Iowa
Iowa State football: See which former Cyclones players stood out in Week 11 of NFL season
Iowa State coach Matt Campbell on Verdon, Sadowsky, McLaughlin
Iowa State coach Matt Campbell on defense bouncing back with return of Will McLaughlin, Malik Verdon, and Jack Sadowsky playing.
Week 11 of the 2024 NFL season is in the books, and several former Iowa State players had huge hands in their teams’ performances.
The collection of ex-Cyclones in the NFL continues to grow, with several more added to rosters this season after having around a dozen consistently active last season. While the star-studded names like Brock Purdy, Breece Hall and David Montgomery continue to shine week after week, several others Iowa State fans will recognize are making significant impacts at the pro level too.
With that, here are a few ex-Cyclones who stood out in Week 11 of the NFL season.
David Montgomery, Detroit Lions RB
Everyone on the Detroit Lions got a piece of the action in Sunday’s 52-6 win over the Jacksonville Jaguars. Montgomery was right in the middle of the dominance.
The former Iowa State running back finished with 15 carries for a game-high 75 yards and two touchdowns. Montgomery also added three catches for 20 yards.
He’s now found the end zone 10 times this season, but Sunday was Montgomery’s first game with multiple touchdowns since a 47-9 win over the Dallas Cowboys on Oct. 13. Montgomery and the Lions are rolling right along this season.
Brock Purdy, San Francisco 49ers QB
Just when Purdy and the 49ers seem like they’ve turned a corner, disaster strikes on the field. That’s what happened in Sunday’s 20-17 home loss to the Seattle Seahawks.
The former Iowa State quarterback still managed a decent day, finishing 21-for-28 for 159 yards with one touchdown and one interception. Purdy also added five carries for 40 yards and a score. He’ll look for a rebound winning performance Sunday at Green Bay.
Breece Hall, New York Jets RB
It’s a broken record at this point. Hall goes for a decent day, even as his New York Jets continue to sputter significantly.
In Sunday’s 28-27 loss to the Indianapolis Colts, the former Iowa State running back finished with 16 carries for 78 yards and a touchdown. Hall also added seven catches for 43 yards and a score. It’s impressive the stats keep coming even as the wins aren’t.
Dargan Southard is a sports trending reporter and covers Iowa athletics for the Des Moines Register and HawkCentral.com. Email him at msouthard@gannett.com or follow him on Twitter at @Dargan_Southard.
Iowa
Iowa State Cyclones Key Defensive Player Will Be in Lineup Against Kansas Jayhawks
Injuries have been a major storyline for the Iowa State Cyclones throughout the 2025 college football season.
They have contributed to the team’s season spiraling out of control. After starting 5-0, the Cyclones went on a brutal four-game losing streak, during which nothing was going their way on the field.
In Week 11 against the TCU Horned Frogs, Iowa State was able to get back into the win column for the first time since Week 5. A 20-17 victory snapped the losing streak and made them bowl eligible.
Unfortunately, it wasn’t all positive, because the injury bug bit them again. Linebacker Caleb Bacon went down with an injury against the Horned Frogs.
A defense that has been decimated by injuries in the secondary can not afford to lose any more key contributors. Luckily for the Cyclones, the ailment Bacon was dealing with must not have been overly serious because head coach Matt Campbell provided a positive update, sharing the star linebacker will be active this weekend against the Kansas Jayhawks.
“Bacon will be ready to play,” Matt Campbell said Tuesday, via Alec Busse of Cyclone Report, part of the 247Sports Network. “Bacon is good to go and [will] be ready to play this weekend.”
That is excellent news for Iowa State to have its star back in the lineup. He is third on the team in total tackles with 55. His 6.5 tackles for loss are the second most on the team, behind only safety Marcus Neal.
Bacon has also gotten the job done in coverage with three passes defended. Capable of performing in every facet of the game, being without him would have been a major detriment to the Cyclones’ defensive game plan.
Alas, the injury updates for Iowa State weren’t all as positive as they were for Bacon.
Tight end Gabe Burkle is not going to be able to play. He is set to undergo surgery today. Safety Jamison Patton is seemingly trending in the wrong direction, being labeled questionable “at best” to take the field against the Jayhawks.
Fellow defensive back Ta’Shawn James is also going to be sidelined “for the foreseeable future,” which means his season could be over.
That is a brutal blow for defensive coordinator Jon Heacock to deal with. He is already without his top two cornerbacks, Jeremiah Cooper and Jontez Williams, and backup Khijohnn Cummings-Coleman.
The Cyclones are digging deep into their depth chart to find out the season, looking to improve their bowl positioning as much as possible over the final two weeks.
Iowa
Center for Intellectual Freedom advisory council passes bylaws after disagreements
DES MOINES, Iowa (Gray Media Iowa Capitol Bureau) – The advisory council for the University of Iowa’s new Center for Intellectual Freedom voted 10-7 Tuesday to approve bylaws, including how to select the permanent director.
Republican legislators established the center to combat what they felt was too much liberal ideology on university campuses. The center aims to create college classes that promote what legislators consider intellectual diversity.
