Iowa finished the 2025 season with a 9-4 record and ranked #17, highlighted by bizarre statistics including a kicker who set records and a quarterback with more rushing touchdowns than passing. The team faces significant changes heading into 2026 with key players graduating and entering the NFL Draft.
Mentioned in this story
Three points. Five points. Five points. Two points. Thatâs the entire margin of defeat for the 2025 Hawkeyes, across four games. The average loss was by 3.75 points â basically a field goal. Iowa State, , , and all beat Iowa by less than a touchdown. Push two field goals the other direction and weâre talking about an undefeated regular season. We are very much *not* talking about that, but the rounding error was not in our favor in 2025. Thatâs to say *nothing* of the *how* in some of those losses. Indiana, for example, was an almost certain win if Iowa doesnât lose starter in the 4th quarter. Or if can simply throw a screen pass to a wide open teammate. Too soon? Yeah, it will always be too soon.
Iowa finished the 2025 season with a 9-4 record and ranked #17 in the final AP poll.
Iowa is losing three of its five starting offensive linemen to the NFL Draft, including Logan Jones, Gennings Dunker, and Beau Stephens.
Iowa's offensive line drew only two accepted holding penalties throughout the entire 2025 season, showcasing exceptional performance.
Mark Gronowski recorded 16 rushing touchdowns, surpassing his 10 passing touchdowns, marking a significant trend in Iowa's offensive strategy.
See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.
Thatâs not a typo. The Joe Moore Award-winning offensive line, across 13 games, was flagged for accepted offensive holding **twice**. Logan Jones, the Rimington Trophy-winning center, drew zero. The other linemen combined for two. We donât have data on which game ledger officials checked for omitted holding calls, but at this point weâre prepared to assume the linemen werenât actually playing football and were instead practicing some kind of clean-form interpretive dance. *The 2026 catch:* Iowa lost **three of five starting offensive linemen** to the NFL Draft â Logan Jones (Bears), Gennings Dunker (Steelers), and Beau Stephens (Seahawks). Holding penalty totals are projected to regress to the mean.
In an era of college football where transfers churn the roster every spring, where backups become starters every fall, where the average Power 4 program rotates 8-12 different lineups in a season â Iowa just put the same five dudes out there every Saturday for an entire season. The 2013 unit was the last one to do it. Weâre now back to roughly once-per-decade for this stat. Itâs the kind of continuity that wins Joe Moore Awards.
This one isnât a massive surprise to Hawkeye fans, but itâs still a wild stat in the broader college football world. Gronowski threw for 1,741 yards and 10 scores. Then he ran for 545 yards and **16 touchdowns** â an Iowa single-season record for a quarterback. Tim Lesterâs offense leaned on Gronowskiâs legs in a way no Iowa offense has leaned on a quarterbackâs legs in modern memory. The 130 rushing yards he put up against Penn State were the most ever by an Iowa quarterback in a single game. The man finished his college career with **57 wins as a starting QB**.
Phil Parkerâs defense gave up explosive runs at a rate of about one every other game. Across 13 games, against 13 different rushing attacks, Iowa surrendered **seven** total runs of 20 or more yards. Thatâs not a defense. Thatâs a clamp. Itâs precisely the way Parker has tried to build his Iowa defenses for his entire tenure. We all know the mantra âbend, donât breakâ and thatâs exactly how last yearâs unit operated. They kept things in front of them by being disciplined, filling gaps and playing their assignments. The result, much like weâre beginning to see with the Iowa hoops team, is fewer opponent possessions, less room for mistakes and the ever tightening grip of the anaconda as Big Ten offenses find themselves in close games late against the Hawkeyes.
Across 13 games, Iowa surrendered an average of **7.2 points per second half**. Thatâs halftime adjustments translated directly into scoreboard. Whatever Phil Parker and Kirk Ferentz were drawing up on the whiteboard at halftime â film cutups, blitz package tweaks, coverage adjustments, whatever â opposing offenses came out of the locker room and turned to dust. Much like the lack of explosive plays, this is sort of what weâve come to expect in Iowa City. Phil will allow opponents to try some things and show their hand a bit in the first half so he can make his adjustments and slam the door shut when the game is on the line. As the pressure mounts and the anaconda tightens its grip, Parker dials up perfectly timed blitzes, stunts and coverage disguises late in the game. The 2025 defense was at its absolute best when the game was close and the half was new. There will be new faces in 2026 but Iowa fans should expect more of the same.
Stevens tied the Iowa school record for longest field goal with a 58-yarder against Oregon. He also broke the programâs all-time field goals made record (**76 career makes**), finished second on the all-time scoring list, and accounted for 107 points in 2025 alone â sixth-most in a single season in school history. He hit four game-winning field goals over his career. The NFL passed on him in all seven rounds. That feels like a mistake. He did sign on with Washington as an UDFA and thereâs a real chance he wins that job give Jake Moodyâs struggles last year across multiple teams.
Twenty-six point eight. Yards. Per punt return. **An NCAA record.** Wetjen passed Jaylen Waddleâs previous mark â yes, that Jaylen Waddle, the Alabama All-American who got drafted sixth overall and is now the Dolphinsâ WR1. The Iowa kid from Williamsburg who came in as a walk-on transfer just broke a record set by a Heisman finalist Pro Bowler. He had a 95-yard punt return TD vs. UMass that tied the Big Ten record. He had a 100-yard kickoff return TD vs. Rutgers that tied a different Big Ten record. He led the nation in combined return yards with 965. He has six career return TDs (an Iowa record). He won the Jet Award twice â back-to-back, the only player ever to do so.
