Iowa football has built its identity on development, especially up front, where Kirk Ferentz has turned the offensive line into one of the program’s calling cards. That’s what makes the Kadyn Proctor story sting so much for Hawkeye fans.
It wasn’t just one lost recruiting battle. It was two.
Proctor, one of the best offensive line prospects the state has ever produced, came out of Southeast Polk, the same powerhouse program that also featured five-star Xavier Nwankpa and running back Abu Sama. Sama went to Iowa State, Nwankpa chose Iowa, and for a moment it looked like Proctor would join him in Iowa City too.
That first jolt came in June 2022, when Proctor announced for Iowa and gave the Hawkeyes one of the biggest recruiting wins in program history. He was ranked as the No.
1 Iowa prospect and the No. 6 overall player in the 2023 class, and he picked Iowa over Alabama. But the celebration didn’t last.
In December 2022, Proctor flipped to the Crimson Tide.
Then came the second twist in 2024. After Nick Saban announced his retirement, Proctor entered the transfer portal and said he was going home to Iowa.
For a brief stretch, it looked like the Hawkeyes were finally getting the player they had chased so hard. Instead, he backed out shortly after announcing he was signing with Iowa and returned to Alabama.
When asked why he changed course again, Proctor said something "didn't feel right," and that sent him back to Tuscaloosa. Even though he was never officially a Hawkeye, the whole sequence left plenty of Iowa fans frustrated, and some still hold it against him.
For others, the feeling is different. They believe Iowa was better off because he never seemed fully committed in the first place. Either way, it remains one of the strangest recruiting sagas in recent Iowa memory.
And the ending only adds another layer. Proctor went on to become a first-round draft pick of the Miami Dolphins in the 2026 NFL Draft, closing the book on a recruitment that could have changed the Hawkeyes’ offense.
With him in the fold, Iowa might have been even more dangerous on the ground and maybe opened things up more through the air. Instead, it stays in the “what if” file - and one that still splits the fanbase.
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Sages timing matters because Iowa is moving forward without Bennett Stirtz, which changes the way the offense will have to function. Rather than leaning on one clear centerpiece, the Hawkeyes appear headed toward a more shared approach, and Sage said he expects to be involved more often with the ball, around the rim, and as a scorer when needed. [Read more 🡒]
