Ben McCollum has a lot to sort out heading into his second season at Iowa, but Tate Sage looks like one of the cleanest answers on the roster.
That’s the kind of leap CBS Sports’ Jon Rothstein is betting on. Rothstein listed Sage as one of his breakout players in the Big Ten for next season, a notable nod for a player who spent last year turning himself from a quiet addition into one of McCollum’s most trusted reserves.
Sage’s path to Iowa City started back in September 2024, when he committed to McCollum while McCollum was still at Drake. Once McCollum took over the Hawkeyes, Sage followed him to Iowa.
At the time, plenty of the attention went elsewhere, with Bennett Stirtz, Tavion Banks, Brendan Hausen, and Alvaro Folgueiras also heading to Iowa City. Sage slipped into the background, then quickly forced his way into the rotation.
He ended up appearing in all 37 games last season, averaging 6.1 points while shooting 49.3 percent from the field and 38.9 percent from three. He also chipped in 2.1 rebounds in 16.2 minutes per game. More often than not, he was the first player McCollum called off the bench.
Now the spotlight is expected to find him again.
With Folgueiras, Hausen, and Stirtz gone, Iowa has minutes available, and Sage is positioned to slide into either the off-guard or forward spot. A projected starting group could include Ty'Reek Coleman, Kael Combs, Tate Sage, Cooper Koch, and Andrew McKeever, though no official announcement has been made and likely won’t be for a while.
The bigger question is who absorbs the offensive load left behind by Stirtz, who averaged 19.8 points per game. Iowa doesn’t need Sage to replace that by himself, but it does need more from him.
More scoring. More responsibility.
More impact on both ends.
That’s where his versatility matters. Before flipping to Iowa, Sage was ranked as the No.
2 Oklahoma prospect because of his six-foot-seven frame and his ability to affect the game in a variety of ways. He backed that up last season with rim-rattling dunks and a real shooting touch, knocking down nearly 40 percent of his three-point tries.
His size and skill also showed up during Iowa’s run to the Elite Eight in the NCAA Tournament. Next season, though, the challenge changes.
As a starter, he’ll draw more attention and face more pressure than he did coming off the bench. He could also end up guarding the opponent’s best player because of his length.
With summer workouts underway, Sage and the Hawkeyes are already building toward that next step. If Iowa is going to piece together its offense without Stirtz, Sage’s development may be one of the biggest swing factors on the roster.
In Other News...
Iowa QB Battle Just Took A Turn Fans Will Feel
Iowas quarterback picture for the 2026-27 season is still very much in flux, and the coaching staff is not giving away much as the program moves toward fall. Jeremy Hecklinski and Hank Brown have emerged as the leading candidates, and both spent plenty of time with the first group during spring practices, giving the Hawkeyes a real two-man race at the most important spot on the field.
Tim Lesters offense only adds to the intrigue, because the system appears to line up well with Hecklinskis style. Even so, the competition remains open, and the next stretch of work will go a long way toward showing whether Iowa is leaning toward a cleaner fit or simply the quarterback who keeps making the strongest case. [Read more 🡒]
Why Iowa Fans Are Already Buzzing About LJ Phillips
LJ Phillips arrived in Iowa City with the kind of rsum that gets attention quickly. The transfer running back was a force at South Dakota, where he led the FCS in rushing and touchdowns, and that production is part of why Hawkeye fans have been buzzing about what he might bring to the offense this fall.
What has only added to the optimism is how smoothly Phillips has fit in since joining the roster. He has connected well with Iowas coaching staff and teammates, and the expectation inside the program is that he can help right away in the backfield, giving the Hawkeyes a newcomer whose impact may be felt early. [Read more 🡒]
Hawkeyes Mourn A Beloved Name Behind The Program
Will Moon, a longtime donor whose name became part of the fabric of Iowa football, died July 16 at age 64, leaving behind a legacy that stretched well beyond the checkbook. Along with his wife, Renee, Moon was one of the programs most visible supporters, helping establish endowment funds and backing facility improvements that strengthened the Hawkeyes on and off the field.
For Iowa, the loss carries a personal and institutional weight because the Moon familys generosity helped secure the permanent Moon Family Head Football Coach designation, a rare marker of how deeply they invested in the program. Funeral services are scheduled for July 21 in Walcott, Iowa, as the Hawkeye community remembers a name that was attached not just to a title, but to years of support behind the scenes. [Read more 🡒]
