Iowa’s special teams room is in a reset, but the expectation level hasn’t budged one bit.
That’s why the unit lands at No. 6 in this countdown of the Hawkeyes’ most indispensable pieces. There’s turnover everywhere, and that makes it fair to talk about the group as a whole instead of isolating one name. LeVar Woods built a standard that became its own brand, and Chris Polizzi now gets the job of carrying it forward.
The mystery starts with the kicking job. North Dakota State transfer Eli Ozick appears to be the favorite, and the numbers back up why. He made 62 of 63 extra points in his career and was steady on field goals for the Bison last season, going 5 of 5 from 20 to 29 yards, 6 of 6 from 30 to 39 yards, 4 of 5 from 40 to 49 yards, and 1 of 2 from beyond 50.
Punting is just as open. Tanner Philpott and Boston Everett are set to battle for the job, and Philpott brings a strong résumé from Simpson College.
He piled up 1,757 yards on 40 punts and averaged 43.9 yards per kick, which ranked third in the nation. Even with Simpson not punting in three games, he still put 16 kicks inside the 20, tied for a top-20 national total and the fourth-most in a single season in program history.
He also had 11 punts of 50 yards or more, tied for sixth nationally, and matched his career long with a 78-yard boot against Nebraska Wesleyan on Nov. 15.
Everett, meanwhile, is still waiting for his first game action, but Polizzi said the competition has been productive.
"They both have tremendous leg talent. They both work well with one another," Polizzi said.
"That's why I mentioned that it's a healthy competition. They trade notes with one another.
They review film with one another. They catch Jugs off one another.
They're continuing to in a healthy manner critique one another."
Iowa does have one important piece back in long snapper Ike Speltz, and Zach Lutmer is the favorite to handle punt returns. The kick return job is still open, with Brevin Doll, Braeden Jackson, KJ Parker, Nathan McNeil, and others in the mix.
The bigger picture, though, is the same one Iowa has always sold: special teams is not a side project. It is part of the program’s identity. Polizzi said the message starts in recruiting and carries straight into the locker room, where the value of special teams has long been reinforced.
"When you attract that type of player that realizes the value of special teams and for a lot of these guys, that's their window. That's their first opportunity to step on the field is that special teams unit."
He pointed to a recent team meeting that included clips of Bob Sanders as a true freshman, a reminder of the edge Iowa wants on every snap.
"Then you show them. I think one of the things that's of value here, we did a team meeting the other day, and we're showing clips of Bob Sanders as a true freshman, and the film is grainy. Some of these kids weren't even born when Bob was running down the field, but you see the tenacity and ferocity that a young Bob Sanders as a freshman is running down tackling a guy from Kansas State."
Polizzi also stressed that the job is about trust and detail, not just leg talent.
"I think it's also a connection with the players. They have to feel that this is really important to you.
That every rep here is critical. I don't know when your number is going to be called, but you be ready when your number is called.
There's a lot of people counting on you to do that, but it starts with Rai Braithwaite and the strength and conditioning department where those things are emphasized. The detail, the attention to detail, in everything that we do is emphasized."
That’s the standard Iowa is trying to preserve, even with new faces in key spots. But this doesn’t look like a unit that will roll out and instantly be one of the nation’s best again. There could be some early growing pains as Polizzi settles in and the Hawkeyes sort out their identity, even if they continue to lean on trick plays and the usual attention to detail.
The real test may come during the three-game stretch against Michigan, Ohio State, and Washington. Two road trips and a home matchup with one of the country’s best teams in Kinnick will tell the story. That’s where Iowa’s newcomers will have to prove they can handle the pressure that comes with wearing this uniform on special teams.
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