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Boothby adds to legacy as toughest Panther

Oct. 24, 2011 9:56 pm
CEDAR FALLS - University of Northern Iowa defensive lineman Ben Boothby is listed as an exercise science and physical therapy major.
It turns out he might be his own best case study.
Less than a week after arthroscopic surgery on his left knee, Boothby remained the anchor of a stout defense that powered the second-ranked Panthers to a 17-10 win Saturday over Southern Illinois on Saturday at the UNI-Dome.
Boothby suffered a torn lateral meniscus late in the 31-14 win at South Dakota State on Oct. 15, and had surgery on Oct. 17 to repair it. UNI Coach Mark Farley was somewhat in awe of Boothby's ability to avoid being sidelined and produce in the trenches, which can be a physical grind.
“Ben has trained his whole life and all that hard training paid off because the rest of him holds up so well that they can cut out a little bit, but he's still Ben,” Farley said. “He is a one of a kind.
“He's the first I've seen to be able to come back four days after surgery and play like he did in the position that he plays.”
Boothby was impressive, tallying eight tackles Saturday. He had 1 1/2 tackles for loss, stuffing former University of Iowa and the Salukis top running back Jewel Hampton behind the line of scrimmage on a key third-and-3 just inside UNI territory in the first quarter.
A fifth-year senior and preseason nominee for the Buck Buchanan Award, the top individual defensive honor in FCS football, Boothby was focused on suiting up. The Panthers had not beaten Southern Illinois in the last three meetings, and the fans were encouraged to wear black for a “blackout” in the UNI-Dome.
It was too much to miss.
“I wanted to get back,” Boothby said in the postgame news conference. “There's a lot going on that I really wanted to be a part of it. I was willing to do whatever it took.”
Unable to walk sufficiently the Sunday following the injury, Boothby underwent an MRI test the next morning and had surgery later that evening. Boothby said he had full range of motion when he woke up Tuesday, participated in practice Thursday and resumed his role as difference maker Saturday.
“I didn't even take any of my painkillers,” he said. “I was ready to get after it the next day. They gave me two and I'm pretty sure those ended up in Wendy's parking lot after I got done because it didn't go too well with the anesthesia.
“I was really determined to come back and give all I could for my team.”
Farley was apprehensive about the lightning-fast comeback until he saw Boothby's effort in that Thursday practice.
“Come Thursday, Coach said he was going to put me in for a couple reps at practice,” Boothby said. “I felt fine. I played fine, so then he said I was going to play on Saturday.”
Farley said he expected Boothby to need a couple days to recuperate after the game, but the 6-foot, 280-pound lineman was ready to prepare for the Panthers' Missouri Valley Football Conference showdown with North Dakota State University (7-0, 4-0) at Bismarck, N.D.
Farley classified the situation as unbelievable.
“He had maybe his best game and was fine on Sunday,” Farley said. “It's one of those things I can't explain and I'm not sure Ben can.”
Boothby may have cemented his legacy in the program. It certainly reinforced the idea that he is the toughest on the squad.
“He played like nothing happened,” Farley said. “When you have the drive and the desire ... that's what sets him apart.”
Northern Iowa's Ben Boothby (left) brings down Maine's Norman Smith during a 2008 FCS playoff game at the UNI-Dome. (AP photol)