
Rudy Geiland, Staff Writer
"Call me Josh" Mack will see more responsibility this year.

Just call me Josh!
Nobody really asked, but Joshua Mack showed up at spriong practices and announced he'd like to be called, just, "Josh." Not Joshua. The national championship winning quarterback will have his choice of first name with a media that's all too happy to please, but Mack will have a lot on his plate this year. With Larry Lloyd now gone, the team is expected to spread the ball around more this year. That could be hard, due to the fact that the isn't a real established wide receiver room. There's a clear cut number one as we understand it with Nikolai Vessel, but after that it really falls off. The line has some question marks as well. Mack will be in charge of winning despite everything being different, so wish him luck.
Malone much improved - But Mack named starting QB
Iowa QB Nathan Malone has impressed the coaching staff in camp, but he's always been pretty good at gunning the ball around an indoor practice facility. Despite the coaching staff seeing him as greatly improved this year, he was never given too much consideration for the starting role. After all, Joshua, I mean, Josh Mack won a national championship last year. It would be ludicrous not to name Mack the starter .So that's what Coach Clark has done.
"Josh has proven he knows the offense. He had over 300 attempts last year and was able to get better as the year progressed. We expect he'll improve again this year as the season goes along," said Coach Clark. "I wasn't necessarily happy with how he looked in Spring Ball compared to the way he looked at the end of last season. We're installing new offense and he's going to have to pick up the rest of it later. He's probably going to need to work a little harder moving foward, but here and now, he's my starter," said Clark. "We know he can get the job done.".
Can Polk win the Mackey Award this year? Can Vessel take a step forward?
Even with Nick Vessel around, Hayden Polk is probably Iowa's most consistent performer catching the ball. As a freshman last year, the 6'4", 249 lb Polk caught 58 passes for 855 yards and 8 touchdowns, dropping only one pass all season. That compares to 52 catches for 768 yards and 4 touchdowns for Vessel. Most onlookers think Iowa will pass the ball at least 70 more times this year than they did last year, which would mean more targets for both players.
Vessel has been impressive in camp, showing off the hands, route running, and running after the catch ability that makes him so unique. Polk has continued to show off sure hands and great route running, although he needs work as a blocker.
Other than those two, it's anyone's guess who will be productive catching the football downfield.
The team has good options this year in the dinking and dunking game. Running back Shakur Becton has sure hands and can run routes out of the backfield. Fullback JJ Harris Jr. has once again caught the eye of coaches, manhandling defenders at times with a massive stiff arm, and retaining his ability to catch the ball out of the backfield at will. The Hawkeyes will need everyone at their best this year without the all-consuming ball carrier known as Larry Lloyd around.
2024 Offensive Preview

Vessel pulls off an animation I've never seen before in practice
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