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College Football: #18 Iowa demolishes #17 Indiana, 34-6

IOWA CITY – Iowa (1-0, 1-0) defeated Indiana (0-1, 0-1), 34-6, on Saturday at Kinnick Stadium.

Iowa extended its winning streak to seven games. Iowa has outscored its last seven opponents, 248-89, averaging 35.4 points per game offensively and allowing 12.7 ppg during the winning streak.

The 34 points scored are the most in a Big Ten opener since scoring 42 at Penn State in 2002.

INDIVIDUAL NOTES
QB Spencer Petras is 91-158 (59.5) with 1,233 passing yards (176.1 ypg) during Iowa’s seven-game winning streak. He has thrown eight touchdowns and two interceptions over the last seven games.

DB Riley Moss returned an interception 30 yards for a touchdown in the first quarter. Moss returned an interception 55 yards for a touchdown in the second quarter. The interceptions were No. 7 and 8 of his career. He has three career pick-sixes. Iowa has had at least one interception return for a touchdown in each of the last 14 seasons and 19 of the last 21.

DB Dane Belton recorded his first career interception.

QB Spencer Petras rushed for a touchdown in the second quarter. It was his fourth career rushing touchdown and the longest rushing touchdown of his career (9 yards).

Iowa had three offensive linemen make their first career start: LT Mason Richman, RG Justin Britt and RT Nick DeJong. Iowa DL John Waggoner and DL Logan Lee also made their first career starts. WR Charlie Jones made his first career start.

TE Sam LaPorta had a career-high 83 receiving yards.

Noah Shannon (4), John Waggoner (4), Jestin Jacobs (3), Logan Lee (3) and Ethan Hurkett (3) recorded career highs in tackles.

MISCELLANEOUS
Iowa has played 23 straight games without surrendering 25 points, the longest streak in the nation among Power 5 teams.

Iowa has won seven straight Big Ten games for the fifth time in the last 30 years. Iowa won eight straight conference games in 2015 and 2008, and seven straight in 2004 and 1991).

Iowa has scored at least 25 points in each of its wins during its winning streak. It is the second time in school history Iowa has scored 25 points or more in seven straight wins (2015, seven games).

Iowa and Indiana met as AP ranked opponents for the second time ever and the first time since 1991, when No. 10 Iowa defeated No. 25 Indiana, 38-21, at Kinnick Stadium.

Iowa is 98-33-2 in season-opening games, including an 19-4 mark under coach Kirk Ferentz.

Iowa won the toss and elected to receive. The Hawkeyes have played 275 games under head coach Kirk Ferentz. Iowa has opened the game on offense 208 times (133-75). The Hawkeyes have opened the game on defense 67 times (36-31).

INSTANT REPLAY
Iowa lost fumble (confirmed)
Iowa pass completion (overturned)

UP NEXT
The Hawkeyes play at Iowa State on Saturday, Sept. 11 in the annual Iowa Corn Cy-Hawk Series. The game is televised on ABC beginning at 3:30 p.m. (CT).

University of Iowa Football Media Conference

Saturday, September 4, 2021

Iowa City, Iowa, USA

Coach Kirk Ferentz

Postgame Press Conference

COACH FERENTZ: Needless to say I am really pleased with the effort of our entire football team today. It was a good team win for us. Starts with the effort, focus and effort, and a week ago I wasn’t so sure where we were, but the guys had a really good week. They came in Monday morning, focused and ready to roll and put a good week in on working on Indiana.

In a nutshell, two things that stand out in my mind: A combination of our older guys doing what we needed them to do; they really played good football and led our football team.

The other aspect, pleased with the young guys, between No. 3 and the youth of our guys up front, inexperience, those things were keeping me up at night a little bit, so anxious to see the film, see how they looked technically, but from the sideline looked like we held our own on both sides and gave us a chance to play good football.

I can’t say enough about the big plays, Riley Moss, couple of interceptions, Belton with an interception in front of our bench, really well done, Tyler Goodson popping that run. That was outstanding. So all that was good. Last but not least, great to be back in Kinnick and to have fans. I tell you, we were all feeling it down there.

Just coming in today, night and day different from last year. It was probably the weirdest thing, like a science fiction movie going into West Lafayette and not to see people out there. To see people just out moving around and enjoying life a little bit and having them in the stadium was fantastic. So appreciative of that, and I’ll open it up.

Q. Coach, what you can you say about your defense today holding Indiana to its lowest point total since 2013?

COACH FERENTZ: I don’t want to say I’m surprised, but just really pleased, a lot of respect for them, their football team, all three phases. They’re a big-play outfit, and they made some big plays, explosive plays between the quarterback and No. 3, those guys are really dynamic.

