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Would Iowa drop Iowa State, and who will provide depth at cornerback?

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Would Iowa drop Iowa State, and who will provide depth at cornerback?


Back in the days of the “On Iowa Podcast,” my former tag-team partner, Marc Morehouse, and I would issue moratoriums on topics like Kirk Ferentz’s succession plan and whether Iowa should drop Iowa State from the annual schedule.

We would open those conversations during a two-month period that Marc christened “the Horse Latitudes.” No, we wouldn’t throw any animals out of the window of our podcast studio, but it was a time when we could address the issues without another premium topic in the way. As such, we have entered the Horse Latitudes of the college football calendar. So let’s address a few topics that squeeze into Part 1 of this Iowa mailbag.

Note: Submitted questions have been lightly edited for length and clarity. 

When will the talks get serious about it being time for Iowa to drop Iowa State? The new schedule doesn’t leave the same room for error, correct? — Jake L.

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This is a topic that gets traction from a vocal minority on the Iowa side. The programs have a contract through 2027, and there are a few outs that both sides could explore if they wanted to end it early.

In Clause 11, should either the Big Ten or Big 12 change its schedule, the series can be canceled without penalty. Recently, that could have included the Big Ten’s altering the home-away allocation of its nine-game schedule when divisional play ends. But with teams lining up nonconference opponents several years in advance, the league kept the East-West sequence intact to not disrupt future schedules. If the Big Ten (or Big 12) increases to 10 games, that changes everything dramatically.

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If Iowa or Iowa State really wanted to conclude the series for its own reason, there’s a $1 million penalty. Only once was there enough friction between the athletic departments to where it almost ended. Back in 2007, the host gave the visitor 20 percent of the gate, which always favored Iowa State financially. It started in the late 1970s when Cyclone Stadium (now Jack Trice) wasn’t big enough to host the series and the first four games were held at Kinnick Stadium, which is bigger and the tickets were more expensive.

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By 2007, Iowa gave Iowa State 20 percent of the Cy-Hawk gate, and ISU switched to paying Iowa 20 percent of an average home gate, which infuriated Iowa administrators. The schools’ previous athletic directors agreed to an extension through 2020, but it wasn’t a binding contract. Iowa considered it “correspondence.” A year later, they agreed to end the 20 percent provision beginning in 2013. Iowa athletic director Gary Barta and Iowa State counterpart Jamie Pollard haven’t wavered in their support for the series. Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz also supports it. But with Barta’s retiring in August, it does allow for a new viewpoint about the rivalry.

The Cy-Hawk remains popular among fans throughout the state and especially in central Iowa, where every aspect of social life splits on Iowa-Iowa State. The series limits scheduling variety, but the Big Ten schedule provides enough challenges to shrug off those limitations. The Cy-Hawk is a guaranteed sellout at either location. As long as the leagues keep the current lineup, the interactions are civil and positive among the fans and the games stay competitive, it will remain in place for generations to come.

Could you see any football teams fall into an abyss because of little NIL commitment and collectives putting the highest focus on basketball and kind of ignoring football because it’s much more expensive to win a championship? — Jesse L.

It really comes down to fans and donors. What is most important to them? I’d say nobody outright would ignore football; it’s too important. But if for Indiana, the choice is a four-star receiver or a four-star shooting guard, it depends on who is footing the bill. But I get your point and a handful of Big Ten schools (Maryland, Indiana, Purdue, Illinois, UCLA) place such a premium on basketball to where reaching the Sweet 16 is more important than beating a football rival or attaining bowl eligibility.

Are the men’s and women’s basketball nonconference schedules completed? — Tri K.

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Not quite. Iowa’s men have 10 games of the 11 nonconference games set, and the women have six completed, per contracts obtained by The Athletic. The women will pay $72,000 (so far) in guarantees and receive $275,000 in guarantees plus $50,000 in Charlotte expenses. The men will pay $485,000 in guarantees and receive $240,000. Both the men’s and women’s teams receive $125,000 for moving a doubleheader to Des Moines.

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The women’s contracts with Drake and Iowa State should be finished soon. Without the ACC-Big Ten Challenge in place, it appears the men’s program needs just a home Power 5 opponent.

