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Becht accounts for 3 TDs as Iowa State drops Cincinnati 30-10

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Becht accounts for 3 TDs as Iowa State drops Cincinnati 30-10


CINCINNATI — Rocco Becht threw two touchdowns and ran for another, and the Iowa State defense collected two more interceptions as the Cyclones defeated Cincinnati 30-10 in the teams’ first-ever meeting Saturday afternoon.

Becht, a freshman, has now thrown at least one score in each of his first seven games as a starter for Iowa State (4-3, 3-1 Big 12), which handed the Bearcats (2-4, 0-3) their fourth straight loss and their first defeat on homecoming since 2017.

The Cyclones entered the day with 10 interceptions, third-most in the FBS. It took Iowa State defense all of two drives to pick off Cincinnati quarterback Emory Jones.

Jones tossed his sixth interception in the last four games to cornerback T.J. Tampa, giving the Cyclones the ball at the Cincinnati 34-yard line. The turnover set up a 30-yard field goal and a 3-0 lead with 2:12 to play in the first quarter.

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Jones responded by throwing a 20-yard score to tight end Chamon Metayer. It was the third touchdown for Metayer in the last two games and the first for Jones and the Bearcats offense in their last 17 drives at home.

Iowa State answered by marching 59 yards in 15 plays and eating up 7:45, taking the lead for good after a little trickery. After Jordan Young dropped a sure interception on third-and-5 at the Cincinnati 15, the Cyclones picked up a first down when kicker Chase Contreraz raced six yards on a fake field goal..

Young dropped another pick on third-and-goal. That play also included a roughing-the-passer penalty on Cincinnati defensive end Eric Phillips.

Iowa State quarterback Rocco Becht (3) scores during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Cincinnati, Saturday, Oct. 14, 2023, in Cincinnati. Credit: AP/Jeff Dean

The errors by the Bearcats led to a 2-yard rush up the middle for a touchdown by Becht. The freshman’s second rushing score of the season put the Cyclones ahead 10-7 with 7:48 left in the first half.

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Young’s struggles continued as the sophomore surrendered a 75-yard gain to wide receiver Jayden Higgins on Iowa State’s next drive. The gash led to Becht finding tight end Benjamin Brahmer on a 14-yard strike to make it 17-7 Iowa State at halftime.

The first half ended with Jones throwing another interception.

The Cyclones opened the second half with a 65-yard kickoff return by Roy Bell that set up a 34-yard field goal.

Iowa State tight end Benjamin Brahmer (18) celebrates with a...

Iowa State tight end Benjamin Brahmer (18) celebrates with a member of the coaching staff after scoring a touchdown during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Cincinnati, Saturday, Oct. 14, 2023, in Cincinnati. Credit: AP/Jeff Dean

Cincinnati made it 20-10 at the 4:03 mark in the third. After Contreraz added another field goal for the Cyclones, Becht linked up with fullback Stevo Klotz for a 13-yard score with 10:00 to play.

Becht finished 15 of 25 for 241 yards. Jones completed 14 of his 26 pass attempts for just 96 yards, far fewer than the nearly 215 per game the Iowa State defense had allowed entering the day.

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THE TAKEAWAY

Iowa State: The Cyclones matched their win total from a season ago (4-8) and improved to 3-1 in conference play for the fifth time under coach Matt Campbell. Iowa State now has a bye week to rest and recover before playing three of its last five games on the road.

Cincinnati: The Bearcats will need to wait another week to capture their first Big 12 win. Cincinnati’s first stint in a Power Five conference under first-year coach Scott Satterfield continues to be a rocky one. The Bearcats have now lost four straight for the first time since 2017. That was also the last time they lost on homecoming.

REMSBURG RETURNS

Iowa State offensive lineman Jake Remsburg saw his first action after serving a six-game suspension for gambling. Remsburg was among five projected ISU starters who faced criminal charges in connection with a state investigation into illegal sports wagering by Iowa and Iowa State athletes. Remsburg was alleged to have place 273 wagers totaling $1,108 on a mobile sports betting app. He originally was charged with tampering with records for setting up his wagering account under his mother’s name to disguise his identity as an underage college athlete. He pleaded guilty to underage gambling and paid a $645 fine.

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UP NEXT

Iowa State: The Cyclones have a bye next week. They’ll be back in action Oct. 28 at Baylor (2-4, 1-2). Iowa State lost to the Bears 31-24 at home last season.

Cincinnati: The Bearcats stay home Oct. 21 to host Baylor. It will mark the first-ever meeting between the two programs.



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Iowa

Depth has given Iowa women’s basketball an element of mystery

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Depth has given Iowa women’s basketball an element of mystery


The Gazette offers audio versions of articles using Instaread. Some words may be mispronounced.

IOWA CITY — Who will it be next?

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Who knows?

Could be one of the veterans. Could be one of the newcomers.

Last time out, it was Taylor McCabe.

The junior sharpshooter hit for a season-high 17 points in Iowa’s 80-68 win over Penn State on Wednesday.

“It was just an example of, ‘I’m ready,’” Iowa Coach Jan Jensen said Friday.

