Interim designator Dino Tommasi sends âmessage of solidarityâ to ousted predecessor Rocchi
Dino Tommasi sends solidarity to Gianluca Rocchi in his first role as interim designator.
Iowa's spring practice concluded with a quarterback battle between Jeremy Hecklinski and Hank Brown, with no clear winner emerging. Sophomore receiver KJ Parker impressed with standout performances, highlighting the team's depth at the position.
This is the headline. It was always going to be the headline. With Mark Gronowski in Miami chasing a UDFA roster spot, Iowaâs QB1 job is the most important uncertainty on the roster, and Saturday at Kinnick gave us our cleanest look yet at the two finalists. Jeremy Hecklinski took the first-team reps and finished an unofficial **10-of-22 for 99 yards** in 11-on-11 work, not counting red zone drills. The âgunslingerâ reputation showed up in the form of a couple of tight-window throws on the run, including a perfectly placed dart down the seam to KJ Parker. He also had stretches where the accuracy walked away from him for a series at a time â a familiar story for anyone who watched his fall reps last season. went **3-of-10** with the second team but his completions were the prettiest throws of the day. He dropped a 32-yard dime to Parker that drew gasps from the Kinnick crowd, hit for a touchdown, and connected with Reece Vander Zee for an end-zone catch that drew a defensive penalty. Brown also faced more pressure than Hecklinski did, which makes the box-score comparison a little misleading. He looked like a player who is more comfortable in clean pockets than he was a year ago. Both quarterbacks threw red-zone touchdowns. Both had moments. Neither separated himself. Kirk Ferentz, asked to handicap it, did what Kirk Ferentz does. âWeâre going back-and-forth, and probably that way, Iâm guessing at least through the majority of August,â he said after practice. He is not naming a Week 1 starter. He is not even committing to naming one before the game on September 5. Offensive coordinator Tim Lester called it âa good problem to have,â which is what coaches always say when they donât have an answer but have two acceptable ones. My read: Hecklinski has the slight edge right now because heâs slightly outpaced Brown on the first team reps for much of spring and the Lester looking for quick reads and more gunslinging than KF is accustomed to. Brown is the more traditional build and reportedly has been better about making mistakes, but he also looked more hesitant and slower to pull the trigger today, which likely caps his upside. Either way â and this is the important part â Iowa now has two scholarship quarterbacks who can move the offense. That has not been a sentence weâve typically been able to type.
Jeremy Hecklinski currently has a slight edge over Hank Brown in the quarterback competition, but neither has fully separated themselves.
KJ Parker made several impressive catches, including a 30-yard reception and a contested catch in double coverage, earning praise from coach Kirk Ferentz.
Iowa's head coach Kirk Ferentz indicated that a decision on the starting quarterback may not come until after the Northern Illinois game on September 5.
The receiver group showed depth, particularly with KJ Parker's performance, although several key players were held out for precautionary reasons.
Dino Tommasi sends solidarity to Gianluca Rocchi in his first role as interim designator.
Draymond Green slams critics claiming Kevin Durant quit on Rockets
Eagles acquire Jonathan Greenard from Vikings for two picks and sign him to a $100M contract.
See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.
The day belonged to a sophomore. KJ Parker entered Saturday with seven career receptions to his name and walked off the field as the player most fans were asking about by name. With Tony Diaz, Evan James, Jarriett Buie, and Terrence Smith all held out for precautionary reasons, Parker got the first-team reps he hadnât seen all spring â and he *devoured* the opportunity. Two highlight-reel grabs stood out: a 30-yard reception from Hecklinski with a defensive back draped on him, and the 32-yard Brown dime over the middle. He also hauled in a contested catch in double coverage that Tyler Tachman called *the* moment of the practice. Ferentz, who is not in the business of overhyping sophomores, basically did anyway. âKJâs got a good energy to him and some ability, certainly,â Ferentz said. âHe goes hard and is fearless out there. Heâs certainly better now than he was 15 practices ago.â Ferentz then dropped the comparison that should make every Iowa fan happy: **Warren Holloway**. Older Hawkeye fans just felt their hearts skip â Holloway caught the Hail Mary against LSU in the 2005 Capital One Bowl on his only career reception. Ferentz is not predicting Hail Marys. Heâs saying Parker has the same blue-collar, fearless gear Iowa receivers need to have. Thatâs a real endorsement.
