Kirk Ferentz says Iowa will 'see how it goes' with Cade McNamara, Brendan Sullivan in 2nd half after QB change
After Iowa benched Cade McNamara for backup quarterback Brendan Sullivan midway through the second quarter, the offensive results were much the same. And head coach Kirk Ferentz demurred on which quarterback will play in the 2nd half against Northwestern.
Sullivan managed to lead a late touchdown drive just before the half to give Iowa a 12-7 lead, but that was mostly on the back of a long Kaleb Johnson touchdown run. Otherwise, Sullivan’s drives had led to punts.
And McNamara was benched after a mostly solid start went awry with a pick-six thrown deep in Northwestern territory to give the Wildcats a 7-3 lead at the time. The next drive, Sullivan was in. But that may or may not be the case coming out of the half, Ferentz said on Big Ten Network.
“We’ll see how it goes. We’ll talk about it at halftime,” Ferentz said.
As for Johnson finally breaking through, Ferentz knew it was just a matter of time.
“That’s part of the run game. They’re really doing a good job. Well coached. We knew it was going to be hard. You just have to stay with it and try to be patient,” Ferentz said.
Some Iowa athletics royalty was celebrated on Saturday
A recent Hawkeyes legend got a moment of celebration on Saturday, as the 2023-24 Hawkeyes women’s basketball team that made the Final Four was on hand. Including, of course, Caitlin Clark.
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During a break in the first half action, Clark and Co., along with recently retired head coach Lisa Bluder, strutted out to the goal line to get a standing ovation. And they brought along their Big Ten championship and NCAA Tournament regional championship trophies, too.
And Clark, who is coming off a star rookie season for the Indiana Fever, could be seen showing off her collection of championship rings to the cameras.
Clark enjoyed as decorated a college basketball career as they come, especially for a player who a national championship title eluded. Even still, she was a multi-time All American, conference and national player of the year and set the NCAA all-time career scoring record during her four years with the Hawkeyes.