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“I don’t buy into her being a one-dimensional shooter. We saw at Penn State that she’s so much more. Her vision is as good as I’ve seen. It was one of the best games she’s ever had.”

McCabe’s gem came a game after four freshmen combined for 35 points in Iowa’s win over Purdue last Sunday.

So, who will it be next?

“It makes us so much harder to scout,” McCabe said. “When you have to put 10 people on your scouting report, it does have its advantages. It keeps team morale very high, and it makes us more excited to come to work.”

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The 23rd-ranked Hawkeyes (12-2 overall, 2-1 Big Ten) will need a full team effort Sunday, when they host Cedar Rapids native Brenda Frese and No. 8 Maryland (13-0, 3-0).

Tipoff is 5 p.m. at Carver-Hawkeye Arena.

“They pose a lot of challenges,” Jensen said of the Terrapins. “This is a vintage Brenda Frese team. They are tough, fast and really explosive. They are physical, and they are going to pressure you.

“Brenda is an excellent coach, a great recruiter. She knows her stuff.”

Former coach Lisa Bluder will be honored at halftime.

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“I had to do some convincing (with Bluder),” Jensen said. “Marketing said she might be busy that day. I told Lisa, ‘Look, you need to do this.’

“I know she doesn’t want to be a distraction. But she’s the reason I’m here. She’s the reason we’re all here.”

Bluder coached 24 years at Iowa, compiling a 528-254 record. She led the Hawkeyes to NCAA tournament finals appearances in 2023 and 2024.

“For her to be back and to be honored like this, she deserves it,” senior Sydney Affolter said. “I’m excited for her.”

Comments: jeff.linder@thegazette.com

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Wisconsin 116, Iowa 85: Badger Blitz

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Wisconsin 116, Iowa 85: Badger Blitz


Wisconsin 116, Iowa 85: Badger Blitz

A good start for the Hawkeyes — Iowa led Wisconsin 28-22 almost 12 minutes into the game — fell apart in the face of torrid shooting from the Badgers, resulting in a 116-85 Wisconsin victory. The loss dropped Iowa to 10-4 overall and 1-2 in the Big Ten.

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A 19-2 Badger run in the first half flipped the game on its head and put the Hawkeyes in a hole they were never able to escape. Wisconsin shredded the Iowa defense over the final thirty minutes of the game and rolled to an easy win.

Here are three takeaways from the loss.

1. When it Rains 3s, it Pours

Both teams started off shooting the ball well, especially from three-point range. Iowa made its first four three-point shots, while Wisconsin made three of its first four threes. But while Iowa’s three-point shooting slowed down, the Badgers just kept burying triple after triple.

Nine different Badgers made at least one three and six players made two or more, led by John Blackwell with a scorching-hot 6-of-10 effort from deep (part of his game-high 32 points). Kamari McGee was the second-best long-range shooter for the Badgers, draining 4-of-5 attempts from beyond the arc.

This sort of three-point eruption from the Badgers wasn’t expected — Wisconsin entered this game shooting 32.5% from deep this season, 217th in the nation. Blackwell was one of the Badgers not firing from deep before tonight — he entered the game making just 28.9% of his long-range efforts, including 3-of-19 in his last six games.

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Iowa’s defense didn’t do enough to close out on several of Wisconsin’s three-point attempts and too many of Wisconsin’s school-record 21 threes were wide open. “They got going from the beginning,” Iowa guard Drew Thelwell said. “I don’t think we made enough adjustments to I guess run them off the line or do something else and they just got comfortable out there.”

“We just gotta fly around, have more energy,” added Thelwell. “[It] felt like we just quit on some possessions, which we can’t have, especially starting off on the Big Ten on the road.”

The entire Wisconsin team was clearly in the zone when it came to shooting from beyond the arc — that’s the only way a team can go 21-of-31 from 3-point range. On some level you have to tip your cap to the Badgers; sometimes the flood hits and just washes away everything in its path.

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Still, allowing 50+ points in a half or seeing an opponent get hot from long range are not new problems for Iowa basketball — as Thelwell said, the Hawkeyes needed to make some sort of adjustments and do something to stop the torrent of threes flowing from the Badger shooters.

“Our shot selection wasn’t very good, nor was our defense obviously,” Iowa head coach Fran McCaffery said. “We gotta be better with our ball-screen action, with our transition defense. Our initial defense was good sometimes, but not our closeouts, not our defense after the ball was reversed, so sometimes they were getting open 3s.”

“They’ve got a lot of weapons,” McCaffery noted. “Once they start hitting 3s, they’re hard to guard. That’s why what you do on the offensive end is so critical.”

Don’t miss out on any of our exclusive football, basketball, and recruiting coverage. Sign up with Hawkeye Beacon here.

2. Broken Glass

Iowa didn’t do many things well against Wisconsin on Friday, but they did protect the ball well — Iowa had just nine turnovers in the game, versus 13 for the Badgers. The Hawkeyes were able to turn 13 Badger giveaways into a 21-8 edge in points off turnovers.

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That was about the only thing that Iowa did better than Wisconsin in this game.

