Is Iowa's QB play really much improved?

Iowa fans are over the top about Nathan Stanley's performance in their recent game. Granted he did what he had to do, but I believe the Hawkeyes are getting carried away. 70% completion rate at home against a mac team is merely making par when the OL was feasting on a overmatched DL and he had allegedly the best receiving corps in the KF era to throw to. He did rumble for a couple first downs but I believe that was just setting up to get into heacock's head and slow the calling of pass rushes that are Stanleys Achilles heel. I don't believe that he is a threat to take off against a tough linebacking corps like isu's. On a related note, perhaps Stanley took the ribbing he receives on this site to heart 'coz he's apparently lost some weight.

WTB: Paved parking for Iowa

Since handicapped parking is limited and it would be too long of a day for my 88 year old mother to get there at 7:00 AM. I would like to get a paved reserved parking spot. I am open to location, I don't mind pushing wheel chair on pavement. We normally take her to the step show to see her grandson and then use South entrance to use elevator. Handicapped was sent to S6 last week and we got a spot, but after that they said others would be sent to G7.

Offensive Possessions vs UNI

Here are the offensive possessions for ISU in regulation against UNI and what ultimately killed each drive.

Drive 1:

Yardage: 27 yards
Drive killer: Personal Foul penalty, dropped screen pass on 3rd & 2
Result: Punt on 4th & 2

Drive 2:

Yardage: 31 yards
Drive killer: Sack, for some reason our right guard is pulling (and missing) to block the defensive end when it is 6 blockers to 4 rushers
Result: Punt on 4th & 4

Drive 3:

Yardage: 34 yards
Drive killer: Personal Foul penalty, running back misses a block on the blitz resulting in a sack
Result: Field Goal on 4th & 10

Drive 4:

Yardage: 39 yards
Drive killer: TE runs 3 yard route on 3rd & 5
Result: Punt on 4th & 2

Drive 5:

Yardage: 9 yards
Drive killer: Pass overthrown on 3rd & 1, 8 blockers can't block 6 defenders on 4th & 1, resulting in no time for the QB to throw
Result: Turnover on downs

Drive 6:

Yardage: 9 yards
Result: Halftime

Drive 7:

Yardage: 75 yards
Result: TD

Drive 8:

Yardage: 19 yards
Drive killer: Drop by WR that would have put us inside the 20, Right Tackle misses block that results in a fumble (or actually an incomplete pass ruled a fumble)
Result: Defensive TD for UNI

Drive 9:

Yardage: 53 yards
Drive killer: 2nd & 1 on the 9 yard line #89 misses block resulting in a 3 yard loss. On the next play, the Left Tackle doubles the nose leaving a linebacker unblocked resulting in no gain
Result: missed FG

Drive 10:

Yardage: 69 yards
Drive killer: bad pass by the QB to TE in endzone (TD if the pass is more to the sideline), #89 missed block on 2nd & goal resulting in a negative running play, holding penalty on QB TD run
Result: FG

Some general thoughts on this game:

1. 78% of our drives went for at least 27 yards (if you take out the end of half run out the clock possession)
2. 75% of our second half drives went for at least 53 yards
3. #28 seems like the only running back with a "make you miss" ability. I expect he will be getting the bulk of the carries by mid-season.
4. The shallow cross seemed to be where most of our chunk plays came from against the 3-3-5.
5. 10 of the drive killers listed above were penalties or missed blocks. I agree that the line play was improved, but it seemed like we had mistakes in the most inopportune times from our offensive line and running backs in pass blocking.

Leath article in Chronicle of Higher Ed.

Apparently "Crash" wasn't a good-enough good-ol-boy for Auburn.

Before His Ouster, Trustees Cautioned Auburn U.’s High-Flying President
By Jack Stripling JULY 30, 2019
photo_92654_landscape_850x566.jpg

The Auburn Plainsman
Auburn trustees warned Steven Leath, seen here in 2017, that the sweeping changes he had made as president could cause “unrest.”
Not long after Steven Leath was hired as president of Auburn University, in 2017, some on the campus took to calling him “Crash.”

The nickname was a nod to Leath’s notorious hard landing of a university-owned airplane at Iowa State University, where he had previously been president, as well as a commentary on a swaggering style that rubbed some people in Auburn the wrong way.

The airplane incident at Iowa State raised questions about whether he had casually mixed business and pleasure on the university’s dime. But it also helped to flesh out the portrait of a loveable rogue — an aviating, bow-hunting, dog-loving, gray-bearded outdoorsman who relished squashing the competition. Leath was the sort of guy who, at least on paper, seemed a natural fit for a football-crazed public university in the Deep South, looking to raise its national profile.

Alas, it was not to be. After just two years, Leath is out of a job, and Auburn is out $4.5 million — using revenues from tuition and fees to pay off a president for a less-than-historic tenure. The separation agreement, which was reached in June, is designed to ensure that the public never knows exactly why this brief marriage ended so poorly.

