JonDMiller
Publisher/Founder
I am not going to write an item on this, because it's waaaaaay too subjective right now when there are acres of facts out there that will do.....but I will post some thoughts on the running back position at Iowa that have been running around my head.
Mark Weisman has 592 carries because Iowa has had a massive recruiting and/or development failure at the position...and/or trust issues with young players at most of the positions.
But I think one of Kirk's biggest blind spots, his Achilles Heel...is blind loyalty to those who are blindly loyal to him. From a human perspective, I get it...and can relate to it. Still, as a CEO or a head football coach at the college level, you have to get past that.
I will offer this example: Lester Erb.
Lester Erb was an assistant coach at Iowa for 13 years. From 2000 to 2007, he was Iowa's wide receivers coach along with Special Teams.
During that time, Iowa was signing/bringing in/developing some pretty good RUNNING BACKS (some offers listed in parenthesis):
Fred Russell
Jermelle Lewis
Albert Young (verbal to Wisconsin)
Justice Hairston (Penn State)
Shonn Greene (Clemson, Wisconsin)
Damian Sims (KSU, Pitt, Va Tech)
Kalvin Bailey (FSU, USC, GA, Miami, Neb)
Corey Robertson (Arizona, Texas A&M, TCU)
Anthony Bowman (Ohio State)
Jevon Pugh (Kansas State)
Jeff Brinson (MSU, OK St)
Adam Robinson (Gray shirt)
On February 11th, 2008, the man who was Iowa's running backs coach during the entire Ferentz era to that point, Carl Jackson, retires. Kirk Ferentz chooses to slide Lester Erb into the role of Running backs coach. Since then, here are the RUNNING BACKS Iowa has signed:
Brandon Wegher: A good pick up, talented player, in state
Marcus Coker: 4 star player, 'OK' offers; KSU, Minnesota, Wake Forest, Maryland)
De'Andre Johnson: at best Mid Major offers
Damon Bullock: Iowa was his lone high major offer, and he started as a WR
Jordan Canzeri: Not a lot of offers, smallish player
Mika'il McCall: (Illinois, Minnesota, Syracuse, nothing major)
Greg Garmon: A who's who of offers list
Barkley Hill: Iowa and Iowa State
Leshun Daniels: Akron, Boston College, Bowling Green
Jonathon Parker: Mid Majors
Akrum Wadley: Iowa and Temple
(No, I didn't include Rodney Coe. I never thought he'd play one down of running back at Iowa. Turns out he never played at Iowa at all)
Did Iowa have some misses during the Carl Jackson era as RB's coach? Yes. But they recruited a better quality of running back during his run than they did in the six or seven years following his retirement...markedly better under Carl Davis than Lester Erb.
Erb is not wholly responsible for the running backs that are brought in, but he was certainly played a pivotal role in development...and there hasn't been much development at Iowa at running back since Carl Davis retired. Have there been injuries? Yes. Have their been 'not in good standing' decisions away from the field? Yes.
But these things happen at other places, too...and Iowa has pretty much lacked quality and quality depth at this position for much of the last decade...and there remains a reticence to play young players unless their hand is forced. This is how you wind up with a walk on fullback who will go down in the Iowa record books with the 4th most carries in school history and what has allowed teams to exert their will on Iowa's running game for the better part of the last three seasons.
Ferentz hasn't really 'fired' anyone while at Iowa...Pat Flaherty was encouraged to look around early on...Darrell Wilson was passed over for the DC job and moved on. Eric Johnson was basically left to spin his wheels, moved into a position he probably didn't want and he chose to leave to join the fast food industry.
He allowed Rick Kaczenski to spew his brand of verbal 'tough love' for a number of years, as the defensive line was losing players at an alarming rate and something that Iowa is just now digging out of...and he encouraged him to look elsewhere.
Erb's contract was not renewed..that and Kaz are as close as Ferentz has gotten to getting his hands dirty on that front. When you are the CEO of an organization for 16 years, it's VERY, VERY unusual for this to be the case.
