Iowa
Iowa State basketball asserts itself as contender even in loss | Hines
KANSAS CITY – There were no tears. Faces were not buried in jerseys, hiding the pain. There was no consoling or commiserating.
Even with angst bubbling under their skin and disappointment flooding their veins, Iowa State remained stoic. Solid. Steadfast.
For the Cyclones knew the truth.
This was a loss, yes, one with weight enough to crush your soul – basketball or eternal – but Iowa State saw its 82-80 loss on a buzzer-beater to second-ranked Arizona in the Big 12 Tournament semifinals for what it was.
An epic featuring two teams worthy of playing in April.
“We really respect Arizona and their program,” Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger said after the March 13 los, “but just like they’re a Final Four contender, so are we.
“And what our guys took away from tonight is that we have big things ahead of us coming next week, the following week and the week after that.”
There’s a key distinction between a moral victory and the validation of a conviction.
A moral victory would be Iowa State feeling good about itself for playing the Wildcats, who along with Michigan and Duke have separated themselves as the class of the country, down to the wire. For giving Arizona all that it could handle. For giving it the ol’ college try.
That, though, is not what Iowa State experienced. This wasn’t the Cyclones giving it their all and nearly toppling the league champs.
This was a game among equals.
The Cyclones walked off the floor, into the locker room and toward an NCAA Tournament knowing that, deep in their bones. For them, it is not an opinion. It is fact. As irrefutable as the sun rising in the east or all of Ames heading south to fill T-Mobile Center the second week of March.
“Probably one of the most competitive college basketball games of the year,” guard Tamin Lipsey said.
“We know we can compete with them.”
This game may have been played on a Friday night in Kansas City, but it just as easily could have been contended on the first Saturday or Monday of April in Indianapolis. The level of play was sublime. The defense was excellent, but the offense was on another level.
The two teams combined to score on their final 11 possessions of the game. Seven of those possessions ended with made 3-pointers, including the game-tying one with 15 seconds left from Lipsey, who was 1-of-10 from the floor before burying that equalizer.
Then, though, Jaden Bradley got his legend moment.
The senior and Big 12 Player of the Year wanted to take Iowa State’s young Frenchman, Killyan Toure, off the dribble. Thought he could get by the freshman, to the bucket and into the championship game.
Instead, Toure played immaculate defense. He stopped Bradley’s progress. He redirected him, not only from his preferred path but actually away from the basket. Toure stayed in lockstep. As the final seconds ticked down, Bradley was left with only one option – turn, shoot and pray.
As that prayer hung in the Missouri air, you could almost feel the basketball gods debating their judgment. Weighing these Cyclones and Wildcats against each other as the ball rose up and out of Bradley’s hand and then rendering a verdict as it fell back toward Earth.
On this night, the deities decreed for the team from the desert.
Iowa State men fall to Arizona in classic Big 12 Tournament semifinal
Iowa State men fall to Arizona in classic Big 12 Tournament semifinal
“So it was a crazy shot,” Bradley said, “but it was a great defense, for sure.”
You might have to stop short of calling Toure’s defense perfect, but only because the dang shot went in. It’s hard to imagine him playing the moment any better.
“He made a tough shot,” Toure said. “I did my best. Unfortunately, it went in.
“Of course it hurts. It hurts a little bit, but it’s part of the game. I just have to move on with the team because we’ve got the March Madness coming up. It’s OK. It will help me for the future, and for the team as well.
“That was a good experience.”
Oftentimes in a locker room after a loss like that, there’s a current of disbelief that runs through. A sort of shock mixed with frustration, anger and, perhaps most potently, sadness.
That was not the scene in Iowa State’s locker room.
The Cyclones stood there bloody and bruised, like a prizefighter losing on a split decision that only makes the inevitable – another shot at the belt – all the more alluring. Because it’s not only within sight, it’s within grasp.
“We’re playing our best right now,” Milan Momcilovic said after scoring 28 points and making eight 3s. “We’re clicking on both sides of the ball.
“I think no team really wants to see us in the tournament because we are ready to play and we’re a fierce competitor.”
