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Showing posts with label chris doyle. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 19, 2020

Bike, tuna and will: How Marshal Yanda lost 60 pounds in three months




May 16, 2020
Jamison Hensley | ESPN Staff Writer

On Jan. 12, Marshal Yanda sat at home, feeling more frustrated and ticked off than he’d ever been.

It was a day after the Baltimore Ravens’ shocking loss to the Tennessee Titans in the divisional round of the playoffs. The most successful and -- as Yanda views it -- fun season of his 13-year NFL career came to a crashing halt. While many of his teammates took solace in making another championship run with quarterback Lamar Jackson, Yanda knew he likely would never snap on a helmet again.


Former Ravens offensive lineman Marshal Yanda knew his NFL career was over after his team's playoff loss in mid-January. Nick Cammett/Diamond Images/Getty Images


Yanda’s anger spurred him to pick up the cycling shoes that lay on the floor for four months and climb aboard his wife’s Peloton for the first time. He furiously pedaled and pedaled, moving further away from a bitter end to an All-Pro career and embarking on a path that would transform his 35-year-old body.
A revamped exercise routine, a couple of checked bags of tuna and a fierce willpower led Yanda to lose more than 60 pounds in his first three months of retirement. He went from being a burly 312-pound offensive lineman to resembling a rookie tight end at 245 pounds.
Fans, teammates and friends are astonished at how different a trimmed-down and clean-shaven Yanda looks these days. Yet no one is surprised by how he attacked a healthier way of living.
Yanda clamped down on his reduced-calorie, increased-cardio lifestyle with the same vigor as he did in grappling with the likes of J.J. Watt and Geno Atkins.

“There are two words: It’s the ‘want to,’” Yanda said. "If you want to do it, you’ll do it. It’s how bad you want to. People want to talk about it, but at the end of the day, do you really want to? That’s important.”
It’s this level of commitment that made Yanda the best and grittiest interior lineman of his generation. He wasn’t the most athletic or physically imposing blocker. But you’d better stand clear of Yanda on a running play, when he'd shove three defenders out of the way to open a hole. He left the game as one of three guards in NFL history to earn eight Pro Bowl selections and win a Super Bowl, joining Larry Allen and Alan Faneca.
Known as a grinder, Yanda is also a realist. He had been prepared to retire since 2018, after dealing with ankle and shoulder surgeries. Many felt Yanda should play one more season considering the Ravens are strong Super Bowl contenders, but his body told him otherwise after 13 operations.

The Marshal Plan

Yanda understands the toll the game has taken and anticipates arthritis and other medical issues in the years to come. So, his focus immediately shifted from shielding Jackson from pass-rushers to taking the weight off his joints.
One of Yanda’s first calls after the season went to Chris Doyle, the University of Iowa strength coach and his mentor, for a plan to shed the weight.

Marshal Yanda ended his career topping 300 pounds, and the weight exacerbated injuries. AP Photo/Ron Schwane


