Iowa
Logan Lee Has Priorities in Order
IOWA CITY, Ia. – Logan Lee has his priorities straight.
“It’s religion first, then household, then soccer,’ stated Iowa’s junior defensive sort out. “I’m simply doing my finest to maintain these in line. Nothing I do will be capable to deviate from that. Soccer means a ton to me, don’t get me incorrect. It has given me quite a lot of alternatives. And I usually do a good job of making an attempt to take advantage of my alternatives.”
Lee, who’s listed as Iowa’s No. 1 proper defensive sort out, added to one in all his priorities on July 3 when he married Tori Verbeck in Geneseo, Sick. After a weeklong honeymoon in Hayward, Wis., Lee is again together with his teammates as low season exercises proceed.
“I truly met her within the seventh grade, however we actually didn’t discuss in any respect,” Lee stated. “We began relationship my sophomore 12 months of highschool. So we’ve been collectively for six years now.”
They bought engaged on Dec. 30 at a Citrus Bowl occasion in Orlando, Fla. Tori, who competed in monitor and subject at Wisconsin-Whitewater, has landed a pupil instructing job as a bodily training teacher in Iowa Metropolis. She desires to be a P.E. trainer on the elementary stage.
Whereas Tori adapts to a brand new career, her husband can be making an attempt to steadiness his life as a student-athlete and a husband.
“It will likely be somewhat completely different, making an attempt to steadiness all the pieces,” Logan stated. “However will probably be a extremely cool alternative.”
It’s taken a while for the three-sport star at Orion Excessive College in Orion,, Sick., to succeed in the sector. He was redshirted in 2019, then performed in simply two video games in 2020. However as a substitute of getting misplaced within the shuffle, Lee turned a significant component in Iowa’s line of defense final season. He began all 14 video games in 2022.
“I do know the presents and blessings I’ve been given,” stated the 6-foot-5, 277-pounder. “And I’m doing my finest each day to have the ability to reside as much as these. I’ll by no means be capable to be excellent, however taking one other step nearer to perfection is what I’m taking pictures for day by day.”
Lee performed defensive finish earlier in his profession, however he’s discovered sort out to be a greater place for him.
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“I assumed it was fairly a bit simpler, going from finish to sort out,” Lee stated. “Every thing hits quite a bit faster essentially. However conceptually, it’s a lot easier.”
Lee had 48 tackles general final season. That included 5 tackles for a loss and three sacks. He additionally recovered a fumble, and had a seven-tackle sport within the victory over Penn State.
“The largest factor I’ve at all times valued is having the ability to assist the workforce as a lot as I can, and dealing as arduous as I can, to place myself in that place,” Lee stated. “I’ve at all times been very assured with my talents, and keen to guess on myself. I knew my time would come, and it was capable of come final 12 months. I’m planning on fully exceeding that this 12 months.”
Iowa’s line of defense, coached by Kelvin Bell, seems deep and skilled heading into the season. Defensive ends Joe Evans and John Waggoner are three-year lettermen. Sophomore Lukas Van Ness, who lettered whereas enjoying largely defensive sort out final season, is predicted to play finish this season. Noah Shannon has lettered three seasons at defensive sort out. Lee, Deontae Craig, Yahya Black and Louie Stec have additionally lettered whereas enjoying throughout the line of defense.
“We’ve bought a terrific group,” Lee stated. “There are a ton of men able to enjoying, near a dozen guys there.”
A real freshman, Aaron Graves, might add to that depth.
“He seems actually good,” Lee stated. “He’s shifting rather well. He’s a terrific child. I’m a giant fan of his. It will likely be thrilling to see what he’s capable of do. I’m going to attempt to take him underneath my wing.”
Lee stated the depth throughout the road will show useful in a number of areas.
“I feel will probably be a terrific alternative for every of us to develop, and throw completely different seems at groups,” he stated. “There are quite a lot of strengths that we’ve. And we’ll be capable to combine and match completely different packages.”
Individually, Lee wish to enhance his conditioning, which might result in extra time on the sector. He additionally desires so as to add some weight, improve his information of the defensive schemes and enhance his go rush with higher hand work and hand-eye coordination.
“I simply need to assist the protection as a lot as I can with my manufacturing,” Lee stated.
