Kinnick Stadium is back in the same spot it held last year in EA Sports College Football 27, landing at No. 19 on the game’s list of the toughest places to play.
The Hawkeyes’ home is one of 25 stadiums that EA Sports says can tilt a game by turning up the pressure on visiting teams. College Football 27, the 24th game in the series and the third since the franchise returned in 2024 after an 11-year break, arrives July 9 for $69.99. Early access opens July 2.
EA Sports has built the home-field advantage feature around the kind of chaos that makes real road games miserable. The company says factors like home winning percentage, attendance, active home winning streaks and team prestige help determine which stadiums are the most intimidating. In those places, visiting players have a tougher time making checks, calling audibles and handling key decisions.
Kinnick’s ranking held steady at No. 19 for a second straight year, sitting behind Rice-Eccles Stadium and ahead of Notre Dame Stadium in the full list. The top five stayed exactly the same as they were a year ago: Tiger Stadium, Ohio Stadium, Beaver Stadium, Sanford Stadium and Bryant-Denny Stadium.
Here’s the full top 25:
Tiger Stadium (LSU)
Ohio Stadium (Ohio State)
Beaver Stadium (Penn State)
Sanford Stadium (Georgia)
Bryant-Denny Stadium (Alabama)
Autzen Stadium (Oregon)
Ben Hill Griffin Stadium (Florida)
Neyland Stadium (Tennessee)
Memorial Stadium (Clemson)
Kyle Field (Texas A&M)
Gaylord Family-Oklahoma Memorial Stadium (Oklahoma)
Michigan Stadium (Michigan)
Darrell K. Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium (Texas)
Jordan-Hare Stadium (Auburn)
Husky Stadium (Washington)
Williams-Brice Stadium (South Carolina)
Memorial Stadium (Indiana)
Rice-Eccles Stadium (Utah)
Kinnick Stadium (Iowa)
Notre Dame Stadium (Notre Dame)
Doak S. Campbell Stadium (Florida State)
Lan Stadium (Virginia Tech)
Carter-Finley Stadium (NC State)
LaVell Edwards Stadium (BYU)
Davis Wade Stadium (Mississippi State)
There are a few notable changes in the 2026 edition of the rankings. Indiana, Virginia Tech and BYU are new to the top 25.
Tennessee and Oregon made the biggest moves upward, climbing four and three places, respectively. Wisconsin’s Camp Randall Stadium, meanwhile, fell out after ranking 15th in last year’s game.
Kinnick’s reputation in the game lines up with what makes the stadium such a difficult place for visitors. It holds 69,250 fans, and the seating is packed close to the field with little buffer between the sidelines and the stands. The north end zone rises vertically instead of stretching outward, helping trap noise and turn the building into a headache for opposing teams.
That kind of environment has not gone unnoticed in the Big Ten. In a social media post from the Big Ten Network last September, Wisconsin coach Luke Fickell and Rutgers coach Greg Schiano both called Kinnick the loudest away stadium in the conference.
And in College Football 27, that noise matters. The higher-ranked stadiums in the game are designed to be harder to operate in because the crowd is louder and more disruptive. For a visiting team, that means more trouble at the line of scrimmage, plus other annoyances like the game clock disappearing and the kicking meter being partially or completely hidden, according to USA TODAY.
In Other News...
Iowa Fans May Hate The Uniform Debate That's Coming
College footballs uniform arms race has already reached the patch stage elsewhere, and Iowa fans may soon find themselves debating whether that next step belongs in black and gold. The idea is simple enough: if the Hawkeyes ever partner with a brand for a jersey patch, it would almost certainly have to be something that feels like Iowa, not just something that pays.
That is where the conversation gets sticky, because the options that make the most sense are also the ones that would stir the most opinion. A local company like Caseys would be an easy fit on paper, while a charitable tie-in would carry a different kind of weight for a fan base that cares deeply about the programs identity and traditions. For now, though, there is no official partnership, which only means the debate is likely to grow louder the longer the question hangs there. [Read more 🡒]
Iowa Just Got The National Respect Hawkeyes Fans Were Waiting For
Iowas offseason hardware keeps piling up in a way that should resonate with a fan base that loves proof as much as promise. Kade Pieper, Trevor Lauck and Zach Lutmer have all landed preseason All-American recognition from multiple outlets, a sign that the Hawkeyes are bringing back not just respected starters, but players the national media believes can shape the season from the start. Pieper drew first-team nods, Lauck landed on second-team lists, and Lutmer cracked third- or fourth-team spots depending on the publication, while all three also picked up preseason All-Big Ten honors.
There is also a leadership layer here that matters for Iowas identity entering the fall. The trio will be part of the player council, which fits neatly with the way this program usually wants to define itself: disciplined, experienced and driven by its veteran voices. For Hawkeyes fans, the larger question is how much of this national respect will show up when the season actually starts, because preseason accolades are one thing and carrying them into Big Ten play is another. [Read more 🡒]
Why Iowa Believes McKenna Woliczko Is Built For This Next Era
McKenna Woliczko arrives in Iowa City with the kind of rsum that makes expectations arrive early, but the Hawkeyes are not asking the five-star forward to be a finished product on day one. As a member of the 2026 recruiting class, she is projected to settle in at power forward and make her mark first with rebounding, defense and the kind of smart, connected play that helps a team function before the points start piling up. That fits where Iowa is headed, too, with Jan Jensen shaping the offense around more reading and reacting than the old scripted feel.
The upside for Iowa is that Woliczko does not have to carry the scoring burden immediately, especially with strong backcourt players around her to create shots. Her three-point range is expected to come along over time, giving the Hawkeyes a frontcourt piece who can grow with the system instead of forcing the system to bend around her. For Iowa, that kind of fit matters as much as talent, and it is a big reason the program believes Woliczko can thrive in this next era. [Read more 🡒]