Women’s schedule: Nov. 6 vs. Fairleigh Dickinson; Nov. 9 vs. Virginia Tech in Charlotte, N.C. (receiving $150,000 plus $50,000 for travel); Nov. 12 at UNI; Nov. 16 vs. Kansas State; Dec. 2 vs. Bowling Green; Dec. 16 vs. Cleveland State in Des Moines (receiving $125,000).

Men’s schedule: Nov. 7 vs. North Dakota; Nov. 10 vs. Alabama State; Nov. 14 at Creighton (Gavitt Games); Nov. 17 vs. Arkansas State; Nov. 23-24 San Diego Invitational vs. USC/Oklahoma/Seton Hall (two) receive $115,000; Nov. 29 vs. North Florida; Dec. 7 at Iowa State; Dec. 16 vs. Florida A&M in Des Moines, receive $125,000; Dec. 29 vs. Northern Illinois.

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What is the greatest individual performance in a game you have covered? Football or basketball? Iowa player or opposing player? — Tom C.

This encompasses nearly 30 years of journalism. I’ll avoid the NFL, although Dante Hall’s punt return against Denver in 2003 was the greatest single play I’ve ever covered. In college football, Penn State running back Saquon Barkley’s 358 all-purpose yards at Kinnick Stadium in 2017 edges Stanford running back Christian McCaffrey’s Rose Bowl domination two years earlier. Penn State needed every inch from Barkley, and he delivered play after play against an elite defense in a raucous environment.

In basketball, I’m trying to decide which of Clark’s games was most impressive. I’ll go with her 34-9-9 game against Indiana with a buzzer-beating 3-pointer. That was an all-timer, but that moment could serve as only a placeholder compared with what we’ll witness this winter.

After missing on a few transfer portal options and losing Terry Roberts, who do you think fills the No. 3 and No. 4 spots on Iowa’s cornerback depth chart? — Derek H.

Iowa was in a tough spot when it came to picking up cornerbacks in the portal. Cooper DeJean is considered a first-round pick next year and elite in multiple ways. Jermari Harris is in line to start and had four interceptions in 2021 but missed last season with an injury. If both juniors are healthy and available, it’s a high-level tandem. Few players would want to transfer to Iowa to become a backup, and what Iowa has in reserve might be better anyway.

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I’d look first to sophomore T.J. Hall, who was shredded against Nebraska last year in the season finale. It was a rough learning experience against the fastest receiver in the 2023 NFL Draft, but Hall showed enough potential to warrant playing in every game last year. He could make major strides. In fact, I’d expect it.

Next, I’d look at redshirt freshman Deshaun Lee and junior Brenden Deasfernandes. Lee worked with the second team quite a bit in the spring, and Deasfernandes was a second-teamer last spring before losing the season to injury. Jamison Heinz, a junior walk-on, got some action late last year and could work into the lineup. Finally, I think true freshmen Kahlil Tate and John Nestor could enter the depth chart. Cornerback is one of the few positions where Iowa’s staff has no problem playing true freshmen when required.

If you had to pick one breakout candidate on offense and defense for football, who would it be? — Andrew H.

There are several candidates on offense, but I’m going with junior guard Connor Colby. He has 24 starts, including the most for a true freshman in program history with 11. At times he has struggled, especially when he was at right tackle last year. But late last season, it started to click for him at guard. Maybe I’m going out on a limb, but I think he can be one of the top eight-to-10 linemen in the Big Ten by November. A close second would be center Logan Jones.

On defense, I believe Deontae Craig can pick up double-digit sacks. He tied for the team lead last year with 6.5 and was second in tackles for loss (10) despite playing about 150 fewer snaps than Lukas Van Ness, Joe Evans and John Waggoner. After Craig, I’m all in on safety Xavier Nwankpa. He’s a difference-maker.

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Iowa went from Luka Garza to Keegan Murray to Kris Murray. Who is the men’s basketball player most likely to be the standout leader? Is there a player who can average 20 points a game? — Ross C.

Iowa might take a step back for a year in the All-Big Ten department. Those players were All-Americans with legitimate NBA potential. I’m not sure I see anyone close to that right now. Key returnees Tony Perkins, Patrick McCaffery and Payton Sandfort all have had moments, but not consistently. Each one seems capable of averaging somewhere between 10 and 15 points per game, but the Hawkeyes won’t have a player like either Murray brother to attract top defenders.