For us to do that, to play that way against them and our DBs really looked quick to the football and good anticipation. We’re veteran back there, so I’m not going to say we expected that, but that really helps us if our veterans play like that. But a big part of it, too, is the guys up front getting pressure. It’s not always about sacks, but if you can keep the quarterback uncomfortable, that factors in, too. Seemed like we were playing cohesively.

Q. They seemed to fit what you guys want to do defensively. They’re a big-play outfit, not a high-percentage passing team, but still to do this effort against a team like this, what did you think of the way Phil called the game, called his defense and put them in position and Riley and everybody else being able to execute.

COACH FERENTZ: I love to complain about that flag in front of their bench right there, I think it was the first half, and then three somewhere in the third quarter, whatever it was, those two plays. Those are the things you worry about, giving up those chunk plays, and they’re good at that hitting those. If you go back and look at them last year, they had a lot of luck with that.

So for us to play good defense, we’re always trying to minimize, make people work, drive the ball and work it a little bit, but that doesn’t work either if we’re not playing good run defense and also getting a little pressure on the quarterback.

Q. What went into the game plan defensively to eliminate this offense?

COACH FERENTZ: Good team defense, and I know that sounds mundane, but it really is. That’s how we play. If we can get a spark play, and picks are a spark play, obviously, but you’re not banking on that, but when you get those that’s super. Getting a sack is great, but it’s not always about that, but playing with tempo and making the other team uneasy. I think our guys did that.

Phil and the defensive staff did a good job. They do a really good job, and the combination of all those things gives you a chance, and not giving up easy, big plays because they’re demoralizing.

Q. You started like last year’s home opener against Northwestern, you guys got up a couple scores early, and then the game starts to normalize a little bit, and this time you guys be continued to shut them down. Spencer was saying at halftime you talked about, we know what can happen. We saw Indiana lose to Ohio State last year. How do you feel like this team has evolved in that way from last season?

COACH FERENTZ: First of all, about Indiana, they were really impressive last season, there was no question about that. They’re good in all areas; they’re well coached. But the thing that stood out to me, the two games they lost they were down against Ohio State and they pulled it right back to a score, and the same thing in the bowl game, it was 20-20 after being down 20-6, I believe, so that tells you about a team’s personality. Then you factor in, we haven’t always been the fastest starting outfit in the third quarter. So we reminded the guys that this thing is far from over, and you factor in their big play capability. It’s hard to relax. It’s hard to relax on Saturdays.

Q. You said a week ago you felt a little unsure? What happened there? What did you see this week?

COACH FERENTZ: It was hot last week, really hot and humid, and we had a bug going around in the building, I think the whole campus. That was affecting some guys and just, you know, when your numbers go down a little bit and probably couldn’t practice as hard or as much as we wanted to at the end of the last week. So, what do we do, we find ways to worry about things and there was plenty of am mow right there.

Saturday, it’s kind of like that but it’s hard to enjoy time off, which we all took. Like I said, when they came in Monday, they were — they practiced really well this week and prepared well and did their work away from the building, so pleased and happy with what the guys did.

Q. Talk about the play that Spencer ran where —

COACH FERENTZ: It’s one of those plays if you get the right coverage, then you have a chance to execute it. Then you’ve got to execute it, too, and to his credit, he’s not renowned as being a runner, college football runner, a running quarterback, but he showed good poise. He didn’t rush it and let it develop and the guys did a good job blocking.

Q. You and your coaches have a similar rule. With what you are facing next week, you go right into it tonight?

COACH FERENTZ: I don’t, me, personally, no, and I don’t recommend it. To that point, last week we walked out of here, most of the coaches of were out 1 or 2, and we were off last Sunday, and the guys were in and out doing what they’ve got to do to be ready Monday. One thing I’ve learned is you’ve got to rest hard and work hard, and wins are hard to come by, so I encouraged our guys to enjoy today, smartly, but enjoy it, and we will look at film tomorrow and then move on.

And the morning schedule has forced us to move a little quicker. Used to be we would start out Tuesday afternoons 3:00, prior to 15 — so you talk about the 24-hour rule, but we didn’t put it into affect. But tomorrow we will have plenty of time to get on the next game and start to work on it and see what we can do. We’ve got a lot of work to do in terms of the opponent and also us getting better at some things. These games are hard to win, so you want to enjoy it.

Q. I think you said earlier this week that was a night and day difference for Spencer Petras going into the game now that you have some film and there are some in-season reps to look at. How did you feel like he performed as opposed to last year?

COACH FERENTZ: I thought he did a good job protecting the football, and it starts there. We had two fumbles today, and that’s not good but, you know, Ivory has been out for a while so I think that’s part of it, and we’re careful about tackling experienced guys in practice during scrimmages. We don’t tackle a lot live anyway. We had two in our last year’s opener, too. I think Spencer just has more confidence, and he’s played. You can’t hand that to anybody, or give it to them, they’ve got to earn that. He’s played through the highs and lows and he will have more ahead.

