KIRK FERENTZ: Good afternoon. Good to have everybody here. Just to start out by taking a minute just to express our condolences to the Marilyn Howard family. She just passed. She's been a longtime supporter and friend of the university, and she and her husband have been very generous contributors and supporters, not only in athletics but the entire university. They really stepped forward in a big way when we did this project. I've developed a relationship with her family. They're great people.
Marilyn in particular, she had a really serious health challenge about 15, 17 years ago and spent some time in a facility in Ankeny, and thought that might be the end of the line for her. She rallied from that, and had a very full and exciting life since that time.
Been to a lot of things with her family, and my biggest takeaway is what a positive person and strong-willed person she was. So it was always a delight to have a chance to visit with her.
All that being said, our condolences certainly go out to her family, her daughters, Donna and Diane and then sons Steve and Scott and numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren, one of whom just finished up with us as a student manager, now in the PT school across the street here.
Our thoughts are with the entire family.
Moving forward here, step back for one second to last week's game, just really proud of the team's effort. I thought the guys played hard and showed a lot of resiliency, and that game went down for the full 60. Tremendous environment; so appreciative of our fans, as well.
I want to finish up by extending my congratulations to Xavier for being Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week. He's playing outstanding football, playing his best as a senior, something that helps any football team, and he's been a strong leader, great leader for us, so happy for him and certainly well-deserved on that one.
Transition to this game, our captains are the same: Ethan Hurkett, Koen Entringer, Logan Jones and Mark Gronowski.
Injury-wise things are looking a little bit better. Jaz and TJ have both been practicing. Looks like they're going to be okay. Jaden Harrell looks like he'll be okay. Good to have those guys back, certainly.
Luke Gaffney will not be back. He had an injury last week, something that's been ongoing, so he'll be out through the bye week. A few guys with bumps and bruises from the game on Saturday, as expected, but I think everybody has got a chance to be ready to go. That's kind of where that's at right now.
That being said, we're going to need to be at our best this Saturday. We're playing a really good Minnesota team, and they're coming off an impressive win against Nebraska last Friday. They're going to come in here with momentum.
Pretty much what you'd expect, they're a big physical team, playing well in all three areas right now. Offensively big line, a lot of experience up there, and guys doing a good job, big tight ends do a good job with them, good receiver corps.
The running backs have been really good and continue to be good. Got a returner back who's a really good player.
Then the wildcard has been the quarterback position. Playing a young guy who's done really an outstanding job, and you can see him, like their whole team, getting better week to week, so he's playing with a lot of confidence. Had a really good game the other night.
Defensively, big, strong, tough and aggressive. Their attack, very sound fundamentally. On special teams they do a great job. It's clear they invest a lot on special teams. They have good specialists, and then they have done a really good job with their core guys, guys that are active as players, but then they have a handful of guys that aren't really in their two deep but take a lot of pride in playing well on special teams. We've seen a lot of guys like that around here and take a lot of ownership. So they do a nice job there.
No. 3 is a very dangerous return guy.
All that being said, it's a big challenge for us, two 5-2 teams, so it should be a really tough Big Ten contest.
Kid Captain is Luke Johnson from Dunlap, Illinois, an eight-year-old. Great to have him with us. He had several conditions basically since birth, and on a visit here to the step family children's hospital fairly recently they discovered a spinal condition that is really rare, extremely rare, and could have led to paralysis, so they were able to discover that and then more importantly able to address it, and last Halloween actually, a 13-hour surgery, if you can imagine that. The thing he was most upset about I've been told is he missed Halloween.
The staff there did a great job trying to simulate that, dressed in costumes, et cetera, so it's going to be special for him to be with us.
Last year he was watching the wave from across the street, and now he'll be on this side of the street and leading the wave, he and his family, so we look forward to having them here.
Then the last couple things real quick, going back to the game, all of you who are paying attention to the Big Ten, a lot of competitive football, a lot of really good teams, and this is another week where we're facing a big challenge playing a really good Minnesota team.
A lot on the line certainly, a rivalry trophy involved, and we know it'll be a great environment. We'll look forward to kickoff on Saturday.
Q. In some ways it seems from the outside that Mark Gronowski kind of epitomizes what you want in your program, gritty, tough, selfless, willing to do whatever it takes to win. How quickly did he present those intangibles to you and the team, and what's been the response like from you and your team to him and the way he plays the game?
KIRK FERENTZ: It probably goes back to our first visit with him in person when he and his dad came out here in January. Probably back before even that. it's a little bit like recruiting, and obviously he wasn't recruited by the Big Ten schools or the MAAC schools I'm assuming, so a lot of people missed. I don't know how obvious it was or wasn't, but what he did at South Dakota State in a short time is impressive, and I don't think you stumble into things like that. I'm sitting here thinking about Jovon Johnson. Coach Moore was still alive at that time and he kept encouraging me to look at the film, he did everything so well, and he wasn't very tall, but he just did everything for his team.
So Mark's production at South Dakota State is so impressive. You meet him in person, he and his dad, and just tremendous people. But then to your point, it's when you're around somebody for an extensive period of time and you get to see them in a lot of conditions that that's how you really learn about people, and it's been great to be around him at every turn.
A little frustrating for everybody, especially him, not being able to go in the spring, but the way he handled that and navigated that was really impressive. Then he got going in June and really quickly earned everybody's respect, I think, internally.
Now you go through the season and watch what he's done, it's just been really impressive. To my knowledge we haven't had a quarterback like him since I've been here, and I don't think we coached one in the '80s either like him. He's a little bit unique that way. But he's got just so many good attributes that the good players typically have.
