Iowa
Where can Iowa’s passing game improve in 2023?
IOWA CITY, Iowa — Questions proceed to swirl round Fortress Kinnick about potential Iowa teaching workers adjustments or if the Hawkeyes will prolong the established order for one more season.
Offensive coordinator Brian Ferentz stays a public lightning rod for a stressed fan base because the image for faculty soccer’s worst offense. The statistics mirror on the play caller and schemer, each of that are a part of Ferentz’s job description. There are different elements akin to expertise, expertise and well being that impacted the offensive efficiency that had been exterior of the coordinator’s management.
Whether or not Ferentz returns for a seventh season calling performs or leaves for one more job stays speculative at the moment. What isn’t up for debate is that Iowa’s offense — which ranked within the 120s in most areas — wants enchancment to merely complement this system’s elite-level protection.
“Yearly you go into the offseason, and also you have a look at belongings you did properly, belongings you didn’t do properly,” Brian Ferentz stated earlier than the Music Metropolis Bowl. “How will we intensify the issues we did do properly; how will we enhance the issues we didn’t do properly.
“In some regards, progress was made. In different regards, not as a lot. After which in different regards, I believe we regressed in some areas. The problem in January and February, which actually has already begun all through December, is figuring out all three of these areas, determining the perfect plan of assault shifting into subsequent yr.”
Each side of Iowa’s offense stays underneath appraisal, and others will obtain their examination within the coming days and weeks. As for as we speak, listed below are three areas of the passing sport that require an analysis earlier than spring.
Tight finish utilization
Iowa’s passing sport runs by its tight ends, because it did final fall. However the Hawkeyes had been more adept as a good end-centered assault in 2017 and 2018 after they had T.J. Hockenson and Noah Fant combining for 27 touchdowns these two seasons. Maybe it’s unfair to check the present tight ends with two first-round skills, certainly one of which earned his second Professional Bowl nod. However Sam LaPorta possible can be a top-80 draft choose in April and boasts comparable capability and higher tenacity than his predecessors. Luke Lachey has comparable potential, an even bigger body and maybe the next athletic ceiling than all three. Michigan switch Erick All matches in the identical class, too.
So, what did Iowa do in a different way with Hockenson and Fant that didn’t translate in 2022 however ought to for Lachey and All this fall? The workers attacked downfield with the earlier tight ends, particularly Hockenson. On third-down snaps in 2018, Hockenson caught 17 passes for 379 yards and two touchdowns. No tight finish since 2013 has extra third-down receiving yards in a season, and 15 of his 17 catches went for first downs. No person nationally had extra third-down catches of 25-plus yards than Hockenson (seven).
GO DEEPER
Breaking down Iowa soccer’s 2023 offensive depth chart
There are the reason why Iowa may play that method in 2018 and never as a lot in 2022. Fant and Hockenson had been complemented by a field-stretching Z receiver in Ihmir Smith-Marsette and a troublesome slot cross catcher in Nick Easley. However much more essential, Iowa featured bookend tackles in Alaric Jackson and Tristan Wirfs, who gave quarterback Nate Stanley time to aim downfield passes. Hockenson additionally may high-point the ball higher than most receivers, and each tight ends typically confronted single protection due to each other.
In 2022, accidents decimated Iowa’s receiving corps. Within the Hawkeyes’ first two video games, just one scholarship receiver was obtainable, and that was 5-foot-10 Arland Bruce IV (who since has transferred to Oklahoma State). There was no constant X-receiver or deep menace, and solely slot receiver Nico Ragaini reliably discovered openings or made robust catches. LaPorta typically performed vast to compensate, however that restricted his effectiveness. He nonetheless completed his profession with 153 catches, which ranks fourth in Massive Ten historical past at that place.
Evaluation: In 2018, 61.8 % of Iowa’s offensive snaps featured at the very least two tight ends. In 2022, it was 61.7 out of necessity. From 2019-21, the Hawkeyes didn’t exceed 39 % in any yr with two tight ends and had been at solely 20.9 % in 2019. Iowa’s projected finest personnel in 2022 contains two-plus tight ends on 60 % of the offensive snaps. The Hawkeyes have NFL prospects in Lachey and All, and the perfect course is to maintain them as tight ends quite than flex them out. With a little bit time and receiver enhancements, new quarterback Cade McNamara ought to put the tight ends in prime place to not solely make catches however prolong performs after the reception.
