Dillon Doyle Commits to Hawkeyes

Thought it was Judge Reinhold at first glance. 54 tackles warrants a scolly? Jus askin? If his name wasn't Doyle???
 
So, if he had a 100 tackles you wouldn't ask if he deserves a scholarship?

Brian and James Ferentz were on scholarship, Steve Ferentz was not. There were two other Doyle sons who didn't get scholarships. Dillon did.
In some respects, it would be harder to play for your father. A lot more scrutiny, so you're performance has to be better, or both coach and player will be skewered, particularly at the college level. The same will hold true for Connor McCaffrey.
 
Well I’m sure he knows his way around the weight room… If he has half the work ethic of his Dad he’ll be a great player to have on the team. Can you imagine having your Dad spotting you in the weight room of a D1 program for 4 or 5 yrs and the pressure that might have for him? To me if the kid has the stones to try and live up to what his old man will demand of him effort wise then I look forward to the end result.
 
Just saying that he appears to not have much more than a 2 star body to be playing LB....and he does look like Judge Reinhold circa Stripes.....maybe that is why I can't take him all that seriously. Oh, and the 54 tackles.
 
Just saying that he appears to not have much more than a 2 star body to be playing LB....and he does look like Judge Reinhold circa Stripes.....maybe that is why I can't take him all that seriously. Oh, and the 54 tackles.

That's why you're paid the big bucks.
 
Last edited:
Just saying that he appears to not have much more than a 2 star body to be playing LB....and he does look like Judge Reinhold circa Stripes.....maybe that is why I can't take him all that seriously. Oh, and the 54 tackles.
Greenway was a 195 lb qb from a 8 man football team in SD.... Enough said...
 
How many kids does Doyle have to Doyalize before some of us on here give him the benefit of the doubt? Geesh. The guy has turned upteen 2 star small town nobodies ever recruited kids into All Americans and 1st round draft picks. I’d like to think we’ll give him a chance to build up his kid BEFORE he has a chance to play. I would have thought by now that he’s shown over and over that it’s not what a kid looks like day 1 on campus that matters so much. It’s what they look like about 24 months into it. Kids change a lot between being 18 and 20 when on a vigorous training routine. His kid may or may not stay at LB. Maybe he ends up a TE or FB or who knows what. But I’d put good money down that he’ll be on the football field at Iowa no later than by his RS Jr year in some capacity and we’ll be happy he is.
 
Just saying that he appears to not have much more than a 2 star body to be playing LB....and he does look like Judge Reinhold circa Stripes.....maybe that is why I can't take him all that seriously. Oh, and the 54 tackles.

In response to your opinion, here is another take on this recruit from today's DMRag. Reading this; it appears Doyle has added value as he is multi-position recruit and is also pretty darn smart. Key point, he is still a junior in high school, ergo he has more time to grow, learn, and get stronger.

"IOWA FOOTBALL
Iowa getting ‘strong tackler’ and lifelong Hawkeye in Doyle
MATTHEW BAIN
MBAIN@PRESS-CITIZEN.COM

IOWA CITY, Ia. — Dillon Doyle’s earliest and favorite memories are all as a little kid at Kinnick Stadium — sitting in the bleachers with his older brothers, Donovan and Declan, and watching the swarm of Hawkeyes storm out of the tunnel every Saturday.

That’ll be him soon.

Doyle, a junior outside linebacker at Iowa City West, committed to play football at Iowa on Monday night. As cliché as it might sound, this really is a dream come true for a kid who’s literally grown up with the team. Recognize the last name? Dillon’s the son of Chris Doyle, Iowa’s strength and conditioning coach. “I’ve been around the program to know what we’re about, obviously,” Dillon said. “I’ve loved being around the program. But I’m excited to be a part of it for real now.”

A 6-foot-3, 215-pound athlete with room to grow, Doyle held offers from Northern Illinois, Central Florida and South Dakota. He’s also a classroom gem — with a 4.0 GPA and 32 ACT score — so Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Penn and Brown were all interested, too.

His brother Donovan is a freshman in Harvard’s wrestling program.

“It was really down to Harvard and Iowa for me, because Iowa is the best football, in my opinion, and Harvard is the best education,” Doyle said. “I think Iowa is a mix of both of those, in reality.”

Doyle was a focal point of West’s state-runner up defense this season. He racked up 54 tackles and an interception, which he returned 21 yards. He also caught 12 passes for 152 yards and three touchdowns.

At first glance, he looks like a tight end or a wide receiver — long, strong legs, a yawning wingspan, quick feet, great leaping ability (he also does high jump for West). But then he tackles somebody. “I think (he has) a lot of things you would expect to see on tape from a kid who was the son of a strength coach, specifically,” said Allen Trieu, Scout.com’s Midwest football recruiting manager. “The kid is physical, definitely runs hard to the football, makes it known when he gets there — he’s a strong tackler.” 247Sports.com gives Doyle three stars and ranks him the state’s fourth-best outside linebacker in the Class of 2018. Trieu said he looks a lot like current Hawkeye linebacker Ben Niemann did coming out of high school. “He changed directions on film really well. He plays really well in space,” Trieu said of

Doyle. “You watch him on offense and you’d say those skills would definitely translate to him covering and running with receivers and tight ends and backs on defense. So I think he’ll easily be able to play that outside linebacker spot.

