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Does Kirk Have An Issue With Black Coaches?

IowasLaw

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Nov 19, 2019
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Kirk's coaching tree over the past 25 years is as thin as the Charlie Brown Christmas tree. I'm not sure football has seen anything quite like it. Coaching is a big $ business and most coaches are ambitious guys wanting to reach the top.

While Hayden Fry's staff produced 8 - 10 head coaches, including some Hall of Famers, Kirk's staffs have produced a guy currently working at Culvers, several unemployed former coaches, and a series of "yes" men with no ambition to grow their careers.

Now take a look at the internal pecking order / chain of promotions within the program. Do the best coaches typically to move up? What goes into the decisions to promote?

In evaluating, consider Kirk's admitted "blind eye" toward the racial discrimination situation that rocked the program and led to the firing of his strength coach/best friend. Then consider how the investigation called Kirk out for virtually never appointing black players to the team's "leadership counsel." Did he believe black players were not leaders? With that as foundation, take a look at Kirk's coaching personnel decisions over the years (i.e. who he's promoted and who he's kept on staff despite their failures). It makes you wonder whether black coaches at Iowa are given the same opportunity for advancement as the white coaches.

Take the career paths of Brian Ferentz, Seth Wallace, and LeVar Woods as an example:

Woods. 2008 - retired from the NFL. Immediately came back to work at Iowa. Put in 4 years. In 2012, was elevated to position coach, where he excelled. He's now been in the program 16 years but has yet to receive a promotion. He remains a low level position coach despite coaching some of the best special teams units Iowa has ever had.

Wallace. 2014 - after working at a DIII school in Georgia for a few years while somehow developing no recruiting pipeline there, he was hired as a position coach at Iowa. Just 3 years later, Kirk named him assistant defensive coordinator. He was then named in a racial discrimination lawsuit. In 2023, he was once again promoted to some fake title like assistant head coach, and is now paid DOUBLE what Woods is paid despite not even being a coordinator.

Ferentz. 2012 - came to Iowa at the same time Woods became special teams coach. Because Kirk didn't have a spot for him, Kirk chose to toss aside Iowa's legendary OL coach Reece Morgan (and forced him to switch to DLine coach) to make room for inexperienced Brian. With Brian at the helm, the OL immediately saw a drop off. It was about then that Iowa lost its "bullies of the Big 10" status and its run game suffered. Three years later, Kirk promoted Brian to "running game coordinator," a fake title never used before to help justify a future promotion to OC. The run game under Brian was below average for a Big 10 team. Despite that, just one year after being promoted to run game coordinator, Brian was promotion again to offensive coordinator. He received a doubling of his salary despite having never called a play in his life and Kirk not interviewing another soul for the position. Brian was then named in a racial discrimination lawsuit where clear evidence of wrongdoing was presented. Instead of being fired, Brian was rewarded the following year with his 4th promotion, this time taking on QBs coach duties...a position he admitted he knew nothing about.

One of the above is black. The other two are white. Would it be fair to say the white coaches quickly received promotions while the black coach did not? If so, can you reasonably argue that merit was the basis for the coaching decisions?

Removing Brian from the equation, let's now look at Iowa's worst performing coaches over the past 5 years. WR coach, OL coach, and "QB guru/analyst." Correct? I don't think anyone would argue otherwise. One of the 3 is black, the other two are white. How were they treated? The black got unceremoniously fired. The other two failed coaches have been routinely lavished with praise by Kirk. While firing the WR coach was warranted, it leads the question...how do you fire the WR coach but keep the underperforming OL coach (who had far more talent and experience to work with yet was clearly the weak link on staff)? More perplexing, how do you not only keep, but promote & double the salary of the "QB guru" who was oversaw Petras' senior year and Deacon Hill? Kirk promoted him to WR coach despite never coaching the position or having any track record of improving position group performance.

Iowa already had the whitest, small-town coaching staff in the Power 5. Check out the makeup of the other coaching staffs in the Big 10 and you'll see. Blame it on demographics, fine. Yet when Iowa's OC position opened up this fall, Kirk didn't bother to interview a black candidate. When the WR coach position opened up (a position where 95% of the players are black), not a single black coach was interviewed. Maybe that's a coincidence? Maybe Kirk has never had a black coordinator in his coaching career?

