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Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball

The Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team represents Iowa State University (ISU) and competes in the Big 12 Conference of NCAA Division I. The Cyclones play their home games at Hilton Coliseum on Iowa State's campus.

Iowa State Cyclones
UniversityIowa State University
First season1907
All-time record1431–1390 (.507)
Head coachT. J. Otzelberger (3rd season)
ConferenceBig 12
LocationAmes, Iowa
ArenaHilton Coliseum
(Capacity: 14,267)
NicknameCyclones
Student sectionCyclone Alley
ColorsCardinal and gold[1]
   
Uniforms
Home
Away
Alternate
NCAA tournament Final Four
1944
NCAA tournament Elite Eight
1944, 2000
NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen
1986, 1997, 2000, 2014, 2016, 2022
NCAA tournament round of 32
1986, 1992, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2005, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2022
NCAA tournament appearances
1944, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2005, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019, 2022, 2023
Conference tournament champions
1996, 2000, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2019
Conference regular season champions
1935, 1941, 1944, 1945, 2000, 2001

History edit

Early years (1908–1980) edit

From 1907 to 1928, the Cyclones played in the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association,[2] managing a few winning records in-conference but no championships.[2] In 1929, the Cyclones moved to the Big Six Conference and named Louis Menze as head coach. Over the next 19 years, Menze would lead the Cyclones to four conference championships (their only seasons with a winning conference record in this period). Two of these teams earned consideration for the then eight-team NCAA tournament; the 1941 squad lost in a pre-Tournament "qualifying game" to Creighton. Three years later, the 1944 team beat Pepperdine to reach the semifinals in the tournament proper before losing its next game against eventual champion Utah, good for a spot in history as a Final Four participant.

After Menze's last conference win in 1945 and subsequent resignation as coach in 1947 (he would remain Iowa State's athletic director until 1958, having taken the position in 1945),[3] the Cyclones floated between the bottom and the middle of the conference for decades, their main claim to fame being two wins of the conference's annual "Holiday tournament", played between Christmas and New Year's Day in Kansas City, in 1955 and 1959. Neither these tournament wins, nor their regular season performances, qualified the Cyclones for postseason play in the 33 years between Menze's and Johnny Orr's stints in the head coaching position. However, the 1957 Cyclones were ranked #3 in the nation after handing Wilt Chamberlain's #1 Kansas its first loss.

 
Gary Thompson

Gary Thompson outscored Chamberlain, while Don Medsker held Chamberlain to 17 points the 2nd lowest of his career and then hit the game winner at the buzzer. No. 3 remains the school's highest-ever national ranking.[4] From the introduction of the Big Eight's postseason tournament in 1977 until Johnny Orr's fifth season in 1985, the Cyclones did not advance past their first game.[5]

In 1971, Maury John left Drake University to move to Iowa State. John led Drake to the 1969 NCAA Final Four and the Elite Eight in 1970 NCAA tournament and 1971 NCAA tournament. John inherited an Iowa State team that was 5–21 the previous season. John was excited about the new Hilton Coliseum and led Iowa State to a 12–14 record in 1971–1972 and a 16–10 record in 1972–1973, a 15-year best. On Dec. 2, 1971, in the first game played at Hilton Coliseum, John led the Cyclones to a victory over Arizona 71–54. Said Cyclone announcer Eric Heft, a player for Coach John: "The place was sold out for the Arizona game and we doubled the capacity of season tickets from the season before. We didn't have all the fanfare you have today, but it was packed. It was my first game and Maury John's first game as the head Cyclone coach as well."[6]

In the 1973–74 season, Iowa State was off to a 4–1 start. But, John sat out the remainder of the 1973–74 season after a cancer diagnosis. Assistant Gus Guydon (11–10) finished the season.[7] In October 1973, John had seen a doctor after having health concerns. Two months later, on the day his Iowa State team lost at Drake, John was told he had an inoperable malignant tumor at the base of his esophagus. "It was a bolt out of the blue for someone who lived his life free of smoking or drinking," His son John said later. "There was high stress. But he was always healthy."[8]

John was optimistic about returning to Iowa State in 1974–75, but his health worsened and he resigned on July 30, 1974. John said "It's going to be hard for me not to be on that bench. I won't have to sweat out all those games down on the floor. But truthfully, I'd rather be down there sweating them out."[8][7] John died on October 15, 1974, at the age of 55. During a 28‐year coaching career, John had a 528–214 record.[9][7] John's departure sent the Cyclones into free fall. In the next six years, Iowa State would only have one winning season, bottoming out in 1975–76 with a 3–24 record, still the worst in school history.

Johnny Orr era (1980–1994) edit

 
Jeff Hornacek

Johnny Orr came to Iowa State from Michigan in 1980. Iowa State's athletics director had called Orr to inquire about Michigan assistant Bill Frieder. When Orr learned of the salary Iowa State would offer Frieder, he negotiated the Iowa State head coaching job for himself. Orr is credited with building "Hilton Magic" and laying the foundation for Iowa State's success in men's basketball. A number of Cyclone greats played for Orr, including Jeff Grayer, Barry Stevens, walk-on Jeff Hornacek, Lafester Rhodes, Justus Thigpen, Victor Alexander, Fred Hoiberg, Julius Michalik, and Loren Meyer, many of whom would go on to success in the NBA.

Orr's first team (1980–81), led by junior forward Robert Estes (14.9 points per game, 6.7 rebounds per game) produced a lackluster 9–18 record. Freshman forward Ron Harris, whom Orr considered his first prominent Cyclone recruit, contributed per-game averages of 13.7 points and 5.9 rebounds.

Led by sophomore Ron Harris and freshman recruit Barry Stevens of Flint, Michigan, Orr's 1981–82 team finished the season with a 10–17 overall record and a 5–9 record in Big Eight play. Harris gave the Cyclones 13.3 points per game, while Stevens contributed 13.0 points per game. Senior Robert Estes added 10.3 points per game.

The Cyclones improved to a 13–15 overall record in the 1982–83 season, but again finished 5–9 in conference play. Many of the Cyclone faithful regard sophomore Barry Stevens' buzzer-beating shot against 10th-ranked Missouri during the 1982–83 season as the foundational example of "Hilton Magic."[10] Stevens tallied per-game averages of 16.8 points and 5.2 rebounds for the season. Ron Harris contributed 14.3 points per game.

Orr's 1983–84 team recorded the first winning season of his tenure at Iowa State—and the first winning season for Cyclone basketball since Lynn Nance's 1977–78 team finished 14–13—with a 16–13 overall mark and a 6–8 record in conference play. The Cyclones played in the 1984 National Invitation Tournament (NIT), losing to Marquette in the first round. Junior forward Barry Stevens averaged 22.2 points per game on the season. Seniors Terrence Allen and Ron Harris each averaged 11.0 points per game.

Led by senior Barry Stevens and freshman forward Jeff Grayer, natives of Flint, Michigan known at Iowa State as "The Flintstones", the 1984–85 Cyclones finished tied for third in conference play (7–7) and finished 21–13 overall. Iowa State advanced to the NCAA tournament for the first time under Orr and for just the second time in the history of the program. The Cyclones, the #13 seed in the Midwest Region, lost to #4 seed Ohio State by a score of 75–64. ISU managed to upset 10th-ranked Kansas twice during the regular season. Stevens averaged 21.7 points per game. Junior guard Jeff Hornacek recorded 12.5 points per game, and Grayer averaged 12.2 points and 6.5 rebounds on the season.

Despite the departure of two-time first-team All-Big Eight forward Stevens, the 1985–86 campaign saw First-team All-Big Eight players Grayer and Hornacek lead the Cyclones to their most successful season yet under Orr. Iowa State finished with a 22–11 overall mark and a 9–5 record and second-place finish in conference play. The Cyclones advanced to the NCAA tournament in consecutive years for the first time in school history. With wins over #10 seed Miami (Ohio) and #2 seed Michigan, the #7 seed Cyclones reached the "Sweet Sixteen" before falling to #6 seed North Carolina State, 70–66. Grayer led the Cyclones with per-game averages of 20.7 points and 6.3 rebounds. Hornacek averaged 13.7 points per game. The Cyclones upset 5th-ranked Oklahoma and 4th-ranked Kansas during the regular season.

The 1986–87 Cyclones finished with a 13–15 overall record and a 5–9 record in Big Eight play, missing postseason tournament competition for the first time in four seasons. Grayer (now a junior) averaged 22 points and 7 rebounds per game, while senior Tom Schafer averaged 18 points and 6 rebounds. Despite their struggles, the 1986–87 Cyclones managed wins over two ranked teams (15th-ranked Kansas and 12th-ranked Oklahoma).

Orr's 1987–88 Cyclones rebounded from the losing season of the prior year to finish 20–12 overall and 6–8 in conference play, including wins over #2 Purdue, #7 Iowa, #16 Kansas, and #15 Missouri. Iowa State returned to the NCAA tournament, losing 90–78 to #5 seed Georgia Tech in the first round. The Cyclones were led by senior and three-time first-team All-Big Eight forward Jeff Grayer and senior Lafester Rhodes, who averaged 25 and 22 points per game, respectively.

The 1988–89 Cyclones finished the season 17–12 overall and 7–7 in conference play, including a victory over third-ranked Missouri in Hilton Coliseum. The Cyclones advanced to their fourth NCAA tournament under Orr, losing 84–74 to #7 seed UCLA in the first round. Sophomore Victor Alexander averaged 20 points and 9 rebounds per game on the season. Sophomore Mark Baugh averaged 13.3 points per game, while Sam Mack contributed per-game averages of 11.8 points and 8.1 rebounds.

Following the loss of key players to attrition and legal problems in the offseason, the 1989–90 Cyclones finished 10–18 overall and 4–10 in conference play, marking the Cyclones' second-worst season under Orr. Only Orr's 1980–81 team, his first at ISU, had finished with a worse overall record. Junior Victor Alexander averaged 19.7 points and 8.7 rebounds per game. Senior guard Terry Woods averaged 16 points per game.

The 1990–91 season saw the Cyclones finish with an overall record of 12–19 and a conference record of 6–8. Despite their poor overall performance, the Cyclones managed wins over two ranked teams (#12 Oklahoma State and #21 Oklahoma). Senior Victor Alexander averaged 23.4 points per game and 9.0 rebounds per game, while senior Doug Collins averaged 14.3 points per game.

Iowa State's fortunes improved during the 1991–92 season, with the Cyclones finishing 21–13 overall (5–9 in conference play) and earning the #10 seed in the East Region of the NCAA tournament. The Cyclones defeated #7 seed UNC Charlotte in the opening round before losing 106–98 to #2 seed Kentucky in the round of 32. Iowa State recorded wins over #16 Iowa, #21 Oklahoma, #2 Oklahoma State, #3 Kansas, and #13 Missouri during the regular season. Junior Justus Thigpen led the team with 16.3 points per game, while junior Ron Bayless averaged 12.6 points per game. Freshmen Julius Michalik and Fred Hoiberg averaged 13.6 and 12.1 points per game, respectively.

Iowa State finished the 1992–93 season with a 20–11 overall record and a second-place 8–6 record in conference play. The Cyclones advanced to their sixth and final NCAA tournament under head coach Johnny Orr, losing in the first round to #9 seed UCLA, 81–70. Iowa State managed victories over #12 Oklahoma and #7 Kansas during the regular season. Seniors Justus Thigpen and Ron Bayless led the team with 17.6 points and 13.3 points per game, respectively. Sophomore Julius Michalik and Ames native and sophomore Fred Hoiberg contributed 12.0 and 11.6 points per game, respectively.

In the 1993–94 campaign—Orr's final season as Iowa State men's basketball head coach—the Cyclones posted a 14–13 overall mark and a 4–10 record in conference play. ISU was led by a trio of juniors—Loren Meyer, Fred Hoiberg, and Julius Michalik, each of whom averaged over 20 points per game on the season.

Orr retired from coaching in 1994. He remains the winningest coach in Iowa State history (in terms of total wins), with a win–loss record of 218–200 as the head coach of the Cyclones.

Tim Floyd era (1994–1998) edit

Following Johnny Orr's retirement, Iowa State hired Tim Floyd from the University of New Orleans to become the next men's basketball head coach. Floyd's first ISU team recorded a 23–11 overall mark and a 6–8 mark in conference play, and advanced to the second round of the 1995 NCAA tournament by beating Florida, 64–61, before losing 73–51 to #2 seed North Carolina. Senior Fred Hoiberg averaged 19.9 points per game. Seniors Loren Meyer and Julius Michalik averaged 15.7 points and 9.0 rebounds per game and 14.3 points and 5.4 rebounds per game, respectively.

