Tate Sage arrived in Iowa City as a late add and a three-star signee, the kind of player plenty of people viewed as a long-term project. By the end of last season, he looked like something much bigger than that.
The 6-foot-7 guard flashed in February losses to Wisconsin and Michigan, but his real breakthrough came when Iowa stunned top-seeded Florida in the NCAA Tournament and then turned around to face Nebraska. In what the source calls the biggest Iowa game of this century, Sage delivered the kind of performance that changes how a player is seen. He scored 19 points, grabbed eight rebounds and handed out three assists in 29 minutes off the bench, burying four massive 3-pointers to help push Iowa into its first Elite Eight in nearly 40 years.
Sage said that game opened his eyes to another level of what he can be.
"That Nebraska game, I feel like kind of broke another level of realization, like, ‘Oh dang,'" Sage said.
That momentum carried into Iowa’s summer work. During the open portion of practice last week, Sage stood out again, and he said that was a fair snapshot of how the offseason has gone overall.
“I would say so, yeah,” Sage said. “That's where I've been getting comfortable, and I've been shooting it at a pretty high clip. I'm just getting more comfortable with my new role and trying to excel in it.”
Now Sage is preparing for a bigger workload as his sophomore season approaches. He said he has been focused on his diet and trying to get leaner, while also putting in time on his shot, ball-handling and ball-screen actions.
"I'm going to have a bigger role," Sage said. "I'm going to have the ball in my hands a lot more, more looks at the rim.
I've been shooting a lot, working on my ball-handling, and all these ball-screen actions, really whatever the team needs. If I need to be a scorer, I'll be a scorer."
With Bennett Stirtz gone, Sage believes Iowa’s offense will be more shared and more balanced. He said the Hawkeyes are ready for that shift.
"I just think it's going to be the Iowa Hawks,” Sage said. “I'm not saying we weren't a true team last year, but it's going to be more of a team effort.
More involved, more spread out. There's not going to be just one main guy.
Everybody's willing to do whatever they have to do to win.”
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Iowa Just Lost A Young Receiver At The Worst Time
Iowas receiver room took another hit heading toward 2026, with second-year wideout Terrence Smith no longer expected to be on the roster. A three-star member of the 2025 class, Smith was part of the group the Hawkeyes hoped could grow into a bigger role as the offense kept searching for more answers on the outside.
His departure leaves a noticeable gap in a position group that was already counting on development from younger players. Iowa still has options with eligibility remaining, but the loss of a receiver with Smiths upside makes the path forward a little less straightforward, especially for a team that needs every promising pass catcher it can keep in the pipeline. [Read more 🡒]
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 🡒]
