Iowa
When is Iowa State vs TCU? Time, date, TV channel, betting odds for Week 11 football
Chase Sowell on Iowa State football’s mentality after four losses
Hear from Iowa State wide receiver Chase Sowell on how the Cyclones are handling four-straight losses and looking ahead to TCU.
Iowa State football continues its 2025 season on Saturday, Nov. 8, with a Big 12 Conference road game against TCU.
The Cyclones (5-4, 2-4 Big 12) have lost four straight games following a 5-0 start and are hoping to find some answers this week.
The Horned Frogs (6-2, 3-2) have won two straight contests, most recently 23-17 over West Virginia before enjoying a bye week last Saturday.
Here are details on how to watch head coach Matt Campbell’s group try to get back on track:
Buy Iowa State vs. TCU tickets
Iowa State plays TCU at Amon G. Carter Stadium in Fort Worth, Texas, on Saturday, Nov. 8. The game will air on FOX and can be streamed on FUBO, which offers a free trial to new subscribers.
What time is Iowa State vs. TCU?
The Cyclones and Horned Frogs kick off at 2:30 p.m. CT on Saturday, Nov. 8, at Amon G. Carter Stadium in Forth Worth, Texas.
Iowa State vs. TCU betting odds
Odds courtesy of BetMGM as of Tuesday afternoon.
To see a full list of ticket prices, visit StubHub.
Buy Iowa State football tickets
Iowa
Iowa State basketball breaks points, 3-point records vs Alcorn State
Iowa State’s T.J. Otzelberger on Killyan Toure’s energy plays
Iowa State’s T.J. Otzelberger on Killyan Toure’s energy plays
The Iowa State basketball team made history Wednesday night.
In a dominating win over Alcorn State, the Cyclones broke their own program records for total points scored, with 132, and 3-pointers made in a single game with 22. The previous record for total points was 130, which was set against The Citadel on Nov. 20, 2016. The previous 3-point record was 18, which Iowa State hit in a game against Kansas on Feb. 4, 2017.
In total, nine different players scored points and five of them drilled a shot from beyond the arc in the victory. Three different Cyclones also scored over 20 points, while three more scored 10 or more. Milan Momcilovic led the way with 27 total points and eight long-range baskets. At one point, he had made 8-for-8 of his 3-point attempts, but eventually missed one late in the second half.
On the night, the Cyclones were 22-for-30 and shot 73% from 3-point range. The 132-68 victory helped Iowa State improve to 8-0 on the season.
Iowa
Iowa will be the coldest state in the US. Maps show how cold it’ll be.
What is the polar vortex? How it can impact snow, freezes in the U.S.
The polar vortex is a large area of circulating cold air above the North Pole. Strong winds keep it contained, but when it weakens, it can wobble and stretch.
Temperatures across Iowa are forecast to plunge to the coldest in the Lower 48, dipping well below zero as a surge of Arctic air sweeps in.
The broader weather pattern will stay active and winter-like through the end of the week and into the weekend. A recent stratospheric disturbance weakened the polar vortex, allowing frigid Arctic air to spill into the U.S. and shift the jet stream, bringing snow and wintry precipitation to several regions.
While the heaviest snow will target the Rockies and High Plains on Dec. 3, Iowa will primarily feel the effects of a strong cold front and fast-moving clipper systems sweeping through the Great Lakes and Midwest.
“An active winter-like pattern will continue to bring the threat of winter weather to multiple areas of the country through the end of the week and into the weekend,” the Climate Prediction Center said.
When is the coldest air expected in Iowa?
Dangerous cold will dominate the forecast through Thursday, Dec. 4. Record-breaking lows are likely early Thursday, and even daytime highs will struggle to climb out of the single digits and teens. Winds will ease overnight, but the extreme cold will persist.
By Friday, Dec. 5, temperatures moderate slightly, but the pattern remains active into the weekend.
When will temperatures warm up in Iowa?
After the deep freeze, a gradual warm-up arrives Friday, Dec. 5, though temperatures will still run below normal.
The weekend and early next week look unsettled, with a series of disturbances tracking through the Midwest. While confidence in timing and amounts remains low, light snow chances will return periodically. Anyone with travel plans should monitor updates closely, as even light snow combined with cold conditions could impact roads.
Is snow expected in Iowa?
Light snow showers are possible today, Dec. 3, along the trailing cold front.
Additional chances for snow are possible on Thursday, Dec. 4, as another clipper system passes through. Accumulations in Iowa should remain light, but the bitter cold will dominate the story, with temperatures running well below normal for early December.
Several weak systems will ripple through the region, bringing occasional chances for light snow. While significant accumulations appear unlikely, even minor snowfall could cause hazards as low temperatures keep roads slick.
“Anyone with travel plans this weekend should monitor the latest forecast updates, because while at this time the probability of a significant snowfall event is low, even lighter accumulations could still impact travel conditions at times,” the National Weather Service office in Des Moines wrote.
Maps: Temperature lows in Iowa
Fort Dodge is set to see the coldest temps in the U.S. on Thursday, Dec. 4, reaching -16 degrees overnight.
