Numerous special teams gaffes cost the Hawks against Wisconsin; it was the only area on the field where Wisconsin was better.
I haven't read through the rest of this thread, so maybe some will echo my comments.
Who are you to say it isn't?
None of the losses this year came when Iowa just get completely blown off the field - in all five, Iowa made enough mistakes to leave the door open, and in all five, the opponent took advantage of the opportunity.
Hell, in all five games, it came down to execution - or rather, the lack of it.
Special teams **** the bed against Arizona, giving away 14 points in a game Iowa lost by a touchdown.
Numerous special teams gaffes cost the Hawks against Wisconsin; it was the only area on the field where Wisconsin was better.
Offense the has the ball with 6 minutes to go against NW with a chance to get some first downs and kill the clock, they don't do it.
Same for Ohio State, same thing for Minnesota.
In four of those five games (Arizona being the exception) Iowa had the ball - and the lead - past the halfway mark of the 4th quarter. In every instance, neither unit did their job. You can say that's on the coaches, I can say it's on the players.
Kirk has fallen on the sword MANY times in the past, so it's odd that you pick now to say the he refuses to accept accountablilty. It simply isn't true.
Are you seriously going to blame the players for that fake punt? The COACHING STAFF failed to call for punt safe - just like BB knew they would. Yes, they were predictable - and it cost us that game. No, that loss most certainly was not due to a lack of execution. It was a lack of coaching.
Because he is smart enough to know that he has the University of Iowa by the balls.
He understands that it would be very difficult for Iowa to find a better coach and one that would stay even with offers to leave.
He also understands that the Iowa FB program is one bad hire away from being a bottom level B10 program, just like the BB team.
Its a tough situation for fans to deal with. Mainly because donations from season ticket holders go to the athletic budget which is where he gets his salary. Directly or indirectly, fans are paying his salary, yet he doesn't have to answer to them or like the original poster said, he gives a smart *** remark.
I agree with your prmise that players need to make the plays. Execution is the name of the game.
But you can't absolve Ferentz and the staff this year. They have done a poor job adjusting, especially in late game scenarios. Especially considering the situations.
They deserve the criticism they are getting. The players do as well, although it would be hard to keep listen when you're getting beat the same way and your coach does nothing about it.
It is actually the opposite. It works with poor offenses because it forces the other team to earn their way down the field, thus shortening the game and shortening the game, and taking away potential scoring opportunities.
What makes Indy's defense go is that Peyton gives them a lead alot, and their pass rush off the edge is one of the quickest in the game. They get a pass rush with four more than we do due to the speed of their edge.
Can you give me an example? I don't know the types of defenses that major colleges run.
But I really think you are off there (though i get your logic)
Ball control defense is never a philosophy I have ever heard in my life - that the DEFENSE is trying to shorten the game for the offense. That would lead to a tired, pounded, ineffective defense.
I get your logic dude but that's just never anything I've ever heard of. The cover two defense is basically the idea that you soley use your defensive line to stop the run and pass rush and drop your LB's. This type of defense used to be the fad but now is pretty dormant in the NFL (things goin in cycles)
If you look at alot of Defensive dominant NFL teams they run blitzing packages and have a offense that runs the ball alot
Pittsburgh
Balitmore
Tennesee
Giants
In four of those five games (Arizona being the exception) Iowa had the ball - and the lead - past the halfway mark of the 4th quarter.
And if we could score more than 2 offensive touchdowns each against Indiana, Northwestern, and Minnesota, then it wouldn't have come down to the last possession of the game.
Can you give me an example? I don't know the types of defenses that major colleges run.
But I really think you are off there (though i get your logic)
Ball control defense is never a philosophy I have ever heard in my life - that the DEFENSE is trying to shorten the game for the offense. That would lead to a tired, pounded, ineffective defense.
I get your logic dude but that's just never anything I've ever heard of. The cover two defense is basically the idea that you soley use your defensive line to stop the run and pass rush and drop your LB's. This type of defense used to be the fad but now is pretty dormant in the NFL (things goin in cycles)
If you look at alot of Defensive dominant NFL teams they run blitzing packages and have a offense that runs the ball alot
Pittsburgh
Balitmore
Tennesee
Giants
Iowa is one bad hire away from being in the same or worse position that Michigan, Tennessee or Notre Dame is in right now...Traditional power houses with national title history, that are floundering badly.
If things can change that dramatically at places that have deeper pockets than Iowa, bigger recruiting advantages than Iowa, a better platform for success than at Iowa, they sure as hell can happen at Iowa real quickly.
People assume that this is the new 'floor'...that winning 27 games over three years is the baseline of what we should expect every year.
