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Stanzi's ankle ready to roll
Marc Morehouse
Dec. 15, 2009 3:36 pm
Ricky Stanzi does the public speaking thing very well. Through his play -- sometimes uneven and sometimes heroic -- he became the de facto spokesman for the 2009 Iowa Hawkeyes.
It's been a month since anyone heard anything from the junior quarterback. After his ankle was torn apart by a 280-pound defensive end, Stanzi was led to the lockerroom in the second quarter against Northwestern on Nov. 7. He showed up on the sidelines a few times after that. At Ohio State, he was in a boot and on crutches. During the season finale against Minnesota, he showed up without the crutches and even threw a few passes.
When Iowa's bid in the Orange Bowl opposite Georgia Tech (11-2) was announced, Stanzi said all systems go for him and his surgically repaired right ankle.
"Getting back to practice was very exciting," he said. "You take things for granted sometimes when you do it all the time. When it's taken away from you, you realize how much you miss it and how bad you want to be out there.
"Being back out there, I was more excited than worrying about shaking off the rust. It is practice, it's a non-pressure situation, so it's good to come back under that. Practice has been fun for me."
After Northwestern defensive end Corey Wootton spun Stanzi into the Kinnick Stadium turf, Stanzi suffered a severe high-ankle sprain. He had surgery the following Monday. The idea was to speed up the healing process, and so far, that seems to have worked.
Stanzi returned to practice Dec. 10.
"I'm full speed," said Stanzi, who completed 56 percent of his passes for 2,189 yards, 15 TDs and 14 interceptions this season.
He thanked Iowa's training staff for the quick rebound. Also, during Thanksgiving break, he continued his rehab at the Cleveland Clinic near his home in Mentor, Ohio.
"If I didn't have the chance to work with those guys or that surgery, I'd still be in a boot right now," Stanzi said. "I'm thankful for that support."
He's so far along that he labled himself "95 percent."
"There's a little bit I have to work out, but I'm moving faster than most would expect at this point," Stanzi said. "They're still keeping an eye on me, obviously, to make sure everything is done the right way."
Stanzi didn't have much to say about the hit that took him out. Stanzi was just out of his spin on a play-action bootleg from Iowa's 6-yard line. Wootton fired up field. Stanzi had no time to react.
"It was just unfortunate he was there when I turned around," Stanzi said. "I just got tangled up in a bad position. There was no way of getting out of that.
"I'm just fortunate that it wasn't worse. The way it looked, it could've been a knee or something worse. I'm pretty fortunate to only have an ankle sprain out of it."
One of the questions bowls asked Iowa athletics director Gary Barta before selection Sunday was about Stanzi's health. Bowls wanted to make sure they got the "never say die," "last-second heroic" Iowa offense and not the dud that muscled past Minnesota.
"They (bowls) want to know if it's going to be a good, competitive game," Barta said. "We've been able to comfortably tell them that we're very confident that Stanzi should be at full strength, (running back Adam) Robinson should be at full strength and potentially everybody."
Stanzi laughed off that notion. He's happy to be healthy and headed to Miami beach with the Hawkeyes (10-2).
"I don't think so," he said when asked if he was a "beach guy."
"The beach is a great place, it doesn't stink," Stanzi said. "It's better than the winter in Iowa. Nobody likes winter, especially me."
Iowa quarterback Ricky Stanzi, center, speaks to the media following an announcement that his team will play Georgia Tech in the Orange Bowl, Sunday, Dec. 6, 2009, in Iowa City, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
Iowa quarterback Ricky Stanzi smiles during a special ceremony for endowed scholarship donors and recipients at the Iowa wrestling team's dual meet against UNI Thursday, Dec. 10, 2009 at Carver-Hawkeye Arena in Iowa City. (Brian Ray/The Gazette)