HAWK TALK

February 2016

Issue link: http://catalog.e-digitaleditions.com/i/636858

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 206 of 212

207 K irk Ferentz talks of it oen to the University of Iowa football team: postseason awards are team awards. Hawkeye junior defensive back Desmond King received the Jim orpe Award on Feb. 2 at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City. He won a bronze trophy, cowboy hat, cowboy boots, and (eventually) a Rolex watch because he compiled 72 tackles, 13 pass breakups, and eight interceptions during the 2015 regular season. He also won the award because the nationally ranked Hawkeyes were 12-0 at the time of voting. To the victor goes the spoils…and hardware. Winning as a team has always been a hallmark of Ferentz-coached football teams and 2015 was no different. An interesting side note occurred while King was in Oklahoma three days enjoying festivities that pre- cede the Jim orpe Award banquet. King was being transported by limousine to a function when he began to smile while viewing an Instagram post by a true freshman teammate. One of the big, strong Paulsen twins posted a pho- tograph of King wearing his new hat and boots and added a comment that made King laugh. Paulsen, a collegiate rookie from tiny Moville, Iowa, made the day of King, a consensus All-American from Detroit. In some football programs, true freshmen are lucky to get a hello in the locker room from a veteran. at isn't how it works under Ferentz. "It says we have great team chemistry all together and that shows what kind of program we have run- ning over there," King said. "It's like a family." King decided in early December that he was return- ing to Iowa for his senior season to earn a degree in communications and African-American studies. en he won the Jim orpe Award and became a consensus All-American. King began to wonder if maybe he was ready to enter the NFL Dra. But spending another year with teammates tugged him toward returning to Iowa City. "Sitting down and thinking about the season we had and the bond between teammates, it was hard know- ing I had an extra year I could spend with them," King said. "at's hard to give up. And then the brotherhood bond that we have on the team. When you know you have another year with my brothers and we can make another magical season." King told everyone who asked at the Jim orpe fes- tivities that he expects a "great" season for the Hawk- eyes in 2016. He cited eight returning defensive starters and six on offense. He bragged about young players on Iowa's roster gaining experience to fill key holes. He talked about a bitter taste le from being inches and seconds away from a Big Ten Champion- ship. One of King's closest friends on the team is junior quarterback C.J. Beathard. ey chatted about being totally invested on having another historic season inside Kinnick Stadium as well as on the road. "So why not take another shot at it knowing we fell short in the Big Ten Championship?" King asked. "Now we know what to do when that time comes again." ere was another consistent message King deliv- ered from Sunday until Tuesday to interested ears on the Jim orpe Award committee. While seven defensive backs from the Big Ten have won the Jim orpe Award from 1997-2015, no one has ever been a repeat winner. "It's an honor to represent this great award and be able to come back another year and contribute to our team's success again," King said. "I want to come back to Oklahoma City, because I would like another pair of boots." King knows that in order to get those boots, he will have to repeat his All-America season and prove once again that he is the top defensive back in col- lege football. And while a lot of that is based on King's perfor- mance, he understands that postseason awards are team awards.

Articles in this issue

view archives of HAWK TALK - February 2016