I think it stems from Kirk coming up through the assistant coaching ranks and knowing how hard of a road that is...Kirk was a mudder...he had to grind...he worked for Ken O'Keefe early on in his career, was a GA at Pitt, fibbed a bit when he interviewed with Hayden Fry, went out to the hinterlands in Maine, that didn't work and he clocked his time in the NFL...building a solid reputation along the way as a great teacher, and then was the fourth or so choice for the Iowa job. It worked out.
I think he's reticent to damage anyone's career with a black mark like a firing. Again, I get that human side of it. I've had to fire people before and it flat out sucks. Many of you have had to do that, too...and I am sure you didn't enjoy it. But there are times when that is the best thing for the company, or the organization.
You let a guy's contract expire who had been there for 13 years, and a guy you had leading your recruiting efforts in historically the 2nd most important state to your football program (Illinois) as well as developing a key position like running back? 13 years...and you just don't renew his contract. I'd suggest the evidence was there well before year 13 that it wasn't the best fit...well, I guess we've laid out some of that evidence above.
For a large portion of the Ferentz era, about 13 years, the coaching staff was pretty much unchanged. For so long, that continuity was viewed as a strength for Iowa and in many ways, it probably was. However when you have an organization with that little change, you get little change...probably not a lot of people shaking the tree in the meeting rooms, I would guess. You also had a world class college defensive coordinator and defense for much of the Ferentz era, until Norm Parker's health issues got the better of him and he had to step away. The defense was the ultimate backboard for Kirk Ferentz, the offense a necessary evil...and for a good chunk of the time, Iowa got away with it.
But inaction on Kaz and perhaps even Erb (hello special teams, and punter??), along with Norm Parker before forced to step away...then Ken O'Keefe choosing to leave the program...things have been shaky since then...and specifically at running back, things haven't been the same since Carl Jackson retired...it's just been a very slow bleed out to where we are now.
Anyway, this is just tea leaves stuff, and it's really hard to pin it down enough to where I'd put it in an article ...but I think there is something to it on many fronts.
Feel free to shoot holes in this, as I appreciate opposing ideas.
Mark Weisman has 592 carries because Iowa has had a massive recruiting and/or development failure at the position...and/or trust issues with young players at most of the positions.
But I think one of Kirk's biggest blind spots, his Achilles Heel...is blind loyalty to those who are blindly loyal to him. From a human perspective, I get it...and can relate to it. Still, as a CEO or a head football coach at the college level, you have to get past that.
I will offer this example: Lester Erb.
Lester Erb was an assistant coach at Iowa for 13 years. From 2000 to 2007, he was Iowa's wide receivers coach along with Special Teams.
During that time, Iowa was signing/bringing in/developing some pretty good RUNNING BACKS (some offers listed in parenthesis):
Fred Russell
Jermelle Lewis
Albert Young (verbal to Wisconsin)
Justice Hairston (Penn State)
Shonn Greene (Clemson, Wisconsin)
Damian Sims (KSU, Pitt, Va Tech)
Kalvin Bailey (FSU, USC, GA, Miami, Neb)
Corey Robertson (Arizona, Texas A&M, TCU)
Anthony Bowman (Ohio State)
Jevon Pugh (Kansas State)
Jeff Brinson (MSU, OK St)
Adam Robinson (Gray shirt)
On February 11th, 2008, the man who was Iowa's running backs coach during the entire Ferentz era to that point, Carl Jackson, retires. Kirk Ferentz chooses to slide Lester Erb into the role of Running backs coach. Since then, here are the RUNNING BACKS Iowa has signed:
Brandon Wegher: A good pick up, talented player, in state
Marcus Coker: 4 star player, 'OK' offers; KSU, Minnesota, Wake Forest, Maryland)
De'Andre Johnson: at best Mid Major offers
Damon Bullock: Iowa was his lone high major offer, and he started as a WR
Jordan Canzeri: Not a lot of offers, smallish player
Mika'il McCall: (Illinois, Minnesota, Syracuse, nothing major)
Greg Garmon: A who's who of offers list
Barkley Hill: Iowa and Iowa State
Leshun Daniels: Akron, Boston College, Bowling Green
Jonathon Parker: Mid Majors
Akrum Wadley: Iowa and Temple
(No, I didn't include Rodney Coe. I never thought he'd play one down of running back at Iowa. Turns out he never played at Iowa at all)
Did Iowa have some misses during the Carl Jackson era as RB's coach? Yes. But they recruited a better quality of running back during his run than they did in the six or seven years following his retirement...markedly better under Carl Davis than Lester Erb.
