Game Notes: Hawkeyes Prepare For Rematch At Indiana

OPPONENT #8 Iowa (13-5, 7-4) at Indiana (9-8, 4-6)
LOCATION Assembly Hall – Bloomington, Indiana
DATE Sunday, Feb. 7, 2021
TIPOFF 11:07 a.m. (CT)
TELEVISION FOX
RADIO HAWKEYE RADIO NETWORK

THE SETTING
No. 8 Iowa (13-5, 7-4) will travel to Indiana (9-8, 4-6) on Sunday for a rematch against the Hoosiers. Tipoff is set for 11:07 a.m. (CT) at Assembly Hall in Bloomington. Both Iowa and Indiana enter Sunday’s contest having lost three of their last four games.

GAME #19 STORYLINES
• Luka Garza tallied 38 points last year at Indiana (Feb. 13, 2020). The 38 points were two points shy of matching the Assembly Hall single-game record by an opponent.
• Luka Garza is the first and only student-athlete in Big Ten history to accumulate 2,000 points, 800 rebounds, 125 blocked shots, and 100 3-pointers. He is the only player from a major conference with those numbers dating back to the 1992-93 season.
• Luka Garza totaled 27 points and 12 rebounds in Tuesday’s win over Michigan State pushing the senior All-American over 2,000 points and 800 rebounds. Garza reached 2,000 points in 113 games, faster than any other Big Ten player over the last 25 years.
• Jack Nunge has increased his production over the last five games, averaging 10.2 points, 4.6 rebounds, and shooting 50 percent (7-of-14) from 3-point range and 83 percent (10-of-12) from the foul line during that span. Nunge equaled a career high with 18 points Thursday versus No. 7 Ohio State.
• Three Hawkeyes have made four or more 3-pointers in two games this season. Three players made five triples in the win over No. 16 North Carolina and three Hawkeyes made four treys in Thursday’s loss to No. 7 Ohio State.
• Luka Garza is Iowa’s all-time scoring leader in Big Ten regular season games with 1,223 points and second in overall scoring; 92 points from surpassing Roy Marble (2,116).
• Joe Wieskamp become the 50th Hawkeye to reach 1,000 career points on Jan. 10. Wieskamp has made three or more 3-pointers in four of the last six games. The junior has made 18 of his last 30 attempts (.600), dating back to Jan. 10.
• Ten of Iowa’s 13 victories this season have come by 15 points or more.
• Sunday concludes a stretch of three games in six days for the Hawkeyes.
• Iowa has been ranked in the AP Top 10 the first 11 weeks. The last time the Hawkeyes have been ranked in the Top 10 11 consecutive weeks was the 1986-87 season.
• Connor McCaffery (4.75) and Jordan Bohannon (3.46) rank first and second, respectively in the Big Ten in assist-to-turnover ratio. McCaffery is third nationally, while Bohannon is 13th.
• Jordan Bohannon (587) is 26 assists from becoming Iowa’s all-time assists leader (Jeff Horner, 612).
• Luka Garza ranks first in the country in points per game (25.9 ppg) and eighth in double-doubles (8). He has scored 479 points against AP Top 25 teams, the most of any player since the start of the 2019-20 season.
• Iowa, who has led the Big Ten in scoring each of the last two seasons, ranks second in the country, averaging 89.1 points per game.
• Iowa has made more free throws (292) than its opponents have attempted (287).
• The Hawkeyes have posted 20 runs of 10-0 or better this season, which includes a 20-0 run in Iowa’s at Maryland on Jan. 7 (via @Hlas).

ON THE AIR
Radio: Iowa games are broadcast on the Hawkeye Radio Network. Gary Dolphin handles the play-by-play, along with color commentator Bob Hansen. The network includes more than 40 stations that blanket the state of Iowa and include portions of Illinois, Nebraska, Minnesota, Missouri and Wisconsin. The Hawkeye Radio Network coverage includes a 60-minute pregame show.
TV: Sunday’s game will be televised nationally on FOX. Gus Johnson and Bill Raftery will call the action. This will be Iowa’s first ever appearance on FOX.

