Nov 19

Almost.

In 1964, the Iowa Highway Commission made a sort of wish-list for freeways that would be built in addition to the interstates. With some changes to the corridor paths, this has been the root of the state’s operating plan for nearly half a century. It was expanded greatly in 1968; US 151, IA 60, IA 330, and semi-substantial parts of US 30 and 63 made it off the drawing board from that group.


Dubuque Road/old US 20 on the east side of Waterloo, June 25, 2002. This four-lane road built in 1958 ceased to be part of 20 in 1984.

Construction on US 20 steadily progressed from 1969 to 1991. The upgrading of other corridors in that 1964 plan really took off after 1993. A switch to mainly expressway construction, with at-grade intersections, lessened costs.

But after 1991, US 20 saw only bits and pieces. In 2000, it was built toward both US 65 and IA 14 and left a giant gap in the middle. Finding the best way to go through this gap, the Iowa River Greenbelt, had perplexed the DOT and the Iowa Highway Commission before that. Through delays, protests, and budget troubles, “no-build” was the chosen alternative for decades. Continue reading

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Nov 18

The Big 12 circular firing squad

is alive and well. So is the Sports Illustrated cover jinx. (Note first, that person wrote before the game, and second, that the cover explicitly invokes the jinx in case of a Kansas State loss.)

Two “bottom feeders” of the Big 12 have, in successive years, derailed a potential national championship berth for a team that’s never won it all and opened the door for — of all teams! — Alabama. And this time, Notre Dame too.

The universe has an odd, odd sense of humor.

In semi-related news, Iowa State won its sixth game of the year Saturday, ensuring a trip to lovely — Shreveport?

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Nov 16

Summary of NT playoff opponents’ outcomes

It’s a decent rule of thumb: The team that beats North Tama in the playoffs, or the team that beats the team that beats North Tama, wins the state championship. Granted, this is not difficult to do in an eight-team bracket, but it’s still kind of interesting.

In 21 playoff appearances across three sports, the team that beat North Tama won it all 12 times (including three four-team brackets and three championship games), and the team that beat the team that beat North Tama won five times. Three times the formula didn’t work, and one time nobody beat the Redhawks.

Football

  • 1988: Grundy Center beat NT in Class 1A first round, won championship
  • 1995: Denver beat NT in Class 1A first round, won championship
  • 1999: West Marshall beat NT in Class 1A quarterfinals, won championship
  • 2000: Aplington-Parkersburg beat NT in Class 1A quarterfinals, lost to Southern Cal in championship
  • 2001: Aplington-Parkersburg beat NT in Class 1A semifinals, won championship
  • 2002: Valley of Elgin beat NT in Class A first round, lost to Fredericksburg, who lost championship to Manning. Exception #1.
  • 2003: North Mahaska beat NT in Class A first round, lost to Martensdale-St. Marys, who lost to Madrid, who lost to Treynor. Exception #2, and the only three-loss chain.
  • 2006: Postville beat NT in Class A first round, lost to Wapsie Valley, who lost to IKM. Exception #3.
  • 2007: Wapsie Valley beat NT in Class A first round, won championship
  • 2008: Southern Cal beat NT in championship game
  • 2009: Mason City Newman beat NT in Class A semifinals, lost to Southern Cal in championship
  • 2010: North Tama won state championship
  • 2011: Mason City Newman beat NT in Class A first round Round of 16, lost to Lisbon, who won state championship (Stupid playoff inflation.)
  • 2012: Wapsie Valley beat NT in Class A quarterfinals, won championship

Baseball (4-team playoff until 1995) (all Class 1A)

  • 1982: Burlington Notre Dame beat NT, won championship
  • 1986: Tri-Center (Neola) beat NT, lost to Kee High
  • 1990: Norway beat NT in championship
  • 2002: Mason City Newman beat NT in championship
  • 2003: Van Meter beat NT in semifinals, won championship
  • 2012: Algona Garrigan beat NT, lost to Martensdale-St. Marys, who won championship

Girls’ Basketball

  • 2012: North Mahaska beat NT in Class 1A first round, won championship
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Nov 15

US 20 link opens before ceremony


The last pieces of US 20 in the state to be paved, in 1938, are also the last pieces to be bypassed, nearly 75 years later.

This is a slight twist on the usual process. New 20 is going to open before the ribbon cutting. From the Iowa DOT, emphasis theirs:

The newly completed segment begins at the intersection with Iowa 4 near Rockwell City in Calhoun County and continues west to U.S. 71 near Early in Sac County. The road is scheduled to open to traffic Monday, Nov. 19, at noon. The celebratory event will follow on Wednesday.

That celebratory event begins at 10 AM.

On a personal note: Yikes. That means, for me, VERY early driving. Maybe the governor would let me carpool with him.

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Nov 15

Football championships

This year the state football championships are a day earlier, I’m guessing because of a UNI home game Saturday. Thursday is 8-man, A, and 3A, while 1A, 2A, and 4A are Friday.

The Class 1A title game is Council Bluffs St. Albert vs. Iowa City Regina…again. They played in 2007 and St. Albert won 7-6. In the past decade, nine of the 20 spots in 1A title games belong to three private schools: St. Albert, Regina, and Algona Bishop Garrigan (and that’s not counting two Regina titles in 2A).

Meanwhile, in Class A, it’s Wapsie Valley (10-0) vs. Hinton (10-3). Wapsie beat North Tama in the quarterfinals.

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Nov 14

Iowa State 19, Nebraska 10

“First down play, and it’s Seiler keeping, trying to turn the corner, he does, he pops through at the 30! He’s to the 40, to midfield, to the 45! To the 30! To the 25! To the 15, to the 10, to the 3-yard line! Marvin Seiler almost breaks it all the way, 77 yards to the Nebraska 3!”

