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The 2010 Iowa State Cyclones football team represented Iowa State University in the 2010 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was led by second year head coach Paul Rhoads and played their home games at Jack Trice Stadium in Ames, Iowa. They are members of the Big 12 Conference in the North Division. They finished the season 5–7, 3 ...
Season results Bowl result Final ranking Conference finish Wins Losses Ties AP Poll 1 Coaches Poll 2; Iowa State Cyclones football seasons: 1892 Ira C. Brownlie: Independent — — 1 0 1 — N/A N/A 1893 W. P. Finney: Independent — — 0 3 0 — N/A N/A 1894 Bert German: Independent — — 5 1 0 — N/A N/A 1895 Pop Warner: Independent ...
The Cyclones added Ball State to the schedule to replace in-state rival Iowa. [7] On August 6, 2020, Iowa State's game against UNLV was canceled and rescheduled for the 2030 season. [8] The Cyclones announced a reconfigured schedule on August 12, 2020, with the addition of Louisiana as their non-conference opponent.
After an impressive 7-0 start, Iowa State football has a bye in Week 9 of the college football season. The No. 10 Cyclones will use that time to regroup after their comeback 38-35 win at home over ...
Iowa State's game against Oklahoma State puts the Cyclones — one of college football's youngest teams — against one of its oldest.
The former Iowa State running back and his Detroit teammates put on an offensive show Monday night. In the Lions' 42-29 win over the Seattle Seahawks, Montgomery piled up 80 total yards — 40 ...
In 1997, Iowa State's Cyclone Stadium was renamed Jack Trice Stadium in his honor, [10] becoming the first and as of 2020, the only, major college football stadium to be named for a black man. [11] In his first season, Willaman's team finished with a 2–6 record, but posted a winning record in each of the three years that followed.
In 1944, the All-America Football Conference was established and it began play in 1946 in direct competition with the NFL. From 1946 to 1949, the two leagues fiercely competed for the top college football prospects with each league holding their own drafts, before the AAFC finally merged with the NFL at the end of the 1949 season.