Abdul Hodge

OLB, ILB · Iowa
College's version of Baltimore's Ray Lewis, Hodge has been a sensational leader for the Hawkeyes since stepping into the starting lineup as a sophomore. He teamed with outside linebacker Chad Greenway to give Iowa the best tackle tandem in the collegiate ranks. In 2005, Hodge (13.2 avg) and Greenway (13.0) ranked third and fourth in the nation in tackles per game. Hodge is only the third player in school history to lead the team in tackles three times in a career, joining Tom Rusk (1976-78) and Larry Station (1982-85) and his career-high 158 tackles in 2005 rank second on the school's season-record list. Hodge earned Super Prep All-American honors as a senior linebacker at Boyd Anderson High School. He added first-team All-State and All-Conference accolades his final year and was a first-team All-County and third-team All-State pick as a junior. He captained the foot-ball team three years, lettering in football four times, twice in track and once in basketball. The Broward County MVP on defense as a senior led the team to a 22-10 record during his last three years. He finished his career with 308 tackles, 22 sacks and six interceptions. He also had eight fumble recoveries and two touchdowns following fumble recoveries. Hodge recorded over 100 tackles in each of his final three prep seasons, leading a 9-3 team that reached the state semi-finals as a senior. Like most Iowa recruits, Hodge spent his first season (2001) as a redshirt. He competed as an outside linebacker on the scout team that year, but moved to inside linebacker the next season. He totaled 38 tackles (28 solos) with a sack in 2002, receiving the Coaches' Appreciation Award for his performance on special teams. Hodge took over middle linebacker chores as a sophomore. The All-Big Ten Conference first-team pick led the team with 141 tackles (83 solos), two sacks and nine stops for losses. He recovered two fumbles, caused two others and deflected three passes. His 141 tackles rank fourth on the school's season-record list. College Sports Report gave Hodge fourth-team All-American recognition and he was again named to the All-Big Ten first-team in 2004. Hodge posted a team-high 116 tackles (79 solos) with three sacks, two fumble recoveries and a forced fumble. He also batted away three passes. Despite leading the conference and ranking third in the nation in tackles, Hodge was only named to the All-Big Ten second-team in 2005. He amassed 158 tackles (98 solos), the second-best season total in Iowa annals. Hodge had a sack, eleven stops for losses and recovered two fumbles. He also caused three fumbles. In 50 games with the Hawkeyes, Hodge started 37 times. He ranks third in school history with 453 tackles (288 solos), the seventh-best career total in NCAA Division 1-A history (records kept since 2000). He added seven sacks for minus 36 yards and 25.5 stops for losses of 75 yards. Hodge recovered six fumbles for 47 yards in returns and also caused six fumbles while deflecting seven passes.