Kirk Ferentz dissects Marco Lainez’s Citrus Bowl play

Freshman QB Marco Lainez saw his first career action in the Cheez-It Citrus Bowl vs. Tennessee. Kirk Ferentz dissected what he saw.

One of the lone bright spots in Iowa‘s 35-0 loss versus Tennessee in the Cheez-It Citrus Bowl was the play of freshman quarterback Marco Lainez.

In his first career action, Lainez directed a pair of Hawkeye drives in the fourth quarter. Both ended as turnovers on downs, though the first would have led to a field goal attempt and probably been a scoring drive under different conditions.

Lainez’s first drive under center was a 13-play, 53-yard drive that began at the Iowa 25-yard line and ended with a turnover on downs at the Tennessee 22-yard line.

Lainez’s mobility provided a dimension to the Hawkeye offense that has been sorely lacking. In just his two drives of work, Lainez finished as Iowa’s leading rusher against Tennessee with 51 rushing yards on six carries.

Lainez completed 2-of-7 passes for four yards.

Afterwards, Iowa head football coach Kirk Ferentz shared his thoughts on how Lainez performed.

“Marco’s done a really good job, the improvement he’s made. He basically started with us in August. So the improvement he’s made, it’s been really impressive. He’s a great young guy, great attitude.

“It’s hard to practice three quarterbacks. He certainly got work as the season went on, but he’s still got a lot of learning to do, a lot of time in front of him and all those types of things. Yeah, he went in and competed like you’d think. He’s got some things to learn. All this will be good experience for him. Something to draw upon and doesn’t burn a year of eligibility, so it’s a good thing,” Ferentz said of Lainez.

Ferentz said Iowa came into the game considering playing Lainez, but not in a starting role.

“No, not starting. He’s practiced well. So, you think about that with all your guys. We played a couple young backs a little bit today. You think about all the guys, but, obviously, we felt our best chance to win, because we started Deacon and played Deacon the majority of the game, we thought that gave us our best chance to win. At some point, you just felt like making a change would be the best thing. That’s what always drives every personnel decision,” Ferentz said.

“Anybody that can run at any position is a good thing. Again, he’s a young player, he’s got a lot to learn and he’s got a good future. He’s got good throwing skills, running skills.

“But just, you know, Deacon’s obviously got a lot of experience through the season, Deacon’s done a lot of good things for us. That was kind of the decision. But, we’ll let everybody compete in the spring and see where it all goes,” Ferentz said.

Lainez certainly provided a spark with this Hawkeye offense that Iowa fans have been missing. What the quarterback room ultimately looks like in the spring will be fascinating to watch unfold.

Senior Cade McNamara is expected to be back after rehabbing a second knee injury in as many seasons. The thought was that McNamara would be the Hawkeyes’ projected starter.

But, the Hawkeyes are reportedly getting a visit from former five-star signee and Oregon Ducks transfer quarterback Ty Thompson on Friday. If Thompson picks the black and gold, that could change the direction of the offseason for the Hawkeyes.

Would McNamara sign up for a full-fledged quarterback competition this spring? What about sophomore quarterback Deacon Hill? Would Hill stick around as the Hawkeyes’ No. 3 or No. 4 option?

Iowa also signed four-star quarterback James Resar out of Bishop Kenny in Jacksonville, Fla., in the 2024 class and the Hawkeyes brought in walk-on quarterback Tommy Poholsky as a freshman this season.

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