January 27, 2012

Rhoads hopes to create more pressure on defense

Iowa State football coach Paul Rhoads says the defense may turn up the pressure next season. Rhoads wants to see more big plays out of a defense that gave up nearly 29 points per game in 2010. Rhoads says they have to be able to challenge the quarterback in the form of zone and man blitzes.

Rhoads says they will work on a new way to get the pressure after relying on four man pressure in the past. He says the quickest way is to increase the number of people you bring with pressure. Senior cornerback Leonard Johnson likes the more aggressive style. Johnson says he’d like to come off the edge more and make more plays, but will run whatever the scheme calls for him to do.

Johnson says he has been working on his back peddling during the off-season and has proven to himself that he can play press man and he has worked hard on making the back peddling second nature.

The Cyclones need to find a new safety but the secondary is experienced and Johnson feels they will do a better job of communicating next season. Johnson says they can improve in communication as at time they fell apart last year with communication. He says the new scheme has one safety making one call to everyone in the secondary and that will help out.

I.S.U.’s spring game is April 16th.

Drake enters Spring football practice with game looming in May

Drake football coach Chris Creighton says the focus in spring drills will be on the 2011 season and not the Bulldogs’ upcoming trip to Africa. Drake will play a team from Mexico in the Global Kilimanjaro Bowl in May.

Creighton says they won’t specifically prepare for the bowl game in spring practice, as they will get some practices prior to the trip and have some practices before they play. Creighton says with a game less than two months away there is a different feeling about this spring as it looms on the horizon that they will play a game and not have to wait until later to play.

Hopes are high for the Bulldogs who have 17 starters back from last year’s team that finished third in the Pioneer Football League race. They will have a spring game on April 23rd.

Ten restaurants in competition for “Iowa’s Best Burger”

Ten restaurants are now in the running for the title of “Iowa’s Best Burger.” The contest started with Iowans submitting 3,500 nominations that named 275 restaurants. Michelle Baumhover, with the Iowa Beef Industry Council, says the 10 finalists named this week were the top vote-getters. She says the restaurants vary in size and style.

“One’s a bowling alley, one’s a little higher end (restaurant) and one’s in Ute, Iowa, which a very small town,” Baumhover said. The overall winner of the contest will be named the first week of May as a kickoff to “May Beef Month.”

Baumhover says a panel of judges will secretly visit the top ten restaurants and choose “Iowa’s Best Burger” based on style, taste and proper temperature. The overall winner of the inaugural contest last year was the Sac County Cattle Company in Sac City for their mushroom Swiss burger. The contest is sponsored by the Iowa Beef Industry Council and the Iowa Cattlemen’s Association.

The ten finalists this year (in alphabetical order) are:
Bancroft Drive Inn, Bancroft
Coon Bowl III, Coon Rapids
Dublin’s Food & Spirits, Emmetsburg
The Dugout, Ute
Farmer’s Kitchen, Atlantic
Grinnell Steakhouse, Grinnell
The Irish Shanti, Gunder
Rube’s Steakhouse, Montour
Rusty Duck, Dexter
61 Chop House, Mediapolis

Dove hunting bill now law

Governor Branstad has just signed the bill which lets the Department of Natural Resources establish a dove hunting season in Iowa. 

With a decline in both the state’s pheasant population and in applications for pheasant hunting licenses, Branstad said a dove hunting season may help provide more sporting opportunities for hunters.

“I think it’ll be good for the Iowa economy, certainly something hunters have wanted for a long time,” Branstad said in an interview immediatelyafter he signed the bill into law.

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Senator Grassley says it’s too early to make a presidential pick

Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley says it’s still too early for him to pick a favorite among the many possible presidential candidates making the rounds in Iowa. Grassley, a Republican, says he first needs to know where the candidates stand on the various issues, though he says, “only two or three of them are qualified to be president.”