Erb is not wholly responsible for the running backs that are brought in, but he was certainly played a pivotal role in development...and there hasn't been much development at Iowa at running back since Carl Davis retired. Have there been injuries? Yes. Have their been 'not in good standing' decisions away from the field? Yes.
But these things happen at other places, too...and Iowa has pretty much lacked quality and quality depth at this position for much of the last decade...and there remains a reticence to play young players unless their hand is forced. This is how you wind up with a walk on fullback who will go down in the Iowa record books with the 4th most carries in school history and what has allowed teams to exert their will on Iowa's running game for the better part of the last three seasons.
Ferentz hasn't really 'fired' anyone while at Iowa...Pat Flaherty was encouraged to look around early on...Darrell Wilson was passed over for the DC job and moved on. Eric Johnson was basically left to spin his wheels, moved into a position he probably didn't want and he chose to leave to join the fast food industry.
He allowed Rick Kaczenski to spew his brand of verbal 'tough love' for a number of years, as the defensive line was losing players at an alarming rate and something that Iowa is just now digging out of...and he encouraged him to look elsewhere.
Erb's contract was not renewed..that and Kaz are as close as Ferentz has gotten to getting his hands dirty on that front. When you are the CEO of an organization for 16 years, it's VERY, VERY unusual for this to be the case.
I think it stems from Kirk coming up through the assistant coaching ranks and knowing how hard of a road that is...Kirk was a mudder...he had to grind...he worked for Ken O'Keefe early on in his career, was a GA at Pitt, fibbed a bit when he interviewed with Hayden Fry, went out to the hinterlands in Maine, that didn't work and he clocked his time in the NFL...building a solid reputation along the way as a great teacher, and then was the fourth or so choice for the Iowa job. It worked out.
I think he's reticent to damage anyone's career with a black mark like a firing. Again, I get that human side of it. I've had to fire people before and it flat out sucks. Many of you have had to do that, too...and I am sure you didn't enjoy it. But there are times when that is the best thing for the company, or the organization.
You let a guy's contract expire who had been there for 13 years, and a guy you had leading your recruiting efforts in historically the 2nd most important state to your football program (Illinois) as well as developing a key position like running back? 13 years...and you just don't renew his contract. I'd suggest the evidence was there well before year 13 that it wasn't the best fit...well, I guess we've laid out some of that evidence above.
For a large portion of the Ferentz era, about 13 years, the coaching staff was pretty much unchanged. For so long, that continuity was viewed as a strength for Iowa and in many ways, it probably was. However when you have an organization with that little change, you get little change...probably not a lot of people shaking the tree in the meeting rooms, I would guess. You also had a world class college defensive coordinator and defense for much of the Ferentz era, until Norm Parker's health issues got the better of him and he had to step away. The defense was the ultimate backboard for Kirk Ferentz, the offense a necessary evil...and for a good chunk of the time, Iowa got away with it.
But inaction on Kaz and perhaps even Erb (hello special teams, and punter??), along with Norm Parker before forced to step away...then Ken O'Keefe choosing to leave the program...things have been shaky since then...and specifically at running back, things haven't been the same since Carl Jackson retired...it's just been a very slow bleed out to where we are now.
Anyway, this is just tea leaves stuff, and it's really hard to pin it down enough to where I'd put it in an article ...but I think there is something to it on many fronts.
Feel free to shoot holes in this, as I appreciate opposing ideas.