Opening Statement
Good afternoon. Just before we get to this week's game, I want to look back for one second and thank our fans for helping create a phenomenal environment out in Kinnick Stadium last Saturday night. Like so many of the night games, it was a tremendous football game, and we really showed a national audience why Kinnick is such a special place to play. We are so appreciative of our fan support.
Obviously it was a tough, competitive, great football game. We felt bad to come up on the short end of it, but we woke up Sunday, went back to work, looked at the tape and we've moved on and certainly started our preparation for Michigan State in earnest yesterday. The thing about playing Michigan State, it's been a while over the years here, but pretty much one thing that doesn't change anytime you lineup against them, you know you're going to play a well-coached team, and a team that's got good players.
This one's no different. They're a physical football team. Very aggressive on defense, and the same thing offensively doing a good job there. They've got good players. They're physical players and it's going to be a big challenge from that standpoint.
Playing in the Big Ten on the road is always another challenge in itself. So we're going to have to have a great week of practice, going up to East Lansing, and most importantly, to be ready to compete at game time.
The game this past week was pretty hot. The game took a lot out of everybody. You kind of sense that, plus on top of it now with the new technology and Coach Doyle and his staff monitoring things, we've been sensitive to our players. Hopefully we'll do our best to alter practice where they can be ready to go 100 percent on Saturday, and give us a chance to go up there and play at our absolute best, and that's exactly what it will take to come out victorious.
Our captains this week are Josey Jewell, and congratulations to him on his honors. Well-deserved, certainly. James Daniels, Ben Niemann, and Kevin Ward; those four guys will be our captains this week, and I'll throw it out for questions.
Q. Follow-up on the conference call with the player protests. Would you consider something along the lines of linking arms during the anthem or something like that, or is that still too politically motivated, do you think?
KIRK FERENTZ: I think enough has already been said about this, quite frankly. There are kind of two levels. I read this this morning that sports and politics are intertwined. I see the world a lot differently, I guess. It's the beauty of sports, quite frankly. You go back to Saturday night and a bunch of fans had a chance to come to Kinnick Stadium, and life's always full of challenges and things that you maybe don't agree with or what have you, but it's a chance to be unified. Whatever team you're cheering for, hopefully you're into the game. I think as athletes and coaches, that is the beauty of it.
As I said on the teleconference, as you talk to people, former players, just about every one of them will mention, what they miss is just the camaraderie, the singleness of purpose, that type of thing. It's a really unique time in someone's life if you're an athlete. To me, that's the beauty of it all.
My preference is we keep politics to our individual time. That's how I look at it. Pertinent to our players, we work with college-aged students. Certainly we encourage them to grow, and be curious and ask questions. To me, that's healthy. As long as you're alive you should be doing that. But this is the one time we put everything aside. We all dress alike, act alike, and we're trying to do the same thing. Whatever they do on campus is great, as long as it's not illegal or immoral. I'm all for it.
But it's part of growing up and part of life in general. You're always looking at things and your perspective certainly changes as you get older. To me, that's on the outside and sports ought to be about sports. That's kind of how I look at the world, I guess. I always thought that was the beauty of sports, quite frankly.
Q. The other topic in the locker room, what have you heard over the years from teams and administrators coming in here about Iowa?
KIRK FERENTZ: Yeah, well that's why I had a smirk or chuckle under my breath, I guess, when people talk about the color of our locker room because we have a great locker room. That's a great visitor's locker room, I would be thrilled to come here as a visitor. I wouldn't have been so thrilled to come back to the one up above, the old one. But the home room locker room is the exact same.
Back in the day it was 1AA level football, a bus ride league, and you talk about bad locker rooms. That's part of football and part of games that's shifted in time. We really upgraded.
I went to Cleveland in 1993 and play at the old Cleveland Municipal Stadium, and they literally had hooks coming out of the wall. The same ones that Jim Brown as a rookie used. And the visitors was the same way, home and visitors were both lousy. You know, that's football. I don't know why it's a big conversation piece, but apparently it is. I heard that on the radio.
I get these little glimpses, about 12 minutes of news every morning when I come into work. Hear stuff and what the talk of the day might be.