He has a tough job, and he plays a tough position. You see the growth and you can feel it. I think all of us have confidence in him. One thing I was pleased with, too, was the penalty situation. We had two today, and that’s in stark contrast to the opener a year ago.

One of them, I can’t find fault in that one at all, it was just and aggressive play, and it was a bang-bang play, and I understand why the official had to call it but hard to get mad on that one for sure.

Q. Coaches are notorious worriers, and you’re probably at the top of the list for that. And you look at your offensive line situation, moving guys in and around and then Indiana the way that they move guys in and out. How did you feel they protected and did it meet your expectation?

COACH FERENTZ: We had that sack I think it was before the half, down on our end, where the guy came off late. Like I say, you’ve got to see the film to know the intricacies, but it didn’t look like we were on the retreat or anything like that. I thought the guys seemed unaffected, and that’s one of the things I worry about, all of us worry about, especially the young guys.

Overall from the sidelines — these guys do some things — our opponent does, do some things that are really tough to handle, so some of the dead plays were just good calls on their part, and they got us and sometimes you get them.

I thought it seemed like they — nobody seemed like they were out of place. They just seemed like they were doing okay and then flipping it around, just got off the radio saying one of my “Kodak moments” etched in my mind was a Yahya Black at Penn State last year. He was in the fourth quarter, and he was rushing a left tackle, and he looked like one of those cartoon characters, and his feet were going, and the guy basically had one hand on him, like, you know, get away. And I told him the next day, it’s okay to be aggressive. Don’t be reverent, try to be aggressive, but I didn’t see that out there today, especially with our defensive guys, and a lot of those guys haven’t played much. We have our veteran group and then the next wave hasn’t had a lot of experience.

Q. Holding Indiana to 6 points for an entire 60 minutes and the way they played.

COACH FERENTZ: We can’t complain about that. We got a chance in every game if — we would really have to screw it up, right, if we can’t win with 6 points, although it has been done. That’s a good starting point, if you can keep people out of the end zone. Even the one time they got down there we forced them to kick the field goal, and that’s part of good defense, too. They had us on the run, a little momentum, but we dug in and forced them to kick a field goal. Those are things we’ll point out in tape, like, you know these are things that are going to help us this season if we just understand how important those situations are.

Q. Seemed like a big deal you started a freshman left tackle and seemed you rode him most of the game, might have been a few snaps he didn’t play, but what led you to Mason Richman being your starting left tackle?

COACH FERENTZ: Pretty much how he practices, and it’s been good competition with all three guys right now playing the tackle slot, and Colby would be the next guy, all three of them have improved a lot, spring ball and this period here. Mason is a guy who is coachable, and it’s one thing to hear what a guy is being coached to do, but he goes out and really tries to execute it.

The other thing that impressed me during camp for sure was if he had a rough day and VanValkenburg gave him fits, he would come the next day and take the challenge. He wouldn’t go into retreat. You never know what’s going to happen, but that is a positive step, and he’s got to feel better about himself right now.

Q. Talk about Riley Moss.

COACH FERENTZ: Riley? You know, he’s kind of been that way. It’s funny, when we recruited him, it wasn’t like we were on him as a sophomore or freshman. It was later in the process.

But he kept impressing us, and then since he’s been here he’s done nothing but impress us. If you get his personality, he’s loose and light and all that kind of stuff. He’s a light-hearted guy that way. But he competes hard out there and he’s got some good skills and ability and he competes hard and he’s got a lot of pride in what he does.

I think he’s grown a lot, and so has Matt Hankins, Matt, on the other side, and that’s good. And Terry Roberts, I’m not going to say he is closing that gap, but he’s gaining ground, so we’ve got guys that have taken steps forward.

Q. What did you think of Shudak’s performance today, specifically the field goal right before halftime. They had the three timeouts. He’s got to sit through that?

COACH FERENTZ: I’m not sure how that affected him. He got a couple of practice shots in, I guess that would be good, from my vantage point. But he does such a good job on kickoffs. You almost take that for granted. I’ve said, we considered him to be the starter. We have a lot of confidence in him. Like Mason Richman, he’s an older guy who just practices so well. The facts are sometimes you’ve got two guys that are really good, and Keith Duncan was really good. It wasn’t like he was beaten out by somebody, just had somebody maybe a little bit better, but it gave us total confidence when he got his chance. Even last year if he would have been called up, he would have answered it. First-class guy, smart guy, serious at it and works at it.

When you see guys doing that day after day that you feel — you can never predict but you feel like when they get out there they’re going to do well with their opportunity, and all of us feel that way about Caleb. He’s earned that.

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