midfield, shook hands with Washington counterpart Jedd Fisch and completed an interview with Fox Sports. More subdued than emotional, Ferentz jogged off the playing surface, up the tunnel and into Iowa’s locker room where his players welcomed him with a water bottle shower.

Sunshine and 70-degree days — literally or figuratively — rarely have followed Ferentz into October in his coaching career, so the picturesque autumn setting was abnormal for college football’s longest-tenured coach. However, how Ferentz and the Hawkeyes responded to a 35-7 loss to Ohio State last week went entirely by script.

There are two defining characteristics through the highs and lows of Ferentz’s 26 years at Iowa: One, his players trust him and believe in him. The other truth is, no football coach — thus, no program — responds better to adversity than Ferentz and his Hawkeyes.

Ferentz’s entire career has revolved around continual improvement. And Iowa has gone very far following Ferentz’s ethos.

“He’s the same person every day,” said left tackle Mason Richman, who is in his fifth season. “He brings the same exact energies. You know exactly what to expect from him, no matter what the scoreboard says.”

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Iowa rarely recruits five-star players and mostly signs three-star prospects. Only once in his career did Iowa finish in the top 15 in national recruiting, and that was in 2005. The Hawkeyes are a low-offer program because they heavily research character in recruiting. They want high achievers with good grades who were team captains in multiple sports. To Ferentz and his staff, those players invest themselves and improve others.

“I feel like we recruit the type of the right type of guys,” Iowa linebacker Jay Higgins said. “We just don’t have selfish guys in the locker room. So when you have good guys who understand what a team should look like, and then you also have a good leader, it’s easy to stand together. I just think this team, this program, anytime there’s adversity, we only get closer.”

Those types of players are built to handle challenges, and Iowa continues to have the right coach to navigate them through it. The examples in Ferentz’s era abound.

• In 2016, the Hawkeyes gave up 599 yards in a 41-14 massacre at eventual Big Ten champion Penn State. As a three-touchdown home underdog to No. 2 Michigan the following week, Iowa bounced back with a stunning 14-13 upset.

• Sitting at the midpoint of the 2008 season, Iowa was 15-16 over 2 1/2 seasons. Ferentz never wavered, and neither did his team. The Hawkeyes won their final four games to end that season, and then their first nine in 2009. They finished with their highest final ranking (No. 7) since 1960.

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• In 2014, Iowa continued a slope of mediocrity by losing all four rivalry trophy games and finishing 7-6. The next year, dubbed “New Kirk,” Ferentz switched practices from afternoon to morning and became much more open in the public. The players responded in 2015 with a spirit of togetherness, leading to a school-record 12 wins. From that year onward, Iowa ranks tied for 10th among power-conference teams in victories.

• Two years ago, Iowa’s offense was among the nation’s worst in every category. After a 7-3 season-opening win against South Dakota State in which the Hawkeyes scored on two safeties and a field goal, linebacker Jack Campbell shot down any question that dealt with division. Campbell’s attitude set the tone for that season and it carried over to 2023, in which Iowa’s offense posted the Big Ten’s worst statistical numbers in nearly 40 years. Yet there was no sniping, let alone dissension. The team eventually claimed the Big Ten West Division crown.

• In 2004, Iowa started 2-2, including a 44-7 loss at Arizona State. Despite losing four scholarship running backs to injury, the Hawkeyes held it together with defense mixed with an occasional highlight-reel play. The Hawkeyes won their final eight games, claimed a share of the Big Ten title and won the Capital One Bowl with a 56-yard touchdown pass on the game’s final play.

That 2004 team was honored Saturday before the second quarter to rousing applause. One of its stars, defensive tackle Jonathan Babineaux, was Iowa’s honorary captain on Saturday. It was a team molded by adversity, and it charted an unconventional path of success. It even took a safety midway through the fourth quarter against Penn State in a 6-4 win. Ferentz gave the eulogy at his father’s funeral in Pittsburgh the day before that game.

Most teams would have crumbled in any of those situations, but Iowa never did.

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Why? Ferentz.

“It’s definitely his leadership,” Higgins said. “He truly only cares about the guys in the locker room. When you’ve got a guy like that thinking you’re able to respond, it’s nice. He’s not gonna freak out. Doesn’t matter what the headline is. He’s not gonna come to the meeting room and read off the headlines. He keeps his voice, and we all respond off him. If he’s calm and he knows that we need to respond after a bad game or a tough situation, we’re all going to follow that.”

None of those anecdotes mean Ferentz is perfect. Far from it. Critiques are plentiful about his son, Brian, running his offense for seven years, especially when the final three were so rough. Brian remained in place until university president Barbara Wilson and athletic director Beth Goetz stepped in and dismissed him following the 2023 season. Other complaints about Ferentz’s game-day decision making are fair.

And in 2020, dozens of former players accused the program of racial insensitivity and bias, which was confirmed through an independent investigation. Instead of resisting necessary changes or stepping down, Ferentz opted for a new course. He accepted responsibility and sought counsel from former players, relieved longtime strength coach Chris Doyle and extended a leadership council to include more voices. Many arbitrary rules such as not using X or wearing hoodies in the football complex were vacated. Although some feel the changes didn’t go far enough — while others believed they went too far — there’s no doubt the program has become more welcoming to all players. Its attrition rate is among the lowest in the Big Ten, and it has won the third most games in the Big Ten since that season.

With Ferentz’s guidance, Iowa has punched well above its weight class.

