Schott keeps his nose to the grindstone for on-field success
Kyler Schott is the latest walk-on success story for Iowa. The Coggon, Iowa, native worked through adversity to see time on the field for the Hawkeye football team.
September 26, 2019
Iowa football fans held their breath.
Starting left tackle Alaric Jackson was down with an apparent leg injury with 4:58 remaining in the first quarter of the new season’s opening game against Miami (Ohio).
Tristan Wirfs flipped from right tackle over to the left side, while right guard Levi Paulsen moved out to right tackle.
With Jackson down and the offensive line swapping positions, fans may have missed the player who trotted onto the field to fill the remaining void on the restructured offensive line.
It was a redshirt sophomore from Coggon, Iowa, who walked onto the Hawkeye football team after graduating from North Linn High School in 2017.
It was Kyler Schott.
Schott had played sparingly as a redshirt freshman and was scheduled to rotate at right guard before Jackson’s injury. Instead, he was thrust into action before he himself suffered a foot injury on Sunday. When he played, he enjoyed every second of it.
“It was unreal,” Schott said. “It has been a dream of mine to play football here. And so to finally get an opportunity to get some real playing time, not just the three plays I got last year, was really fun.”
Schott is in a position nobody from his high school has ever been in before. The school has graduated Division-1 athletes, but as far as Schott can remember, none have been football players at a major college.
“Not football,” Schott said. “We’ve had track, we’ve had a guy come wrestle here, but not football.”
North Linn head football coach Jared Collum recognized early in Schott’s football career that he was a special player. Schott started for Collum’s team as a freshman, one of only a few to ever do so under Collum, who has led the Lynx football program since 2007.
Schott became a four-year letterman as an offensive lineman and linebacker for North Linn. He earned first-team all-state honors and was named district MVP as a senior.
“I’d describe him as a humble person, a very nice guy,” Collum said. “When he gets on the football field, he’s a very violent player. One of his biggest strengths as a player is his ability to finish plays, to finish blocks.”
That mentality has helped him onto the field.
“That’s what coaches have said since I was a little kid playing football,” Schott said. “Play through the whistle. So, that’s what I’ve learned and that’s what I’ve stuck to, and people love it.”
Schott brought his relentless blocking with him to Iowa. Videos of Schott staying on his block and taking his defender to the ground have made rounds on social media through the first few weeks of the season.
Among the people who — like Collum — love the way Schott finishes plays is ESPN personality Mike Golic Jr.
Golic Jr. played offensive line at Notre Dame from 2008-12, and he took to social media to praise Schott for one of his punishing blocks against Miami (Ohio).
Iowa RG #64 Kyler Schott taking everyone and anyone for a ride @JoeMooreAward pic.twitter.com/pFF8X3w37U
— Mike Golic Jr (@MGolicJR57) September 4, 2019
Schott has possessed the mindset to finish plays and to finish them hard ever since his days in youth football. What helped him fine-tune that skill was his work on the wrestling mat.
“Mentally, I believe [wrestling] is one of the hardest sports in the world,” Schott said. “It trains you to just be tough, physical and to just keep pushing yourself. Physically, you learn how to stay low, be explosive, how to run through people.”
Schott was a four-year letterwinner in wrestling at North Linn. He wrestled his way to a 50-2 record in his senior year of high school and earned Class 1A state runner-up honors.
“We have this little joke in the O-line room,” Wirfs said. “If he does something good, we’ll be like, ‘Oh that’s the wrestler in him.’”
Schott was also a standout in basketball and baseball at North Linn.
The skills Schott utilized in his other sports may not directly translate to playing football. Except, of course, for the competitive fire that brims to the surface regardless of what he’s playing.
That competitiveness is a characteristic Iowa head coach Kirk Ferentz looks for in his players.
He found it in Schott.
“I think all of us kind of followed during wrestling and the same thing going to the state track meet or the Drake Relays,” Ferentz said. “Just watching guys compete and how they do when they maybe need a big throw or need a big moment, how they react that way.”
Schott’s choices were somewhat limited when he was deciding where to go to play major college football.
A slight history with knee injuries and questions about his height turned some schools away.
