116 3rd St SE
Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52401
Home / Sports / Iowa Hawkeyes Sports
Former Hawkeye Jake Christensen has been cheering for Iowa all year
Nov. 5, 2009 4:22 pm
Jake Christensen has no hard feelings about Iowa's football success. He's just enjoying it differently from his apartment in Charleston, Ill.
Christensen, Iowa's former starting quarterback, plans to attend Saturday's football game at Kinnick Stadium and cheer for the Hawkeyes against Northwestern. If that sounds surprising, consider Christensen wants to attend the Rose Bowl - or even the national title game - should Iowa qualify.
“I've been cheering for Iowa all year,” Christensen said in a phone interview. “It hurts when people think that I cheer against Iowa, and I hate Iowa. If I gave that impression, I guess that's my fault. Nothing could be further from the truth.”
Christensen, 23, started 15 games and won eight from 2006 through 2008 before he was permanently benched in favor of Ricky Stanzi midway through the 2008 season. After the season, Christensen took 42 credit hours from January through July to earn a bachelor's degree before transferring to Eastern Illinois. He starts at quarterback for the 6-2 Panthers this fall and has thrown 14 touchdowns and seven interceptions, similar numbers to the 17 touchdowns and six picks he threw for Iowa in 2007.
As his former team enters unprecedented territory at 9-0 and ranked No. 4 in the BCS standings, Christensen said he has no regrets. His team most likely will play in the FCS playoffs, and he's throwing the ball better than ever, he said. But Christensen laments that when he chose to leave Iowa, many people described it as a divorce. Likewise, when he made unflattering comments about Iowa to a national Web site, he was described as bitter, especially about losing the starting quarterback position.
Christensen said his comments were based on his competitive spirit, not anger.
“It's hard to say this without coming off wrong. I think anytime you have to transfer out of a situation where you feel like you're the better player, you don't feel like you got a good shot, a fair shot,” he said. “That's not saying anything negative about anybody else. It's my own opinion. It didn't work out that way. I'm not mad about it. But I think if you don't think you're the better player and you just concede over to somebody, then you're done from the beginning. Maybe I did get a fair shot, maybe I didn't do well enough to hold on to my position. That's one way to look at it.
“I would look like a complete maniac to say they made the wrong decision when they're No. 4 in the country and undefeated.”
Iowa rotated Christensen and Stanzi the first four weeks in 2008. Iowa was 3-1, but the offensive results were erratic. As it entered the Big Ten season, Iowa chose to start Stanzi, and Coach Kirk Ferentz told Christensen face-to-face the decision was permanent.
“Once we made the decision, I let Jake know that we were going to give Rick some time, and we weren't going to play back and forth,” Ferentz said. “We were going to give Rick ample opportunity to demonstrate what he could do.
“Really the gist of my conversation with Jake was what we need from you right now is to be a good, supportive backup, like Rick's been to you. And if you can do that, and it's not going to be easy - I knew that - but if you can do that, that's what we need. If you can't, you need to let me know that, too. because it's not going to work the other way.”
Ferentz and Iowa players acknowledge Christensen prepared with the same vigor each week and helped others, too.
Sophomore wide receiver Marvin McNutt, who began at Iowa as a quarterback, called Christensen his “lefty mentor” and said the two remain friends.
“When I didn't know what the read was, he'd come over and try to explain it to me the best way he could,” McNutt said. “Jake was more of a lead-by-example guy.”
Christensen remains complimentary toward Ferentz, Stanzi, the Iowa program and its coaching staff. He watches Iowa highlights in the apartment he shares with former Iowa teammate and Eastern Illinois kicker Austin Signor. He said he's at peace with his decision.
“It'd be hard to be at peace if I was watching Iowa and they were 2-7 and Ricky was not playing well,” Christensen said. “But that's not the case.
“Ricky is playing well, they're undefeated, they're in the national title hunt. Everything is going the way they had hoped, and everything is going for me the way I had hoped here at Eastern.”

Daily Newsletters