Aside from 3-point shooting, Wisconsin also hammered Iowa on the glass, out-rebounding Iowa 37-21 for the game. Obviously Iowa didn’t have as many defensive rebound opportunities with the ball going through the net again and again on the Wisconsin end (the Badgers shot 64.5% overall from the floor and missed just 22 shots), but they didn’t capitalize well on the chances they did have.

The offensive rebound stats ended up almost even — 8 for Wisconsin, 7 for Iowa — but that’s mainly a function of some late o-boards for the Hawkeyes after the game outcome was long decided. In the first half, Wisconsin out-rebounded 18-9 overall and 5-1 on the offensive glass. They turned that advantage on the offensive boards into a 10-2 edge in second-chance points.

“As a collective unit, I think we just took our foot off the gas pedal,” Thelwell said of Iowa conceding a 19-2 run to Wisconsin after the Hawkeyes led 28-22 in the first half. “Obviously you can’t do that in the Big Ten. [We] just need more energy, more effort, gotta rebound the ball too.”

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There are tactical things that Iowa can do to improve its rebounding — as we’ve discussed over the last few days — but one of the biggest changes Iowa can make is bringing more effort to its rebounding attempts. The Badgers seemed to be the quicker team to every loose ball in this game, which is the sort of effort that can be critical in winning the rebounding battle.

3. Drew Thelwell Shined, but… 

One of the only bright spots for Iowa in this drubbing was the play of Morehead State transfer Drew Thelwell. Thelwell had his best game as a Hawkeye (by far), erupting for a team-high 25 points on 9-of-14 shooting (3-of-5 from deep), along with a team-high five assists and two rebounds. Thelwell attacked the Badgers inside and out on offense and did what he could on the defensive end as well.

“He was spectacular at both ends,” said McCaffery after the game. “[He] kept fighting, played at the 1, at the 2, driving the ball, finishing in traffic, getting to the free throw line, making steals. [He] just really tried to will us though those difficult minutes in the middle portion of the game.”

After the game, Thelwell said that he embraced the role of being a sparkplug for the team, especially on the defensive end. “I would say it has to start with somebody,” he said. “If that’s my role to get this team going, I’ll do it the best I can on defense and show them that I’ll always give 100%.”

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Aside from Thelwell, Iowa’s top performer was Josh Dix, who made his first four shots of the game and finished with 16 points on 7-of-10 shooting (2-of-3 from 3-point range). Dix was key to Iowa’s fast start and early lead and things went south when he went to the bench for a break in the first half; Wisconsin outscored Iowa 16-2 with Dix out of the game in that stretch.

Not one of Iowa’s top performers? Payton Sandfort, who endured one of his worst games in an Iowa uniform and finished with more personal fouls (3) than points (2). Sandfort could not buy a shot, going 1-of-9 from the floor and 0-of-5 from beyond the arc. He did finish with a team-high 5 rebounds.

“Payton puts a lot of pressure on himself,” said McCaffery. “He’s had some off nights. He was fighting tonight, he was trying, [but he] couldn’t get anything to fall. [He] had a couple clean looks, they didn’t go in. That really frustrated him, because teams are guarding him very closely, and then when he gets a clean look, he wants to make it. He was flying at the glass, he was flying around, [it] just didn’t happen for him tonight.”

Iowa is not going to win many games — especially in Big Ten play — when Payton Sandfort scores just two points.

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Owen Freeman, Iowa’s other top scorer this season, finished with 14 points on 6-of-11 shooting, but had a quiet night overall. He had just three rebounds and struggled mightily to slow down Wisconsin’s twin towers in the post — Nolan Winter and Steven Crowl combined for 32 points (on 12-of-15 shooting), 15 rebounds and 3 assists.

NEXT: Iowa returns home to face Nebraska (11-2, 1-1 Big Ten) in Carver-Hawkeye Arena on Tuesday, January 7 (7:00 PM CT, Peacock).



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A vote for Tim Winter is a vote for Iowa Democrats’ self-determination

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A vote for Tim Winter is a vote for Iowa Democrats’ self-determination


Julie Russell-Steuart served two terms as chair of the Iowa Democratic Party’s Disability Caucus (2020-2024) and is a disability rights advocate, rural organizer, and artist creating community and power through creativity. Founder of Power of the Press Iowa printing workshops. IGs @Caveworks and @PowerofthePress

Organizing, as I define it, is the practice of bringing people together in solidarity for mutual benefit. The Iowa Democratic Party’s current chair, Rita Hart, recognized in her action plan that this is the keyword going forward for Democratic success: “The first goal for all organizing in 2025 should be more people doing more things—rural, urban, suburban—everywhere.”

This is a belated goal, honestly. The IDP had no dedicated, paid organizers on the ground in the last election cycle, and it was a consequential decision on resources. I got emails from the party asking for donations of $2.00, $1 per targeted race and every time I thought, “Why can’t we ask for four bucks to send the second and fourth Congressional districts a dollar each too? Why is my state party laser focused on complying with national Democrats’ goals, instead of Iowa Democrats’ actual organizing needs?” 

I don’t know about you, but I found those emails disappointing. They represented lost opportunity and misplaced loyalty.

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