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COMMIT: Portal Quarterback Hank Brown Chooses Iowa

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COMMIT: Portal Quarterback Hank Brown Chooses Iowa


COMMIT: Portal Quarterback Hank Brown Chooses Iowa

Iowa has landed its first commitment out of the transfer portal in former Auburn quarterback, Hank Brown. He visited Iowa City on Thursday.

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After two seasons with the Tigers, Brown has three years of eligibility remaining.

Premium subscribers were aware of the mutual interest between he and Iowa prior to his visit being made public.

Brown started two games and appeared in five for the Tigers while with the program. He completed 34-of-52 passes (65.4%) for 403 yards, six touchdowns and three interceptions in those five games.

Granted the opportunity to play early this season after college football veteran Payton Thorne struggled, Brown’s potential flashed against Group of 5 New Mexico in September. That was the game where he received the majority of his snaps for the Tigers, and Brown completed 17-of-25 passes for 235 yards and four touchdowns in the game.

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He followed that up with his second start, playing against Arkansas, his first SEC competition. Against the Razorbacks, Brown completed just 7-of-13 passes for 72 yards and three interceptions. He was benched at halftime of the game.

Initially committed to Hugh Freeze and Liberty out of high school, Brown flipped to Auburn once Freeze landed the job with the Tigers.

A three-star passer out of Lipscomb Academy in Nashville, Tennessee, Brown did not start until his senior year. Prior to playing as a senior, Brown sat behind Cincinnati signee Luther Richesson, who also led the Mustangs to a state championship.

Brown maintained that same standard and led his team to a DII-AA state championship in 2023. In his one year as a starter, he threw for 3,264 yards with 47 touchdowns against just three interceptions. He was coached by NFL vet and now UAB head coach Trent Dilfer when he joined the program for his junior and senior year. Brown is originally from Wheaton, Illinois — the same hometown as Iowa offensive coordinator Tim Lester.

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With his recruitment starting before his junior campaign, Brown received offers from Power 4 programs Pitt, Minnesota and Illinois before choosing Liberty and then Auburn.

Adding Brown now gives Iowa three scholarship quarterbacks for the spring, as he’ll be on the depth chart with Northwestern transfer Brendan Sullivan and freshman gunslinger Jimmy Sullivan. So far, the trio is also set to be joined by transfer walk-on Jackson Stratton and freshman walk-on Ryan Fitzgerald.

This will be the first season under Lester that no quarterback on the roster will have ties to previous offensive coordinator Brian Ferentz.

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What did TJ Otzelberger have to say after Iowa State’s win vs. Iowa

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What did TJ Otzelberger have to say after Iowa State’s win vs. Iowa


The third-ranked Iowa State men needed a rally late in the second half to end a decade-long drought inside Carver-Hawkeye Arena Thursday night, winning over Iowa, 89-80.

Curtis Jones and Nate Heise scored 33 points off the bench with six made 3-pointers and 12 rebounds between them. Joshua Jefferson had a double-double, scoring 19 points with 10 rebounds and seven assists. 

But despite all that, the Cyclones (8-1) trailed 44-37 at the break before outscoring Iowa (7-3) in the final 20 minutes, 52-36. 

Iowa State returns to action on Sunday when they host Omaha live on CBS Sports Network. 

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Here are some of the key highlights from Otzelberger’s post-game press conference:

“Credit to Coach (Fran) McCaffrey, his staff and players because they spaced us out and had us back on our heels for the first 35 minutes, which is a huge credit to them,” Otzelberger said. “They were relentless. I thought the last four-or-five minutes, we did a better job defensively, a better job guarding the dribble, contesting and finishing plays on the glass. That got us out in transition. Guys made big shots, made big plays. Our team is at its best when they are disruptive defensively.”

“Throughout the course of a season, you are put in a lot of tough spots,” Otzelberger said. “Challenges come your way. You try to build young men in our program to expect adversity. Challenges  will come and you can’t think you will play perfectly. What really matters to me is when something doesn’t go your way, how do you respond? I thought our guys showed a lot of pride in our program playing for our fans, alums and donors.”

Tamin Lipsey

Tamin Lipsey had a big second half to help spark Iowa State past Iowa Thursday night. / Julia Hansen/Iowa City Press-Citizen / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

“I made the comment a couple of days ago that he is a super hero,” Otzelberger said. “The shots are great but he makes so many hustle plays. He is so tenacious in that department. They are not 50-50 balls; he commands, demands all of those. I believe those plays are energizing plays that take your team to another level.”

“Nate is a tremendous competitor who brings great energy, especially on the road,” Otzelberger said. “When you are playing a really good opponent, he is a guy you put a lot of trust in. I liked his energy. He is a shotmaker, a playmaker and I am happy for him playing as well as he is.”

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* How to watch Iowa State vs. Omaha on Sunday

* Cyclones rally past Iowa to secure road win



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Iowa State lands three on AP all-Big 12 football teams led by Jaylin Noel

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Iowa State lands three on AP all-Big 12 football teams led by Jaylin Noel


The Iowa State football team earned three honors on the AP all-Big 12 team, the Associated Press announced.

Jaylin Noel made the first team as an all-purpose selection while Jayden Higgins and Jontez Williams each earned second team status.