OHIO STATE BEATS IOWA IN TOP TEN SHOWDOWN
No. 7 Ohio State rallied from an 11-point deficit in the second half to upend No. 8 Iowa, 89-85, on Thursday in Iowa City.
• Thursday’s game was as even as they come. Both teams made 14 3-pointers, dished out 20 assists, collected four steals, and committed six turnovers.
• Jack Nunge tied a personal best with 18 points, reaching double figures for the third time in five contests. The redshirt sophomore sank a career-best four 3-pointers.
• Joe Wieskamp recorded his second double-double in four games and sixth of his career (17 points, 10 rebounds). He sank four treys, marking the fourth time in six games the junior has made three 3-pointers or more.
• Luka Garza totaled 16 points, seven rebounds, and dished out a career-high five assists.
• Jordan Bohannon sank four 3-pointers, moving into the top five all-time in Big Ten history with 330 triples. The redshirt senior finished with 18 points and a team-best six assists.
• Iowa starting guard CJ Fredrick did not play due to injury (lower leg injury).
• Kyle Young, E.J. Liddell, and Duane Washington Jr. each netted 16 points to pace the Buckeyes. Justice Sueing recorded his fourth career double-double (12 points, 11 rebounds). CJ Walker came off the bench registering a game-best nine assists.
• Ohio State posted its fourth consecutive win over a Top 15 opponent on the road (Rutgers, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Iowa).

LUKA GARZA CONTINUES WHERE HE LEFT OFF
• Reached 2,000 points in 113 games, faster than any other Big Ten player over the last 25 years. The only Big Ten player to reach the milestone faster was Wisconsin’s Michael Finley, who accomplished the feat in 107 games.
• Iowa’s all-time scoring leader in Big Ten regular season games with 1,223 points. Garza has tallied 261 points in 11 Big Ten games this season; 496 in 20 games in 2019-20; 243 in 19 contests in 2018-19; and 223 in 18 games in 2017-18.
• After passing 10 former players on Iowa’s all-time scoring chart this season. Garza needs 92 points to surpass Roy Marble to become Iowa’s scoring leader.
• Accounts for nine of the 12 27-point/10-rebound games in the Fran McCaffery era (2010-present).
• Luka Garza is one of just five players from major conferences, since 1992, to average 25+ points and 8+ rebounds (KSU’s Michael Beasley, 2008; Texas’ Kevin Durant, 2007; UConn’s Donyell Marshall, 1994; Purdue’s Glenn Robinson, 1994).
• One of only two players in the country (Notre Dame’s Nate Laszewski) to shoot at least 59 percent on FGAs and 45 percent on 3FGAs, with at least 25 made 3-pointers; Garza has more than double the field goals made and attempted as Laszewski.
• Luka Garza tallied 18 points against Northwestern (Dec. 29), halting his streak of scoring 20+ points at 18 straight Big Ten games, dating back to last season. His 18-game streak is the longest by any player against a Big Ten team in over three decades.
• Reached the 30-point plateau six times this season. Garza has topped 30 points 11 career times, second most in program history trailing only John Johnson (13). Garza has topped 22 points an NCAA-best 11 times this season.
• Shot 70 percent or better from the field in six games in 2020-21, including 80 percent or better in four games (93% vs. Southern; 93% vs. Iowa State; 80% vs. Northern Illinois; 80% at Rutgers).
• Twice has been named Big Ten Player of the Week this season (Nov. 30 and Dec. 14). Garza was named Co-Big Ten Player of the Week after averaging 24.3 points, 8.3 rebounds, and 1.7 blocks in wins over No. 16 North Carolina, Iowa State, and Northern Illinois. Garza was named Big Ten Player of the Week after averaging 33.5 points, 9.5 rebounds, and 3.0 blocks in victories over N.C. Central and Southern.
• Garza scored 44 points at Michigan (Dec. 7, 2019) and 41 points versus Southern University (Nov. 27, 2020). He is one of two players in program history to score 40 points or more in two games in a career (John Johnson, 49 and 46).
• Tallied 102 points in three games; that is the most points by any Division I player over his first three games of a season since Davidson’s Stephen Curry had 106 in 2008-09.
• Garza is the only Division I player in the last 25 years to score 100+ points on 75.0 percent shooting over any 3-game span. The last NBA player to accomplish that over a 3-game span was Shaquille O’Neal in January, 1996.
• Torched Southern University for 41 points, nine rebounds, and three blocks. Garza netted 36 first-half points, which is believed to be the most points scored by a Hawkeye in a half in program history. In the first half, Garza made all 12 field-goal attempts and was 10-of-12 from the free throw line.
• His 41 points are the most points scored by a Hawkeye in a single-game in Carver-Hawkeye Arena history (1983), besting 36 scored by Adam Haluska (2006) and Rob Griffin (2000). The arena record is 45 points by Brian Quinnett of Washington State in a neutral site contest contested against Loyola Marymount (1986).
• Finished the Southern University contest with a .933 field goal percentage (14-of-15), including a perfect 1.000 (3-of-3) from 3-point range, which is the best single-game mark by a Big Ten player since 1984 (Minnesota’s Tommy Davis, 15-of-16, at Indiana).
• Scored a game-high 32 points and snagged a season-best 17 rebounds at Minnesota.
• Posted a double-double (16 points and 14 rebounds) to go along with a season-high four blocks against No. 16 North Carolina.

