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Chargers football feels confident heading into Quarterfinal matchup

Sports

November 7th, 2024 by Asa Lucas

The (10-0) ACGC Chargers football team have been dominant all year and are currently one win away from a trip to the UNI-Dome. In order to make it to Cedar Rapids though, ACGC first has to take on a very balanced and sharp (9-1) Tri-Center Trojans squad. Last week the Chargers came away with a 41-14 victory against the Mount Ayr Raiders. In that matchup, ACGC head coach Cody Matthewson was pleased with how well his team executed throughout all four quarters.

In their victory against Mount Ayr, the Chargers ran for 337 yards and five touchdowns. The productive ground game for ACGC has been their bread and butter all year and senior fullback Mike Fuller has been a workhorse rushing for 1200 yards. Coach Matthewson commented on the constant improvement and effort by Fuller during his senior season.

The Chargers undefeated season has been gained by a great rushing attack, but also by a disciplined defense that seems to fly towards the ball. ACGC’s defense has forced 18 turnovers and has 13 players in the double digit range for tackles. They’ve been a stalwart unit all year and coach Matthewson recognized it.

Up next for ACGC is a Tri-Center squad that has done a one-eighty considering they were 3-6 a season ago. The Trojans have proven to be fierce with a 58-13 win against the Riverside Bulldogs, in which they scored six rushing touchdowns and nearly averaging eight yards a carry. Coach Matthewson is well aware of the talent that Tri-Center brings into Friday’s game.

In preparing for Friday, Coach Matthewson explained that one advantage the Chargers do have is the experience of being in a quarterfinal matchup three times in the last four years.

KJAN has the coverage for Friday’s battle with the pregame beginning at 6:00 p.m.

DINNEBIER NAMED TO WOODEN AWARD TOP 50 WATCH LIST

Sports

November 7th, 2024 by Asa Lucas

LOS ANGELES, Calif. – Star Drake guard Katie Dinnebier has received another national honor as a member of the Los Angeles Athletic Club John R. Wooden Award Preseason Women’s Top 50 Watch List, the organization announced today.

A Waukee High School graduate, Dinnebier became ninth player in program history to win Jackie Stiles MVC Player of the Year last season and was also named to All-Missouri Valley Conference First Team and All-Defensive Team. She earned MVC Scholar-Athlete Second Team honors and collected Patty Viverito MVC Tournament Most Outstanding Player award. The Waukee High School graduate was included as a finalist for Becky Hammon Mid-Major Player of the Year award. She led Drake and was atop or near the top of the league with 18.1 points, 6.9 assists, 3.0 rebounds, and 2.4 steals per game and eclipsed 1,000 career points as a junior, currently sits at 1,333. Dinnebier ranks 10th all-time with .370 career three-point percentage and second all-time with .856 career free throw percentage, fourth all-time with 548 career assists, marking the seventh player in program history to dish out 500+ assists, and cracked top 10 on all-time steals list with 188.

Dinnebier is the only mid-major and Missouri Valley Conference representative included on the watch list.

Jay Higgins Named Lombardi Award Semifinalist

Sports

November 7th, 2024 by Asa Lucas

IOWA CITY, Iowa — University of Iowa senior Jay Higgins has been named a 2024 Lombardi Award semifinalist, it was announced Thursday.

The award is presented to the college player who best embodies the values and spirit of legendary NFL coach Vince Lombardi. These qualities are include character, discipline and excellence both on and off the football field.

Higgins is also a semifinalist for the Butkus Award and a quarterfinalist for the Lott IMPACT Trophy. He was named a midseason All-American last month by the Associated Press, Sporting News, CBS and The Athletic.

Higgins is leading the Big Ten in tackles (sixth nationally), making 94 tackles (10.4 per game). He has led the team in tackles in all nine games, including a season-high 14 tackles against Ohio State, Washington and Michigan State. He also has three interceptions (18th nationally and tied for the most by a Power 4 linebacker) and forced two fumbles. Higgins, who has 311 career tackles in 54 games, has five double-digit tackle games this season and 16 in his career.

The Indianapolis native has 69 tackles in six Big Ten games, averaging 11.4 tackles per contest. Higgins is six tackles shy of reaching 100 for the season. The last Hawkeye to record back-to-back 100-tackle seasons was Jack Campbell in 2021 and 2022.

Finalists for the award will be announced in December.

Iowa (6-3, 4-2) returns to action Friday at UCLA (3-5, 2-4). Kickoff for that contest is scheduled for 8:05 p.m. (CT) in Pasadena, California. The game will be televised on FOX and broadcast on the Hawkeye Radio Network.