By using the offseason to: (i) replace two outgoing coaches with white guys; (ii) limiting internal promotions to white guys only; and (iii) keeping the underperforming white coaches on staff while firing the black one, is Kirk showing his true colors?
 
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It's been well documented that despite coaching Iowa for the past 25 years, Kirk's coaching tree is as thin as the Charlie Brown Christmas tree. While Hayden Fry's staff produced 7 - 10 head coaches, including some Hall of Famers...Kirk's staffs have produced a guy currently working at Culvers, several unemployed former coaches, and a series of "yes" men with minimal ambitions to grow their careers beyond Iowa. That much has been discussed at length.

Now take a look at the internal pecking order / chain of promotions within the program. When you consider Kirk's admitted "blind eye" toward the racial bias situation while virtually never appointing black players to the team's leadership counsel until he got sued for racial discrimination, it makes you wonder whether or not the black coaches are given the same opportunity for advancement at Iowa as the white coaches.

Take Brian Ferentz, Seth Wallace, and LeVar Woods.


Wallace. 2014 - after working at a DIII school in Georgia for a few years while developing no recruiting pipeline there, he was hired as a position coach at Iowa. Just 3 years later, Kirk named him assistant defensive coordinator in 2017. He was then named in a racial discrimination lawsuit. In 2023, he was again promoted to some fake title like assistant head coach.
First off just a couple of weeks ago at the press conference about the OC hiring and Wallace's promotion, it was mentioned that Wallace came to Iowa around 2007 or so to be a grad asst for Norm Parker. Wallace was at Iowa then for a few years.

You failed to mention this so your post is lacking in details.
 
It's been well documented that despite coaching Iowa for the past 25 years, Kirk's coaching tree is as thin as the Charlie Brown Christmas tree. While Hayden Fry's staff produced 7 - 10 head

Ferentz. 2012 - came to Iowa and instantly booted a legend from coaching the OL so that dad could hand him the OL coach job (the only position Brian knew, presumably). The OL immediately saw a drop off in coaching. Three years later, in 2015, Kirk promoted Brian to a fake position of "running game coordinator" to help justify a future promotion to OC. The run game was awful. The following year, at the end of the 2016 season, Brian was awarded with a promotion to offensive coordinator despite having never called a play in his life. He was then named in a racial discrimination lawsuit where clear evidence of wrongdoing was presented, and Brian was rewarded by also being promoted to QBs coaching duties.

So in the first bolded part above, who is the OLine coaching legend that got booted our of his job or reassigned? Are you talking about Reece Morgan? Morgan was OLine coach for 8-9 years and he moved to DLine for about 7 years and did effing great.

Not sure what you are talking about. And the second bolded part is the run game was not terrible at all in 2015. You are so wrong at that line and those running backs continually gained a lot of yards and busted a ton of big runs. You must not remember the 2015 season very well at all as Leshon Daniels, Canzeri, Wadley and DMitchell did very well.
 
It's been well documented that despite coaching Iowa for the past 25 years, Kirk's coaching tree is as thin as the Charlie Brown Christmas tree. While Hayden Fry's staff produced 7 - 10 head coaches, including some Hall of Famers...Kirk's staffs have produced a guy currently working at Culvers, several unemployed former coaches, and a series of "yes" men with minimal ambitions to grow their careers beyond Iowa. That much has been discussed at length.

Now take a look at the internal pecking order / chain of promotions within the program. When you consider Kirk's admitted "blind eye" toward the racial bias situation while virtually never appointing black players to the team's leadership counsel until he got sued for racial discrimination, it makes you wonder whether or not the black coaches are given the same opportunity for advancement at Iowa as the white coaches.

Take Brian Ferentz, Seth Wallace, and LeVar Woods.

Woods. 2008 - retired from the NFL and immediately came back to work at Iowa. Put in 4 years and in 2012 was eventually elevated to position coach in 2012. He's now been in the program 16 years and remains a position coach despite coaching some of the best special teams units Iowa has ever had.