"That’s exactly the way you would predict Marshal would proceed,” Doyle said. "This is the next step. This is the goal. This the plan. This is how I’m going to methodically knock it out. This is how meticulous and detailed I’m going to do it. That was just the way he approaches everything. The way he approaches a pass set. The way he approaches the run game. The way he approaches game prep. That’s the way he is.”
Here is how Yanda went from eating 6,000 calories a day to 2,200:
Breakfast
Before: Six eggs (hard-fried or scrambled) and a cup of oatmeal with a banana and brown sugar.
Now: Two eggs.
Midmorning snack
Before: Shake that included spinach, kale and fruit ("You get tired of eating and it’s easier to drink things than eat them,” Yanda said).
Now: Half a cup of fat-free Greek yogurt with a quarter cup of blueberries.
Lunch
Before: 12 ounces of chicken breast with either rice or quinoa.
Now: 3 to 4 ounces of chicken breast, turkey or tuna.
Midafternoon snack
Before: Granola, mixed nuts and dried mangoes by the handfuls.
Now: A quarter cup of mixed nuts that he pre-measures in sandwich bags.
Dinner
Before: 12 to 13 ounces of protein (steak or chicken) with baked or sweet potato.
Now: 3 to 4 ounces of lean protein along with cabbage, asparagus, tomatoes and peppers.
Post-dinner snack
Before: Granola around 8 p.m.
Now: Nuts, baby carrots or cheese stick but nothing after 7 p.m.
Doesn’t Yanda get hungry? “Hold up now, when cheat day comes, just get out of my way,” he said with a laugh.
Once a week, Yanda treats himself to a couple of double cheeseburgers or a mini-barbecue feast that includes ribs, brisket, pulled pork, cole slaw, baked beans and, of course, cornbread.
"Now, the problem is, I eat too much and I’m so damn uncomfortable,” Yanda said. “My stomach is all in knots.”
Yanda certainly works it off. His daily regimen is riding 45 minutes on the stationary bike -- he sweats so much that he bought a boot drier for his cycling shoes. He then hops in the sauna to burn off more calories.
He didn't take notes on how many pounds he lost in the first couple of weeks. Progress was measured by what many take for granted. During his playing days, Yanda would go down the stairs by slowing moving down one step at a time. If you had suggested a long walk with the family, he’d laugh at you.
When Yanda was over 300 pounds, any extended time on his feet would’ve resulted in his ankles and lower back killing him. Now, five days a week, he’s putting in 4 miles in an hour alongside his wife, Shannon, and children Graham, Logan and Libby, all of whom are under the age of 10.
Yanda bought a smartwatch to keep track of the walks, although he really doesn’t need it. If he slows down, his wife will nudge him and say, “Let’s pick up the pace. You’re slacking."

Marshal Yanda took a page from his former teammate Matt Birk, who lost 75 pounds and 10 inches off his waistline after he retired. AP Photo/John Russell


Inspired by Birk

For inspiration to lose weight, Yanda didn’t have to look far. In fact, he only had to turn to his left.
Former Pro Bowl center Matt Birk, who lined up next to Yanda in the Super Bowl seven years ago, lost 75 pounds and 10 inches from his waist line in 2013, his first year away from the game. Other linemen such as Faneca, Joe Thomas, Jordan Gross and Nick Hardwick have all dropped at least 50 pounds.

"When you retire, all of a sudden you have nothing to do and you have this competitiveness,” Birk said. "You like to have goals and focus on things. It’s like, well, football took up so much of that before and I don’t have that anymore. I might as well put some of that energy into dropping a few pounds.”
For Yanda, he combined a couple of passions with his free time, using his first big fishing trip in retirement to help him with his weight loss. He went to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, and left with one of his primary sources of lean protein.
Yanda caught his biggest fish ever -- a 270-pound yellowfin tuna -- which he proudly made his first (and currently only) post on Instagram. It’s quite an achievement considering he had never brought in a fish larger than 100 pounds.

And, like many of the major accomplishments for Yanda, this was a battle. It was a 90-minute tug-of-war before he finally reeled it in.
To get it back home, Yanda first froze the tuna and then checked it into two 49-pound bags on his return flight. For 2½ months, he has been grilling it up for one of his favorite meals.
“Living his best life,” Ravens center Matt Skura wrote on Yanda’s Instagram story.


New habits

Yanda is a creature of habit, although there is a purpose that comes with it.
Coaches at Iowa could set their watches by Yanda’s 2007 Chevy pickup, which is affectionately known as “Old Blue," pulling into the parking lot for his offseason workout. They watched him head to the locker room, where he put on the same pair of Nikes that he’d worn for the past nine years. He received the red-and-silver shoes as part of a gift package from his first Pro Bowl in 2011.
"To him, it was a reminder to remain humble,” Doyle said. "It was a reminder of what it took to get to the level of playing in a Pro Bowl and what it would require to continue to play at Pro Bowl level.”
That’s why it’s been even more startling for some to see such drastic changes with someone who had been so set in his ways. Yanda is under 250 pounds for the first time since his sophomore year of high school. All of his dress clothes and jeans fall off him. He used to wear pants as big as size-44 waist. These days, the size-38 ones are feeling loose on him.