Jay Higgins | 2024 Honors
Dick Butkus Award Semifinalist
Lott IMPACT Trophy Quarterfinalist
AP, CBS Sports, Sporting News, The Athletic Midseason All-America
Chuck Bednarik Award midseason Watch List
Preseason National Defensive Player of the Year by Phil Steele
Preseason first-team Walter Camp All-American
Preseason first-team All-America by AP, ESPN, CBS Sports
Preseason first-team All-America by Phil Steele, Athlon Sports
Preseason first-team All-Big Ten by Phil Steele, Athlon Sports
Preseason Big Ten Honors List
Bronko Nagurski Trophy preseason Watch List
Lombardi Award midseason Watch List
Wuerffel Trophy preseason Watch List
Senior Bowl preseason Watch List

Iowa State Wrestling Coach Kevin Dresser Earns Contract Extension

Sports

November 7th, 2024 by Asa Lucas

Ames, Iowa – After leading the Iowa State wrestling program to its first Big 12 Conference title since 2009 and its highest NCAA Championship placement since 2010, head coach Kevin Dresser has been rewarded with a four-year contract extension thru June 30, 2029, ISU Director of Athletics Jamie Pollard announced today.

“We are excited that Kevin has agreed to a contract extension through 2029,” Pollard said. “Kevin and his staff have done a tremendous job revitalizing our wrestling program and we look forward to continued success under their leadership. The success and excitement surrounding the program is exactly what we expected when we hired Kevin to lead our program. It is very important to Iowa State University and our athletics department that our wrestling program be successful. Kevin has more than delivered in helping us achieve that goal.  I could not be more pleased with the direction of our wrestling program.”

A two-time Big 12 Conference Coach of the Year (2019, ’24) and the 2019 National Wrestling Coaches Association Coach of the Year, Dresser begins his eighth season leading the Cyclone program on Nov. 8 when his sixth-ranked team takes on No. 20 Stanford in a 7 p.m. match at Hilton Coliseum. The eighth head coach in program history has reinvigorated the tradition-rich Cyclone program since returning to his native Iowa for the 2017-18 season. He owns a 241-79 (.753) record in 18 years as a head coach, including an 81-28 (.743) mark at Iowa State.

“On behalf of my staff and our team, I want to thank Jamie (Pollard) and everyone in this department for helping us get to this point,” Dresser said. “College athletics are becoming more challenging each year and this staff is committed to putting a great product on the mat every season. This will be a fun team to watch in 2024-25!  We look forward to the future in Ames with great anticipation and we look forward to the challenge of winning at the highest level.”

His efforts have seen Iowa State climb on the national stage, highlighted most recently by a 2024 Big 12 title and fourth-place finish at the NCAA Championships, ISU’s best since 2010. Dresser inherited a program that had scored just one point and finished tied for 57th at the 2017 NCAA Championships. Since then, Iowa State has finished T-45th, 16th, T-13th, 17th, 11th and 4th at the national tournament and qualifying eight or more individuals to the NCAA Championships in six of seven years.

Iowa State had no conference champion in 2017 and failed to have a wrestler reach All-American status. Since then, Dresser’s program has produced 10 Big 12 Champions and 13 NCAA All-Americans. One of Dresser’s top priorities when arriving on campus in 2017 was bringing blue-chip recruit and Cyclone legacy David Carr to Ames. A catalyst in turning the program around, Carr won four individual Big 12 titles and a pair of NCAA titles in 2021 and 2024.

Fan support has been crucial to Dresser’s program revival and Cyclone fans are once again turning out in droves to watch wrestling in Hilton Coliseum. Iowa State averaged 6,690 fans per dual at home during the 2023-24 season, which ranked third nationally and was its highest average home attendance in the Big 12 era.

The 2023-24 season was ISU’s best under Dresser’s direction, as four Cyclones – Evan Frost (6th, 133), Anthony Echemendia (5th, 141), Casey Swiderski (7th, 149) and David Carr (1st, 165) – earned All-America honors. It marked ISU’s most All-Americans since 2009 and Iowa State’s 68.5 team points and fourth-place finish were both its best at nationals since 2010. Carr won his second NCAA title to become the 17th Cyclone to win multiple national titles and the first since 2010 (Jake Varner, 2009-10).

Dresser was named the 2024 Big 12 Coach of the Year as Iowa State won its first league title since 2009 aided by individual championship performances from Echemendia (141) and Yonger Bastida (285). The Cyclones put 152.5 points on the board at the Big 12 Championship, the fourth-most in a tournament in league history and the most-ever by an ISU team in the Big 12 era. The Cyclones finished with a 13-2 overall dual record, a 6-1 Big 12 record and an 8-2 mark against ranked foes, losing only to No. 4 Iowa and No. 5 Oklahoma State, teams they would go on to finish ahead of at the NCAA Championships.

No. 5 Tri-Center visits No. 1 AC/GC Friday night in class A

Sports

November 7th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

There is a top five showdown in the Class A quarterfinals Friday night when top ranked AC/GC hosts number-five Tri-Center. AC/GC coach Cody Matthewson.

Matthewson says the keys will be protecting the ball on offense and limiting big plays.

Tri-Center coach Ryan Schroder says they need to find a way to slow down the AC/GC ground game.