ALL-TIME SERIES RECORDS
Indiana holds a 105-77 advantage in the series, dating back to 1909. The two teams have split the last four overall meetings. The Hoosiers hold a 61-30 advantage in games played at Bloomington.

NUMBER OF THE WEEK — 5
Iowa has three 1,000-point scorers on its 2020-21 roster: Luka Garza (2,009), Jordan Bohannon (1,472), and Joe Wieskamp (1,065). It marks the fifth time in program history that three 1,000-point scorers are on the same team: 1987-88 (Roy Marble, B.J. Armstrong, Jeff Moe); 1988-89 (Roy Marble, B.J. Armstrong, Ed Horton); 1995-96 (Jess Settles, Kenyon Murray, Chris Kingsbury); 2004-05 (Jeff Horner, Greg Brunner, Pierre Pierce).

Iowa’s 2020-21 trio (4,546 points and counting) is the second highest trio in school history behind the 1988-89 trio of Marble, Armstrong, and Horton (5,193 points).

SCOUTING INDIANA
• Indiana (47 NET Ranking) has lost three of its last four games, with the lone victory coming over the Hawkeyes in Iowa City.
• The Hoosiers dropped their last outing, 75-71 OT, to nationally-ranked Illinois on Tuesday in Bloomington. Indiana was held scoreless in overtime until the final seven seconds. Trayce Jackson-Davis posted his sixth double-double of the season (19 points, 14 rebounds). Race Thompson contributed 18 points, eight rebounds, three steals, and two blocks in the losing effort.
• The Hoosiers are 4-4 at home in Assemby Hall this season, having lost three straight (Purdue, Rutgers, and Illinois).
• Three Hoosiers average double figures in scoring: Trayce Jackson-Davis (20.1; Armaan Franklin (12.7); and Aljami Durham (10.8). Indiana has three players who have made 19 or more 3-pointers this season: Franklin (25), Durham (22), and Phinisee (19). Jackson-Davis ranks second nationally in free throw attempts (152), fourth in free throw makes (103), 18th in field goals made (119), 27th in double-doubles (6), and 35th in blocked shots (31).
• Indiana ranks fifth in the Big Ten in blocked shots (4.5); sixth in scoring defense (68.5) and field goal percentage (.456); last in 3-pointers made per game (6.3). Individually, Trayce Jackson-Davis ranks third in the league in points per game (20.1), rebounds per game (9.0), blocked shots (1.8) and minutes played (33.5); and fifth in field goal percentage (.520). Armaan Franklin ranks eighth in the conference in steals per game (1.4).
• Archie Miller is in his fourth season as head coach at Indiana (64-51, .556) and 10th season overall as a collegiate head coach (203-114, .640).

