KIRK FERENTZ: Good afternoon to everybody. I’ll just say a couple words about last week and then look forward to this Saturday’s game.
Last Saturday was certainly a unique experience, and the bottom line is I was happy for our team to win the game, obviously, and see a great performance by our guys.
I thought they did a really good job, staff, players, everybody involved. Always good to get the win. It was a team effort and all three phases contributed. A lot of good things, a lot of things to teach off of off that tape, like every week.
Certainly, it was very different not being there, and it was a little bit of a unique experience.
Illinois State is very well-coached. We knew that. I thought they competed hard and made it tough on us in a lot of areas.
First half, our defense did a great job, special teams did a nice job, and the offense worked through some things, especially early in the first quarter. Bottom line is they worked through that. The penalties in the first half were a major factor. I think we had 6 for 45.
It’s not so much the yardage as it is just how the penalties impact things, and one of those was on special teams, really costly, as well. That was like a flashback right to our Kids’ Day practice at Kinnick, the ninth or tenth practice.
But almost like a direct correlation. That certainly was a better situation in the second half. We had one for five yards and played a lot cleaner. That helped.
Good to see the offensive execution in the second half. Looked a lot better. Defense kept playing; special teams did a good job. Good to be back in the facility Sunday and see everybody in person and have a chance to congratulate them on their effort and just playing through the bumps and going the full 60, doing a good job there.
Moving forward to this week, we have the same four captains: Jay Higgins, Quinn Schulte, Luke Lachey and Cade McNamara. It’s the same four guys there.
Injury-wise, we’re pretty clean. Looked like we came out of it in pretty good shape. Hopefully we make it throughout the week without any issues.
This game, obviously, is a big game. It’s a rivalry game. Certainly it’s been intense for a long time. It’s my 34th experience, I’ve seen a lot of different things throughout the course of that time. But bottom line is it’s a good game for our state. It’s good for everybody if they’re involved in football and like football.
On top of it, It’s probably a little bit underappreciated outside of our state in terms of the intensity of the rivalry and the way the players go after it each and every time.
It’s really a good football game.
Talking about Iowa State. They are a good football program and a good football team. I have a lot of admiration for their staff. They have a really good coaching staff. They’ve done a great job since Coach Campbell arrived. They have a veteran football team. They’ve recruited well, they coach their guys well, and each and every year there’s a good program and a good team.
Look at the last six years, I think it’s a five-point whatever differential between the two teams, so I would expect the same thing Saturday. Another tough competitive hard-fought game. That’s what we’re looking at there.
Kid Captain this week is eight year old Atlas Coleman from West Des Moines. Atlas they discovered in a tumor in Atlas’ lung a year and a half. They had to take that out and then found a really rare form of cancer that they had to work through, and glad to say he’s doing really well.
He’s in school and like every other kid having a good time. Apparently he has a good sense of humor, tells jokes and just a great young guy. It’ll be good to have him and his family here with us. Look forward to that.
Again, a big game here, big rivalry, and we turned the page yesterday, moved on towards our preparation here, and a big challenge right now is getting through this week and just doing a great job with our preparation knowing it’s going to be a tough game on Saturday.
Q. What can you tell us about your experience on Saturday. Were you like a coach? Were you more like a fan? Did you have a little tailgate —
KIRK FERENTZ: There was no tailgate (laughter).
Q. Describe as much as you can.
KIRK FERENTZ: Actually I had a grandson in the house, so got up, had two scrambled eggs, nothing too dramatic.
But when the game started, it’s different watching it on TV. It’s really different. You can see better. That’s one thing. I had a nice surface to write on, which was the second thing. So I guess those are two upgrades.
But outside of that, there wasn’t much good about it. It’s sterile, and you’re pretty much helpless. Not that I do a lot during games anyway, I’m not playing, but you have a total feeling of disconnection, so it was really strange.
Q. In the second half there was six offensive possessions; scored a touchdown on five of them. What’s going through your head as you see that unfold?
KIRK FERENTZ: Yeah, it felt a lot better watching, from where I was watching. Life was a lot better in the second half.
Again, that’s the study in offense. Execution is a huge part of the game. It takes a lot of concentration, a lot of detail.
I think one thing for sure, the penalty situation did impact us in the first half. Second thing, we didn’t really throw or catch. The throws weren’t always accurate. Then we made some of those throws in the second half, and we caught the ball well.
