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***WBB: No. 8 Iowa State Announces Top-10 2023 Signing Class***

Iowa State Media Relations

AMES, Iowa – For Iowa State women’s basketball, making history is happening even beyond the court. Head coach Bill Fennelly and his staff announced on Wednesday the highest-rated signing class in program history, with five student-athletes on board to join the Cyclones in 2022-23.

The new additions are forward Jalynn Bristow from Wichita Falls, Texas, forward Addy Brown from Derby, Kansas, center Audi Crooks from Algona, guard Arianna Jackson from Des Moines and guard Kelsey Joens from Iowa City. This quintet ranks at No. 10 in the 2023 ESPNw/HoopGurlz Recruiting Rankings at the time of publication.

“This is a great day for Iowa State women’s basketball,” Fennelly said. “We are adding five great young people and their families to our Cyclone family. Our staff knew that the 2023 class would be an important one, and they have delivered with one of the highest-rated ones in our program’s history. We add five players who will provide versatility at both ends of the floor. They are already a very connected group, and are very excited to get to campus, and play in front of the best fans in the country.”

Jalynn Bristow – Forward, 6-2, Wichita Falls, Texas (Holliday)

Bristow checks in at No. 47 in the ESPNw/Hoop Gurlz Class of 2023 recruit rankings. In three seasons at Rider High School, Bristow put up 2,060 points at 22.4 per game and grabbed 1,139 rebounds at 12.4 per game, earning All-State, All-Region and District MVP all three seasons. Bristow will play her senior season at Holliday High School. Teaming up with fellow future Cyclone Addy Brown, Bristow helped lead the 17U Team Lex Nation team to a National Title at the Adidas 3SSB Tournament this past summer.

Coach Fennelly Says…

“Jalynn is rated as one of the best players in Texas and nationally. She has great length and has a skill set that allows her to impact the game in a variety of ways at both ends of the floor. JB fits our style of play perfectly, and helps to fill what we will lose in our frontcourt.”

Addy Brown – Forward, 6-2, Derby, Kan. (Derby)

Brown checks in as Iowa State’s highest-rated signee on the ESPNw/Hoop Gurlz Class of 2023 rankings at No. 31. A two-time First Team All-State honoree and conference MVP and three-time all-conference honoree, Brown helped lead Derby to a Kansas Class 6A runner-up, averaging 14.5 points per game and 9.3 rebounds per game while shooting over 60 percent from the field. With fellow future Cyclone Jalynn Bristow, Brown helped lead the 17U Team Lex Nation team to a National Title at the Adidas 3SSB Tournament this past summer.

Coach Fennelly Says…

“Addy is coming off a great summer and was recognized as one of the best players in the country. She is a very talented offensive player who can score at all levels and, in our mind, is one of the best passers we have seen in this cycle. She is another frontcourt player we will be counting on with what we graduate.”

Audi Crooks – Center, 6-3, Algona, Iowa (Bishop Garrigan)

Crooks is at No. 57 in the ESPNw Hoop Gurlz Class of 2023 recruit rankings and is wrapping up a decorated prep career across multiple sports. On the basketball court, Crooks is the three-time Iowa Class 1A Player of the Year and has led Bishop Garrigan to the Class 1A state title game three times, claiming the title last season. Individually, Crooks has racked up 1,845 points at 71.1 percent shooting. She also has 955 rebounds and 287 blocks across three seasons. In track and field, she has won the last two Class 1A shot put state titles, breaking the division record last year with a throw of 45-1. In volleyball, Crooks was a three-time all-conference honoree and led the Golden Bears with 254 kills and 70 blocks this past season.

Coach Fennelly Says…

“Audi will help us fill a major need in the post next season. She is a very skilled low-post player who has great hands and footwork. Audi is a player who has gained national attention for her play, and it is exciting that she is from our state. I know our fans will love to see Audi in a Cyclone uniform.”

Arianna Jackson – Guard, 5-9, Des Moines, Iowa(Roosevelt)

Jackson, a four-star guard, has been a three-time All-State honoree (earning First Team honors in 2022) at Roosevelt High School in Des Moines. She helped lead the Roughriders to last year’s Class 5A State Tournament for the first time since 2008. A three-time all-conference recipient, Jackson has racked up 787 career points and 301 rebounds, leading the state in 3-point shooting percentage as a sophomore at 64.3 percent. Jackson is another multi-sport star, having made the state championships in cross country and track and field three times. Jackson is a legacy Cyclone, with her father Hez playing football for the Cyclones from 1995-99 and brother Kendell currently a linebacker with ISU.