Wednesday night through Thursday morning, Dec. 3-4
Thursday night through Friday morning, Dec. 4-5
Friday night through Saturday morning, Dec. 5-6
Iowa weather watches and warnings
Here are the watches and warnings for the area.
Stay informed. Get weather alerts via text.
Brandi D. Addison covers weather across the United States as the Weather Connect Reporter for the USA TODAY Network. She can be reached at baddison@gannett.com. Find her on Facebook here.
Iowa
Couch: 3 quick takes on Michigan State basketball’s 71-52 win over Iowa
1. MSU showed its style can match up with any style and any pace
EAST LANSING — That was a really good win for Michigan State’s basketball team, believe it or not. That Iowa team is going to wind up being trouble a lot of nights in the Big Ten. And this could have been a thorny night for the Spartans, if they’d let it.
Things didn’t start easy. They were playing against a different style and more deliberate pace than anything they’d faced yet this season. They didn’t have their best freshman, Cam Ward, who missed the game with a sprained wrist. He would have been useful in this matchup. They had to figure out how to control the game without a fast break.
But they did, turning a prickly first 10 minutes into an emphatic home win, 71-52, imposing their will on team a that didn’t have the big men to match up in the paint and on the glass. Their energy was only matched by Pat Fitzgerald’s energy, as MSU’s new football coach introduced himself to the Breslin Center crowd Tuesday night during a first-half timeout. He told the fans they were the difference in MSU’s run just before that break. They might have been.
But one thing we’ve learned about this MSU team is that to have a chance to beat it, you’ve got to match its toughness and be able to handle its physicality. The Hawkeyes could do neither. Iowa would have to shoot the daylights out of the ball from beyond the arc — which the Hawkeyes are capable of doing — to have any chance.
This game looked dangerous on the calendar because the Hawkeyes are better than MSU made them look and because human nature says this was a little bit of a look-ahead spot, if a Big Ten opener can ever be that. Getting Duke at Breslin Center this coming Saturday is an event. Something to look forward to. This MSU team, though, hasn’t looked distracted all season. We should begin to trust they won’t be. Especially not to open conference play, at home, the beginning of a title defense, and for a core group that looks out to prove something.
The rebounding numbers and points in the paint told the story of the difference between the teams. The Spartans out-rebounded the Hawkeyes, 37-18, including 24-12 on the offensive end (MSU rebounded 52% of its missed shots), outscored them in the paint, 34-18, and hit 22 of 25 free throws.
“That takes care of a lot of things,” Izzo said of MSU’s work on the glass especially.
MSU created a lot of contact in the first half, getting to the line to loosen up its offense and spur an 11-0 run in a game that was 9-9 at the midway point of the first half.
Neither team shot well from the perimeter. The problem for the Hawkeyes is that they live by the 3 much more and took many more.
Now MSU can focus on the fourth and final of its marquee non-conference matchups, likely the biggest test of its ceiling and also of its improvement since the exhibition at Connecticut. At 8-0, and with how they’ve played, the Spartans have earned the hype this game will come with.
2. An impressive night for Coen Carr
There were several impressive performances by MSU on Tuesday night. Jaxon Kohler’s dominance early on the glass set a tone in the paint (He finished with 12 points and 11 rebonds). Jeremy Fears Jr. got to the line repeatedly and didn’t miss there (going 10-for-10), and made Iowa star Bennett Stirtz’s life difficult.
But Coen Carr, perhaps, deserves as much credit as anyone. This wasn’t a matchup built for him. Because Iowa doesn’t play a game that allows for transition offense. Carr had to work his way into this and figure out how to impact the game. And he did, with 15 points and five rebounds, almost all of his production coming in the final couple minutes of the first half and in the second half.
That was a good sign for Carr. He didn’t force things, but he also didn’t accept that this wasn’t going to be his night. He got on the glass and started attacking the lane on the drive. Iowa didn’t have an answer for him.
3. Freshman thoughts — the Iowa edition
Jesse McCulloch played a season-high 17 minutes, in part because Cam Ward missed the game with a sprained wrist. MSU will and has faced teams with better front lines, but McCulloch made the most of his opportunity, with nine points and two rebounds. The redshirt freshman big man sometimes has been overmatched this season. But he played well in a short spurt against North Carolina and then in a longer stint Tuesday.
He’s got a skilled offensive game and we saw it against Iowa, especially with a couple buckets late. The more he holds his own on the glass and defensively, the more we’ll see him.
The other MSU freshman that played, Jordan Scott, had another Jordan Scott-like game. They ought to just name the plus-minus stat after him. At halftime, he had six points and was plus-18 in 10 minutes. Nobody else was better than plus-10. He finished with those six points and five rebounds. He’s a gritty player who makes MSU better when he’s on the court. He also hit one of MSU’s three 3s. If he starts making more, he’ll be a 20-minute per game player every night. You could argue he already should be.
Contact Graham Couch at gcouch@lsj.com. Follow him on X @Graham_Couch and BlueSky @GrahamCouch.
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