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Its recruiting rankings are closer to those of Illinois and Purdue than Michigan and Penn State, yet the Hawkeyes’ results are closer to the latter. Iowa finds ways to win where its peers fall short. It’s not always pretty and perhaps it won’t ever win the ultimate prize. But that Iowa remains anywhere near the College Football Playoff rankings most years is a credit to Ferentz.

“I appreciate him how much this program means to him,” Richman said. “When you get an appreciation like that, you’re less stressed out. With him at the helm, this place has a really special place in my heart and the hearts of many across the entire state.”

(Top photo of Kirk Ferentz: Matthew Holst / Getty Images)



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What channel is Iowa State vs. West Virginia game tonight (10/12/24)? FREE LIVE STREAM, Time, TV, Channel for college football, Week 7

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What channel is Iowa State vs. West Virginia game tonight (10/12/24)? FREE LIVE STREAM, Time, TV, Channel for college football, Week 7


The No. 11 Iowa State Cyclones, led by quarterback Rocco Becht, face the West Virginia Mountaineers, led by quarterback Garrett Greene on Saturday, Oct. 12, 2024 (10/12/24) at Mountaineer Field at Milan Puskar Stadium in Morgantown, W. Va.

How to watch: Fans can watch the game for free via a trial of DirecTV Stream or fuboTV. You can also watch via a subscription to Sling TV.

Here’s what you need to know:

What: NCAA Football, Week 7

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Who: Iowa State vs. West Virginia

When: Saturday, Oct. 12, 2024

Where: Mountaineer Field at Milan Puskar Stadium

Time: 8 p.m. ET

TV: FOX

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Live stream: fuboTV (free trial), DirecTV Stream (free trial)

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Here are the best streaming options for college football this season:

Fubo TV (free trial): fuboTV carries ESPN, FOX, ABC, NBC and CBS.

DirecTV Stream (free trial): DirecTV Stream carries ESPN, FOX, NBC and CBS.

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Sling TV ($25 off the first month)– Sling TV carries ESPN, FOX, ABC and NBC.

ESPN+($9.99 a month): ESPN+ carries college football games each weekend for only $9.99 a month. These games are exclusive to the platform.

Peacock TV ($5.99 a month): Peacock will simulstream all of NBC Sports’ college football games airing on the NBC broadcast network this season, including Big Ten Saturday Night. Peacock will also stream Notre Dame home games. Certain games will be streamed exclusively on Peacock this year as well.

Paramount+ (free trial): Paramount Plus will live stream college football games airing on CBS this year.

***

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Here’s a preview capsule via the Associated Press:

No. 11 Iowa State (5-0, 2-0 Big 12) at West Virginia (3-2, 2-0), Saturday, 8 p.m. ET (Fox)

BetMGM College Football Odds: Iowa State by 3.

Series record: West Virginia leads 6-5.

WHAT’S AT STAKE?

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Iowa State is off to its best start since 1980, and a win would make them 6-0 for the first time since 1938. The Cyclones are looking to extend their road winning streak to seven games. West Virginia is going after its third straight win after a 1-2 start. Iowa State and West Virginia are 2-0 in conference play. One of them will forge a first-place tie with idle Texas Tech.

KEY MATCHUP

Iowa State’s defense vs. West Virginia QB Garrett Greene. Of the dual-threat quarterbacks the Cyclones have faced so far, Greene could be the best. He had runs of 39, 15 and 10 yards against Oklahoma State last week and is averaging 5.4 yards per carry and 59 yards per game. Run defense hasn’t been a strength for the Cyclones, who hope to force Greene to try to beat them through the air. Iowa State has the Big 12’s top defense, allowing just 10 points and 272 yards per game.

PLAYERS TO WATCH

Iowa State: LB Kooper Ebel has led or co-led the team in tackles in three straight games. He made just three tackles in eight games as a freshman last year. He added 15 pounds to get up to 240 on his 6-foot-4 frame and has made at least six stops in all five games. Last week he had eight tackles and a quarterback hurry against Baylor.

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West Virginia: RB Jahiem White. The sophomore ran for a season-high 158 yards in the lopsided win at Oklahoma State and the Mountaineers compiled 389 on the ground. White hopes to be back on track after being limited to 94 yards combined against No. 4 Penn State, No. 22 Pittsburgh and Kansas.

FACTS & FIGURES

Anthony Becht, a tight end for the Mountaineers from 1996 to 1999, will be honored during the game for his induction into the West Virginia Sports Hall of Fame. His son, Rocco, is Iowa State’s quarterback. … The Cyclones have won 12 straight when scoring at least 30 points. They’ve scored at least 30 in the last five meetings with WVU. … ISU had nine plays of 20 or more yards against Baylor last week, tied for the most by a Power Four team against a conference opponent this season. … The Cyclones’ defense gets better as the game progresses. They’re allowing an average of 4.0 points and 112 yards in the second halves. … West Virginia will wear all-black uniforms in honor of the state’s coal mining industry.

(The Associated Press contributed to this report)

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Rosemount H.S. Marching Band wins at Iowa competition

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Rosemount H.S. Marching Band wins at Iowa competition


The Rosemount High School Marching Band is celebrating a big victory from a competition earlier this fall. In late September they took home the Class AAA Championship trophy at the Bands of America regional competition in Waukee, Iowa. Members of the band joined the FOX 9 Morning News to talk about the win and share how they are getting ready for another big competition this weekend at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis.



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