Pink zone route depth
The distinction between Iowa’s earlier purple zone success and its latest failures is canyon-esque. In 2018, Stanley threw for 301 yards and 20 landing passes within the purple zone. Iowa ranked eighth nationally in each classes. As clutch as Hockenson was on third down, Fant was his equal as a purple zone goal. In 2017-18, Fant was focused within the purple zone 21 instances with 15 catches and 12 touchdowns. Of the 61 gamers with at the very least 20 purple zone targets throughout these two seasons, Fant’s 57.1 % landing fee ranked No. 1 in faculty soccer.
Brandon Smith performed alongside Fant for 2 seasons, and few Massive Ten receivers had been higher at contested catches on fade routes, particularly within the purple zone. From 2018-20, Smith caught 13 purple zone passes for 130 yards and eight touchdowns. 5 of these scores had been on contested fades, and just one landing reception was thrown in need of the objective line.
Within the purple zone alone, Stanley handed for 47 touchdowns and only one interception from 2017-19. Outdoors of 1 communication catastrophe (at Penn State), Iowa was cash within the purple zone in 2018 with the third-most touchdowns (38) of all Massive Ten groups. Sure, Iowa actually did that with Brian Ferentz because the offensive coordinator.
Previously three seasons, Iowa has mixed for 16 purple zone landing passes and two interceptions. It totaled 12 purple zone touchdowns in 2022, rating 129th of 131 groups. That’s lower than one per sport for an eight-win workforce.
Nevertheless it’s even worse underneath nearer examination. From contained in the 10-yard line, Iowa ran 38 performs for 38 yards in 2022. The Hawkeyes accomplished 6-of-10 passes for 13 yards and two touchdowns. Maybe most unbelievable, Iowa threw simply three passes to the objective line or into the tip zone when lined up contained in the 10-yard line. From the 20-yard line to the 11, the Hawkeyes picked up 172 yards on 36 performs however threw just one cross into the tip zone. Satirically, there was a wide-open receiver in need of the objective line on that incomplete cross. That provides as much as 4 purple zone passes to the objective line or finish zone in 13 video games.
Evaluation: Scheme clearly is the wrongdoer together with the play calling. In a yr when the Hawkeyes had vital accidents at receiver, their finest purple zone cross choices had been to their tight ends. However the play design both didn’t present for routes previous the objective line or the receivers weren’t open ultimately zone. Neither final result is appropriate.
Throwing in need of the objective line forces defenses to cowl each speck of rubber from sideline to sideline. One missed deal with often turns right into a landing. It’s a turnover-averse technique however one that always results in area targets. It negates the dimensions benefits tight ends current or doesn’t permit your athletes to make a play on the ball. Generally soccer coaches should assume like their basketball colleagues. Belief your gamers to make performs.
GO DEEPER
Dochterman: Touchdown Cade McNamara is a important first step for Iowa
Fast and straightforward
Nothing about Iowa’s passing sport has come simple however maybe most troubling is the shortage of easy completions inside 2.5 seconds. Per TruMedia, Iowa quarterback Spencer Petras accomplished 60.7 % of his passes in fewer than 2.5 seconds for six.0 yards per try and a 118.5 effectivity ranking (102nd nationally) final fall. He additionally endured 16 sacks.
Almost each difficulty with Iowa’s offense comes into play with these numbers. One, the quarterback’s lack of accuracy. Two, there was little chemistry with receivers. Three, the receivers struggled to realize any separation on their first three steps. 4, the receivers didn’t do something with the ball as soon as they caught it. 5, the road failed to offer enough safety. Six, the quarterback couldn’t evade the frenzy. Seven, the scheme didn’t change sufficient to enhance any of these numbers.
McNamara was higher in all of these areas in 2021 when he began at Michigan. He accomplished 70.5 % for 7.8 yards per try with an effectivity ranking of 147.0. Petras threw 4 touchdowns and one interception in 2022, whereas McNamara tossed 10 touchdowns and 5 interceptions.
Evaluation: Iowa wants fast winners on the perimeter. If a receiver can’t beat press protection routinely, the play calling must compensate with pre-snap motion or preserving them off the road of scrimmage. Both method, utilizing fast completions permits every thing to flourish in Iowa’s type of play. In any other case, it sputters.
(Prime picture of Luke Lachey: Keith Gillett / Icon Sportswire through Getty Photos)
Iowa
Iowa 97, Nebraska 87: Payton Sandfort's Overtime Revenge
Iowa 97, Nebraska 87: Payton Sandfort’s Overtime Revenge
IOWA CITY — Behind a furious second-half comeback and outlasting Nebraska (12-3,2-2) in overtime, Iowa (11-4, 2-2) took the victory over the Cornhuskers, 97-87 on Tuesday night in Carver-Hawkeye Arena.
