KIRK FERENTZ: I’ll talk a little bit about Saturday and then look forward to this week. First and foremost, as I said after the game, good to get the win. Troy competed hard. We expected that. They really did a good job in certain areas, made some big plays, and credit to their execution on that.
I thought our guys handled adversity pretty well. It wasn’t great at halftime, they came out and did a better job in the second half. It’s certainly good to get some points, finish some drives. That being said, we left two of them on the table out there with a lack of a conversion on 4th and 1 — that was really communication more than anything else — and then missed on a makeable third down that led to our field goal. Certainly some things that needed to get cleaned up.
Then the big plays, both fundamentals, but communication, as well. So a couple things involved in that.
The one thing I do know is giving up big plays makes it tough to play winning football, so it’s something we have to get corrected. We’ve been victimized by that now two weeks in a row.
Again, it’s really not a matter of effort, it’s a little better job with communication and a better job with good fundamental play out there. We’re certainly going to have to improve as we start to move into conference play now.
Now we head to Minnesota on Saturday, first league game and first road game. Big on a couple fronts, and most importantly we’re playing a really good football team, a veteran and confident football team. They play extremely hard and they’re playing really well right now.
Our captains will be the same four guys: Jay Higgins, Quinn Schulte, Luke Lachey and Cade McNamara, so we have those four guys leading us again. Injury wise, Leshon left the game on Saturday. I don’t see him having a chance to return this week, so hopefully we’ll get him back soon in the future. But I don’t think this week is reasonable for him to be in there.
It’s a rivalry game, trophy game. That says enough right there. But most importantly, if you look at the series the last three games, they have been decided by 10 points.
I think that just kind of tells you the nature of the series and what it’s all about. My guess is this game will probably fall in line with that. As I said, they have a very good football team, they’re veteran, play extremely hard, well-coached, and they’re playing with a lot of confidence right now, and rightfully so.
A tough loss in the first game, they come back, and they’ve looked really good the last two weeks. They have good experience across the board and I would include the quarterback. He’s a new player, but he is an older guy and is experienced. He’s playing well for them. He’s fit right in with, I think, what they were looking for.
I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention their kicker and punter. They have two outstanding specialists. The kicker was the kicker of the year in the Big Ten last year, and the punter is a veteran guy, very talented, very strong punter. They’re really good in that area.
Again, back to back shutouts, tough to beat that.
The Kid Captain this week, I know we’re going to be on the road, but Aiden Washburn will be with us from Keokuk. Had a rare heart condition, had a couple surgeries, basically his first week on earth here, and had another one at six months and another one at three and a half. As he tells his friends, he has a special heart. He’s fought some issues there and is on the transplant list.
But right now, a healthy and happy third grader. I’ve been told he likes science, likes reading and swimming, as well. He’ll be in our thoughts as we travel up to Minneapolis.
Q. You’ve integrated Brendan into that goal line package. Would you ever think about maybe 3rd and short, those 4th down plays, maybe integrate him into that, as well?
KIRK FERENTZ: We’ll see. Right now we haven’t given it a lot of thought, but we’ll see. Just happy to get him involved. He’s practiced well, done some good things. Certainly gives us a little different dimension. Those are things we might consider as we move forward.
Q. Quite the first three games for Jacob Gill leading the team in receptions. How have you seen him adjust from not being here in the spring to kind of getting up to speed so quickly and adding a different dimension to his offense?
KIRK FERENTZ: It’s a credit to him because to your point, I think the most significant point is he got here in June, late, newcomer, wanted to finish up school at his previous stop. I think it’s a real credit to him. He’s a little bit like Nick Jackson or Rusty Feth a year ago, came in after spring ball, but those guys really got up to speed fast, and I think the biggest thing is everything about him is really impressive. He’s just a very mature, serious, focused guy, and that’s a room that was lacking of experience and lacking production.
I think as much as anything, we wanted to get a guy who’s been around a little bit and has gone through this, and he just really operates at a really high level. Most importantly, practices really well, and that’s how he plays, as well.
Q. Have you ever gotten any answer why you guys always start on the road in the Big Ten? Eighteen out of 26 now, including three in a row. But anyway, you guys have been a good road team. You’ve won six of your last seven on the road. What does it take to be a good road team, and you obviously have to be this year if you want to accomplish your goals.
KIRK FERENTZ: Yeah, if you want to be a really good football team at our level, you’re going to play at least five away games. Typically it’s 7 and 5. That’s just part of the deal.
First thing, you can’t worry too much about it, where you’re playing. I think you have to worry about the game.
Then to the point about being on the road, sometimes it’s almost good in a way because it really forces you to be even more focused, if that’s possible, and not just assume, hey, we’ve got the comforts of home and the crowd is going to be behind us and all that. We know it’s going to be exactly the opposite of that.
That’s the great thing about playing in our conference. Everywhere you go, it’s good venues to play in, historic, and a lot of tradition. It gets down to being able to focus on what is important, realize it’s not a field trip. We’re going up there to do something, and there’s only 72 of us, so it’s a little smaller number. That’s what you have on the sideline.
It’s basically us against whoever is there in the stadium, and most importantly the opponent.
