Tag Archives: Iowa State Cyclones

South Florida Job is Iowa State Assistant Chris Ash’s to Take

Chris Ash, an Iowa State defensive assistant coach, has been offered a co-defensive coordinator job at South Florida according to the Tampa Tribune.


http://tinyurl.com/dhqzox

From the story:

Under Ash, the Cyclones led the Big 12 in interceptions in 2005 and ranked seventh nationally with 35 turnovers. In 2004, ISU ranked 20th nationally in pass efficiency defense. He reportedly was next in line to become ISU’s defensive coordinator if USF defensive coordinator Wally Burnham had not left USF for Iowa State.

Former USF linebacker Tyrone McKenzie said Ash was instrumental in McKenzie (originally) attending Iowa State.

“He’s a good guy, he knows his defense,” McKenzie said. “His knowledge of the game is remarkable. I think he would be one heck of a defensive coordinator. He’s young, he’ll be around for years. He relates to the players, not just as a coaching figure, but someone the players look up to. He’s very passionate.”

Iowa State fans have indicated they do not want to see Ash leave. If nothing else, though, this is a sign new Cyclones Coach Paul Rhoads is doing a good job of hiring assistants.

Iowa State Football Taketh, Now It May Giveth Away … and News and Views on Two Ex-Cyclones

ISU assistant football coach Chris Ash: filling a South Florida void that a co-worker caused?

ISU assistant football coach Chris Ash: filling a South Florida void that a co-worker caused?

 

Last week, Iowa State plucked defensive coordinator Wally Burnham from the winning South Florida program to take the same job for Paul Rhoads’ ISU football team.

Now comes this item from Brett McMurphy, who does a stellar job covering USF and other sports for the Tampa Tribune:

In ironies, of all ironies, the University of South Florida could be looking for its next defensive coordinator from the Big 12 and, you guessed it, Iowa State.

Nope, Wally Burnham is not returning to Tampa from Ames, Iowa, but Iowa State secondary coach Chris Ash has emerged as a distinct possibility. Rumblings throughout the coaching ranks indicate that Leavitt has been asking individuals for their opinions about the 35-year old Ash.

Ash could not be reached for comment.

Ash was hired at Iowa State in December after a two-year stint as secondary coach at San Diego State. Before that he was at Iowa State from 2000-2006, serving as ISU’s recruiting coordinator his final season. He worked with former USF defensive line coach Dan McCarney at Iowa State and went to San Diego State after McCarney was fired at ISU.

In Ash’s first stint at Iowa State, he recruited the Tampa Bay area and was instrumental in getting USF LB Tyrone McKenzie to ISU from Michigan State.

McMurphy’s complete blog item on the topic:  http://tinyurl.com/bp5bpf

Larry Eustachy: Winnings tough in Hattiesburg

Larry Eustachy: Winning's tough in Hattiesburg

Meanwhile, former Iowa State men’s basketball coach Larry Eustachy hasn’t taken Southern Mississippi to anywhere special in his five years as USM’s coach. His record at the school is 74-76, not really comparable to his 101-59 mark over five years with the Cyclones.

Rick Cleveland of the Jackson Clarion-Ledger sounds none too optimistic about the way things are going.

Wrote Cleveland:

So here we are five years later, and the USM basketball record is 14-13, with three of those wins coming against NAIA competition. I tuned in to the Tulane game Tuesday night and saw entire sections of Reed Green Coliseum without a single butt in the seats.

Any initial boost in attendance from the coaching change has long since fizzled.

In many, many ways, USM is back to square one, only paying more for it – against lesser competition.

Cleveland’s column: 
http://tinyurl.com/b5e5be

Something that’s a little more upbeat for Cyclone fans: Former ISU quarterback Sage Rosenfels is officially headed to the Minnesota Vikings in a trade from the Houston Texans.

Few Cyclone quarterbacks have been as good as Rosenfels. He’s a good guy, and here’s hoping he makes a really good impact for the Vikings.