At his heaviest, Marshal Yanda could not go on walks with his family and experienced pain in his feet and back. Courtesy Yanda Family


Yanda doesn’t plan to lose more weight. He has settled in at 245 pounds for the past two to three weeks, and he doesn’t foresee himself dipping below that.
It’s not just the pounds that are missing. Yanda shaved the bushy beard that he had for most of nearly 15 years. The last time he removed it was after the Ravens won the Super Bowl in 2013, and he hated how round his face was. He grew it back for “camouflage.”
After he dropped 30 pounds, Yanda was excited to see how he looked without the beard. He has been so pleased that he bought an electric razor and shaves every other day.
“I actually have a chin line,” Yanda said. “I like to feel the wind on my chin and my face. It’s nice to have a change."

Looking toward the future

Yanda found out how many former teammates saw his appearance on “The Pat McAfee Show" last week by the number of playful jabs that flooded in.
One text from Birk read: “At 248 pounds, I bet you’re weak as a kitten.”
Yanda’s response: "It’s not the size of the dog. It’s the size of the fight in the dog. So back off.”
Yanda never backed down from anyone on the field, and he was known to put players in their place, especially when a young player engaged in trash talk.
Listen, young buck, you just got on this field. You haven’t done nothing. Shut the f--- up.

After a strict diet and trimming down to 245 pounds, Marshal Yanda weighs as much as he did when he was a sophomore in high school. Courtesy Yanda Family


Birk believes going from Superman to Clark Kent is the toughest part in the weight loss.
“You’ve been wired to be like the big, strong guy,” Birk said. "When you’re an NFL player, any room you walk into, you’re the biggest, strongest guy there. Now, you might not be.”
When football season begins, Yanda knows it’s going to feel weird. The competitor inside him will want him to play. But one or two more seasons weren’t going to quiet his love of the game.
Yanda doesn’t know exactly what his future holds. He might build on the 94 acres he owns in Iowa. He might get involved with football. All that is certain is he’ll help his father on the family farm and take family vacations.
So, it’s easy to fixate on how different Yanda looks in all the recent pictures. Others see his smile and a certain look in his eye.
"To me, it’s just a look of contentment in that this is just one more instance where Marshal Yanda set a goal, made a plan, developed strategies and achieved it,” Doyle said. "Marshal lost 60 pounds. Marshal made some life changes. Marshal is committed to it. Marshal executed his plan. Like no kidding. That’s exactly what Marshal does."

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Dallas Clark still feels at home at Iowa



Former Hawkeye, Indianapolis Colts tight end to go into ANF Wall of Honor; still has a presence at Iowa football facility


Former Iowa Hawkeyes and Indianapolis Colts tight end Dallas Clark stands outside Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City on Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2016. Clark was added to the ANF Wall of Honor at Kinnick Stadium. (Stephen Mally/The Gazette)

