Regional softball is here, and the race to Fort Dodge and Rogers Park has tightened up fast.
Waukee Northwest still sits at No. 1 in the latest High School On SI Iowa High School Softball Rankings, but the chase behind the defending Class 5A state champion is getting louder. Ankeny Centennial and a handful of other contenders have made the top of the board look a lot less comfortable.
The Wolves’ six-game winning streak ended in the nightcap at Southeast Polk, though they had already taken the opener in convincing fashion. They also picked up a shutout against Johnston, their 18th shutout of the season.
Ankeny Centennial keeps pressing with offense that has been rolling all year. The Jaguars are averaging almost nine runs per game and have 26 wins against teams with a record of .500 or better. After a 6-2 loss to West Des Moines Valley, they answered with a 6-3 win in the nightcap and have now won eight of their last nine.
Valley is making its own late push. The Tigers have ripped off 14 straight wins and are giving up just 1.3 runs per game. They beat Class 5A-ranked Southeast Polk and then handled North Polk, allowing only one run in each game.
The Tigers have been one of the most difficult teams in the state to score on, and the rankings note they are not going away. Waukee Northwest and Ankeny Centennial may be the “new kids” on the block, but Valley keeps stacking marquee wins and figures to be in the mix when Rogers Park arrives.
The Dodgers added another pair of statement wins to an already strong resume, knocking off Class 5A contenders Cedar Falls and Waukee in the final week of the regular season. They are averaging more than 10 runs per game, fueled by all-staters Hope Alstott and Ellie Doster.
The Bobcats also keep climbing on the strength of a steady finish. They swept Linn-Mar in a doubleheader, winning 3-2 and 8-5, and have not lost since splitting with Dubuque Wahlert Catholic in late June.
The Mustangs have stumbled a bit late, dropping three straight at one point to Southeast Polk, Ankeny Centennial and Winterset. They did steady themselves with a 9-0 win over Winterset in the nightcap of that doubleheader.
The Wildcats are winning in convincing fashion, too, with an average margin of six runs per night and fewer than two runs allowed per game. They have won seven in a row, and six of those victories came by five runs or more.
The Golden Eagles saw a nine-game winning streak end against Norwalk, but they responded quickly with a 6-1 win in the nightcap. They have also added back-to-back wins over Cedar Falls.
Albia’s defense remains one of the toughest in Iowa. The Lady Dees lost a 1-0 battle with Davenport Assumption, then came right back with four straight wins. Star pitcher Grace Pence continues to anchor that stingy group.
Dropped out of the rankings were No. 19 Clarksville, No.
22 North Scott, No. 24 Southeast Polk and No.
25 Lewis Central.
In Other News...
An Iconic Part Of The Kinnick View Is Disappearing
A familiar piece of the Kinnick Stadium skyline started coming down July 10, as the University of Iowa began removing the Hawkins Drive water tower that has stood near the stadium since 1960. For generations of Hawkeye fans, it has been part of the view on game day, a landmark as recognizable as the stadium itself, even if most people never gave it a second thought until now.
The tower is being cleared to make room for a new adult inpatient tower for the Iowa Health Care Stead Family Children's Hospital, and a newer water tower already built in March is handling campus needs with a much larger capacity. Removal work is scheduled around weekends through the end of August, and Iowa expects any traffic issues to be gone before the Sept. 5 opener against Northern Illinois, but the loss of that old silhouette will still mark a noticeable change around the stadium. [Read more 🡒]
Why Landing Jaidyn Coon Feels Even Bigger For Iowa Now
Jaidyn Coons arrival gives Iowa a little more juice in a recruiting class that already had some promise. The four-star guard from Storm Lake is Iowas Mr. Basketball and one of the states most accomplished prep players, and his commitment adds another in-state name to a class that also includes Ethan Harris. For a program trying to establish a new identity under Ben McCollum, landing a player with Coons athleticism and defensive versatility matters well beyond the usual hometown buzz.
Coons path to Iowa also made the fit feel timely. After first committing elsewhere, he reopened his recruitment and took an official visit to Iowa before choosing the Hawkeyes, a sequence that gave McCollums staff a real chance to make its case. What Iowa is getting is not just a scorer, but a flexible piece who can help in a lot of ways, and the bigger question now is how quickly that kind of skill set can be translated into a role that matches what this staff wants to build. [Read more 🡒]
Gable Mitchell Just Gave Iowa Fans Another Reason To Pay Attention
The 2026 MLB draft gave Iowa baseball another reminder of how much talent has been moving through the state, with several high school products hearing their names called over the July 11-12 event. Gable Mitchell was among the headliners, going to the Toronto Blue Jays in the eighth round, while Kaleb LaFavor landed with the Boston Red Sox in the 10th and Caleb Klein followed to the Atlanta Braves in the 15th.
The list kept growing from there, with Sam George going to the Milwaukee Brewers in the 19th round, Nate Smithburg heading to the Tampa Bay Rays in the 18th, and Kooper Schulte closing it out with the New York Mets in the 20th. For Iowa fans, it was the kind of draft showing that underscores how many in-state names are now on the radar of pro teams, and Mitchells selection gave the group an especially notable lead story. [Read more 🡒]