Perhaps the one I could see approaching that threshold is newcomer Ben Krikke from Valparaiso. As a first-team All-Missouri Valley Conference forward last year, Krikke led the league in scoring at 19.4 points per game plus averaged 5.9 rebounds and 2.1 assists while shooting 55 percent. At worst, Krikke will be a solid starter at Iowa. But I can’t predict 20 points a game going from the Valley to the Big Ten.

With the cutbacks at The Athletic, approximately how much of your time will continue to be devoted to the Hawkeyes? Your beat coverage of the Hawks is a big reason why I subscribed. — Stephen W.

I’ve noticed you are writing about other teams with increasing frequency. Is this part of the Times’ reconfiguring The Athletic staff? I hope they recognize your talent — and output — as much as we all do. — Fred L.

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How is your role going to change at The Athletic given the recent changes? Is it going to change? — Michael R.

Thank you all so much for the kind words. Five years ago I came aboard here, and you all are the reason I’m still here. I’m humbled and flattered that you trust me to bring you these stories and you think enough to subscribe. If I don’t say it enough, I should. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.

It has been unfortunate to lose some colleagues I consider friends and outstanding journalists. It has caused us to reshuffle some priorities. At this point, Iowa football will remain my primary beat. But on occasion, I will branch out for other college football stories — and sports — beyond the Hawkeyes. I will cover a little more college basketball, sporting trends, NFL Draft and other relevant topics. Yes, I may slide over to Ames, but it also means more on Clark. But I still will write plenty about Iowa football. You have proved there’s a strong audience for it.

(Top photo: Matthew Holst / Getty Images)





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Iowa

Kirk Ferentz’s Reputation On The Line In Iowa vs Washington

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Kirk Ferentz’s Reputation On The Line In Iowa vs Washington


The Iowa Hawkeyes are coming off of a 35-7 thumping at the hands of the Ohio State Buckeyes, and while a loss to Ohio State was expected, it was how Iowa lost that has Hawkeyes fans livid.

Iowa’s offense was absolutely lifeless, Cade McNamara looked lost and head coach Kirk Ferentz did not seem to have any answers.

Not only that, but Ferentz doubled down on McNamara remaining the starter after the game, saying that the quarterback actually showed improvement.

That’s why Ferentz’s reputation may actually be on the line when the Hawkeyes face the Washington Huskies this Saturday.

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Iowa is just 3-2 on the season, as it also lost to the Iowa State Cyclones back in Week 2. A loss to Washington would drop the Hawkeyes to .500, and it would add more fuel to the “fire Ferentz” discussion that has been smoldering.

The Huskies are a new addition to the Big Ten and just beat the Michigan Wolverines, and while Michigan has not been as good as expected, Washington is no joke.

However, make no mistake: Iowa needs to beat these guys.

Here is the thing: barring a catastrophic remainder of the 2024 campaign at Iowa City, the Hawkeyes aren’t canning Ferentz. The man is under contract through 2029 on a hefty salary. It isn’t happening.

But Ferentz’s reputation is a different story.

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The 69-year-old has been at the helm for Iowa since 1999 and is highly respected by the fans, but patience is running thin.

Last year, the Hawkeyes played three ranked opponents and lost by a total score of 92-0. They also just got destroyed by Ohio State. The Iowa fan base is tired with being second-best, and at this point, that is all Ferentz has offered them.

Sure, Iowa does not have the cachet or prestige of schools like Ohio State, Michigan or Alabama. It typically won’t land the very best recruits as a result. But the Hawkeyes’ inability to even put together respectable offenses over the years does reflect poorly on Ferentz, who is the longest-tenured coach in the country.

And Iowa fans are sick of it.

The Hawkeyes absolutely need to beat the Huskies this Saturday. Iowa should be better than Washington, and at some point, the Hawkeyes are going to have to display that they can consistently beat good teams.

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Is all of the Ferentz criticism deserved? No, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that all of it is completely unfounded.

Ferentz can provide some nice pushback to all of the naysayers with a Week 7 win over Washington. Or, he can give fans more reason to complain with a loss.