The Cyclones will shuffle onto the bus Saturday morning for the ride back to Ames. As those 200 miles pass by their windows, it would be easy to think about what might have been. To wish they could have made one more shot. To lament not getting one more stop. To wonder what might have been in overtime.
I doubt, though, that’s how the Cyclones spend those hours.
“We know,” Otzelberger said, “we have our best still in front of us.”
There’s no time or use for mourning when there are still games to be won, nets to be cut and history to be made.
The Cyclones will not return home with a trophy, but they’ll spend that bus ride back believing, like never before, they can win the next one.
Iowa State columnist Travis Hines has covered the Cyclones for the Des Moines Register and Ames Tribune since 2012. Contact him at thines@amestrib.com or (515) 284-8000. Follow him on X at @TravisHines21.
Iowa
Iowa State basketball vs Arizona Big 12 Tournament injury report
The final Big 12 availability report for Friday’s 6 p.m. Big 12 Tournament semifinal game featuring Iowa State basketball vs Arizona was released 90 minutes before tip-off.
The No. 5-seeded Cyclones have one player listed as out and another as a game-time decision. No surprises for Iowa State, as both players have held those designations for some time.
Meanwhile, the 1-seed Wildcats have no players on the injury report.
These two teams met once during the regular season, with Arizona winning 73-57 in Tucson on March 2.
Here is the full availability report for Friday’s Iowa State vs Arizona game.
Iowa State players listed as “out”
Iowa State players listed as “game-time decision”
Arizona players listed as “out”
Arizona players listed as “game-time decision”
Iowa
‘By no means was I intentionally being racist’: Iowa child services worker speaks out after firing
CHARLOTTE, Iowa (IOWA CAPITAL DISPATCH) – A child-services worker alleges she was fired from her job and accused of racist behavior after playing “cowboys and Indians” with the children in her care.
State records indicate that in 2025, Lisa Bartels of Charlotte worked with autistic children on their social and behavioral skills while employed as a registered behavior technician for Beyond Behavior Applied Behavior Analysis, an organization that provides support services for families throughout Iowa.
The records indicate that on July 3, 2025, Bartels was disciplined for playing the game “cowboys and Indians” with the children at Beyond Behavior. On Aug. 14, 2025, Bartels was allegedly disciplined a second time, in that instance for singing the nursery rhyme “One Little, Two Little, Three Little Indians” with the children.
According to Bartels, her superiors at Beyond Behavior considered the game and the nursery rhyme to be “racist” in nature, presumably because the word “Indian” was being used to describe Native Americans.
On Oct. 13, 2025, Bartels was having a private conversation with a co-worker about their pets when she referred to her own dog as “retarded.” An employee allegedly complained to management about Bartels’ use of the word, and Bartels was fired two days later for violating the organization’s code of conduct by using unprofessional language.
Bartels applied for unemployment benefits, which led to a Feb. 3, 2026, hearing before Administrative Law Judge Stephanie Adkisson.
In a recent ruling, Adkisson concluded Bartels was disqualified from collecting benefits due to job-related misconduct, in part for having “used an offensive word” in describing her dog.
“Given the type of work she performed, she knew or should have known that the use of the word is unacceptable,” Adkisson stated in her ruling. “The fact that (she) did not use the word to refer to a person does not change that fact that she should have been aware it was a word that others would find offensive.”
Adkisson observed that Bartels “had received two prior warnings regarding using offensive words. (Bartels) knew she needed to be aware of her use of language and that her job was in jeopardy. Despite these warnings, (she) continued to engage in the use of offensive language.”
Bartels said Wednesday her actions last summer weren’t motivated by racism.
“By no means was I intentionally being racist,” she said. “My daughter has American Indian blood running through her. Her father was part American Indian and the man I’m dating now is American Indian. He has a tattoo of Sitting Bull on his right arm.”
Describing herself as a Christian conservative, she said that after the shooting death of conservative activist Charlie Kirk last fall, she wore red to work in honor of Kirk, but added that she “would not dare share that with my place of employment for fear of being reprimanded for it.”
