Iowa
Sandfort Good to Go, Traore a “Game-Time Decision” for Northwestern
Just five weeks into the 2024-25 season, the Iowa men’s basketball team has faced its fair share of adversity in the injury department.
Josh Dix missed time with a wrist injury, Owen Freeman missed a game with an illness, Riley Mulvey and Even Brauns have had to sit out for a variety of health reasons, Chris Tadjo has missed games while in concussion protocol, Seydou Traore missed the first couple games of the season with a lower leg injury, sprained his ankle against USC-Upstate and is considered a “game-time decision” for Iowa’s matchup with Northwestern on Tuesday, and Cooper Koch is out indefinitely after an injury he sustained in practice.
Though Payton Sandfort hasn’t missed any time yet, he’s also been nursing a wrist injury that took place against Washington State. The senior forward hasn’t seen the injury bug bite this hard and this frequently in his four years with the program.
“It’s just super unlucky what’s going on with everybody,” Sandfort said. “We delt with it a little bit before Eastern Illinois when we got beat here [two years ago]. We had a lot of guys out. That would’ve been the last time we really delt with something like this.”
Sandfort recognizes the team-wide health issues have made it a little more difficult for him to bounce back, too.
“There have probably been times where I’ve been on the floor when I shouldn’t have been,” he said. “I was just trying to keep being the leader, even if I wasn’t 100%.”
Sandfort’s wrist injury reared its ugly head in Iowa’s 77-69 loss to Utah State just under a couple weeks ago. Regarded as one of the top shooters in the Big Ten — if not the country — Sandfort shot 4-of-18 from the field and 1-of-13 from three.
“I just wasn’t good enough,” Sandfort said following the loss. “If I’m myself tonight, we win. I take 100% responsibility for it. … I just can’t really do much, in life or in basketball right now. I’ve got to be able to make those shots anyway.”
In the meantime, players at the end of the bench have picked up some of the slack from regular rotation players — like him, Traore or Koch.
“I think a lot of guys on our team have done a really good job of stepping up,” Sandfort said. “Riley has played really good minutes. Carter (Kingsbury) is a really good player. He’s going to keep playing, he’s been playing well. A lot of guys have been waiting their turn for years. … I’m proud of the way the guys have stepped up.”
Going forward, Sandfort is framing the extra minutes at the end of the bench as a positive.
“It’s brought our team closer together,” he said. “A lot of other leaders have emerged from this. We’re more together because of it. Once everybody is back out there, we’ll have a lot of weapons that have had playing time this year and can contribute to winning games in the Big Ten.”
Now ten days removed from that woeful shooting performance against Utah State and currently at the tail end of a week off from playing, Sandfort said his wrist is “good” and that he’d “figured some things out” with the injury.
“I figured out how to get it better,” he said. “I feel comfortable, and I have my tools back. So I’m good to go.”
Fran McCaffery affirmed that the break over Thanksgiving was good for his team’s second-leading scorer.
“He’s had to deal with [the injury] for a while now,” McCaffery said. “I give him credit because he keeps grinding. A lot of guys would shut it down and make excuses. He just keeps plugging away.”
With Sandfort and potentially Traore in the lineup, Iowa will face off with the Northwestern (6-2) at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, December 3 in Carver-Hawkeye Arena. The game will be broadcast on Peacock.
Iowa
Will Moon, Iowa football donor and owner of Iowa 80 truck stop, dies at 64
Video: Iowa football QB Jeremy Hecklinski provides summer update
Iowa football’s Jeremy Hecklinski meets with media on July 15, 2026.
The accounting student whose name is attached to the University of Iowa’s endowment for the head football coaching position and who created an athletics excellence fund at the school grew up as a “truck-stop kid.”
Will Moon raced around towering semis while his parents labored to grow what, six decades later, is now the massive, hugely popular Iowa 80 World’s Largest Truck Stop along Interstate 80 at the Walcott exit.
The longtime UI donor and namesake of the Moon Family Head Football Coach died on Thursday, July 16. He was 64.
“I was very saddened to hear about Will’s passing,” Hawkeye coach Kirk Ferentz said in a news release. “Will and his wife Renee have been very generous in their support of our program and Hawkeye athletics. Hawkeye student-athletes will benefit from their gifts for years to come.”
Moon arrived in Iowa City at the perfect moment for a football fan in the fall of 1979, just as coach Hayden Fry was beginning the revival of the Hawkeye football program, and Moon was captivated.
“From that point on, Iowa football was fun again,” Moon told the University of Iowa Center for Advancement in 2021.
Moon grew up working at the truck stop during the summers after his parents took over in the 1960s. His father, Bill Moon, an entrepreneur, bought the truck stop after he found the land for Standard Oil as construction of Iowa’s portion of I-80 neared completion. A year later, Bill Moon convinced Standard Oil to let him run the truck stop, and he took full ownership in 1964.
As a teenager, Moon became interested in the family business and its operations, and, with an aptitude for math, came to the University of Iowa to study accounting, paving the way for a successful business career and to take over the family business.
