Iowa’s defense always comes with a standard attached, and Jayden Montgomery is in position to help keep it there.
The linebacker lands at No. 9 on the list of Iowa football’s most indispensable players, and the case for him is built on something the Hawkeyes value as much as talent: trust. Montgomery may not be the flashiest name in the room, but he’s the kind of player Iowa leans on when the games get messy and the lineup keeps changing.
Last season was the first time he really forced his way into the conversation. Montgomery played in all 13 games, made seven starts, and finished with 44 tackles and two pass breakups.
More than the numbers, though, he brought consistency. He was steady in space, reliable as a communicator, and dependable when it came time to finish tackles in the open field.
He also showed a little more to his game than expected. Montgomery was physical in coverage, and while he is not going to win many jump-ball battles, he found ways to impact plays with smart timing as a blitzer and by reading the quarterback’s eyes.
"(We) didn't know as much about Montgomery game wise until he had to jump in there," Iowa head coach Kirk Ferentz said. "I believe that was Wisconsin.
So he's done nothing but gain everybody's confidence. I think we all feel great about what he does and the contributions he makes.
He's a good player, great leader."
That leadership piece matters even more now. Iowa has plenty of young linebackers with upside, but not many senior voices.
Montgomery has been around enough to understand the standard and has learned from some of the program’s best at the position. He’s also earned respect the right way, which is part of why he’ll be one of Iowa’s three representatives at Big Ten Media Days in Chicago next month.
Competition in the room hasn’t changed that dynamic. Montgomery described it as healthy and productive, with players pushing each other while still backing one another up.
"There's always competition, which is great for the room. Guys are playing really hard and doing all they can do.
But I don't think that takes away from supporting each other," Montgomery previously said when asked about the competition. "We also do a great job of congratulating and getting excited for guys when they make a play.
So it's a healthy, fun competition. It's been awesome just continuing to grow with those guys."
Now a fifth-year senior, Montgomery enters his final season with the chance to turn patience into production. He got better as last year went on, and Iowa’s staff - Seth Wallace, Phil Parker, and Ferentz - clearly grew more comfortable with him once he was pushed into a larger role.
The best version of this season for Iowa would have Montgomery serving as a stabilizer on defense while also giving younger teammates a steady hand. He should have chances to make a few splash plays, but his bigger value may come in the quieter moments: lining people up, setting the tone, and helping the next wave of linebackers find its footing.
An All-Big Ten level season would be a tough climb with the conference’s linebacker depth, but there’s little reason to think Montgomery can’t get the most out of his game. For Iowa, that kind of player is never just useful. It’s indispensable.
In Other News...
Kade Pieper Made The Kind Of Choice Iowa Fans Will Love
Kade Pieper already had the kind of season that puts an Iowa offensive lineman on the map. After starting all 13 games at right guard and earning third-team All-Big Ten honors, he could have easily been one of the next Hawkeyes to test the NFL waters, the sort of lineman pro teams look at closely when draft season rolls around.
Instead, Pieper is staying put, and that matters in Iowa City because it says plenty about what the program still sells as well as what it develops. Offensive line coach George Barnett said he talked through Piepers options with him, and the decision fits the culture-first identity Iowa has leaned on for years. Now Pieper is making another move up front, shifting to center and keeping the Hawkeyes interior line tradition in good hands. [Read more 🡒]
Former Hawkeye Faces Much Bigger Summer League Test Than The Others
The post-draft shuffle will keep a few familiar Iowa names on the same Summer League stage, with Bennett Stirtz, Payton Sandfort and Josh Dix all landing with the Oklahoma City Thunder and Brendan Hausen set to suit up for the Memphis Grizzlies. It gives Hawkeye fans an easy early summer follow, especially with both teams building out their schedules and plenty of crossover between players who spent recent seasons in Iowa City.
Hausens situation makes his month feel a little different from the others, since he is trying to turn this opportunity into something more lasting, while the Thunder side offers a clearer runway for Stirtz, Sandfort and Dix to show what they can do against NBA competition. Their paths will cross right away, too, with all four former Hawkeyes set to be on the floor in the same opener next Saturday at 2 p.m. CT. [Read more 🡒]
Iowa Prep Baseball Race Just Got Interesting For Hawkeyes Fans
High school baseball in Iowa has entered the part of the calendar where every big swing and every dominant outing starts to carry a little extra weight, and that has Hawkeyes fans with a reason to keep an eye on the statewide picture. High School On SI Iowa has opened voting for its midseason player of the year across five classifications, with nominees and their numbers through June 28 serving as a snapshot of who has separated himself before the stretch run.
The race is meant to be a fun one, but it also offers a look at some of the talent making noise just before the Iowa High School Athletic Association State Baseball Tournament begins July 20. Among the names in the mix are several Class 4A standouts, including one Iowa commit and another player whose power numbers have put him in the spotlight, giving fans plenty to sort through before voting closes on July 6. [Read more 🡒]
