COACH FERENTZ: Good afternoon, everybody. To start, a couple words about setbacks. Obviously, everybody in Kinnick on Saturday witnessed us experiencing one of those.
I know a lot of people are disappointed, certainly our fans. But I can assure you nobody is more disappointed than the people directly involved, especially our players. They invest an awful lot.
Needless to say, anytime you experience a setback, it’s painful. One thing for sure, I’ll share it with the team, you don’t get second chances and you don’t get games back. That’s part of the big deal.
Big takeaway is it’s one game and we still have 10 opportunities in front of us so that’s a big takeaway there.
Unfortunately, setbacks are part of every season. It’s not always in the form of a loss, but always you have challenges and that’s one of the axioms of going into a season, just understanding there’s going to be things that happen that aren’t planned, maybe not wanted. And how you deal with those is what is important and that’s kind of where our focus is.
That’s what we do on Sundays — learn from what took place and then begin working through it. And the biggest thing is how you choose to respond. It’s been that way forever in sports. So that’s the big takeaway there.
That was the message postgame. It was the message Sunday. And it’s quiet here Sunday and business-like, all that type of thing. But win, lose, draw, there’s always learning opportunities. I think it’s the most important thing that gets done. So I think that got done.
And then just specifically I really don’t feel a lot different than I did after the ball game. The major takeaways, we had good field position — one off a turnover, one off a really good drive. Ball down inside the 5 and didn’t come out with a touchdown in either case. So those were certainly big factors in the ball game, the outcome.
Three of their scoring drives were on four big plays, and I think you’ve heard me say before defensively it kind of starts with that. You want to make people work, you want to make them earn what they get, and those four plays really altered the course of the game.
So that was the takeaway on Sunday, and then we moved forward yesterday and began working on Troy.
Couple words about them. They were an 11-win team last year. Had a really good football team. And now they’re a team in transition, if you will. They have a new coaching staff. Previous staff moved on. And a lot of new players, too.
So it’s kind of unique that we’ve played two straight games now where both staffs were very established. The programs were established. Knew for the most part who the players were and what their tendencies were going to be.
Now we’re piecing those things together a little bit and just, A, trying to figure out what to expect, what to match up against; and then secondly, you always have to project a little bit because they’re in the middle of installing new systems. So I’m not sure what their players are capable of taking or not taking, so what kind of changes we’ll see from the first two games as part of the game that goes on.
But bottom line is this: If we’re going to match-up against them, we have to be sound and have to be flexible not knowing exactly what’s going to happen. Every week that’s the first challenge is matching up against your opponent. And the bigger challenge is working to improve and working in the efficiency areas that we identify. So really no different than any other week that way.
Captains this week are the same four guys — Jay Higgins, Quinn Schulte, Luke Lachey and Cade McNamara.
Lastly, I’ll tell you a little bit about our Kid Captain. Mya Gilchrist from Center Point will be with us on Saturday. When she was young, just an infant, she was diagnosed with a tumor on her brainstem. 18-month-old at that point and was treated at Stead Family Hospital. And unfortunately the cancer reappeared at age 5 and then again at age 12. Treated again and then was doing really well.
About a year ago she was tired, kind of sluggish, and they discovered she had a rare form of blood cancer. So she’s had a lot of battles and doing really well right now. She’s an 18-year-old who is doing very well. And it will be great to have her with us. Obviously, she really epitomizes how to handle setbacks, if anything else. We’re excited to have her join us.
Q. I don’t know if you thought about this but the game the other day had so many analogies to the 2002 Iowa State game. You ran the ball great, veteran team, big second half lead that melted away. Kind of some weird stuff happened, I guess. I just wonder if you drew that comparison. And also I know it was a long time ago, but what did that particular team do to move on from such a disappointment in that way?
COACH FERENTZ: I can even top you on that one. Coincidentally, Brad Banks was here on Sunday in the office, he was at the game, came through, we got to spend time with him. Talked about the game. The thing about Brad’s story and probably that team’s story is how he did respond. Everybody knows Brad Banks, player of the year, runner-up to the Heisman. And obviously played really well all season long.
But what an easy path. And what you’re referencing there, that third quarter, especially, was really rough. I share that story a lot with our players annually, just that the essence of what Brad did that year is, in my opinion — I don’t think anybody felt worse, talk about investment — nobody feels worse after a game in that case than him.
But he went back to work. Brad’s pretty unflappable. That’s one characteristic I think he really embodies.
