Q. Ihmir, is his suspension for just this week or have you decided on that?
KIRK FERENTZ: Our standard team policy has been a one-week suspension. He also has some athletic department protocol he’ll go through. I’m anticipating he’ll handle that well. He practiced on the scout team yesterday. He’ll do that all week.
As far as I know, unless something unforeseen happened or come up, that would be the plan.
Q. And then my other question was, and I know you’ve been asked home field and visiting team, I hope you’ll indulge me in one, the dynamic of maybe visiting teams being a little more comfortable this year and home teams maybe psychologically feeling awkward with the empty stadium, does that dynamic ring true with you having now been on the road and played at home?
KIRK FERENTZ: We said that last week, and I think I made the comment, I was a little more concerned about being at home than on the road to that point.
After being in both, I would concur with that. I think it’s accurate. But all that being said, that’s not what the game gets decided by. It can be a crutch if you want it to be a crutch. Hopefully nobody in our building is looking that way, and it’s all about what we do on the field, it really is. It’s about our production on the field and how we play, the energy we have.
It’s just smart to know going into it but it is going to be what it is, pretty quiet, and just like, you know, if we were going into a hostile environment, you obviously want to be prepared for that. This year that won’t be as big a factor and hopefully it’s the last year we ever have to talk about that.
Q. What have you seen — I know you didn’t get practice today, but you’ve commented in the past when you’ve got good guys on the team, do you feel confident that you will not lose this team, so to speak?
KIRK FERENTZ: You must knowing something I don’t, but our guys are great. They were good on Sunday looking at the film. A lot of good things on that film. There are a lot of things that were painful. You know, it’s like every game. But when you don’t win, it’s a little harder. That makes it a harder day. But they were great on the field yesterday morning. Thought we had a good workout. Got a lot done, a lot accomplished. Good meetings last night.
I have no reason to think that they are not just going to keep pushing forward. I have no reason to believe that. I think we have good players. I think we have good people as I’ve said. Haven’t seen anything to the contrary, and obviously coaches have little things they look at all the time and watch. I’m seeing a lot more good than negatives, that’s for sure.
Q. When you see what’s going on with Wisconsin and Clemson’s quarterback and so many things like this and is when you come out of the tunnel at Kinnick and nobody is in the stands, does the whole thing feel off, or are you so tunnel-visioned with football you don’t even think about it?
KIRK FERENTZ: When we come out of the tunnel, it’s a strange feeling. Different, certainly. You’d have to be oblivious, totally oblivious. I’m not that focused not to know that.
On the COVID thing, I think that’s probably the biggest thing. I actually saw an interesting article about voter stress in the last couple days. I’m trying to figure out what that means. But maybe I can equate it to COVID stress, because there’s definitely — it’s taken on a whole new element. We test daily, as you know, in the Big Ten and yeah, when my phone, the little bing it makes when you get a text message from the trainer, I don’t look forward to those because you just don’t know what is going to be on there.
I think certainly you look across the straight border here and it’s a good reminder, constant reminder that this thing is just day-to-day right now. I think we have all known that really since March if not sooner. It’s very real. It’s apparently not going away. I’ve told our team, just figure it’s going to be this way untilJanuary. You take it day-by-day. Don’t assume anything. You know, just hope for the best. Try to be as smart as you can but you know, there’s nothing you can do to be 100 percent insulated from this thing, I don’t think. We all have to keep living but we have to try to be smart.
It’s a concern, certainly, knowing that something could happen at any time. Just look at any of the pro teams that are playing in the pro leagues, and then certainly in college football, it’s very real, too. There is just nothing about this year that’s going to be normal, that’s for sure.
Q. Thinking back to last season, in what ways have you seen Daviyon Nixon improve, and how have you seen him emerge as one of your vocal leaders off the defensive side of the ball?
KIRK FERENTZ: I think football at any level is all about growth and it’s all about development. You know, every now and then, guys come in here and play right off the bat. That doesn’t happen a lot. It’s really uncommon.
Last year in Daviyon’s case, we had two guys that were seniors, both with Reiff and Lattimore in there. I don’t know if you remember last year, I commented on how well they had done that spring prior to their senior year, and I was concerned about the consistency level of both those guys and they had great springs, not good springs.
Going into the season, we felt like we had two starters that we were really comfortable with and knew were going to do a good job and Daviyon was coming up the ranks. He got to play a lot last year. He certainly has grown and practiced really well and he’s played really well in two games. He clearly has worked his way into a starting role where he’s impacting our defense in a positive way.
It’s the same thing off the field, so it’s just good to see. If we’re going to be a good team, we need those kinds of stories on both sides of the ball, and on special teams, as well. That’s just how teams come together and they grow.
