2010 Iowa Hawkeyes

Jack Lambert

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Here are the updated Iowa Hawkeyes against Mizzou tonight. There are a few white subs on defense that get into the game for the Hawkeyes, giving them a majority white defense for a lot of the game. Collin Sandeman gets the start at SE with Koulianos out for drug charges. True Frosh RB Marcus Coker gets the start with 2-3 RBs for Iowa out ahead of him. You want Knapp now, don't you Ferentz? Anyway, still 14 palefaces getting the start for Iowa.

Offense
QB- Ricky Stanzi
FB- Brett Morse
SE- Collin Sandeman
TE- Allen Reisner
LT- Riley Reiff
LG- Julian Vandervelde
C- James Ferentz
RG- Josh Koepell
RT- Markus Zusevics

Defense
DT- Karl Klug
OLB- Troy Johnson
MLB- James Morris
FS- Brett Greenwood
SS- Tyler SashEdited by: Jack Lambert
 

Colonel_Reb

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Awesome to see an increase for Iowa! They should be starting at least this many Whites every year.
Edited by: Colonel_Reb
 

Colonel_Reb

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RB Robinson has been dismissed from the team. Now if only Brandon Wegher would have kept himself in line, he'd be in the driver's seat for PT.
<a href="http://%20sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=5985306" target="_blank">
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=5985306</a>



DES MOINES, Iowa -- Running back Adam Robinson's promising career at Iowa is over.

Iowa
coach Kirk Ferentz announced Monday that Robinson had been dismissed
from the Hawkeyes one week after he was arrested for marijuana
possession. The coach said he would have no further comment.

Robinson, 21, was charged with possession
of marijuana on Dec. 27 in his hometown of Des Moines. The Iowa State
Patrol said Robinson was a passenger in a vehicle pulled over for not
having a front license plate. A trooper detected a marijuana odor from
the vehicle, then found marijuana after a search.

Robinson was
suspended for Iowa's win over Missouri in the Insight Bowl for failing
to comply with team policies. His arrest came the night before the bowl
game, leaving the Hawkeyes (8-5) with an unwanted distraction they
overcame in beating the Tigers 27-24.

Robinson rushed for a team-high 941 yards and 10 touchdowns in 2010 as the Hawkeyes' featured back.

Freshman Marcus Coker
starred in Robinson's absence against Missouri, rushing for 219 yards
and two touchdowns. Coker, who finished the season with 622 yards
rushing on an impressive 5.5 yards per carry, will likely be Iowa's top
back heading into spring practice.

Robinson was an unheralded
recruit coming out of Lincoln High in Des Moines. But he got an
unexpected chance to prove himself in 2009 when Jewel Hampton blew his knee out before the season.

Robinson led Iowa with a freshman-record 834 yards and five TDs in 2009 while sharing time with fellow freshman Brandon Wegher.
Robinson was elevated to a starting role this fall when Wegher left the
program for personal reasons, and he got the majority of Iowa's carries
after Hampton injured his knee in September and was lost for the
season.

Robinson's dismissal, along with Hampton's recent decision
to transfer, leaves the Hawkeyes without any of their top three backs
from the start of practice last fall.

Besides Coker, freshman De'Andre Johnson, who redshirted in 2010, will also be in the mix at running back in 2011.
 

jaxvid

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Kicked off the team for possession of pot? Seems extreme. Not only that but there is not a D1 team in the country that could field a team if every pot user was cut. Couldn't field a "black" team that is.
smiley2.gif
 

referendum

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Tyler Sash elects to go pro. CBS has him ranked as the number three strong safety. Rival's depth chart has a white player listed as Sash's top back up.
 

Colonel_Reb

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Robinson apologizes and wants back on the team. No word from Ferentz yet.
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=6029788


DES MOINES, Iowa -- Former Iowa running back Adam Robinson wants back on the team.

At
a news conference in Des Moines on Sunday, Robinson apologized to
friends, family and former teammates for breaking team rules and Iowa
law by possessing marijuana.

"I know I have disappointed you and let you down," Robinson said. "For that, I am sorry."