Interim director Luciano de Castro created the advisory council’s bylaws, which included who would decide the next director. The group would have consisted mainly of scholars from high research universities.
But Iowa’s Board of Regents felt that too many of those scholars would come from outside Iowa.
“The hiring of the permanent director is on the top of the list. So having a faculty balance at this point and as we’re moving forward, I think, is really important,” said Christine Hensley of the Iowa Board of Regents.
The center’s council considered those concerns at Tuesday’s meeting, but not without disagreement between members.
“Most of the academic side of you folks being willing to serve on there, which we truly appreciate, are from a different state and just not known by Iowans,” said Robert Cramer of the Iowa Board of Regents.
Thomas Gallanis, a professor at George Mason University, disagreed.
“This center is under Iowa control because it reports to the Board of Regents. The Board of Regents is the governing body. The Advisory Council is not a governing body,” Gallanis said.
The council now needs the Board of Regents to sign off on the bylaws before the process can get underway to choose a leader for the center.
Copyright 2025 KCRG. All rights reserved.
Iowa
Iowa attorney general pushes federal review as farmers warn refinery exemptions hurt corn market
Johnson County farmers have expressed general disapproval of policy exemptions for facilities that turn crops into fuel across the state. Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird urged an investigation into these facilities across the state.
Bird sent a letter to federal agencies alleging some of Iowa’s small biofuel refineries may be cutting production to qualify for ethanol exemptions, a tactic that farmers say is contributing to lower prices and lost income on their crops.
The Renewable Fuel Standard, or RFS, is a federal program requiring U.S. fuel suppliers to mix renewable fuels into gasoline and diesel with the Environmental Protection Agency, or EPA, with the 2025 target calling for renewable fuels to account for about 13 percent of the nation’s gasoline and diesel supply.
Small refineries — those unable to satisfy the 75,000-barrel-per-day threshold — can claim an exemption from this requirement by submitting an application that is then reviewed by the EPA.
According to the letter, which was sent on Oct. 29, these companies are claiming hardship while simultaneously telling investors they’re thriving.
According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, Iowa produces over one-fourth of the nation’s ethanol, making Iowa particularly exposed to these kinds of exemptions. When small refineries bypass mixing requirements, it cuts directly into the demand for fuels.
George Swenka, a farmer and rancher in the Tiffin area, agreed with Bird and said he was unhappy with these exemptions, adding it does not make sense to avoid the 10 percent when it helps “everyone.”
“It gives them [refineries with exemptions] an unfair advantage in the marketplace,” Swenka said.” It’s a renewable resource. It helps the producers. It helps every state that’s involved. At the end of the day I just don’t think it’s achieving the goal that should be a common goal for all of us.”
RELATED: Iowa cattle farmer sentiment falls alongside beef futures following Trump’s beef import comments
Chad Hart, an agriculture and finance economics professor at Iowa State University, said this lack of demand has caused financial hardship for farmers.
“It’s a combination of them having ample supplies right now and not seeing as much demand as they would need to take prices higher again. So, if you have the sort of overwhelming supply combined with demand uncertainty, they’re feeling financially squeezed,” Hart said.
Swenka spoke personally about how the lack of demand has affected his farming and said it is especially difficult as farming prices continue to rise.
“Right now, the prices that we’re receiving are just at breakeven, and without an extra marketplace without another source to market our goods, it really makes it tough,” Swenka said.
He said the issue is a common conversation for farmers, calling it “coffee talk,” but he also worries that refinery issues will not be taken as seriously.
“Farmers make up less than 1 percent of the population, so we really feel sometimes that we’re a minority and we feel that we lack any kind of political clout,” he said.
However, he hopes those outside of agriculture realize it affects the broader Iowa community.
“There’s such a high percentage of jobs, especially in Iowa, directly or indirectly touched by agriculture. So, when the attorney general does good, we all do good, especially in small rural Iowa,” Swenka said.
Great American Insurance Group’s Iowa’s 2025 Digital Yield Tour projects Iowa’s 2025 corn yield could hit 223.7 bushels per acre, which would be well above recent averages, with the average last year being 205 bushels per acre. Hart cited statistics like these as a potential reason why Bird decided to write to the federal government, as many farmers are looking for “usage of their bountiful harvest.”
Hart said the last time Trump was in office, a large number of exemptions were granted to these smaller refineries, and then later overturned in court cases, with Trump issuing 85 exemptions in his first term according to an EPA report.
“There’s also this idea that we may see a similar wave of that here during President Trump’s second term,” Hart said.
Timothy Hagle, a political science professor at the UI, said if changes aren’t made, people may see farms go out of business. According to a Bloomberg Law report released in April, farm bankruptcies grew 55 percent from 2023 to 2024 and are trending even higher in 2025, with Iowa leading all other states with 12 bankruptcies.
“You’re going to have some farmers that would not be able to continue because of financial reasons, so they may go out of business. You may have some people that would switch crops to the extent they can do,” Hagle said.
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