Sorry, but you are creating your own problem and you are emoting it to everyone else, then you need to check yourself.
That doesn't mean that this year wasn't a disappointment. It also doesn't mean that last year is some norm, either.
Georgia barely got to 6-6 this year after a disappointing season last year. Florida is 7-5. Texas is 5-7. Tennessee is 6-6. Notre Dame is 7-5. USC is 7-5.
These programs have so many more advantages than Iowa it would choke a billy goat. Their fans are disappointed too, but these are not apples to apples comparisons. Iowa is the interloper, in a pure college football aristocracy point of view, on this list.
For a number of reasons, this team didn't have it this year. I am writing up as many things as I can think of as to why that might have been, and then we can look at it and talk about what we think the real problems were, etc.
But I remain steadfastly convinced, as do most people I speak with that live in the football world, that Kirk Ferentz is in the cream of the crop, and especially for Iowa.
Some will scoff at this, some will say I am kissing his *** or whatever. I really don't care what you think of me, otherwise I would have been long gone by now doing something else. It's what I believe, given the obstacles Iowa has to overcome in this sport, and how well they have done that under Ferentz.
You can hope for more, but when your basis for expectations is on a foundation of hope with little material evidence beyond speculation, that's on you.
It still doesn't white wash this year; things were set up to do much better than they did, and they didn't get over.
But people are acting like this program has been a chronic disappointment under Ferentz, which is BS, plain and simple.
He does not get paid to answer questions. He is paid to coach football.
And this notion of these "softball" questions are ridiculous. I often times sit in on the press conferences at the Football Complex and if he doesn't want to answer a question, he dodges it or gives a very, very, VERY brief answer.
But (we) the press do try. More than many of you think.
I don't think any of the above reasons are correct.
Let's stop making Kirk out to be some villain. He's not.
However the OP brings up a great point that myself and others have thought about as well. Kirk is not accountable. The entire coaching staff is not accountable. When we contentiously failed in close games in his time here, something needs to change. We all know the players change at least every four years.
When you have this much talent and go 7-5, something needs to change.
11-2 was nice, but Kirk said it himself we were a few plays away from being 7-5.
Well, 11-2 once every 7 years isn't going to cut it for me. I demand much more ROI.
Like I've said, they get asked and he dodges them. You can't force someone to say something they don't want to say. Kirk is a smart man. He knows how the media works.
Give me a REALISTIC question to ask him tomorrow and I'll do my best.
You don't insult a coach of slam him and expect any respect or cordial answer by the way. So let's all remember that.
My question I have prepared is "While the execution has obviously been a factor in the losses, do you think the coaches could change anything or be doing anything different to help the players execute better?"
Players and coaches need to be held accountable. If coaches are stupid enough to put the punt return personnel in instead of the punt safe folks they deserve what they get with the WI game. Bottomline last year was a boom and this year was a bust. In boom years things just go right no matter what you do wrong...in bust years things go against you but as coaches you don't just accept it you try and do SOMETHING to shake the troops up get them out of the doldrums. This coaching staff has clearly demonstrated they are going to run the same damn things regardless and that is either arrogance or stupidity and I don't think Kirk or his staff is STUPID. I agree with those that have stated if we could get the next 10 years like the past 10 we'd all be pretty happy. Now that means we should expect 2 more Big Ten titles and that concerns me...I don't see it in our future.
Not sure why fans thirst for some kind of self-flagellation by KF, as if him coming out and apologizing would change a darn thing about this past season.
If changes are needed he will not make a big production ...he will just quietly change the approach in the offseason.
I think you may have misunderstood me or I probably did a poor job of typing it out.......I don't want any answers, I'm way past that. What I DO want, though, is an admittance that the coaching staff royally f*cked the year up by not being smart.......putting Stanzi under center against Arizona when you knew they were going to come after him.......not putting on the punt safe against Wisconsin when the whole f*cking stadium knew it was coming........constantly putting linebackers on slot guys and watching those guys burn us in 3rd down after 3rd down. Those are NOT execution problems.....those are coaching problems. Period. End of sentence. And I'd like to know that those f*ck ups will be addressed by the start of next season. If not, I may as well start planning to fill those Saturday's in with something else.
Interesting interpretation there, considering I never mentioned the fake punt at all. I'm thinking more of the PAT the got blocked or the botched snap on a field goal - you know, the four points Iowa left on the field in a game they lost by one.
Getting a PAT blocked and botching a snap on a field goal is certainly not coaching. It's execution.
Had the coaching staff not been so insanely short-sighted and predictable none of that would have mattered. And who is responsible for having the kicking game working right in the first place? Who is responsible for putting a walk-on true freshman in as kicker?