The
21-year-old Robinson was charged with possession of marijuana Dec. 27
in his hometown of Des Moines. The Iowa State Patrol said Robinson was a
passenger in a vehicle pulled over for not having a front license
plate. A trooper detected a marijuana odor from the vehicle, then found
marijuana after a search.

Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz suspended
Robinson for the Dec. 28 Insight Bowl, which Iowa won 27-24 over
Missouri. Ferentz kicked Robinson off the team Jan. 3. Robinson said
Sunday the dismissal was for academic problems.

Robinson pleaded guilty to the possession charge and was fined $315 and given a year of probation.

On
Sunday, Robinson said he had resisted offers to play at other colleges
because he intended to prove himself worthy this semester of returning
to the Iowa backfield.

"I've always wanted to be a Hawkeye," Robinson said. "I have no wishes or desires to leave the Hawkeye team."

Robinson said he intended to undergo drug counseling in Iowa City and work on raising his grades, too.

He has not talked to Ferentz about those plans, Robinson said.

Robinson rushed for a team-high 941 yards and 10 touchdowns in 2010 as the Hawkeyes' featured back.

Spokesman Steve Roe said Iowa officials would have no statement Monday.

Robinson
said his hopes of returning to the team were raised when he read that
after being on suspension for eight months, Iowa wrestler Montell Marion
had been reinstated to practice. Marion was suspended after an arrest
for drunken driving.

Robinson said he never failed a drug test
while at Iowa but acknowledged using marijuana several times. His drug
transgressions were limited to pot, he said.

His mother, Sally
Robinson, was with her son to face reporters Sunday, and she suggested
that she blamed his drug abuse in part on two concussions he suffered
late in the season.

"He had a meltdown the first part of December," his mother said.
 

Colonel_Reb

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Kind of a strange story here. I've never heard of this problem before.

http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=6061650




IOWA CITY, Iowa -- The University of Iowa said Wednesday that 13
football players had to be hospitalized this week with a muscle disorder
following grueling offseason workouts that left them with extreme
soreness and discolored urine.

The players have rhabdomyolysis, a
stress-induced syndrome that can damage cells and cause kidney damage
and even failure in severe cases, school spokesman Tom Moore said at a
news conference two days after players were hospitalized at the
University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics in Iowa City.

School
officials said the players, whom they would not identify, were in stable
condition and responding well to treatment, which includes bed rest and
the administration of hydrating fluids. Moore said he did not know when
the players would be discharged.

Director of football operations Paul
Federici said the players participated in workouts that started last
Thursday after they returned from winter break. Some of them complained
to medical staff after a workout on Monday and symptoms included
soreness throughout the body and tea-colored urine, and other players
were told they should receive treatment if they had similar problems, he
said.

All five Iowa strength trainers were present at these workouts, according to ESPN.com's Adam Rittenberg.

A
former athletic trainer, Federici said he's never seen the syndrome
among student-athletes at Iowa before. He said he was still looking into
the details of the workouts but said they were no different than those
from previous years during what he called a critical seven-week stretch
of training.

"It is strenuous. It is ambitious. The
student-athletes know that," he said. "This is an anomaly. We just
haven't seen this type of response before."

He said the players range from freshmen to upperclassmen and include a range of positions.

One
of those hospitalized is freshman linebacker Jim Poggi of Towson, Md.,
whose father, Biff Poggi, said his son complained to trainers on Monday
after several days of soreness. He said his son's pain started last
Thursday with a lower-body workout that involved performing 100 squats
in a certain amount of time and pulling a sled 100 yards. It got worse
Friday after an upper-body workout, and Monday's workout "didn't go
well." His urine was discolored, and the team's medical staff sent him
for treatment.

Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz, athletic director Gary
Barta and team doctor Ned Amendola were all out of town on business and
not at the press conference. Chris Doyle, the team's strength and
conditioning coach who has worked under Ferentz all 12 years of his
tenure, and other strength coaches who oversaw the workouts were not
made available to reporters.