LAST MEETING VERSUS INDIANA
Indiana rallied from a nine-point second-half deficit to upend Iowa, 81-69, on Jan. 21, at Carver-Hawkeye Arena in Iowa City.
• The Hoosiers posted a 23-3 scoring run, spanning nearly ten minutes (12:00-2:06), in the second half to comeback and hand Iowa its first home setback of the season.
• Iowa had two players post double-doubles: Luka Garza (28 points, 12 rebounds) and Joe Wieskamp (16 points, 12 rebounds).
• Starter CJ Fredrick played only 13 minutes before exiting in the first half and did not return due to a lower leg injury. It marked the second straight game against Indiana that Fredrick sustained a lower leg injury and missed the second half (Feb. 13, 2020).
• Iowa shot 51.7 percent from the field in the first half but made just 26.5 percent of its field goal attempts in the second stanza. The Hawkeyes made four 3-pointers in the first half but misfired on its first 10 attempts before making their final attempt from long distance over the final 20 minutes.
• While Iowa struggled shooting the basketball in the second half, the Hoosiers were the opposite, making 60 percent of its attempts, including 66.7 percent from 3-point range.
• The Hawkeyes outrebounded the Hoosiers by 14 (46-32).
• Four Hoosiers scored in double digits: Tracy Jackson-Davis (23), Rob Phinisee (18), Aljami Durham (14), and Armaan Franklin (11).
• The Hoosiers attempted 35 free throws, an Iowa opponent best this season. Durham was 9-of-10 (.900) from the charity stripe.

NUMBER OF THE WEEK — 5
Iowa has three 1,000-point scorers on its 2020-21 roster: Luka Garza (2,025), Jordan Bohannon (1,490), and Joe Wieskamp (1,112). It marks the fifth time in program history that three 1,000-point scorers are on the same team: 1987-88 (Roy Marble, B.J. Armstrong, Jeff Moe); 1988-89 (Roy Marble, B.J. Armstrong, Ed Horton); 1995-96 (Jess Settles, Kenyon Murray, Chris Kingsbury); 2004-05 (Jeff Horner, Greg Brunner, Pierre Pierce).

Iowa’s 2020-21 trio (4,597 points and counting) is the second highest trio in school history behind the 1988-89 trio of Marble, Armstrong, and Horton (5,193 points).

VALUING THE BASKETBALL
Iowa ranks first in the nation in assist-to-turnover ratio (2.14). The Hawkeyes have two players ranked high nationally in assist-to-turnover ratio. CJ Fredrick has a blistering 9.25 ratio (37 assists; 4 turnovers), but does not meet the minimum assists per game requirements to be ranked. Connor McCaffery is third in the country with a 4.75 ratio (76 assists; 16 turnovers), while Jordan Bohannon is 13th with a 3.46 ratio (83 assists; 24 turnovers).

Iowa has teammates who recorded 10-assist/0-turover games in consecutive games. Connor McCaffery and Jordan Bohannon are the first Division I duo from the same team to accomplish the feat in the last 10 years. McCaffery had 10 assists and zero turnovers at Maryland (Jan. 7), while Jordan Bohannon was credited with 14 assists and zero turnovers versus Minnesota (Jan. 10).

IN THE RANKINGS
• Iowa has been ranked in the AP Top 10 the first 11 weeks. The last time the Hawkeyes have been ranked in the top 10 11 consecutive weeks was the 1986-87 season.
• The Hawkeyes were ranked No. 3 in the AP Poll three of the first four weeks of the season. The last time Iowa was ranked as high as third nationally was Jan. 25, 2016.
• Iowa’s No. 5 preseason ranking is its highest preseason position in 65 years (No. 4 in the 1955-56 preseason poll). This marks the eighth time in program history that Iowa is ranked in the AP Preseason Top 10: No. 4 in 1954-55, No. 4 in 1955-56, No. 9 in 1981-82, No. 7 in 1983-84, No. 7 in 1988-89, No. 8 in 1995-96, and No. 9 in 2001-02. Iowa last started a season ranked in the AP Poll 15 seasons ago (No. 20 in 2005-06).
• Iowa’s game against Gonzaga on Dec. 19, was just the second time in program history that Iowa played in a contest pitting No. 1 against No. 3.

IOWA VERSUS RANKED TEAMS
Iowa is 4-3 versus ranked teams this season. The four victories tie six other teams for the most during the 2020-21 season.