By Jeremiah Davis | October 18, 2016
IOWA CITY — Kirk Ferentz wondered aloud Tuesday during his weekly media availability if he could "get a couple snaps out of" former Iowa and Indianapolis Colts tight end Dallas Clark on Saturday against No. 10 Wisconsin.
While that ship might have sailed — "I think that might go detected," Ferentz said — Clark will be in Kinnick Stadium as the honorary captain and to be inducted into Iowa’s ANF Wall of Honor.
Ferentz’s joke got a laugh, but Clark would if he could. He’s around a lot as it is, and still works out with the team when he can.
“This is home. If you want me to pick up groceries or something — just give me any reason to come to Iowa City and I’ll come back,” Clark said. “I love working out with (the players). I love trying to beat them, and (strength and conditioning) coach (Chris) Doyle is fantastic letting me. He always prefaces it with, ‘Are you sure?’ and then ‘Why?’ And it’s because I’m sick in the head, I guess. I want to see if I can keep up with these 19-year-olds.”
Clark’s presence around the Iowa football facility isn’t only welcome, it’s encouraged.
Clark moved back to Iowa to run the Dallas Clark Foundation that benefits Humboldt and Kossuth Counties, as well as to oversee the running of a 135-acre family farm outside his hometown of Livermore. So like he said, whenever he can, he comes back to Iowa City.
While helping with the Back Porch Revival concert in August, Clark spent his free time at Hawkeyes’ camp, working out with the current players and going through the same rigors Doyle put him through from 1999 to 2002.
Ferentz has, essentially, an open-door policy with his former players and when they’re around, he wants them to embed the history and meaning of the program into the current guys.
“He’s been around our players, they know him, and he’s talked to them at camp. When guys come through, not just Dallas but former players come through, we invite them to talk to our players any time,” Ferentz said. “The more our players can learn about the tradition, the fabric; the people that have played here and come through these halls, it’s so valuable. It means a lot to everybody.”
Clark’s work ethic post-NFL is just a continuation of what he was as a Twin Rivers High School athlete, as well as a Hawkeye. He got his start at Iowa as a walk-on linebacker just hoping to play special teams, mowing the Kinnick Stadium grass during his gray shirt year in 1998. He ended his career with a year of eligibility left, leaving to become a Super Bowl champion and All-Pro with the Indianapolis Colts.

He joked he doesn’t think he’s worn out his welcome at the Iowa football facilities yet, but it’s probably not possible for that to happen given what he tries to do when he’s around.
Clark’s journey to such a successful career included Hayden Fry and that Iowa staff being the only Division I school to give him a look, then Bret Bielema vouching for him during the staff change and then Ferentz fostering the move from his original linebacker spot to tight end. All along the way, he had people to lean on, and wants to be that for whoever needs or wants him to be.
“I love being around. If I’m passing them in the hall, I always try to leave myself open; I always say hi. I ask them how school is going or what’s next and try to be engaging so then you open the window of, if they do need help,” Clark said. “You just want to be a resource for them, because I had so many people that helped me get to this. You can’t do it by yourself. If I can pass along any little piece of advice to help them to be successful and figure things out (I will).”
Clark will serve as the honorary captain Saturday, when he also becomes the fifth former player inducted into the ANF Wall of Honor — joining Casey Wiegmann (2012), Jared DeVries (2013), Bruce Nelson (2014), and Robert Gallery (2015).
His work as a “hobby farmer” on the farm that’s been in his family for more than 100 years is part of a post-NFL life that might include coaching down the road — but nothing past the high school level. If being around the Iowa football facilities has taught him anything, he said, it’s that he doesn’t want that level of stress in his life.
Whether it’s lifting weights with current players or milling around the facility to lend his thoughts, Clark has been around and likely will be around plenty going forward.
While expressing his gratitude for everything, Clark also reminded everyone it’s not always this way with former players and college football programs across the country. He said he’s taking advantage of the fact that his college coach is still around while he can, because he genuinely loves being back.
Fourteen years after leaving for the NFL Draft, Iowa City and the Iowa football building are the same places they’ve always been to him — even if it’s a little fancier inside the Hansen Performance Center than it was in the Jacobson Athletic Building when Clark was in school.
“There’s not many places, 18 years down the road, where your coach is still the coach. It still feels like home,” Clark said. “It’s the familiar faces, it’s the people who helped me become the player I was. If there’s a new coach in there, a lot of coaches have different agendas on how they approach past players. It’s still very easy for me to come in here, work out with the guys, be available; be accessible.
“That’s the beauty of this university and the coaching staff here. It’s still my coach.”



