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Return of the Jewel
Marc Morehouse
Mar. 24, 2010 4:53 pm
Last season, the Iowa Hawkeyes were a Brandon Wegher rib injury from the running back abyss.
Week eight at Michigan State, untested true freshman Brad Rogers dressed and took a spot on the travel squad to Michigan State. During that game, starter Adam Robinson suffered a high-ankle sprain. Wegher missed a quarter and a half after taking a shot to the ribs, which eventually cost him the Ohio State game.
In the fourth quarter, it was Wegher, his ribs and then Rogers.
Not fun for Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz. Even with two proven backs in Robinson and Wegher, he happily welcomed Jewel Hampton back into the competition during Wednesday's news conference to kick off spring practice.
“Our first goal is to get more than two guys to the game,” Ferentz joked. “We've had a hard time doing that, unfortunately. It's a luxury item when we have three backs, so if we can get to that point, that'd be great.”
Running back isn't a spring hotspot for the Iowa Hawkeyes, but it is a position that will draw a lot of interest.
Hampton is back in the mix after suffering a torn ACL last June. As a true freshman in 2008, he rushed for 463 yards, seven touchdowns and averaged an impressive 5.1 yards a carry. He was poised to be the man, on the heels of record-setter Shonn Greene, but then the ACL.
Robinson and Wegher stepped in last season as a redshirt and true freshman, respectively. Robinson would've had a 1,000-yard season, but missed 2 1/2 games with the ankle. He finished with 834 yards, five TDs and a 4.6 yards per carry. Wegher made a bid for MVP of the Orange Bowl with 113 yards and a 32-yard TD. He finished with 641 yards and a freshman-record eight TDs.
Robinson averaged 16.45 carries a game; Wegher had 13.5.
“The only thing I know is competition is great at any position, and that's one position (running back) where we will have good, healthy competition, if things pan out,” Ferentz said. “We'll see what happens, but hopefully it's going to be a good situation for us.”
Hampton is, perhaps, the most interesting commodity. The 5-foot-9, 210-pounder teased fans in 2008, when he backed up Greene. During recruiting, he described his running style as angry. It showed. He aggressively hit holes and did well after contact.
Ferentz said Wednesday that Hampton has been cleared to practice. He won't be tackled this spring, but will see contact work. On the flipside, Robinson is out this spring after undergoing shoulder surgery.
“(Hampton) is pretty close to it right now,” Ferentz said. “By June, he'll be 100 percent.”
Hampton spent the year on the sidelines and watched two freshmen take, presumably, his job and run with it.
Ferentz was asked Wednesday where Hampton's head was with all of that.
“I think one of the hardest things about being injured, even if it's just two days, you feel like you're removed from the team,” Ferentz said. “I don't care what you do, it's really hard to change that. If you're a player who's hurt, that's probably the worst thing that you experience.
“You feel like you're on the outside looking in. There's really not much anyone can say or do. We certainly include the guys in all of our activities, but you just can't change that feeling. So, I think he'll welcome the chance to get back with the group and start working again.”
Another way to look at it, it's probably a safe assumption that Hampton will be one of the hungier players on the team.
“I think he's proven he can compete very well at this level,” Ferentz said. “I thought he did a lot of good things. The best thing about it was he really improved during the course of that season, the ‘08 season. I thought he was a much better player the second half of the year than the first.
“He's going to be right in the thick of it, and I was impressed with both Adam and Brandon last year. I thought they did a great job. Both of those guys got better, too, as the year went on.”
Strong saftey Tyler Sash (shoulder), free safety Brett Greenwood (shoulder), O-lineman Kyle Haganman (undisclosed) and defensive tackle Steve Bigach (knee) will join Robinson on the sidelines this spring.
Defensive end Dominic Alvis (groin) and offensive tackle Nolan MacMillan (sports hernia) will be slowed during spring, which ends with an open scrimmage April 17 at Kinnick Stadium, which begins 1 p.m.
From UI student Meredith Mulford
Here's an interview I, and a boatload of my media friends, did with Jewel last August.
Iowa running back Jewel Hampton tucks the ball under his arm while working out during the team's practice Wednesday, March 25, 2009 at the Kenyon Football Practice Facility on the University of Iowa campus in Iowa City, Iowa. (AP Photo/The Gazette, Brian Ray)