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Iowa Hawkeyes deliver a masterclass on how to blow a football game

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Iowa Hawkeyes deliver a masterclass on how to blow a football game


IOWA CITY, Iowa — As Iowa quarterback Cade McNamara’s Hail Mary heave fell 7 yards shy of the end zone and landed in the hands of Iowa State defensive back Darien Porter, shock turned into acceptance for the Hawkeyes.

After a dominating first half and twice leading by double digits, the No. 21 Hawkeyes taught a master-level class on how to blow a winnable ball game in a 20-19 loss to Iowa State. The blame is all-encompassing from scheme to execution. Everywhere you look, there was either a personnel breakdown or a head-scratching coaching decision. Everyone takes a bite of this sandwich.

Rather than address the issues chronologically, let’s begin with the Cyclones’ game-winning sequence. Iowa State kicker Kyle Konrardy drilled a 54-yard field goal with six seconds left to provide the winning margin. But the Hawkeyes committed two critical mistakes to put Konrardy in range. Iowa State quarterback Rocco Becht completed a 30-yard pass up the right sideline to receiver Jaylin Noel, who streaked past defensive back Sebastian Castro for the reception. Castro was in man coverage but passed Noel off to safety Quinn Schulte, which left the receiver wide open.

That play might not have mattered had Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz chosen a different option on the previous possession. With time dwindling inside one minute, Iowa faced fourth-and-8 from its 46-yard line. Rather than call timeout, Ferentz elected to take a delay-of-game penalty with the clock hitting 40 seconds left. The decision backed the Hawkeyes up 5 yards for a punt that was fair caught at the Cyclones’ 22-yard line with 34 seconds left. The extra 5 yards were worth more than one extra second on the clock.

“I didn’t think yardage was very significant at that point in the field,” Ferentz said. “We were at midfield. Six of one, half-dozen of another. There was really no benefit, unless I’m missing something.

“He could punt the ball out of the end zone. It didn’t matter. The yardage really wasn’t important. But to your point, we could have. We took a couple timeouts home with us.”

But those plays don’t end up under a microscope if it wasn’t for the Hawkeyes’ goal-line calamities.  Twice in the second quarter, the Hawkeyes had the ball first-and-goal inside Iowa State’s 3-yard line — including one series starting at the 1 — only to wind up with field goals.

Both times, the Hawkeyes lined up in a four-tight end formation on first down. With first-and-goal at the 1, McNamara had a reverse-pivot handoff to running back Kamari Moulton, who was leveled by Iowa State defensive tackle Domonique Orange. The Hawkeyes attempted an inside zone but asked tight end Johnny Pascuzzi to block down on Orange, who tossed him aside. The run ended in a 3-yard loss. The next play was a reverse action run by receiver T.J. Washington for a 1-yard loss. A third-down incompletion led to a field goal. This entire series was set up by Iowa linebacker Jay Higgins’ interception at the ISU 12.

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Three possessions later, Iowa drove the ball from its 20 to the Iowa State 3. On both first and second down from the 3-yard line, Iowa lined up with four tight ends. The first play was an incomplete pass and the second was a run for no gain. On third down, Iowa shifted to its two-tight end, two-receiver formation.  McNamara threw toward tight end Addison Ostrenga in the back of the end zone. While coverage was tight, it wasn’t an impossible throw.

In both cases, Iowa strayed from the personnel groupings it used to advance down the field. On the first series, offensive coordinator Tim Lester got too cute. The second time, Iowa State dropped eight defenders in the end zone on passing plays.

“We’ll obviously be reevaluating that again after (Sunday) when we look at the film and see what we need to do to be better, but it’s just an ongoing thing,” Ferentz said. “You want to have those things available certainly down in there where things are pretty tight. There are a couple plays there that obviously we could have executed better that pushed us back, set us back.”

Iowa could have survived the red zone issues and the late-game breakdown had the passing game been remotely effective for the final three quarters. After the first quarter, McNamara was 8-of-11 passing for 72 yards. Over the final three quarters, he was 5-of-18 for 27 yards and two interceptions.

Timing-wise, McNamara’s first interception ranks as the worst passing decision in recent Iowa memory. With a 13-0 lead early in the third quarter and the ball on Iowa State’s 42-yard line, McNamara rolled to his right, then threw across his body toward the left sideline. He badly underthrew tight end Luke Lachey, and Porter pulled down the interception. It came directly after a 30-yard Iowa State punt to open the second half, and the Hawkeyes could have ended the game’s competitive phase with a scoring drive. Instead, they gave the Cyclones life.

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“I just made a dumb decision,” McNamara said. “I should have just thrown it away. I just can’t force a ball in that situation.”

McNamara’s inconsistency remains an issue for the offense. Last week, he completed 8-of-17 passes in the first half then hit 13-of-14 in the second. Regardless, Ferentz remains unwavering in his support of McNamara.

“We expect him to be our quarterback,” Ferentz said. “I expect some ups and downs. I’ve been saying it pretty consistently. He’s still working his way back into shape, as is our whole team with the offense and whatever. But we’ll get better. We’ll improve.”

Iowa’s defense is built to stop the run and not give up big plays. Yet in the third quarter, the Hawkeyes inexplicably gave up a 75-yard touchdown pass from Becht to Noel. Lining up in the right slot, Noel had a free release and had no mandated re-route when he reached the second level. Noel then raced past safety Xavier Nwankpa and was wide open for the score. Higgins took the fall for failing to re-route Noel while defensive coordinator Phil Parker benched Nwankpa for Koen Entringer.

