The Des Moines Register

ISU rocks No. 1 Houston, wins Big 12 championsh­ip

- Travis Hines Des Moines Register USA TODAY NETWORK Travis Hines covers Iowa State University sports for the Des Moines Register and Ames Tribune. Contact him at thines@amestrib.com or(515) 2848000. Follow him at @TravisHine­s21.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Iowa State had already emerged from the wilderness.

Back-to-back NCAA Tournament berths and a Sweet 16 repaired much of the damage inflicted by the worst season in program history that proceeded it. Cyclone basketball's reputation was restored.

Iowa State hadn't, though, quite returned to the former glory of the preceding decade, when the Cyclones were a national contender, winning titles and possessing real Final Four aspiration­s.

The Cyclones were a good story under head coach T.J. Otzelberge­r, but not much more across the national landscape.

That changed Saturday night when Iowa State emphatical­ly and triumphant­ly announced itself as undoubtedl­y one of the country's best teams.

The No. 8 Cyclones completely dismantled Houston, the country's topranked team and regular-season conference champion, in a 69-41 victory to claim the Big 12 Tournament championsh­ip.

"The ceiling is the best team in the country," point guard Tamin Lipsey said of the Cyclones. "Obviously, we just took down Houston, who was the previous No. 1 in the country. Obviously, our goal is a national championsh­ip.

"We know that there's a lot more to go in March."

Iowa State had three players finish in double figures, led by Milan Momcilovic's 18 points. Keshon Gilbert added 16 points while Hason Ward posted 13.

Gilbert was named the tournament's Most Outstandin­g Player.

The Cyclones shot 50% from the floor on the night and 41% from beyond the arc on 9-for-22 shooting. Otzelberge­r's crew held a potent Houston offense to just 27% shooting from the floor and a measly 18% (4-for-22) from long range.

The victory makes the 2-22 team Otzelberge­r inherited seem like a bad dream from long ago. It is an echo of the best stretch of Iowa State basketball in history, when the Cyclones went to seven NCAA Tournament­s in eight years, made two Sweet 16s and won four Big 12

Tournament­s.

This team, by beating a Houston squad that spent the last two months steamrolli­ng the Big 12, has the potential to do what none of those could, however.

Go even further in the NCAA Tournament.

"We put a lot of people on notice," senior Tre King said.

The Cyclones were tough, more physical and better defensivel­y than the Cougars, who had won 11 straight games and their last three by an average of 22 points. That pushes Iowa State to the forefront of the national conversati­on at the exact right time.

Iowa State is Final Four good. "We played to our identity," Otzelberge­r said. "We defended. We rebounded. We shared the basketball. "That's what we'll continue to do." Now, the world is watching. And it should know what the Cyclones are capable of achieving.

"I hope so," senior Robert Jones said, "and if they don't (know what ISU is capable of), they're a fool."

Up next

Iowa State learned its NCAA Tournament particular­s on Sunday night.

The Cyclones landed as a No. 2 seed at the Omaha site and will play South Dakota State in a first-round matchup on Thursday.

This will mark the third straight season Iowa State has made the NCAA Tournament in Otzelberge­r's three seasons.

The Cyclones reached the Sweet 16 in 2022, and they were upset in the first round last season.

 ?? WILLIAM PURNELL-USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Iowa State’s Cade Kelderman (13) and Robert Jones (12) are fired up after a play during Saturday’s victory over Houston in the Big 12 Tournament championsh­ip game.
WILLIAM PURNELL-USA TODAY SPORTS Iowa State’s Cade Kelderman (13) and Robert Jones (12) are fired up after a play during Saturday’s victory over Houston in the Big 12 Tournament championsh­ip game.

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