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Video: Kirk Ferentz reacts to Iowa’s ReliaQuest Bowl win over Vanderbilt
Kirk Ferentz meets with media after Iowa football’s 34-27 win over Vanderbilt in the ReliaQuest Bowl.
IOWA CITY — Australian punter Boston Everitt has committed to Iowa football, he announced Jan. 21.
Everitt, who is 19 years old and listed at 6-foot-1 and 200 pounds, will come to the Hawkeyes with four seasons of eligibility remaining.
“I am extremely honoured and grateful to announce that I will be continuing my premedical studies and playing football on scholarship at the University of Iowa,” Everitt posted on social media.
“I want to give a huge thank you to Tyler Barnes, Coach Ferentz, Coach Sherman, and Coach Polizzi for believing in me and giving me this opportunity.
“Also want to thank Mum and Dad for all their support, sacrifice, and love throughout this time.”
Iowa’s special teams unit has changed drastically after the departures of coordinator LeVar Woods, punter Rhys Dakin, returner Kaden Wetjen and kicker Drew Stevens.
Woods left the Hawkeyes to become the assistant head coach and special teams coordinator at Michigan State. Dakin, who spent the last two seasons as Iowa’s punter, followed Woods to Michigan State. Wetjen and Stevens, two all-time special teams greats for the Hawkeyes, exhausted their college eligibility.
Iowa has made progress in rebuilding that room.
Chris Polizzi was promoted to special teams coordinator. North Dakota State transfer Eli Ozick, who was 16-of-18 on field goal attempts and 62-of-63 on extra points last season, committed to the Hawkeyes and could be Iowa’s replacement for Stevens at kicker. The Hawkeyes also return kicker Caden Buhr, who will be a redshirt freshman in 2026.
Everitt is actually the second punter that Iowa is bringing in ahead of the 2026 season. The previously landed a commitment from Simpson College transfer Tanner Philpott, who averaged 43.9 yards per punt as a sophomore and was named an AFCA Division III Coaches’ second-team All-American last season.
Follow Tyler Tachman on X @Tyler_T15, contact via email at ttachman@gannett.com
Luke Fetbroth, Tonino, Boston
Shi Mei, Lenox Sophia, Boston
Amarilys Colón, La Padrona, Boston
Sāsha Colman, Comfort Kitchen, Boston
Peter Nguyen, Lê Madeline, Quincy
David DiStasi, Materia Ristorante, Bantam, Conn.
Bolivar Hilario, Community Table, New Preston, Conn.
Shilimat Tessema, Lalibela Ethiopian Restaurant, New Haven, Conn.
Sarah Jenkins, Nina June, Rockport, Me.
Chris Gould, Central Provisions, Portland, Me.
Jake Stevens, Leeward, Portland, Me.
Jeremy Broucek, Bread & Friends, Portland, Me.
Thomas Takashi Cooke, Izakaya Minato, Portland, Me.
Evan Hennessey, Stages at One Washington, Dover, N.H.
Derek Wagner, Nick’s on Broadway, Providence, R.I.
Kevin O’Donnell, Giusto, Newport, R.I.
Annie Parisi, Jayd Bun, South Kingstown, R.I.
Max Vogel, Ondis, Montpelier, Vt.
Paul Trombley, Fancy’s, Burlington, Vt.
Tiara Adorno, The Crooked Ram, Manchester, Vt.
Outstanding Bakery
Night Moves Bread, South Portland, Me.
Super Secret Ice Cream, Bethlehem, N.H.
Outstanding Bar
Spoke Wine Bar, Somerville
Outstanding Hospitality
Ostra, Boston
State Road, West Tisbury
Outstanding Restaurant
O Ya, Boston
Oberlin, Providence, R.I.
Outstanding Wine Program
Talulla, Cambridge
Port of Call, Mystic, Conn.
Best New Bar
Loma, Providence, R.I.
Best New Restaurant
ROLi, New Haven, Conn.
Claudine, Providence, R.I.
Cafe Monette, St. Albans, Vt.
Emerging Chef
Pao Thampitak, Gaaeng Thai Supper Club, Boston
Jasmine Watson, Audette, Newport, R.I.
Outstanding Chef
David Standridge, The Shipwright’s Daughter, Mystic, Conn.
Outstanding Baker
Monica Glass, Verveine, Boston
Whitney Stancil, Cuvée at Chatham Inn, Chatham
Outstanding Professional in Beverage Service
Alyssa Mikiko Dipasquale, The Koji Club, Boston
Nader Asgari-Tari, Zurito, Boston
Outstanding Professional in Cocktail Service
Jesse Hedberg, Club Frills, Providence, R.I.
Kate Wise, Juniper Bar, Burlington, Vt.
Outstanding Restaurateur
Dana Street, Fore Street, Scales, Street & Co., Portland, Me.
Leslie McCrorey Wells, Pizzeria Verità, Trattoria Delia, Sotto Enoteca, Burlington, Vt.
Kara Baskin can be reached at kara.baskin@globe.com. Follow her @kcbaskin.
Local News
Hundreds of demonstrators gathered in Copley Square Tuesday for a protest against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) coinciding with the one-year anniversary of the second Trump administration.
“I think that issues are always going to come up and change, but our analysis is always pretty clear, which is like all of these different attacks,” Boston Democrats Socialists of America co-chair Bonnie Jin told Boston.com. “Whether it is the illegal intervention in Venezuela or the militarism that we have seen in our streets in Minnesota, it’s all connected to this attack on working people.”
Using the bitter cold weather as a motivator, organizers led protesters in a chant of “It’s cold out, but the struggle is hot.” The sub-freezing temperatures later became a tongue-in-cheek segue into chants of “F— ICE.”
Representatives from the Boston branch of the Party for Socialism and Liberation, Boston Democratic Socialists of America, and the LUCE Immigrant Justice Network delivered speeches. Students from Cambridge Rindge and Latin School and Somerville High School who participated in the walkouts also spoke out.
“Whether it’s ICE terror in our communities, attacks on healthcare and SNAP, wars abroad, they think that using force and strength and bullying is going to beat us into submission,” Joe Tache, a PSL organizer, said in his speech. “It’s not going to happen because the truth is that is not strength; it’s cowardice masked as strength.”
Organized by the Boston PSL , the rally followed a nationwide series of walkouts earlier in the day. On the steps of the Boston Public Library, speakers condemned Trump’s immigration enforcement efforts, the killing of Renee Good by an ICE agent, and the strike on Venezuela and capture of its president, Nicolás Maduro, by the US.
After hearing from the speakers, protesters marched through Boylston Street and around Boston Common while participating in chants that ranged from defiant (“We want justice, you say how? ICE out of Boston now”) to optimistic (“One year longer, one year stronger”).
Reflecting on how the United States has changed since Jan. 20, 2025 gave many protesters a fresh wave of anger and disgust. For protester Stephen Downey Jr., the one-year point of the second Trump administration was as good a time as any to declare that enough is enough.
“I’m tired of this fascist regime,” Downey Jr. told Boston.com. “I’m tired of this rapist and pedophile and 34 [time] convicted felon sitting in office, ruining everyone’s lives, taking everyone’s health care, and everyone just supporting it. It’s time for us to stand up now and make a choice before it’s too late.”
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