Following the graduation of four starters from the 1994–95 Cyclones, Tim Floyd replenished his roster with several junior college and Division I transfers. Four of the 1995–96 team's starters had not been part of the ISU roster during the prior season, with sophomore point guard Jacy Holloway being the lone exception. Dedric Willoughby transferred to Iowa State from the University of New Orleans, and Kenny Pratt, Shawn Bankhead, and Kelvin Cato each transferred from junior colleges to play for the Cyclones. The 1995–96 Cyclones finished with a 24–9 overall record, a second-place 9–5 conference record, and the final Big Eight tournament championship—the first conference tournament championship in Cyclone basketball history—with a 56–55 victory over Roy Williams' Kansas Jayhawks. Iowa State earned the #5 seed in the Midwest Region of the NCAA tournament, the then-highest seed achieved in ISU men's basketball history. The Cyclones defeated #12 seed California 74–64 in the first round of the Tournament; Rick Majerus' #4 seed Utah Utes defeated ISU 73–67 in the second round. Dedric Willoughby averaged 20.5 points per game on the season. Kenny Pratt averaged 15.3 points and 6.5 rebounds per game, while Kelvin Cato contributed per-game averages of 9.6 points and 7.7 rebounds.

The 1996–97 Cyclones returned all five starters from the previous season's Big Eight tournament championship and NCAA Tournament team. Iowa State finished with a 22–9 overall record and a 10–6 conference mark in the inaugural season of the Big 12 Conference. The Cyclones would advance to the third NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen in Iowa State men's basketball history with victories over Illinois State and Cincinnati, before falling in a 74–73 overtime loss to UCLA. Senior Dedric Willoughby averaged 18.9 points per game for the season, and seniors Kenny Pratt and Kelvin Cato averaged 14.7 points and 6.1 rebounds per game and 11.3 points and 8.4 rebounds per game, respectively.

Tim Floyd's 1997–98 Cyclones finished the season with a 12–18 overall record and a 5–11 conference record. Freshman forward Marcus Fizer averaged 14.9 points and 6.7 rebounds per game, and Klay Edwards contributed per-game averages of 9.3 points and 7.7 rebounds. Following the season, Floyd left Iowa State to replace Phil Jackson as the head coach of the Chicago Bulls.

Larry Eustachy era (1998–2003) edit

Iowa State hired Larry Eustachy from Utah State to fill the head coaching position vacated by Tim Floyd. In his first season, Eustachy led the Cyclones to 15–15 overall record and a 6–10 record in Big 12 play. Sophomore Marcus Fizer averaged 18 points and 7.6 rebounds per game. Michael Nurse and Martin Rancik both averaged 10.3 points per game.

Following his first season, Eustachy gained the services of two guards, Jamaal Tinsley and Kantrail Horton, via transfer. The 1999–2000 Cyclones returned Marcus Fizer, Martin Rancik, Michael Nurse, and Stevie Johnson from the previous season's team. Iowa State finished the season 32–5 overall, setting a school record for wins in a season. The Cyclones finished 14–2 in conference play to earn the outright Big 12 Conference regular season championship—the sixth regular season conference title in the program's history, and the first since 1945. The Cyclones then defeated Oklahoma 70–58 in the Big 12 basketball tournament finals to win the Big 12 conference tournament championship, the second conference tournament title in ISU men's basketball history. The #2 seed Cyclones advanced to the Elite Eight of the 2000 NCAA tournament after wins over #15 seed Central Connecticut State, #7 seed Auburn, and #6 seed UCLA by 10, 19, and 24 points, respectively, but ultimately fell to Michigan State, the eventual NCAA Champion, in the regional finals by a score of 75–64 (the differential representing the Spartans' narrowest margin of victory during the tournament). It was the Cyclones' deepest NCAA Tournament run in the modern era. The Big 12 champion Cyclones were led in scoring by All-American forward and eventual fourth pick of the 2000 NBA draft Marcus Fizer, who averaged 22.8 points per game and 7.7 rebounds per game. Michael Nurse and first team All-Big 12 guard Jamaal Tinsley contributed 12.5 points and 11 points per game, respectively.

Despite the departure of Marcus Fizer to the NBA, Eustachy's 2000–01 Cyclones, led by returning senior and eventual All-American guard Jamaal Tinsley and senior Kantrail Horton, managed a 25–6 overall record and a 13–3 record in conference play, earning a second consecutive Big 12 regular season championship. Iowa State earned a #2 seed in the NCAA tournament, but the Cyclones' season ended with a stunning 58–57 defeat at the hands of #15 seed Hampton. Iowa State became just the fourth #2 seed to lose to a #15 seed since the expansion of the Tournament field to 64 teams in 1985. Jamaal Tinsley led the team in scoring with 14.3 points per game. Martin Rancik and freshman Jake Sullivan added 13.2 points per game and 11.4 points per game, respectively.

The 2001–02 Cyclones produced the worst overall men's basketball record since the 1990–91 season, finishing 12–19 overall record and 4–12 in conference play. Tyray Pearson averaged 18.7 points and 7.8 rebounds per game. Jake Sullivan and Shane Power contributed per-game averages of 16 points and 13.6 points, respectively.

The 2002–03 Cyclones finished with a 17–14 overall record and a 5–11 conference record. ISU accepted an invitation to the NIT. The Cyclones defeated Wichita State in the opening (play-in) round, but fell 54–53 to Iowa in the first round. Jake Sullivan led the team in scoring with 17 points per game. Jackson Vroman contributed 12.5 points and 9.4 rebounds per game. Junior point guard Tim Barnes averaged 11.3 points per game.

Following the 2002–03 season, pictures surfaced showing Larry Eustachy at a student party in Columbia, Missouri. Eustachy attended the party just hours after his team had lost to Missouri. Though Eustachy broke no laws, he did violate a conduct clause in his contract, which led to Eustachy's public admission of alcoholism. Eustachy subsequently resigned on May 5, 2003, receiving a $960,000 settlement from Iowa State.

Wayne Morgan & Greg McDermott era (2003–2010) edit

In 2004 Iowa State reached the NIT semifinals under Wayne Morgan with wins over Georgia, Florida State, and Marquette, before falling to Rutgers. In 2005 Iowa State reached the NCAA Tournament and defeated the University of Minnesota in a 1st-round game, losing to eventual national champion the University of North Carolina. Both teams were led by Curtis Stinson and NBA Draft pick Will Blalock. Morgan's won-lost record from 2003 to 2006 was 55–39.

Morgan was replaced by Greg McDermott, who previously coached at Northern Iowa. During McDermott's tenure, he recruited Craig Brackins, Michael Taylor, Justin Hamilton, Diante Garrett and Wes Johnson, all of whom would eventually play in the NBA. In 2010, McDermott resigned to accept the head coaching position at Creighton. From 2006 to 2010 Greg McDermott recorded a won lost record of 59–68 with no NCAA appearances. He was replaced by Fred Hoiberg.

Fred Hoiberg era (2010–2015) edit

On April 27, 2010, it was announced that Fred Hoiberg, a star at Iowa State in the early and mid-1990s, would become the 19th coach in the history of the Iowa State men's basketball program. In his first season as coach, Hoiberg led a team with only four returning players to a 16–16 record.

In his second season, Iowa State had a much deeper team with players such as Royce White, Chris Babb, and others now eligible to play after sitting out the previous year due to transfer rules. The Cyclones improved to 23–11, had 12 wins in the conference, and earned a #8 seed in the South Regional in the 2012 NCAA tournament, earning Hoiberg Big 12 Co-Coach of the Year honors. The Cyclones defeated the #9 seed and defending national champion Connecticut Huskies before falling to overall #1 seed and eventual champion Kentucky.

In Hoiberg's third season, the Cyclones earned a #10 seed and defeated #7 Notre Dame to advance to the Round of 32. It was the first year the Cyclones had been to the NCAA Tournament in back-to-back years since 2000–2001, and the first time the Cyclones had won Tournament games in successive seasons since 1996–1997.

Hoiberg entered his fourth season at Iowa State by guiding the team to its best start to a season with a 14–0 undefeated non-conference record before suffering its first loss to Big 12 rival Oklahoma, 87–82, on January 11, 2014, in Norman. The winning streak included victories over #7 Michigan and #23 Iowa, plus wins over George Mason, Akron, and Boise State to capture the Diamond Head Classic in Honolulu, Hawaii. The Cyclones entered the Big 12 men's basketball tournament with a 23–7 mark. After a close call with Kansas State in the quarterfinals, Iowa State faced Kansas in the semifinals, the only team it had not beaten at least once all year to that point. ISU emerged victorious this time, beating the Jayhawks, 94–83. Iowa State went on to beat Baylor in the Big 12 championship game, 74–65, for its first conference tournament title since 2000.

The Cyclones earned a #3 seed in the East Regional of the 2014 NCAA tournament and defeated their first opponent, North Carolina Central, 93–75. Another close call came next in the third-round game against North Carolina, with ISU prevailing, 85–83. The Cyclones advanced to the Sweet Sixteen for the first time since 2000, and lost to #7 seed Connecticut, 81–76 (the differential representing the Huskies' narrowest margin of victory during the tournament), the eventual national champion. This marked the third time in their last four trips to the NCAA Tournament that the Cyclones lost to the eventual national champions (2005 North Carolina, 2012 Kentucky, and 2014 Connecticut.)

In 2014–15, Hoiberg's Cyclones finished the season with a 25–9 overall record and 12–6 in the Big 12, finishing second to Kansas in the conference regular season. ISU defeated Texas, 69–67, Oklahoma, 67–65, and Kansas, 70–66, in the championship to win its second straight Big 12 Conference tournament championship. Invited to the NCAA Tournament for the fourth consecutive year, the #3 seed Cyclones were upset by #14 seed UAB, 60–59, in the first round. The Cyclones finished the season ranked ninth in the final AP poll. After several weeks of speculation, Fred Hoiberg was hired on June 2, 2015, by the NBA's Chicago Bulls to be their head coach.

Steve Prohm era (2015–2021) edit

On June 8, 2015, Iowa State announced that Steve Prohm, previously the head coach at Murray State for four seasons, would become the 20th head coach of the Cyclones. After the departure of Fred Hoiberg, Prohm retained Assistant Coach T.J. Otzelberger and Assistant Coach Director of Basketball Operations Micah Byars on his staff, while making the additions of Assistant Coach William Small (formerly under Prohm as an assistant at Murray State), Assistant Coach Daniyal Robinson (formerly on staff at Loyola (IL)), and Special Assistant to the Head Coach Neill Berry, who was previously on staff at High Point, and played for Prohm in college at Southeastern Louisiana. Prohm's first season was a success with a few bumps along the way. The Cyclones finished the regular season 10–8 in conference play and 21–10 overall, this included wins over No. 1 Oklahoma and No. 4 Kansas. The Cyclones then received a No. 4 seed in the NCAA tournament. After wins over Iona[11] and Arkansas–Little Rock[12] they advanced to the Sweet Sixteen where they lost to Virginia.[13] After the conclusion of the season Otzelberger accepted the head coaching job at South Dakota State,[14] Neill Berry was promoted to assistant coach.[15]

On February 4, 2017, Iowa State won at No. 3 Kansas, ending the longest active home win streak in NCAA men's college basketball at 54 games. Iowa State became the first team to beat Bill Self more than once at Allen Fieldhouse.[16] The Cyclones then proceeded to win their third conference tournament title in four years with wins over Oklahoma State, TCU and West Virginia. The Cyclones were selected as a five seed in NCAA tournament[17] where they proceeded to beat the University of Nevada in the tournament's second round.[18] Iowa State then lost to 4-seed Purdue in the round of 32, 80–76.[19]

After a down 2017–2018 season, in 2018-2019 the Cyclones went 23–12, and 9–9 in the Big 12 conference.[20] They faced Baylor in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament, winning 83–66.[20] They next beat number 1 seed Kansas State, 63–59.[20] They played Kansas in the Big 12 Championship and won 78–66.[21] They were a 6 seed in the NCAA tournament. They played Ohio State, who was an 11 seed. They lost 62–59, after Ohio State point guard Aaron Craft hit a three-pointer with 0.2 seconds remaining.[20] On March 26, Iowa State announced that Prohm's contract had been extended through 2025,[22] while sophomore forward Cameron Lard requested a transfer from the school, citing the need for a fresh start.[23]

On March 15, 2021, Prohm mutually parted ways with Iowa State University as the head men's basketball coach.[24]

T.J. Otzelberger era (2021–present) edit

On March 18, 2021, former Iowa State assistant coach T. J. Otzelberger, who spent the last 2 seasons as head coach at UNLV, was named the 21st head coach of the program. As of March 7, 2022, the Cyclones are 20–12 in Otzelberger's first season with victories over Texas Tech, Texas, Memphis, and Iowa, suffering their first loss to #1 ranked Baylor on January 1, 2022.[25]

