Iowa’s offensive line has long been one of the defining pieces of Kirk Ferentz’s program, and Trevor Lauck sits right in the middle of that identity. After Iowa finished last season with the Joe Moore Award as the nation’s top offensive line, Lauck emerged as one of the key reasons the Hawkeyes were able to get back to that standard.
Now entering his fourth year, Lauck is being counted on for more than just steady play. Iowa needs him to be a leader, too. That’s why he lands at No. 3 on the list of the Hawkeyes’ most indispensable players.
What makes Lauck so valuable is the full package he brings at tackle. He has the experience, the violent hands, and a burst off the line that has clearly improved as his reps have piled up. He plays with a finish that shows up over and over again - the kind of blocker who keeps driving until he has buried his man.
His ability to climb to the second level also matters, especially for Iowa’s outside zone runs. Lauck can handle more than one defender at a time, and his hand placement and footwork have become so refined that he can win a rep before the defender even has a chance to get going.
The production backed it up last season. Across 303 pass-blocking snaps, Lauck gave up just six pressures and no sacks.
That kind of reliability is exactly why he matters so much to this team. He’s the most seasoned tackle in the group and will be asked to help protect whoever ends up at quarterback. Iowa has plenty of confidence in him, and he has already shown he can hold up against some of the best edge rushers in the country.
Lauck also fits the Iowa mold in another way: he stayed put. In an era when the transfer portal has become the norm, he would have had no shortage of options if he had decided to leave. Instead, his ties to the coaches, his teammates, and the program’s culture kept him in Iowa City, and he said the connection with George Barnett was the biggest factor.
"The reason I came here as a high school recruit is why I'm here now. I didn't want to leave one bit," Lauck stated.
"The same reason I picked here is why I stayed. Teammates, coaches, the culture- there's no reason to leave this place," Lauck said with a smile.
"When you have Coach Barnett as your position coach, Kirk Ferentz as your head coach, those guys in the locker room are awesome. Why would you look to leave?
I just wanted to stay here and finish what I started."
He also had high praise for Barnett’s impact on the room.
"What (Barnett has) done here is nothing short of super special. Obviously, he's an amazing coach, but he's an even better person.
I think that's a really big thing. To be a really good coach, you have to have the trust and love from your players.
And he has our trust and love 100 percent. He's said before- the first thing that he wanted to do when he got here was to build the connection in the room.
When he got here, he felt like it wasn't as good as it could be."
That kind of mindset is hard to fake, and it’s part of why Lauck’s profile keeps rising. He has the size, the technique, the strength, the leverage, and the footwork to keep climbing. CBS Sports’ Michael Renner recently ranked him as the No. 38 overall prospect in his 2027 NFL Mock Draft, and there’s a real chance Lauck has a major decision waiting for him at the end of the season.
For now, Iowa is counting on him to keep taking the next step. Lauck has the tools to become an All-American-caliber tackle, and his growth over the last two years suggests last season may have only scratched the surface. He’ll be a central figure in how Iowa’s offense looks in Year 3 under offensive coordinator Tim Lester.
In Other News...
Iowa Fans Wont Love What This New QB Ranking Suggests
EA Sports College Football 27 gives Iowa plenty to like elsewhere, with a deep roster that should look familiar to anyone who has watched the Hawkeyes lean on defense, line play and overall depth. The quarterback room, though, is a different story. Jeremy Hecklinski and Hank Brown are the names at the center of it, and the games initial ratings put both well below where Iowa would hope to be at the sports most important position.
For fans, the concern is less about a video game number than what it hints at for the real season ahead. Iowa is expected to sort through Brown or Hecklinski under center, and neither has started a game for the Hawkeyes yet. The challenge now is obvious: prove on the field that the rating is too low, and give the program a reason to believe the quarterback position can climb out of the bottom tier. [Read more 🡒]
Iowa Football Faces An Uncomfortable 2027 Recruiting Reality
Iowas 2027 recruiting picture is off to an awkward start, with the Hawkeyes sitting at the bottom of the Big Ten in the early rankings. For a program that has long made a habit of finding and developing overlooked players, the number is not exactly fatal, but it is the kind of snapshot that can make fans uneasy this far out from signing day, especially when the league table is already starting to take shape around them.
The bigger question is how much that ranking really matters in Iowa City, where Kirk Ferentzs staff has never relied on splashy recruiting alone to stay competitive. The Hawkeyes have leaned more heavily on the transfer portal to balance the roster and have shown they can still patch together a capable team even when the high school class is slow to build, but the current pace leaves plenty of room for concern until the next wave of commitments arrives. [Read more 🡒]
Top Iowa Prospect Is Coming Home After A Brutal Twist
Brett Harris had spent much of his senior year at Western Dubuque High School looking like one of Iowas most promising baseball prospects, with his play on both the baseball diamond and the football field keeping him squarely on the radar of college programs. The senior had originally committed to Ole Miss, a path that seemed to fit the kind of talent and profile he had built in Dubuque.
Instead, Harris is now headed to the University of Iowa after Ole Miss withdrew its scholarship offer, a stunning turn for a player who has kept competing while undergoing radiation treatment for a brain tumor. The move sends one of the states top prospects closer to home at a time when his athletic future has already been tested far beyond the usual recruiting drama, and it adds another layer to a story that has drawn attention well beyond the box scores. [Read more 🡒]
