University of Iowa Football
Media Conference
Wednesday, March 30, 2016
Reese Morgan
REESE MORGAN: I hope everyone is doing well. First
of all, I want to thank you for a great season. You have
a hard job to do and we appreciate it and value it, but,
anyhow thank you for your part there.
We just had our fourth practice today. We have a lot of
work to do on the both sides of the football but really
we have a great group of guys. Love our energy in the
defensive line room, we have some experienced guys
inside at the tackle position, we have semi experience
on the outside, with a couple of younger guys and then
we've got a good nucleus of guys that are doing well.
The good thing you feel about it is you see guys
helping each other in the room, trying to do things the
way they're supposed to be doing them.
Q. Talk about Anthony Nelson?
REESE MORGAN: Anthony Nelson is a freshman, true
freshman. This is his first spring he's been on campus,
eight and a half months, excellent student, really has
an upside, athletic, a little bit of a burst. His dad was a
great defensive lineman here at the University of Iowa
and he's off to a pretty good start. He's just learning
things. He's got to be -- he's very good in the
pass/rush game, he's got to get better at the point of
attack, so forth.
But he's right now working in the two-deep. He's
working with the second group. We have all our
defensive ends sit together and all the defensive
tackles sit together. So there is a lot of cooperative
learning going on. They're communicating with each
other, in addition to what Coach Bell and I work
together, and that brings me to the next point. We
really are fortunate to have Kelvin Bell working with us.
He played here as a defensive lineman under a great
defensive line coach, Ron Aiken, and he's had an
opportunity to go out and work at other programs as a
line coach. Then back here as an on-campus
recruiting coordinator, and he's been a huge asset.
Q. Does Drew's situation complicate things for you
this spring or is it business as usual?
REESE MORGAN: The thing you feel bad for is Drew.
He has no control over it. We don't have any control
over it so we can't worry about it. Even if he was
healthy he wouldn't be practicing this spring. So it
provides an opportunity for some of our younger guys
to get some reps. I feel bad for him because it's been
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denied several times. He has an appeal in again and
the process just seems to be extremely frustrating
because no one from the NCAA has talked to anybody
in this building about it or him, which seems to be
unusual.
Q. What was his involvement at this point?
REESE MORGAN: He's written appeals. He has
communicated. Our compliance people are going back
and forth trying to help out. But, yeah, it's -- you know,
it's hard and you feel for him, because he just wants to
know. He just wants to know, can I get an agent, can I
continue to play, do I -- what am I able to do? He was
able to go to the combine. He got special permission
to do that.
Q. What's he doing with you guys, sitting in the
meetings?
REESE MORGAN: No, he's not with us at all. Right
now he's treated as a graduate. He works out with
Coach Doyle. He hasn't been granted that year so
can't participate with us.
Q. Is Jaleel the anchor on the line?
REESE MORGAN: I tell you what, anchor might not be
the right word. I would hesitate using that word
because sometimes that anchor goes over here or over
there, but Jaleel is an excellent player and he has great
ability and the if Jaleel was up here right now he would
say, I have a lot of work to do to get better. The good
thing about it is he's playing with a lot of energy. He's
playing hard. He's playing fast. He's our most
experienced defensive linemen and he's got a chance
to be good.
That being said, he has so much to get better at and
the run and the pass so much going on. Nate Bazata
who plays next to him, solid tough, had a whole years
of experience. He was a rookie last year, so Nate has
an opportunity to be a leader for us.
And Faith Ekakitie, Faith came on probably the last
three games of the year. Faith probably played his best
football of his career toward the end of the year. So
those three guys are getting some rep and our other
guy in there is Jake Hulett. Jake is a nonscholarship
player from Springville, Iowa, that just gets better and
better and better, and I don't know what it is about 8man football and the D-line but they always seem to
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gravitate toward us.
know, we'll see. We'll see.
Q. Question about Parker. When he had to fill in for
Drew, he's an undersized guy, but it seemed like he
rose to the challenge?
REESE MORGAN: The great thing about Parker
Hesse has to do with what his parents did with him
when he was a young man. They did a great job of
instilling values in him. He's a great competitor. He's
very tough. He is very detailed, very intelligent. He
has a lot of pride. You have that. Plus he has got
some ability, he was a high school quarterback as
many of you know. Played all over the field, but he
hates to lose. It was very competitive. He had a
chance to go out and he had some help from -- Drew
was helping to give him advice and help him out during
the course of the season, but, you know, he's -- he's
out there right now and he's kinda -- he's getting better
but it's a work in progress. He is a redshirt sophomore,
so that's not a lot of experience, especially in the line
position.