Coach Fennelly Says…

“’AJ’ was born to be a Cyclone; her parents are Iowa State graduates, her father and brother played football at Iowa State. Arianna is someone who has excelled in the classroom and on the court while showing great leadership traits. She can play the point or off-the-ball and is a willing defender.”

Kelsey Joens – Guard, 5-10, Iowa City, Iowa (West Liberty)

Another member of the Joens family is headed to Iowa State and will ensure Joens family continuity in the Iowa State program following older sister Ashley’s graduation following this season. The fourth Joens sister to play Division I basketball, Kelsey earned 2022 First Team All-State honors and was a three-time all-conference selection at Iowa City High. In helping lead City High to the state tournament twice, Joens racked up 1,056 points across three seasons, including 124 3-pointers. She will play her senior season at West Liberty High School for oldest sister Courtney, who took over as head coach over the summer.

Coach Fennelly Says…

“We are excited to add another member of the Joens family to our program. Kelsey is a dynamic scorer who can score at all three levels. She can play across the perimeter and that will allow her to fill many roles on our team. Kelsey has tremendous work ethic and love for the game.”

A couple of Cyclone items for sale

Posting with permission from Bill. I know that this is not Craigslist, but these 2 things are very specifically Cyclone.

1) Jack Trice themed Pendleton wool stadium blanket. Brand new with tags. See the photos. Purchased new and never found a good place to display. Some of the plastic wrap it came in is torn, but it is mint. Was $265 new. Make me a legitimate offer and I will sell it to you. I can ship it if needed.


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2) Nice "Cyclone Legacy" print by Doug Knutson. Some very cool images captured of the 3 sports. Love it, but it is too big for my spot I planned to hang it. It is 24" x 43" . Make me an offer.


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Message me here or toddsmothers@gmail.com I live in Johnston.

Brand new Bracketology

This is kind of cool....we are up to a 3 seed. As much as we are frustrated (myself included), the outside world does give us a lot of props considering we are 17-9. There are 3 9-loss teams in the Top 25 coming into the week....us, TCU and Creighton.

And somehow Iowa....after falling to an 8 seed...gets Des Moines.

MBB: Toughness

Considering everything that's happened over the last month. This is sincerely one of the most surprising (at least to me) wins in recent memory. And to do it in this fashion? I didn't for the life of me see this coming. Credit to the ENTIRE team and coaching staff.

Side note: Can we keep Tre King and Demarion in the rotation please? They need minutes. We are so much better with them on the floor. Less Kunc, more athleticism.

***WRESTLING: Iowa State Sends Five to Big 12 Finals***

Iowa State Media Relations

TULSA, Okla. – Iowa State sent five of its six semifinalists through to the finals Saturday night inside the BOK Center. The Cyclones' five finalists are their most since ISU had six in 2015, when the tournament was still a four-team format.

Zach Redding (133), Paniro Johnson (149), David Carr (165), Marcus Coleman (184) and Sam Schuyler (285) were all victorious in their semifinal bouts. Redding, Johnson, Coleman and Schuyler are all first-time finalists while Carr will wrestle in his fourth conference title match.

Carr will aim to become Iowa State's second four-time Big 12 champion in school history and the first since 2002. Oklahoma State's Daton Fix (133), along with Carr, are both vying for their fourth Big 12 titles tomorrow night. If both succeed, they will become the 10th and 11th wrestlers, respectively, to win four championships in the Big 12 era (1997-pres.).

Combined, Iowa State wrestlers went 12-3 in Session II as three more Cyclones punched their tickets to the 2023 NCAA Championships. Coleman, along with Casey Swiderski (141) and Jason Kraisser (157) earned an automatic spot in the national tournament, bringing ISU's total to eight.

Iowa State finished the day in second place with 112 team points trailing only Missouri (135). Oklahoma State sits in third place with 102.5 points.

How it Happened
Redding used a first-period takedown and locked up a riding time point as he defeated Northern Iowa's Kyle Biscoglia, 4-1, in a 133-pound semifinal. Johnson made it two finalists in as many tries after he picked up a tight, 3-2, decision over Northern Iowa's Colin Realbuto.