“Watching his film, also, it’s not completely out of the question that he might be a defensive end some day. I think he could get big enough and be skilled enough.” The Hawkeyes offered Doyle at their junior day March 5. Doyle said he’s happy to have a decision made before his senior season, when West will be gunning to return to the state title game and win it this time.

And along the way, don’t be surprised to see him featured a bit more as a receiver than he was this year — in addition to leading what should be another stout defense.

“As far as his offensive abilities, he’s underrated,” West head coach Garrett Hartwig said. “ ... He’s a mismatch. He’s physical when he blocks, he’s a big target, he can run like a receiver, catch like a receiver and he’s a very, very capable blocker.”

Doyle said Iowa has recruited him as an outside linebacker.

Doyle is Iowa’s third commit in the Class of 2018. Three-star offensive guard Jeff Jenkins of Crystal Lake, Ill., committed in late January, and three-star linebacker Mike Bruner of Thiensville, Wis., committed in October.

Matthew Bain covers preps, recruiting and the Hawkeyes for the Iowa City Press-Citizen, Des Moines Register and HawkCentral. Contact him at mbain@gannett. com and follow him on Twitter @MatthewBain_."
 
In response to your opinion, here is another take on this recruit from today's DMRag. Reading this; it appears Doyle has added value as he is multi-position recruit and is also pretty darn smart. Key point, he is still a junior in high school, ergo he has more time to grow, learn, and get stronger.

"IOWA FOOTBALL
Iowa getting ‘strong tackler’ and lifelong Hawkeye in Doyle
MATTHEW BAIN
MBAIN@PRESS-CITIZEN.COM

IOWA CITY, Ia. — Dillon Doyle’s earliest and favorite memories are all as a little kid at Kinnick Stadium — sitting in the bleachers with his older brothers, Donovan and Declan, and watching the swarm of Hawkeyes storm out of the tunnel every Saturday.

That’ll be him soon.

Doyle, a junior outside linebacker at Iowa City West, committed to play football at Iowa on Monday night. As cliché as it might sound, this really is a dream come true for a kid who’s literally grown up with the team. Recognize the last name? Dillon’s the son of Chris Doyle, Iowa’s strength and conditioning coach. “I’ve been around the program to know what we’re about, obviously,” Dillon said. “I’ve loved being around the program. But I’m excited to be a part of it for real now.”

A 6-foot-3, 215-pound athlete with room to grow, Doyle held offers from Northern Illinois, Central Florida and South Dakota. He’s also a classroom gem — with a 4.0 GPA and 32 ACT score — so Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Penn and Brown were all interested, too.

His brother Donovan is a freshman in Harvard’s wrestling program.

“It was really down to Harvard and Iowa for me, because Iowa is the best football, in my opinion, and Harvard is the best education,” Doyle said. “I think Iowa is a mix of both of those, in reality.”

Doyle was a focal point of West’s state-runner up defense this season. He racked up 54 tackles and an interception, which he returned 21 yards. He also caught 12 passes for 152 yards and three touchdowns.

At first glance, he looks like a tight end or a wide receiver — long, strong legs, a yawning wingspan, quick feet, great leaping ability (he also does high jump for West). But then he tackles somebody. “I think (he has) a lot of things you would expect to see on tape from a kid who was the son of a strength coach, specifically,” said Allen Trieu, Scout.com’s Midwest football recruiting manager. “The kid is physical, definitely runs hard to the football, makes it known when he gets there — he’s a strong tackler.” 247Sports.com gives Doyle three stars and ranks him the state’s fourth-best outside linebacker in the Class of 2018. Trieu said he looks a lot like current Hawkeye linebacker Ben Niemann did coming out of high school. “He changed directions on film really well. He plays really well in space,” Trieu said of

Doyle. “You watch him on offense and you’d say those skills would definitely translate to him covering and running with receivers and tight ends and backs on defense. So I think he’ll easily be able to play that outside linebacker spot.

“Watching his film, also, it’s not completely out of the question that he might be a defensive end some day. I think he could get big enough and be skilled enough.” The Hawkeyes offered Doyle at their junior day March 5. Doyle said he’s happy to have a decision made before his senior season, when West will be gunning to return to the state title game and win it this time.

And along the way, don’t be surprised to see him featured a bit more as a receiver than he was this year — in addition to leading what should be another stout defense.

“As far as his offensive abilities, he’s underrated,” West head coach Garrett Hartwig said. “ ... He’s a mismatch. He’s physical when he blocks, he’s a big target, he can run like a receiver, catch like a receiver and he’s a very, very capable blocker.”

Doyle said Iowa has recruited him as an outside linebacker.

Doyle is Iowa’s third commit in the Class of 2018. Three-star offensive guard Jeff Jenkins of Crystal Lake, Ill., committed in late January, and three-star linebacker Mike Bruner of Thiensville, Wis., committed in October.

Matthew Bain covers preps, recruiting and the Hawkeyes for the Iowa City Press-Citizen, Des Moines Register and HawkCentral. Contact him at mbain@gannett. com and follow him on Twitter @MatthewBain_."

I like this kid even more now.
 

Latest posts

Top