Wednesday, May 04, 2016

Scherff buckles up for new season





May 4, 2016

By Jordan Hansen | jordan-hansen@uiowa.edu

Washington’s first-round draft pick Brandon Scherff has had a busy year adjusting to life in the NFL.

He was moved from offensive tackle, his position in college, to guard during the first few weeks of training camp. In addition to switching positions, he also had to learn an entirely new playbook after spending the previous five years mastering the Hawkeyes’.
Washington made the playoffs, and Scherff got a taste of something rare in the NFL — postseason football. While Washington lost in the first round, it was a successful year for a franchise coming off a 4-12 season in 2014.

“We started to finally put the pieces together and started playing together,” Scherff said. “To win the division and go to the playoffs, some of the vets said, ‘Don’t get used to it.’ You gotta take advantage of those opportunities you get.”

The transition has been nearly seamless and much of that credit, he says, goes to the Iowa coaching staff, especially strength and conditioning coach Chris Doyle.

“He got me to do things I never thought I could do,” Scherff said. “When it comes to getting you ready for the NFL, there’s no one who does it better than Iowa.”

Scherff made the Pro Football Writers of America All-Rookie team and was widely hailed as a massive success. He was also one of the most consistent players on the team, missing exactly one snap in his 17 starts.

Pro Football Focus’ Mike Renner said Scherff graded out as one of the top guards in the league.


“Scherff is definitely a very good run blocker, and I think the scheme they run in Washington is perfect for him; it plays to a lot of his strengths,” Renner said. “He’s only going to get better with more time, and he’s just a freakish athlete.”

There are, however, some things for Scherff to work on. There were a few pass-blocking issues at Iowa, and Renner says they have carried over a bit.

Even so, according to Pro Football Focus, Scherff gave up just 2 sacks this season. He was also only assessed for just three penalties this year, a solid statistic.

“He still doesn’t have the great change of direction that some guys do, but guards not a premium pass-protecting position, similar to center,” Renner said. “You can get by with a guy who’s maybe not pass blocking extremely well snap after snap if he’s getting movement in the running game.”

Washington will expect quite a bit out of its now second-year guard next season, and Scherff sounded like he’s up for the challenge.

It’s now the middle of the off-season, and Scherff has been busy in the weight and film room, preparing for coming season.

“You always want to get your body stronger and faster,” he said. “We’re trying to play faster, play smarter, so you’re getting into the playbook … meeting the new guys and just getting ready for the season.”

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Iowa Football: No Coaching Carousel Exists in Hawkeye Land





By JA Allen

August 9, 2010


No doubt about it—you get more hype, more scrutiny, and media exposure playing for Ohio State, Texas, Alabama, or Notre Dame in football then you do playing for the University of Iowa.

That is because Ohio State, Texas, Alabama, and Notre Dame have reputations of being esteemed, premier football programs, fielding the best teams with the best athletes year after year.

The most talented players ready to enter college desire to play for top-flight football programs because it means a chance to excel, playing with or against the very best in the country. It also means a higher likelihood of being drafted by the NFL and signing lucrative pro contracts.

In the past decade of college football, however, the Iowa Hawkeyes finished No. 8 in 2002, 2003, and 2004, No. 20 in 2008, and No. 7 in 2009 in both the Associate Press and USA Today polls.

How does Iowa manage to play great football and field winning teams despite being designated as a middle-of-the-pack team in college football?


For Iowa fans and college football aficionados the answer is pretty simple. Iowa offers great coaching and stability. For players, that means an open and honest assessment of your playing skills, a chance to develop and receive support from coaches who know the game well and are as committed to their players as they are to winning.

Leading the way in this player-rich environment is head coach Kirk Ferentz who begins his 12th season as Iowa’s head coach and under whose leadership Iowa has finished in the top 10 four times and in the top 20 five times.

