vlog

Skip to content
NOWCAST vlog News at 10pm Weeknights
Watch on Demand
Advertisement

No. 22 Iowa State faces challenging start to the season with third-year starting QB Rocco Becht

No. 22 Iowa State faces challenging start to the season with third-year starting QB Rocco Becht
POWERED BY CARL’S AUTO GROUP. YOU CAN BET YOUR DOLLAR THAT IOWA STATERS ARE GOING TO GET THEIR MONEY’S WORTH ON THURSDAY NIGHT AT THE GUINNESS FACTORY, AT FRIDAY AT THE PEP RALLY. YOU KNOW, THEY WILL MAKE THIS INTO A REALLY AWESOME LIFE EXPERIENCE. THAT’S RIGHT. CYCLONE NATION ABOUT TO FLOOD THE STREETS OF DUBLIN, IRELAND IOWA STATE AID JAMIE POLLARD CANNOT WAIT THE WEEK ZERO GAME AGAINST KANSAS STATE WILL BE THE TRIP OF A LIFETIME FOR ALL INVOLVED. THE NUMBER OF FANS WILL FAR EXCEED YOUR TYPICAL BOWL GAME, POLLARD TELLS ME. IOWA STATE AND KANSAS STATE HAVE EACH SOLD OVER 10,000 TICKETS TO THEIR RESPECTIVE FAN BASES. HERE’S MORE FROM OUR ONE ON ONE CONVERSATION. SO THERE’S GOING TO BE 20,000 PEOPLE OVER THERE IN CARDINAL AND GOLD AND PURPLE AND WHITE AND AND THEN THEY’VE TOLD US THAT THE FOLKS IN DUBLIN WILL BUY THE OTHER 25, 30,000 TICKETS. SO THE STADIUM WILL BE SOLD OUT. AND HOW WERE YOU CHOSEN? WE WERE CHOSEN IN LARGE PART BECAUSE OUR FANS TRAVEL. YOU KNOW, WHEN JOHN ANTHONY FROM ANTHONY TRAVEL, WHO SET ALL THIS GAME UP FOR THE LAST TEN YEARS, WHEN I ASKED HIM ABOUT IT, HE SAID, WE’RE ASKING YOU FOR TWO REASONS. NUMBER ONE, WE KNOW YOUR FANS WILL TRAVEL, AND NUMBER TWO, WE EXPECT THAT YOU’RE GOING TO BE REALLY GOOD. DID YOU APPLY FOR THIS OPPORTUNITY OR DID YOU JUST GET GET A PHONE CALL? NO, WE GOT THE PHONE CALL. DID YOU DO A DOUBLE TAKE? DO YOU WANT US TO GO WHERE? WELL, I HAPPEN TO KNOW JOHN BECAUSE HE WENT TO COLLEGE WITH MY WIFE. SO WHEN HE FIRST CALLED, I THOUGHT HE WAS JUST CALLING AS A FRIEND. AND THEN WHEN HE ASKED IF WE WOULD BE INTERESTED, I SAID, WELL, BEFORE WE SPEND ANY TIME THINKING ABOUT IT, LET ME JUST CALL COACH CAMPBELL AND SEE IF YOU KNOW IS BECAUSE IT’S A DISRUPTION, RIGHT? YOU GOT TO IT CHANGES EVERYTHING FOR THE BEGINNING OF THE YEAR. AND IT’S A CONFERENCE GAME. SO YOU KNOW, THERE’S JUST A LOT OF ISSUES, RIGHT. THAT A COACH COULD SAY I DON’T WANT TO DEAL WITH THAT. RIGHT. AND I CALLED COACH CAMPBELL AND HE PICKED UP AND I ASKED HIM AND HE SAID, ABSOLUTELY, LET’S DO IT. SO I CALLED JOHN BACK. AND SO I CALLED HIM BACK WITHIN FIVE MINUTES. AND HIS FIRST REACTION WAS HE THOUGHT I HAD -- DIALED HIM. AND THEN WHEN HE SAID, WAIT A SECOND, YOU ALREADY TALKED TO COACH CAMPBELL LIKE YOU WERE ABLE TO JUST CALL HIM AND ASK HIM. AND I WAS LIKE, WHY NOT? I MEAN, WE’VE GOT A GOOD RELATIONSHIP. I JUST CALLED HIM AND HE SAID, LET’S DO IT. SO HE SAYS, WE’RE THE SCHOOL WITH THE FASTEST RESPONSE TIME EVER TO DOING THIS. I BELIEVE IT. CYCLONE NATION STACEY HORST AND I BEGIN REPORTING FROM ACROSS DUBLIN WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20TH AS WE LEAD UP TO THE GAME AT AVIVA STADIUM. THE AER LINGUS FOOTBALL CLASSIC KICKS OFF S
AP logo
Updated: 2:28 PM CDT Aug 18, 2025
Editorial Standards
Advertisement
No. 22 Iowa State faces challenging start to the season with third-year starting QB Rocco Becht
AP logo
Updated: 2:28 PM CDT Aug 18, 2025
Editorial Standards