Q. Last year you played Jaleel and Nathan, you
know, I think 80% of the time. How difficult is it to
find that right mix with the rotation?
REESE MORGAN: I tell you that's a great point. We
would love to play eight guys. We would love to. Last
year we played six. We played six guys, and, you
know, the year before we probably played six. But you
want your best players on the field and the only way for
them to demonstrate they can successfully do it is in a
practice situation.
Q. Talk about why Parker stepped up. He was the
only redshirt freshman, he was the next man up?
REESE MORGAN: Yep.
Q. Do you feel like that depth exists this season?
REESE MORGAN: Hopefully he will be better and he
will be available to provide some experience for us
there. You've got Anthony Nelson who I have
referenced and Matt Nelson on the other side. Matt is
a very -- he's really starting to come on. You saw him
in the bowl game and in the Big Ten Championship.
He played some valuable reps and provided us with
some depth. He's a very smart kid. He's a
perfectionist so we've gotta kinda get a little bit of Nate
Meier in him, go in and go hard. If you make a mistake
that's okay once in a while but just go! He's off to a
good start right now.
Q. I think you have four or five incoming linemen,
do you see any of them chipping in or is it too early
to tell?
REESE MORGAN: Yes and no. Yes, it's too early to
tell which is the obvious thing. It's hard to come in as a
defensive lineman. However, the situation is unique.
We're experienced inside. We're younger on the
outside, so we're going to need some depth. I think
there are a couple of guys, one, maybe two guys that I
think might have an opportunity to possibly be in that
two-deep, you know, but you never know. We've got 14
guys out there right now and our goal -- our goal as a
coach is to make each and every one of them the best
player they can be by providing positive feedback,
doing a great job of teaching, letting them understand
the defense and teaching the technique and
fundamentals, so it's still -- it's ambiguous, but, you
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So they have to go out and practice and be able to do
what you're asking them to do in practice on a
consistent basis and the trust has to be earned. The
trust is on that take that they're out there, are they
doing it on tape what we're trying to do, the corrections,
are they applying correction and is it showing up?
I think we've got some guys that have played a little bit,
and hopefully we can develop some depth.
Q. With the amount of TV timeouts that you guys
deal with is fatigue as big of a factor that it was 20
years ago?
REESE MORGAN: I tell you what, if they can figure out
how to have a commercial during the sixth or seventh
play of a tempo set that would be excellent because
what happens is they're going and going and going and
they put the rule in if they sub you can sub, so that's
different. But certainly the game right now favors the
offense and favors teams that are run tempo so there
are a lot of rules in that help them out an awful lot and
what we have to do is do the very best we can.
I think it's got to be a mind-set, one where you have to
be mentally tough and you have to embrace the fact
that you're going to be fatigued and fatigue is just an -it's another obstacle that you have to overcome in
football and you're going to have to overcome fatigue,
mental fatigue in life, too.
Q. Michael Slater appeared on the depth chart. I
don't know if that was the next name on the list.
What have you seen from him to be in that eightguy group?
REESE MORGAN: Michael is a talented kid, good kid,
really talented. Got off to a tough start and he's
working his way back in. He's got a lot of ability, really
like him and he's got to continue to grow, you know, as
a student -- a college student-athlete.
Q. The sour part of the Rose Bowl, the losing part,
isn't what people want to talk about, but what
experience did your group get facing someone like
Christian McCaffrey?
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REESE MORGAN: I think we know where we want to
go. I know we know where the bar has been set. We
know what we have to do. Interesting thing, the five
guys that played a lot last year. I went and made a cutup of every single play in the run game that they did,
both good and bad. I went through every snap and we
put it in their locker. Their goal in the off-season was to
study that, come into spring ball with goals, what do
you have to get better at, what are you good at? What
are your objectives?
So we talk about that every day and that's been helpful.
They all understand they have work to do, especially if
you watch that game or any of our games or our
practices. We're trying to build on that. It's been
something that has been a motivating thing for our
entire football team.