The Hawkeyes’ loss to the Buckeyes on Thursday snapped Iowa’s nine-game home win streak against AP ranked opponents. That was the longest such streak in program history during the AP Poll era (since 1948-49).

The Hawkeyes have won 16 games over ranked opponents over the last three seasons, which tie Kansas and Virginia for the second most in the country (Michigan State, 21).

Iowa won seven contests against ranked opponents last season, the most by any team nationally and the most by a Hawkeye team in a single-season since 2006 (8).

WIESKAMP NAMED JERRY WEST AWARD SEMIFINALIST
Joe Wieskamp has been named one of 10 semifinalists for the 2021 Jerry West Shooting Guard of the Year Award. It marks the third time in five seasons that a Hawkeye has been named a semifinalist for the award (Wieskamp, 2020; Peter Jok, 2017).

Wieskamp ranks second on the team in scoring (14.4 ppg) and rebounding (6.4 rpg). The native of Muscatine, Iowa, ranks 10th in the league in 3-pointers made per game (2.1), and 13th in defensive rebounds per game (4.9). Wieskamp has scored in double figures in 13 of Iowa’s 18 games this season and 58 career times. He became the 50th player in program history to score 1,000 career points on Jan. 20, 2021.

Wieskamp has made three or more 3-pointers in four of Iowa’s last six games.

In late February, five finalists will be presented to Mr. West and the Hall of Fame’s selection committee. The winner of the 2021 Jerry West Award will be presented on April 9, along with the other four members of the Men’s Starting Five.

GARZA RETURNS FOR SENIOR SEASON
All-American Luka Garza has been named to every major preseason All-America list, including headlining the AP Preseason All-America Team. Garza, who is the first Iowa men’s basketball player named to a preseason AP All-American, was the lone unanimous selection, receiving all 64 votes. Below is a sampling of Garza’s preseason recognition:

• Associated Press Unanimous Preseason All-American
• Blue Ribbon First Team Preseason All-American
• CBS Sports First Team Preseason All-American
• USA Today First Team Preseason All-American
• Dick Vitale Preseason Player of the Year
• Big Ten Preseason Player of the Year
• NABC Player of the Year Watch List
• Wooden Award Top 50 Watch List
• Naismith Trophy Player of the Year Watch List
• Unanimous All-Big Ten Preseason Team
• Kareem Abdul Jabbar Center of the Year Watch List

EMOTIONAL YEAR FOR NUNGE
It was a difficult 12 months for forward Jack Nunge. On Nov. 24, 2019, Nunge tore his ACL (right knee) in the fifth game of the 2019-20 season after sitting out the previous season (redshirt). Nearly 12 months to the day later, Nunge’s father (Dr. Mark Nunge) passed away unexpectedly at the age of 53 on Nov. 28, 2020.

Nunge did not play in Iowa’s first two games of the year as he was with family back home in Indiana. Nunge returned to Iowa City on Dec. 1, and played in his first game in over a year, tying a career high with 18 points and snagging five rebounds versus Western Illinois.

Nunge is Iowa’s leading scorer (7.8) and rebounder (5.6) off the bench.

Nunge has increased his production over the last five games, averaging 10.2 points, 4.6 rebounds, and shooting 50 percent (7-of-14) from 3-point range and 83 percent (10-of-12) from the foul line during that span. Nunge equaled a career high with 18 points, bolstered by sinking a personal-best four triples, Thursday versus No. 7 Ohio State.

QUIET CONFIDENCE
Small forward Keegan Murray is playing with a quiet confidence when his name is called coming off the bench. All-American center Luka Garza has tabbed him “Nicholas Baer 2.0.”

He ranks fourth on the team in rebounding (4.8), second in blocked shots per game (1.0), and tied for sixth in 3-pointers made (8). Murray has started two of the last three contests, replacing the injured CJ Fredrick (lower leg injury).