Wallace. 2014 - after working at a DIII school in Georgia for a few years while developing no recruiting pipeline there, he was hired as a position coach at Iowa. Just 3 years later, Kirk named him assistant defensive coordinator in 2017. He was then named in a racial discrimination lawsuit. In 2023, he was again promoted to some fake title like assistant head coach.

Ferentz. 2012 - came to Iowa and instantly booted a legend from coaching the OL so that dad could hand him the OL coach job (the only position Brian knew, presumably). The OL immediately saw a drop off in coaching. Three years later, in 2015, Kirk promoted Brian to a fake position of "running game coordinator" to help justify a future promotion to OC. The run game was awful. The following year, at the end of the 2016 season, Brian was awarded with a promotion to offensive coordinator despite having never called a play in his life. He was then named in a racial discrimination lawsuit where clear evidence of wrongdoing was presented, and Brian was rewarded by also being promoted to QBs coaching duties.

One of the above is black. The other two are white. Connect the dots, as the white coaches quickly received promotions while the black coach did not. Was the black coach a much worse coach than the other two?

Now let's look at Iowa's worst performing coaches over the past 5 years. WR coach, OL coach, and "QB guru/analyst." One of the 3 is black, the other two are white. The black got fired. The other two have been routinely lavished with praise by Kirk despite their coaching failures. While I have no problem with firing the WR coach due to his terrible coaching, it leads the question...how do you keep the OL coach (who had far more talent and experience to work with) and more perplexing how do you promote the QB guru who was clearly the weakest link on the entire staff,?

Even before firing Copeland, Iowa already had the whitest, small-town coaching staff in the Power 5. When the OC position opened up, Kirk didn't even think to interview a black candidate, as he has never had a black coordinator in his coaching career.

By using the offseason to: (i) replace two outgoing coaches with white guys; (ii) limiting internal promotions to white guys only; and (iii) keeping the underperforming white coaches on staff while firing the black one, is Kirk showing his true colors?
Honestly, who knows? I’m guessing consciously Kirk would say no. Subconsciously? Again, who knows?

Can most of us agree the Budmayr promotion is a joke? Yeah, I think so.

The greater issue with race, if you want to make one out of this, is expect a slew of white receivers from South Dakota and suburban Illinois now to be the norm. Our receiver room is about to get even shittier.

Thanks, Kirk.
 
Honestly, who knows? I’m guessing consciously Kirk would say no. Subconsciously? Again, who knows?

Can most of us agree the Budmayr promotion is a joke? Yeah, I think so.

The greater issue with race, if you want to make one out of this, is expect a slew of white receivers from South Dakota and suburban Illinois now to be the norm. Our receiver room is about to get even shittier.

Thanks, Kirk.
For Bud now since out in the open totally, it is def put up or shut up time for him.
 
I hate race baiting like this but I'll die on the hill that Copeland was a scapegoat. We just hired a guy with no experience coaching WRs and is terrible at developing QBs. Wisconsin didn't want him back and here he is.
We had so many damn drops dude! I mean he should have had them doing the JUGS machine drills like way more than average.
 
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How many programs have been sued by their former African American players for hostile/inequitable environment and settled out of court for millions? You can blame the players but KF needs to error on the other side of political correctness/equality.

THis hire of Budamyr is a disaster regardless of his color because he is part of the chitty offenses KF has been putting up the last 3 years.
 
It's been well documented that despite coaching Iowa for the past 25 years, Kirk's coaching tree is as thin as the Charlie Brown Christmas tree. While Hayden Fry's staff produced 7 - 10 head coaches, including some Hall of Famers...Kirk's staffs have produced a guy currently working at Culvers, several unemployed former coaches, and a series of "yes" men with minimal ambitions to grow their careers beyond Iowa. That much has been discussed at length.

Now take a look at the internal pecking order / chain of promotions within the program. When you consider Kirk's admitted "blind eye" toward the racial bias situation while virtually never appointing black players to the team's leadership counsel until he got sued for racial discrimination, it makes you wonder whether or not the black coaches are given the same opportunity for advancement at Iowa as the white coaches.

Take Brian Ferentz, Seth Wallace, and LeVar Woods.