Iowa
What’s the National Day of Mourning? Here’s what is open in Iowa
Former President Jimmy Carter’s life, legacy honored
Vice President Kamala Harris and Republican leaders delivered eulogies as mourners said their final goodbyes to the former President Jimmy Carter.
After the death of Jimmy Carter, President Joe Biden declared Jan. 9 a National Day of Mourning in the 39th president’s honor.
Federal offices will close on Thursday, Jan. 9, however, businesses are not required to close, unlike federal holidays.
Is Jan. 9 the National Day of Mourning a federal holiday?
Jan. 9 will be treated as a holiday for most federal employees. But it’s not an official federal holiday and most other employers won’t be automatically giving employees the day off.
Will banks be closed on Jan. 9?
Because this National Day of Mourning isn’t a federal holiday, banks are not required to close.
Will post offices be open on Jan. 9 the National Day of Mourning?
No, there will be no mail delivery. All U.S. Post Office locations will be closed.
What is open in Iowa on the National Day of Mourning Jan. 9?
- All of Des Moines Public Libraries will operate at regular hours.
- Trash and recycling provided by the city of Des Moines will remain on its regular schedule for Thursday.
- The city of Des Moines will remain open at regular hours.
- The State Historical Society will be open at its regular hours.
Kate Kealey is a general assignment reporter for the Des Moines Register. Reach her at kkealey@registermedia.com or follow her on Twitter at @Kkealey17.
Iowa
Iowa 97, Nebraska 87: Payton Sandfort's Overtime Revenge
Iowa 97, Nebraska 87: Payton Sandfort’s Overtime Revenge
IOWA CITY — Behind a furious second-half comeback and outlasting Nebraska (12-3,2-2) in overtime, Iowa (11-4, 2-2) took the victory over the Cornhuskers, 97-87 on Tuesday night in Carver-Hawkeye Arena.
Here are three takeaways from the win.
Payton Sandfort: Confirmed Back
After scoring just two points on 1-9 shooting in Iowa’s 116-85 loss to Wisconsin on Friday, Sandfort had a rough first half. Over the first 20 minutes, it looked as though the senior may continue his cold streak, as he started 0-2 with zero points.
“At halftime, I was pretty upset,” Iowa’s second-leading scorer said postgame. “I went into the locker room and acted like I was going to the bathroom, but I read some Bible verses, read some notes to myself. Once I saw one go in [in the second half], I just felt like myself again.”
The first triple he made after the half was a small miracle in itself — and it showed Sandfort that he was ready to break through the rough shooting streak.
“I got a roll off the top of the backboard,” Sandfort smiled. “It seems like ever shot this year has rimmed out. From there I knew I was going. I was like ‘Alright. It’s about time.’”
It was time, indeed. Sandfort proceeded to score 30 points in the second half and overtime, shooting 8-13 in the second half, including going 6-of-9 from three. He earned some pretty high praise from his head coach afterward, too.
“The only thing close to it that I’ve seen, (Jarod) Uthoff had 30 in the first half at Iowa State a couple years ago. More than a couple years ago,” Fran McCaffery said postgame. “He made big shots in the second half that just changed everything.”
McCaffery continued, Sandfort’s scoring was generated without too much of a concerted effort by he and the staff.
“We wanted to get him going, you know, so we tried to run some stuff for him. But the way they play defense, it has to happen naturally,” he said. “You got to move it, you got to push it in transition, he got some there. We did run some stuff for him, so we got some stuff there. But for the most part, you know, we just got to move it, move it, move it and find him.”
Clawed Back
Thanks in part to Sandfort, Iowa rallied back from 15-point deficit with 14:54 left. The Waukee, Iowa native pointed to a lack of defensive effort for the 52-37 Nebraska lead.
“To start the half, we were pretty lax defensively, Sandfort said. “We were making bad plays, turning the ball over.”
McCaffery pushed the team to stay the course.
“Well, there’s plenty of time,” McCaffery said, who remained calm despite trailing by double-digits. “There’s no need to panic, you know, we’ve got a group with great character. They were locked in during the timeout. Obviously we scored the next five, and that changes everything.”
Sandfort relayed a similar message to his head coach.