Carr defeated West Virginia's Peyton Hall, 3-1, in the 165-pound semifinal match. The pair were tied, 1-1, late in the match but Carr secured a takedown with 27 seconds remaining to win it.

At 184 pounds, Coleman punched his ticket to nationals with a 5-3 decision over Oklahoma State's Travis Wittlate. Schuyler became Iowa State's fifth finalist with his second consecutive victory over Missouri's Zach Elam, 3-2.

Yonger Bastida was Iowa State's only semifinalist to lose as he dropped a 6-0 decision to Rocky Elam of Missouri.

The Cyclones started session two strong with Julien Broderson, Corey Cabanban, Swiderski and Kraisser going a combined 5-0 to advance into the Consolation Quarterfinals, where all four faced win-and-they're-in qualifying matches for the NCAA Championships.

Swiderski secured his ticket back to Tulsa after grinding out a 3-1 decision over Wyoming's Job Greenwood. Kraisser became Iowa State's 300th individual to qualify for the NCAA Championships with an upset over No. 3 Jarrett Jacques of Missouri, 5-2, in the consolation quarterfinals.

Cabanban (125) and Broderson (174) both fell one win short of an automatic NCAA Championship bid and will wrestle in the seventh-place match tomorrow.

Up Next
Session III begins at noon Sunday with consolation semifinals and placing matches. The session will be streamed live on Big 12 Now on ESPN+.

Jon Wilner’s latest

In an article published this morning, Wilner of the (San Jose) Mercury News provides his final predictions on the PAC-12:
  • Expects the situation to be resolved by end of March
  • Using a sports gambling metaphor, he said for months he viewed Pac-12 survival as a 5.5 point favorite over the conference’s demise. He now has that spread down to 5 with it decreasing a half point with each week that passes without a resolution.
  • States there’s value in the 7:30 Pacific Time time slot, and not just on Saturday night. Pac can fill that need for Friday as well with no competition
  • Ultimately, he predicts a media package with ESPN and Amazon and/or Apple that will be within 10% of the Big 12’s deal. Said a 4th “mystery” media outlet could be in the mix
  • Lastly, he thinks there’s a 50% chance the conference adds 2 schools; 45% chance it adds no new schools; and a 5% chance it adds 4 new schools

***WBB: Iowa State’s Joens Named to Wooden Award National Ballot***

Iowa State Media Relations

AMES, Iowa – For the second-straight year, Iowa State’s Ashley Joens will be on the National Ballot for the Wooden Award, which the Los Angeles Athletic Club announced on Saturday. Joens is one of 15 players that will appear on the ballot for the trophy given to college basketball’s best player, and will be eligible for the Wooden Award All-American Team.

To make the Wooden Award National Ballot, players must excel both in and out of basketball, and Joens does so in all areas.

On the court, Joens leads the Big 12 and ranks 14th nationally with her 21.0 points per game, while her 9.4 rebounds per game is third in the conference. She has 12 double-doubles on the season. Joens has saved her best basketball for the stretch run, as over ISU’s last five games she is averaging 25.2 points and 10.6 rebounds per game with three double-doubles.

Off the court, Joens received her Bachelor’s Degree in Elementary Education from Iowa State in December and is currently enrolled in the Education Master’s Program at ISU. She is a three-time Academic All-Big 12 honoree. She did her student-teaching over the summer and has been involved with multiple community service events and opportunities through Iowa State.
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Some interesting points from the Coaches Corner

1. Conrad Hawley aspires to become a Navy Seal. TJ spent some time talking about how Hawley came to darken the Cyclones' door. The kid is impressive.
2. Jamie is still on the selection committee and isn't at all concerned with ISU making the tourney. He even said that there is a greater chance of the team playing in DSM than there was before this slide.
3. Said this team isn't the most talented team and given the strength of the entire conference, the round robin schedule, and the coaching staffs, opposing teams take things away and weaknesses get expoited.
4. The Big 12 is positioned to capitalize on any other conferences changing....but it doesn't have to.


Side note: I suspect TJ's part was done before whatever happened to Grill because TJ wasn't subdued.

***WRESTLING: Six Cyclones Advance to Big 12 Semifinals***

Iowa State Media Relations

TULSA, Okla. – Iowa State sent six wrestlers to the semifinals Saturday in the opening session of the 2023 Big 12 Wrestling Championship. Of the six semifinalists, five of them have already locked up a spot at the 2023 NCAA National Championships in Tulsa March 16-18.

