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Iowa State Cyclones Commit Could Potentially Flip To Michigan State

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Iowa State Cyclones Commit Could Potentially Flip To Michigan State


The Iowa State Cyclones could be on the losing side of a potential commitment flip.

Earlier this year, Cyclones’ head coach Matt Campbell made a splash in the Ohio pipeline with 2026 three-star safety Brayden Thomas. While Iowa State was originally the only power four team in the mix for the young talent, this quickly changed when the Michigan State Spartans decided to offer Thomas on May 14.

Michigan State head coach Jonathan Smith’s late run at the St. Edwards High School defender has unfortunately begun to work, as Thomas shared part of his official visit this past weekend on social media.

In addition to his recent visit to East Lansing, Thomas told Spartans Illustrated that his trip “turned the tables” and put Michigan State “high on his list”.

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“When I get back from Iowa State [next weekend], I’m going to make my decision,” said Thomas. “I’m not committed to Michigan State, but I will say this weekend definitely turned the tables in a good way and put them high on my list.”

Losing out on Thomas would be a significant blow to Campbell’s 2026 recruiting class, especially if four-star quarterback Jett Thomalla flips his commitment to Alabama. Thomas, along with three-star Tyrell Chatman are the lone safeties in the upcoming class, and a flip would put the Cyclones at 12 commits in the 2026 class.

MORE: Iowa State Alum Tyrese Haliburton Fires Shot at Ben Stiller

MORE: Myles Turner Defends Former Iowa State Star Tyrese Haliburton After Leading Pacers to NBA Finals

MORE: Iowa State Transfer Guard Shows She’s Locked In for Breakout Season

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MORE: Iowa State Cyclones Star Could be the Next Christian McCaffrey

MORE: New York Jets Predicted to Trade Former Iowa State Cyclones Star



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Arizona baseball to hire Iowa’s Sean Kenny as pitching coach

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Arizona baseball to hire Iowa’s Sean Kenny as pitching coach


Arizona got caught up in the swirl of college baseball coaches leaving for professional jobs this offseason, losing pitching coach John DeRouin to a coordinator position with the New York Mets organization. But the Wildcats didn’t take long finding a replacement, one with a strong pedigree in the collegiate ranks.

Kendall Rogers of D1Baseball.com is reporting the UA will hire Iowa’s Sean Kenny as pitching coach. Kenny will techincally be Arizona’s fourth pitching coach in five seasons under Chip Hale, though DeRouin only served in that role during the offseason following Kevin Vance’s departure in June to become San Diego State’s head coach.

Kenny, 53, spent the 2025 season at Iowa where his staff ranked 16th in the country in ERA and 11th in strikeouts per nine innings. The Hawkeyes went 33-22-1 but missed the NCAA Tournament.

Prior to Iowa, Kenny spent the 2023 season at Iowa and before that was at Georgia from 2018-23. He’s also coached at Michigan, Maryland, Pepperdine and San Diego. The 2026 season will be his 30th in college baseball.

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Arizona, which is coming off a trip to the College World Series, returns weekend starters Owen Kramkowski and Smith Bailey and NCBWA Stopper of the Year Tony Pluta among several other pitchers from the team that went 44-21.

The UA opens the 2026 season on Feb. 13 in Surprise against former Pac-12 foe Stanford, part of a tournament that also includes Oregon State and Michigan. The home opener is Feb. 17 vs. Omaha at Hi Corbett Field.



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Watch live as bodies of Iowa National Guard soldiers return to US

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Watch live as bodies of Iowa National Guard soldiers return to US


President Donald Trump, Gov. Kim Reynolds, members of Iowa’s congressional delegation and families are receiving the bodies of fallen Iowa National Guard soldiers Sgt. William Nathaniel “Nate” Howard, 29, of Marshalltown, and Sgt. Edgar Torres-Tovar, 25, of Des Moines and a civilian interpreter, Ayad Mansoor Sakat, of Michigan.

The dignified transfer ceremony is expected to happen this afternoon at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware.

All three were killed Saturday, Dec. 13, by an attacker who targeted a convoy of American and Syrian forces in Palmyra, Syria, before being shot dead.

Their caskets will be transferred from the plane to an awaiting vehicle and taken to the Air Force Mortuary Affairs Operations building at the Dover base “for positive identification by the Armed Forces Medical Examiner System and preparation for their final resting place.”

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I-80 crash cleanup continues after weekend pile-up in eastern Iowa

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I-80 crash cleanup continues after weekend pile-up in eastern Iowa


WEST BRANCH, Iowa (KCRG) – Cleanup crews are still working to remove vehicles from Interstate 80 in eastern Iowa following multiple crashes that blocked the highway for about 12 hours Saturday morning.

Multiple crashes on I-80 east of Iowa City Saturday morning shut down the interstate for several hours in both directions. No one was killed, but dozens of people were injured and taken to the hospital.

Lanes in the area will be closed in order to pull crashed cars out of the median.

“Towing and recovering efforts started right away after the storm, Sunday night after the storm and have continued each night since then and we’re estimating a couple, two to three more nights yet to get everything removed out there,” said Mitch Wood with the Iowa Department of Transportation.

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DOT explains highway closure decision

The DOT did not expect conditions to be as bad as they were this weekend. Access to the highway was only limited after the crash happened.

“It started out with just a typical Iowa snowfall forecast. Nothing in that forecast, I guess, rose to that level of alarm for us to kind of forecast that we would have seen the traffic issues that we ended up seeing,” Wood said.

The DOT says preemptively closing the interstate can be done if unsafe travel can be predicted.

“What we could never really anticipate is the driving conditions changing rapidly and how drivers are going to respond to that,” Wood said.

Wood says shutting down an interstate is never a light decision.

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“It’s not something that we necessarily want to do but when we make that decision, almost everytime we’re making that decision for safety reasons,” Wood said.

Cleanup of those accidents from Saturday are still underway. That typically happens in the evening, so drivers should watch for signs and lane closures when towing is happening.



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