But documents and interviews suggest that Auburn’s trustees and some faculty members had misgivings early on about Leath’s approach to the job, and his brimming self-confidence was seen as a mixed bag.

Some of these concerns are alluded to in the trustees’ first and only full evaluation of Leath, concluded in 2018, which has heretofore escaped public scrutiny. A report of the three-page evaluation, which the university provided to The Chronicle in response to a public-records request, urges Leath to “focus on urgency … but also on collegiality,” underscores the importance of balancing his “bold confidence” with Auburn’s “trademark humility,” and cautions Leath that the swift changes he made within the administration had the potential to create “unrest.”

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The evaluation, submitted by a five-member assessment committee of the board, provides a peek into the value that trustees place on a president’s cultural fit and the subtle ways that boards encourage course corrections. The evaluation is a diplomatic document that spares Leath any overt criticism. It is peppered, however, with what in hindsight read as oblique references to a president who did not yet understand the university’s culture or instinctively appreciate the importance of “focusing on positive morale and collaboration.”

Leath’s first year was one of sweeping personnel changes, as several key administrators retired or took other jobs. This carried risks, the board said.

“As you continue to remove bureaucratic barriers, we further suggest that you approach the inevitable changes with clear communication and attention to morale,” the report states. “Retirements, new hires, and organizational alterations are capable of causing unrest among faculty and staff. We remain hopeful that through clear communication and careful planning, Auburn personnel will welcome and aid in your efforts.”

What has not spawned unrest is Leath’s ouster. No emergency meetings of the University Senate, no public demand for answers. That may have a lot to do with the academic calendar, as many students and professors have left campus for the summer. But no one seems particularly upset that Leath is gone.

“You can infer a lot by the faculty response to this,” said John Carvalho, a professor and associate director for journalism.

On Monday the Senate’s executive committee sent a note to faculty members. “It is unlikely that further information will be made public” about Leath’s resignation, the note said, because of confidentiality provisions in the separation agreement.

Efforts to reach Leath were unsuccessful. Auburn’s trustees have declined or not responded to interview requests.

Promises, Promises

Leath came to Auburn as an outsider, and questions emerged early on about whether he understood the university’s ethos. A plant scientist with degrees from Pennsylvania State University, the University of Delaware, and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, he was the first Auburn president in a long time with no clear connection to “the Plains,” as the campus is known.

Since the 1980s, all but one of Auburn’s presidents have either held degrees from the university or ascended from its ranks. The lone exception was William V. Muse, and that didn’t work out well, either. Muse butted heads with the university’s governing board, which fired him in 2001, escalating concerns about trustee micromanagement, particularly in athletics. Citing those concerns, Auburn’s accrediting agency put the university on probation nearly three years later.

But under Jay Gogue, who preceded Leath, Auburn’s fierce governance battles died down. Even firebrand faculty members describe Gogue’s 10-year run with fondness. The board has now turned to Gogue — who holds two degrees from Auburn — yet again to stabilize the university, pulling him out of retirement this month to serve as interim president.

Gogue was known for opening the president’s residence to trustees and faculty members. He revived a tradition of having former University Senate leaders over for dinner, and he extended the invitation to leaders of Auburn’s chapter of the American Association of University Professors, an organization that had long been at odds with the administration. Leath did not have the same reputation for openness.

In the trustees’ evaluation of Leath, they encouraged him to focus on Auburn’s reputation as a place that “hospitably welcomes” people. He should tap into the university’s old guard, trustees advised, to learn more about “Auburn’s culture and history.”

Leath’s deviations from tradition weren’t always welcome. He created a chief-of-staff position, for example, which some professors saw as a way of walling off the president. He filled that slot with Miles Lackey, who had served in the same role under Leath at Iowa State.

Lackey stayed at Auburn for only three months before taking a job in North Carolina. Short as his tenure was, it proved long enough for the joke to stick that Leath had literally brought his own “lackey” with him to Auburn. (Lackey did not respond to interview requests).

One of Gogue’s first moves upon his return to Auburn was to eliminate the new position.

“The chief of staff position was created by Dr. Leath,” Brian Keeter, a university spokesman, said in an email to The Chronicle. “It’s a role Auburn didn’t have previously, and the need for the position no longer existed after his departure.”

John M. Mason Jr., who resigned as Auburn’s vice president for research and economic development to become chancellor of Penn State at Harrisburg, was another key administrator to depart during Leath’s first year. Mason, who described Leath as a person with ambitious goals for the university, said he left Auburn for the opportunity to return to his alma mater. He offered no direct criticism of Leath, a person with whom he said he had “reasonably pleasant conversations.”

“The things we were trying to do would be for the long-term benefit,” Mason said, “so I would have expected that he would have been successful for a longer period of time.”

Some people were skeptical, however, about Leath’s grand plans.

He was applauded for setting a goal to hire 500 tenure-track faculty members by 2022, but the fine print showed that Auburn’s professorial ranks would grow by only about 100 once attrition and retirements were factored in.

