For the first time in history, both the Iowa State Cyclones and Iowa Hawkeyes are in the NCAA Tournament’s Sweet 16. Yet, in a state synonymous with fierce rivalries, this unprecedented dual success has ignited a civil war, not a celebration, as fan identities and decades of competitive disdain prevent any unified “Cy-Hawk” front.
The Unlikely Sweet 16 Journey
The paths for both teams were defined by resilience. The second-seeded Cyclones lost star forward Joshua Jefferson to an ankle injury minutes into their tournament opener but responded by rolling past 7-seed Kentucky 82-63(AP). Hours later, the 9-seed Hawkeyes pulled off a staggering 73-72 victory over defending national champion and top-seeded Florida(AP).
These runs are a testament to the Midwestern work ethic instilled by their coaches. Iowa State’s T.J. Otzelberger and Iowa’s Ben McCollum have built programs built on grit, not flash. As McCollum described his Hawkeyes, “They fight. They compete. They stick with it.”(AP) The same could be said of Otzelberger’s Cyclones.
A State Divided: The Deep Roots of the Cy-Hawk Rivalry
In a state of just 3.2 million people, the geographic separation between Ames (Iowa State) and Iowa City (Iowa) is roughly 300 miles. The rivalry, known as the Cy-Hawk Series, spans multiple sports and is rooted in perceptions: Iowa fans often see Iowa State as the “little brother” land-grant school, while Cyclone fans view the Hawkeyes as possessing an “annoying air of superiority.”
Des Moines sports radio host Heather Burnside estimates the traditional fan split was 70-30 in favor of the Hawkeyes. That gap has narrowed to near 50-50 recently, fueled by Iowa State’s football rise and sustained basketball success. “There are a lot of fans who say, ‘They’re our rival. I don’t want them to do anything good, ever,'” Burnside noted(AP).
This isn’t a theoretical divide. While both fanbases acknowledge the historic achievement of having two teams in the last 16(AP), the immediate next step is choosing a side. Hawkeye fans will cheer against Nebraska on Thursday. Cyclone fans, in turn, will be focused on their own game against Tennessee on Friday. The idea of a unified “We all are Cy-Hawks” movement? “Not happening,” as the original report states.
Coaching Trees Rooted in Iowa Soil
The personal connections between the programs add a layer of complexity. Otzelberger, a Wisconsin native, is married to Alison Lacey, a former All-Big 12 star who played high school ball 20 minutes from Ames. Meanwhile, McCollum is an Iowa native—born in Iowa City, raised in Storm Lake—who met his wife at a high school basketball game.
These ties contrast sharply with the current rosters. The Cyclones feature hometown point guard Tamin Lipsey from Ames and three total Iowans. The Hawkeyes have only two players from the state, including star guard Bennett Stirtz, but feature six from Missouri. This reflects a modern recruiting reality that exists separately from the in-state emotional tug-of-war.
The Fred Hoiberg Wild Card
The ultimate twist in this narrative involves the Hawkeyes’ first opponent: Nebraska. The Cornhuskers are coached by Fred Hoiberg, the Ames native and former Iowa State star known as “The Mayor.”(AP) Hoiberg, who led the Cyclones to the Sweet 16 in 2014, remains a beloved figure across the state.
This creates a profound cognitive dissonance for Cyclone fans. Burnside explained: “There are Iowa State fans who don’t know what to do, or they absolutely know what to do, which is to root for Nebraska and Fred Hoiberg over Iowa.”(AP) The prospect of Iowa’s tournament run being aided by the man who symbolizes Cyclone basketball success is a storyline unique to this moment.
The “What If” and the Economic Reality
The dream scenario—a hypothetical Iowa vs. Iowa State national championship game—is a sports editor’s fantasy and a fan’s nightmare. “It would be absolutely bonkers,” Burnside said. “I’m not sure there would be enough Busch Light to handle an Iowa-Iowa State national championship game.”(AP) The economic impact of two teams traveling deep into the tournament is significant, with fans from both sides expected to flock to Chicago and Houston.
This moment transcends basketball. It’s a cultural event for a state defined by its agricultural identity and intimate scale. Having both teams in the Sweet 16 is being hailed as “the best thing since sliced bread,” a nod to the Davenport-born innovation(AP). Yet, the visceral, lived-in rivalry ensures that for the next week, Iowa will be a state of divided households, split bars, and guarded optimism for half the population.
The takeaway is clear: historic achievement does not erase history. In the land of tall corn, the tallest order was never asking rivals to unite. It was simply asking both to keep winning—and watching how a state with two teams in the Sweet 16 inevitably roots for one, and against the other.
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