Head coach history edit

Head coach history
Names Years Record Win pct. Conference
regular
titles
NCAA
appearances
NIT
appearances
S. Clyde Williams 1908–11 20–29 .408
Homer C. Hubbard 1911–15 21–40 .344
H. H. Walters 1915–19 27–38 .415
R. N. Berryman 1919-20 6–12 .333
Maury Kent 1920-21 10–8 .556
Bill Chandler 1921–28 40–85 .320
Louis Menze 1928–47 166–153 .520 4 1 0
Clayton Sutherland 1947–54 63–89 .414 0 0 0
Bill Strannigan 1954–59 69–46 .600 0 0 0
Glen Anderson 1959–71 142–161 .469 0 0 0
Maury John 1971–74 43–35 .551 0 0 0
Ken Trickey 1974–76 13–40 .245 0 0 0
Lynn Nance 1976–80 44–64 .407 0 0 0
Johnny Orr 1980–94 218–200 .522 0 6 1
Tim Floyd 1994–98 81–47 .633 0 3 0
Larry Eustachy 1998–03 101–59 .631 2 2 1
Wayne Morgan 2003–06 55–39 .585 0 1 1
Greg McDermott 2006–10 59–68 .465 0 0 0
Fred Hoiberg 2010–15 115–56 .673 0 4 0
Steve Prohm 2015–21 97–95 .505 0 3 0
T. J. Otzelberger 2021–Present 41–27 .603 0 2 0
All-time totals 1431–1391 .510 6 22 3

Season records edit

Championships edit

All-time records edit

Record vs. Big 12 opponents edit

Current Big 12 opponents edit

Current Big 12 Opponents
Iowa State
vs.
Overall Record in Ames at Opponent's
Venue
at Neutral Site Last 5 Meetings Last 10 Meetings Current Streak As Big 12
Opponent
Baylor BU, 23–21 ISU, 15–6 BU, 16–2 ISU, 4–1 BU, 5–0 BU, 8–2 L 5 BU, 22–19
Kansas KU, 188–66 KU, 73–40 KU, 97–16 KU, 18–10 KU, 5–0 KU, 8–2 L 6 KU, 43–16
Kansas State KSU, 144–91 tied, 54–54 KSU, 83–26 ISU, 11–7 KSU, 4–1 KSU, 6–4 W 1 ISU, 29–28
Oklahoma OU, 121–93 ISU, 55–38 OU, 68–24 OU, 15–14 OU, 4–1 OU, 6–4 W 1 OU, 23–20
Oklahoma State OSU, 69–67 ISU, 41–16 OSU, 40–19 OSU, 13–7 OSU, 4–1 OSU, 6–4 W 1 OSU, 23–19
Texas UT, 27–19 ISU, 14–6 UT, 18–2 Tied, 3–3 UT, 3–2 UT, 7–3 L 1 UT, 26–15
TCU tied, 14–14 ISU, 7–5 TCU, 7–6 TCU, 2–1 TCU, 3–2 TCU, 6–4 W 1 ISU, 12–9
Texas Tech ISU, 21–20 ISU, 14–6 TTU, 13–6 tied, 1–1 TTU, 4–1 TTU, 7–3 L 1 TTU, 20–18
West Virginia WVU, 12–9 ISU, 6–4 WVU, 8–2 ISU, 1–0 WVU, 4–1 WVU, 7–3 W 1 WVU, 12–9
*As of January 8, 2023

Former Big 12 opponents edit

Former Big 12 Opponents
Iowa State
vs.
Overall Record in Ames at Opponent's
Venue
at Neutral Site Last 5 Meetings Last 10 Meetings Current Streak
Colorado ISU, 78–70 ISU, 48–18 CU, 48–16 ISU, 14–4 CU, 3–2 tied, 5–5 W 1
Missouri MU, 150–86 ISU, 60–48 MU, 86–21 MU, 5–16 MU, 3–2 MU, 8–2 W 2
Nebraska NU, 132–102 ISU, 62–48 NU, 79–32 ISU, 8–5 ISU, 3–2 ISU, 7–3 W 1
Texas A&M TAMU, 11–9 tied, 4–4 TAMU, 6–4 tied, 1–1 TAMU, 3–2 TAMU, 8–2 L 1
*As of January 29, 2022.[5][27][28][29]

Record versus Iowa schools edit

Records vs Iowa schools as of the end of December 9, 2021.[5]

Postseason tournament history edit

Iowa State has appeared in the NCAA Tournament 21 times, with a current record of 21–22.

Seeds edit

NCAA tournament edit

Years → 1944 1985 1986 1988 1989 1992 1993 1995 1996 1997 2000 2001 2005 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2019
Seeds→ - 13 7 12 10 10 8 7 5 6 2 2 9 8 10 3 3 4 5 6
Years → 2022 2023
Seeds→ 11 6


Pageantry and traditions edit

Team name edit

The original "Cyclone" football team first played during 1895. This team earned the nickname "Cyclones" when they soundly defeated Northwestern, 36–0. The Chicago Tribune the next day headlined the story about the game "STRUCK BY A CYCLONE — It Comes From Iowa and Devastates Evanston Town." Since then the name Cyclones has been associated with Iowa State.[30]

Mascot edit

Borrowing from one of its school colors, Iowa State uses a cardinal, Cy, as its mascot instead of an actual tornado or Cyclone. Prior to the football match-up against Colorado on November 12, 2005, a tornado touched down in several places in and around Ames, Iowa, forcing fans to either weather the storm outside in the parking lot or seek shelter in the adjacent Bergstrom Indoor Training Facility or nearby Hilton Coliseum. Such an atmosphere was created that Iowa State was able to beat the favored Buffaloes, 30–16. When asked about the event, Colorado coach Gary Barnett said, "I thought we had a pretty good mascot. But when we showed up at Iowa State and they had a real tornado, that's the real deal."[31]

Rivalries edit

Iowa edit

While the Kansas Jayhawks are the Cyclone's main basketball rival, Iowa State's biggest non-conference rival is the Cyclone's in-state rival the Iowa Hawkeyes. This rivalry game counts toward the Iowa Corn Cy-Hawk Series that encompasses all athletic competitions between Iowa and Iowa State. The series began in 1909–10, but it was suspended between 1935 and 1970. As of the 2021–22 season, Iowa leads the all-time basketball series 47–28.

Hy-Vee Classic edit

In the Hy-Vee Classic, which ran from 2012 to 2018, Iowa State played in-state rivals from the Missouri Valley Conference at Wells Fargo Arena in Des Moines, on an alternating basis each December: Drake in even years and Northern Iowa in odd years.

As of the 2018–19 season, Iowa State has a 38–13 lead in the all-time series against Northern Iowa (going 2–1 in Hy-Vee Classic games).[32] Also as of that season, Iowa State has a 110–65 all-time series lead over Drake (going 4–0 in Hy-Vee Classic games).[33]

Facilities edit

 
Hilton Coliseum

Hilton Coliseum

James H. Hilton Coliseum is a 14,384-seat multi-purpose arena in Ames, Iowa. The arena, which is part of the Iowa State Center, opened in 1971. It is home to the Iowa State Cyclones basketball, wrestling, gymnastics, and volleyball teams. The building was specifically built to hold in sound with a solid concrete structure, steel doors, and a crowd that sits just a few feet from the court. During big games, players from opposing teams, as well as Iowa State, have even said that the floor has shaken due to the loudness of the crowd. A record basketball crowd of 15,000 saw the Cyclones post a 97–94 win over Iowa in 1971.

Hilton Magic is the atmosphere created by the fans at Hilton Coliseum during men's and women's basketball games. The now famous moniker for Iowa State's home basketball facility was coined by Des Moines Register writer Buck Turnbull on February 14, 1989, after the Cyclones (with Johnny Orr as coach) stunned third-ranked Missouri, 82–75. The morning newspaper included a headline that read "Hilton Magic Spells 'Upset' One More Time." In the article, Turnbull called for more Hilton Magic in an upcoming game with Oklahoma State. Cyclone fans responded and ISU defeated the Cowboys, 90–81, and a nickname was born.[31]

According to many sources,[34][35] Hilton Coliseum is considered one of the toughest venues to play in the nation.

Sukup Basketball Complex

Opened in September 2009, Iowa State's new basketball practice facility is located on two acres of land (in west Ames) that was donated by a local developer, Dickson Jensen. The $8 million, 36,000-square-foot (3,300 m2) facility, includes two separate 10,000-square-foot gymnasiums for both the men's and women's basketball programs, as well as separate lounges and locker rooms, a theater room, a medical treatment area, and coaches' offices and conference rooms.[36]

Hixson-Lied Student Success Center

The $10 million Hixson-Lied Student Success Center was designed for improving academic achievement campus-wide, with the second floor devoted specifically to student athletes. The facility was built using private contributions. Since its completion in 2006, Iowa State student athletes have dramatically improved in the classroom and now have a higher average grade point average than the rest of the student body.[37]

Roster edit

2021–22 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team
Players Coaches
Pos. # Name Height Weight Year Previous school Hometown
F 0 Tre King 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 235 lb (107 kg) Sr Georgetown Lexington, KY
G 1 Izaiah Brockington 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 196 lb (89 kg) Sr Penn State Philadelphia, PA
G 3 Tre Jackson 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 185 lb (84 kg) Jr Blythewood HS Columbia, SC
F 4 George Conditt IV 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 234 lb (106 kg) Sr Corliss HS Chicago, IL
F 5 Aljaž Kunc 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 215 lb (98 kg) Sr Washington State Ljubljana, Slovenia
G 11 Tyrese Hunter 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 178 lb (81 kg) Fr St. Catherine's Racine, WI
F 12 Robert Jones 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 245 lb (111 kg) Jr Denver Prior Lake, MN
G 15 Carter Boothe (W) 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 200 lb (91 kg) Sr Central Decatur Community School District Leon, IA
G 21 Jaden Walker 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 200 lb (91 kg) So Discovery High School Lawrenceville, GA
G 22 Gabe Kalscheur 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 198 lb (90 kg) Sr Minnesota Edina, MN
G/F 23 Tristan Enaruna 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 220 lb (100 kg) Jr Kansas Almere, Netherlands
G 25 Eric Steyer (W) 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 180 lb (82 kg) RS Sr Ames HS Ames, IA
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (S) Suspended
  • (I) Ineligible
  • (W) Walk-on

Roster

NBA draft edit

As of the conclusion of the 2020 NBA draft, 41 Cyclone players have been selected in the NBA draft in the history of the program. Of these, ten players were selected in the first round, and eleven were selected in the second round.[38][39]

NBA Draft[40]
Year Round Pick Overall Player Team
1948 N/A N/A N/A Ray Wehde Boston Celtics
1953 N/A N/A N/A Delmar Diercks New York Knicks
1957 5 3 35 Gary Thompson Minneapolis Lakers
1958 12 2 79 Don Medsker Cincinnati Royals
1961 4 5 37 Henry Whitney Syracuse Nationals
1962 9 5 74 Vince Brewer Syracuse Nationals
1963 11 2 77 Marv Straw St. Louis Hawks
1968 1 5 5 Zaid Abdul-Aziz Cincinnati Royals
1968 11 3 137 John McGonigle Chicago Bulls
1970 3 8 42 Bill Cain Portland Trail Blazers
1973 3 17 52 Martinez Denmon Boston Celtics
1973 5 8 77 Clint Harris Phoenix Suns
1973 16 3 201 Tom O'Connor Cleveland Cavaliers
1974 3 5 41 Robert Wilson Houston Rockets
1976 4 10 61 Hercle Ivy Houston Rockets
1976 10 7 165 Art Johnson New Orleans Jazz
1979 3 2 46 Andrew Parker Washington Bullets
1980 6 14 129 Dean Uthoff San Antonio Spurs
1982 10 5 210 Robert Estes Kansas City Kings
1985 2 19 43 Barry Stevens Denver Nuggets
1986 2 22 46 Jeff Hornacek Phoenix Suns
1987 3 8 54 Tom Schafer Denver Nuggets
1987 5 20 112 Sam Hill Dallas Mavericks
1988 1 13 13 Jeff Grayer Milwaukee Bucks
1991 1 17 17 Victor Alexander Golden State Warriors
1995 1 24 24 Loren Meyer Dallas Mavericks
1995 2 23 52 Fred Hoiberg Indiana Pacers
1997 1 15 15 Kelvin Cato Dallas Mavericks
2000 1 4 4 Marcus Fizer Chicago Bulls
2001 1 27 27 Jamaal Tinsley Vancouver Grizzlies
2004 2 2 31 Jackson Vroman Chicago Bulls
2006 2 30 60 Will Blalock Detroit Pistons
2008 2 25 55 Mike Taylor Portland Trail Blazers
2010 1 21 21 Craig Brackins Oklahoma City Thunder
2012 1 16 16 Royce White Houston Rockets
2016 2 20 50 Georges Niang Indiana Pacers
2016 2 28 58 Abdel Nader Boston Celtics
2017 2 21 51 Monté Morris Denver Nuggets
2019 2 16 46 Talen Horton-Tucker Orlando Magic
2019 2 24 54 Marial Shayok Philadelphia 76ers
2020 1 12 12 Tyrese Haliburton Sacramento Kings

