Cam Manyawu’s third college stop has brought something he hadn’t had in a while: continuity. After one season at Wyoming, one at Drake and then a move to Iowa with Ben McCollum, the Hawkeyes big man finally got to stay put when the spring semester wrapped up.
That mattered to him.
"It was super nice," Manyawu said. "When school ended, all I did was turn off the AC, turn off the lights, and drive home to Kansas City for a couple of weeks.
Didn't have to pack up any bags; it was really nice to have some continuity to come back to the same place and not pick up my life and move. It's a great place.
I'm happy to be here, and I love that we're still here."
Now Manyawu is working toward a different kind of comfort for Iowa, one that could put him in a new spot on the floor in 2026-27. He’s coming off a junior season in which he averaged 6.6 points and 4.6 rebounds, and while the box score numbers were modest, his value showed up where Iowa needed it most. He was the Hawkeyes’ best rebounder by offensive and rebounding rate on KenPom and led the team in block percentage.
More than that, he gave Iowa its most dependable presence at the five. He handled ball-screen coverage well, anchored the defense around the rim and improved as the season went on, contesting shots and cleaning the glass with more consistency.
The numbers back that up. Opponents shot 60 percent at the rim with Manyawu on the floor, compared to 67 percent when he sat.
In Iowa’s regular season, Big Ten Tournament and NCAA Tournament games, opponents shot 73.8 percent at the rim when Alvaro Folgueiras played the five, but just 53.9 percent when Manyawu was there. The two shared the floor for only 54 possessions in that stretch.
Even so, Manyawu is not an ideal full-time Big Ten center at 6-foot-9. Iowa’s answer may be to slide him into more of a traditional four spot, especially with Saint Mary’s 7-foot-3 transfer Andrew McKeever and 6-foot-11 rising sophomore Trevin Jirak in the mix.
That idea showed up in Stirtz’s projected 2026-27 starting five: Combs at point guard, Tate Sage at shooting guard, Cooper Koch at small forward, Manyawu at power forward and McKeever at center.
"Cam has been working on his three-point shot, then, moving Cooper at the three," Stirtz added. "It'll be a little different -- a lot bigger. ...
It's a second-week prediction, though. A lot could change."
The push for more size is no accident. Iowa’s lack of it last season was a major factor in the Elite Eight loss to Illinois, and McCollum said right after the game that the Hawkeyes had to get bigger in the offseason.
In Houston, Iowa took only 10 shots at the rim while Illinois went 15-of-24 there and controlled the interior almost everywhere else. The Illini, the tallest team in college basketball by average height last season, also forced Iowa’s bigs into difficult finishes over the top.
Manyawu’s offseason work is aimed at making him more useful in that bigger frontcourt. He has the quickness and lateral movement to defend in space, and Iowa wants that versatility to show up more often. He said his focus has been on daily consistency and expanding what he can do defensively and offensively.
"Making sure that I'm an everyday guy," Manyawu said of his big focuses this offseason. "Bringing the energy and effort every single day. Defensively, I'm going to have to be able to switch, so I've been working on guarding different perimeter guys so when I'm in practice, making sure I'm guarding different people all throughout the day and trying to work on that and challenge myself to get up on guys."
"Offensively, being able to make some drives and keep the space. Making sure that things don't get clogged up and being able to hit the open shot if it's there."
Last week’s brief open practice gave a glimpse of how that might look. There were several high-low actions between McKeever and Manyawu that opened up looks at the rim.
That pairing could matter on both ends. Manyawu finished 71.6 percent at the rim last season and had 24 dunks, and his finishing should fit well with McKeever’s size, gravity and passing.
Iowa is also using McKeever as a hub, while Jirak brings a similar passing feel with a little more polish on the perimeter. That kind of size and playmaking could help a Hawkeye offense that ranked in the 15th percentile nationally in scoring chances off offensive rebounds and putbacks.
Defensively, the payoff could be just as important. Iowa allowed the second-most shots at the rim and the second-highest opponent field-goal percentage at the rim in the Big Ten last season, and a two-big look could help seal off the lane more often and push opponents into tougher shots.
For now, Manyawu looks settled into the idea that his role can keep changing. Iowa can go bigger with him at the four, or smaller with him back at the five, where he already proved he can hold up. And there’s still another layer to all of this: Manyawu is a senior, but with the new five-for-five rule, he also has another year of eligibility available, just like McKeever.
He finished last season looking more comfortable and more confident, especially down the stretch, and that growth carried over from playing in McCollum’s system. Now Iowa is asking him to do even more.
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