Woods. 2008 - retired from the NFL and immediately came back to work at Iowa. Put in 4 years and in 2012 was eventually elevated to position coach in 2012. He's now been in the program 16 years and remains a position coach despite coaching some of the best special teams units Iowa has ever had.

Wallace. 2014 - after working at a DIII school in Georgia for a few years while developing no recruiting pipeline there, he was hired as a position coach at Iowa. Just 3 years later, Kirk named him assistant defensive coordinator in 2017. He was then named in a racial discrimination lawsuit. In 2023, he was again promoted to some fake title like assistant head coach.

Ferentz. 2012 - came to Iowa and instantly booted a legend from coaching the OL so that dad could hand him the OL coach job (the only position Brian knew, presumably). The OL immediately saw a drop off in coaching. Three years later, in 2015, Kirk promoted Brian to a fake position of "running game coordinator" to help justify a future promotion to OC. The run game was awful. The following year, at the end of the 2016 season, Brian was awarded with a promotion to offensive coordinator despite having never called a play in his life. He was then named in a racial discrimination lawsuit where clear evidence of wrongdoing was presented, and Brian was rewarded by also being promoted to QBs coaching duties.

One of the above is black. The other two are white. Connect the dots, as the white coaches quickly received promotions while the black coach did not. Was the black coach a much worse coach than the other two?

Now let's look at Iowa's worst performing coaches over the past 5 years. WR coach, OL coach, and "QB guru/analyst." One of the 3 is black, the other two are white. The black got fired. The other two have been routinely lavished with praise by Kirk despite their coaching failures. While I have no problem with firing the WR coach due to his terrible coaching, it leads the question...how do you keep the OL coach (who had far more talent and experience to work with) and more perplexing how do you promote the QB guru who was clearly the weakest link on the entire staff,?

Even before firing Copeland, Iowa already had the whitest, small-town coaching staff in the Power 5. When the OC position opened up, Kirk didn't even think to interview a black candidate, as he has never had a black coordinator in his coaching career.

By using the offseason to: (i) replace two outgoing coaches with white guys; (ii) limiting internal promotions to white guys only; and (iii) keeping the underperforming white coaches on staff while firing the black one, is Kirk showing his true colors?
You are probably as white as the driven snow and the self loathing hate of Your own self and skin color that has been programmed into You is like syphilis, rots the brain and causes the weak to go mad. Please do not breed
 
It's been well documented that despite coaching Iowa for the past 25 years, Kirk's coaching tree is as thin as the Charlie Brown Christmas tree. While Hayden Fry's staff produced 7 - 10 head coaches, including some Hall of Famers...Kirk's staffs have produced a guy currently working at Culvers, several unemployed former coaches, and a series of "yes" men with minimal ambitions to grow their careers beyond Iowa. That much has been discussed at length.

Now take a look at the internal pecking order / chain of promotions within the program. When you consider Kirk's admitted "blind eye" toward the racial bias situation while virtually never appointing black players to the team's leadership counsel until he got sued for racial discrimination, it makes you wonder whether or not the black coaches are given the same opportunity for advancement at Iowa as the white coaches.

Take Brian Ferentz, Seth Wallace, and LeVar Woods.

Woods. 2008 - retired from the NFL and immediately came back to work at Iowa. Put in 4 years and in 2012 was eventually elevated to position coach in 2012. He's now been in the program 16 years and remains a position coach despite coaching some of the best special teams units Iowa has ever had.

Wallace. 2014 - after working at a DIII school in Georgia for a few years while developing no recruiting pipeline there, he was hired as a position coach at Iowa. Just 3 years later, Kirk named him assistant defensive coordinator in 2017. He was then named in a racial discrimination lawsuit. In 2023, he was again promoted to some fake title like assistant head coach.

Ferentz. 2012 - came to Iowa and instantly booted a legend from coaching the OL so that dad could hand him the OL coach job (the only position Brian knew, presumably). The OL immediately saw a drop off in coaching. Three years later, in 2015, Kirk promoted Brian to a fake position of "running game coordinator" to help justify a future promotion to OC. The run game was awful. The following year, at the end of the 2016 season, Brian was awarded with a promotion to offensive coordinator despite having never called a play in his life. He was then named in a racial discrimination lawsuit where clear evidence of wrongdoing was presented, and Brian was rewarded by also being promoted to QBs coaching duties.