Individual accomplishments edit

All-Time Cyclone scoring leaders edit

Points Leaders[41]
Player Years Points PPG
Jeff Grayer 1984–85 1985–86 1986–87 1987–88 2,502 20.0
Georges Niang 2012–13 2013–14 2014–15 2015–16 2,228 16.1
Barry Stevens 1981–82 1982–83 1983–84 1984–85 2,190 18.7
Fred Hoiberg 1991–92 1992–93 1993–94 1994–95 1,993 15.8
Victor Alexander 1987–88 1988–89 1989–90 1990–91 1,892 17.1

All-Time Cyclone rebounding leaders edit

Rebounds Leaders[41]
Player Years Rebounds RPG
Dean Uthoff 1977–78 1978–79 1979–80 1,233 11.4
Melvin Ejim 2010–11 2011–12 2012–13 2013–2014 1,051 7.8
Zaid Abdul-Aziz 1966–67 1967–68 1,025 13.7
Bill Cain 1968–69 1969–70 957 12.4
Jeff Grayer 1985–86 1986–87 1987–88 910 7.2

All-Time Cyclone assist leaders edit

 
Diante Garrett
Assists Leaders[41]
Player Years Assists APG
Monté Morris 2013–14 2014–15 2015–16 2016–17 765 5.5
Jeff Hornacek 1983–84 1984–85 1985–86 665 5.4
Diante Garrett 2007–08 2008–09 2009–10 2010–11 611 4.8
Gary Thompkins 1985–86 1986–87 1987–88 600 5.0
Jacy Holloway 1994–95 1995–96 1996–97 592 4.7

Cyclone All-Americans edit

All-Americans
Year Player Type
1935 Jack Flemming Third Team All-American
1937 Waldo Wegner Second Team All-American
1957 Gary Thompson Consensus Second Team All-American
1968 Zaid Abdul-Aziz Third Team All-American
1978 Dean Uthoff
Andrew Parker
Honorable Mention All-American
Honorable Mention All-American
1984 Barry Stevens Honorable Mention All-American
1985 Barry Stevens Honorable Mention All-American
1986 Jeff Hornacek
Jeff Grayer
Honorable Mention All-American
Honorable Mention All-American
1987 Jeff Grayer Honorable Mention All-American
1988 Jeff Grayer Second Team All-American
1995 Fred Hoiberg Honorable Mention All-American
1996 Dedric Willoughby Honorable Mention All-American
1997 Dedric Willoughby Honorable Mention All-American
2000 Marcus Fizer Consensus First Team All-American
2001 Jamaal Tinsley Consensus Second Team All-American
2005 Curtis Stinson Honorable Mention All-American
2009 Craig Brackins Honorable Mention All-American
2012 Royce White Honorable Mention All-American
2014 Melvin Ejim
DeAndre Kane
Second Team All-American
Third Team All-American
2015 Georges Niang Third Team All-American
2016 Georges Niang Consensus Second Team All-American
2017 Monté Morris Third Team All-American

First Team All-Conference selections edit

Retired numbers edit

Iowa State has retired seven numbers to date:

 
 
Fltr: Fred Hoiberg, and Zaid_Abdul Aziz, whose numbers were retired by Iowa State
Iowa State Cyclones retired numbers
No. Player Position Career No.ret. Ref.
14 Jeff Hornacek SG / PG 1982–1986 1991 [42]
Waldo Wegner C 1932–1935 1992 [43]
20 Gary Thompson G 1954–1957 1957
32 Fred Hoiberg SG 1991–1995 1997 [44]
35 Zaid Abdul-Aziz PF / C 1965–1968 1968 [45]
Barry Stevens SG / SF 1981–1985 2008 [46]
44 Jeff Grayer SF / SG 1984–1988 1988 [47]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Iowa State University Style Guide" (PDF). Trademark.IAState.edu. February 20, 2020. Retrieved March 14, 2022.
  2. ^ a b "Big Eight Conference Men's Basketball Championship History Sponsored by the Big Eight Conference (1908–1996)". Bigeightsports.com. Retrieved June 12, 2015.
  3. ^ . Cyclones.com. Archived from the original on January 12, 2012.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on October 23, 2013. Retrieved June 15, 2013.
  5. ^ a b c (PDF). Cyclones.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 23, 2015. Retrieved June 12, 2015.
  6. ^ "Hilton Coliseum Celebrates Its 40th Anniversary". Iowa State University Athletics.
  7. ^ a b c Writer, JIM SULLIVAN, Courier Sports. "Sully Saturday: Mac's story parallels that of Maury John's". Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ a b "Register Sports Hall of Fame Database - Maury John - DesMoinesRegister.com". data.desmoinesregister.com.
  9. ^ "Maury John, 54, Coached At Drake and Iowa State". October 17, 1974 – via NYTimes.com.
  10. ^ "Emcee of Hilton magic dies: ISU mourns loss of a true deliverer". Desmoinesregister.com. Retrieved April 27, 2007.[dead link]
  11. ^ Baumgaertner, Gabriel. "Iowa State survives late push from Iona".
  12. ^ "Little Rock vs. Iowa State – Game Summary – March 19, 2016 – ESPN".
  13. ^ "Iowa State vs. Virginia – Game Summary – March 25, 2016 – ESPN".
  14. ^ "Report: Iowa State assistant T.J. Otzelberger heading to South Dakota State". The Des Moines Register.
  15. ^ "Iowa State's Prohm promotes Neill Berry to replace Otzelberger". The Des Moines Register.
  16. ^ "Jeff Borzello on Twitter".
  17. ^ "Fifth-seeded Iowa State opens NCAA Tourney play against Nevada in Milwaukee". Des Moines Register. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
  18. ^ "Iowa State storms past Nevada in first round of NCAA Tournament". Des Moines Register. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
  19. ^ "Iowa State's massive NCAA rally falls just shy vs. Purdue". Des Moines Register. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
  20. ^ a b c d "2018-19 Men's Basketball Schedule". cyclones.com. Retrieved March 27, 2019.
  21. ^ "Men's Basketball vs Kansas on 3/16/2019 - Box Score". cyclones.com. Retrieved March 27, 2019.
  22. ^ Kerkhoff, Blair (March 26, 2019). "Iowa State extends Steve Prohm's contract. Does Fred Hoiberg wind up at Nebraska?". www.kansascity.com. Retrieved March 26, 2019.
  23. ^ "Cameron Lard to Transfer". www.widerightnattylite.com. March 26, 2019. Retrieved March 27, 2019.
  24. ^ "Prohm out as Iowa State men's basketball coach".
  25. ^ Hines, Travis (March 18, 2021). "Iowa State hires UNLV's T.J. Otzelberger to replace Steve Prohm as Cyclones basketball coach". Des Moines Register. Retrieved March 18, 2021.
  26. ^ a b c (PDF). Iowa State University. 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 25, 2009.
  27. ^ "Team Series Results" (PDF). Big12sports.com. Retrieved July 1, 2020.
  28. ^ "Game & Season Records" (PDF). Big12sports.com. Retrieved June 12, 2015.
  29. ^ "Game & Season Records" (PDF). Big12sports.com. Retrieved June 12, 2015.
  30. ^ . Archived from the original on April 21, 2013.
  31. ^ a b . Iowa State University. 2008. Archived from the original on March 29, 2012.
  32. ^ 2014–15 media guide December 13, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, pp. 101–102.
  33. ^ 2014–15 media guide December 13, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, p. 96.
  34. ^ "Cameron Indoor Stadium is great, but the best in the land is ..." CBS Sports. 2001.
  35. ^ "10 Programs Primed to Rise this Season". ESPN. 2010.
  36. ^ "Basketball Practice Facility". Cyclones.com. 2008.
  37. ^ . Iowa State University. Archived from the original on February 17, 2012.
  38. ^ "NBA Draft Picks From". Basketball-Reference.com.
  39. ^ (PDF). Cyclones.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 12, 2011. Retrieved June 12, 2015.
  40. ^ "NBA Draft Picks From - Basketball-Reference.com".
  41. ^ a b c "Records" (PDF). sidearm.sites.s3.amazonaws.com.
  42. ^ Hornacek bio at cyclones.com
  43. ^ Wegner bio at cyclones.com
  44. ^ Hoiberg bio at cyclones.com
  45. ^ Aziz bio at cyclones.com
  46. ^ Stevens bio at cyclones.com
  47. ^ Grayer bio at cyclones.com

