Iowa State’s first look in College Football 27 comes with a pretty harsh verdict.
After a massive offseason shakeup that sent head coach Matt Campbell to the Penn State Nittany Lions, the Cyclones are entering a new era with new head coach Jimmy Rogers and a roster that barely resembles the one from before. Almost the entire coaching staff is gone, a large chunk of the roster has turned over, and Iowa State isn’t bringing back a single starter on either side of the ball. That leaves Rogers with a full rebuild on his hands.
He’s done this kind of thing before. In 2025, Rogers inherited a Washington State Cougars roster that featured 75 newcomers, so the challenge in Ames won’t be unfamiliar. Some of those players followed him to Iowa State, but the early numbers in College Football 27 still paint a bleak picture for the Cyclones.
Iowa State landed at 77 overall, with both the offense and defense also checked in at 77. That puts the Cyclones in a tie for the lowest mark in the Big 12 alongside the Kansas Jayhawks, who are also sitting at 77 overall with matching 77 ratings on offense and defense.
The only other Big 12 teams below 80 overall are West Virginia, Cincinnati and Baylor, but each of them at least has one side of the ball graded at 80 or better. West Virginia’s offense comes in at 81, powered by running back Cam Cook, who is rated 91 overall and ranks among the top 11 players in the conference based on the College Football 27 ratings. Cincinnati is projected to have an 80-rated offense even after losing quarterback Brendan Sorsby, while Baylor’s strength appears to be defense with an 80 rating on that side.
At the top of the league, Texas Tech stands alone. The Red Raiders are rated 87 overall, with an 85-rated offense and a defense that checks in at 90.
For Iowa State, the player ratings show just how much work there is to do. The Cyclones have only six players rated 80 or higher, and defensive end Isaac Terrell leads the way at 86.
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Iowa State Still Has One Roster Flaw That Could Break March Dreams
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Jefferson was never a true rim-deterrent, and the interior numbers got even shakier when the Cyclones were forced to play without one of their bigs. That is the kind of flaw that can shorten a postseason, especially for a team built to defend and grind. Iowa State has clearly tried to address it with the next roster, but the real question is whether the fix is good enough when March brings bigger lineups and fewer chances to hide a weak spot. [Read more 🡒]
