8. Arizona Wildcats

9. North Carolina Tarheels

10. Baylor Bears

11. Tennessee Volunteers

12. Auburn Tigers

13. Purdue Boilermakers

14. Arkansas Razorbacks

15. Creighton Bluejays

16. Texas A&M Aggies

17. Cincinnati Bearcats

18. Illinois Fighting Illini

19. Indiana Hoosiers

20. Texas Tech Red Raiders

21. Kentucky Wildcats

22. Texas Longhorns

23. Marquette Golden Eagles

24. Kansas State Wildcats

25. Miami Hurricanes

26. Ohio State Buckeyes

27. Xavier Musketeers

28. BYU Cougars

29. Maryland Terps

30. St. John’s Red Storm

31. UCLA Bruins

32. Oregon Ducks

33. Wake Forest Demon Deacons

34. Florida Gators

35. Ole Miss

36. USC Trojans

37. Grand Canyon Lopes

38. Providence Friars

39. Mississippi State Bulldogs

40. Rutgers Scarlet Knights

41. Memphis Tigers

42. McNeese Cowboys

43. Michigan State Spartans

44. Michigan Wolverines

45. VCU Rams

46. Dayton Flyers

47. St Mary’s Gaels

48. Washington Huskies

49. UCF Knights

50. Louisville Cardinals

51. Boise State Broncos

52. Clemson Tigers

53. New Mexico Lobos

54. Arizona State Sun Devils

55. Utah State Aggies

56. Colorado State Rams

57. Seton Hall Pirates

58. SMU Mustangs

59. South Carolina Gamecocks

60. Nevada Wolfpack

61. TCU Horned Frogs

62. Villanova Wildcats

63. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets

64. Saint Louis Billikens

65. Syracuse Orange

66. Nebraska Cornhuskers

67. Pittsburgh Panthers

68. Iowa Hawkeyes

69. NC State Wolfpack

70. Butler Bulldogs

71. Princeton Tigers

72. Virginia Cavaliers

73. Saint Joseph’s Hawks

74. Oklahoma Sooners

75. West Virginia Mountaineers

76. Georgia Bulldogs

77. UAB Blazers

78: Wisconsin Badgers

79. San Diego State Aztecs

80. Missouri Tigers

81. Northwestern Wildcats

82. Loyola Chicago Ramblers

Here’s where our TCH analysts have the Cyclones ranked:

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Everything I said regarding Arizona in yesterday’s article about playing in the Big 12 applies to Iowa State as well. The difference is that Iowa State is coming off a season where they finished second in the Big 12 and went 13-5 in the conference, while Arizona has yet to play a Big 12 conference game since joining the conference from the Pac-12. Not only is TJ Otzelberger’s coming off a 29 win season, but they’re also bringing back their top four players in minutes and points from last season. In total, that equates to 59.3% of their minutes from last season. It’s also worth noting nobody wants to play this team in Hilton Coliseum, where they went 18-0 last season.

A year after the Cyclones went 2-22, the Cyclones fired Steve Prohm and hired Otzelberger. From there, the Cyclones are 70-35 in three seasons with four wins in the NCAA tournament. In Otzelberger’s three seasons, the Cyclones had the #5, #8, and #1 defense according to KenPom’s adjusted efficiency metric. In the day and age of the transfer portal, bringing back the top four from the best defensive team in the country is a good start. This starts with Tamin Lipsey, a 6’1″ junior guard who was nominated to the All-Big 12 Preseason First Team and has a strong chance at being an All-American. The Cyclones are #5 in the AP preseason poll and #6 in KenPom, and Lipsey is undoubtably the straw that stirs the drink for one of the nation’s best teams. Additionally, there’s Keshon Gilbert, who just dropped 35 points in a secret scrimmage win against Creighton. Gilbert was also the leading scorer on last year’s Cyclones team.

The third returning starter is Milan Momcilovic, a 6’8″ wing who’s a legitimate NBA draft prospect. As a freshman, Momcilovic, a former 4 star recruit, averaged 11 points per game and he should be expected to make the freshman year to sophomore year jump. The other returner is Curtis Jones, who is expected to be this team’s sixth man. Despite this, Coach Otzelberger recently informed Jon Rothstein that Curtis Jones has made the biggest jump among all returnees. Additionally, there’s Joshua Jefferson from St. Mary’s College as well as Dishon Jackson from Charlotte who round out the starting five. Jackson, standing at a towering 6’11” and weighing 280 lbs, is an inside presence that will give this team great interior play on both ends of the floor. Jefferson started every game for St. Mary’s until he suffered a knee injury late in the season. There’s also Nate Heise, a Northern Iowa transfer and Third Team All-MVC pick last season. He’s averaged 13.5 points per game last season. Finally, the backup big is Brandton Chatfield, who started all 37 games for Seattle last year.

While this team has the depth to deal with the rigors of the Big 12, they also have an identity. They’re ranked second in KenPom’s adjusted defensive efficiency and 17th in adjusted offensive efficiency. While the Big 12 has five teams ranked in the top 10 in the preseason AP Poll, it’s conceivable to believe that Iowa State might end up being the best of team in the best conference in the country.


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