“Honestly, I don’t think I even got a phone call,” Schott said. “I talked to Upper Iowa once, and they never talked to me again. But [former Iowa assistant coach Reese Morgan] seemed to really like me. Kept sending me letters, and I loved it. So I decided to walk on here.”
Morgan made quite an impression on the North Linn offensive lineman.
“As soon as he met Reese Morgan, he was pretty much set on Iowa,” Collum said. “If he was going to get a preferred walk-on spot, he was going to Iowa. That’s what we started telling schools because he could have gone to Division-2 or junior colleges, and they would have loved to have him.”
A walk-on spot at Iowa is different than one at other programs. The Hawkeyes have a history of turning under-recruited walk-on players into key contributors. From the early days of Ferentz with Dallas Clark to the more recent contributions of Nick Easley and Jake Gervase, walk-ons have a chance at Iowa.
“They don’t treat us any differently [as walk-ons],” Schott said. “We get fed the same, we get coached the same. So I knew if I was tough enough I could do it here. You got to be tough. You got to tell yourself that you’re going to push yourself every day.”
Schott has pushed himself. He would not have been called upon after Jackson’s injury — and start the two subsequent games — had he not been constantly preparing for playing time.
The grit Schott has displayed wore off on his teammates.
“He’s about 6-foot, 6-1, maybe 6-2 on a good day,” defensive end A.J. Epenesa said. “He’s a typical Iowa guy, a walk-on, works hard. He’s strong, real strong. Just put him on an incline bench and see what he can put up. He keeps his nose to the grindstone, keeps grinding. He doesn’t stop, he doesn’t quit. He’s a hard worker, a great guy. I was proud to see him on the field.”
Schott and Wirfs took very different paths to start for Iowa.
Wirfs was a highly sought-after recruit and became the first true freshman to start at offensive tackle in the Ferentz era. Schott didn’t have that kind of interest.
Despite the varying circumstances, the two heavyweights upfront for the Iowa offense share something besides their position group: a very close friendship.
“That’s my buddy,” Wirfs said. “That’s my roommate.”
Schott and Wirfs spend plenty of time together being that they both play offensive line. Chances are, however, the two will be side-by-side even when they aren’t on the football field.
“We live together,” Schott said. “We pretty much go everywhere together. We are always playing video games or watching film together.”
The togetherness carried over to their summer employment.
“We didn’t want to be bored so we just got a job together,” Schott said. “We worked for the [Iowa Memorial Union], worked at the warehouse. We were moving boxes, sending orders out. It wasn’t too bad.”
Both on and off the field, Wirfs appreciates Schott’s work.
“He comes to practice every day, he’s kind of like a little bug,” Wirfs said. “He just chugs along and chugs along, and all of a sudden, it’s spring ball and he’s coming out of nowhere. He’s getting reps with the ones and then in camp he gets more reps with the ones and now you see him playing. It’s exciting. I’m really excited to get to play next to him as my roommate.”
When Schott first got to Iowa City, few people knew his name. Include Iowa offensive line coach Tim Polasek on that list.
Polasek had a habit of mispronouncing Schott’s last name, leading to one of the offensive linemen’s nicknames: “Shooter.”
“Shooter came around because of Coach Polasek,” Schott said. “My first week when I got here, he thought my last name was ‘Shoot’ instead of Schott. And then he just started calling me shooter, and it stuck.”
Schott has also earned the nickname “Jack Black,” considering his long hair and beard gives him a similar look to the actor and musician. He does have a preference among his nicknames, however.
“If I had to choose, probably Shooter,” Schott said. “I don’t know, I think I’m a little better looking than Jack Black.”
“Shooter” is now a key component to the Iowa offensive line and a fan favorite. The walk-on recruit from small-town Iowa has received significant attention since his increase in playing time.
Those who have been around Schott for the long run knew he had this in him and wanted to make sure he knew how happy they were for him.
“I actually got a phone call from my strength coach and then my football coach was with him and they were all cheering me on,” Schott said. “It was after the [Miami] game and they were all super happy for me, telling me how proud they were. That was really nice to hear that they were all watching the game.”