No one from Beyond Behavior participated in Bartels’ unemployment hearing, and Alyssa Hennings, the organization’s CEO, declined to comment on the case Wednesday. She referred the Iowa Capital Dispatch to the organization’s human resources department. No one who identified themselves as being from the department responded to the news organization’s inquiry Wednesday afternoon.
Copyright 2026 KCRG. All rights reserved.
Iowa
Iowa State basketball touches its ceiling in win over Texas Tech | Hines
KANSAS CITY – What would it look like, if you closed your eyes and let your imagination soar, for Iowa State to play its best basketball?
The defense would be electric, connected and furious. Joshua Jefferson would be dictating and dominating offensively. Tamin Lipsey would make every critical play. The bigs would be tough, active and productive. Loose balls and tough plays would both go in the Cyclones’ direction. There would be contributions up and down the rotation.
It would look a lot like what happened at T-Mobile Center on Thursday, March 12.
The seventh-ranked Cyclones unleashed perhaps their best and most complete performance of the season in their 75-53 smackdown of No. 14 Texas Tech to advance to the Big 12 Tournament semifinals.
“Against that caliber of opponent,” said Iowa State senior Nate Heise, “that’s probably our best game. That’s always what you want to be able to do at the end of the year and be able to stack it – yesterday to today and hopefully tomorrow.
“It was fun to watch how everyone stepped up today.”
It was fun to watch an excellent team play excellently, truth be told. These Cyclones have touched their ceiling before, but those wins against Kansas and Houston are now nearly a month old. When these Cyclones get going, there are only a handful of teams that can stop them.
The Red Raiders weren’t one of them.
“You can tell,” Texas Tech coach Grant McCasland said, “they had an edge and had the right edge in order to win this basketball game.”
There was lots to love for Iowa State. Between Lipsey’s 20 points (and four made 3s), Heise’s tip dunk, Jamarion Batemon’s timely shooting and the physical, Killyan Toure’s never-say-die hustle and the efficient play of centers Blake Buchanan and Dom Pleta, Iowa State’s play was a symphony.
Most impressive of it all was how Jefferson directed the music.
Iowa State’s All-American was at the absolute height of his powers. The 6-foot-9, 240-pound power forward wasn’t so much playing basketball as he was controlling everything around him. And I mean everything. I’m not ruling out that space and time were under his direction.
His 18 points, 13 rebounds, six assists, two blocks and a steal only hint at the extent to which he influenced the game, but Jefferson’s command was exquisite. It seemed, at times, that whatever unfolded on the court was doing so only with his permission and at his instruction.
“I think that was huge,” Jefferson said of his play and feel for the game. “Playing on the fly and playing with freedom and playing with confidence is the biggest thing for us.
“That’s when we’re at our best – when I’m more vocal and leading that way. Sometimes I can fall away from that if I’m not confident in myself. If I’m being confident in myself, that’s going to feed the team.”
And Iowa State ate well.
Iowa State basketball beats Texas Tech, advances to Big 12 semifinals
Iowa State basketball beats Texas Tech, advances to Big 12 semifinals
The Cyclones shot 53.6% from the field and 38.9% from 3-point range. They committed just 10 turnovers and led by as many as 24, which is impressive, sure, but when you consider the Cyclones trailed by 12 after the first six minutes, it’s incredible.
Texas Tech shot 33.9% from the floor, 31% from deep and saw the Cyclones just steamroll right into the semis where a rematch with No. 2 Arizona awaits.
The Wildcats dispatched the Cyclones with ease, 73-57, in Tucson last week, but this looked like a different Iowa State squad playing at an entirely different level than what happened at the McKale Center.
“We all believe it’s sustainable,” Lipsey said. “We’re playing our best basketball of the year. That’s exactly what you want to do this point in the year.
“We can play like this moving forward.”
If they can and if they do, the Cyclones are going to be push right against their ceiling and, maybe, push themselves into the Final Four.
“We played well today,” said Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger. “Was it our best? I think our best is still in front of us.”
After a day like this one, it’s not hard to imagine what that might look like and where it could take them.
Iowa State columnist Travis Hines has covered the Cyclones for the Des Moines Register and Ames Tribune since 2012. Contact him at thines@amestrib.com or (515) 284-8000. Follow him on X at @TravisHines21.
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