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IARN – While the temperatures have been enjoyable lately, the lack of rainfall has been anything but. After experiencing the driest September on record, drought and fire dangers have increased. Justin Glisan, state climatologist for Iowa, said that the drought monitor has been repopulated with zones of abnormally dry conditions.
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Iowa State honors 2000, 2001 men’s basketball teams for Cyclones’ historic two-year run
Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger on the 2000 and 2001 Big 12 champions
Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger on honoring the 2000 and 2001 Big 12 championship teams
As the days drew closer to a homecoming at Hilton Coliseum, the memories started flooding back for Iowa State’s 1999-2000 and 2000-01 men’s basketball teams. Group chats were buzzing with activity.
During that two-year run under then-head coach Larry Eustachy, the Cyclones won back-to-back outright Big 12 regular-season championships. They also won a Big 12 Tournament title in 2000 and reached the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament.
In 2001, they fell short of matching the previous season, but Eustachy’s team capped an impressive two-year stretch in which the Cyclones compiled a 57-11 overall record and went 27-5 in Big 12 Conference play.
“This is me trying to think back to 20-25 years ago and I’m being honest, I was just trying to survive each practice,” said Stevie Johnson, who played from 1996-2000 before a lengthy overseas pro career. “It wasn’t until looking back and being able to see that, ‘Hey, this team went further than anybody.’ Now, I can look at it and be like, that was an accomplishment. At the time, I didn’t understand what type of accomplishment it was. I don’t think any of us did.”
More than two decades after their glory days and quite possibly the best two-year run in program history, the 1999-2000 and 2000-01 Iowa State men’s basketball teams were honored at Hilton Coliseum on Saturday during halftime of the No. 3 Cyclones’ win against No. 21 Baylor.
The packed arena was on its feet to applaud and cheer every player and coach after a short video presentation that included highlights of their two-year run.
For some of those former players and coaches, it was their first time back at Hilton Coliseum in years, a place where they won 39 straight games and went unbeaten for two seasons.
Although not every former player was able to make it on Saturday, there was no shortage of excitement among those who could make the reunion at Hilton Coliseum.
“I kind of ran away, I brought my family here and I completely ditched my family to go see and hug my guys because we haven’t seen each other in so long,” said Marcus Jefferson, who was a freshman on the 2000-01 team. “It’s just a camaraderie and the memories that we have from campus to here in Hilton, man, it’s truly a blessing to see all the guys here healthy, looking good and doing well.”
Eustachy was a gruff taskmaster during those years, but players were glad to see him too.
“This was really cool, they like me now,” he joked.
Looking back at Iowa State’s rise to prominence
By reaching the Elite Eight, the 1999-2000 Cyclones accomplished more than any other Iowa State team in the NCAA Tournament.
Although Iowa State was officially credited with a Final Four appearance in 1944, the NCAA Tournament consisted of only eight teams back then. The tournament also played second-fiddle to the NIT, which had plenty of prestige at that time.
The NCAA Tournament didn’t reach 32 teams until 1975, before doubling to a more modern 64-team format in 1985.
However, that Elite Eight run started in a manner that was far from elite.
Iowa State finished 15-15 the previous year, Eustachy’s first season in Ames. The season before that, the Cyclones finished 12-18 in 1997-98, coach Tim Floyd’s last season before becoming an NBA head coach for the Chicago Bulls. As a result, the Cyclones entered that 1999-2000 season with little fanfare.
Iowa State was projected to finish sixth in the conference, according to 1999 Big 12 preseason coaches’ polls.
The Cyclones lost to nearby Drake in a sloppy 48-44 contest in their first game against a Division I opponent.
“Drake wasn’t particularly good and it was a horrible game,” said radio broadcaster Eric Heft, who has covered Cyclones football and men’s basketball for more than four decades. “You’re thinking, oh man, this may be another tough year. But then we started playing well.”
Iowa State took another loss in non-conference play to top-ranked Cincinnati shortly after but competed much better, before it went on a 13-game winning streak.
The success carried into Big 12 play against some of the top coaches and teams around college basketball, with the likes of Roy Williams at Kansas, Eddie Sutton at Oklahoma State, Quin Snyder at Missouri and Kelvin Sampson coaching at Oklahoma.
