Iowa State’s roster is headed for a major reset, and T.J. Otzelberger isn’t hiding what he expects from the new faces.
The Cyclones will look very different in the 2026-27 season after finishing the 2025-26 campaign in the Sweet Sixteen of the 2026 NCAA Tournament. Three seniors - Tamin Lipsey, Nate Heise and Joshua Jefferson - are gone, and junior sharpshooter Milan Momcilovic is out of the mix as well. In their place, Iowa State is bringing in three freshmen from the Class of 2026 - Yusef Gray Jr., Christian Wiggins and Dorian Rinaldo-Komlan - plus five transfers.
That transfer group gives Otzelberger a mix of experience and immediate responsibility. Tre Singleton arrives from Northwestern, Taj Manning from Kansas State, Ryan Prather Jr. from Robert Morris, Leon Bond III from Northern Iowa and Jaquan Johnson from Bradley. Each one is expected to have a defined role, and Otzelberger made it clear the staff didn’t bring them in to sit and wait.
“I think that covers all the transfers, I believe. I think each guy’s going to have an impact.
I mean, we brought those guys here for a reason. You don’t bring in transfers, especially guys in their last year, the last couple of years, without a plan for them to play and develop.
And I think all those guys have put themselves in a great position that way,” Otzelberger said via Bill Seals of Cyclone Report (subscription required).
The challenge is obvious: those transfers are being asked to step into big jobs quickly, and the freshmen class is already dealing with injuries. Gray suffered a shoulder injury during his senior year, and his return remains uncertain. Wiggins’ first season in Ames is effectively on hold after an Achilles injury, with a return not expected until next summer.
That puts even more pressure on the newcomers to deliver. Johnson is projected to slide into Lipsey’s leadership role on both ends of the floor. He brings burst as a scorer, toughness as a defender and the kind of recognition that comes with winning the Missouri Valley Defensive Player of the Year Award.
Bond is the candidate to take on the versatile, do-everything role Heise handled. Singleton has the biggest frontcourt burden, as he’s the one most likely to replace Jefferson.
Manning adds the interior toughness and size Iowa State was missing last season, while Prather gives the Cyclones elite ball security and three-level scoring. He also looks like a natural sixth-man option, someone who can bring a scoring lift and extra size to the backcourt.
This offseason, size was a clear priority for Otzelberger in the portal. That’s part of a broader trend in men’s college basketball, and Iowa State is making sure it’s part of the conversation too.
In Other News...
Iowa State Enters Camp With A Quarterback Battle Fans Can't Ignore
Training camp opens Aug. 5, and the biggest question hanging over Iowa States quarterback room is the kind that can shape an entire season. Jaylen Raynor arrives from Arkansas State with the reputation of a player who can make things happen, while Zane Flores brings a different kind of intrigue after transferring from Oklahoma State and getting a longer look in a Power Four setting. For a program trying to sort out its pecking order before the first practice, this is less about naming a starter on paper and more about figuring out which passer can settle the offense fastest.
Raynors fit will be watched closely because the leap from the Sun Belt to the Big 12 is no small one, even for a quarterback with obvious tools. Flores, meanwhile, has already shown enough in game action to keep himself in the conversation, but there are still questions about how cleanly his production translates in a new system. However it shakes out, Iowa State enters camp with a quarterback battle that feels real, not routine, and the early days of August should tell a lot about where the room is headed. [Read more 🡒]
Iowa States Frontcourt Reload May Hinge On One Crucial Newcomer
Tre Singleton arrives in Ames with a clear opportunity in front of him, and Iowa State needs it to work. The Northwestern transfer is a top-100 addition who brings the kind of physicality and defensive versatility the Cyclones value, especially with frontcourt minutes opening up after key departures. He has been spending the offseason getting acclimated and refining his game with assistant coaches Erik Crawford and Nate Schmidt, a process that should help him settle into the spots Iowa State needs him to fill.
For the Cyclones, the bigger question is how quickly Singleton can grow into the role left behind by Joshua Jefferson. His profile suggests he can handle the dirty work right away, but Iowa State is also looking for more than just a body in the paint. Singleton is working to expand his offensive ceiling by improving his jump shot, and how far that progress goes could shape whether the frontcourt reload feels seamless or still leaves a gap when the season begins. [Read more 🡒]