 

 

 

McMurphy’s full blog item: 
http://tinyurl.com/bp5bp

The Hlog Belongs To You Today — Don’t Let Us Down

This is an experiment that is either doomed to utter failure or … or not, I guess.

But it’s Friday, and I’ve kind of hit the wall from spending a week at the Super Bowl insanity and coming home to deal with office … stuff.

So I’m taking the day off, and the Hlog is yours, all yours for the day.

What does that mean, if anything? Well, it means you have your say on anything. Anything.

Well, not anything. You’ve got to keep it clean, keep it fairly concise, and it has to sort of be coherent.

I’m not going to tell you what to write about. The fact Iowa and Iowa State are a combined 3-14 in men’s basketball conference play? Go ahead. The fact Northern Iowa is running away with the Missouri Valley regular-season title at 11-1? Go for it.

Do you care about Michael Phelps and his bong-smoking? Do you care about Pat Summitt winning 1,000 games? Joe Torre’s book? College football recruiting, the Cubs’ crazy trades, your kids’ 8-and-under wrestling tournaments?

Fire away.

Maybe you want to sound off about the economy, the crooked New York bankers, how February doesn’t feel like the shortest month even though it’s just that.

Maybe you want to talk about last night’s episode of “The Office ” (Creed had his way with Squeaky Fromme?) or “30 Rock.” Maybe you’re fed up with the City Council or your cable company or your kids or your parents. Maybe you want to pass out party invitations.

Go for it.

Look, approximately eight billion earthlings have blogs. But most average one visitor per day. Today, your opinions could reach thousands.

And if you’re good, and the right talent scout out there sees it? Oh, the possibilities!

UPDATE: Cyclones Don’t Land Mars

He chose this over Ames?

He chose this over Ames?

Larvez “Pooh Bear” Mars signed with Florida International University in Miami instead of Iowa State.

Will Cyclones Have a Mars Landing?

Can the Cyclones lay claim to the red planet?

Can the Cyclones lay claim to the red planet?

The signing date is Wednesday. Will Iowa State remain earth-bound in football recruiting, or will it take one giant leap for Cyclone-kind?

Of course, that being all-world linebacker Larvez “Pooh Bear” Mars, who is between FIU and Iowa State. Our friends at the Miami Herald offer this report:


http://miamiherald.typepad.com/fiusports/2009/02/contact-from-mars.html

Mars actually is from Florida, Apopka to be precise. He is a linebacker.


http://rivals100.rivals.com/viewprospect.asp?sport=1&pr_key=76523

How big and bad can a guy be if he is nicknamed “Pooh Bear?”

Well, he played in the Army All-American Game in San Antonio, where a lot of the best prep seniors gather each year.

Rivals.com ranks him as the No. 8 inside linebacker in the nation, and the No. 24 player in football-rich Florida.

Mars just tossed out Orange Bowl-participant Cincinnati out of his equasion.

I’m admittedly not too involved in recruiting coverage. I’ve been preoccupied the last couple weeks with the Kurt Warner story. But looking at Iowa State’s list of commitments in Paul Rhoads’ first recruiting class, it’s clear he’s wasted no time mining some of the nation’s richest areas for prep football talent.

As of Tuesday afternoon, Rhoads had at least four verbal commitments of players from California and Texas, and three from Florida. He also has one commit from Oklahoma and Pennsylvania.

None of which means anything if the kids can’t play. But getting dug in right away in those areas has to be considered a good sign for the Rhoads regime.

If he can extend his reach to Mars, all the better.

Dan McCarney: A National Champion

DAN MCCARNEY

How about that? You go from having your head-coaching run at Iowa State come to an end in December 2006 to being a defensive guru on the 2008 national champions.

That’s Dan McCarney (pictured above with Bob Tebow, the father of Florida quarterback Tim Tebow). Urban Meyer hired him to right the Gators’ defense, which was all wrong when it got shredded by Michigan for 41 points in last year’s Capital One Bowl.