Noel, a 1,000-yard wide receiver this past fall, recorded over 1,300 all-purpose yards in helping the Cyclones win 10 games for the first time in advance to the Big 12 Conference title game. 

The senior has 72 receptions for 1,077 yards and seven touchdowns entering the Pop-Tarts Bowl vs. Miami later this month. 

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Higgins, a wide receiver from South Miami, Florida, caught a team-high 87 passes for 1,183 yards with nine touchdowns. All of those numbers are the second-best totals in school history.

Noel and Higgins also became the first pair of Iowa State receivers to each have 1,000 yards in the same season.

Williams, a defensive back, picked off four passes and had 38 tackles in his first season as a starter. He had an interception in four straight games, including one to seal the win over UCF and two that came in the end zone.

* Rocco Becht getting pressure to enter the transfer portal

* List of current Iowa State players in the transfer portal

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* Where are the Big 12 teams going for bowl season?

* How to watch Iowa State-Miami in the Pop-Tarts Bowl

* Latest AP Poll Top 25 sees Iowa State drop



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No. 3 ISU 89, Iowa 80: Small-Ball Works… Until It Doesn't

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No. 3 ISU 89, Iowa 80: Small-Ball Works… Until It Doesn't


No. 3 ISU 89, Iowa 80: Small-Ball Works… Until It Doesn’t

IOWA CITY — Iowa State head coach T.J. Otzelberger mentioned early and often in his postgame news conference that Iowa’s small-ball gameplan had the Cyclones on their heels for 35 minutes Thursday night.

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Unfortunately, games last 40, and Iowa couldn’t keep up the juice for what would have been a sterling upset, falling to the No. 3 Cyclones, 89-80, at a raucous Carver-Hawkeye Arena.

McCaffery threw a pregame curveball at the Cyclones, starting point guard Drew Thelwell for the first time this season — not to replace Brock Harding in the starting five, but forward/center Ladji Dembele.

It worked — until it didn’t. Iowa staked a 13-point lead in the first half, had it as high as nine in the second half, but faltered down the stretch during a 23-4 run to the visiting Cyclones in the second half. The Cyclones collected eight of their 18 offensive rebounds during that stretch, leading to seven second-chance points and numerous missed opportunities for Iowa to develop its own transition game.

“They spaced us out so well. They had such a great plan. They had us back on our heels for the first 35 minutes. That’s a huge credit to them. We play relatively well against good teams, and they were relentless. The last 4-5 minutes we were a little better guarding the dribble, we were a little better contesting, and finishing plays on the glass, and that allowed us to get out in transition.”

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Thelwell responded to his starting nod with a spirited 10-point, four-assist performance in 36 minutes of court time, but his shot — like his teammates — ran cold near the end, and even as the team’s leading rebounder, he (and his teammates) couldn’t keep the Cyclones from extending plays down the stretch.

“Being in position to rebound was extremely important,” said Otzelberger. “Tamin [Lipsey] being able to track down and keep possessions was important. Rebounding, there’s a skill piece to it, but so much comes down to heart, determination and effort.”

“We went small, so you run the risk of that happening,” said McCaffery. “I thought our small lineup was really good. We had two turnovers in the second half. Plenty of shot opportunities to win the game; we made a bunch, then didn’t make them. I could go big and get more rebounds, but then who knows what would happen on the other end?”

It’s a fair question, especially with Iowa State’s bevy of dangerous perimeter performers. But losing a game by 9 after being outscored on second-chance points 20-10 suggests a certain answer.

Indeed, even though Dembele was moved out of the starting lineup, he still earned 10 minutes of run in the first half, knocking down a pair of three-pointers and energizing the crowd. In a back-and-forth rivalry defined by great individual performances, it looked as if the “Ladji Dembele Game” would be a surprising next chapter in the series.

McCaffery left Dembele on the bench for all but 4:21 of the second half, and though the Malian sophomore center still made his only three-pointer of the second half, he wasn’t able to re-establish his presence on the glass — not that starting center Owen Freeman did either against the Cyclones’ bevy of bigs, finishing with just five rebounds.

“[Thelwell] was our leading rebounder,” said McCaffery. “And that’s good, except somewhat disappointing. We’ve got to do a better job across the board.”

Dembele strictly rotated with Freeman Thursday, so the two never shared the floor together. And while Dembele’s turn as a stretch-five off the bench seems to suit his skill set better than a middling run starting next to Freeman while Seydou Traore has been out — Traore returned to the rotation Thursday — one can’t help but wonder whether the Hawkeyes could have managed the stops they needed to maintain the lead with some extra size out there.

“I’m really proud of [Dembele],” McCaffery said. “I told him, ‘Come off the bench, play with confidence.’ He was getting a little tentative, and he wasn’t tentative at all tonight. He was great, and he should’ve played more. That’s on me.”

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At a minimum, these rotation mistakes are easier to swallow in early December than the Big Ten season — to say nothing of March, if Iowa can make it back to the Big Dance. And make no mistake: beating the No. 3 team in the nation would have gone a long way to legitimizing this dessert cart of a non-conference slate (the Hawkeyes’ current KenPom SOS rating: 311th out of 364, with two more cupcakes and Utah yet to face).

But even though it won’t improve their resume, the Hawkeyes gave a no-doubt top-five team 35 minutes of hell Thursday night, and now it’s up to McCaffery and the team to build off this lesson, painful as it may be.

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