HawkleberryFinn
Well-Known Member
Ole Pierschy's gonna be fishin buddies with Brandon Scherff.
Or, he could have been Blake Larsen and never developed at Iowa. See how this works?
This basically sums up my opinion on the matter as well. Bama is no chump at O line development, but they start with a better mold. Iowa is a master class on O line fundamentals and concepts. There just isn't really anybody out there that does it better or more consistently.
Money isn't everything....they say....I know Ross and his family. Great people who are well liked in Cedar Falls. His dad coached for the high school team. They're also very close with Ike Boettger's family. Ike and Ross are tight.
I can tell you all without any doubt that Ross doesn't regret for a second going to Alabama.
I feel this way about the other 49 states. But Iowa is different as we all knowWhy should it matter where he is from? I don’t give people extra credit for being born/raised in a state since it isn’t something they have control over.
Maybe. Or he is Gettis, Boettger(sp?) or countless other mid to late round o-lineman that KF has sent to the NFL. I don't know enough about the intricacies of o-line play to say he would have been a special talent if he had come to Iowa.
If you think Iowa has a bullet-proof track record of turning 4* talent into NFL 1st rounders:
To think it is automatic that he would have been a higher draft pick at Iowa just seems silly.
By the way, Alabama had the highest OL selected in the draft (247 composite 5* Jonah Williams, #2OT coming out of his HS class). That guy can't just ride his recruiting accolades and talent to the top OL in the draft. If it worked like that, Nebraska would have had a lot more success with their good recruiting classes lately. It takes a lot of development to carry over "top OL in HS" to "top OL in NFL draft."
Nothing to do with his rankings but Alabama gets so much talent every year that it can over shadow a talented player like Pierschbacher. I doubt at Iowa he gets moved to center and our line coaching is very good and is highly respected in the NFL.
But who really knows how he would have done, this is all speculating.
If you think Iowa has a bullet-proof track record of turning 4* talent into NFL 1st rounders:
To think it is automatic that he would have been a higher draft pick at Iowa just seems silly.
By the way, Alabama had the highest OL selected in the draft (247 composite 5* Jonah Williams, #2OT coming out of his HS class). That guy can't just ride his recruiting accolades and talent to the top OL in the draft. If it worked like that, Nebraska would have had a lot more success with their good recruiting classes lately. It takes a lot of development to carry over "top OL in HS" to "top OL in NFL draft."
It’d be hard to put a price tag on the experience of playing in 4 national championship games.
I doubt the kid has regrets and there’s no guarantee going to Iowa would have made him a higher pick.
Agreed. There's a whole lot of ego assuming that he would be a higher draft pick by playing in Iowa City. Has anyone other than a few of you with black-and-gold tinted glasses made this assertion? Any national media who are in a much better position to say it?
If you think Iowa has a bullet-proof track record of turning 4* talent into NFL 1st rounders:
To think it is automatic that he would have been a higher draft pick at Iowa just seems silly.
By the way, Alabama had the highest OL selected in the draft (247 composite 5* Jonah Williams, #2OT coming out of his HS class). That guy can't just ride his recruiting accolades and talent to the top OL in the draft. If it worked like that, Nebraska would have had a lot more success with their good recruiting classes lately. It takes a lot of development to carry over "top OL in HS" to "top OL in NFL draft."
If you think Iowa has a bullet-proof track record of turning 4* talent into NFL 1st rounders:
To think it is automatic that he would have been a higher draft pick at Iowa just seems silly.
By the way, Alabama had the highest OL selected in the draft (247 composite 5* Jonah Williams, #2OT coming out of his HS class). That guy can't just ride his recruiting accolades and talent to the top OL in the draft. If it worked like that, Nebraska would have had a lot more success with their good recruiting classes lately. It takes a lot of development to carry over "top OL in HS" to "top OL in NFL draft."