Doyle is nationally known as a leader
in player development, turning sometimes scrawny freshmen into physical
specimens by the time they graduate. Ferentz has said that is a key
part of his program's success.

Biff Poggi, a high school football
coach in Baltimore, said he was concerned about the situation but also
confident his son would recover and rejoin the team. He said the
hospitalized players are disappointed and eager to resume practice.

Biff
Poggi said his son's treatment hasn't included dialysis, but bed rest,
IV fluids and blood work to ensure there's no kidney damage.

Another
player, freshman defensive lineman Carl Davis of Detroit, wrote Sunday
that he couldn't walk or feel his arms after performing 100 squats and
100 bench presses, and had "a whole weekend of soreness." A third,
freshman defensive back Tanner Miller of Kalona, Iowa, wrote on Tuesday
that he had a "night in the hospital ... couldn't be a worse day."

The
Des Moines Register confirmed through Alan DiBona that his son,
freshman linebacker Shane DiBona, was among the 13 hospitalized.

Shane
DiBona had described a workout last week on Facebook. "I had to squat
240 pounds 100 times and it was timed. I can't walk and I fell down the
stairs &amp; lifes (sic) great," the Register reported.

Alan DiBona told the newspaper he had spoken with his son, and "he's doing great."

University
of Iowa doctor John Stokes, a kidney specialist who is not involved in
the players' treatment, said the common denominator is they had all
participated in strenuous exercise, which commonly brings on the
disorder in otherwise healthy young people. He said the symptom is
common among military recruits in boot camp and treatment usually
focuses on trying to limit kidney damage.

"I've been at UI for 32
years and I don't think I've seen 13 people get rhabdomyolysis," he
said. "It's a fairly common diagnosis. This cluster would be unusual."

Athletes
routinely recover from the disorder and go back to playing, but they
may change their exercise routines and ensure better hydration, he said.

Associate
athletics director Fred Mims said school officials would take steps to
"ensure it doesn't happen again." Mims, who is in charge of the
department's compliance with NCAA rules, said the matter did not need to
be reported since the workouts were allowed and routine.

He said
the case is a "good lesson" for why university officials should ask
players about how they are feeling after strenuous workouts. He said
Iowa will also try to avoid problems after players return from school
breaks and might not have kept up with fitness routines by making sure
expectations are clear.
 

FootballDad

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Very interesting article, Colonel_Reb. It makes you wonder if these "strength coaches" have any brains at all. When I work athletes, I look to the benefits of each particular set of exercises as to how they perform what they need to perform. I can't see how doing 100 squats in a "timed" setting, followed by pulling a sled 100 yards, etc. is going to benefit an athlete. How would it make them "better"? I'm all for rigorous training, I push athletes hard, but there has to be a target, a purpose for the exercise, not just to do something because the coach thought it would be a cool iron man-type of thing to do.
 

Colonel_Reb

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Hopefully Brett will recover and be ok.

Brett Greenwood in intensive care

http://espn.go.com/college-football/story/_/id/6949389/former-iowa-hawkeyes-safety-brett-greenwood-intensive-care-collapsing


Former Iowa safety Brett Greenwood is in an Iowa hospital after he collapsed Friday afternoon during a workout.
A spokeswoman for Trinity Medical Center in Bettendorf says Greenwood was taken there in critical condition Friday. He's since been transferred to University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics in Iowa City where he is listed in stable condition.
The Quad-City Times in Davenport reported Greenwood collapsed while working out at Pleasant Valley High School in Bettendorf. Athletic director Randy Teymer told the newspaper that school medical personnel administered to him before he was taken by ambulance to Trinity Medical Center.
A three-year starter for the Hawkeyes, Greenwood, 23, signed a free-agent contract with the Pittsburgh Steelers but was released last week. He earned second-team All-Big Ten honors in each of his last two seasons with Iowa.
Former Iowa safety Tyler Sash, who started alongside Greenwood, tweeted Friday night: "My prayers are with #BrettGreenwood he is alive and on his way to IC. He has overcome every challenge throughout his life. Please keep him in your thoughts and prayers. Most people only knew the football player; I was blessed to know the person as well."
 
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