After winning the school’s first ever playoff game two weeks ago Tri-Center bids for a first trip to the UNI-Dome.

Iowa visits UCLA Friday night

Sports

November 7th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Hawkeyes take a 6-3 record on the road to UCLA Friday night. The Bruins are 3-5 against what Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz says has been a difficult schedule.

UCLA is coming off back-to-back road wins at Rutgers and Nebraska.

It’s Iowa first trip to the Rose Bowl for a Big Ten game.

Ferentz says in his first season as head coach DeShaun Foster has UCLA on the right track.

Iowa defensive end Deonte Craig on playing in the Rose Bowl.

Iowa linebacker Jay Higgins on playing in the Rose Bowl.

Higgins says practice was condensed this week to get ready for a Friday game.

Iowa State linebacker Kooper Ebel previews Kansas

Sports

November 7th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Iowa State sophomore linebacker Kooper Ebel (E-bull) says the 17th ranked Cyclones are not taking Kansas lightly as they get ready for Saturday’s game in Arrowhead Stadium. After starting the season nationally ranked the Jayhawks have struggled to a 2-6 record.

Ebel says practice this week has been spirited and all of their goals are still attainable.

Ebel is looking forward to playing in the home of the Kansas City Chiefs.

Conservation bond issues pass in Story and Johnson Counties

Ag/Outdoor, News

November 7th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Voters in Story and Johnson counties approved conservation bonds to help fund new trails, support wildlife and improve water quality. The 25 million dollar Story County Water and Land Legacy Bond passed with nearly 80 percent of the vote. Jim Pease is chair of the Story County Conservation Board.

“It says, I think to us, how important parks and wild places and wild things are to the people of Story County and to people in general,” Pease says. He says the new funding will support more than one dozen projects in the next two decades and shows that people want more opportunities to recreate outside and that they value wild places in Iowa.

“Iowa is one of the most altered states in the union. The prairies, woodlands and wetlands that were once here have been tremendously altered to make a very strong agricultural state and a very altered state from the nature that was here,” he says.

Nearly 80 percent of the voters in Johnson County approved a 30 million dollar conservation bond. Residents passed a similar measure in 2008. Polk County passed conservation bonds in 2012 and in 2021.

Eastern Iowa theater seeks donations so the show can go on into 2025

News

November 7th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A Cedar Rapids theater company is no longer in danger of closing after the community rallied to bring in last-minute donations. The Mirrorbox Theatre was launched in 2018 and exclusively puts on new and contemporary plays. Mirrorbox founder Cavan Hallman says they were in the midst of an ongoing 30-thousand dollar fundraising campaign.

“Last week, we did, however, receive a notice that we had three days to pay back rent,” Hallman says, “otherwise, we would be forced to vacate the property and terminate the lease.” The theater launched an emergency campaign and has raised enough to continue productions through the end of the year. “The financial struggle wasn’t new, but the urgency was new,” he says, “and that’s what led to the public part of the campaign.”

Hallman says the overall fundraising goal is -not- yet met and the theater will need to reevaluate its operations in order to move forward.

University of Iowa buying all of mall ‘in the heart’ of Iowa City campus

News

November 7th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The University of Iowa currently owns just over half of a shopping mall in downtown Iowa City and the Iowa Board of Regents has approved a plan to buy the rest of the Old Capitol Town Center — for 20-point-six MILLION dollars. David Keift is the University of Iowa’s senior director of business and real estate. “This is less about either the short or long term need for the first floor commercial space in the building,” Keift says, “but more about the university acquiring control of a significant footprint in the heart of our campus.”

The mall was built in 1980 as part of an Urban Renewal District that also created the pedestrian mall in downtown Iowa City. “The mall, which covers nearly two city blocks in the heart of the University of Iowa campus, is nearly 375,000 square feet of space,” Keift says. In the late 1990s, the mall’s major tenants started relocating a new mall in Coralville and, in 2003, Keift says a group of local investors rescued the mall from bankruptcy. The University of Iowa struck a deal to purchase 45 percent of the property in 2006.

“The building became a monumental importance to the university during the 2008 flood as it was quickly reconfigured to host our School of Music for numerous years,” he says, “and our Memorial Union operations and bookstore.” Keift says. Under the deal, the university will use reserve funds to make an initial payment of 206-thousand dollars, then take out a commercial loan to pay the rest. Keift says the university will use rental income from current tenants in the building to cover those loan payments.

“The university views the purchase price, which was based on a recent appraisal, as a favorable value to the institution. It comes out to be about $123 per square foot for all the leased space and common areas in the building,” Keift says. “You couldn’t come close to duplicating that cost per square foot to rebuild this size of a building.” Keift admits the university doesn’t need the space right now, but he says the reason to buy now is to ensure 45 percent of the building isn’t acquired by other investors who may not be interested in upkeep of the property.

“It’s imperative that this building and this center remain an important and vibrant part of the university and community,” Keift says.