IOWA CITY, Iowa - Kade Pieper had a path to the NFL Draft, and according to Iowa offensive line coach George Barnett, the conversation about it was almost too easy.
Barnett said Friday in an exclusive interview that he pulled the Nebraska native aside and laid out his options after Pieper’s breakout season, when he started all 13 games at right guard and earned third-team All-Big Ten honors. Pieper had put himself in position to be viewed as a potential first-round pick, but the response he gave told Barnett everything he needed to know.
"He didn't bring it up (to me) because he just loves being in this locker room," Barnett said. "They know that once they leave it will never be like this again.
Life can still be good. It starts with Coach Ferentz that builds such a cool culture here and kids enjoy being in the facility.
Kids don't really get ahead of themselves."
Barnett said he made it a point to bring the subject up anyway.
"As a position coach, I feel it's my obligation to bring it up to them," Barnett added. "I brought him in and told him 'here are your options' and he said 'coach, I'm good.'
I know you are, but I want you to hear from me your options. You don't owe anything to anybody.
This is about you and your future."
"The conversation was really quick."
That mindset fits the way Pieper has carried himself. When he met with the Hawkeye media earlier this month, he kept the focus squarely on football and the people around him, not on projections or outside buzz. Now moved to center after his first season as a starter, he said the noise around him barely registers.
"Not really. I don't really look at that at all," Pieper said of the hype.
"And I tell my inner circle that I don't want to hear about it at all. Just kind of worry about having fun with my guys and just having fun this year."
"I don't really care about it to be honest."
Iowa’s line room has a standard attached to it, especially at center. The Hawkeyes have had two of the best centers in the country over the past four years in Tyler Linderbaum and Logan Jones, and Pieper is stepping into that kind of tradition after his strong first year in the lineup.
He also has a front-row seat to Kirk Ferentz’s involvement with the offensive line, something Pieper said stands out to him.
"I think it's really beneficial, especially with him investing so much time in the offensive line and we're taking everything to heart," Pieper said. "He's a big offensive line guru and he knows a lot, so we're just listening and taking everything he says to heart."
The same pull that brought Trevor Lauck to Iowa as a recruit is still keeping him there now. Lauck, the left tackle, said he had no interest in going anywhere after last season, even with the portal and NFL opportunities available.
"The reason that I came here as a high school recruit is the same reason why I'm here now," Lauck said. "I didn't want to leave one bit. Like I said; the same reason I picked here is the same reason why I stayed; the coaches, the teammates, the culture; there's no reason to leave this place."
For Iowa, that combination of old-school coaching and buy-in still works. Pieper’s decision is the latest example.
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