Phil Steeles Early Iowa State Outlook Will Frustrate Cyclones Fans

Phil Steele anticipates a challenging season ahead for Iowa State under new leadership and a largely rebuilt roster.

Phil Steele isn’t exactly bullish on Iowa State heading into the 2026 season.

With the Cyclones set to open in 64 days against Southeast Missouri State at Jack Trice Stadium, Steele’s annual preview has Iowa State slotted 16th in the Big 12. He has the Cyclones behind Baylor, Kansas, Oklahoma State and Colorado, though Iowa State won’t face Colorado or Kansas.

The schedule does bring a tough stretch in the middle of the year, with back-to-back games against Oklahoma State and Baylor. Steele also lists Texas Tech, BYU, Utah, Houston and Arizona as his top five picks to win the league.

Iowa State will travel to BYU and Arizona, while hosting Utah in Ames at the end of September, and it avoids Texas Tech and Houston entirely.

Steele’s view of the roster is blunt: this is a team in transition.

“[Matt] Campbell left for Penn State and took 20+ players with him,” Steele wrote about Iowa State. “Leaving new head coach Jimmy Rogers with just three returning starters.

He did bring 15 players from Washington State, but not many started. This is almost an entirely new team (56 transfers) and it figures to be a rebuilding year.”

On offense, Steele expects Jaylen Raynor to win the quarterback job, which lines up with the buzz around the program. He projects Aiden Flora and Cameron Pettaway to handle the backfield work, while Cody Jackson, Dominic Overby, Evan Boyd and tight end Christian Greenlaw are his projected pass-catchers. Up front, Steele has Tarleton State transfer Braden Smith at center, with Caden Maas and Garret Rutledge at guard and transfers Colin Amick and Jake Taylor at tackle.

“This year, the entire offense is gone with a grand new o-line,” Steele wrote. “They do add Jaylen Raynor at QB but figure to take a step back.”

The defense, at least in Steele’s eyes, should be the stronger side of the ball. He notes that all 11 starters are gone, but points to Jesse Bobbit’s track record from last season at Washington State, where the Cougars finished No. 15 nationally in defense.

“All 11 starters depart, but DC [Jesse] Bobbit had a brand new unit last year at Washington State and they were No. 15 in the country in defense.”

Rogers also told Steele he expects the Cyclones’ defense to be better than it was with the Cougars last season.

Steele’s projected linebacker group is notable, too. He does not have Washington State transfer Sullivan Schlimgen in the starting lineup. Instead, he projects Carson Willich at WILL, Tristan Exline at MIKE and former JUCO linebacker Willie Breland on the outside in Ross Watson’s position group.

Even with his respect for Rogers, Steele isn’t buying a quick turnaround. He said Rogers impressed him last season at Washington State by getting the Cougars to a bowl game before taking the Iowa State job, but he sees a tougher road in Ames.

“Rogers did surprise me last year at Washington State,” Steele wrote. “Especially with his defense.

But this may be a tougher task as Washington State faced just three Power Four foes in 2025. There is more of the Cyclones' 8-4 team in Happy Valley than there is in Ames this year, and I will call this a rebuilding year for the Cyclones.”

In Other News...

Iowa State Mourns The Loss Of Beloved Former Coach Jim Walden

Jim Walden, who guided Iowa State football from 1987 to 1994, died at 88, leaving behind a run that Cyclone fans still remember for its grit as much as its results. He took over in a difficult stretch and managed to squeeze real progress out of a program dealing with scholarship reductions, delivering a 1989 season that stood out as one of the brighter chapters of that era and producing wins that gave the program a much-needed lift.

Waldens rsum stretched well beyond Ames, with a strong coaching career at Washington State after starting as an assistant at Nebraska. Even so, his time at Iowa State is where many fans will remember him most, because he showed that the Cyclones could be competitive in hard circumstances and occasionally knock off teams that were supposed to be out of reach. [Read more 🡒]