Illinois
No. 25 Iowa eager to see offensive improvement in opener against FCS foe Illinois State
No. 25 Iowa will unveil what it hopes will be an improved offense under first-year coordinator Tim Lester when it opens the season against Illinois State in Iowa City on Saturday.
Based on his experience from knocking around the Big Ten as a defensive assistant in the 1990s and 2000s, Redbirds coach Brock Spack predicted even if the Hawkeyes’ offense is improved, there won’t necessarily be anything new about it.
Spack quoted the tough-guy title character in the 1971 movie “Billy Jack” to make his point.
“Billy Jack says, ‘You know what, I’m going to put my right foot on the side of your face, and there’s nothing you can do about it,’” Spack said. “That’s Iowa football. They’re going to try to run that outside sprint and inside zone and they’re going to say, ‘There’s nothing you can do about it.’”
The Hawkeyes won 10 games and made it to the Big Ten championship game last year in spite of an offense that ranked at the bottom of the Bowl Subdivision. Brian Ferentz, coach Kirk Ferentz’s son, finished the season as coordinator after athletic director Beth Goetz announced in October he would not be back in 2024.
Lester, hired in January, spent last season as a senior analyst for the Green Bay Packers. The offense may feature more motion and perhaps some run-pass options for quarterback Cade McNamara, but nothing too flashy.
“I think good effort obviously, playing fundamentally sound and not doing things that are going to beat us, would be a good starting point,” he said. “Then if we can get a little momentum going and hit a couple plays, that’s always a good thing, too. That’s usually what it takes for offensive production.”
Wallace is in charge
Head coach Kirk Ferentz will serve a self-imposed one-game suspension along with wide receivers coach Jon Budmayr for committing a recruiting violation
Assistant head coach Seth Wallace, the linebackers coach and assistant defensive coordinator, will take over Ferentz’s game-day duties.
“I would say we want to (win) for him, but at the end of the day, we’re also doing it for our teammates,” defensive back Sebastian Castro said.
Ferentz said there’s no need for the team to rally around his absence.
“We’ve got a good group of guys, and the staff will do a great job,” he said. “To me it’s almost a non-factor. It could be the same thing if I got hit by a truck or something like that.”
Cade says he’s OK
McNamara, who tore the ACL in his left knee in the fifth game last year, made it to game week with no health problems.
“I’ve gotten over it,” he said. “My leg’s not injured. There’s no injury, there’s nothing. This is the best my body has felt, I’m fully confident of that.”
Surprise RB starter
Kamari Moulton is listed as the No. 1 running back on the Iowa depth chart ahead of veterans Leshon Williams and Kaleb Johnson. Ferentz said Williams has been battling a nagging injury and Moulton merits the job for being consistently sharp at practice. Moulton appeared in four games last season to preserve his redshirt and ran for 50 yards and two touchdowns.
Redbirds’ starting QB?
The identity of Illinois State’s starting quarterback remained a mystery as of midweek. Spack said before preseason practice he’ll likely have a two-quarterback system with 2023 backup Tommy Rittenhouse and Kansas State transfer Jake Rubley.
Thanks for the memories
The Redbirds have played eight games against a Bowl Subdivision team since Spack took over in 2009. Five of those have been against Big Ten opponents, with the Redbirds beating Northwestern 9-7 in 2016. They’ve also knocked off Colorado State (2018) and Eastern Michigan (2012). Iowa will pay Illinois State a $650,000 guarantee.
“What I like about them is it’s a bus ride — you don’t spend a lot of money on an airplane — and the kids in the Big Ten (footprint), most of them are from the Midwest, if not Illinois and the Chicago area. They watched these teams and now get to play against them.”
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Illinois
11 reasons Illinoisans can be thankful this year
This Thanksgiving, Illinoisans should give thanks for Illinois’ heritage, opportunities, wins against new taxes and educational freedom.
From Rockford to Carbondale, towns and cities across Illinois are creating opportunities, increasing liberty and decreasing the burden of taxes.
Here’s a look at 11 items worthy of gratitude.
Growing pride
1) Illinois grows more pumpkins than any other state.
