Kirk Ferentz’s take on college’s new era may surprise you ahead of 27th Iowa season

MisterGopher

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Excellent article.

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6446598/2025/06/24/iowa-football-kirk-ferentz-interview/

In the era of college athletics defined by unlimited free agency, revenue sharing and an expanding playoff system, it may be stunning to some that the longest tenured person leading a football program is comfortable with the new status quo.

Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz will lead the Hawkeyes for a 27th season this fall and has acquired a vanilla reputation that can border on stale and resistant to change. But when it comes to paying athletes and allowing them to move around at a whim, Ferentz is more invigorated than many of his peers.

“In some crazy way, I enjoy all the crazy stuff that’s going on the last couple of years here with our game and the landscape and all that,” said Ferentz recently in an exclusive interview with The Athletic. “It’s almost like a challenge in some ways. And then the single best part is just the people you work with, and that hasn’t changed.”

The stress of paying athletes, some of whom take a nomadic journey as yearly free agents, has contributed to driving out national championship-winning coaches in football and men’s basketball. Ferentz has chosen a different route. He has long supported athlete compensation, especially with soaring media rights revenues in college football.

Iowa football, for instance, directly generated nearly $92 million in the athletic department’s 2024 fiscal year financial statement and indirectly brought in around $50 million more in unspecified revenue. Yet in the same fiscal year, only $4.16 million went toward football scholarships.

“I think we all agree, at least I certainly do, that the revenue has really grown at a pace nobody really foresaw, other than maybe (former Big Ten commissioner) Jim Delany 15 years ago,” Ferentz said. “So, it ought to be redistributed. Whatever the numbers are on that, that’s for somebody else to decide. I think this is great.

“This is easily the most interesting time that we really have faced.”

:

“It’s almost a good trade-off rather than having somebody on your team that’s not sure they want to be there,” Ferentz said. “Now you’ve got guys, they’re just excited as hell to be here. So, hey, let’s go for it.”
 


No ... he doesn't enjoy it.

Someone told him he has to say that.

If he had a choice he'd fire the medical staff and hire a student to rub dirt in the injury.
There's a book out called "Performing under pressure."

Supposedly, neuroscientific backed advice, on the how.

In that book, one of the strategies to reduce anxiety from a situation that would otherwise make you nervous, is to reframe the topic from a threat, to a challenge.

“It’s almost like a challenge in some ways." -Kirk Ferentz

Methinks you are correct.

Kirk is actually anxious. However, he is actively taking steps to change. That phrase looks like he is trying, but not quite there yet.
 

Honestly Ferentz is the perfect Iowa coach.
Football guy who is good enough to usually win 6-9 regular season games with occasionally more than that.

And he works for a place where that is good enough to stick around.

There is at least a 51% that program gets worse when he retires
 

I've said this before, I think that the portal, NIL and revenue sharing will benefit programs like MN and IA more than the blue bloods.
 


Honestly Ferentz is the perfect Iowa coach.
Football guy who is good enough to usually win 6-9 regular season games with occasionally more than that.

And he works for a place where that is good enough to stick around.

There is at least a 51% that program gets worse when he retires

Ferentz has won more than 9 games in more than a third of his seasons over the past 23 seasons. And he's won a Big Ten title or a Big Ten division title in more than 20% of his seasons over the past 23 years.

He has won less than 6 games once in the past 24 seasons.

There is more than a 51% chance they get worse after he leaves.
 

Honestly Ferentz is the perfect Iowa coach.
Football guy who is good enough to usually win 6-9 regular season games with occasionally more than that.

And he works for a place where that is good enough to stick around.

There is at least a 51% that program gets worse when he retires
Iowa has had two coaches since 1979. Iowa getting another Hayden Fry or Kirk Ferentz is uhh wishful thinking. You only roll that die when you have no other choice. The odds of getting worse are probably closer to 90%.
 

Iowa has had two coaches since 1979. Iowa getting another Hayden Fry or Kirk Ferentz is uhh wishful thinking. You only roll that die when you have no other choice. The odds of getting worse are probably closer to 90%.
I agree. Unless they find a way to get Bielema.
 





He's sure turned around a crappy Illinois team in short order.
Bret is 57-56 since leaving Wisconsin. He's been fine at Illinois and maybe could be great at Iowa you never know. I would still say that Fry and Ferentz is a very tough act to follow, even for Bret. That said, Bret just signed a non-compete clause for all Big Ten teams in his six year contract until 2030.
 

Read this article on the Iowa QB situation and tell me that Kirk loves the new landscape of college football.

https://www.si.com/college/iowa/foo...ommit-cash-herrera-lands-with-indiana-hoosier

Despite all the things they do well, they have been abysmal at recruiting the most important position in college football for at least the last 10 years. I don't know if it's the recruits or the coaching or a combination of both, but all the nepotism with his son wasn't helpful to the program either.
 







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