External links edit

  • Official website  

iowa, state, cyclones, basketball, team, represents, iowa, state, university, competes, conference, ncaa, division, cyclones, play, their, home, games, hilton, coliseum, iowa, state, campus, iowa, state, cyclones2023, teamuniversityiowa, state, universityfirst. The Iowa State Cyclones men s basketball team represents Iowa State University ISU and competes in the Big 12 Conference of NCAA Division I The Cyclones play their home games at Hilton Coliseum on Iowa State s campus Iowa State Cyclones2023 24 Iowa State Cyclones men s basketball teamUniversityIowa State UniversityFirst season1907All time record1431 1390 507 Head coachT J Otzelberger 3rd season ConferenceBig 12LocationAmes IowaArenaHilton Coliseum Capacity 14 267 NicknameCyclonesStudent sectionCyclone AlleyColorsCardinal and gold 1 UniformsHome Away AlternateNCAA tournament Final Four1944NCAA tournament Elite Eight1944 2000NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen1986 1997 2000 2014 2016 2022NCAA tournament round of 321986 1992 1995 1996 1997 2000 2005 2012 2013 2014 2016 2017 2022NCAA tournament appearances1944 1985 1986 1988 1989 1992 1993 1995 1996 1997 2000 2001 2005 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2019 2022 2023Conference tournament champions1996 2000 2014 2015 2017 2019Conference regular season champions1935 1941 1944 1945 2000 2001 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1908 1980 1 2 Johnny Orr era 1980 1994 1 3 Tim Floyd era 1994 1998 1 4 Larry Eustachy era 1998 2003 1 5 Wayne Morgan amp Greg McDermott era 2003 2010 1 6 Fred Hoiberg era 2010 2015 1 7 Steve Prohm era 2015 2021 1 8 T J Otzelberger era 2021 present 2 Head coach history 3 Season records 4 Championships 5 All time records 5 1 Record vs Big 12 opponents 5 1 1 Current Big 12 opponents 5 1 2 Former Big 12 opponents 5 2 Record versus Iowa schools 5 3 Postseason tournament history 5 4 NIT results 5 5 Seeds 5 5 1 NCAA tournament 6 Pageantry and traditions 6 1 Team name 6 2 Mascot 6 3 Rivalries 6 3 1 Iowa 6 4 Hy Vee Classic 7 Facilities 8 Roster 9 NBA draft 10 Individual accomplishments 10 1 All Time Cyclone scoring leaders 10 2 All Time Cyclone rebounding leaders 10 3 All Time Cyclone assist leaders 10 4 Cyclone All Americans 10 5 First Team All Conference selections 10 6 Retired numbers 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksHistory editEarly years 1908 1980 edit From 1907 to 1928 the Cyclones played in the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association 2 managing a few winning records in conference but no championships 2 In 1929 the Cyclones moved to the Big Six Conference and named Louis Menze as head coach Over the next 19 years Menze would lead the Cyclones to four conference championships their only seasons with a winning conference record in this period Two of these teams earned consideration for the then eight team NCAA tournament the 1941 squad lost in a pre Tournament qualifying game to Creighton Three years later the 1944 team beat Pepperdine to reach the semifinals in the tournament proper before losing its next game against eventual champion Utah good for a spot in history as a Final Four participant After Menze s last conference win in 1945 and subsequent resignation as coach in 1947 he would remain Iowa State s athletic director until 1958 having taken the position in 1945 3 the Cyclones floated between the bottom and the middle of the conference for decades their main claim to fame being two wins of the conference s annual Holiday tournament played between Christmas and New Year s Day in Kansas City in 1955 and 1959 Neither these tournament wins nor their regular season performances qualified the Cyclones for postseason play in the 33 years between Menze s and Johnny Orr s stints in the head coaching position However the 1957 Cyclones were ranked 3 in the nation after handing Wilt Chamberlain s 1 Kansas its first loss nbsp Gary ThompsonGary Thompson outscored Chamberlain while Don Medsker held Chamberlain to 17 points the 2nd lowest of his career and then hit the game winner at the buzzer No 3 remains the school s highest ever national ranking 4 From the introduction of the Big Eight s postseason tournament in 1977 until Johnny Orr s fifth season in 1985 the Cyclones did not advance past their first game 5 In 1971 Maury John left Drake University to move to Iowa State John led Drake to the 1969 NCAA Final Four and the Elite Eight in 1970 NCAA tournament and 1971 NCAA tournament John inherited an Iowa State team that was 5 21 the previous season John was excited about the new Hilton Coliseum and led Iowa State to a 12 14 record in 1971 1972 and a 16 10 record in 1972 1973 a 15 year best On Dec 2 1971 in the first game played at Hilton Coliseum John led the Cyclones to a victory over Arizona 71 54 Said Cyclone announcer Eric Heft a player for Coach John The place was sold out for the Arizona game and we doubled the capacity of season tickets from the season before We didn t have all the fanfare you have today but it was packed It was my first game and Maury John s first game as the head Cyclone coach as well 6 In the 1973 74 season Iowa State was off to a 4 1 start But John sat out the remainder of the 1973 74 season after a cancer diagnosis Assistant Gus Guydon 11 10 finished the season 7 In October 1973 John had seen a doctor after having health concerns Two months later on the day his Iowa State team lost at Drake John was told he had an inoperable malignant tumor at the base of his esophagus It was a bolt out of the blue for someone who lived his life free of smoking or drinking His son John said later There was high stress But he was always healthy 8 John was optimistic about returning to Iowa State in 1974 75 but his health worsened and he resigned on July 30 1974 John said It s going to be hard for me not to be on that bench I won t have to sweat out all those games down on the floor But truthfully I d rather be down there sweating them out 8 7 John died on October 15 1974 at the age of 55 During a 28 year coaching career John had a 528 214 record 9 7 John s departure sent the Cyclones into free fall In the next six years Iowa State would only have one winning season bottoming out in 1975 76 with a 3 24 record still the worst in school history Johnny Orr era 1980 1994 edit nbsp Jeff HornacekJohnny Orr came to Iowa State from Michigan in 1980 Iowa State s athletics director had called Orr to inquire about Michigan assistant Bill Frieder When Orr learned of the salary Iowa State would offer Frieder he negotiated the Iowa State head coaching job for himself Orr is credited with building Hilton Magic and laying the foundation for Iowa State s success in men s basketball A number of Cyclone greats played for Orr including Jeff Grayer Barry Stevens walk on Jeff Hornacek Lafester Rhodes Justus Thigpen Victor Alexander Fred Hoiberg Julius Michalik and Loren Meyer many of whom would go on to success in the NBA Orr s first team 1980 81 led by junior forward Robert Estes 14 9 points per game 6 7 rebounds per game produced a lackluster 9 18 record Freshman forward Ron Harris whom Orr considered his first prominent Cyclone recruit contributed per game averages of 13 7 points and 5 9 rebounds Led by sophomore Ron Harris and freshman recruit Barry Stevens of Flint Michigan Orr s 1981 82 team finished the season with a 10 17 overall record and a 5 9 record in Big Eight play Harris gave the Cyclones 13 3 points per game while Stevens contributed 13 0 points per game Senior Robert Estes added 10 3 points per game The Cyclones improved to a 13 15 overall record in the 1982 83 season but again finished 5 9 in conference play Many of the Cyclone faithful regard sophomore Barry Stevens buzzer beating shot against 10th ranked Missouri during the 1982 83 season as the foundational example of Hilton Magic 10 Stevens tallied per game averages of 16 8 points and 5 2 rebounds for the season Ron Harris contributed 14 3 points per game Orr s 1983 84 team recorded the first winning season of his tenure at Iowa State and the first winning season for Cyclone basketball since Lynn Nance s 1977 78 team finished 14 13 with a 16 13 overall mark and a 6 8 record in conference play The Cyclones played in the 1984 National Invitation Tournament NIT losing to Marquette in the first round Junior forward Barry Stevens averaged 22 2 points per game on the season Seniors Terrence Allen and Ron Harris each averaged 11 0 points per game Led by senior Barry Stevens and freshman forward Jeff Grayer natives of Flint Michigan known at Iowa State as The Flintstones the 1984 85 Cyclones finished tied for third in conference play 7 7 and finished 21 13 overall Iowa State advanced to the NCAA tournament for the first time under Orr and for just the second time in the history of the program The Cyclones the 13 seed in the Midwest Region lost to 4 seed Ohio State by a score of 75 64 ISU managed to upset 10th ranked Kansas twice during the regular season Stevens averaged 21 7 points per game Junior guard Jeff Hornacek recorded 12 5 points per game and Grayer averaged 12 2 points and 6 5 rebounds on the season Despite the departure of two time first team All Big Eight forward Stevens the 1985 86 campaign saw First team All Big Eight players Grayer and Hornacek lead the Cyclones to their most successful season yet under Orr Iowa State finished with a 22 11 overall mark and a 9 5 record and second place finish in conference play The Cyclones advanced to the NCAA tournament in consecutive years for the first time in school history With wins over 10 seed Miami Ohio and 2 seed Michigan the 7 seed Cyclones reached the Sweet Sixteen before falling to 6 seed North Carolina State 70 66 Grayer led the Cyclones with per game averages of 20 7 points and 6 3 rebounds Hornacek averaged 13 7 points per game The Cyclones upset 5th ranked Oklahoma and 4th ranked Kansas during the regular season The 1986 87 Cyclones finished with a 13 15 overall record and a 5 9 record in Big Eight play missing postseason tournament competition for the first time in four seasons Grayer now a junior averaged 22 points and 7 rebounds per game while senior Tom Schafer averaged 18 points and 6 rebounds Despite their struggles the 1986 87 Cyclones managed wins over two ranked teams 15th ranked Kansas and 12th ranked Oklahoma Orr s 1987 88 Cyclones rebounded from the losing season of the prior year to finish 20 12 overall and 6 8 in conference play including wins over 2 Purdue 7 Iowa 16 Kansas and 15 Missouri Iowa State returned to the NCAA tournament losing 90 78 to 5 seed Georgia Tech in the first round The Cyclones were led by senior and three time first team All Big Eight forward Jeff Grayer and senior Lafester Rhodes who averaged 25 and 22 points per game respectively The 1988 89 Cyclones finished the season 17 12 overall and 7 7 in conference play including a victory over third ranked Missouri in Hilton Coliseum The Cyclones advanced to their fourth NCAA tournament under Orr losing 84 74 to 7 seed UCLA in the first round Sophomore Victor Alexander averaged 20 points and 9 rebounds per game on the season Sophomore Mark Baugh averaged 13 3 points per game while Sam Mack contributed per game averages of 11 8 points and 8 1 rebounds Following the loss of key players to attrition and legal problems in the offseason the 1989 90 Cyclones finished 10 18 overall and 4 10 in conference play marking the Cyclones second worst season under Orr Only Orr s 1980 81 team his first at ISU had finished with a worse overall record Junior Victor Alexander averaged 19 7 points and 8 7 rebounds per game Senior guard Terry Woods averaged 16 points per game The 1990 91 season saw the Cyclones finish with an overall record of 12 19 and a conference record of 6 8 Despite their poor overall performance the Cyclones managed wins over two ranked teams 12 Oklahoma State and 21 Oklahoma Senior Victor Alexander averaged 23 4 points per game and 9 0 rebounds per game while senior Doug Collins averaged 14 3 points per game Iowa State s fortunes improved during the 1991 92 season with the Cyclones finishing 21 13 overall 5 9 in conference play and earning the 10 seed in the East Region of the NCAA tournament The Cyclones defeated 7 seed UNC Charlotte in the opening round before losing 106 98 to 2 seed Kentucky in the round of 32 Iowa State recorded wins over 16 Iowa 21 Oklahoma 2 Oklahoma State 3 Kansas and 13 Missouri during the regular season Junior Justus Thigpen led the team with 16 3 points per game while junior Ron Bayless averaged 12 6 points per game Freshmen Julius Michalik and Fred Hoiberg averaged 13 6 and 12 1 points per game respectively Iowa State finished the 1992 93 season with a 20 11 overall record and a second place 8 6 record in conference