Here are three takeaways from the win.
Payton Sandfort: Confirmed Back
After scoring just two points on 1-9 shooting in Iowa’s 116-85 loss to Wisconsin on Friday, Sandfort had a rough first half. Over the first 20 minutes, it looked as though the senior may continue his cold streak, as he started 0-2 with zero points.
“At halftime, I was pretty upset,” Iowa’s second-leading scorer said postgame. “I went into the locker room and acted like I was going to the bathroom, but I read some Bible verses, read some notes to myself. Once I saw one go in [in the second half], I just felt like myself again.”
The first triple he made after the half was a small miracle in itself — and it showed Sandfort that he was ready to break through the rough shooting streak.
“I got a roll off the top of the backboard,” Sandfort smiled. “It seems like ever shot this year has rimmed out. From there I knew I was going. I was like ‘Alright. It’s about time.’”
It was time, indeed. Sandfort proceeded to score 30 points in the second half and overtime, shooting 8-13 in the second half, including going 6-of-9 from three. He earned some pretty high praise from his head coach afterward, too.
“The only thing close to it that I’ve seen, (Jarod) Uthoff had 30 in the first half at Iowa State a couple years ago. More than a couple years ago,” Fran McCaffery said postgame. “He made big shots in the second half that just changed everything.”
McCaffery continued, Sandfort’s scoring was generated without too much of a concerted effort by he and the staff.
“We wanted to get him going, you know, so we tried to run some stuff for him. But the way they play defense, it has to happen naturally,” he said. “You got to move it, you got to push it in transition, he got some there. We did run some stuff for him, so we got some stuff there. But for the most part, you know, we just got to move it, move it, move it and find him.”
Clawed Back
Thanks in part to Sandfort, Iowa rallied back from 15-point deficit with 14:54 left. The Waukee, Iowa native pointed to a lack of defensive effort for the 52-37 Nebraska lead.
“To start the half, we were pretty lax defensively, Sandfort said. “We were making bad plays, turning the ball over.”
McCaffery pushed the team to stay the course.
“Well, there’s plenty of time,” McCaffery said, who remained calm despite trailing by double-digits. “There’s no need to panic, you know, we’ve got a group with great character. They were locked in during the timeout. Obviously we scored the next five, and that changes everything.”
Sandfort relayed a similar message to his head coach.
“I just kind of told everybody, we’re gonna be fine,” he said. “This is game 15, we got more than half the season left. Let’s just relax, let’s change the season right now, and let’s just get gritty. And we got gritty guys, and I think we’ve seen it all season, except for that Wisconsin game. But we really gritted down.”
He pointed beyond his own heroic performance as to how the team pulled off the win.
“Everybody had to contribute, but we stayed together,” he added. “And that’s the mantra, bad teams fall apart when things go bad. And I just tell everybody, if we stay together as a team and block out what everybody’s saying, just be in the room, be present, be where your feet are, then it always turns out all right.”
It almost didn’t turnout alright. After the ferocious comeback and holding a three-point lead with 3.5 seconds remaining, Nebraska’s Brice Williams — who finished with a team-lead 28 points — drilled a buzzer-beating three-pointer to send the game into overtime.
“Right away, we had a chance to get on the floor and get the loose ball,” Nebraska head coach Fred Hoiberg said postgame. “We didn’t do it, we didn’t get it. And they got out again, and transition was the problem with us.”
The Hawkeyes did get out and get going in OT, outscoring the Cornhuskers 21-11 in the final five minutes. Sandfort was proud of his team’s post-regulation effort.
“Just knowing that we can do it. Especially after what happened at the end of regulation the way that we came together in overtime — it was really player-led, the way that we were talking to each other,” Sandfort said. “The coaches put us in good spots, but the way that we stayed together, the five of us on the floor and the guys on the bench,(3:55)was really what pushed us over the edge. And I hope we know that we can build on that and keep moving forward.”
Don’t Forget Di
Ultimately the win doesn’t happen without the efforts of Dix and Owen Freeman.
Alongside Sandforts 30-point second-half and overtime, Dix put up a team-lead 31 points, including nine points in overtime to help seal the victory. He went 10-14 from the field and 7-10 from the three point line.
“I think Dix is a hell of a player,” Hoiberg said postgame. “I think he’s the most underrated player in this league.”
The statement wasn’t a shock to Sandfort, who has seen Dix develop from a gangly freshman one of the Hawkeyes’ three best players.
