KIRK FERENTZ: Welcome to game week, finally here. It’s good to end of camp and begin preparation for Saturday.
As i indicated last Thursday, the guys have done a good job during camp, and I thought the last week went really well. Saw some sharper execution out there. Overall we are pretty healthy. Phil (Parker) really is the worst injury we had, which we will try to keep him safe this week.
Happy with what we’ve seen. I think we’re getting good leadership and pretty consistent on that for most of the year. It’s been consistent as we’ve moved forward.
Then the challenge over the weekend and then starting this week is transitioning into normal student life. A lot more activity in Iowa City this past week or so. Our guys are out there with the student body now, they’re back in classes, and we’ve had a spike in heat, too. So a couple things going on that way.
Anyway, good to be in game week, that’s for sure. I think the team’s excited about having a chance to play in Kinnick. First game challenges are always a challenge. If you have veteran players who are a little more used to it, for a lot of the new guys, it’s going to be a totally new experience, having fans there, and then your first game, there’s a lot of unknowns with your opponent. But that’s kind of where it’s at.
Moving forward to the game, our captains are Jay Higgins, Quinn Schulte, Luke Lachey and Cade McNamara.
Transitioning to Illinois State, obviously a good program. They were 6-5 last year. Of those five losses, four of those were by eight combined points. Played in a lot of close games. Coach Spack been there since ’09. I’ve known Brock for quite some time. A lot of respect for him as a player back in the ’80s when he played at Purdue, outstanding player for them there.
He’s had a great career in coaching. Certainly is a big part of the success Purdue had when Joe Tiller was the head coach there. When we got there, they were awfully tough to beat, and Brock was a big part of that, being the defensive coordinator.
I’ve gotten to know him over the years. An outstanding person and a good football coach. And then if you look broader, a lot of the guys on the staff have experience Illinois State. Yeah they have an identity, its no big surprise. It’s a veteran staff for the most part. I think they have a good idea what they want to do, what they want to accomplish. A lot of respect for them that way.
Football-wise, they have a lot of returners back on both sides of the ball plus special teams. Their specialists are back for the most part. Pretty balanced offensively, run/pass. They get the ball pretty quick, so it’s hard to get to their quarterback. Defensively, it’s a little bit of a different preparation because they have a three-man front, and we’ve been practicing against four basically all camp. So some adjustment there.
As you might imagine, they have a good pressure package. I think we had one of Brock’s blitzes up on our board for about three years, I think it was ’02, ’03, ’04, one of those memorable ones. Again, I’m sure we’ll see some things on Saturday that will be a challenge for us. And as I mentioned, their specialists are back on special teams.
Good football team. We expect them to be a tough, competitive football team like they have been in the past. That’s what we have to get ready for.
Finally, we are thrilled that the Kid Captain program is still going. I think it was 2009 when they started that. It’s just a really good concept, and a nice way to honor special people. This week it will be Carter Schmidt who is from Coralville. His grandfather, Kent Ellis, was a captain here in 1980, a little connection to the program that way.
Carter had a rare form of leukemia early in his life and had a bone marrow transplant right before his first birthday and has been treated since. Looks like he’s in great shape. He’s been pronounced clear and cured. So really happy about that. He’s an active 8-year-old right now, who likes to ride his bike. Very involved in sports.
Then the last thing, just want to pay tribute to Don Suchy, who played here in ’56. Don passed away earlier this month from Belle Plaine. Played center on the ’56 team, second team All-American, first team All-Big Ten. Served as an honorary captain back here in ’04 for our Kent State game and just a first class guy. Had a long and productive life. Our feelings to his family certainly. Just a great guy.
I’ll throw it out for questions.
Q. The depth chart that just came out, Kamari Moulton at RB 1, who’s probably the splashiest update there. Sort of how has he ascended to that spot, and what are you looking to see from guys like Leshon and Kaleb?
KIRK FERENTZ: I figured that might get everybody’s attention, but it’s more a by-product of what’s going on. Leshon missed some time. He’s had an injury that nagged pretty much throughout camp, so Kamari got a lot of work this August.
The other component there is Kamari’s done a nice job. I mentioned that or alluded to that back in December. He started to look comfortable and did a lot of good things, did a good job in the spring and has just been consistent all the way through August.