play The Cyclones advanced to their sixth and final NCAA tournament under head coach Johnny Orr losing in the first round to 9 seed UCLA 81 70 Iowa State managed victories over 12 Oklahoma and 7 Kansas during the regular season Seniors Justus Thigpen and Ron Bayless led the team with 17 6 points and 13 3 points per game respectively Sophomore Julius Michalik and Ames native and sophomore Fred Hoiberg contributed 12 0 and 11 6 points per game respectively In the 1993 94 campaign Orr s final season as Iowa State men s basketball head coach the Cyclones posted a 14 13 overall mark and a 4 10 record in conference play ISU was led by a trio of juniors Loren Meyer Fred Hoiberg and Julius Michalik each of whom averaged over 20 points per game on the season Orr retired from coaching in 1994 He remains the winningest coach in Iowa State history in terms of total wins with a win loss record of 218 200 as the head coach of the Cyclones Tim Floyd era 1994 1998 edit Following Johnny Orr s retirement Iowa State hired Tim Floyd from the University of New Orleans to become the next men s basketball head coach Floyd s first ISU team recorded a 23 11 overall mark and a 6 8 mark in conference play and advanced to the second round of the 1995 NCAA tournament by beating Florida 64 61 before losing 73 51 to 2 seed North Carolina Senior Fred Hoiberg averaged 19 9 points per game Seniors Loren Meyer and Julius Michalik averaged 15 7 points and 9 0 rebounds per game and 14 3 points and 5 4 rebounds per game respectively Following the graduation of four starters from the 1994 95 Cyclones Tim Floyd replenished his roster with several junior college and Division I transfers Four of the 1995 96 team s starters had not been part of the ISU roster during the prior season with sophomore point guard Jacy Holloway being the lone exception Dedric Willoughby transferred to Iowa State from the University of New Orleans and Kenny Pratt Shawn Bankhead and Kelvin Cato each transferred from junior colleges to play for the Cyclones The 1995 96 Cyclones finished with a 24 9 overall record a second place 9 5 conference record and the final Big Eight tournament championship the first conference tournament championship in Cyclone basketball history with a 56 55 victory over Roy Williams Kansas Jayhawks Iowa State earned the 5 seed in the Midwest Region of the NCAA tournament the then highest seed achieved in ISU men s basketball history The Cyclones defeated 12 seed California 74 64 in the first round of the Tournament Rick Majerus 4 seed Utah Utes defeated ISU 73 67 in the second round Dedric Willoughby averaged 20 5 points per game on the season Kenny Pratt averaged 15 3 points and 6 5 rebounds per game while Kelvin Cato contributed per game averages of 9 6 points and 7 7 rebounds The 1996 97 Cyclones returned all five starters from the previous season s Big Eight tournament championship and NCAA Tournament team Iowa State finished with a 22 9 overall record and a 10 6 conference mark in the inaugural season of the Big 12 Conference The Cyclones would advance to the third NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen in Iowa State men s basketball history with victories over Illinois State and Cincinnati before falling in a 74 73 overtime loss to UCLA Senior Dedric Willoughby averaged 18 9 points per game for the season and seniors Kenny Pratt and Kelvin Cato averaged 14 7 points and 6 1 rebounds per game and 11 3 points and 8 4 rebounds per game respectively Tim Floyd s 1997 98 Cyclones finished the season with a 12 18 overall record and a 5 11 conference record Freshman forward Marcus Fizer averaged 14 9 points and 6 7 rebounds per game and Klay Edwards contributed per game averages of 9 3 points and 7 7 rebounds Following the season Floyd left Iowa State to replace Phil Jackson as the head coach of the Chicago Bulls Larry Eustachy era 1998 2003 edit Iowa State hired Larry Eustachy from Utah State to fill the head coaching position vacated by Tim Floyd In his first season Eustachy led the Cyclones to 15 15 overall record and a 6 10 record in Big 12 play Sophomore Marcus Fizer averaged 18 points and 7 6 rebounds per game Michael Nurse and Martin Rancik both averaged 10 3 points per game Following his first season Eustachy gained the services of two guards Jamaal Tinsley and Kantrail Horton via transfer The 1999 2000 Cyclones returned Marcus Fizer Martin Rancik Michael Nurse and Stevie Johnson from the previous season s team Iowa State finished the season 32 5 overall setting a school record for wins in a season The Cyclones finished 14 2 in conference play to earn the outright Big 12 Conference regular season championship the sixth regular season conference title in the program s history and the first since 1945 The Cyclones then defeated Oklahoma 70 58 in the Big 12 basketball tournament finals to win the Big 12 conference tournament championship the second conference tournament title in ISU men s basketball history The 2 seed Cyclones advanced to the Elite Eight of the 2000 NCAA tournament after wins over 15 seed Central Connecticut State 7 seed Auburn and 6 seed UCLA by 10 19 and 24 points respectively but ultimately fell to Michigan State the eventual NCAA Champion in the regional finals by a score of 75 64 the differential representing the Spartans narrowest margin of victory during the tournament It was the Cyclones deepest NCAA Tournament run in the modern era The Big 12 champion Cyclones were led in scoring by All American forward and eventual fourth pick of the 2000 NBA draft Marcus Fizer who averaged 22 8 points per game and 7 7 rebounds per game Michael Nurse and first team All Big 12 guard Jamaal Tinsley contributed 12 5 points and 11 points per game respectively Despite the departure of Marcus Fizer to the NBA Eustachy s 2000 01 Cyclones led by returning senior and eventual All American guard Jamaal Tinsley and senior Kantrail Horton managed a 25 6 overall record and a 13 3 record in conference play earning a second consecutive Big 12 regular season championship Iowa State earned a 2 seed in the NCAA tournament but the Cyclones season ended with a stunning 58 57 defeat at the hands of 15 seed Hampton Iowa State became just the fourth 2 seed to lose to a 15 seed since the expansion of the Tournament field to 64 teams in 1985 Jamaal Tinsley led the team in scoring with 14 3 points per game Martin Rancik and freshman Jake Sullivan added 13 2 points per game and 11 4 points per game respectively The 2001 02 Cyclones produced the worst overall men s basketball record since the 1990 91 season finishing 12 19 overall record and 4 12 in conference play Tyray Pearson averaged 18 7 points and 7 8 rebounds per game Jake Sullivan and Shane Power contributed per game averages of 16 points and 13 6 points respectively The 2002 03 Cyclones finished with a 17 14 overall record and a 5 11 conference record ISU accepted an invitation to the NIT The Cyclones defeated Wichita State in the opening play in round but fell 54 53 to Iowa in the first round Jake Sullivan led the team in scoring with 17 points per game Jackson Vroman contributed 12 5 points and 9 4 rebounds per game Junior point guard Tim Barnes averaged 11 3 points per game Following the 2002 03 season pictures surfaced showing Larry Eustachy at a student party in Columbia Missouri Eustachy attended the party just hours after his team had lost to Missouri Though Eustachy broke no laws he did violate a conduct clause in his contract which led to Eustachy s public admission of alcoholism Eustachy subsequently resigned on May 5 2003 receiving a 960 000 settlement from Iowa State Wayne Morgan amp Greg McDermott era 2003 2010 edit In 2004 Iowa State reached the NIT semifinals under Wayne Morgan with wins over Georgia Florida State and Marquette before falling to Rutgers In 2005 Iowa State reached the NCAA Tournament and defeated the University of Minnesota in a 1st round game losing to eventual national champion the University of North Carolina Both teams were led by Curtis Stinson and NBA Draft pick Will Blalock Morgan s won lost record from 2003 to 2006 was 55 39 Morgan was replaced by Greg McDermott who previously coached at Northern Iowa During McDermott s tenure he recruited Craig Brackins Michael Taylor Justin Hamilton Diante Garrett and Wes Johnson all of whom would eventually play in the NBA In 2010 McDermott resigned to accept the head coaching position at Creighton From 2006 to 2010 Greg McDermott recorded a won lost record of 59 68 with no NCAA appearances He was replaced by Fred Hoiberg Fred Hoiberg era 2010 2015 edit On April 27 2010 it was announced that Fred Hoiberg a star at Iowa State in the early and mid 1990s would become the 19th coach in the history of the Iowa State men s basketball program In his first season as coach Hoiberg led a team with only four returning players to a 16 16 record In his second season Iowa State had a much deeper team with players such as Royce White Chris Babb and others now eligible to play after sitting out the previous year due to transfer rules The Cyclones improved to 23 11 had 12 wins in the conference and earned a 8 seed in the South Regional in the 2012 NCAA tournament earning Hoiberg Big 12 Co Coach of the Year honors The Cyclones defeated the 9 seed and defending national champion Connecticut Huskies before falling to overall 1 seed and eventual champion Kentucky In Hoiberg s third season the Cyclones earned a 10 seed and defeated 7 Notre Dame to advance to the Round of 32 It was the first year the Cyclones had been to the NCAA Tournament in back to back years since 2000 2001 and the first time the Cyclones had won Tournament games in successive seasons since 1996 1997 Hoiberg entered his fourth season at Iowa State by guiding the team to its best start to a season with a 14 0 undefeated non conference record before suffering its first loss to Big 12 rival Oklahoma 87 82 on January 11 2014 in Norman The winning streak included victories over 7 Michigan and 23 Iowa plus wins over George Mason Akron and Boise State to capture the Diamond Head Classic in Honolulu Hawaii The Cyclones entered the Big 12 men s basketball tournament with a 23 7 mark After a close call with Kansas State in the quarterfinals Iowa State faced Kansas in the semifinals the only team it had not beaten at least once all year to that point ISU emerged victorious this time beating the Jayhawks 94 83 Iowa State went on to beat Baylor in the Big 12 championship game 74 65 for its first conference tournament title since 2000 The Cyclones earned a 3 seed in the East Regional of the 2014 NCAA tournament and defeated their first opponent North Carolina Central 93 75 Another close call came next in the third round game against North Carolina with ISU prevailing 85 83 The Cyclones advanced to the Sweet Sixteen for the first time since 2000 and lost to 7 seed Connecticut 81 76 the differential representing the Huskies narrowest margin of victory during the tournament the eventual national champion This marked the third time in their last four trips to the NCAA Tournament that the Cyclones lost to the eventual national champions 2005 North Carolina 2012 Kentucky and 2014 Connecticut In 2014 15 Hoiberg s Cyclones finished the season with a 25 9 overall record and 12 6 in the Big 12 finishing second to Kansas in the conference regular season ISU defeated Texas 69 67 Oklahoma 67 65 and Kansas 70 66 in the championship to win its second straight Big 12 Conference tournament championship Invited to the NCAA Tournament for the fourth consecutive year the 3 seed Cyclones were upset by 14 seed UAB 60 59 in the first round The Cyclones finished the season ranked ninth in the final AP poll After several weeks of speculation Fred Hoiberg was hired on June 2 2015 by the NBA s Chicago Bulls to be their head coach Steve Prohm era 2015 2021 edit On June 8 2015 Iowa State announced that Steve Prohm previously the head coach at Murray State for four seasons would become the 20th head coach of the Cyclones After the departure of Fred Hoiberg Prohm retained Assistant Coach T J Otzelberger and Assistant Coach Director of Basketball Operations Micah Byars on his staff while making the additions of Assistant Coach William Small formerly under Prohm as an assistant at Murray State Assistant Coach Daniyal Robinson formerly on staff at Loyola IL and Special Assistant to the Head Coach Neill Berry who was previously on staff at High Point and played for Prohm in college at Southeastern Louisiana Prohm s first season was a success with a few bumps along the way The Cyclones finished the regular season 10 8 in conference play and 21 10 overall this included wins over No 1 Oklahoma and No 4 Kansas The Cyclones then received a No 4 seed in the NCAA tournament After wins over Iona 11 and Arkansas