Iowa
Flexibility Key to Iowa Success in ’24
IOWA CITY, Iowa – Color me surprised by Kirk Ferentz (basically) announcing his starting quarterback 10 days before the season-opener. There wasn’t a competitive advantage to the Iowa Football coach doing so.
The news likely won’t put the Hawkeyes at a disadvantage against FCS Illinois State, though. No disrespect intended, but the game shouldn’t be close if Iowa is a College Football Playoff contender, which some of us believe.
Public opinion on the Hawkeye quarterback competition formed on Aug. 10 during the team’s only open practice. Sixth-year senior Cade McNamara struggled, to put it mildly. Backup Brendan Sullivan, a Northwestern transfer, was marginally better.
Ferentz said Thursday that McNamara would be the starter if the team were playing the next day. While it didn’t completely close the book on the competition, it meant something to say that after camp had just wrapped up.
Nobody should be surprised despite the Kids Day disaster. Ferentz has publicly backed McNamara since he arrived through the transfer portal from Michigan. He’s just rarely been healthy enough to show people outside of the football building what the coach sees.
That could change next week. McNamara said last month that he felt the best he had since becoming a Hawkeye late in ’22. He underwent knee surgery a few months before that. Then, he tore his ACL in Week 5 last year after injuring his quad during training camp.
McNamara was early into his return to practice on Aug. 10. Rust made sense. Improvement also did.
McNamara’s play convincing Ferentz to name him the leader in the clubhouse is a good thing for the Hawkeyes. It means he’s been better than how he and Sullivan looked Aug. 10, which was a must. And Sullivan likely has improved, too.
At the risk of eliciting a “no crap” response from you, Iowa needs much better quarterback play than it experienced in 2023. It’s better positioned to do so. I know, “breaking.”
The key moving forward is flexibility, however. The offensive staff must be precise in its continued evaluation and then act if change is warranted.
If you just began following this program, you might say “no crap” again. If not, there’s evidence showing that the few close quarterback competitions witnessed during the last quarter century have been wonky.
This month’s competition was close, according to the coaches. The student-athletes observed that as well.
As the saying goes, you can’t fool the team. It will be watching and judging along with the staff. Fairness is essential for culture.
It can’t be like ’12 and last season, when rigidity overrode what our eyes were seeing. Poor quarterback play can’t keep this team from reaching its potential. Nobody around here can handle that emotionally.
The stars are aligned for a memorable Iowa Football season, perhaps one of the most memorable in a long, long time. If, in the end, the prevailing perception is that the offense kept that from happening, first-year coordinator Tim Lester will face less blame than did his predecessors. More will be directed at the boss.
We’ve been told that it’s Lester’s show on that side of the ball. Heed history. Believe it when you see it. Know it’s not out of the question, however.
Phil Parker and Seth Wallace were given more control of the defense in ’18 after being beat again having a linebacker covering a receiver. The Cash position was born.
Afford Lester the same opportunity. Welcome advancements within the pro-style offense and adjust better to rule changes. Take advantage of player strengths.
Ideally, McNamara will be what Iowa saw in recruiting. It’s plausible he presides over an efficient, opportune offense. It doesn’t need to be great.
It’s also possible that Sullivan keeps developing and ends up being a better fit for Lester’s scheme. He’s more mobile than McNamara.
Let it continue playing out with an openness to switching. There’s no time to waste. A formidable Iowa State team is the opponent Week 2. The Big Ten opener at Minnesota is two weeks later.
It’s tricky, of course. It’s much easier making imaginary decisions sitting in the stands or on the couch or typing on a computer in your underwear. Nobody’s impacted, with the possible exception of the latter.
Personnel decisions always play a critical role in determining success and failure. The stakes are raised when it’s at the game’s most important position. That’s the current dynamic.
Iowa
Iowa Boys High School State Basketball Tournament Sets Two Classes
The Class 1A and Class 2A Iowa high school boys basketball state tournament brackets are now official following substate action.
The Iowa High School Athletic Association Boys State Tournament begins Monday, March 9 from the Casey’s Center in Des Moines, Iowa.
St. Edmond, the top-seed in 1A, gets Woodbine in a rematch of a quarterfinal from a year ago. Woodbine ended the run of defending state champion Madrid in a substate final on the same court that St. Edmond qualified on when they defeated Riverside.
Burlington Notre Dame plays Bellevue, MMCRU meets Boyden-Hull and Bishop Garrigan battles Bellevue Marquette Catholic in the other elite eight games.