McCarney had just spent a year at South Florida, doing a lot to help turn that defense into something good.

Oklahoma, just 14 points? Are you kidding me? That Florida “D” looked pretty good in Thursday’s BCS title-game, wouldn’t you say?

Florida defensive coordinator Charlie Strong is getting hosannas for his game plan against the Sooners. McCarney shaped a young defensive line into something formidable, and every one of those linemen return for next season.

Here’s another photo of McCarney in the spiffy, NFL-like Gators football facility. Gazette photographer Jim Slosiarek and I went to Gainesville on Dec. 30 for a feature on McCarney, who was nice enough to give us a tour of the complex. The photos here are Jim’s.

Congrats to Mac.

DAN MCCARNEY

Comparative Results: Iowa, Iowa State, UNI and Coe College All Better Than Florida and Oklahoma

I’ve caught some grief from USC supporters who think I’m being unfair to the Trojans by noting Utah beat Oregon State and USC did not, thus, no No. 1 AP vote from me for USC.

You can’t compare scores, they’ve bleated. It’s not fair. Utah played Oregon State at home. USC played the Beavers in Corvallis.

Boo hoo. Lots of things aren’t fair. USC having a recruiting advantage in southern California and a budget that is probably about the size of Utah’s government may not be fair, either, but why bring that into this discussion?

If you can’t compare scores in making judgments, what are we left with in college football? Besides torn ACLs, intoxicated chest-painters, and millionaire coaches, that is?

Hey, I may vote Iowa State No. 1 if Florida beats Oklahoma for the national title. Why? Because … Iowa St beat
Kent St who beat
Buffalo who beat
Ball St who beat
Navy who beat
Wake Forest who beat
Mississippi who beat
Florida, while Mississippi beat Texas Tech who beat Texas who beat Oklahoma

Then again, I may opt for Iowa No. 1 ahead of Florida and Oklahoma since …

Iowa beat
Florida Int’l who beat
Middle Tennessee St who beat
Maryland who beat
Wake Forest who beat
Mississippi who beat
Florida, while Mississippi beat Texas Tech who beat Texas who beat Oklahoma

Heck, Northern Iowa outclassed Florida this season. Proof:

Northern Iowa beat
New Hampshire who beat
Army who beat
Louisiana Tech who beat
Mississippi St who beat
Vanderbilt who beat
Mississippi who beat
Florida, while Mississippi beat Texas Tech who beat Texas who beat Oklahoma

For that matter, I may vote Coe College No. 1, since the Kohawks established dominance over Florida and Oklahoma. How so?

Coe beat
Simpson who beat
Northwestern MN who beat
Malone who beat
Marian who beat
Valparaiso who beat
Davidson who beat
Jacksonville FL who beat
San Diego who beat
UC-Davis who beat
Portland St who beat
Eastern Washington who beat
Weber St who beat
Cal Poly SLO who beat
San Diego St who beat
UNLV who beat
Wyoming who beat
Tennessee who beat
Vanderbilt who beat
Mississippi who beat
Florida, while Mississippi beat Texas Tech who beat Texas who beat Oklahoma.

Hey, you USC whiners, you aren’t even as good as Penn State.

Penn State beat
Oregon St who beat
USC

Wait, you say USC beat Penn State in the Rose Bowl?

OK, I’ll give you that one.

Why do people keep calling for a playoff every year when these things are all so obvious? Just look at who beat who.

Now who was it that beat Utah?

A True Cyclone Sounds Sounds Off About Chizik, Raves About Rhoads

Ben Bruns played the game. Played it very well.

He was an Iowa State offensive lineman from 1996 to 2000. He was on the ’00 Insight.com Bowl-winning Cyclones, was one of the people who turned the team from perennial losers to a program that went to five bowls this decade.

Bruns, an Iowan, never fully bought into the Gene Chizik era at ISU.

This is a bright guy, an engineer. This is an articulate guy, the sideline reporter on Iowa State football radio broadcasts. This is a Cyclone.