That asterisk on the WR conversation matters. Tony Diaz (the Texas-Rio Grand Valley transfer Iowa signed in January), Evan James, Buie, and Smith all sat out. So the depth chart picture from Saturday is incomplete. What we do know: Reece Vander Zee looks the part as the X. Dayton Howard caught two touchdowns (one from each QB). Vonnahme made a play. And freshman Xavier Stinson made enough impact that the staff is already talking about him as a four-deep contributor in year one. This room has more bodies than it has had in years. The question for fall camp is whether Lester can manufacture target distribution that keeps everyone fed. With a real receiver group *and* Kaden Wetjen replaced as the primary slot/return specialist, Iowaâs passing game has more outside-the-numbers options than it did at any point in 2025.
Replacing a Rimington Trophy winner is not supposed to be easy. But Kade Pieper, who took the bulk of first-team center reps this spring, looks like heâs already won the job. His expected competition, Michael Myslinski, missed time with a minor injury. The most surprising development was redshirt walk-on **Cael Winter** from Waukee, who took meaningful first-unit reps on Saturday and looked like he belonged. Iowaâs offensive line history is full of in-state walk-ons turning into starters. Winter just put his name in the conversation. Lucas Allgeyer, a redshirt freshman, leads the right guard race. Replacing Gennings Dunker, Logan Jones, *and* Beau Stephens in a single offseason is a legitimate rebuild â but Iowa returns enough experience at tackle that the interior is the only real question. Weâll know more in August. Hereâs a breakdown of the rotations at OL from Saturday: **1st Team** â Trevor Lauck, Leighton Jones, Cael Winter, Kade Pieper, Jack Dotzler **2nd Team** â Bodey McCaslin, Trent Wilson, Josh Janowski, Will Hahn, Lucas Allgeyer
Hereâs where the optimism cools. Phil Parkerâs defense lost a *lot* of production: Aaron Graves, Ethan Hurkett, Max Llewellyn, Brian Allen, and Jonah Pace are all out the door. Saturday confirmed that Iose Epenesa and Kenneth Merriweather are the locks at defensive end. Beyond that, the d-line had inconsistent moments. The starters were Merrieweather and Epenesa on the edge with Luke Gaffney and Will Hubert at tackle. Epenesa also took some reps on the inside on the day. The good news: redshirt freshman **Joseph Anderson**, a 6-foot-6 edge, stepped in front of a pass and took it back for what would have been a pick-six in a real game. Heâs still adding weight. He moves like someone whoâs going to play a lot in 2026. Elon transfer **Kahmari Brown** drew praise. **Bryce Hawthorne**, expected to start at defensive tackle, was limited all spring with an MCL sprain but is expected back at full strength for fall camp. At linebacker, **Cam Buffington** has shifted to middle linebacker and **Jayden Montgomery** moved to weakside â a defensive reshuffle Parker apparently believes makes the room more experienced top-to-bottom. Both will start. The secondary is where things got fun. **Zach Lutmer** played like a senior DB who knows exactly where heâs supposed to be. Deshaun Lee continued to look the part. **Jacob Wallace** was steady. And then thereâs **Marcello Vitti**, the true freshman corner from Michigan who is built like a strong safety and plays like one. He had multiple pass breakups, including one in the end zone, and laid out a couple of receivers. Deshaun Leeâs review of his freshman teammate: *âThat boy physical. Heâs a physical player.â* Thatâs high praise from an upperclassman corner. Bank on Vitti getting CASH-package snaps in September.
The single best moment of the day had nothing to do with the scrimmage. Late in practice, the stadium PA announced that **Kaden Wetjen had been selected by the Pittsburgh Steelers with the 121st pick** in the NFL Draft. Kinnick erupted. Practice paused. Iowaâs record-setting 2026 draft class added another name in real time, with the next generation of Hawkeyes watching it happen on the same field. Thatâs recruiting tape that writes itself. While weâre on Wetjen, thereâs still a question on his successor in the return game. On Saturday, we saw Lutmer, Parker and Jackson Naeve working punt return in that order.
Spring did not solve the quarterback question. It also did not need to. What it did was confirm that Iowa has two viable answers, that the receiver room finally has a true alpha forming in KJ Parker, that the offensive line transition is going better than the worst-case projection, and that the defense â for all its question marks up front â has a freshman corner who is going to make plays in September. The Big Ten schedule is going to be unforgiving and there are questions abound, but the team that shows up in August has a real chance to be more dynamic on offense than any Iowa team in quite some time. Iâll take that trade.