IowaLawWasRight
Well-Known Member
I hate what is going on in the program this week. However, Ferentz and staff have always had a problem with black athletes who played with "swagger" for decades and IowaLaw often pointed it out...only to be bashed as a "troll" or "cyclone fan" by fans and this site's moderators alike.
In the DJK era, IowaLaw noted that there was something off about having the most talented WR in program history constantly in the coach's dog house. Early in his career, he was ripped by the staff for having the audacity of wearing sunglasses on his way to practice. It didn't fit with "Iowa culture." Did anyone ask why that was such a crime? DJK played with swagger, as an elite WR should, and that rubbed the staff the wrong. After his all-Big 10 senior season, it was reported by DJK himself that Kirk badmouthed him to NFL scouts, which may have even hindered him having a pro career. He want on to harbor a lot of ill will against the program for the racism he experienced while the small town Iowa boys were repeatedly praised by the staff for doing things the "right way." At one point, he threatened to write a book about his experiences and was dismissed by fans as a disgruntled "thug."
The next athlete at Iowa of DJK's electrifying caliber was Derrick Mitchell. He averaged 6.5 yards per carry in Iowa's magical Rose Bowl season as a sophomore (by comparison, current stud RB Tyler Goodson averaged 4.8 yrds last season behind a Top 10 NFL draft pick left tackle). He probably should have started the following year, but instead went the entire season with just 2 carries after finding himself in the staff's dog house. I befrended Mitchell that year, as one of his biggest fans, wondering why on earth he didn't get more touches. He said staff didn't like his "flashy" attitude, and whenever he would try to speak up about unfair treatment, he would fall further and further into the dog house. He ultimately was forced to transfer because he couldn't get a fair shake.
Akrum Wadley was a human highlight reel, yet he didn't start a game until his senior year. He averaged 6 yards per carry and 16 yards receiving as a sophomore. As a junior, he had 1100 yards rushing/6.5 yards per carry, and had 360 yards receiving. Somehow, he did so while in the staff's dog house. He was benched once for making a spin move. He was benched another time for getting a bogus excessive celebration penalty. When Kirk was asked why Wadley never started that year, and received 50 carries less than the starter despite averaging 2 yards per carry more and catching 30 more passes out of the backfield, Ferentz simply said "Wadley couldn't make weight." Obviously, that made no sense, as he wasn't injury prone and didn't have issues fumbling the ball. The fact was, Wadley's swagger didn't mesh with the clean cut small town Iowa "culture" the staff wanted and he suffered as a result.
Perhaps the staff's issue was the swagger and it had nothing to do with race? Nah. Plenty of white players went through the ranks with swagger that didn't wind up in the dog house. Drew Tate, CJ Beathard, Matt Roth are just a few who come to mind. Brian Ferentz himself had a major attitude while living for free in Section 8 housing. All were multi-year starters who the staff never seemed to have a problem with.
It's unfortunate but true. The smoke has been around for a long time...we just didn't want to see it.
In the DJK era, IowaLaw noted that there was something off about having the most talented WR in program history constantly in the coach's dog house. Early in his career, he was ripped by the staff for having the audacity of wearing sunglasses on his way to practice. It didn't fit with "Iowa culture." Did anyone ask why that was such a crime? DJK played with swagger, as an elite WR should, and that rubbed the staff the wrong. After his all-Big 10 senior season, it was reported by DJK himself that Kirk badmouthed him to NFL scouts, which may have even hindered him having a pro career. He want on to harbor a lot of ill will against the program for the racism he experienced while the small town Iowa boys were repeatedly praised by the staff for doing things the "right way." At one point, he threatened to write a book about his experiences and was dismissed by fans as a disgruntled "thug."
The next athlete at Iowa of DJK's electrifying caliber was Derrick Mitchell. He averaged 6.5 yards per carry in Iowa's magical Rose Bowl season as a sophomore (by comparison, current stud RB Tyler Goodson averaged 4.8 yrds last season behind a Top 10 NFL draft pick left tackle). He probably should have started the following year, but instead went the entire season with just 2 carries after finding himself in the staff's dog house. I befrended Mitchell that year, as one of his biggest fans, wondering why on earth he didn't get more touches. He said staff didn't like his "flashy" attitude, and whenever he would try to speak up about unfair treatment, he would fall further and further into the dog house. He ultimately was forced to transfer because he couldn't get a fair shake.
Akrum Wadley was a human highlight reel, yet he didn't start a game until his senior year. He averaged 6 yards per carry and 16 yards receiving as a sophomore. As a junior, he had 1100 yards rushing/6.5 yards per carry, and had 360 yards receiving. Somehow, he did so while in the staff's dog house. He was benched once for making a spin move. He was benched another time for getting a bogus excessive celebration penalty. When Kirk was asked why Wadley never started that year, and received 50 carries less than the starter despite averaging 2 yards per carry more and catching 30 more passes out of the backfield, Ferentz simply said "Wadley couldn't make weight." Obviously, that made no sense, as he wasn't injury prone and didn't have issues fumbling the ball. The fact was, Wadley's swagger didn't mesh with the clean cut small town Iowa "culture" the staff wanted and he suffered as a result.
Perhaps the staff's issue was the swagger and it had nothing to do with race? Nah. Plenty of white players went through the ranks with swagger that didn't wind up in the dog house. Drew Tate, CJ Beathard, Matt Roth are just a few who come to mind. Brian Ferentz himself had a major attitude while living for free in Section 8 housing. All were multi-year starters who the staff never seemed to have a problem with.
It's unfortunate but true. The smoke has been around for a long time...we just didn't want to see it.