It gives you a chance to get going. Then the run game was a little cleaner and crisper.
Those are things you go through. We’re going to go through a series of things over the course of the season. As much as you try in camp and you try to put the guys in pressure situations and create things and all that, it’s not the same as playing the game.
Until you get in the game, you don’t know how individuals are going to perform or how they’re going to play, and then the other component is just the same thing to be said about your team, you just don’t know how they’re going to respond to those situations. We’ll have a bunch of them here in the next 11 games out there. You just don’t know what they are.
But the biggest takeaway for me was the guy our guys stuck together. They kept a good attitude. I’m not so sure how many adjustments got made at halftime, but we just made a little cleaner in that second half.
Then when you do that, you give yourself a chance for some success.
Q. Cade, like the rest of the offense, had a really strong second half. I know a lot of what we’ve talked about here is the fact that he hasn’t been healthy, and now we got to see him play healthy. Just your thoughts. Were you impressed with what he did in the second half —
KIRK FERENTZ: Absolutely.
Q. Are you feeling more confident going into this second week? Where are you with Cade and his performance?
KIRK FERENTZ: I’ve been saying it pretty consistently. You can’t quantify this. It’s just going off experience.
But I think to me, at least, one of his biggest challenges, firstly, getting through the injury was his first challenge, first and foremost. I will say this after watching TV: If I hear one more thing about ACL repairs — this is 2024. There’s a lot of guys playing college football and pro football that have had ACL repairs, so to me it’s so far in the rearview mirror right now. But nonetheless, it was the reality it was a reality certainly this last year to deal with it.
But more importantly it was getting back into football shape, if you will, and playing in a team environment, not a 7-on-7 environment, which he hasn’t really done for two years as a healthy player.
To see him keep his attitude positive and keep working through it — he was much cleaner in the second half, and that’s what you hope a guy is going to do.
He has game experience. That’s in his pocket. That’s a good thing for him. But that two-year gap is something that he’s had to work through.
It was good to see him. He looked relaxed, looked confident, and that was in the second half, and those are positive things. You can’t hand that to a player. They have to go out and experience it and earn it.
Q. I don’t remember seeing Jaziun Patterson out there on Saturday. Can you kind of comment on his status, and do you have a sense of how quickly Seth Anderson could get back on the field?
KIRK FERENTZ: Yeah, so Jaz, that was a coach’s decision to keep him out. He was back with us yesterday, and we expect him to be ready to roll this week. Great young guy. Just something we decided to do.
Seth, his injury is not as bad maybe as we thought initially, but nonetheless, I guess it was last Wednesday — I think we met Tuesday, so the next day, of course. It doesn’t look as bad right now. We’ll probably know more by the end of the week, but it won’t be this week. Hopefully we’re talking about a week or two, not multiple weeks.
Q. I thought a great stat that came out of the game last Saturday was Reece Vander Zee was the first true freshman wide out for Iowa to score a touchdown in the season opener since 2006. He obviously had two in the game, the first freshman to do that since 2017. When was it, if there was a moment, that you saw in practice that this was the type of guy who could make an impact at such a young age, and if it wasn’t a moment, what did you see that gave you confidence in him?
KIRK FERENTZ: Yeah, I’ll go back to recruiting him. We were excited about him. I saw him two years ago. I saw Zach Lutmer playing basketball, and he was out there playing, and I got to go out there and see him during our bye week last week; saw a couple games that night.
Just liked that he was playing quarterback; just liked kind the way he handles himself, carries himself. And then it was frustrating during the summer because he had a multitude of things that kind of held him back from the summer program, just general training. He missed a lot of time that way. Fortunately he was able to get back and get going.
Since we’ve been in practice he just carries himself well. I don’t know how well you know him. I don’t want to say he’s expressionless, but he doesn’t get real demonstrative, just very steady, focused and mature for his age and his experience level. He just continues to grow, continues to do a good job with whatever we throw at him, and as we went on, just became apparent to us that he’s probably the guy to have in there.
I thought, again, just watching on it TV, it looked like he performed well the other day. I am not on the sidelines seeing him and all those things, but he just seemed to handle things in stride.
It’s not too big for him, and he certainly likes to compete, and it was good to see him go up with his hands and catch balls and make some plays for us.