HAWK TALK

November 2016

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15 G etting Randy Duncan to talk about his University of Iowa football career always took some doing. He was never a "me" guy. I would still try, on occasion, to get him to talk about his days inside jersey No. 25. I wasn't the only one. "Listen, I was a quarterback playing with a bunch of talented guys," Duncan once told the Des Moines Register. "Being in the right place at the right time probably was more important than my ability." Don't let Duncan's humble nature fool you. He was one of the greatest quarterbacks in Iowa history, which is why he's one of nine members on the Kinnick Stadium Wall of Honor. Duncan passed away Sept. 27 at 79 years of age. Iowa head football coach Kirk Ferentz never saw Duncan play in person, but he understands his place in Hawkeye football history. "The word legend is often overused in sports, but in the case of Randy Duncan it fits," Ferentz said. "He was one of the true Hawkeye legends who served as an outstanding representative of Iowa football and the University of Iowa." Duncan wrote notes to Ferentz many times. Sometimes it was congratulations. Maybe some encouragement. Because Duncan cared deeply about the Hawkeyes, and they remained an important part of his life until he lost his battle with cancer. As his obituary read, "Randy was devoted to the University of Iowa, as an athlete, and a member of the Letterman's Club and the National I-Club. His greatest love besides his family was Hawkeye football and he was a season ticket holder for over 50 years." On Oct. 7, the night before Iowa won at Minnesota, 14-7, Ferentz played his team a film clip of a Duncan speech. Nearly six decades later, Duncan's words touched on things Ferentz wanted his team to hear. Recent generations know about Iowa quarterbacks Chuck Long and Brad Banks, both Heisman Trophy runners-up. Duncan was a Heisman runner-up, too. Long and Banks played for Big Ten championship teams. Duncan did, too. Long and Banks won the Silver Football Award presented to the most valuable player in the Big Ten. Duncan did, too. Head coach Forest Evashevski left Washington State to take over Iowa's struggling program in 1952, and made the Hawkeyes a national name. Iowa went 9-1 in 1956, winning the Big Ten title and a Rose Bowl. The quarterback was Kenny Ploen, who was named the Big Ten MVP. Evashevski had recruited Duncan out of Des Moines Roosevelt High School, and almost didn't get him. Duncan was giving Colorado serious consideration. But Bump Elliott, one of Evashevski's assistant coaches and Iowa's athletics director from 1970-1991, sold Duncan on the Hawkeyes. "I changed in favor of Iowa because of Bump Elliott," Duncan said when he was enshrined into the Des Moines Sunday Register Sports Hall of Fame in 1976. "I thought he was the greatest human being ever to walk the face of this earth." Duncan was Ploen's sophomore understudy in 1956. In the two seasons that followed, Duncan quarterbacked the Hawkeyes to a 15-2-2 record and was first-team All-Big Ten both seasons. This was in the days of single platoon football. Duncan also played safety on defense. Duncan led the Big Ten in passing in 1958, completing 106-of-178 passes for 1,397 yards. He passed for 12 touchdowns and ran for five more that season, and his career ended with a 38-12 victory over California in the 1959 Rose Bowl. The passing game is much more sophisticated today than it was when Duncan played. But his 23 career touchdown passes and 2,615 career passing yards were school records at the time. Those 23 touchdown passes are still tied for 11th all-time. Duncan is one of 23 quarterbacks to throw for at least 2,000 yards at Iowa. He is the only player on that list who played before 1963. Every player who has thrown more touchdown passes than Duncan played after 1980.

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