Murray was one of the team’s key contributors in Iowa’s three road wins at No. 14 Rutgers, Maryland, and Northwestern. The native of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, scored a personal-best 14 points and led the team in rebounding (9), steals (3), and blocks (3) against the Scarlet Knights. Murray was a staggering +30, totaling 12 points, five rebounds, and a game-best two blocks versus the Terrapins. Murray’s plus-minus is the third highest of any Hawkeye this season (Patrick McCaffery +39 and Fredrick +33 vs. Northern Illinois). He totaled eight points, seven rebounds, two rejections, and two assists against the Wildcats.

Although technically a freshman, Murray and his twin brother Kris gained a year of experience following high school graduation playing at DME Academy in Florida in 2019-20 prior to arriving in Iowa City. The Murray twins are legacy Hawkeyes; their father Kenyon played for head coach Tom Davis for four seasons (1993-96).

JORDAN BOHANNON RETURNS FOR REDSHIRT SENIOR SEASON
Jordan Bohannon had surgery on his left hip last December after playing in 10 games in 2019-20. The native of Marion, Iowa, had the same procedure done on his right hip in May, 2019.

Bohannon averaged 18.5 points, 8.0 assists, 5.5 rebounds and 0.5 turnovers at Maryland and at home against Minnesota to earn Big Ten Co-Player of the Week accolades on Jan. 11. He made 61 percent (11-of-18) of his field goal attempts, including a blistering 62.5 percent from 3-point range (10-of-16).

Bohannon had a ridiculous stat line against the Gophers on Jan. 10: 19 points, 14 assists, 7 rebounds, 0 turnovers. Bohannon is the first Big Ten player to post those numbers in a game since the 2002-03 season. He has recorded a program-best seven career double-doubles in points and assists.

Bohannon is tied with Wisconsin’s D’Mitrik Trice for the most games played among active Division I players with 130.

Forty-six of Bohannon’s 58 made field goals have been 3-pointers. He shot a blistering 63 percent (22-of-35) from behind the arc during Iowa’s five-game win streak (Dec. 29-Jan. 17).

Bohannon has made a school-record 330 3-pointers and is 44 triples from tying the all-time Big Ten record (374, Jon Diebler). His 330 triples are the most of any active player from a Power 5 conference and are fifth best in Big Ten history. Bohannon has made three or more 3-pointers in seven of Iowa’s last 11 games. Iowa is 9-2 this season when Bohannon drains multiple 3-pointers.

Bohannon (18 points) shared game high scoring honors with Jack Nunge, bolstered by sinking four 3-point field goals in Iowa’s last outing versus No. 7 Ohio State on Thursday in Iowa City.

A third-team All-Big Ten performer in 2019, Bohannon was credited with a team-best 118 assists, becoming just the seventh Hawkeye to register three 100-assist seasons.

Bohannon’s 14 assists on Jan. 10 against the Gophers moved him past Mike Gesell and Dean Oliver for third on Iowa career assists list. He is one of seven Hawkeyes to record three 100-assist seasons (Dean Oliver, Jeff Horner, B.J. Armstrong, Andre Woolridge, Mike Gesell, Devyn Marble). Only two Hawkeyes have posted four 100-assist seasons (Horner and Oliver).

