My Iowa Hawkeye Preview was written before fall camp started and as with any preseason preview, it deserves a little update now that fall camp is in the books and the Hawkeyes kick off the season on Saturday. So here are a few updates, some thoughts, and a look at the season ahead.
The QB position worked out how I saw it coming together, Mark Gronowski is the starter, Hank Brown is the backup and Jeremy Hecklinski is the third stringer. After watching them at the open practice I’m not surprised. It wasn’t the most impressive day for Gronowski but you could see the skills he brings to the position. It’s a huge upgrade at QB, not just the starter, the whole roster at QB.
At RB, Kamari Moulton and Terrell Washington both missed a chunk of fall camp but they are still listed as the top two RBs on the two-deeps. That’s who I had and it proved to be true. One thing to keep in mind is that on the two-deeps Moulton and Washington were listed as co-starters with Jaziun Patterson and Xavier Williams listed as co-backups. The Hawkeyes have depth at RB and it shows. I think we will see them use six RBs this year after true freshman Nathan McNeil had a great camp and redshirt freshman Brevin Doll is a talented player too.
At WR, I said Sam Phillips was a wild card and he moved his way all the way to he starting lineup. Jacob Gill, Seth Anderson, and Phillips were the three listed starters. Anderson looked great at the open practice and if he can stay healthy, he’s going to have a good year. Gill is just the reliable target every QB loves. Phillips is the speed demon this offense needs to give it the big play capability it needs. Last year, almost all the big plays came in the running game from Kaleb Johnson, with Anderson and Phillips, there’s potential for big plays in the passing game. Kaden Wetjen, Reece Vander Zee, and KJ Parker are listed as the backups so there’s some real depth with Jarriet Buie and Dayton Howard not even on the depth chart.
The starting offensive line has LG Beau Stephens, C Logan Jones, RG Kade Pieper, and RT Gennings Dunker which we all knew was how it would be for those spots. LT is listed as Trevor Lauck and Jack Dotzler which means it’s still not decided. Lauck seems to be trending towards being the starter but I’m sure they will rotate, especially in the first game, to get a better idea. This could be a competition for weeks before they decide on one guy, or they could rotate them all season. Bryce George is listed as the backup LT but Lauck and Dotzler are both listed as the backups at RT so basically Dunker, Lauck, and Dotzler are the top three tackles. That doesn’t bode well for Cannon Leonard since he’s not listed on the two-deeps at all. One other thing to note is true freshman Lucas Allgeyer is listed as the backup RG, that does bode well for his future.
On the defensive line the one change of note is that Bryce Hawthorne is listed as the starting DT next to Aaron Graves. Jeremiah Pittman is still working his way back from surgery and while Jonah Pace looked like a potential starter inside, Hawthorne has really impressed the coaches. Also, Brian Allen is recovered from his off season surgeries and is listed as a backup DE while Will Hubert, a walk-on, takes the fourth DT spot. There will be a heavy rotation in the first game against Albany so we will see plenty of the young guys.
There were no surprises at the LB spots except that none of the redshirt freshman (Cam Buffington, Preston Ries, Derek Weisskopf) were listed at all. Jayden Montgomery and Landyn Van Kekerix were the only guys listed behind the starters. Jaxon Rexroth is listed as the starting LEO and the backup to Karson Sharar on the weakside.
In the secondary we got some clarity on some things and a little confusion on others. Zach Lutmer was listed as the starter at Cash with Koen Entringer set to be the strong safety. That’s good to know, however, Entringer is listed as the backup at Cash and like a co-starter with Xavier Nwankpa at FS, that’s confusing. Clearly, Entringer is going to be on the field at all times but it’s going to be interesting to see how Phil Parker uses his safeties this season.
At CB, TJ Hall and Deshaun Lee are the starters, that’s not surprising. Jaylen Watson is listed as the co-backup at both spots so that tells me he’s the third CB. Shahid Barros and Rashad Godfrey are the other listed backups so the Hawkeyes have some depth.
That is all the notes I have about the two-deeps but just a few thoughts on the season. I think Iowa’s passing game is going to be much improved. It’s not just the upgrade at QB and WR. It’s the installation of the passing scheme that Lester wasn’t really able to implement last year at all. McNamara was never healthy enough to really get it going and Sullivan wasn’t the passer you need to run it. Gronowski has the skills to actually run the offense the way Lester wants to run it.
The biggest obstacle to the Hawkeyes having great season might be the schedule. There is some good news, the three toughest conference games are Indiana, Penn St. and Oregon and all come to Kinnick. The bad news is the road schedule has some hazards in it. First of all, three of Iowa’s biggest rivalry games are on the road; Iowa St, Wisconsin, and Nebraska. The Hawkeyes have had good luck lately in Ames and Lincoln and Wisconsin doesn’t look all that good but playing all three of those games on the road, sucks. It’s losing one of those games that could derail a really good year for the Hawkeyes. Also, Iowa has to travel to the west coast to take on USC. I’m not sure if USC will be good or not but going west hasn’t been kind to the Hawkeyes.
The Big Ten slate doesn’t have any gimmes because at Rutgers, Minnesota, and Michigan St. won’t be pushovers. Not sure why Iowa doesn’t get to play Purdue this season, we could really use a Purdue game this year. This is the reality of the new Big Ten, there are no easy weeks. I think this team is going to be pretty good and I’m thinking 9-3 or even 10-2 is possible but if the defense faulters like it did last year against Michigan St. and UCLA, 7-5 might be the reality. I don’t make predictions on final records because I like to be optimistic this time of year. Iowa could be fighting for a bowl berth the last few weeks of the season or looking for a potential spot in the College Football Playoff, neither one would surprise me all that much.