Grassley says he’d try to determine if the candidates who could win the Iowa Caucuses could also go on and had the resources to win in states like New Hampshire, Florida, Nevada and South Carolina. He says, “It wouldn’t do me much good to back somebody that won in Iowa if they can’t carry on the campaign elesewhere.”

Grassley says he’ll likely make his decision in August or September –if– he decides to back one of the prospective candidates. With regard to Donald Trump’s interest in seeking the country’s top job, Grassley says if the billionaire/real estate mogul/reality TV star wants to run for president, he’ll need to spend more than a few days in Iowa.

He advises Trump not to give one or two speeches and then expect Iowans to support his effort. Grassley says he would have to campaign in a grassroots style if he expects to be taken seriously, meeting with the voters and talking candidly. Grassley says he found it a “surprise” to learn former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin is laying the groundwork for a more informed presidential bid, traveling overseas to brush up on foreign policy issues.

Grassley says, “She may be more seriously considering than I thought because, quite frankly, she’s making so much money, (she’s) been lower-middle class in income all of her life and is making some good money now and thinking about her family and her future that I didn’t think she was going to be a candidate.”

Grassley said whether Republicans will support Palin as a viable presidential candidate depends on whether she proves herself and passes muster in front of Iowans and the rest of nation. The same, he says, applies to any other presidential hopeful.

By Ric Hanson, KJAN, Atlantic

Two Republicans critical of Vander Plaats action against judges

Two Iowa Republicans are questioning the motives of former G.O.P. gubernatorial candidate Bob Vander Plaats, suggesting he has embarked on a campaign to politicize Iowa’s judicial system. Sioux City attorney Dan Moore served as treasurer of Vander Plaats’ campaign for governor.

“Mr. Vander Plaats needs to provide straight answers and stop purveying misinformation about Iowa’s judiciary,” Moore said this morning at a news conference in Des Moines. “Bob needs to stop conveying political rhetoric. Bob needs to acknowledge his efforts are to make the courts cede to special interests, not the constitution.”

Vander Plaats led the successful effort to oust three Iowa Supreme Court justices in the 2010 judicial retention election, then he became chief executive of The Family Leader late last year, a group that has been at the center of the crusade against gay marriage in Iowa. Moore cited a recent Des Moines Register poll which found 45 percent of Iowans “disapprove” of Vander Plaats and his agenda and Moore suggested Vander Plaaats is “out of touch” with the “real issues” Iowans face.

“And I understand that the voters voted out the three justices. I get that ,” Moore said. “I think where my friend Bob has crossed the line for me is now the senseless and reckless attacks on the remaining four justices on the Iowa Supreme Court.” Three days after the November election Vander Plaats began calling for the four justices to resign.

Those four justices, along with three who were voted off the bench, signed onto the unanimous 2009 ruling which essentially legalized gay marriage in Iowa. According to Moore, Vander Plaats is using the political skills he’s gained from running for governor over the past decade to build negative public attitudes about the courts.

“We need to move on and build back up what we’ve had instead of tearing each other down and that’s what I’d like to have Bob do, not only as a friend, but as a leader,” Moore said. “I mean, I have respect for Bob because I’m smart enough to know he’s got great backing and they’re out there and I wish we could come together and say, ‘How can we resolve this so we’re still not just tearing each other down and hurting the State of Iowa.”

Former Lieutenant Governor Joy Corning, who is also a Republicans, has called upon Vander Plaats to “come clean” and release the names of donors to the effort to oust supreme court justices. Neither Vander Plaats or a spokesman for The Family Leader have responded to requests for comment.

Nebraska man sentenced to 50 years in deaths of 4 motorcyclists

The Nebraska man authorities blamed in the deaths of four motorcyclists was sentenced today in western Iowa’s Harrison County District Court. Twenty-two-year-old Andrew Schlichtemeier of Murray, Nebraska, was sentenced to 50 years in prison after killing four motorcyclists back in August 2010 on Interstate 29.

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