Iowa State has two new names at the top of its athletic honors list, and both came from seasons that left a mark well beyond Ames.
Joshua Jefferson was selected as the school’s Gary Thompson Male Athlete of the Year, while Mercyline Kirwa earned the Celia Barquin Arozamena Female Athlete of the Year award for the 2025-26 season, Iowa State announced this week.
Jefferson’s recognition comes after a breakout year that put him in rare company. The basketball standout became the 18th men’s basketball player to win the award and the first since 2017.
He was taken in the first round of the 2026 NBA Draft by the Brooklyn Nets, making him the 42nd NBA Draft pick in Iowa State history. He also joined a short list of Cyclones greats as one of only five players in program history to be named a consensus All-American, alongside Gary Thompson, Marcus Fizer, Jamaal Tinsley and Georges Niang.
His season was packed with production. Jefferson became the first player in Big 12 history to post multiple triple-doubles in conference play, and he finished as the only Power Conference player in the nation averaging at least 16.4 points, 7.4 rebounds, 4.8 assists and 1.6 steals per game. A footnote that says plenty about his consistency: before an injury in the opening minutes of the NCAA Tournament cut his season short, he had scored in double figures in 40 straight games, the second-longest active streak in the country.
Iowa State will formally honor Jefferson at Jack Trice Stadium during the Sept. 5 football season opener.
Kirwa’s award follows a freshman year that already reads like a program-changing debut. The distance runner captured the NCAA title in the 10,000-meter and finished second nationally in the 5,000-meter at the 2026 NCAA Outdoor Championships. Her 18 individual points were the most scored by any woman at the meet, and they helped push the Cyclones to a sixth-place team finish, the best in school history.
She did it by beating elite company in the 10,000-meter, including two-time NCAA champions and Bowerman Award nominees, among them the all-time collegiate record-holder. Kirwa is already a three-time All-American and owns Iowa State’s indoor 5,000-meter school record. Her first season also included two Big 12 titles and the USTFCCCA Midwest Region Women’s Track Athlete of the Year honor.
In Other News...
Iowa State Just Got Hit With A Brutal Big 12 Disrespect
Iowa States offseason has already been defined by upheaval, with Matt Campbell leaving for Penn State and a wave of players following him there. Jimmy Rogers, hired away from Washington State, now inherits a program trying to stabilize itself quickly, and the early conversation around the Cyclones has not exactly been flattering.
On3s Big 12 power rankings for the 2026 season put Iowa State at the bottom of the league, a sharp drop for a team that reached the conference title game two years ago and still went 8-4 last season. The ranking has sparked a fair amount of pushback, too, because the Cyclones still have enough returning pieces that some around the league think they belong well ahead of the very bottom of the conference picture. [Read more 🡒]
T.J. Otzelberger Faces A New Iowa State Test Fans Will Feel Fast
Iowa States offseason reset is already feeling bigger than a routine roster shuffle, even after a season that put the program back in a familiar winning place. The Cyclones have moved into 2026-27 with a mix of returning pieces, newcomers and staff turnover, and T.J. Otzelberger has made it clear the next step is about more than talent. For a team that has built its identity on edge and cohesion, the challenge now is stitching together a new group without losing the habits that carried it so far.
The departures were heavy, and the replacements are still getting acquainted with both the program and each other, which is why the early days of summer matter so much around Ames. Iowa State has added experience on the bench and fresh options on the roster, but the real test comes in how quickly the Cyclones can make all of it look like one team. Fans will feel that process fast, because the first signs of whether this group is tracking upward or simply starting over will show up long before league play does. [Read more 🡒]