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Who the ranked Iowa high school football teams face in Week 7

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Who the ranked Iowa high school football teams face in Week 7


Williamsburg’s Grant Hocker looks to throw for a 2-point conversion against Cedar Rapids Xavier earlier this season. (Savannah Blake/The Gazette)

The Gazette offers audio versions of articles using Instaread. Some words may be mispronounced.

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Here’s who all 71 Iowa high school football teams ranked in this week’s Gazette poll face in Week 7 games Friday night.

Class 3A gets the spotlight this week as its top two teams face top-seven opponents. No. 1 Algona visits No. 7 Humboldt, while second-ranked Williamsburg hosts a Solon team eager to bounce back from last week’s loss to Benton Community that dropped it from the top spot.

There is intrigue in the 8-Player top five as well, where three of the top five teams face fellow unbeaten foes. That includes No. 1 Remsen St. Mary’s taking on No. 10 Woodbine and No. 2 Algona Garrigan hosting Ruthven GTRA.

Class 5A

No. 1 West Des Moines Valley (5-1) vs. Waterloo West (5-1)

No. 2 West Des Moines Dowling (5-1) at Urbandale (3-3)

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No. 3 Bettendorf (6-0) at Davenport Central (2-4)

No. 4 Pleasant Valley (5-1) vs. Muscatine (2-4)

No. 5 Ankeny Centennial (4-2) vs. Des Moines Roosevelt (1-5)

No. 6 Linn-Mar (5-1) vs. Davenport West (0-6)

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No. 7 Johnston (4-2) vs. Council Bluffs Lincoln (4-2)

No. 8 Iowa City Liberty (5-1) vs. Ankeny (3-3)

No. 9 Waukee (4-2) at Southeast Polk (3-3)

No. 10 Sioux City East (4-2) vs. Des Moines Lincoln (1-5)

Class 4A

No. 1 Lewis Central (6-0) at Winterset (4-2)

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No. 2 Pella (6-0) at Des Moines Hoover (0-6), Thursday

No. 3 North Polk (6-0) at No. 10 Indianola (4-2)

No. 4 Gilbert (6-0) vs. Bondurant-Farrar (1-5)

No. 5 Decorah (6-0) at Marion (2-4)

No. 6 Adel ADM (5-1) at Ballard (3-3)

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No. 7 Cedar Rapids Xavier (4-2) at Oskaloosa (1-5)

No. 8 North Scott (4-2) at Clear Creek Amana (4-2)

No. 9 Newton (4-2) vs. Carlisle (0-6)

No. 10 Indianola (4-2) vs. No. 3 North Polk (6-0)

No. 10 Western Dubuque (4-2) at Waterloo East (2-4)

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Class 3A

No. 1 Algona (6-0) at No. 7 Humboldt (5-1)

No. 2 Williamsburg (5-1) vs. No. 5 Solon (5-1)

No. 3 Dubuque Wahlert (6-0) at West Delaware (4-2)

No. 4 Sergeant Bluff-Luton (6-0) vs. Carroll (4-2)

No. 5 Mount Vernon (5-1) vs. Fort Madison (0-6)

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No. 5 Solon (5-1) at No. 2 Williamsburg (5-1)

No. 7 Humboldt (5-1) vs. No. 1 Algona (6-0)

No. 8 Sioux City Heelan (4-2) at Boyden-Hull/Rock Valley (1-5)

No. 9 Independence (4-2) at Maquoketa (1-5)

No. 10 Nevada (5-1) at Harlan (3-3)

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Class 2A

No. 1 West Lyon (6-0) at Sheldon (2-4)

No. 2 Monroe PCM (6-0) at West Marshall (5-1)

No. 3 Spirit Lake (5-1) at Garner GHV (1-5)

No. 4 Van Meter (5-1) vs. Centerville (4-2)

No. 5 Carroll Kuemper (5-1) vs. Saydel (1-5)

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No. 6 North Fayette Valley (5-1) vs. Oelwein (0-6) — canceled, Oelwein to forfeit

No. 7 Northeast (6-0) at Tipton (2-4)

No. 8 Central Lyon/George-Little Rock (4-2) vs. No. 10 Western Christian (4-2)