Q. I know you’ve said the last few years about you can’t microwave, offensive line, it has to develop, and it seems to be developing to that level that you want, at least the way it appears. There was a block I think it was on Kaleb’s second touchdown where Nick DeJong was able to go from right tackle to execute a reach on a linebacker which is almost impossible. How has the line grown now? Has it kind of reached that point that you want it to reach, and is that why it’s executing at a high level?
KIRK FERENTZ: It’s a process, and we are gaining ground. We’re not there yet.
But I think we’re getting better, and the things that you referenced takes some experience. It takes a lot of work on the field and in the meeting rooms, too. Guys have a real opportunity to really learn and move and improve in the meeting rooms.
But the most important work is what they do on the field, and thinking about some plays that didn’t look so good today, frustration, and failure is part of getting better, though, too. You’ve got to go through some things and sometimes try to match what you’re doing against maybe what they’re doing, and it doesn’t always look pretty at this, but if we can get there by Saturday it would be a good thing.
I think the thing is the guys are more confident right now. They’re certainly more physically mature than they’ve been, and we’re healthier, too, so all those things help. George does a great job with those guys.
But it’s a process, and if we’re doing it right, we’ll get better week to week, and hopefully by mid-season or so we’re really starting to have some proficiency.
Q. After the Nebraska game last year, you had mentioned that no official had gone up to you before the game and said, you can’t do this, this is an invalid fair catch. I was curious since that play happened last year, has that come up in a pre-game talk with the officials, and is it clear to you now what an illegal fair catch is?
KIRK FERENTZ: I think we’re all on the same page on that. I go back to Michigan, I think it was ’06, we were up there, and there was like a six-minute review, and that’s where the issue starts, coming to play, and then when you’re told we’re reviewing one thing and then we get a different interpretation about something else, those lacks of communication, or that lack of communication I think is a little disturbing afterwards.
I do think we addressed that in the out of season as a conference. I think we’re in a better place right now.
Bottom line, I think that play was open for interpretation, but it was more about the process afterwards that was kind of troubling. It is kind of what it is.
But I think we have in the out of season cleaned that up a little bit.
Q. I know through the first few weeks part of the conversation around Cade is him getting back into game shape and really feeling like he’s in the flow of a game. He made it sound like he feels like he’s there or at least it’s progressing. Do you feel the same way?
KIRK FERENTZ: We’ll see. I don’t mean that in a negative way by any stretch. But we’ve played three weeks right now, and I can’t stand here in front of you and say we’ve played a complete game start to finish yet. I wasn’t here for the first one, but I watched it.
So we’ve had peaks and valleys. As I said, the good thing is we’ve faced some adversity the other day, and it could have gotten worse after that muffed punt, too, just for the record. Nestor did a good job being there and scooping that thing up, but that could have been interesting. We’re at 17-14 at that point and the ball is at mid-field.
Those things are going to be good for us in the long run. I’d just as soon not have to go through all of them that we’ve done.
I think to the point, whether it be Cade or the offensive line, hopefully our best football is in front of us. That’s the way it’s got to work and does typically work for us. I know more about our program than I do others, but that’s usually how it works.
But we have to be working at it and doing right, and I do think he’s more comfortable now, and now the challenge is can we keep it going week to week knowing that the degree of difficulty is going to get a little tougher, too, because these guys — two straight shutouts in a row, so it’s going to be a big challenge for us.
Q. Last week I know we talked about Jay a little bit, but today Jay Higgins told us that the game at Minnesota in 2020 was the first game in which he got defensive snaps as a Hawkeye. He’s kind of reflecting on just his career a little bit, a full-circle moment here this season. Can you reflect a little bit on what he’s meant to this team over the last few years especially?
KIRK FERENTZ: Yeah, first comment is a rare regular season game played in December, not to mention at night in Minnesota.
But yeah, Jay has been great. I can’t say enough about him. I said this back in the summertime, in this modern era of cut and run, not that everybody does that, but it seems to be pretty popular, he ends up sitting behind a guy named Jack Campbell, who’s pretty good, and Jay recognized that, and instead of running from Jack, he went and ran to him and listened and really watched him, most importantly. I think he watched how Jack operated, not that Jay didn’t already know how to operate. But good players tend to gravitate towards good players, and Jay was always eyes and ears, and he’s learned from the best of the guys in our program.
Now he’s become one of the best of our guys ever. He’s always had a great personality. Does a lot of football, which as silly as that sounds, it’s a real starting point to being a great player in my opinion. Lives for it. Last night I think I saw him going downstairs about 8:30 p.m. I’m sitting at my desk and if my door is open I can watch guys go up and down the steps. He’s going home at 8:30, so he’s back there watching tape. Good things don’t happen by accident.
I’m not trying to compare him to Ray Lewis but Ray was a rookie all of our first years in Baltimore, and you could hear Ray just about anytime, anywhere, but the one thing about him, boy, I’ll tell you, nobody worked harder than him. Same deal like early in the morning, there late at night, that type of stuff. You wonder why great players are great players, there’s a dedication. Just the way they study it and the way they approach it. They’ve also got some humility, and Jay has got all those things. He’s done a great job, and we’re thrilled he’s on our team.