Ferentz followed in the footsteps of Hayden Fry who remained at the helm at Iowa for 20 years, from 1979-1998.

Iowa coaches stay. Why do you suppose in this day and age of mass coach migration—the infamous coaching carousel—that Iowa's coaches stay?

The simple answer is this—just as Iowa football coaches give their players undivided attention and support, the University of Iowa gives its coaches an equally nourishing environment to grow and develop a substantial football program. The University is committed to its coaches and offers them something that the prestige schools cannot always afford—time and freedom to develop.

Look at Notre Dame, for example. As a coach, you know going in that if you do not succeed at turning the program around fast, your days will be numbered. The PR focus becomes a nightmare because you not only have to deal with players and coaches as head coach, you have to mediate with donors, alumni, boosters, administration—plus confront a mean-spirited media.

Charlie Weis must have considered himself the most abused man on the face of the earth on any Sunday when Notre Dame failed to win on Saturday. He lasted five years, always under the gun—let go after another tortured season in 2009.

For Ferentz, coming to Iowa as Fry faded away in 1998 with a 3-8 season meant coming home to a place he’d spent time coaching before he left Iowa City in 1989 to try something new.

In his first season in 1999, Iowa went 1-10, followed by a 3-9 record in 2000. Not exactly awe-inspiring results but Ferentz and his coaches were given the time they needed to develop a program that would work at Iowa. Ferentz felt at home, understanding Iowa ethics and the Midwest code for living. Iowa City was a good fit for this quiet, hardworking man.

Right along side Ferentz was his defensive coordinator, Norm Parker, whose defenses have been the most consistent ingredient in the Hawkeye formula for success year after year. Parker came with Ferentz to Iowa and he remains a true leader and champion of the defense. His players respect him as do his peers, especially his boss, Ferentz. This year, Iowa could well have the most potent defense in the country.

Joining Ferentz and Parker from the beginning was offensive coordinator Ken O’Keefe who has also been at Iowa for 12 seasons, serving as quarterback coach for the past 10. O’Keefe has been responsible for helping nurture and develop some outstanding quarterbacks during his tenure like Brad Banks, Nathan Chandler, and Drew Tate, as well as Ricky Stanzi, the current quarterback.

Also on board for the past 12 years is strength and conditioning coach Chris Doyle whose innovations many feel have been the at the core of the development of top Iowa players. Their success on offense and defense come back to Doyle’s ability to assess a player’s strength level, guiding and motivating him to where he needs to be to succeed.

Other long-time coaches include
• Lester Erb, running back and special teams coach who has been at Iowa for 11 years,
• Eric Johnson, tight end coach and recruiting coordinator who starts his 12th season at Iowa,
• Reese Morgan, offensive line coach in his 11th season at Iowa,
• Phil Parker, defensive backs coach in his 12th season at Iowa, and
• Darrell Wilson, linebacker and special teams coach for his 9th season with the Hawkeyes.

This is a rock-solid coaching staff with decades of experience who have created a winning program at the University of Iowa, building on the foundation of football fundamentals. These coaches root for their players and for each other week after week and year after year.

So as the Iowa coaches and their players get ready for their opener on September 4 in Iowa City against Eastern Illinois, both will be anxious to prove their preseason No. 10 ranking was spot on. Coaches and players will not wish to start 2010 as they started 2009 with a one-point squeaker over in-state rival Northern Iowa.

No one wants to win more than the Iowa players, except the Iowa coaches who have built this winning program from the ground up, retooling the offense and the defense to fit the players they have and retooling the players to fit into roles necessary to win. It works both ways in building a successful football team.

Iowa has never won a national championship and many feel the Hawkeyes just might come very close to it this season with an overpowering defense and a stable, experienced quarterback at the helm. The window of opportunity is open for the Hawkeyes in 2010. Time to let a little fresh air into college football…

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