The other substate finals saw Burlington Notre Dame defeat Calamus-Wheatland, MMCRU eliminated North Union, Bishop Garrigan downed South Winneshiek, Bellevue bested East Marshall and Bellevue Marquette Catholic topped Montezuma.
In 2A, Kuemper Catholic is the No. 1 seed and will face Union Community in the opening game on Wednesday, March 11. The other quarterfinals see Treynor vs. Grundy Center, Unity Christian vs. defending state champion Western Christian and Iowa City Regina vs. Aplington-Parkersburg.
Kuemper Catholic survived vs. Roland-Story, Union knocked off Pella Christian in a nail-biter, Treynor bested Underwood, Grundy Center downed Beckman Catholic, Unity Christian handled Southeast Valley, Western Christian ran past Tri-Center, Iowa City Regina downed Northeast and Aplington-Parkersburg defeated Cascade.
Here are the Iowa High School Athletic Association Boys State Basketball Tournament pairings for Class 1A and Class 2A.
Quarterfinals
Tuesday, March 10
Semifinals
Thursday, March 12
Championship
Friday, March 13
Wednesday, March 11
Semifinals
Thursday, March 12
Championship
Friday, March 13
Iowa
Minnesota Wild Recalls Tyler Pitlick From Iowa | Minnesota Wild
SAINT PAUL, Minn. – Minnesota Wild President of Hockey Operations and General Manager Bill Guerin today announced the National Hockey League (NHL) club has recalled forward Tyler Pitlick from the Iowa Wild of the American Hockey League (AHL).
Pitlick, 34 (11/1/91), has tallied two goals, 24 penalty minutes (PIM) and 26 shots in 31 games with Minnesota this season and ranks fourth on the team with 76 hits. He has also collected 11 points (8-3=11) and 31 shots in 12 games with Iowa. The 6-foot-2, 201-pound native of Minneapolis, Minn., owns 111 points (58-53=111) and 565 shots on goal in 451 career NHL games over 11 seasons with the Edmonton Oilers (2013-17), Dallas Stars (2017-19), Philadelphia Flyers (2019-20), Arizona Coyotes (2020-21), Calgary Flames (2021-22), Montreal Canadiens (2021-22), St. Louis Blues (2022-23), New York Rangers (2023-24) and Minnesota (2025-26). He has tallied three points (2-1=3) in 22 career Stanley Cup Playoff games. Pitlick has also recorded 140 points (60-89=149) in 289 career AHL games in parts of eight seasons with the Oklahoma City Barons (2011-15), Bakersfield Condors (2015-16), Hartford Wolf Pack (2023-24), Providence Bruins (2024-25) and Iowa (2025). He was originally selected by the Edmonton Oilers in the second round (31st overall) of the 2010 NHL Draft. Pitlick was signed by Minnesota as a free agent on July 2, 2025, and wears sweater No. 19 with the Wild.
Minnesota hosts the St. Louis Blues tomorrow at 4 p.m. CT on FanDuel Sports Network and KFAN FM 100.3.
Iowa
Iowa Boys High School Basketball Substate Finals Locked In For 4A
The fourth and final bunch of Iowa high school boys basketball substate championship games are now set after the second round of Class 4A games were completed on Friday, February 27.
Substate championships in Iowa’s largest classification will take place on Tuesday, March 3, with the higher seed serving as host in all eight games. Winners advance to Des Moines, Iowa and the Casey’s Center to compete in the Iowa High School Athletic Association Boys State Tournament beginning March 9.
Three-time defending 4A state champion Valley was eliminated by Ankeny, 72-36. The Tigers, who lost all five starters from a year ago, won just one game prior to earning a victory in the opening round of postseason play.
Cedar Falls, who has held the No. 1 spot in 4A throughout the season, scored a dominating 78-45 decision vs. Iowa City High to move on.
Colin Rice, a Nebraska commit for Fred Hoiberg, scored a single-game school-record 50 points as Waukee Northwest topped Iowa City Liberty, 101-58.
Council Bluffs Lincoln, Ames, North Scott, Dowling Catholic, Dubuque Senior, Johnston, Linn-Mar, Muscatine, Norwalk, Cedar Rapids Prairie, Des Moines Roosevelt, Urbandale and Waukee all joined them in the next round after winning games at home.
The 1A and 2A substate finals will take place on Saturday, February 28 while the 3A games go down on Monday, March 2.
Here are the Iowa boys high school basketball Class 4A substate finals for Wednesday, March 3.
Wednesday, March 3
Class 4A
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