HAWKEYE FASTBREAKS
• Iowa is 106-25 when scoring 80 points or more, the last 11 seasons. The Hawkeyes are 81-2 when holding opponents to fewer than 61 points, the last 10 years.
• Iowa has two of the top four active scorers in the Big Ten: Luka Garza is first with 2,025 points, while Jordan Bohannon is fourth with 1,490 points.
• The Hawkeyes opened their season with 93+ points in each of their first six games for the first time in program history.
• Iowa scorched Northwestern for 96 points in its 23-point win on Jan. 17, which are the most points scored by the Hawkeyes in Evanston in 34 years (103 points on March 5, 1987).
• Iowa’s 22-point win (89-67) at Maryland on Jan. 7, is the largest margin of victory for either team in the series. The 89 points are the most points Iowa has scored in the 12-game series.
• Iowa’s 53-point win over Northern Illinois (106-53) tied the 18th largest margin of victory in program history.
• Iowa beat Northern Illinois by 53 points, tying the 18th largest margin of victory in program history.
• The Hawkeyes have won 70 of its last 75 nonconference home games, dating back to 2012.
• Iowa’s 105 points and 28-point victory on Dec. 11, are the most points scored and the largest margin of victory, respectively, in the 74-game series history with Iowa State.
• The Hawkeyes sank 17 3-pointers against the Tar Heels. The 17 triples were two shy of a school record (19 against Savannah State on Dec. 22, 2018). Additionally, the 17 3-pointers tie for the third most ever against North Carolina.
• Assistant Coach Billy Taylor has been named to the class of 2021 for the Illinois Basketball Coaches Association Hall of Fame.
• Luka Garza scored 20+ points in 19 straight games (Jan. 10-Dec. 3, 2020), including 16 straight against Big Ten opponents, breaking the school’s 49-year old record. The 16-game streak against Big Ten opponents is the longest streak since Ohio State’s Dennis Hopson accomplished the feat in 1987. Garza scored 20+ points in 19-of-20 Big Ten games in 2019-20.
• Jordan Bohannon joined Bob Hansen, Kevin Boyle, and Mark Gannon as the only Hawkeyes to register four victories over the Cyclones in their career.
• Coach Fran McCaffery has coached a first-team All-Big Ten honoree five of the last seven seasons, the most over a seven-year span since 1956-62. Garza joins Devyn Marble (2014), Aaron White (2015), Jarrod Uthoff (2016), and Peter Jok (2017) as first team selections.
• As a result of Iowa’s win over No. 16 North Carolina, the Hawkeyes have won six of their last eight ACC/Big Ten Challenge games and four straight Challenge home games.
• Fran McCaffery has guided Iowa to 20 wins or more in six of the last eight seasons. He has led Iowa to Big Ten upper division finishes seven of the last eight years. Only Michigan State (8) has more first division finishes than Iowa (7) and Wisconsin (7) since the 2013 season.
• The Hawkeyes have won 10 or more Big Ten games five of the last six seasons.
• Iowa has qualified for four NCAA tournaments over the last six completed seasons (2014, 2015, 2016, 2019) and seven postseason tournaments over the last eight completed seasons (4 NCAA; 3 NIT).

McCAFFERY CLIMBING WINS CHART
McCaffery and the Iowa Hawkeyes have reached the 20-win plateau six of the last eight seasons. McCaffery joins Lute Olson (6) and Tom Davis (10) as the only Iowa head coaches to win 20 or more games in at least five seasons.

McCaffery has taken Iowa to the NCAA Tournament four times, and likely a fifth time last March if not for the postseason cancellation due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Among Iowa’s head basketball coaches, McCaffery ranks third in tournament appearances behind Davis (9) and Olson (5). Davis is Iowa’s all-time winningest coach, while McCaffery is second.

RECENT GRADUATES PLAYING PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL
A number of recent Iowa basketball graduates are playing professionally: Jarrod Uthoff (NBA Washington Wizards), Devyn Marble (Kazakhstan), Tyler Cook (NBA Denver Nuggets), Adam Woodbury (NBA G League: Grand Rapids Drive), Anthony Clemmons (Bosnia), Gabriel Olaseni (Turkey), Peter Jok (Spain), and Aaron White (Greece).LUKA

COACHING EXPERIENCE
Fran McCaffery has the most experienced coaching staffs in the country. The Iowa men’s basketball staff has 73 years of combined collegiate head coaching experience and more than 125 years of collegiate coaching under their belts.
Iowa is one of two programs nationwide who have four current/former Division I head coaches on their active coaching staffs (Pitt).

MEN’S BASKETBALL REPRESENTED ON BIG TEN COALITION
In June 2020, the Big Ten Conference formed the Anti-Hate and Anti-Racism Coalition, which includes student-athletes, coaches, athletic directors, chancellors, presidents and other members of the Big Ten family representing all 14 member institutions.

The University of Iowa has 10 representatives on the Coalition, including head coach Fran McCaffery, assistant coach Billy Taylor, and redshirt junior Connor McCaffery.

The Coalition will leverage, support, and complement the extraordinary efforts already taking place across the Big Ten through initiatives on our campuses, as well as through existing conference-wide organizations like the Big Ten Advisory Commission.