Now he has a blog, and here are excerpts from his first entry:

So I was a little conflicted when I first heard about Gene Chizik’s decision to go to Auburn. Obviously, as a career move, it was a step up for him; I won’t diminish him for that at all. The funny part to me was a couple of days afterward when he asked to meet with his old team once more. I wasn’t in the room, but I have heard the same thing from a number of people that were. Accounts say it was a 90 second to 3 minute session where the “CEO” coach told his guys it was something he had to do for his family and that it was his dream job. By all accounts, he didn’t look one person in the eye. By a number of other accounts, he didn’t talk to his old staff in the time leading up to the meeting and in the time immediately after. …

2008 should have started where 2007 left off. It didn’t. Too many changes in the o-line (Brandon Johnson should have been up and ready as soon as Knapp got hurt), some young guys playing that shouldn’t have (Carter Bykowski- not because he couldn’t contribute, but because we were loaded at the TE spot already), a Kansas game that got away – not for lack of effort on anyone’s part, a Baylor game with the worst defensive game plan I have ever seen in my 13 years as a Cyclone and absolutely zero meaningful adjustments, followed by a offensive nightmare against Nebraska, left me knowing we didn’t have a whole different level of coaching, in fact changes were needed. Gene Chizik was taking steps to address the problems he saw, and then Auburn stepped in. …

December 20th changed everything for me. I know Coach Rhoads. Paul Rhoads is everything Gene Chizik sold himself to be – a great recruiter, a great coach and leader. Coach Rhoads will reestablish relationships with the coaches across the state – not just the ones that have kids we want right now, but ones that may have great kids in the future. It won’t be just because of that future kid, though — it will be because he actually cares about ISU’s reputation and he respects what those coaches do for young people every day.

Here is the link to Bruns’ blog:
http://hitithardeveryyard.blogspot.com/2009/01/chiziked.html

 

Hlas Column on New Iowa State Football Coach Paul Rhoads

Paul Rhoads, when he had facial hair and a job at Auburn

Paul Rhoads, when he had facial hair and a job at Auburn

In December 1967, new Iowa State head football coach Johnny Majors didn’t make enough money to feel comfortable buying a house in Ames, so he rented one for his first year in town.

In December 2008, new Iowa State football coach Paul Rhoads has a contract guaranteeing him $1,150,000 per year for five years.

But envy was the furthest thing from Majors’ mind Saturday afternoon. For one thing, he made pretty good coin before finishing a 29-year career as a head coach that began with five seasons and two bowl trips at ISU, and included a national title at Pittsburgh and seven bowl wins at Tennessee.

For another, Rhoads is a good friend of his. No one from Iowa State called Majors to get his thoughts on candidate Rhoads, but they would have gotten an earful of encouragement had they done so.

Majors retired after coaching at the University of Pittsburgh in 1996, but lived in Pittsburgh almost the whole time Rhoads was the defensive coordinator at Pitt from 2000 through 2007.

“I saw many of their practices when he was defensive coordinator,” Majors said. “I watched film and talked a lot of football with him. He called me today to tell me he got the Iowa State job. It was a complete surprise to me. After I hung up, I was very enthused and very excited, like a little kid.”

At his introductory news conference in Ames later in the day, Rhoads said, “Coach Majors was a little excited. I think if I’d tossed him the ball, he would have carried it all the way across the goal line.”

We can list all sorts of statistics of how Rhoads’ defenses ranked at Pitt and in the season that just ended at Auburn. The numbers look good, but nothing an assistant has done tells us how he’ll produce once he runs his own program. Anyone who says they know is deluded.

But a learned football man like Majors kept using the phrase “time and place” Saturday, saying he thinks Rhoads is the right coach at this time for Iowa State.

“In my opinion, he’s extremely well-prepared,” Majors said. “Only time will tell what the end result will be. But this, I think, is an ideal fit. They could have spent a year researching and had all sorts of search committees, but for time and place, school and man, I don’t think they could have done better.