One of the above is black. The other two are white. Connect the dots, as the white coaches quickly received promotions while the black coach did not. Was the black coach a much worse coach than the other two?

Now let's look at Iowa's worst performing coaches over the past 5 years. WR coach, OL coach, and "QB guru/analyst." One of the 3 is black, the other two are white. The black got fired. The other two have been routinely lavished with praise by Kirk despite their coaching failures. While I have no problem with firing the WR coach due to his terrible coaching, it leads the question...how do you keep the OL coach (who had far more talent and experience to work with) and more perplexing how do you promote the QB guru who was clearly the weakest link on the entire staff,?

Even before firing Copeland, Iowa already had the whitest, small-town coaching staff in the Power 5. When the OC position opened up, Kirk didn't even think to interview a black candidate, as he has never had a black coordinator in his coaching career.

By using the offseason to: (i) replace two outgoing coaches with white guys; (ii) limiting internal promotions to white guys only; and (iii) keeping the underperforming white coaches on staff while firing the black one, is Kirk showing his true colors?
Stupid post
 
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It's been well documented that despite coaching Iowa for the past 25 years, Kirk's coaching tree is as thin as the Charlie Brown Christmas tree. While Hayden Fry's staff produced 7 - 10 head coaches, including some Hall of Famers...Kirk's staffs have produced a guy currently working at Culvers, several unemployed former coaches, and a series of "yes" men with minimal ambitions to grow their careers beyond Iowa. That much has been discussed at length.

Now take a look at the internal pecking order / chain of promotions within the program. When you consider Kirk's admitted "blind eye" toward the racial bias situation while virtually never appointing black players to the team's leadership counsel until he got sued for racial discrimination, it makes you wonder whether or not the black coaches are given the same opportunity for advancement at Iowa as the white coaches.

Take Brian Ferentz, Seth Wallace, and LeVar Woods.

Woods. 2008 - retired from the NFL and immediately came back to work at Iowa. Put in 4 years and in 2012 was eventually elevated to position coach in 2012. He's now been in the program 16 years and remains a position coach despite coaching some of the best special teams units Iowa has ever had.

Wallace. 2014 - after working at a DIII school in Georgia for a few years while developing no recruiting pipeline there, he was hired as a position coach at Iowa. Just 3 years later, Kirk named him assistant defensive coordinator in 2017. He was then named in a racial discrimination lawsuit. In 2023, he was again promoted to some fake title like assistant head coach.

Ferentz. 2012 - came to Iowa and instantly booted a legend from coaching the OL so that dad could hand him the OL coach job (the only position Brian knew, presumably). The OL immediately saw a drop off in coaching. Three years later, in 2015, Kirk promoted Brian to a fake position of "running game coordinator" to help justify a future promotion to OC. The run game was awful. The following year, at the end of the 2016 season, Brian was awarded with a promotion to offensive coordinator despite having never called a play in his life. He was then named in a racial discrimination lawsuit where clear evidence of wrongdoing was presented, and Brian was rewarded by also being promoted to QBs coaching duties.

One of the above is black. The other two are white. Connect the dots, as the white coaches quickly received promotions while the black coach did not. Was the black coach a much worse coach than the other two?

Now let's look at Iowa's worst performing coaches over the past 5 years. WR coach, OL coach, and "QB guru/analyst." One of the 3 is black, the other two are white. The black got fired. The other two have been routinely lavished with praise by Kirk despite their coaching failures. While I have no problem with firing the WR coach due to his terrible coaching, it leads the question...how do you keep the OL coach (who had far more talent and experience to work with) and more perplexing how do you promote the QB guru who was clearly the weakest link on the entire staff,?

Even before firing Copeland, Iowa already had the whitest, small-town coaching staff in the Power 5. When the OC position opened up, Kirk didn't even think to interview a black candidate, as he has never had a black coordinator in his coaching career.