No. 9 Roland-Story (4-2) vs. Des Moines Christian (4-2)

No. 10 Western Christian (4-2) at No. 8 Central Lyon/George-Little Rock (4-2)

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Class 1A

No. 1 Grundy Center (6-0) at Alburnett (4-2)

No. 2 Wilton (6-0) at West Branch (2-4)

No. 3 Dike-New Hartford (5-1) vs. Aplington-Parkersburg (2-4)

No. 4 Emmetsburg (6-0) vs. Eagle Grove (0-6)

No. 5 Iowa City Regina (6-0) at Dyersville Beckman (4-2)

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No. 6 Ida Grove OABCIG (5-1) vs. No. 10 Hinton (5-1)

No. 7 South Hardin (5-1) at Hudson (5-1)

No. 8 Treynor (5-1) vs. Shenandoah (3-3)

No. 9 Sigourney-Keota (5-1) at Colfax-Mingo (1-5)

No. 10 Hinton (5-1) at No. 6 Ida Grove OABCIG (5-1)

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Class A

No. 1 West Hancock (6-0) at Lake Mills (4-2)

No. 2 Guthrie Center ACGC (6-0) vs. Mount Ayr (5-1)

No. 3 Saint Ansgar (5-1) at West Fork (1-5)

No. 4 Lisbon (6-0) vs. Danville (4-2)

No. 5 Earlham (5-1) at Oakland Riverside (4-2)

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No. 6 Tri-Center (5-1) vs. No. 8 Woodbury Central (5-1)

No. 7 Le Mars Gehlen (5-1) at South O’Brien (0-6)

No. 8 Woodbury Central (5-1) at No. 6 Tri-Center (5-1)

No. 9 North Linn (6-0) vs. Maquoketa Valley (5-1)

No. 10 Madrid (4-2) at North Mahaska (3-3)

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8-Player

No. 1 Remsen St. Mary’s (6-0) vs. No. 10 Woodbine (6-0)

No. 2 Algona Garrigan (6-0) vs. Ruthven GTRA (6-0)

No. 3 Don Bosco (6-0) vs. Turkey Valley (3-3)

No. 4 Audubon (6-0) vs. Collins-Maxwell (4-2)

No. 5 Lenox (6-0) vs. Southeast Warren (6-0)

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No. 6 Iowa Valley (6-0) vs. HLV (1-6)

No. 7 Gladbrook-Reinbeck (5-1) at Clarksville (5-2)

No. 8 Anita CAM (5-1) at Fremont-Mills (5-1)

No. 9 Bedford (5-1) vs. Lamoni (4-2)

No. 10 Woodbine (6-0) at No. 1 Remsen St. Mary’s (6-0)

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Comments: nathan.ford@thegazette.com





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Iowa State women’s basketball star Emily Ryan discusses eating disorder in video

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Iowa State women’s basketball star Emily Ryan discusses eating disorder in video


Iowa State women’s basketball star Emily Ryan released a video Thursday in which she discusses her battle with an eating disorder.

Ryan, a senior from Claflin, Kansas, has been one of the Big 12 Conference’s best point guards for the past few seasons. She was a first-team all-conference pick in 2022, and a second-team selection in 2023.

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“By sharing my story, I hope to build awareness and provide hope to everyone else fighting an invisible battle,” Ryan said in the video.

Ryan said her sense of self-worth was dependent on Iowa State’s success and her individual performance. That led to increased time spent in the weight room in an effort to get stronger and faster. When Ryan didn’t see the results that she desired, she began to focus on her diet.

Ryan said the Iowa State medical staff expressed their concern about Ryan’s eating habits and what it was doing to her body. Ryan said she was in “complete denial” about having an eating disorder, but her health continued to worsen.

Ryan missed the first nine games of the 2023-24 season due to the eating disorder. When she returned, she said, “off the court I was really struggling. By the end of the season, I was physically and mentally hanging on by a thread.”

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During the offseason, Ryan spent 88 days at a treatment center in Denver.

“It took a long time but I finally came to the understanding that being sick wasn’t my fault, and eating disorders are real, complex illnesses,” she said.

How to get help

For resources on disordered eating, call the National Eating Disorders Helpline at 800-931-2237 or text NEDA to 741741.



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