Q. You’ve been through the league 20 years worth here, it used to be an 11-team league where you played Wisconsin and Minnesota every year, and everybody else six times over eight years, and then you didn’t play Illinois for several years, and Wisconsin a few years, and with Michigan State, you had really a tremendous rivalry, I would say, year-in and year-out when you’re part of the legends division. What is it like to be in this league where some years you’re playing teams every year and others you’re not, and what’s your thoughts about the Spartans Hawkeyes rivalry over the years?
KIRK FERENTZ: Yeah, to your point, that thing went all the way back to when I was here as an assistant in the ’80s. We had some great games through the years, so it’s one of those traditions.
I’m sure it’s not unique to our conference. In college football, one of the biggest, most impactful things that has happened since the ’80s or ’90s is expansion. It really has taken place in this century. You know, the big expansion, Penn State joined the league in the early ’90s, but when things started shaking that way, not only in our conference but across the country, that’s when things, a lot of the norms or things you were used to in the year-in, year-out rivalries went out the window.
The Illinois series would be the one that really impacted me because I think that whatever year we picked them up, we had not played them since 2008, 2009 or something like that. It’s kind of strange for a school that close to us.
I think it’s reflective of what’s going on in college football and it’s a reality of the whole thing. So the whole series has taken on much different light, but all that being said it gets down to being a conference game that’s extremely important this Saturday.
Q. Couple position questions. Who takes Ihmir’s 52 snaps that he played the other day at Northwestern? Who steps up there? And also, you’ve still got Coy Cronk at right tackle, is that accurate on the first team or did Kallenberger unseat him on Saturday?
KIRK FERENTZ: At the receiver position, obviously Ihmir is not going to play. Tyrone Tracy is going to get more reps out of that, and Charlie Jones, and we’ll go from there. Those two guys are next in line for the most work, certainly.
With the line position, we’re hoping to start the same group we started last week. We’ll just see how the week goes. One good thing is right now I think we probably have seven, eight guys who we are pretty comfortable playing. That’s what we’ve been doing and we’ll just — no matter who starts a game, I would assume we’ll keep rotating players through there and giving them all work because they have earned that right right now.
Q. I wanted to ask about Spencer and how he’s handled things after two games. Tough spot for a young quarterback to come in and start 0-2. How has he responded this week?
KIRK FERENTZ: Yeah, you know, I’ll add to that I said back somewhere in the summer, one thought I had based on the pandemic and just the situation, it would be good this year to be well-endowed genetically. You know, a team that’s got genetics for experience is a good thing and that’s certainly an experienced quarterback.
We don’t have an experienced quarterback. That is one thing that’s a little bit different I’ve referenced. We’ve had a lot of first-year quarterbacks have a lot of success. Those guys all had spring ball and a normal camp going into the season, and they had the month of September to kind of build up to Big Ten play but that’s not the case.
So we are right in league play. Spring ball, nobody had it, or at least not many people had. I shouldn’t say nobody.
So those are things he’s working through but I think he’s doing a really good job. He had a couple tough series this past game in the second half. But I’m thinking back to 2009 when James Vandenberg, coming in against Northwestern for Ricky, and a week later went to Ohio State gave us every chance to win that football game and played his tail off.
So that’s week-to-week. He’s a young guy. He’s quality. We all believe in him, and he’s done a lot of good things already and I think all of us are really confident he’s just going to keep getting better as we go, and we are looking forward to seeing him play this Saturday.
Q. Curious about on your depth chart, Nick DeJong was listed as the No. 2 right tackle. I know he was a walk-on, but pretty good athlete in high school. What has helped him vault into that territory and how do things set with him and, say, Mark Kallenberger on the depth chart?
KIRK FERENTZ: Mark is our next tackle in, for the record there. We’ve got Nick. We’ve got Jack Plumb. Those would be our five guys that are playing tackle right now.
We think Nick is a good prospect. I kind of half-smiled when you were talking about him because I think he was quarantined like 45 days this summer, something like that, and he needed to be training. But instead, he was — I don’t know what they do on quarantine, play video games or watch movies, Netflix, whatever, so it was unfortunate for him.
He’s done a really good job. He’s kind of quietly done some good things in practice over the last two years here. We are very impressed with him. I think he’s got a chance to become a good player here. I’m not sure he knows how much potential he has at this point, but hopefully he’ll keep pushing forward, and that goes back to the pandemic thing. These quarantines were just killers. I mean, first of all, if a guy is sick, you worry about them and fortunately we haven’t really had anybody that’s had any complications, nothing really major at all.
But the quarantines, when guys just had to sit idle for two weeks,that just was hard and Nick unfortunately. Made his training hard. It’s made the challenge a little bit tougher for him but he’s doing a good job. Great to have him back on the field, whether it’s been four, five weeks and just doing really, really well. We’re excited about him and we’ll just see how things go.