As the Iowa Hawkeyes women's basketball team prepares for the third year under head coach Jan Jensen, there is a combination of roster shuffling and a postseason sense of urgency building.
Fantasy football is synonymous with the NFL. It drives ratings and creates an entire ecosystem of football discourse. So, why not bring it to the college football world?
The days of stopping teams outright in football are becoming few and far between. The talent level on offense is only getting better each year, with more speed and size across the board.
You know how this goes. Iowa lands a bunch of under-recruited, lesser-known three-stars, and half of them become All-Big Ten members, a few are All-Americans, and the Hawkeyes produce yet another crop of NFL talent.
It's prediction time. The college football season is around the corner. Get your predictions ready. One of the most common predictions is the preseason top 25.
Few teams, unless you are Ohio State or Texas or Notre Dame, enter the season without weaknesses. Even those teams have areas of concern when push comes to shove.
What if Iowa threw aside the cupcake non-conference games? What if they replaced them with a 12-game slate that provided week-after-week matchups made in heaven?
The 2026 season feels up in the air for the Iowa Hawkeyes with training camp looming. You know Iowa is going to find a way to get its standard eight wins, but could this be the year things take off and see the Hawkeyes hit double digits?
Week 1 is supposed to be a cupcake for the Iowa Hawkeyes, right? It's Northern Illinois. It's Iowa. This should be a tune-up game, right? Unless it suddenly isn't.
He's the grandfather of college football. He's been around for nearly three decades. He's seen the sport change more than anyone else. He's Kirk Ferentz.
You can't escape the Iowa Hawkeyes. You can run, sure, but you can't hide. Like a sort of corn-fed, field-position-loving, defense-playing grim reaper, Iowa forces the issue time and time again.
Make no mistake about it, the Iowa Hawkeyes are going to will their way into at least eight wins. It's what they do. Head coach Kirk Ferentz and Iowa haven't found fewer than eight wins in a full season since 2014.
College football season is growing closer with a sense of urgency, and one telling sign of that is the growing noise around the annual release of EA Sports College Football 27.
The Iowa Hawkeyes are putting together quite a slate this year, with some heavy hitters early in the season. The Hawkeyes are loading up on non-conference opponents from the other major conferences such as the Big East, Big 12, ACC, and SEC, in an effort to take the next step.
Iowa is rarely known for putting together recruiting classes with the likes of Ohio State, Georgia, and Notre Dame, but the Hawkeyes hang in there on the recruiting trail.
If there was any question about Iowa's place among the top college basketball teams in today's era, the recruiting work being put on by the Hawkeyes might be enough to silence that.
Despite the Iowa Hawkeyes' success last year, there was a glaring weakness on this team. A kryptonite, some might even say. The ability to navigate it speaks volumes to what Ben McCollum did with the roster he had in his first year, but repeating that would be a tall task.
Being thrust into the starting lineup in the Big Ten is a trial-by-fire type of thing. Players sink or swim in a hurry, and the sense of urgency is immediate.
Few fans can manufacture a smile or produce a frown as quickly as college football fans can. It's a truly special trait. The season can be going good, even great, but one play, and it's all over; it's done, wrap it up.
It's college football. You're going to get some auto-wins. It's the way of scheduling in 2026. The Iowa Hawkeyes are no different, with a couple of non-conference cupcakes and some Big Ten cellar dwellers.
Football season continues to grow closer, and a clear sign of that is the preseason recognition for top talents coming to life. The Iowa Hawkeyes once again have a roster featuring future NFL talent that can compete at the highest level in the collegiate ranks.
Why fight it? Iowa keeps on winning, and winning, and winning, and it's not enough. Under Kirk Ferentz, the Hawkeyes have been consistently strong for over two decades, holding the dubious distinction now of being the winningest Group of Four program in the College Football Playoff era not to make the playoff.
The Iowa Hawkeyes have picked up an important recruiting win on the 2027 recruiting trail.
Ferentz has sent a ton of great offensive linemen into the league, and the latest is Gennings Dunker, who was selected No. 96 overall in the 2026 NFL Draft by the Pittsburgh Steelers.
The Iowa Hawkeyes are going to accept the punishment handed down to them by the NCAA for allegedly tampering with quarterback Cade McNamara before he entered the transfer portal in 2022.
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