“He’s about as good as he gets from a toughness standpoint, from a skill standpoint,” Sandfort said. “Nothing rattles him, nothing makes him excited. He’s just out there playing ball. And the things that he’s battled through, I think, have made him tough and(5:00)made it so that he doesn’t rattle him.”
And Dix played all but 22 seconds of the game. With Drew Thelwell out due to a “tweaked lower leg” injury and Cooper Koch missing the game due to a previously noted medical condition, Dix was forced to play nearly all 45 minutes.
“I’m going to need an ice bath,” Dix joked. “I feel good that we won. My body hurts a little bit, but I’m good.”
“He was exhausted,” McCaffery added. “I mean he played as hard as he could every possession at both ends of the floor — and made phenomenal decisions, made big shots, made big plays. He was really, really special. … Steals, assists, rebounds. That’s who he is.”
Dix’s 31 points paired with Sandfort’s scoring effort resulted in Iowa’s first duo to score 30+ points since Jordan Bohannon and Keegan Murray did the same at Maryland in 2022.
“That’s crazy,” Dix said. “Payton was going crazy in the second half, so we just kept feeding him. In overtime, I got the ball in my hands a little bit more. He also just took over. It was great.”
NEXT: Iowa will face Indiana (12-3, 3-1) in Carver Hawkeye-Arena on Saturday, January 11. The game will be broadcast at 7 pm CST on Fox.
Iowa will host a high-priority official visitor this weekend for the matchup with the Hoosiers.
Don’t miss out on any of our exclusive football, basketball, and recruiting coverage. Sign up with Hawkeye Beacon here.
Iowa
HawkCast Ep. 119 – MARK GRONOWSKI is a HAWKEYE: Iowa Lands MAJOR QB
Eliot and Ross breakdown the impact of the Hawkeyes landing South Dakota State transfer quarterback Mark Gronowski in the transfer portal.
Is Gronowski immediately QB1 or Iowa?, how he elevates the floor and the ceiling of the QB room, why his accomplishments set him apart from previous Iowa transfer targets and acquisitions, shout out to Tim Lester/Brad Heinrichs/Tyler Barnes, what’s next with the Hawkeyes and the portal, plus more.
Iowa
Iowa football: Kaden Wetjen wins 2024 Jet Award for nation’s top return specialist
Video: Kaden Wetjen talks punt return touchdown vs. Northwestern
Kaden Wetjen discusses a variety of topics following Iowa’s win over Northwestern.
IOWA CITY — On Tuesday, Kaden Wetjen was announced as the winner of the 2024 Jet Award, which honors the most outstanding return specialist in college football.
Wetjen became a weapon on special teams in 2024 as the Hawkeyes’ full-time punt and kickoff return man. He took a punt for a touchdown against Northwestern in October. Then he returned a kickoff to the house in Iowa’s matchup against Missouri in the Music City Bowl.
Wetjen finished the 2024 season amassing more than 1,000 combined kickoff and punt return yardage.
A standout at Williamsburg High School, Wetjen’s recruiting process in high school was not chock-full of college football’s elites. Division III programs wanted him. NAIA-level Grand View offered. Seth Wallace talked to Wetjen about walking on at Iowa.
But Wetjen opted to go to junior college, taking his talents to Iowa Western. His time there earned him some recruiting attention but it still was relatively limited. Iowa came around again.
Ultimately, Wetjen decided on a preferred walk-on opportunity with the Hawkeyes over scholarship offers elsewhere, the most prominent of which was FBS-level UMass.
Wetjen worked his way into a bigger role at Iowa over time. He didn’t play in his first season, but in 2023 he led Iowa in kickoff returns and filled in at punt return following Cooper DeJean’s season-ending injury. In 2024, Wetjen had his best season and became one of the nation’s premier returners.
For the second consecutive season, a Hawkeye was named Big Ten’s Rodgers-Dwight Return Specialist of the Year. DeJean took the honor in 2023, Wetjen did it in 2024.
Ahead of the Music City Bowl, Wetjen indicated he was likely to return to Iowa in 2025, but not yet certain.
“The plan is to come back,” Wetjen said in December. “But I’ll say I’m 98% sure.”
If Wetjen does return, Iowa is projected to return multiple key pieces of its 2024 special teams unit.
Drew Stevens, who was 20-of-23 on field goals last season, is set to come back, along with punter Rhys Dakin, who gained meaningful experience as a freshman.
Follow Tyler Tachman on X @Tyler_T15, contact via email at ttachman@gannett.com
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