By using the offseason to: (i) replace two outgoing coaches with white guys; (ii) limiting internal promotions to white guys only; and (iii) keeping the underperforming white coaches on staff while firing the black one, is Kirk showing his true colors?
IOWA SLAW
 
It's been well documented that despite coaching Iowa for the past 25 years, Kirk's coaching tree is as thin as the Charlie Brown Christmas tree. While Hayden Fry's staff produced 7 - 10 head coaches, including some Hall of Famers...Kirk's staffs have produced a guy currently working at Culvers, several unemployed former coaches, and a series of "yes" men with minimal ambitions to grow their careers beyond Iowa. That much has been discussed at length.

Now take a look at the internal pecking order / chain of promotions within the program. When you consider Kirk's admitted "blind eye" toward the racial bias situation while virtually never appointing black players to the team's leadership counsel until he got sued for racial discrimination, it makes you wonder whether or not the black coaches are given the same opportunity for advancement at Iowa as the white coaches.

Take Brian Ferentz, Seth Wallace, and LeVar Woods.

Woods. 2008 - retired from the NFL and immediately came back to work at Iowa. Put in 4 years and in 2012 was eventually elevated to position coach in 2012. He's now been in the program 16 years and remains a position coach despite coaching some of the best special teams units Iowa has ever had.

Wallace. 2014 - after working at a DIII school in Georgia for a few years while developing no recruiting pipeline there, he was hired as a position coach at Iowa. Just 3 years later, Kirk named him assistant defensive coordinator in 2017. He was then named in a racial discrimination lawsuit. In 2023, he was again promoted to some fake title like assistant head coach.

Ferentz. 2012 - came to Iowa and instantly booted a legend from coaching the OL so that dad could hand him the OL coach job (the only position Brian knew, presumably). The OL immediately saw a drop off in coaching. Three years later, in 2015, Kirk promoted Brian to a fake position of "running game coordinator" to help justify a future promotion to OC. The run game was awful. The following year, at the end of the 2016 season, Brian was awarded with a promotion to offensive coordinator despite having never called a play in his life. He was then named in a racial discrimination lawsuit where clear evidence of wrongdoing was presented, and Brian was rewarded by also being promoted to QBs coaching duties.

One of the above is black. The other two are white. Connect the dots, as the white coaches quickly received promotions while the black coach did not. Was the black coach a much worse coach than the other two?

Now let's look at Iowa's worst performing coaches over the past 5 years. WR coach, OL coach, and "QB guru/analyst." One of the 3 is black, the other two are white. The black got fired. The other two have been routinely lavished with praise by Kirk despite their coaching failures. While I have no problem with firing the WR coach due to his terrible coaching, it leads the question...how do you keep the OL coach (who had far more talent and experience to work with) and more perplexing how do you promote the QB guru who was clearly the weakest link on the entire staff,?

Even before firing Copeland, Iowa already had the whitest, small-town coaching staff in the Power 5. When the OC position opened up, Kirk didn't even think to interview a black candidate, as he has never had a black coordinator in his coaching career.

By using the offseason to: (i) replace two outgoing coaches with white guys; (ii) limiting internal promotions to white guys only; and (iii) keeping the underperforming white coaches on staff while firing the black one, is Kirk showing his true colors?
This is an incendiary and unwise post. KF has had plenty of Black coaches, he’s hired and fired White as well as Black coaches in the past, and just fired an underperforming WR coach that most of us also thought should be fired. I’ll criticize KF on the nepotism thing, but accusing him of racism is something else entirely. Also, we have zero idea if Budmayr might not be wildly successful as a WR coach. Hey, maybe we give him one season to see how he does first! I don’t see any good that can come from a post like this, I really don’t
 
I hate race baiting like this but I'll die on the hill that Copeland was a scapegoat. We just hired a guy with no experience coaching WRs and is terrible at developing QBs. Wisconsin didn't want him back and here he is.
I don't particularly like the racial angle to this either, but I think there's plenty of fair questions the media could ask about this and previous history. For Kirk's sake, I hope he has some good answers.
 
We had so many damn drops dude! I mean he should have had them doing the JUGS machine drills like way more than average.

