The independent newspaper of the University of Iowa community since 1868

The Daily Iowan

The independent newspaper of the University of Iowa community since 1868

The Daily Iowan

The independent newspaper of the University of Iowa community since 1868

The Daily Iowan

By the Numbers: Iowa-Iowa State

Iowa+defensive+lineman+Drew+Ott+tackles+Iowa+State+quarterback+Sam+Richardson+in+Kinnick+Stadium+on+Saturday%2C+Sept.+13%2C+2014.+Iowa+State+defeated+Iowa%2C+20-17.+%28The+Daily+Iowan%2FValerie+Burke%29
The Daily Iowan
Iowa defensive lineman Drew Ott tackles Iowa State quarterback Sam Richardson in Kinnick Stadium on Saturday, Sept. 13, 2014. Iowa State defeated Iowa, 20-17. (The Daily Iowan/Valerie Burke)

The Cyclones and the Hawkeyes are both 1-0 on the season entering the Cy-Hawk showdown at Jack Trice Stadium onSept. 12.
Iowa State came out on top last season, but a closer look at the numbers reveals why this season could be a bit of a different story.

Sacks against Iowa QB Jake Rudock last season: 22
For as much depth and experience as the Iowa offensive line had last season, the line still managed to let quarterback Jake Rudock be sacked a hefty 22 times, seventh-most in the Big Ten.

And while the O-line this season is younger and less experienced, pressure on the quarterback was not at all an issue in the first week for the Hawkeyes.
C.J. Beathard was not sacked a single time against the Redbirds, and the Hawks suffered just a single play for a loss from the line of scrimmage. Football Championship Subdivision opponent aside, a similarly dominant game against Iowa State would go along way to stacking the deck in Iowa’s favor this week.
A more mobile, slippery quarterback such as Beathard will no doubt help to alleviate some of that pressure should the line let behemoths through, but make no mistake, this year’s Cy-Hawk series will be won and lost in the trenches for the Hawks.

Number of interceptions Iowa State threw in 2014: 11
The Cyclone offense had a bad habit of giving the ball away last season, finishing tied for fourth in the Big 12 in interceptions with 11.
Quarterback Sam Richardson went without a pick in the team’s first win of the season against Northern Iowa. But turnovers played a large part in last season’s Cy-Hawk game, when Rudock tossed the game’s lone pick, one the Cyclones turned into 7 points shorty thereafter.
Rudock won’t. obviously, return this year, and Richardson looked calm in the pocket in his team’s opener against the Panthers, but it goes without saying that a positive turnover margin would benefit both teams.

Average yards per carry for Iowa against ISU: 4.8
The duo of LeShun Daniels Jr. and Jordan Canzeri was positively electric on Sept. 5 for Iowa, combining for more than 200 all-purpose yards and establishing both players as legitimate threats out of the backfield.
Those two will figure to play a huge role in Saturday’s clash at Trice against a Cyclones team that dominated UNI from defensive standpoint.
The Cyclones boast an incredibly veteran and experienced defensive front, with free-safety Kamari Cotton-Moya as the lone underclassmen to start.
Seeing how Iowa’s backfield performs against a Division-I school will be a good barometer of what the Hawkeyes’ ceiling can be going into the rest of the season.

Average margin of victory for Iowa/ISU since 2010: 3.75 points
In the years following the Hawkeyes’ 35-3 rout of the ‘Clones in 2010, the last four Iowa-Iowa State games have been decided by an average of fewer than 4 points.
Three of those four contests ended with just a field goal separating the two teams. Of course, Ferentz, along with Iowa fans, remember including Iowa State’s last-second game winner in the waning seconds of the fourth quarter last season to give them rights to bring the trophy back to Ames.
Ferentz called a time-out intended to ice Iowa State kicker Cole Netten. It backfired catastrophically for the Hawks, negating what would have been a missed field goal by the Cyclones and gave them another chance to win the game.
These tight-game situations tend to lead to an intense scrutiny of coaching decisions, something Hawks fans are all too familiar with.

More to Discover