They’re all going to play, but he’s really done a nice job. Leshon has only been back maybe 10 days, and it looks like he’s good to go. It’s just he had a long, nagging injury that took a while to work through, but happy he’s back.
The other guys have done a good job too. I feel pretty good about the group. I’m eager to see them play, and Kamari especially, we haven’t really seen him go in game activity.
Q. I think this off-season you alluded to Michael Penix Jr., in the context of Cade, and like Michael Penix was someone that had major surgical repairs and came back. Not that those two guys are exactly the same, but could you just kind of expand on the context of maybe how you see guys coming — the ability to come back from multiple major injuries.
KIRK FERENTZ: I’ll put it in the context that I’ve sat in a lot of meetings, medical meetings and academic meetings, but a lot of medical meetings, since, you know 26 years now. We had one last night.
I don’t pretend to know anything about medicine, but you listen, and you pay attention. Then also you witness things. I can go back just the contrast between the ’80s, ’90s, and now. The way all injuries are different now. Certainly an ACL repair is much, much different than it was 40 years ago. Labral surgeries have come a long way. Most of them are arthroscopic. The bottom line is this, ACL repairs, it’s our experience it just takes time to get them back.
Koen Entringer came back from his in record speed. That’s one end of the spectrum. Sometimes they’re slower. I think they’re different for every individual, just like any injury.
But the bottom line is a player has to get confidence in his body and confidence that he can do what he has to do to perform whatever his position may be.
Nothing’s routine medically, but it would be unusual for a player to be deterred from an injury like Cade had, and it was a very clean repair. Again, I’m no expert on medicine, but it’s always good when they say everything’s clean, really nice repair, and that type of thing. It’s a matter of time for the physical component and then also where a player gets the confidence.
I think that open scrimmage is really the first time I saw him look like he just kind of put it aside, and we’ve seen a lot of those pictures since then. I think he’s more than ready to go and really confident in his body.
Q. Obviously a little different this week with you not being there on Saturday. How do you prepare for that, and what’s your approach at the wide receiver spot in terms of who’s spending the most time with them?
KIRK FERENTZ: A couple things. Those are things we’re working through this week and haven’t really talked much about. I’ll start that tomorrow. Thursday is really our day to talk about all those things.
I can think of one good thing about this, at least I can blame, if something happens Saturday, I can say I don’t know why they did that. Something stupid. So there’s a positive in this whole deal.
In all seriousness, no, I think it’s going to be pretty much business as usual. Tim would be the guy I go to to refer what do you think about this, this, and this on offense? Phil, LeVar, and Seth will do the same thing. We talk about a lot of things on Thursdays about what we do fourth down, four down territory, all those kinds of things, this situation, that situation.
The only missing part is, when you get in a game sometimes there’s a feel that flies in the face of maybe what you decide on Thursday, and sometimes you’ve just got to make a call and go with a gut instinct. If that be the case, Seth will do a great job with that. He’ll have the final say on all of that stuff, but we’ll talk a lot of those things out. And the receiver thing, we’ll work out internally.
As I said last week, we have a really good staff, and the guys, young and old, the full-time coaches, but also the GAs, part-time guys, and we’ll get it done. We’ll cover that.
Q. Kirk, TJ Hall listed as cornerback too. There’s no doubt John Nestor is probably going to get significant time and Deshaun Lee, but what were the one or two things that kind of gave TJ Hall just the extra edge over the other two?
KIRK FERENTZ: Probably the consistency. It’s gone back and forth. It’s a little like the running back position. Difference is most of those guys have been available, the four corners have been competing and practicing. Probably a little consistency thing, but it’s still really close.
We have a lot of positions right now where we’ve got to start somewhere Saturday and start somewhere this week when we practice with our first team. I will say this, it won’t surprise me, especially in certain groups, where it may take a month to figure out like where we’re at.
I say that in a positive way because I think we have a lot of young guys right now that we’re going to learn a lot more about them. John Nestor is a good example. He hasn’t played an awful lot. We’ve seen him on special teams. To see him in game action, we’ll learn a lot about them. Our receiver room is a lot like that.
The back thing will probably sort itself out, but I think we have a lot of guys that are capable. That’s part of the process as we move forward. It will be interesting to see what it looks like six weeks from now as opposed to just this Saturday.