“Tim Floyd left some really good players — Marcus Fizer, Paul Shirley, Martin Rancik — and he recruited Mike Nurse,” said Eustachy, who coached the Cyclones from 1998-2003, of how they turned it around after a .500 season. “We added two key pieces in Jamaal Tinsley and Kantrail Horton, and we did something that nobody really did, because we played three guards. Everyone was still going with a conventional center.”
What Iowa State relinquished in size, it made up for with toughness and hard-nosed play. Conditioning, discipline, rebounding and defense were played to a level like the Cyclones’ lives depended on it.
The games are a blur to some former players, but they vividly remember the demanding practices, especially the “links” and the five-man weave drills. The links were a set of five baseline-to-baseline sprints that required the entire team to finish five consecutive sprints in under 30 seconds. The entire team − from the swiftest guards to the biggest forwards − had to touch the baseline in unison or they would have to re-do it.
There were days where practices would consist solely of the links and five-man weave for hours.
“The toughest players were going to play for Larry, he’s going to put you in a lot of situations to see if you will break to the point that the game was the easiest thing that could ever come, nothing was ever harder than practice,” Johnson said. “It made the game like a cakewalk. You have to be very tough-minded to play for Larry.”
Fizer was a first-team All-American, Big 12 Player of the Year and fourth overall pick of the 2000 NBA Draft. He averaged 22.8 points per game and was the leading force with a solid cast that also featured another all-conference pick and future NBA point guard in Tinsley. Other Cyclone players often punched above their weight class.
After winning the regular-season title, the Cyclones stormed their way to a Big 12 Tournament championship by beating every team they faced by double figures.
They embraced the underdog role throughout the season, even as they received a 2-seed in the 2000 NCAA Tournament. They fell to eventual national champion Michigan State in a game played at the Detroit Pistons’ arena, the Palace at Auburn Hills. Iowa State finished 32-5, which still stands as the winningest season in program history. The Cyclones won a program-record 14 conference games in the regular season.
“One of the knocks on some of the (ISU coaching icon) Johnny Orr teams was that they would often win at home but they couldn’t win on the road, and I would say that was where we were at our best when 12,000 people were screaming at us at Texas or wherever and we were able to come together under an umbrella of previous experiences,” Shirley said of that two-year stretch. “Practices that were really hard, other games that we had gotten through, we were able to unite under some banner of toughness.”
The following year, they reloaded.
“Expectations were zero, then once we lost Fizer, I think we were probably picked sixth in the league that next year,” Eustachy said. “There was a lot of similarity as far as expectations. They thought once we lost Fizer (to graduation) that was it, but it wasn’t accidental that we started winning when Tinsley showed up and we lost when he left. He was just a unique, unique player. As unique as the players I’ve watched at Iowa State over the years, but he was a unique individual.
“Paul Shirley played in the NBA. Martin (Rancik) could’ve. Kantrail Horton, Mike Nurse − in today’s era, a lot of those guys could have, but that was when you only had 11 guys in the NBA on a team.”
In that 2000-01 season, the Cyclones enjoyed another undefeated run at home. The team defeated Kansas on the road at Allen Fieldhouse for the second straight year, a rare feat. The Cyclones won a Big 12 regular-season title but got bounced out early in the Big 12 Tournament, then became the fourth No. 2 seed to lose to a 15 seed when they were upset by Hampton in the opening round of the NCAA Tournament.
They ended that season with a 25-6 record, including a 13-3 mark in conference play.
“Nobody can tell you who wins the league anymore, but that used to be the big thing,” Eustachy said. “That 2000-01 team was playing as well as anybody in the country midseason. I thought that 25 years later, being recognized for back-to-back championships would be impossible, so I really pushed them. I don’t think I burned them out, but they were awfully tired. Tried to gather them when we lost in the first round of the conference tournament, and then we lost the infamous Hampton game. I think if we’d gotten past the Hampton game, we would have caught our legs again. That was a decision I made, it wasn’t the players’ fault.”
Finding pride in the past, despite heartbreaking finishes
As successful as the 1999-2000 and 2000-01 teams were, their seasons both ended in heartbreaking fashion.