Producing 85% of the world’s canned pumpkin, Illinois farmers produced about 485 million pounds of pumpkins. Illinois produced one-third of the nation’s pumpkins as Morton, Illinois, is dubbed the “pumpkin capitol of the world”
2) Illinois lawmakers end ban on nuclear energy
The state’s 40-year moratorium on large-scale plants has ended. Lifting the ban is a positive step towards competitiveness and reliability and a much-needed step toward energy independence and affordability.
3) Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed 5 bills to help fix Illinois education
Illinois lawmakers passed five education reforms focused on literacy, transparency and career pathways. Pritzker signed these bills into law, signaling a renewed effort by state lawmakers to improve student outcomes, empower parents, invest in literacy and diversify career pathways.
4) Chicago ordinance will remove college degree requirements for most city jobs.
Breaking down employment barriers for disadvantaged groups, new pathways to prosperity open. By endorsing a shift toward skills-based hiring, city leaders recognized some simple but powerful truths: a college degree isn’t the only path to career success and isn’t the only – or even the best – indicator of competency.
Decreasing tax burdens
5) Rockford cut property tax rate almost in half since 2017
The mayor’s office cut back on anything piling on unnecessary expenses, such as printing costs, centralizing printers and defaulting them to black and white. The city also re-bid routine contracts and merged back-office tasks.
6) Kane County, six townships and Bensenville vote “no” to more taxes
More than 75% of Kane County voters rejected a ballot question which would raise county taxes by 0.75% for public safety costs. Voters in Kane County, the six townships and Bensenville have loudly said “no” to tax increases. Taxes are too high, and local leaders who raise grocery taxes, gas taxes or property taxes do so without the consent of those who gave them power to govern.
7) Peoria Heights mayor vetoes grocery tax
“…I know we can and we will balance our budget without balancing it off the backs of families at the grocery checkout.”
Boosting housing affordability
8) Chicago and Lamont boost development, housing supply to address housing shortage
Chicago is expanding where accessory dwelling units can be built, cutting parking minimums near transit and converting ground floors of commercial spaces into residential units. Lombard allows smaller lots to lower cost.
Protecting against government overreach
9) Highly opposed “Homeschool Act” stalls on Illinois House floor
Lawmakers failed to advance a bill riddled with troubling provisions to limit families’ educational options and create government intrusion into families’ privacy
10) Pritzker signed 7 bills into law to make it easier to work
To reduce the number of government permission slips needed to earn a living, Pritzker signed seven bills into law that expand the ability of professional to work in Illinois. With the 38th-worst unemployment rate in the country, the state cannot afford barriers that block people from jobs they are qualified for.
Calling out corruption
11) Former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan was found guilty on 10 counts of bribery, conspiracy and wire fraud by a federal jury.
Madigan ruled the Illinois House for 36 years, building a political machine that controlled Springfield. The end of one man’s corruption is the start to increasing transparency and trust between lawmakers and constituents.
Illinois is taking steps to relieve the burden of corruption and high taxes. The commitment to pursue economic and educational freedom must prevail over partisan politicians working in their own self-interest.
Illinois still has its issues, but these 11 beams of hope show the state can be turned around.
Illinois
Three Ways Iowa Can Beat Western Illinois
On paper, the Iowa Hawkeyes and Western Illinois Leathernecks are a combined 10-0. The Leathernecks have won their only road game of the year, but Iowa is 3-0 at Carver-Hawkeye Arena.
After a successful trip to Orlando for the WBCA Showcase, Iowa saw a huge jump in the AP Poll. They are now No. 11, one spot away from entering the Top 10. Wins over No. 7 Baylor and Miami certainly boosted their status in the eye of the public as they are now massive favorites against Western Illinois.
While Iowa shouldn’t necessarily need to score 100 to beat a team like Western Illinois, it doesn’t hurt to shoot for the stars. Head coach Jan Jensen’s team didn’t make a field goal in the final eight and a half minutes against the Hurricanes, yet somehow they managed to take them down, 64-61.
After a pair of low scoring games in Florida, Iowa returns home on Thanksgiving Eve for yet another non-conference showdown. This is one of two “tune-up” games before they open B1G play at Rutgers on December 6.
Western Illinois has allowed 75+ points in their last two games. Sure, they’ve won both of them, but allowing that point total to Chicago State and Bradley shows the state of their defense. The Hawkeyes should have no issues scoring against them.
Once again, it’s impossible not to understate just how important Chit-Chat Wright is to this team. Jensen is closely monitoring her status, but the transfer guard will not be playing in the Hawkeyes return to Carver. That said, it’s safe to assume that Taylor Stremlow will once again get the start.