Little Rock 12 they advanced to the Sweet Sixteen where they lost to Virginia 13 After the conclusion of the season Otzelberger accepted the head coaching job at South Dakota State 14 Neill Berry was promoted to assistant coach 15 On February 4 2017 Iowa State won at No 3 Kansas ending the longest active home win streak in NCAA men s college basketball at 54 games Iowa State became the first team to beat Bill Self more than once at Allen Fieldhouse 16 The Cyclones then proceeded to win their third conference tournament title in four years with wins over Oklahoma State TCU and West Virginia The Cyclones were selected as a five seed in NCAA tournament 17 where they proceeded to beat the University of Nevada in the tournament s second round 18 Iowa State then lost to 4 seed Purdue in the round of 32 80 76 19 After a down 2017 2018 season in 2018 2019 the Cyclones went 23 12 and 9 9 in the Big 12 conference 20 They faced Baylor in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament winning 83 66 20 They next beat number 1 seed Kansas State 63 59 20 They played Kansas in the Big 12 Championship and won 78 66 21 They were a 6 seed in the NCAA tournament They played Ohio State who was an 11 seed They lost 62 59 after Ohio State point guard Aaron Craft hit a three pointer with 0 2 seconds remaining 20 On March 26 Iowa State announced that Prohm s contract had been extended through 2025 22 while sophomore forward Cameron Lard requested a transfer from the school citing the need for a fresh start 23 On March 15 2021 Prohm mutually parted ways with Iowa State University as the head men s basketball coach 24 T J Otzelberger era 2021 present edit On March 18 2021 former Iowa State assistant coach T J Otzelberger who spent the last 2 seasons as head coach at UNLV was named the 21st head coach of the program As of March 7 2022 the Cyclones are 20 12 in Otzelberger s first season with victories over Texas Tech Texas Memphis and Iowa suffering their first loss to 1 ranked Baylor on January 1 2022 25 Head coach history editHead coach history Names Years Record Win pct Conferenceregulartitles NCAAappearances NITappearancesS Clyde Williams 1908 11 20 29 408 Homer C Hubbard 1911 15 21 40 344 H H Walters 1915 19 27 38 415 R N Berryman 1919 20 6 12 333 Maury Kent 1920 21 10 8 556 Bill Chandler 1921 28 40 85 320 Louis Menze 1928 47 166 153 520 4 1 0Clayton Sutherland 1947 54 63 89 414 0 0 0Bill Strannigan 1954 59 69 46 600 0 0 0Glen Anderson 1959 71 142 161 469 0 0 0Maury John 1971 74 43 35 551 0 0 0Ken Trickey 1974 76 13 40 245 0 0 0Lynn Nance 1976 80 44 64 407 0 0 0Johnny Orr 1980 94 218 200 522 0 6 1Tim Floyd 1994 98 81 47 633 0 3 0Larry Eustachy 1998 03 101 59 631 2 2 1Wayne Morgan 2003 06 55 39 585 0 1 1Greg McDermott 2006 10 59 68 465 0 0 0Fred Hoiberg 2010 15 115 56 673 0 4 0Steve Prohm 2015 21 97 95 505 0 3 0T J Otzelberger 2021 Present 41 27 603 0 2 0All time totals 1431 1391 510 6 22 3Season records editSeason Records Season Overall Conference1908 1 1 1 0 North 1909 4 10 4 4 North 1910 9 7 6 2 North 1911 6 11 6 81912 8 7 4 4 North 1913 3 13 2 4 North 1914 4 13 4 10 North 1915 6 7 5 51916 4 12 2 81917 12 6 6 41918 6 9 1 61919 5 11 3 81920 6 12 2 101921 10 8 6 81922 10 8 8 81923 9 9 8 81924 2 16 2 141925 2 15 1 151926 4 14 3 111927 9 9 5 71928 3 15 3 151929 8 7 4 61930 9 8 5 51931 8 8 4 61932 9 6 4 61933 6 10 2 81934 6 11 2 81935 13 3 8 21936 8 8 3 71937 3 15 0 101938 6 9 2 8 Season Records Season Overall Conference1939 8 9 5 51940 9 9 2 81941 15 4 7 31942 11 6 5 51943 7 9 2 81944 14 4 9 11945 11 5 8 21946 8 8 5 51947 7 14 5 51948 14 9 6 61949 8 14 3 91950 6 17 2 101951 9 12 3 91952 10 11 4 81953 10 11 5 71954 6 15 2 101955 11 10 4 81956 18 5 8 41957 16 7 6 61958 15 8 8 41959 9 16 4 101960 15 9 7 71961 14 11 8 61962 13 12 8 61963 14 11 8 61964 10 16 5 91965 9 16 6 81966 11 14 6 81967 13 12 6 81968 12 13 8 61969 14 12 8 6 Season Records Season Overall Conference1970 12 14 5 91971 5 21 2 121972 12 14 5 91973 16 10 7 71974 15 11 6 81975 10 16 4 101976 3 24 3 111977 8 19 3 111978 14 13 9 51979 11 16 8 61980 11 16 5 91981 9 18 2 121982 10 17 5 91983 13 15 5 91984 16 13 6 81985 21 13 7 71986 22 11 9 51987 13 15 5 91988 20 12 6 81989 17 12 7 71990 10 18 4 101991 12 19 6 81992 21 13 5 91993 20 11 8 61994 14 13 4 101995 23 11 6 81996 24 9 9 51997 22 9 10 61998 12 18 5 111999 15 15 6 102000 32 5 14 2 Season Records Season Overall Conference2001 25 6 13 32002 12 19 4 122003 17 14 5 112004 20 13 7 92005 19 12 9 72006 16 14 6 102007 15 16 6 102008 14 18 4 122009 15 17 4 122010 15 17 4 122011 16 16 3 132012 23 11 12 62013 23 12 11 72014 28 8 11 72015 25 9 12 62016 23 12 10 82017 24 11 12 62018 13 18 4 142019 23 12 9 92020 12 20 5 132021 2 22 0 182022 22 13 7 112023 19 14 9 9Total 1412 1376 26 National champion Postseason invitational champion Conference regular season champion Conference regular season and conference tournament champion Division regular season champion Division regular season and conference tournament champion Conference tournament championChampionships edit Titles Type YearConference Championships4 Big Eight Conference regular season Title 1935 1941 1944 19452 Big Eight Conference Holiday tournament championship 1955 19591 Big Eight Conference tournament championship 19962 Big 12 Conference regular season Title 2000 20015 Big 12 Conference tournament championship 2000 2014 2015 2017 201914 TotalAll time records edit Record vs Big 12 opponents edit Current Big 12 opponents edit Current Big 12 Opponents Iowa Statevs Overall Record in Ames at Opponent sVenue at Neutral Site Last 5 Meetings Last 10 Meetings Current Streak As Big 12OpponentBaylor BU 23 21 ISU 15 6 BU 16 2 ISU 4 1 BU 5 0 BU 8 2 L 5 BU 22 19Kansas KU 188 66 KU 73 40 KU 97 16 KU 18 10 KU 5 0 KU 8 2 L 6 KU 43 16Kansas State KSU 144 91 tied 54 54 KSU 83 26 ISU 11 7 KSU 4 1 KSU 6 4 W 1 ISU 29 28Oklahoma OU 121 93 ISU 55 38 OU 68 24 OU 15 14 OU 4 1 OU 6 4 W 1 OU 23 20Oklahoma State OSU 69 67 ISU 41 16 OSU 40 19 OSU 13 7 OSU 4 1 OSU 6 4 W 1 OSU 23 19Texas UT 27 19 ISU 14 6 UT 18 2 Tied 3 3 UT 3 2 UT 7 3 L 1 UT 26 15TCU tied 14 14 ISU 7 5 TCU 7 6 TCU 2 1 TCU 3 2 TCU 6 4 W 1 ISU 12 9Texas Tech ISU 21 20 ISU 14 6 TTU 13 6 tied 1 1 TTU 4 1 TTU 7 3 L 1 TTU 20 18West Virginia WVU 12 9 ISU 6 4 WVU 8 2 ISU 1 0 WVU 4 1 WVU 7 3 W 1 WVU 12 9 As of January 8 2023Former Big 12 opponents edit Former Big 12 Opponents Iowa Statevs Overall Record in Ames at Opponent sVenue at Neutral Site Last 5 Meetings Last 10 Meetings Current StreakColorado ISU 78 70 ISU 48 18 CU 48 16 ISU 14 4 CU 3 2 tied 5 5 W 1Missouri MU 150 86 ISU 60 48 MU 86 21 MU 5 16 MU 3 2 MU 8 2 W 2Nebraska NU 132 102 ISU 62 48 NU 79 32 ISU 8 5 ISU 3 2 ISU 7 3 W 1Texas A amp M TAMU 11 9 tied 4 4 TAMU 6 4 tied 1 1 TAMU 3 2 TAMU 8 2 L 1 As of January 29 2022 5 27 28 29 Record versus Iowa schools edit Records vs Iowa schools as of the end of December 9 2021 5 Record versus Iowa Schools Rival Record W L Win Camp Dodge 1 1 500Coe College 11 3 786Cornell College 8 2 800Dubuque 1 0 1 000Drake 110 65 629Fort Dodge 1 0 1 000Fort Dodge YMCA 1 0 1 000Grinnell College 32 20 615 Record versus Iowa Schools Rival Record W L Win Iowa 28 47 373Iowa Pre Flight 2 3 400Loras College 1 0 1 000Luther College 1 0 1 000Morningside College 7 0 1 000Northern Iowa 38 13 745Ottumwa Naval 2 3 400Simpson College 16 1 941 Postseason tournament history edit Iowa State has appeared in the NCAA Tournament 21 times with a current record of 21 22 NCAA Tournament History 26 Season Seed Eliminated Round Teams Defeated Defeated By1944 Final Four Pepperdine Utah1985 13 1st Round 4 Ohio State1986 7 Sweet 16 10 Miami Ohio 2 Michigan 6 North Carolina State1988 12 1st Round 5 Georgia Tech1989 10 1st Round 7 UCLA1992 10 2nd Round 7 UNC Charlotte 2 Kentucky1993 8 1st Round 9 UCLA1995 7 2nd Round 10 Florida 2 North Carolina1996 5 2nd Round 12 California 4 Utah1997 6 Sweet 16 11 Illinois State 3 Cincinnati 2 UCLA2000 2 Elite Eight 15 Central Connecticut State 7 Auburn 6 UCLA 1 Michigan State2001 2 1st Round 15 Hampton2005 9 2nd Round 8 Minnesota 1 North Carolina2012 8 2nd Round 9 Connecticut 1 Kentucky2013 10 2nd Round 7 Notre Dame 2 Ohio State2014 3 Sweet 16 14 North Carolina Central 6 North Carolina 7 Connecticut2015 3 1st Round 14 UAB2016 4 Sweet 16 13 Iona 12 Arkansas Little Rock 1 Virginia2017 5 2nd Round 12 Nevada 4 Purdue2019 6 1st Round 11 Ohio State2022 11 Sweet 16 6 LSU 3 Wisconsin 10 Miami FL 2023 6 1st Round 11 PittsburghNCAA Tournament Record 21 22NIT results edit Iowa State has appeared in the National Invitational Tournament three times The Cyclones have a record of 4 3 26 Year Round Opponent Result1984 First Round Marquette L 53 732003 Opening RoundFirst Round Wichita StateIowa W 76 65L 53 542004 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinals GeorgiaFlorida StateMarquetteRutgers W 82 74W 62 59W 77 69 L 81 84 Seeds edit NCAA tournament edit Years 1944 1985 1986 1988 1989 1992 1993 1995 1996 1997 2000 2001 2005 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2019Seeds 13 7 12 10 10 8 7 5 6 2 2 9 8 10 3 3 4 5 6Years 2022 2023Seeds 11 6 Pageantry and traditions edit Team name edit The original Cyclone football team first played during 1895 This team earned the nickname Cyclones when they soundly defeated Northwestern 36 0 The Chicago Tribune the next day headlined the story about the game STRUCK BY A CYCLONE It Comes From Iowa and Devastates Evanston Town Since then the name Cyclones has been associated with Iowa State 30 Mascot edit Main article Cy the Cardinal Borrowing from one of its school colors Iowa State uses a cardinal Cy as its mascot instead of an actual tornado or Cyclone Prior to the football match up against Colorado on November 12 2005 a tornado touched down in several places in and around Ames Iowa forcing fans to either weather the storm outside in the parking lot or seek shelter in the adjacent Bergstrom Indoor Training Facility or nearby Hilton Coliseum Such an atmosphere was created that Iowa State was able to beat the favored Buffaloes 30 16 When asked about the event Colorado coach Gary Barnett said I thought we had a pretty good mascot But when we showed up at Iowa State and they had a real tornado that s the real deal 31 Rivalries edit Iowa edit Main article Iowa Iowa State rivalry Basketball series While the Kansas Jayhawks are the Cyclone s main basketball rival Iowa State s biggest non conference rival is the Cyclone s in state rival the Iowa Hawkeyes This rivalry game counts toward the Iowa Corn Cy Hawk Series that encompasses all athletic competitions between Iowa and Iowa State The series began in 1909 10 but it was suspended between 1935 and 1970 As of the 2021 22 season Iowa leads the all time basketball series 47 28 Hy Vee Classic edit Main article Iowa Big Four men s college basketball In the Hy Vee Classic which ran from 2012 to 2018 Iowa State played in state rivals from the Missouri Valley Conference at Wells Fargo Arena in Des Moines on an alternating basis each December Drake in even years and Northern Iowa in odd years As of the 2018 19 season Iowa State has a 38 13 lead in the all time series against Northern Iowa going 2 1 in Hy Vee Classic games 32 Also as of that season Iowa State has a 110 65 all time series lead over Drake going 4 0 in Hy Vee Classic games 33 Facilities edit nbsp Hilton ColiseumHilton Coliseum Main article Hilton Coliseum See also Iowa State Center James H Hilton Coliseum is a 14 384 seat multi purpose arena in Ames Iowa The arena which is part of the Iowa State Center opened in 1971 It is home to the Iowa State Cyclones basketball wrestling gymnastics and volleyball teams The building was specifically built to hold in sound with a solid concrete structure steel doors and a crowd that sits just a few feet from the court During big games players from opposing teams as well as Iowa State have even said that the floor has shaken due to the loudness of the crowd A record basketball crowd of 15 000 saw the Cyclones post a 97 94 win over Iowa in 1971 Hilton Magic is the atmosphere created by the fans at Hilton Coliseum during men s and women s basketball games The now famous moniker for Iowa State s home basketball facility was coined by Des Moines Register writer Buck Turnbull on February 14 1989 after the Cyclones with Johnny Orr as coach stunned third ranked Missouri 82 75 The morning newspaper included a headline that read Hilton Magic Spells Upset One More Time In the article Turnbull called for more Hilton Magic in an upcoming game with Oklahoma State Cyclone fans responded and ISU defeated the Cowboys 90 81 and a nickname was born 31 According to many sources 34 35 Hilton Coliseum is considered one of the toughest venues to play in the nation Sukup Basketball ComplexOpened in September 2009 Iowa State s new basketball practice facility is located on two acres