It shouldn't take long for Iowa State to reveal the direction its season will take.The No. 22 Cyclones open Saturday against No. 17 Kansas State in Dublin, Ireland, and two weeks later play the annual Cy-Hawk Game against Iowa at home.Video abover: Cyclone Nation is about to flood the streets of IrelandThe game on the Emerald Isle will be Iowa State's first opener against a Top 25 team since 2002, and it will be only the seventh time in 23 years the Cyclones won't open against an opponent from the second-tier Football Championship Subdivision."Usually you're going against a team to get the rust off," quarterback Rocco Becht said. "K-State, you've got to be ready, prepared. And you have to be really good at the little things, the details, come that game."The Cyclones, who beat the Wildcats 29-21 in Ames in the final regular-season game last year, are well-positioned to take on the challenge. Becht is entering his third year as the starter and is the Bowl Subdivision active leader with a touchdown pass in a school-record 18 straight games. He's led the Cyclones to 18 wins the last two seasons for the best two-year stretch in program history."I'd say in a lot of ways, he's the reason why our football program has clawed back to where we are right now," 10th-year coach Matt Campbell said.Last season, the Cyclones went to the Big 12 championship game, beat Miami in the Pop-Tarts Bowl and finished 11-3 for the program's first double-digit win season.Campbell, who won 64 games in his first nine seasons to become the school's all-time coaching wins leader, recently signed an eight-year contract extension that will pay him $5 million annually.Calling all receiversThe departures of NFL draft picks Jayden Higgins and Jaylin Noel make receiver a position to watch. The spotlight will be on Chase Sowell, a big-play threat from East Carolina, and UCF transfer Xavier Townsend, a versatile player who also can return kicks."That group has probably been a surprise to us, where some of those guys are, and just how talented we think that group has the ability to be," Campbell said.Strong secondary as usualThe Cyclones have had at least one All-Big 12 defensive back each of Campbell's first nine years. They've also had the conference's top pass defense three of the last four.There should be no drop-off with preseason all-conference first-team picks Jeremiah Cooper and Jontez Williams leading the secondary. Cooper will be a four-year starter at safety and Williams a second-year starter at cornerback. The Cyclones also get back corner Drew Surges, a former walk-on who was a revelation in 2023 but missed most of last season because of injury.D-line must step upThe Cyclones slipped to ninth in the Big 12 in total defense after being ranked in the top three six of the previous seven seasons. A lot of focus is on the line after the Cyclones recorded just 16 sacks, fewest under Campbell.Domonique Orange, a part-time starter for two seasons, is a preseason All-Big 12 first-team pick. There are high expectations for fifth-year edge Tamatoa McDonough, who recorded a sack in five straight games for Yale last season and finished with 6.5 in 10 games. Fourth-year edge Vontroy Malone had 8.5 tackles for loss in 28 games at Tulsa.Know these namesFreshman running back Ryver Peppers had a "dynamic spring," Campbell said, and could be a factor in a group led by Carson Hansen and Abu Sama III. Peppers rushed for 621 yards and eight touchdowns despite being limited to five games because of injury as a senior at Fort Osage High in Independence, Missouri.Second-year safety Marcus Neal Jr. played 47 of his 96 total snaps against Miami in the Pop-Tarts Bowl and made a season-high eight tackles.The scheduleThe outcome of the opener against Kansas State could loom large if there's another end-of-season logjam in the standings. Iowa State hosts 2024 FCS semifinalist South Dakota on Aug. 30 before the Hawkeyes come to Ames. Defending Big 12 champion Arizona State visits Nov. 1.