Two years later we’re in the very same situation. Big lead at Penn State and all of a sudden that fourth quarter disappeared and we’re in overtime. I would suggest a big part of the reason we won that game was Brad’s performance in overtime.
It’s one of those stories I cover annually with the team. And that’s the right idea. Like, that’s what you’re looking to do and the rest is history, not that the whole season was smooth but it was hard.
So those are things we talk about in camp. It’s part of the curriculum, if you will. And during the season you’re going to encounter disappointments. That’s one of the more disappointing losses I’ve ever been involved with on a personal basis.
But life goes on. It’s what you do in response that really matters.
Q. I wanted to ask you about the run game where it looks like you’re not necessarily running the same type of outside slant; it’s more of a tighter slant that’s maybe more directed towards the tackle. And it also seems like your guards are able to be tighter in the way they get to the second level. How did that evolution take place? And so far, through two games, it seems to have some really good results?
COACH FERENTZ: I mean, technically, there are a couple of slants we have. One is wider, to your point, and then one is a little tighter, to your point. And then also an inside zone scheme and a couple other things with it.
But bottom line, and what you saw Saturday, the way they play their defense, their interior guys really squeeze the line. That’s why our guards were coming off the way they were on the linebackers. Against other teams you may get guys that are playing deeper and coming over the top. That kind of dictates what the guard’s path is going to be.
It’s a tough defense to run against. I thought we did some good things there and some good awareness by the guys involved in it. But we don’t have it figured out. I can promise you, if you were at today’s practice you’d see some things that need to get cleaned up.
But a lot of it is dictated by, again, we do have a couple of different calls there — but it’s dictated by how the defense played. And Iowa State was really aggressive inside the tackle box.
Q. You mentioned Brad Banks, in particular. In 2001, there were a few instances, a few series where you brought him in to relieve McCann, just as sort of a change of pace sort of guy. When you look at the QB situation this season, is there ever a situation where you’re thinking that maybe Sullivan can be that change of pace, faster QB for somebody like McNamara?
COACH FERENTZ: It’s twofold with Brad. Part was he was a different kind of quarterback than Kyle. We talked a lot about Kyle, too. And big takeaway for me was, and Brad shared this with a couple other people, but he learned. He learned from Kyle.
There’s a lot of good things that he brought up that day just watching how Kyle performed during the 2001 season, his takeaways from it. I thought they were really pretty astute.
So they’re two different guys. But our thinking was Brad was a guy that we thought had a good future here a year later, and we’re going to get him involved in possible weekly. But that was dictated by Brad’s performance in practice.
We’ll keep an open mind to anything. Obviously if it’s going to help us win games now, that’s the first priority. And secondly, if a player — we rotate at other positions — it’s a little tougher at quarterback. It would take the right guy. But Brad certainly was the right guy.
Q. First of all, injury question. Seems like it’s just Seth and Jayden at this point that are still out?
COACH FERENTZ: Looks like Jayden will miss this one. Got a couple guys that are limited in practice right now. Hopefully they’ll be ready by game time.
Q. Would Seth be limited?
COACH FERENTZ: No, I don’t see that happening this week. He’s missed too much time. But hopefully moving forward. Hopefully.
Q. With Kaleb Johnson, what’s the biggest thing you’ve seen from him this year compared to last year?
COACH FERENTZ: I think maturity and focus. It’s like any player. It’s rare for a freshman to play a veteran guy — rare. But he did a lot of good things the last two years. I think he has a much better feel for what he’s doing.
He’s a little bit more patient than he was. He’s running really strong. Obviously had some really nice runs the other day. I thought his best runs were at the end of the game where he ran strong and broke some tackles. There wasn’t a lot there but he was making yards.
So to me, if he can keep integrating that into his style of play, that’s really going to help us.
Q. When Kaleb’s playing the way he is, when the O-line is playing the way they are, like, I guess from the Xs and Os standpoint, what does that do for the passing game? What are opportunities you’re seeing that are opening up as a result of that?
COACH FERENTZ: Those are areas we were hoping we’d be able to build off of because we were a little bit more veteran, certainly up front. Outside of Kamari we’re pretty veteran at the running back position — and tight end. And you are hoping you can get something established there.
But if we’re going to play the way we want to play we’ll have to pass the ball more effectively. That certainly was a factor Saturday, and hopefully it’s just something we’ll keep getting better at as we move forward.
We’ve done some things, done some things that weren’t so good. It’s a little bit of everything — accuracy, route running, things like that, and protection at times. So those are the things that we have to piece together. And again after practice today there’s still a lot to work on. There will be all season long.