“He made promises that it was clear to me he couldn’t keep,” said Barry R. Burkhart, a professor emeritus of psychology and a former chairman of the University Senate, who retired in late 2018 after 44 years at Auburn. “We’re going to get 500 new faculty — well, that’s not going to happen. It was those intemperate, self-aggrandizing things that put me off. I was just waiting for him to go.”

Leath made promises to the board, too. In his written self-assessment, Leath said Auburn would expand its presence in Birmingham, Ala., ending the dominance of “another institution” that for too long had bested Auburn in competition for students, corporate partnerships, and reputational stature. This is surely a reference to the University of Alabama, Auburn’s chief football rival. Leath sounded more like a cocksure quarterback than an administrator as he laid out his plans.

“We aim to end their reign in Birmingham,” he wrote.

As much as Leath seemed to relish Auburn’s big-time sports culture, he managed to get crosswise with the Tiger fan base on several occasions. There were complaints that he appeared insufficiently supportive of Bruce Pearl, the men’s basketball coach, when the program became embroiled in a bribery scandal that involved numerous universities. Contrarily, some thought Leath was overly generous to Gus Malzahn, the football coach, who secured a seven-year, $49 million contract with the university.

[continued in next post due to limits on content size]
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Reactions: skibumspe

2023 Football Targets (Offer List in OP +3)

Key:
Favorite/Commit Date
Warmer
Warm
Offer Date
Unofficial Visit Date
Official Visit Date
EE: Early Enrollee

PWO: Preferred Walk-On


Class Ranking Total: N/A

Announcements:

Visits:


Warm:
EDGE DJ Jones: Howard, Kansas, ISU, Temple, USF 3/1/22

High:

Recent Offers:

Offers:
OT Grant Chapman: 2/15/21; 9/11/21; 1/29/22
OT Cole Rhett: Toledo 4/7/22
RB Rickey Hunt Jr.: 6/18/20; 6/9/21
RB John Randle Jr.: Utah 1/22/21
RB Sedrick Alexander Jr.: Vanderbilt 5/12/22
WR Morgan Pearson: 2/1/21
WR Breeon Ishmail: 2/10/21
WR Chase Hendricks: 5/20/21
WR Eddie Combs III: ISU +9 12/9/21
WR Jarvis Hayes: Minnesota 1/26/22
WR Jarriett Buie Jr.: Iowa 2/3/22
WR Richemard Mellien: 5/3/22
WR Arthur Jenkins: FAU 5/16/22
EDGE Taje McCoy: 3/30/22
DL David Borchers: 2/16/21; 6/9/21
CB Christian Bodnar: 3/9/22
CB Marlon McClendon: 4/26/22
CB Lacory Walker: 4/30/22
CB Jordan Holmes: 5/4/22
S Rahmir Stewart: Oregon, PSU, TA&M, ISU +8 1/10/20
S Jeremiah Vessel: 7/9/21
ATH Jonathan Humpal: 2/17/21; 6/2/21
ATH Jeremiah Augustin: 1/31/22

Initial CyHawk Game Predictions

Didn't see a prediction thread yet. Give your initial prediction now and a revised one after Iowa has a chance to look crappy against Rutgers and ISU fans have a chance to sober up and realize they aren't as bad as they looked Saturday. Thinking it will be a pretty good game as the last two have been. Would be surprised with a double digit win either way.

9/3 Prediction - ISU 28, Iowa 24

9/9 Prediction - ?

Big 12 Sagarin Rankings after week 1



#5 Oklahoma: Beat #57 Houston. Up next is #137 South Dakota. No movement
#13 Texas: Beat #103 Louisiana Tech. Up next is #3 LSU. No movement.
#20 Oklahoma State: Beat #104 Oregon State. Up next is #179 McNeese State. Down 2 spots
#33 Texas Tech: Beat #147 Montana State. Up next is #189 UTEP. Up 8 spots
#34 Iowa State: Beat #85 Northern Iowa. Up next is BYE. Down 5 spots
#37 K-State: Beat #145 Nicholls. Up next is #131 Bowling Green. Up 8 spots
#38 West Virginia: Beat #89 James Madison. Up next is #36 Missouri. Down 2 spots
#41 Baylor: Beat #215 Stephen F. Austin. Up next is #121 UTSA. Down 3 spots
#49 TCU: Beat #249 Arkansas Pine Bluff. Up next is BYE. Down 25 spots
#95 Ku: Beat #118 Indiana State. Up next is #134 Coastal Carolina. Down 4 spots

credit: KSsportsfan56
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Reactions: isutrevman

Well, first weekend of legal betting. How'd you do?

I didn't really see this in a thread so thought I'd post. Mods if it needs moved to another location please do so.

I'm not really Nostradamus, but...I did nail Iowa and Iowa State this weekend.

2-0

Northern Iowa + 23 (No way in any universe is ISU going to beat UNI by that much...ever. I've seen way too many of these games. I should have bet the house on this. That being said I didn't see it THAT close)

Iowa -22.5 (Kept the game interesting)

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