It shouldn't take long for Iowa State to reveal the direction its season will take.

The No. 22 Cyclones open Saturday against No. 17 Kansas State in Dublin, Ireland, and two weeks later play the annual Cy-Hawk Game against Iowa at home.

Advertisement

Video abover: Cyclone Nation is about to flood the streets of Ireland

The game on the Emerald Isle will be Iowa State's first opener against a Top 25 team since 2002, and it will be only the seventh time in 23 years the Cyclones won't open against an opponent from the second-tier Football Championship Subdivision.

"Usually you're going against a team to get the rust off," quarterback Rocco Becht said. "K-State, you've got to be ready, prepared. And you have to be really good at the little things, the details, come that game."

The Cyclones, who beat the Wildcats 29-21 in Ames in the final regular-season game last year, are well-positioned to take on the challenge. Becht is entering his third year as the starter and is the Bowl Subdivision active leader with a touchdown pass in a school-record 18 straight games. He's led the Cyclones to 18 wins the last two seasons for the best two-year stretch in program history.

"I'd say in a lot of ways, he's the reason why our football program has clawed back to where we are right now," 10th-year coach Matt Campbell said.

Last season, the Cyclones went to the Big 12 championship game, beat Miami in the Pop-Tarts Bowl and finished 11-3 for the program's first double-digit win season.

Campbell, who won 64 games in his first nine seasons to become the school's all-time coaching wins leader, recently signed an eight-year contract extension that will pay him $5 million annually.

Calling all receivers

The departures of NFL draft picks Jayden Higgins and Jaylin Noel make receiver a position to watch. The spotlight will be on Chase Sowell, a big-play threat from East Carolina, and UCF transfer Xavier Townsend, a versatile player who also can return kicks.

"That group has probably been a surprise to us, where some of those guys are, and just how talented we think that group has the ability to be," Campbell said.

Strong secondary as usual

The Cyclones have had at least one All-Big 12 defensive back each of Campbell's first nine years. They've also had the conference's top pass defense three of the last four.

There should be no drop-off with preseason all-conference first-team picks Jeremiah Cooper and Jontez Williams leading the secondary. Cooper will be a four-year starter at safety and Williams a second-year starter at cornerback. The Cyclones also get back corner Drew Surges, a former walk-on who was a revelation in 2023 but missed most of last season because of injury.

D-line must step up

The Cyclones slipped to ninth in the Big 12 in total defense after being ranked in the top three six of the previous seven seasons. A lot of focus is on the line after the Cyclones recorded just 16 sacks, fewest under Campbell.

Domonique Orange, a part-time starter for two seasons, is a preseason All-Big 12 first-team pick. There are high expectations for fifth-year edge Tamatoa McDonough, who recorded a sack in five straight games for Yale last season and finished with 6.5 in 10 games. Fourth-year edge Vontroy Malone had 8.5 tackles for loss in 28 games at Tulsa.

Know these names

Freshman running back Ryver Peppers had a "dynamic spring," Campbell said, and could be a factor in a group led by Carson Hansen and Abu Sama III. Peppers rushed for 621 yards and eight touchdowns despite being limited to five games because of injury as a senior at Fort Osage High in Independence, Missouri.

Second-year safety Marcus Neal Jr. played 47 of his 96 total snaps against Miami in the Pop-Tarts Bowl and made a season-high eight tackles.

The schedule

The outcome of the opener against Kansas State could loom large if there's another end-of-season logjam in the standings. Iowa State hosts 2024 FCS semifinalist South Dakota on Aug. 30 before the Hawkeyes come to Ames. Defending Big 12 champion Arizona State visits Nov. 1.