During the 2000 Elite Eight game against Michigan State, the Cyclones held a seven-point lead with less than six minutes left in the game before things started to unravel. The Spartans finished the game on a 23-5 run to win 75-64, in a surge that was marred by fouls and an unfavorable whistle that resulted in Shirley fouling out and Eustachy being ejected in the closing seconds.
The Spartans went on to win the national title. Eustachy and several players, including Johnson, haven’t rewatched that game to this day.
The following year, Iowa State’s promising regular season came to a screeching halt in the postseason, after early exits in the Big 12 and NCAA Tournaments. Hampton held Iowa State scoreless over the final 7:01 of action and came back to win, 58-57. Tarvis Williams hit the game-winning jumper with 6.9 seconds left.
As time has passed, members of those teams as well as outside observers and fans have made peace with those bitter defeats and look back at that two-year run fondly.
“(The 1999-2000 season) was the first time Iowa State won a Big 12 regular-season championship in 56 years, and did it back-to-back,” Heft said. “We haven’t done it since. To put it in perspective, that’s an outlier. It’s unique. I think it can be recreated, but it hasn’t been, despite some really good teams, so I think you have to take your hats off to those guys for what they were able to persevere through.”
In addition to the repeat Big 12 regular-season titles, no Iowa State team has reached an Elite Eight, eclipsed the 30-win mark in a single season, or amassed an .843 win percentage in conference play across a two-year stretch.
They laid the foundation for Cyclone teams after them.
“Those guys did so much for our program,” current Cyclones head coach T.J. Otzelberger said. “The successes they had were tremendous. To win the league back-to-back years, to have the run in the postseason, the consistency at Hilton Coliseum to have two years without losing a game is so impressive. It’s not just a great player or players, but it takes an army of people to do that. It’s coaches, managers, players, from top to bottom, so awesome that we’re able to have those guys back to be able to honor them and show them the respect they deserve for everything that they’ve done for our program and putting us in the position that we’re in now.”
For Eustachy, it was an emotional return to Hilton. His tenure in Ames ended prematurely after photos surfaced in 2003 of the Cyclones coach at college parties at Missouri and Kansas State.
It’s a conversation Eustachy hasn’t shied away from and one that he’s atoned for.
“First of all, I was fired for the right reasons,” he said. “I really felt I embarrassed the crap out of that university.”
Eustachy eventually found his way back into coaching in 2004 at Southern Miss before moving on to Colorado State from 2012-18. He now serves in an advisor role for Boise State. Outside of former coach Fred Hoiberg’s invitation to coach in a 2004 charity benefit game at Hilton Coliseum, Saturday was Eustachy’s only other time back in Ames.
“I’ve been fried hard enough,” Eustachy said, laughing. “I’m 69. We’ve got a place in Florida, and I’m gonna wear my Iowa State stuff the rest of my life.”
Past Cyclones cheer for the future
The Cyclones from 1999-2000 and 2000-01 want to see their records and standards surpassed one day.
Iowa State has come close, reaching the Sweet 16 twice in each of the last three seasons. This year the team appears to be primed for another deep run, as the Cyclones have been fixtures in the top five of the college basketball rankings.
“I’m honored to be a part of one of the best teams in Iowa State history, I really am, but every year, I find myself cheering against us because I want one of these teams that’s been so close to go farther than we did,” Johnson said. “That’s just the love you have for your university. You want to continue to see it get better and better.”
Although inside jokes and some reminiscing emerge in those alumni text threads, most of the chatter has been about the current Cyclones rather than past accomplishments.
You see that game last night?
This team is unreal.
They hope to witness Iowa State reach a Final Four and win it all.
“Records are made to be broken and I don’t think you’re put on this earth to be remembered,” Eustachy said. “I would go to that game and have all my gear on. I’d love it. I would love to see them do it, I really would.”
Eugene Rapay covers Iowa State athletics for the Des Moines Register. Contact Eugene at erapay@gannett.com. Follow him on Twitter at @erapay5.
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The Gazette offers audio versions of articles using Instaread. Some words may be mispronounced.
IOWA CITY — Who will it be next?
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.
“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.”
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.
“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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