Zach Redding (133), Paniro Johnson (149), David Carr (165), Marcus Coleman (184), Yonger Bastida (197) and Sam Schuyler (285) all advanced to tonight's semifinals. Redding, Johnson, Carr, Bastida and Schuyler all punched their ticket to the national tournament.

As a team, Iowa State sits in third place with 52.5 points behind Oklahoma State (71.5) and Missouri (87.5).

At 133 pounds, Redding avenged a loss from earlier this season against California Baptist's Hunter Leake with a 4-2 decision in the quarterfinals.

Johnson won a tight matchup against Oklahoma's Mitch Moore, 3-2, to advance into the semifinals. The freshman scored the only takedown of the match in the second period and got an escape in the third to break the tie.

Carr looked the part in a dominant 21-6 tech fall against Austin Yant of Northern Iowa. The Cyclone registered eight takedowns in the win.

Iowa State made some noise at the upper weights starting with Coleman's 20-5 tech fall over Air Force's Noah Blake at 184 pounds.

Bastida was Iowa State's only seeded wrestler to draw a first-round match. He racked up 10 takedowns in a strong showing against Wyoming's Tyce Raddon which he won via 24-9 tech fall. In the quarterfinals, Bastida took care of business against Evan Bockman of Utah Valley, 9-5, for his second win of the day.

Schuyler closed out the session with his second win of the year over Northern Iowa's Tyrell Gordon. The Cyclones' anchor didn't allow a point in a solid 6-0 victory.

Up Next

Session II of the Big 12 Championship begins at 5 p.m. with first-round consolation matches followed by second-round consolation matches at 7:30 p.m. and semifinals at 8:30.


Iowa State Results

125: Corey Cabanban
First Round: L-D, 5-3 SV-1 vs. Stevo Poulin (UNC)
Consolation First Round: vs. Tanner Jordan (SDSU)

133: No. 3 Zach Redding
First Round – Bye
Quarterfinals: W-D, 4-2 vs. Hunter Leake (CBU)
Semifinals: vs. Kyle Biscolglia (UNI)

141: Casey Swiderski
First Round: L-D, 6-3 vs. Clay Carlson (SDSU)
Consolation First Round: vs. Cael Happel (UNI)

149: No. 3 Paniro Johnson
First Round – Bye
Quarterfinals: W-D, 3-2 vs. Mitch Moore (OU)
Semifinals: vs. Colin Realbuto (UNI)

157: No. 7 Jason Kraisser
First Round – Bye
Quarterfinals: L-D, 8-3 vs. Kaden Gfeller (OSU)
Consolation First Round: vs. Alex Hornfeck (WVU)

165: No. 1 David Carr
First Round – Bye
Quarterfinals: W-TF, 21-6 (6:33) vs. Austin Yant (UNI)
Semifinals: vs. Peyton Hall (WVU)

174: Julien Broderson
First Round: L-MD, 14-4 vs. Peyton Mocco (MIZ)
Consolation First Round: vs. Hayden Hastings (WYO)

184: No. 2 Marcus Coleman
First Round – Bye
Quarterfinals: W-TF, 20-5 (7:00) vs. Noah Blake (AF)
Semifinals: vs. Travis Wittlake (OSU)

197: No. 3 Yonger Bastida
First Round: W-TF, 24-9 (6:24) vs. Tyce Raddon (WYO)
Quarterfinals: W-D, 9-5 vs. Evan Bockman (UVU)
Semifinals: vs. Rocky Elam (MIZ)

285: No. 2 Sam Schuyler
First Round – Bye
Quarterfinals: W-D, 6-0 vs. Tyrell Gordon (UNI)
Semifinals: vs. Zach Elam (MIZ)
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FOOTBALL RECRUITING ***A 2024 prospect on Iowa State's wish list announcing decision later today***

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I'm anticipating an announcement from Linn Mar (IA) tight end Keaton Roskop at some point today. Iowa State and Kansas State are the two Power-5 offers here, plus he's got ones from Army, Northern Illinois, and UNI. I've had a FutureCast for him to Iowa State for a few weeks now and I think the coaching staff is still in good shape. Stay tuned for that announcement later today.

As a refresher, here's an article I wrote on him last month after a drive out to Marion to catch up with him.

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