Iowa’s wide receiver depth took a hit on Monday, with news that Terrence Smith will no longer be on the Hawkeyes’ roster this fall.
The reasons for Smith’s departure have not been made clear. 247Sports’ Eliot Clough reported that the second-year receiver is no longer with the program, leaving Iowa with one less option in a room that was already expected to need development.
Smith arrived as a three-star signee in Iowa’s 2025 recruiting class and brought plenty of intrigue with him. The 6-foot-3, 187-pound receiver was ranked by the 247Sports composite as the 537th-best prospect in the class, the No. 79 wide receiver and the No. 14 player in Illinois.
For Kirk Ferentz and his staff, Smith represented a meaningful recruiting win. Even though he was not projected to crack the starting lineup right away, he was viewed as one of the younger receivers on the roster with the most upside. His exit leaves Iowa with another spot to account for as it looks ahead.
The Hawkeyes still have a group of receivers with time on their side. Reece Vander Zee, Dayton Howard, Tony Diaz, Evan James, Jarriett Buie, and KJ Parker all have multiple years of eligibility remaining. But losing Smith this late in the offseason is still a tough break, and it puts even more pressure on the program to keep adding talent at the position.
Iowa’s next wave of receiver help will have to come through the recruiting trail, beginning with the 2027 class and continuing beyond that.
In Other News...
One Former Hawkeye Is Starting To Separate In Summer League
Four former Iowa basketball players got their chances in Las Vegas Summer League, and all four turned in performances that gave Hawkeye fans something to track. Brendan Hausen was the biggest scoring name of the group, putting up 20 points for the Memphis Grizzlies in a win over the Golden State Warriors, while Bennett Stirtz, Payton Sandfort and Josh Dix suited up for the Oklahoma City Thunder in a tight loss to the Denver Nuggets.
Stirtz had the most eye-catching all-around line for Oklahoma City, finishing with 22 points, six assists, two rebounds, one steal and one block in 30 minutes. Sandfort added 19 points off the bench, and Dix kept his starting spot with 14 points, six rebounds, one assist and one block, leaving the Thunders Iowa trio with plenty of individual production even as the bigger question around their summer run still hangs in the balance. [Read more 🡒]
Tate Sage Steps Into A Bigger Iowa Role At The Right Time
Tate Sages freshman season ended with a burst that gave Iowa a glimpse of what he could become, and the guard has spent the summer trying to turn that promise into something more dependable. After arriving as a young piece in the rotation, Sage has used practice time to sharpen his game and build the conditioning needed for a bigger workload, all while the Hawkeyes prepare for a season that will ask more of everyone in the backcourt.
Sages timing matters because Iowa is moving forward without Bennett Stirtz, which changes the way the offense will have to function. Rather than leaning on one clear centerpiece, the Hawkeyes appear headed toward a more shared approach, and Sage said he expects to be involved more often with the ball, around the rim, and as a scorer when needed. [Read more 🡒]