So it's been great, and he's just blended in so well with everybody here. We're glad he's with us.
Q. I want to ask you about your Kid Captain program. Since 2009, you just passed 200 Kid Captains in total. Through all the change of your program and the Big Ten has gone through, you still stand up here before every Tuesday and you tell us about the kid captain. I'm curious, what kind of example or what do you want your players to learn or what do you hope they've learned over the past over a decade?
KIRK FERENTZ: First of all, it's like the wave, too, I want to make sure the credit goes where it belongs. The wave was originally Krista Young's idea. It was somebody else that came up with this idea, this concept, and it's a wonderful thing to celebrate.
The hardest thing has got to be picking 12 captains, just limiting it to that, because all these stories are so compelling.
But I think the great part, it's a two-way street, obviously. The Kid Captains and their families really enjoy it, coming here in August and then certainly coming to be honored for a game and being recognized.
But the two-way street part of it is something we try to remind our guys all the time. We choose to do what we do, all of us who are coaching or playing, and then most importantly, it's a great reminder that we're able to do what we're able to do. Not everybody is that lucky or that fortunate.
We all think at times we've got it hard. You run into a tough situation, disappointing and all that stuff, and then you look at any one of these stories, it gives you some perspective on life. It's really healthy, I think, in this day and age. I think it's even more healthy than it's been before, and certainly it's healthy for the population that I get to work with because these guys are all -- they're fortunate to be involved in a great game like this. It's a pretty good deal.
It's a good tangible reminder for everybody that we've all got it pretty good. We think it's hard, and it is hard, but there are things that are a lot harder and more serious than that.
Q. During the bye week, Tim compared Mark's running style to Tim Tebow. From what you can remember from Tebow's time at Florida and in the NFL, is that an accurate comp, and is there any more to that comparison than just simply the physical between-the-tackles running style?
KIRK FERENTZ: Yeah, there's probably a good fair comparison there, and it's unusual. That's why Tim was famous, too. Tim Tebow. Tim Lester, as well (laughter). But Tim Tebow, it's a very unique thing. You don't see it very often.
I was just telling somebody here grabbing food this morning, I was with Mark Rypien for a year in Cleveland. It was the latter part of his career, so his best parts physically weren't there, not that he was a running quarterback like Mark is, but some similar personality attributes where the guy is older than -- and Rypien was older at that time. He was a veteran guy, had had a lot of success. But there was something about his confidence that was so -- it was understated in some ways. He got strong, if that makes any sense. I think Mark kind of leads with that kind of style.
He's very grounded, yet he commands respect. He commands attention and respect by the way he does things.
But the running part is very unique. The one up the middle the other night, it's pretty impressive.
Q. You've had countless examples of guys playing football their senior year after battling through inconsistencies or maybe some poor performances. TJ Hall just seems like he's another one of those stories or questions about the secondary entering the year, but despite not having a pick, he's been probably one of your most consistent players. What can you say about the way he's continued to attack the day and how he's grown as a leader because he seems like a guy that he doesn't speak up often, but when he does, it just seems like the secondary really responds to him.
KIRK FERENTZ: Yeah, picks are great. We're all for them, really all for them. But it doesn't tell the whole story, kind of like sacks on defense don't tell the whole story. They're great to have, but it doesn't always necessarily reflect the kind of pressure you're getting or disruption.
TJ has just been playing really well. We've been fortunate. We've historically usually had a corner, sometimes two that really kind of stabilize things, and you can help out the other guy maybe a little bit more.
Last year we didn't have that luxury -- and Deshaun has improved, as well, in my opinion, but TJ really took it another step. We kind of saw that coming over the course of spring. He just had an outstanding spring. There was a big step forward in terms of growth, confidence. A lot of that just comes from maturity and also comes from having hard times.
He's just stayed the course. He works hard, got a great attitude. He's been a strong leader. It's not always spoken, but he does a great job, and he does a great job in the building. I'll see him leaving a lot of times 8:30 at night. He'll eat and go back, watch tape, I guess. I assume that's what he's doing. He'll say goodnight as he's going down the steps. Just really dedicated. He's really enjoying things.
It's a delight to have him on our team.
Q. As the offensive line has kind of gone through the rebuild, there's been growing pains. There's been times where it hasn't been where you wanted it to be, and obviously now you're a little bit on the other side of things. I was curious how you saw George Barnett. When it wasn't where you guys wanted it to be, how he worked through that.
KIRK FERENTZ: How do I put this? It's kind of with Norm, we started out 27 years ago, Norm never stated the obvious, which I appreciated, that we had work to do, and we always tried to find the positives. Hey, what can we build off of, here's something we're doing a little bit better, and how do we build off that.
I think George clearly knew that we had work to do. We went through that the other night, whether it's injuries, guys choosing not to stay at the game, all those types of things, attrition, there's always things that happen, and you never know where it's going to hit or what position group.
But George has been so steady, rock steady since he got here. He's an excellent teacher. He does a great job with the guys, equally as important maybe more important off the field he helps keep them stable, too.
Some of the things I described the other night, guys playing before they're ready to play, they know that. The players know that. You've heard me say it a million times, you can't hand a player confidence; you've got to earn that and you've got to work through that. With the linemen it's so important to get their feet on the ground and let them really learn how to play.
So I think that's a big part of the reason why we're better, in a better place now. But George has been able to handle it, whether -- you name the challenge. He just has been rock steady with the guys, and he's an excellent technician, all that part of the stuff, it's there for him. He's got that part.
But the mental component is really important, too, and I can't imagine anybody better to do the job that he's done.
