Motiger - good post with the offensive productivity chart. That lays everything out objectively. Since 2002, Iowa's offense is trending up toward a ranking of near the bottom of Power 5 offenses. Iowa's success has been based solely on its defense, which I think we can all acknowlege, has virtually nothing to do with Kirk or Brian's expertise. Kirk brought in his son to run the offense and the experiment has failed. Imagine a team that has Iowa's defense AND a good offense? I think we saw several of them last night in championship games. It can be done...contrary to the ultimate homer opinions, it is not a choice for Iowa to sputter on offense with 3 and outs and a lack of a run game so that Iowa can "win the kicking game." It's simply a lack of Xs and Os and recruiting on that side of the ball.
dirt - the fact that Goodson is a freshmen is no excuse to leave him on the bench. That's 1980s thinking. In college football this day and age, you've got freshmen playing key roles on every top 10 team out there. A freshmen QB won the Heisman Trophy. Jonathan Taylor had 2,000 yards on 300 carries as a freshmen. Does Goodson have a ball control problem that I'm not aware of? It would seem to me that junior Sargent, who started in front of him, had two of the most back breaking fumbles of the season this year, including on the first snap against Michigan. He still palyed ahead of Goodson.
homes - you are on to something. Brian's play calling woes generally occur in the 2nd half. The reason for that is simple...in the first half, Brian uses a pre-programmed script prepared with the help of Ken O'Keef, the OL coach, and a lot of film work. However, when adjustments are made in the 2nd half by real coaches, and it's time to think on the fly, Brian gets bogged down. Brian is an OL coach trying to play coordinator. He's in over his head, despite his dad surrounding him with former offensive coordinators on staff as training wheels.
knight - are you trying to argue that guard is the most important position on the team? The one Iowa could least afford to lose? The problem with this board's myopic thinking is that no consideration is given to the bigger picture. Like I said, every team in college football had injuries. Most of them had injuries at positions more crucial than guard. Would you trade having a healthy guard for Stanley missing games? How about having your starting center hurt? Nebraska was down to their 3rd string kicker. Yes, Iowa had injuries, but its key players stayed relatively healthy.