Video at cyclones.com: Seiler’s fourth-quarter run set up a touchdown.
The New York Times/AP: “Nebraska is whirled by a Cyclone”
Sports Illustrated: “Seiler’s Side”
Miraculous Marv Stuns Huskers (via HuskerMax; 2004; PDF)

The Cyclone defense held the Cornhuskers not just to their lowest point total of the season, but the fewest points Nebraska would score in a game until a 19-0 loss at Arizona State on Sept. 21, 1996, and then a 40-7 loss to Penn State Sept. 14, 2002. (In fact, since the 1992 ISU game, Nebraska has ended with 10 points on the board only three times — twice to Texas Tech and once to USC — and scored 10 or fewer 15 times total. How’s that for an odd pair of stats?)

According to one source, it is one of the biggest the fifth-biggest upsets* in college football history by the point spread (29) (ISU-OSU 2011 was 27½). It’s one of the 150 moments that defined Cyclone athletics. It was also one of three ISU wins over ranked teams in the Jim Walden era and the only victory against Nebraska between 1977 and 2002.

A Nebraska fan who was there adds these statistics: “Iowa State’s ’92 victory over Nebraska was the only loss that Tom Osborne suffered against a team with a losing record. It was the first time since 1978 that Nebraska has lost to another Big Eight team besides Oklahoma or Colorado. It was the only Big Eight loss for Nebraska quarterback Tommie Frazier, the greatest quarterback in college history. After the Iowa State loss, Nebraska didn’t lose a regular season game for another six years.”

Over the next nine years, NU would outscore ISU 464-133, an average of 51.5-14.7, with more than 70 points in two of those games and more than 40 in all except one. NU would also win 2½ national championships.

In 2002, Iowa State had risen and Nebraska had fallen (in relative terms). They met as equals in Ames, and the Cyclones won 36-14 — the second-most points ever scored by ISU against Nebraska.

There will be few markings or citations of either the 1992 or 2002 games this year. We got all that out of our system when Benedict Herbie fled to the Big Ten. (That failed two-point conversion pass is still, still hanging in the air.) In ’72, ’82, ’92, and ’02, ISU was 2-1-1 against NU. There will be no ’12.

Iowa State 19, Nebraska 10: five simple words that have been part of every Cyclone fan’s DNA for 20 years.

*UPDATE 11/15: That page was apparently from the mid-2000s. Bigger wins against the spread now include Stanford over USC, 2007 (34½) and Texas State over Houston, 2012 (34). So ISU-Nebraska 1992 is now no higher than seventh.

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Nov 13

Prelude to an upset

In November 1992, Iowa State fifth-year senior Marv Seiler was still looking for his first career start as quarterback. Seiler had served in relief for a win against Missouri, and coach Jim Walden even said he “earned the right to start, but there’s an old saying that goes, ‘If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.'”

Walden went with Donnie Smith in a Thursday night game against Kansas State. The Wildcats ranked last in Division I-A in offense. Iowa State was 3-5 (1-3). Kansas State was 3-4 (0-4). The game was Kansas State’s first on ESPN under coach Bill Snyder.

On Nov. 5, 1992, in Manhattan, things broke for Iowa State.

Cyclone punter Jon Schnoor had his punt blocked for the first time that season — and then a second time. Kansas State turned those blocked punts into 12 points. When the Wildcats won 22-13, the fans stormed the field and tore down the goalposts. It was Kansas State’s third win in a row against Iowa State and Snyder’s seventh conference win in four seasons.

“It’s not often that any fans tear down the goalposts after beating Iowa State,” Des Moines Register sports reporter Ron Maly wrote. “I’ve never had a team find new ways to get beat,” Walden said.

Walden and ISU had nothing left to lose — except the upcoming Nov. 14 game at home against No. 7 Nebraska. At the end of the week, it was announced that Seiler would be the starting quarterback for Iowa State.

Iowa State was 2-30-1 against Nebraska since 1961.

Sources: Des Moines Register articles “ISU’s tentative plan: Start Smith, use Seiler in relief,” 11/4/92; “Down and out in Manhattan,” 11/6/92; “After five years, Seiler will start,” 11/13/92; Wikipedia articles on KSU football seasons 1988-92
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Nov 13

Sullivan Brothers 70th anniversary

The USS Juneau sank during the Battle of Guadalcanal on Nov. 13, 1942 (Nov. 12 Iowa time). The five Sullivan brothers of Waterloo were on board. KWWL has a video.

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Nov 12

License Plate Tracker — AGP

I can’t call it a “countdown” anymore. It’s not precisely a “count up” either. It’s just a gauge of where the letter sequence is.

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Nov 11

ISU’s 600th loss

With a 33-7 loss to Texas, the fifth of the season, Iowa State joins the following BCS football teams with 600 all-time program losses: Rutgers (605), Kansas State (612), Wake Forest (614), Indiana (634), and Northwestern (635).

Northwestern claimed that its victory over Indiana Sept. 29 transferred the title of “losingest team,” but adding up the losses from the NCAA record book plus the season through Nov. 10 gave the totals above. So there is likely a disputed score or two from the 19th or early 20th century hiding around. The next team to reach 600 likely will be Kentucky (581) or Vanderbilt (578), but it will take a little while.

Why am I bringing this up? I’ll quote from the CBS blog post linked above: “Your football program should be notable for something, even if it is futility. To do otherwise is just delaying the inevitable, anyway.”

I could do an entire ESPN 30-for-30 about Iowa State’s football futility, with a little bit of basketball thrown in. There’s nothing wrong with accepting it while at the same time hoping for better things.

This post will be updated at the end of football season.

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