“I’m not trying to paint a dream world. I just think here’s a young man who I think has excellent character, is very sociable, and is someone I think is a great connector. He knows Iowa and the Iowa people, he speaks their language, and he’s also worked at Iowa State, which I think is very beneficial.”

Ames isn’t some distant memory to Majors. He said he has returned to Iowa State yearly since he left the school to become coach at Pittsburgh after the 1982 season.

“Iowa State people are resilient and loyal,” he said. “They respect competitive spirit and intense play. With the right type of coaching and recruiting, you’ll be able to win at Iowa State even though it’s very challenging as a job.”

Majors knows what it’s like to win at ISU, and so does Northern Iowa assistant football coach Atif Austin. Rhoads helped recruit Austin to Iowa State from Tampa, Fla. Rhoads was Dan McCarney’s secondary coach from 1995 through 1999 before becoming defensive coordinator at Pittsburgh in 2000.

“I think Jamie Pollard made a great decision hiring Paul Rhoads,” Austin said. “I have no doubt he’ll put his heart and soul into it as Dan McCarney did. I know Iowa State fans are looking for a turnaround, and I think Paul Rhoads will be the guy who can get that done.”

Austin described Rhoads the coach as demanding, but fair.

“Every player has the opportunity to get on the football field and prove himself,” Austin said. “I liked that about him. He’s a lunch pail, blue-collar kind of coach, a guy who works his butt off. What I remember about Coach Rhoads is he coached 100 miles an hour with passion.”

Granted, close friends and his former players who are in the coaching profession are going to give Rhoads ringing endorsements. But when Majors, who professed his undying love for Iowa State and Iowans repeatedly in a phone interview, was so happy about Rhoads becoming the Cyclones’ coach, it means something.

When Austin, a former player of Rhoads’ who now coaches in UNI’s highly successful program, says ISU got its man, it means something.

Can this 41-year-old lifelong defensive coach hire the right person to orchestrate the Cyclones’ offense? Can he assemble the total organization needed just to compete in the Big 12, let alone win in it?

Can he inject a winning attitude in a program that has gone 3-21 in the Big 12 over the last three years and get ISU football out of the basement and back into bowl games?

Couldn’t tell you. As Rhoads said Saturday, “Words really don’t mean anything at this point.”

Still, in this case it takes a fire to get a spark. Rhoads demonstrated Saturday in his news conference that he comes from the Dan McCarney school of intensity.

His fervor will be fun at Cyclone Club banquets come spring.

“We will hit you coming off the bus,” Rhoads said Saturday.

But what about during the games? We’ll wait to see, just as we waited on Gene Chizik to show us he could win before he skipped out on ISU without leaving behind evidence he could.

Look at it this way: Bob Stoops, Mike Leach and Mark Mangino got their first head coaching jobs at their current Big 12 schools. They’ve done pretty well.

Chizik’s first head coaching opportunity was in the Big 12, too. He’s also made out quite nicely. For himself, anyway.

The Cyclones basically traded their head coach to Auburn for the Tigers’ defensive coordinator. Won’t it be rich if Iowa State gets the better of that deal?

Paul Rhoads’ Old Boss, Dan McCarney, Interviewing for Army Coaching Job

Dan McCarney in happier times at Iowa State

Dan McCarney in happier times at Iowa State

 

While former Iowa State assistant coach Paul Rhoads gets ready to ascend to the head coaching position there, his old boss is trying to become the head football coach at Army.

Dan McCarney is interviewing for the job this weekend in Washington, D.C. Army fired coach Stan Brock last week after the Cadets went 3-9, including a season-ending 34-0 loss to Navy.

Army Athletic Director Kevin Anderson said hiring someone with West Point ties would be an ideal situation. McCarney currently is the defensive line coach at Florida. He interviewed for the New Mexico job that went to then-Illinois offensive coordinator Mike Locksley.


http://www.recordonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20081220/SPORTS36/812200340/-1/SPORTS