Good afternoon. Just before we get to this week's game, I want to look back for one second and thank our fans for helping create a phenomenal environment out in Kinnick Stadium last Saturday night. Like so many of the night games, it was a tremendous football game, and we really showed a national audience why Kinnick is such a special place to play. We are so appreciative of our fan support.
Obviously it was a tough, competitive, great football game. We felt bad to come up on the short end of it, but we woke up Sunday, went back to work, looked at the tape and we've moved on and certainly started our preparation for Michigan State in earnest yesterday. The thing about playing Michigan State, it's been a while over the years here, but pretty much one thing that doesn't change anytime you lineup against them, you know you're going to play a well-coached team, and a team that's got good players.
This one's no different. They're a physical football team. Very aggressive on defense, and the same thing offensively doing a good job there. They've got good players. They're physical players and it's going to be a big challenge from that standpoint.
Playing in the Big Ten on the road is always another challenge in itself. So we're going to have to have a great week of practice, going up to East Lansing, and most importantly, to be ready to compete at game time.
The game this past week was pretty hot. The game took a lot out of everybody. You kind of sense that, plus on top of it now with the new technology and Coach Doyle and his staff monitoring things, we've been sensitive to our players. Hopefully we'll do our best to alter practice where they can be ready to go 100 percent on Saturday, and give us a chance to go up there and play at our absolute best, and that's exactly what it will take to come out victorious.
Our captains this week are Josey Jewell, and congratulations to him on his honors. Well-deserved, certainly. James Daniels, Ben Niemann, and Kevin Ward; those four guys will be our captains this week, and I'll throw it out for questions.
Q. Follow-up on the conference call with the player protests. Would you consider something along the lines of linking arms during the anthem or something like that, or is that still too politically motivated, do you think?
KIRK FERENTZ: I think enough has already been said about this, quite frankly. There are kind of two levels. I read this this morning that sports and politics are intertwined. I see the world a lot differently, I guess. It's the beauty of sports, quite frankly. You go back to Saturday night and a bunch of fans had a chance to come to Kinnick Stadium, and life's always full of challenges and things that you maybe don't agree with or what have you, but it's a chance to be unified. Whatever team you're cheering for, hopefully you're into the game. I think as athletes and coaches, that is the beauty of it.
As I said on the teleconference, as you talk to people, former players, just about every one of them will mention, what they miss is just the camaraderie, the singleness of purpose, that type of thing. It's a really unique time in someone's life if you're an athlete. To me, that's the beauty of it all.
My preference is we keep politics to our individual time. That's how I look at it. Pertinent to our players, we work with college-aged students. Certainly we encourage them to grow, and be curious and ask questions. To me, that's healthy. As long as you're alive you should be doing that. But this is the one time we put everything aside. We all dress alike, act alike, and we're trying to do the same thing. Whatever they do on campus is great, as long as it's not illegal or immoral. I'm all for it.
But it's part of growing up and part of life in general. You're always looking at things and your perspective certainly changes as you get older. To me, that's on the outside and sports ought to be about sports. That's kind of how I look at the world, I guess. I always thought that was the beauty of sports, quite frankly.
Q. The other topic in the locker room, what have you heard over the years from teams and administrators coming in here about Iowa?
KIRK FERENTZ: Yeah, well that's why I had a smirk or chuckle under my breath, I guess, when people talk about the color of our locker room because we have a great locker room. That's a great visitor's locker room, I would be thrilled to come here as a visitor. I wouldn't have been so thrilled to come back to the one up above, the old one. But the home room locker room is the exact same.
Back in the day it was 1AA level football, a bus ride league, and you talk about bad locker rooms. That's part of football and part of games that's shifted in time. We really upgraded.
I went to Cleveland in 1993 and play at the old Cleveland Municipal Stadium, and they literally had hooks coming out of the wall. The same ones that Jim Brown as a rookie used. And the visitors was the same way, home and visitors were both lousy. You know, that's football. I don't know why it's a big conversation piece, but apparently it is. I heard that on the radio.
I get these little glimpses, about 12 minutes of news every morning when I come into work. Hear stuff and what the talk of the day might be.