“I just kind of told everybody, we’re gonna be fine,” he said. “This is game 15, we got more than half the season left. Let’s just relax, let’s change the season right now, and let’s just get gritty. And we got gritty guys, and I think we’ve seen it all season, except for that Wisconsin game. But we really gritted down.”
He pointed beyond his own heroic performance as to how the team pulled off the win.
“Everybody had to contribute, but we stayed together,” he added. “And that’s the mantra, bad teams fall apart when things go bad. And I just tell everybody, if we stay together as a team and block out what everybody’s saying, just be in the room, be present, be where your feet are, then it always turns out all right.”
It almost didn’t turnout alright. After the ferocious comeback and holding a three-point lead with 3.5 seconds remaining, Nebraska’s Brice Williams — who finished with a team-lead 28 points — drilled a buzzer-beating three-pointer to send the game into overtime.
“Right away, we had a chance to get on the floor and get the loose ball,” Nebraska head coach Fred Hoiberg said postgame. “We didn’t do it, we didn’t get it. And they got out again, and transition was the problem with us.”
The Hawkeyes did get out and get going in OT, outscoring the Cornhuskers 21-11 in the final five minutes. Sandfort was proud of his team’s post-regulation effort.
“Just knowing that we can do it. Especially after what happened at the end of regulation the way that we came together in overtime — it was really player-led, the way that we were talking to each other,” Sandfort said. “The coaches put us in good spots, but the way that we stayed together, the five of us on the floor and the guys on the bench,(3:55)was really what pushed us over the edge. And I hope we know that we can build on that and keep moving forward.”
Don’t Forget Di
Ultimately the win doesn’t happen without the efforts of Dix and Owen Freeman.
Alongside Sandforts 30-point second-half and overtime, Dix put up a team-lead 31 points, including nine points in overtime to help seal the victory. He went 10-14 from the field and 7-10 from the three point line.
“I think Dix is a hell of a player,” Hoiberg said postgame. “I think he’s the most underrated player in this league.”
The statement wasn’t a shock to Sandfort, who has seen Dix develop from a gangly freshman one of the Hawkeyes’ three best players.
“He’s about as good as he gets from a toughness standpoint, from a skill standpoint,” Sandfort said. “Nothing rattles him, nothing makes him excited. He’s just out there playing ball. And the things that he’s battled through, I think, have made him tough and(5:00)made it so that he doesn’t rattle him.”
And Dix played all but 22 seconds of the game. With Drew Thelwell out due to a “tweaked lower leg” injury and Cooper Koch missing the game due to a previously noted medical condition, Dix was forced to play nearly all 45 minutes.
“I’m going to need an ice bath,” Dix joked. “I feel good that we won. My body hurts a little bit, but I’m good.”
“He was exhausted,” McCaffery added. “I mean he played as hard as he could every possession at both ends of the floor — and made phenomenal decisions, made big shots, made big plays. He was really, really special. … Steals, assists, rebounds. That’s who he is.”
Dix’s 31 points paired with Sandfort’s scoring effort resulted in Iowa’s first duo to score 30+ points since Jordan Bohannon and Keegan Murray did the same at Maryland in 2022.
“That’s crazy,” Dix said. “Payton was going crazy in the second half, so we just kept feeding him. In overtime, I got the ball in my hands a little bit more. He also just took over. It was great.”
NEXT: Iowa will face Indiana (12-3, 3-1) in Carver Hawkeye-Arena on Saturday, January 11. The game will be broadcast at 7 pm CST on Fox.
Iowa will host a high-priority official visitor this weekend for the matchup with the Hoosiers.
Don’t miss out on any of our exclusive football, basketball, and recruiting coverage. Sign up with Hawkeye Beacon here.
Iowa
HawkCast Ep. 119 – MARK GRONOWSKI is a HAWKEYE: Iowa Lands MAJOR QB
Eliot and Ross breakdown the impact of the Hawkeyes landing South Dakota State transfer quarterback Mark Gronowski in the transfer portal.
Is Gronowski immediately QB1 or Iowa?, how he elevates the floor and the ceiling of the QB room, why his accomplishments set him apart from previous Iowa transfer targets and acquisitions, shout out to Tim Lester/Brad Heinrichs/Tyler Barnes, what’s next with the Hawkeyes and the portal, plus more.
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