We already touched on the sheer volume of rushing touchdowns by Gronowski, but it was also the consistency. The 10 straight games to start the season with a rushing TD is the longest single-season streak by any Big Ten quarterback. Ever. Three of those touchdowns came on game-winning fourth-quarter drives. He scored on opening drives. He scored in the red zone. He scored on broken plays. The Gronowski Era was 13 games long. We will not see another 13 games like that anytime soon.
Ferentz now has **134 career Big Ten victories**. The all-time leader is some guy named Kirk Ferentz. The previous record-holder was Woody Hayes, the legend whose entire identity was synonymous with Ohio State football, whose name is plastered across the Buckeyesâ football complex in Columbus, and who won three national championships during his time on the Ohio State sideline. The kid from Pittsburgh who took over a 1-10 program in 1999, weathered everything from a winless conference record his first year to a Big Ten title the next, has now won more Big Ten games than any coach who has ever lived. His 213 career wins at Iowa are the most in school history. He is in his 27th season. He has 11 bowl victories â the most in conference history. Heâs also still here. None of this is supposed to be normal. None of this *is* normal. Weâre going to keep saying it out loud until it sounds normal. It will never sound normal.
Now itâs time to turn the page. Hereâs what Iowa is replacing heading into 2026:
So how does this go? Iowa football has been through this kind of departure cycle three times in the modern era. The outcomes ran the spectrum. **2002 â 2003.** Iowa lost Brad Banks (Heisman runner-up QB), Bob Sanders (eventual NFL Defensive Player of the Year), Eric Steinbach (1st-round NFL pick), Fred Russell (All-Big Ten RB), and Dallas Clark (Mackey Award winner) â five program-defining seniors. The Hawkeyes had won the Big Ten outright in 2002 and went 11-2. The 2003 team broke in Nathan Chandler at quarterback, leaned on a defense led by C.J. Jones and Bob Sandersâ younger brother (in spirit), and finished **10-3** with an Outback Bowl victory over Florida. The next year, Drew Tate took over and Iowa went **10-2**, capping the season with the Drew Tate-to-Warren Holloway miracle in the Capital One Bowl. Two straight 10-win seasons after losing your Heisman runner-up. *Best-case parallel.* **2018 â 2019.** Iowa lost T.J. Hockenson (1st-round NFL pick), Noah Fant (1st-round NFL pick), Anthony Nelson, Amani Hooker, and Parker Hesse â the heart of the 9-4 Outback Bowl-winning 2018 team. Stanley returned at QB. The defense rebuilt around A.J. Epenesa. Iowa went **10-3**, finished No. 15 in the AP poll, and absolutely demolished USC 49-24 in the Holiday Bowl. *Solid bounce-back parallel.* **2010 â 2011.** Iowa lost Ricky Stanzi (5th-round NFL pick), Adrian Clayborn (1st-round), Christian Ballard, Karl Klug, plus several others. James Vandenberg took over at quarterback. The defensive line never quite replaced its star pass-rushers. Iowa went **7-6**, finished fourth in the Legends Division, and lost to Oklahoma in the Insight Bowl. *Cautionary parallel.*
Honestly? The 2026 cycle looks closer to 2010-11 than the other two. The 2002-03 team had returning offensive line continuity (Steinbach was the only senior starter to leave). The 2018-19 team had Stanley returning at QB. The 2010-11 team â the dropoff year â lost its quarterback, lost its defensive line stars, and couldnât replace either fast enough. Iowa in 2026 is losing its quarterback (like 2010-11). Losing 3-of-5 offensive linemen (worse than any of the parallels). Losing major defensive line production (like 2010-11). Losing its star special-teams playmaker (like none of the parallels â the Wetjen production is just gone). The hopeful counters: Tim Lester is in his second year as offensive coordinator (continuity at the play-caller), Phil Parker is still the defensive coordinator (always continuity at the play-caller), and Iowa returns more young receiver talent â KJ Parker, Reece Vander Zee, Dayton Howard â than any recent Iowa team. And a key difference from prior departure cycles: the portal. Iowa added key pieces at RB and WR. The QB room is unsettled but has two young scholarship arms with real ceilings who, for the first time in a while, have been in the system for more than a year. The defensive line, even thin on the surface, has freshman talent (Joseph Anderson) and a transfer (Kahmari Brown from Elon) who flashed in the spring open practice. The secondary looks to be like it always is under Parker and the offensive line does still return a pair of starters with a full cupboard of young talent ready to step up. If Iowa lands at **8-4 or 9-3** in 2026, thatâs roughly the 2018-19 outcome curve and we should all consider it a successful transition year. If Iowa lands at **6-6 or 7-5**, thatâs the 2010-11 outcome curve and weâll spend December wringing our hands in despair. If we somehow land at **10-2**⊠well, thatâs a Drew Tate kind of season. Iâm not betting on it, but college football is weird and Iowaâs roster has more talent in spots than the surface stats suggest and one of those two QBs sure reminds me a bit of Tate. The 2025 stat sheet was special. The 2026 stat sheet is going to look very different. Thatâs the only thing about it we can predict with confidence. **Go Hawks!**