of land in west Ames that was donated by a local developer Dickson Jensen The 8 million 36 000 square foot 3 300 m2 facility includes two separate 10 000 square foot gymnasiums for both the men s and women s basketball programs as well as separate lounges and locker rooms a theater room a medical treatment area and coaches offices and conference rooms 36 Hixson Lied Student Success CenterThe 10 million Hixson Lied Student Success Center was designed for improving academic achievement campus wide with the second floor devoted specifically to student athletes The facility was built using private contributions Since its completion in 2006 Iowa State student athletes have dramatically improved in the classroom and now have a higher average grade point average than the rest of the student body 37 Roster edit 2021 22 Iowa State Cyclones men s basketball teamPlayers CoachesPos Name Height Weight Year Previous school HometownF 0 Tre King 6 ft 7 in 2 01 m 235 lb 107 kg Sr Georgetown Lexington KYG 1 Izaiah Brockington 6 ft 4 in 1 93 m 196 lb 89 kg Sr Penn State Philadelphia PAG 3 Tre Jackson 6 ft 0 in 1 83 m 185 lb 84 kg Jr Blythewood HS Columbia SCF 4 George Conditt IV 6 ft 9 in 2 06 m 234 lb 106 kg Sr Corliss HS Chicago ILF 5 Aljaz Kunc 6 ft 8 in 2 03 m 215 lb 98 kg Sr Washington State Ljubljana SloveniaG 11 Tyrese Hunter 6 ft 0 in 1 83 m 178 lb 81 kg Fr St Catherine s Racine WIF 12 Robert Jones 6 ft 9 in 2 06 m 245 lb 111 kg Jr Denver Prior Lake MNG 15 Carter Boothe W 6 ft 0 in 1 83 m 200 lb 91 kg Sr Central Decatur Community School District Leon IAG 21 Jaden Walker 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 200 lb 91 kg So Discovery High School Lawrenceville GAG 22 Gabe Kalscheur 6 ft 4 in 1 93 m 198 lb 90 kg Sr Minnesota Edina MNG F 23 Tristan Enaruna 6 ft 8 in 2 03 m 220 lb 100 kg Jr Kansas Almere NetherlandsG 25 Eric Steyer W 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 180 lb 82 kg RS Sr Ames HS Ames IA Head coachT J Otzelberger UW Whitewater Assistant coach es Kyle Green Hamline Nate Schmidt Denison J R Blount Loyola Chicago Legend C Team captain S Suspended I Ineligible W Walk on nbsp Injured nbsp Current redshirtRosterNBA draft edit As of the conclusion of the 2020 NBA draft 41 Cyclone players have been selected in the NBA draft in the history of the program Of these ten players were selected in the first round and eleven were selected in the second round 38 39 NBA Draft 40 Year Round Pick Overall Player Team1948 N A N A N A Ray Wehde Boston Celtics1953 N A N A N A Delmar Diercks New York Knicks1957 5 3 35 Gary Thompson Minneapolis Lakers1958 12 2 79 Don Medsker Cincinnati Royals1961 4 5 37 Henry Whitney Syracuse Nationals1962 9 5 74 Vince Brewer Syracuse Nationals1963 11 2 77 Marv Straw St Louis Hawks1968 1 5 5 Zaid Abdul Aziz Cincinnati Royals1968 11 3 137 John McGonigle Chicago Bulls1970 3 8 42 Bill Cain Portland Trail Blazers1973 3 17 52 Martinez Denmon Boston Celtics1973 5 8 77 Clint Harris Phoenix Suns1973 16 3 201 Tom O Connor Cleveland Cavaliers1974 3 5 41 Robert Wilson Houston Rockets1976 4 10 61 Hercle Ivy Houston Rockets1976 10 7 165 Art Johnson New Orleans Jazz1979 3 2 46 Andrew Parker Washington Bullets1980 6 14 129 Dean Uthoff San Antonio Spurs1982 10 5 210 Robert Estes Kansas City Kings1985 2 19 43 Barry Stevens Denver Nuggets1986 2 22 46 Jeff Hornacek Phoenix Suns1987 3 8 54 Tom Schafer Denver Nuggets1987 5 20 112 Sam Hill Dallas Mavericks1988 1 13 13 Jeff Grayer Milwaukee Bucks1991 1 17 17 Victor Alexander Golden State Warriors1995 1 24 24 Loren Meyer Dallas Mavericks1995 2 23 52 Fred Hoiberg Indiana Pacers1997 1 15 15 Kelvin Cato Dallas Mavericks2000 1 4 4 Marcus Fizer Chicago Bulls2001 1 27 27 Jamaal Tinsley Vancouver Grizzlies2004 2 2 31 Jackson Vroman Chicago Bulls2006 2 30 60 Will Blalock Detroit Pistons2008 2 25 55 Mike Taylor Portland Trail Blazers2010 1 21 21 Craig Brackins Oklahoma City Thunder2012 1 16 16 Royce White Houston Rockets2016 2 20 50 Georges Niang Indiana Pacers2016 2 28 58 Abdel Nader Boston Celtics2017 2 21 51 Monte Morris Denver Nuggets2019 2 16 46 Talen Horton Tucker Orlando Magic2019 2 24 54 Marial Shayok Philadelphia 76ers2020 1 12 12 Tyrese Haliburton Sacramento KingsIndividual accomplishments edit All Time Cyclone scoring leaders edit Points Leaders 41 Player Years Points PPGJeff Grayer 1984 85 1985 86 1986 87 1987 88 2 502 20 0Georges Niang 2012 13 2013 14 2014 15 2015 16 2 228 16 1Barry Stevens 1981 82 1982 83 1983 84 1984 85 2 190 18 7Fred Hoiberg 1991 92 1992 93 1993 94 1994 95 1 993 15 8Victor Alexander 1987 88 1988 89 1989 90 1990 91 1 892 17 1All Time Cyclone rebounding leaders edit Rebounds Leaders 41 Player Years Rebounds RPGDean Uthoff 1977 78 1978 79 1979 80 1 233 11 4Melvin Ejim 2010 11 2011 12 2012 13 2013 2014 1 051 7 8Zaid Abdul Aziz 1966 67 1967 68 1 025 13 7Bill Cain 1968 69 1969 70 957 12 4Jeff Grayer 1985 86 1986 87 1987 88 910 7 2All Time Cyclone assist leaders edit nbsp Diante GarrettAssists Leaders 41 Player Years Assists APGMonte Morris 2013 14 2014 15 2015 16 2016 17 765 5 5Jeff Hornacek 1983 84 1984 85 1985 86 665 5 4Diante Garrett 2007 08 2008 09 2009 10 2010 11 611 4 8Gary Thompkins 1985 86 1986 87 1987 88 600 5 0Jacy Holloway 1994 95 1995 96 1996 97 592 4 7Cyclone All Americans edit All Americans Year Player Type1935 Jack Flemming Third Team All American1937 Waldo Wegner Second Team All American1957 Gary Thompson Consensus Second Team All American1968 Zaid Abdul Aziz Third Team All American1978 Dean UthoffAndrew Parker Honorable Mention All AmericanHonorable Mention All American1984 Barry Stevens Honorable Mention All American1985 Barry Stevens Honorable Mention All American1986 Jeff HornacekJeff Grayer Honorable Mention All AmericanHonorable Mention All American1987 Jeff Grayer Honorable Mention All American1988 Jeff Grayer Second Team All American1995 Fred Hoiberg Honorable Mention All American1996 Dedric Willoughby Honorable Mention All American1997 Dedric Willoughby Honorable Mention All American2000 Marcus Fizer Consensus First Team All American2001 Jamaal Tinsley Consensus Second Team All American2005 Curtis Stinson Honorable Mention All American2009 Craig Brackins Honorable Mention All American2012 Royce White Honorable Mention All American2014 Melvin EjimDeAndre Kane Second Team All AmericanThird Team All American2015 Georges Niang Third Team All American2016 Georges Niang Consensus Second Team All American2017 Monte Morris Third Team All AmericanFirst Team All Conference selections edit First Team All Conference Season Conference Player Position1910 11 MVIAA Joe Brown F1912 13 MVIAA Hans Pfund C1922 23 MVIAA Pinky Greene F1928 29 Big Six Lester Lande F1930 31 Big Six Jack Roadcap F1933 341934 35 Big Six Waldo Wegner F1936 37 Big Six Jack Flemming F1937 38 Big Six Bob Blahnik F1938 39 Big Six Bob Harris F1940 41 Big Six Al BudolfsonGordan Nicholas FC1941 42 Big Six Al BudolfsonCarol Schneider GG1943 44 Big Six Ray WehdePrice Brookfield FC1944 45 Big Six Bob MottBill Block CF1945 46 Big Six Bob Peterson G1946 47 Big Six Ray Wehde F1951 52 Big Seven Jim Stange F1952 53 Big Seven Delmar Diercks C1955 561956 57 Big Seven Gary Thompson G1957 58 Big Eight John Crawford F1960 61 Big Eight Henry Whitney G1962 63 Big Eight Marv Straw G1964 65 Big Eight Al Koch F1965 661966 671967 68 Big Eight Zaid Abdul Aziz C First Team All Conference Season Conference Player Position1968 691969 70 Big Eight Bill Cain C1974 75 Big Eight Hercle Ivy G1977 78 Big Eight Dean Uthoff C1978 79 Big Eight Andrew Parker F1983 841984 85 Big Eight Barry Stevens F1985 86 Big Eight Jeff GrayerJeff Hornacek FG1986 871987 88 Big Eight Jeff Grayer F1988 89 Big Eight Victor Alexander C1990 91 Big Eight Victor Alexander C1992 93 Big Eight Justus Thigpen G1994 95 Big Eight Fred Hoiberg G1995 961996 97 Big Eight Dedric Willoughby G1998 99 Big 12 Marcus Fizer F1999 00 Big 12 Marcus FizerJamaal Tinsley FG2000 01 Big 12 Jamaal Tinsley G2005 06 Big 12 Curtis Stinson G2008 09 Big 12 Craig Brackins F2011 12 Big 12 Royce White F2013 14 Big 12 Melvin EjimDeAndre Kane FG2014 152015 16 Big 12 Georges Niang F2016 17 Big 12 Monte Morris G2018 19 Big 12 Marial Shayok G2021 22 Big 12 Izaiah Brockington G Retired numbers edit Main article List of NCAA men s basketball retired numbers Iowa State has retired seven numbers to date nbsp nbsp Fltr Fred Hoiberg and Zaid Abdul Aziz whose numbers were retired by Iowa State Iowa State Cyclones retired numbersNo Player Position Career No ret Ref 14 Jeff Hornacek SG PG 1982 1986 1991 42 Waldo Wegner C 1932 1935 1992 43 20 Gary Thompson G 1954 1957 195732 Fred Hoiberg SG 1991 1995 1997 44 35 Zaid Abdul Aziz PF C 1965 1968 1968 45 Barry Stevens SG SF 1981 1985 2008 46 44 Jeff Grayer SF SG 1984 1988 1988 47 See also edit Iowa State Cyclones women s basketballReferences edit Iowa State University Style Guide PDF Trademark IAState edu February 20 2020 Retrieved March 14 2022 a b Big Eight Conference Men s Basketball Championship History Sponsored by the Big Eight Conference 1908 1996 Bigeightsports com Retrieved June 12 2015 Louis Menze Hall of Fame Class of 1998 Cyclones com Archived from the original on January 12 2012 Basketball coaches are generally hardheaded men who 01 28 57 SI Vault Archived from the original on October 23 2013 Retrieved June 15 2013 a b c Iowa State Cyclone Basketball All Time Results PDF Cyclones com Archived from the original PDF on September 23 2015 Retrieved June 12 2015 Hilton Coliseum Celebrates Its 40th Anniversary Iowa State University Athletics a b c Writer JIM SULLIVAN Courier Sports Sully Saturday Mac s story parallels that of Maury John s Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Register Sports Hall of Fame Database Maury John DesMoinesRegister com data desmoinesregister com Maury John 54 Coached At Drake and Iowa State October 17 1974 via NYTimes com Emcee of Hilton magic dies ISU mourns loss of a true deliverer Desmoinesregister com Retrieved April 27 2007 dead link Baumgaertner Gabriel Iowa State survives late push from Iona Little Rock vs Iowa State Game Summary March 19 2016 ESPN Iowa State vs Virginia Game Summary March 25 2016 ESPN Report Iowa State assistant T J Otzelberger heading to South Dakota State The Des Moines Register Iowa State s Prohm promotes Neill Berry to replace Otzelberger The Des Moines Register Jeff Borzello on Twitter Fifth seeded Iowa State opens NCAA Tourney play against Nevada in Milwaukee Des Moines Register Retrieved June 26 2017 Iowa State storms past Nevada in first round of NCAA Tournament Des Moines Register Retrieved June 26 2017 Iowa State s massive NCAA rally falls just shy vs Purdue Des Moines Register Retrieved June 26 2017 a b c d 2018 19 Men s Basketball Schedule cyclones com Retrieved March 27 2019 Men s Basketball vs Kansas on 3 16 2019 Box Score cyclones com Retrieved March 27 2019 Kerkhoff Blair March 26 2019 Iowa State extends Steve Prohm s contract Does Fred Hoiberg wind up at Nebraska www kansascity com Retrieved March 26 2019 Cameron Lard to Transfer www widerightnattylite com March 26 2019 Retrieved March 27 2019 Prohm out as Iowa State men s basketball coach Hines Travis March 18 2021 Iowa State hires UNLV s T J Otzelberger to replace Steve Prohm as Cyclones basketball coach Des Moines Register Retrieved March 18 2021 a b c Iowa State Media Guide Records PDF Iowa State University 2008 Archived from the original PDF on May 25 2009 Team Series Results PDF Big12sports com Retrieved July 1 2020 Game amp Season Records PDF Big12sports com Retrieved June 12 2015 Game amp Season Records PDF Big12sports com Retrieved June 12 2015 A Brief View of Athletic Beginnings at ISU Archived from the original on April 21 2013 a b Iowa State Traditions Iowa State University 2008 Archived from the original on March 29 2012 2014 15 media guide Archived December 13 2014 at the Wayback Machine pp 101 102 2014 15 media guide Archived December 13 2014 at the Wayback Machine p 96 Cameron Indoor Stadium is great but the best in the land is CBS Sports 2001 10 Programs Primed to Rise this Season ESPN 2010 Basketball Practice Facility Cyclones com 2008 Hixson Lied Iowa State University Archived from the original on February 17 2012 NBA Draft Picks From Basketball Reference com Iowa State Cyclone Basketball NCAA Tournament Wins PDF Cyclones com Archived from the original PDF on October 12 2011 Retrieved June 12 2015 NBA Draft Picks From Basketball Reference com a b c Records PDF sidearm sites s3 amazonaws com Hornacek bio at cyclones com Wegner bio at cyclones com Hoiberg bio at cyclones com Aziz bio at cyclones com Stevens bio at cyclones com Grayer bio at cyclones com External links edit Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iowa State Cyclones men 27s basketball amp oldid 1182027017, 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