While at Iowa, Moon met his wife, Renee Breckenridge Moon. Their first date was at The Airliner in downtown Iowa City, where they watched the Hawkeye football team defeat Penn State. Ever since, they cheered for the Hawkeyes from inside Kinnick Stadium, in opponents’ venues and at bowl games.
Moon and his wife rank among UI Athletics’ most generous donors. Their support created an endowment fund for the operational needs of Hawkeye football, establishing the Will and Renee Moon Excellence Fund for unrestricted athletics initiatives, and providing leadership support for the Kinnick Edge Campaign to revitalize the north end zone. In recognition of this generosity, the UI permanently designated the football leadership position, ensuring that Moon Family Head Football Coach will be the official title held by Ferentz and all future UI head football coaches.
“Will was one of the kindest, most genuine people you could ever meet, and his love for the Hawkeyes was unwavering,” Iowa athletics director Beth Goetz said in a news release. “His generosity and loyalty helped shape Iowa Athletics, but it was the relationships he built and the way he cared for others that will be remembered most. He was a dear friend and truly part of the Hawkeye family.”
Visitation will be Monday, July 20, from 4-8 p.m. at Runge Mortuary in Davenport. Funeral services will be Tuesday, July 21, at 10 a.m. at Calvary Church of Walcott, followed by burial at Walcott Cemetery.
Jessica Rish is an entertainment, dining and education reporter for the Iowa City Press-Citizen. She can be reached at JRish@press-citizen.com or on X, formerly known as Twitter, at @rishjessica_
Iowa
US House Speaker campaigning in Iowa responds to President’s election fraud claims
DES MOINES, Iowa (Gray Media Iowa State Capitol Bureau) — U.S. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson told Gray Media Iowa that he got briefed late Thursday afternoon, a few hours before President Donald Trump gave a prime-time speech to make his latest claims about election fraud.
“Yeah, I just got off of a telephone call literally in the motorcade as we were driving here,” Johnson said after arriving at a campaign appearance with U.S. Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R – 1st District, Ottumwa) at a Pella bakery.
Miller-Meeks is running for re-election in what is again considered a competitive race with Democrat Christina Bohannan, a University of Iowa law professor from Iowa City.
This is the third straight election that the two will meet in a general election.
Johnson said the “off the record” intelligence briefing to leaders in the U.S. House and Senate previewed Trump’s new election fraud claims. He called it “blockbuster information.”
“It’s the result of an investigation that’s been ongoing for some time now about fraud and irregularity in in federal elections, American elections around the country,” Johnson said.
Gray Media Iowa asked Johnson whether he believes congressional colleagues were elected because of fraud.
He did not directly answer that question.
“…everybody’s going to be able to evaluate all that information on their own, and it will lead to other investigations, I’m certain,” Johnson said of the briefing.
He added, “we’ll have to see where all this goes.”
For years, Trump has alleged widespread fraud that cost him the 2020 election. Trump has lost dozens of court cases on the matter.
On January 7, 2021, Congress certified his defeat to Democrat Joe Biden, a day after Trump supporters rushed the U.S. Capitol Building. Some attacked law enforcement officers and damaged the outside and inside of the building.
After returning to office in 2025, President Trump pardoned supporters for their crimes.
Copyright 2026 Gray Media Iowa State Capitol Bureau. All rights reserved.
Iowa
Jaylen Raynor Wisely Predicted To Be Starting Quarterback for Iowa State Football
With the college football season right around the corner, the Iowa State Cyclones will be hoping to have a strong campaign with a new regime coming in. However, a lot of their success might depend on one key player.
Following the departure of Matt Campbell to the Penn State Nittany Lions, the Cyclones saw their roster get completely gutted. Most of their players entered the transfer portal, leaving new head coach Jimmy Rogers with plenty of work to do.
Fortunately, Rogers and the coaching staff were able to get out there and bring in a lot of new players from all over the country. While Iowa State might be lacking star power and aren’t going to be as talented as they were last year, they do have a good amount of depth.
There should be quite a bit of competition for spots in camp, but there are some players who should clearly be starters that transferred in.
Pete Nakos of On3 recently predicted who would be the starting quarterback for every team in the Big 12. Unsurprisingly for the Cyclones, it was Jaylen Raynor who was the choice.
Raynor an Easy Pick
After bringing in the three-year starter from the Arkansas State Red Wolves, Raynor instantly became the favorite to be the starter for the Cyclones in Week 1. Him being predicted as that guy should come as no surprise, and his ability to play against elevated competition on a weekly basis will be key.
There is a lot to like about Raynor’s game, and he could certainly help Iowa State exceed expectations next year.
Last season with the Red Wolves, he totaled 3,361 passing yards, 19 passing touchdowns, and a 66.5 completion percentage. It was career-highs for him in all three of those categories, showing some nice improvement in his junior season.
As a dual-threat player, he also totaled a career-high in rushing yards and rushing touchdowns. The junior recorded 423 yards on the ground to go along with seven rushing scores.
Overall, the numbers for Raynor were really solid, and there is reason to believe he might be even better in his senior season. For the Cyclones, with all of the new players on the roster, there will undoubtedly be some competition for starting spots around the field. However, it should certainly be Raynor who is under center to start.
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