Finally, the game might have gone to overtime had the Hawkeyes made a different choice one snap before Noel’s touchdown. Iowa running back Kaleb Johnson burst into the end zone from the 3-yard line to put the Hawkeyes ahead 19-7. Instead of kicking the extra point, Ferentz opted for a two-point conversion, and McNamara’s pass toward Reece Vander Zee fell incomplete. An extra point was critical.

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“I thought it gave us our best chance to win the football game,” Ferentz said on why he opted for the two-point attempt. “To me, the bigger issue is us not getting one touchdown out of those two field goal opportunities, and we had the ball down inside there close. That’s obviously an area we’re going to have to improve on.”

It took a collection of errors and bad decisions for Iowa to lose this game, and that’s by no means a slight to Iowa State’s resilience. A week into September, questions are piling up for the Hawkeyes. There’s still time to come up with the answers, but the stench of this defeat will stick with them for the rest of this season and beyond.

(Photo of Cade McNamara: Matthew Holst / Getty Images)





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Rick Barnes reacts to Tennessee’s win over Iowa State

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Rick Barnes reacts to Tennessee’s win over Iowa State


No. 6 seed Tennessee (25-11) defeated No. 2 seed Iowa State (29-8), 76-62, on Friday in the NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 at United Center in Chicago, Illinois.

The Vols advanced to their third consecutive Elite Eight under 11th-year head coach Rick Barnes.

“One, very humbled by it,” Barnes said. “Certainly proud of our basketball team. They worked really hard. Defensively, I thought we knew we would have to have a great effort defensively. Certainly Iowa State, outstanding. T.J. (Otzelberger), outstanding program, coach.

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“This time of year is always tough when you lose a key guy like they did, and that’s part of the tournament. That’s the tough part about it, but just really proud of our guys and the effort they made and against a team that they play as hard as any team we played all year. The start of the game, I don’t think we’ve seen anything like that all year, and we were able to withstand it. Again, just really proud of the effort from our entire team. Everybody had a hand in us winning this game.”

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Tennessee basketball vs Iowa State Sweet 16 tipoff time changed for later start

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Tennessee basketball vs Iowa State Sweet 16 tipoff time changed for later start


CHICAGO − Tennessee basketball’s Men’s NCAA Tournament game against Iowa State will start a little later than planned.

The Sweet 16 game between the No. 6 Vols (24-11) and No. 2 Cyclones (29-7) will now tipoff at 10:25 p.m. ET at the United Center on TBS.

The game was originally scheduled for 10:10 p.m. before the 15-minute delay. There is also the standard 30-minute break in between tournament games. Tennessee and Iowa State won’t begin until 30 minutes after the end of No. 1 Michigan (33-3) and No. 4 Alabama (29-5).

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Iowa State forward Joshua Jefferson status

Iowa State’s star forward Joshua Jefferson is questionable against Tennessee basketball according to the NCAA player availability report released at 6:32 p.m.

Jefferson sprained his ankle in the opening minutes of Iowa State’s first-round game against Tennessee State. He sat for the remainder of the game and missed the Cyclones’ win over Kentucky on March 22. Iowa State didn’t need the All-Big 12 forward as it generated 20 Wildcat turnovers in its 19-point victory.

Wynton Jackson covers high school sports for Knox News. Email: wynton.jackson@knoxnews.com

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Two Iowans sentenced to prison for creating child pornography

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Two Iowans sentenced to prison for creating child pornography


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Two Iowans will spend decades in federal prison after pleading guilty to separate child exploitation offenses.

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Martin Menjivar, 59, of Iowa City, was sentenced Thursday, March 26, to 42 years in prison after pleading guilty to sexual exploitation of a child and child pornography possession. It comes days after Pry’Shayn Mosley, 21, of Fort Dodge was sentenced to 25 years for exploitation and receipt of child pornography.

Iowa City man picked up children from school, abused them

Menjivar, a citizen of Honduras, was charged in May 2025. In court filings, prosecutors say Menjivar was entrusted to pick up children, some as young as 5, from their elementary school and bring them to his wife’s home for after-school babysitting. In at least two cases, Mejivar used that access to get children alone and touch them inappropriately, recording the interaction on video.

Investigators reportedly found dozens of illicit images and videos on Menjivar’s electronic devices. Menjivar also previously worked as a school photographer in Honduras, and investigators found he had hundreds of photos from his former employment that focused on children’s clothed genitals.

“Defendant’s horrific actions of creating and collecting child pornography show violence against young, vulnerable children and a severe danger to the community,” prosecutors wrote in presentence filings.

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Menjivar also has been charged in Johnson County with second-degree sexual abuse against two different children, apparently in relation to the same conduct. That case remains pending, with a plea hearing scheduled in May.

Fort Dodge man gets 25 years for enticing children

Mosley, who was sentenced March 23, was charged in January 2025. Prosecutors alleged that in 2022, he enticed two minors to engage in sexually explicit conduct, photographed or recorded it, and distributed the resulting pornography to others, including additional children.

In addition, during a warrant search that located drugs, guns and electronic devices containing child pornography, Mosley tried to get a juvenile at the scene to conceal drugs from the investigators.

Mosley pleaded guilty to sexual exploitation and receiving child pornography. Additional drug, pornography and exploitation charges were dismissed as part of a plea deal.

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Menjivar was prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa, while Mosley’s case was handled by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Iowa. Attorneys for Menjivar and Mosley did not immediately return messages Thursday seeking comment.

William Morris covers courts for the Des Moines Register. He can be contacted at wrmorris2@registermedia.com or 715-573-8166.



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