The NCAA found Kirk Ferentz, the head coach, and Jon Budmayr, who was an offensive analyst at the time, guilty of Level-II violations with regards to impermissible contact. Even though the athlete has not been explicitly named, everyone has surmised that it is Cade McNamara. As a result, the Hawkeyes have to vacate four wins from its 10-win 2023 season. Their season record for that year officially drops from 10-4 to 6-3.
According to reports, Budmayr participated in 13 phone calls and sent two text messages to McNamara and his father in November 2022, before he had officially entered the transfer portal. Budmayr facilitated a phone call between McNamara and Kirk Ferentz, who reportedly assured the quarterback that he would have a home at Iowa.
McNamara played as a quarterback for the University of Michigan before the inception of this issue. Following this exchange, it took only a few days for McNamara to go through the transfer portal process and join the football team at the University of Iowa.
The NCAA has announced tampering violations occured at Iowa under head coach Kirk Ferentz.
Penalties include vacated wins, a fine and a handful of recruiting restrictions.https://t.co/4FW0Lf3vDQ
— Ben Portnoy (@bportnoy15) April 14, 2026
As tampering had occurred, McNamara was technically ineligible when he played the first five games of the 2023 season, leading to the vacated wins against Utah State, Iowa State, Western Michigan, and Michigan State.
The program also put itself on probation for one year by the NCAA. Additionally, the school fined itself $25,000 and imposed a two-week ban on all football recruiting communications during the 2026 calendar year. Also, Iowa reduced its recruiting person-days by 24 days. The sanctions restricted Ferentz from conducting off-campus recruiting for two weeks in 2025 and imposed a four-day recruiting restriction on Budmayr during the spring evaluation period.
There is also an impact in the history books. Prior to the ruling, Ferentz had a 213-128 coaching record in 27 years at Iowa. If he has to subtract four wins and one loss, the record would go back to 209-127. This still keeps him as the winningest coach in conference history as the one in second place, Woody Hayes, had 205 wins.
Iowa Frustrated with NCAA Decision
Iowa expressed disappointment with the NCAA’s decision. They feel the wins being vacated is too harsh for such an infraction. They also took full responsibility for it, which ultimately did not result in any leniency by the NCAA.
“I am disappointed by the NCAA’s decision today,” Ferentz said. “Throughout the process, our program has been open and honest about my mistake — contacting a potential player in the hours before it was permissible by NCAA rules. I felt it was important to make amends for the issue, which is why I voluntarily served a one-game suspension to start the 2023 season. I believe today’s decision by the NCAA to vacate four wins in our 2023 season is overly harsh and inconsistent with the violation. As I tell our team and staff, it is how you respond and move forward that defines you. Our focus is on the 2026 season, and that is how we are moving forward.”
The president, Barb Wilson, also shared similar sentiments on this ruling.
“We are very disappointed in today’s removal by the Committee on Infractions,” the statement said. “Throughout this nearly two-and-a-half-year process, the University has fully cooperated with the NCAA enforcement staff. More importantly, when the facts revealed that violations had taken place, the institution and the head coach publicly accepted full responsibility and self-imposed several significant sanctions, something few others have done. We believe the decision to add the penalty of the forfeiture of wins is unwarranted. The matter is now closed, and we are moving forward.”
The post Kirk Ferentz-Led Iowa Hit With NCAA Tampering Sanctions; Multiple Wins Vacated appeared first on EssentiallySports.

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