We did. My argument can certainly be viewed from another perspective and I understand that.

1- it's really hard to get wrs to come here when you are the 3rd or 4th option getting the ball... and that is if you are the #1 receiver. RBs and TEs will out touch you for sure.

2- QB play has been horrendous. I grew up always hearing if the ball hits you in the hands, you should catch it. While I still belive that to a good extent, wrs are trying to catch balls behind them, too high, in traffic, way too hard or not in a tight spiral (Deacon).

3- O line play has been horrendous. No time to get open on deep routes.

4- The offense and route trees are really bad. People know we look to one side of the field. People know we look through 2 or a max of 3 progressions. Also, back to point 1, you aren't getting the ball more than a handful of times a game... if lucky.

5- we have had good wrs: Jones, ISM, Smith, Johnson that were all pretty good. Two in the league, one really underutilized. The problem is they get into the system and leave. Recruiting is a huge problem. Brown is about as elite as we will ever get.
 
How many programs have been sued by their former African American players for hostile/inequitable environment and settled out of court for millions?
Sued for having rules and expected them to be obeyed. I guess we should sue the military, those drill instructors are meanys. No one made any player stay here in such a hostile environment. The whole thing was a witch hunt. If it was so bad why wasn't the culture brought up in 2002, 2005, 2010, 2015 or 2018? I know why... Kirk was lauded then for how he ran his program. This thread is ridiculous.
 
OP Could you list the breakdown of all power 5 schools in regard to their racial background and their hiring, Firing and promotion history in regard to how that compares to Iowa? I am sure you have researched this thoroughly and are not just blowing shit out of your ass.
It's anecdotal but I will give you one example....Michigan:

HC: Black, received 3 promotions in a short few years

OC/QB: White, 2 promotions in last 2 years.

DC: White, New hire

OL: Black, started as GA, second promotion in 3-4 years
RB: Black, skipped over for promotion by another black coach
TE: White, new hire
WR: Black, one promotion in his 4 years
DL: Black, New hire
LB: TBD but expected hire (waiting in decision ( is black)
DB: Black, New hire

ST: White, just promoted from GA

So have at it...
 
Honestly, who knows? I’m guessing consciously Kirk would say no. Subconsciously? Again, who knows?

Can most of us agree the Budmayr promotion is a joke? Yeah, I think so.

The greater issue with race, if you want to make one out of this, is expect a slew of white receivers from South Dakota and suburban Illinois now to be the norm. Our receiver room is about to get even shittier.

Thanks, Kirk.
Yeah, I think there are probably a whole bunch of experienced WR coaches out there at P5 schools, other D1 FBS schools, and even FCS schools who were receivers and who have really coached up their players.

They would love to come to Iowa and help rebuild the passing game.

If Iowa's passing game was already decent then Budmayr could probably step in and keep it rolling. But the passing game is broke, pretty poor, and the new OC could have probably found a better WR coach.

This was a lazy hire, were any other coaches interviewed, will the press ask that question, I bet Tim Lester knows 10 proven WR coaches names off the top of his head.
 
Yeah, I think there are probably a whole bunch of experienced WR coaches out there at P5 schools, other D1 FBS schools, and even FCS schools who were receivers and who have really coached up their players.

They would love to come to Iowa and help rebuild the passing game.

If Iowa's passing game was already decent then Budmayr could probably step in and keep it rolling. But the passing game is broke, pretty poor, and the new OC could have probably found a better WR coach.

This was a lazy hire, were any other coaches interviewed, will the press ask that question, I bet Tim Lester knows 10 proven WR coaches names off the top of his head.
Lazy, and I would add entitled and arrogant.

The same qualities that led to Kirk after the 2021 season adding quarterback coach to his unqualified son’s list of duties which led to the disastrous play of Spencer Petras in 2022 and the shit show that was Deacon Hill in 2023.

I’m just amazed by the number of friends and family of the Ferentzes who come on this board daily to defend this shit. It’s remarkable.

But if all of this works out, and the offense averages 27 points a game in 2024, and if @pistachio1999 can arrange it, I will gladly eat crow and kneel down at the 50 yard line in Kinnick and kiss Kirk’s ass.
 
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