As long as Stremlow plays to the quality she was playing against the Bears and Hurricanes, Miami will be just fine. They also have Taylor McCabe, Kylie Feuerbach, and Addie Deal. With both McCabe and Feuerbach being seniors, this is the perfect game to get Deal even more minutes to showcase just how dominant she’s going to be in the coming years.
.ʎɐpǝɯɐ⅁ pic.twitter.com/4k1kcPdpQ6
— Iowa Women’s Basketball (@IowaWBB) November 26, 2025
In the Leathernecks first game of the year, they dropped 116 points. They’ve scored 80+ in their last two, something that was necessary to win knowing how much their defense has given up.
Their leading scorer, Mia Nicastro, is averaging 25.8 points per game. That’s ten more points per game than Iowa’s leader, but it’s shocking to note that Nicastro has only shot four three pointers this entire season.
As a team, Western Illinois is shooting 40% from three. That’s eight percent higher than the Hawkeyes, and is something that could absolutely make the difference. Allie Meadows is shooting 50% from three point range while fellow senior Addi Brownfield is shooting 46.2% herself. The Leathernecks don’t shoot a ton of threes, but they’re extremely efficient from three-point range.
Don’t forget to bookmark Iowa Hawkeyes on SI for the latest news. exclusive interviews, recruiting coverage and more!
Illinois
Illinois man exonerated of 1992 murder downstate after more than 30 years in prison
Danny Davis will be home for Thanksgiving, a dream for many, but for him, a goal three decades in the making after he was wrongfully convicted of murder in downstate Illinois.
Davis was just 20 years old in 1992 when he was coerced into confessing to a gruesome murder. It took more than 30 years to prove he didn’t do it, just in time for the holidays with his family.
Michael Jordan is Danny Davis’ favorite basketball player, and was still playing for the Bulls when Davis went to prison.
“I was in prison with their second championship,” Davis said.
That’s why he requested dinner at Michael Jordan’s Steak House on Monday night to celebrate his exoneration.
“I ate me a big steak,” Davis said.
In prison for more than three decades, Davis said he had learned to ignore the holidays.
“At one point, I just said all holidays are out, and focused on what needs to be done for me to get out,” he said.
Davis was convicted of the March 1992 murder of Mildred Smith, who was discovered stabbed to death in her apartment in Cairo at the far southern edge of Illinois.
“There’s nothing else to tie them. There’s no forensics tying them to the crime, no eyewitnesses, nothing like that,” said Davis’ attorney, Lauren Myerscough-Mueller, with the Exoneration Project at the University of Chicago Law School.
Myerscough-Mueller said Davis and his younger brother were coerced into a guilty plea.
“They said, ‘If you go to trial, Danny will get the death penalty, and he will die.’ So they were at jury selection, they pull him into a room, they threaten them with this, and so they say, ‘Okay, we’ll plead guilty,’” she said.
Davis was sentenced to life in prison without parole, but he and his legal team never stopped fighting. In 2018, Smith’s fingernail clippings were finally tested for DNA. The male DNA found did not match Davis.
His conviction was vacated and he was released from custody last year, but he was still a long way from truly free.
His case was expected to go back to trial next month, until – out of nowhere – prosecutors filed a motion to dismiss the case altogether earlier this month.
“I knew we would be here at this point one day. We didn’t know how long,” Davis said. “Man, it’s just a blessing that I don’t have to go through that.
Now 53 years old, Davis spent more of his life behind bars than on the outside. On Tuesday, he got a special visit from three men who understand that better than anyone.
Jimmy Soto, Darien Harris, and Robert Johnson also spent years in prison for murders they did not commit. Between the four of them, Davis, Soto, Harris and Johnson spent more than 115 years behind bars before they were able to clear their names.
“They’ve lived the same things, they’re going through the same things, and can be a good support for each other,” Myerscough-Mueller said.
Davis said he said he’s ready to make up for lost time with his supportive family.
“Now I don’t take anything for granted in life; nothing,” he said. “I enjoy every bit of whatever that I’m able, the good Lord is able to give me the strength to do, I enjoy,” he said.
Davis’ attorney said the last step for them is the obtaining a certificate of innocence. They will file a court petition to get it.
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