Q. Have you ever done that before?
REESE MORGAN: Yeah. We did it not every snap, but
I know with Karl and Louis we had an area two years
ago we wanted to get better at. So I put all the doubleteam blocks, every double-team, whether it's a power
play -- and they had to get better at that, so they saw
that and referenced it. It's humbling because you've
got 160 plays that say "bad" and you're supposed to
look at 'em and you got maybe 80 plays that say "good"
and you're supposed to look at those and write down
comments about it. So I think it's part of the teaching
process.
Q. How big of a difference do you see with the
starting guys that before they didn't see a whole lot
of playing time? Mark alluded to the number of
snaps they did see last year. What's the difference
this year with all the snaps that they had last year?
REESE MORGAN: I think it's helped them understand
the concept of the defense and that's important, it's
kind of like Algebra 2 and what you might learn in the
math sequence so it builds on the other thing. Once
you're looking at your man that you're defending now
you're looking at the guys next to you; now you're
looking at the entire offensive line; now you have to
know how the linebacker fits in; where does the safety
fit in? You have to know the whole defense, and where
you have to be because if you don't get there you're
letting your teammates down and that's our
responsibility to get there. That's the struggle.
Technique and fundamentals will always be something
you have to emphasize. You will never perfect it, but if
you can master it and get very good at it, that would be
our objective.
Q. You have 6 to 8 men, I think there are probably
some obvious hurdles there, getting your butt
down and anchoring, but how do you tackle that
and build that?
REESE MORGAN: Matt Nelson has height and we use
it to his advantage. The things he does well and he
should do well is knock down passes. And he has
great length so he can have great leverage and he's
really using that well. People would think a guy that's 6whatever he is, that he would not be able to get low he
probably has the best consistent pad level of anybody
in the front including your shorter guys. There is no
question.
He's really worked at it. He understands it, and he has
things that he has to get better at but I think the tempo
that he's practicing at is all headed in the right direction
and understanding. I tell you, what a great group of
young men! I love being in that room! I wish you guys
could come in and see that. You got guys that are
improving in the classroom, they're improving on the
field. We're a long ways away, but it's rewarding.
Q. What did they need to work on the most?
REESE MORGAN: Defending the block, getting off the
block, reach blocks, everything that you can imagine,
double-team blocks and so forth. Everybody has a
different thing. Then the tough thing is during the
course of spring ball and during preseason and Bowl
prep, we are facing our offense most of the time. Our
offense does not run 70% of the time. We're seeing
something different during the season. We're a zone
read team or a -- so the blocks are still the same.
They're still somewhat, but now the defensive end has
a lot more pressure. He has to know where the back
is, all the different calls, does he have the dive, the
quarterback?
So it puts a lot of stress on him. So it's a great -- it's a
great opportunity to teach. It's a great opportunity for
kids to grow and develop. The great thing about it is,
the best thing is we have such a good offensive line.
Brian Ferentz does a tremendous job with our offensive
line. Our offensive line is excellent.
So every day we tell our -- you're going against some
of the best guys you're going to see all year and when
you get into game season you will be well prepared.
Q. Is Nathan Bazata on the track that you thought
he would be on?
REESE MORGAN: He grades out probably higher than
anybody in our defensive line, so he's doing his job.
He a blue collar guy. He's that guy that goes hard.
He's a good student, good kid, tough, leader, highly
respected, and the thing our guys respect are three
things, number one, if you're a hard worker, number
two, if you're tough physically and mentally, and
number three, if you care about people and help
people, that's what guys respect.
Q. Regarding defensive ends, you saw Shilique
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Calhoun and what a difference he can make.
Doesn't seem like you guys are there yet, but how
important is that position in college football and
what kind of attack do you have going into this
season?
REESE MORGAN: It's a good question because if you
look around the country there's a lot of guys at that
position that are really, really special. We go against
some of those guys. Right now we have some solid
guys that are young and they will have an opportunity
to improve and get better. Somebody like Calhoun, we
don't have that guy yet. I think as we continue to grow
we're going to try to continue to try to get guys that are
better. But right now our focus is to work with the guys
that are here on campus and develop them the best of
our ability. We had a pretty decent team last year and
we didn't have Calhoun or Bosa, whatever his name is.
We're going to do it with the guys we have and we
have to have the guys that are going to fit in our
program, guys that have the intangible characters that
are important for success over time in this program.
You would like to have guys with great ability that have
unbelievable attitudes that are tough and they're great
students and all that stuff. We're just going to try to
work and develop the guys that we have.
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