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The 2011 Iowa Hawkeyes football team represented the University of Iowa in the 2011 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Hawkeyes were led by head coach Kirk Ferentz, who was in his 13th season, and played their homes games at Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City, Iowa. They are member of the Legends Division of the Big Ten Conference.
Despite the disappointing season, Iowa mopped up Missouri, the third place Big 12 Conference team, 27–24 to end the season on a high note. Freshman Marcus Coker ran for an Iowa bowl game record 219 yards and scored two touchdowns. Micah Hyde’s 72-yard interception return in the fourth quarter was the go-ahead score.
The list documents season-by-season records, and conference records from 1892 to 1896 and 1900 to the present. The Hawkeyes began playing football as a club sport in 1872, and began playing intramural games against other colleges in 1882, but it was not until 1889 when Iowa challenged Iowa College to an interscholastic varsity football game.
Iowa's most recent appearance in Chicago took place during the 2012 season, when it beat Northern Illinois at Soldier Field in an 18-17 game. Now, the Hawkeyes (6-2, 3-2 Big Ten) will try to cling ...
Iowa won the Big Ten West, went 10-3 and is No. 17 in the College Football Playoff rankings with an offense that resembles a slow crawl. Iowa’s offensive stats are much closer to Vanderbilt’s ...
In 1899, again playing as an independent, Iowa completed its first undefeated football season, which led to an invitation to join the Western Conference, now known as the Big Ten Conference. In 1900, the Hawkeyes finished another undefeated season and won a share of the Western Conference title in their first year of conference play.
Here's Friday’s full schedule for the four remaining Iowa City-area teams in the IHSAA football playoffs. Iowa City-area Iowa high school football schedule, playoffs Wilton at Regina Catholic ...
The Orange Bowl is one of five Bowl Championship Series (BCS) bowl games that have been played at the conclusion of every college football season since 2006. [nb 1] As defined by contract, the bowl matches the champion of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) against an at-large pick chosen by a special committee. [6]