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New Story Tip Time: Iowa vs. Cincinnati Preview

Apr 8, 2003
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Tip Time: Iowa vs. Cincinnati

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The Hawkeyes will be looking to make a run in the NCAA Tournament.

Tom Kakert • HawkeyeReport.com
@hawkeyereport

IOWA (22-11) vs CINCINNATI (28-6)

TIME: 11:15 a.m. (central) on Friday

TV: CBS – Brian Anderson, Chris Webber, and Allie LaForce on the call.

SERIES: Cincinnati has a 6-2 record against Iowa. The last meeting was also in the NCAA Tournament, in 2005, which resulted in a 76-64 win for the Bearcats. Three of the meetings have taken place in neutral site games and Cincinnati has a 2-1 record against the Hawkeyes in those games. Iowa and Cincinnati are schedule to meet next season in December in a neutral site game at the United Center.

THE LINE: Cincinnati is a 3.5 point favorite.

THE NUMBERS

OFFENSE: CINCINNATI– 71.7 PPG, 43.2% FG, 35.0% 3 PT FG, IOWA – 78.3 PPG, 45.5% FG, 36.1% 3 PT FG.

DEFENSE: CINCINNATI – 62.2 PPG, 40.6% FG, 35.1% 3 PT FG. IOWA – 73.6 PPG, 44.8% FG, 32.6% 3 PT FG.

THE LINEUPS

CINCINNATI

5-10 guard Justin Jenifer – 8.2 points, 2.8 assists per game

6-5 guard Jarron Cumberland – 18.8 points, 4.5 rebounds per game

6-5 forward Keith Williams – 10.1 points, 3.1 rebounds per game

6-8 forward Tre Scott – 9.3 points, 6.9 rebounds per game

6-11 center Nysier Brooks – 8.0 points, 6.4 rebounds per game

IOWA

6-1 guard Jordan Bohannon – 11.3 points, 3.4 assists per game

6-5 guard Isaiah Moss – 9.1 points, 2.8 rebounds per game

6-6 guard Joe Wieskamp – 10.8 points, 4.8 rebounds per game

6-9 forward Tyler Cook – 14.9 points, 7.9 rebounds per game

6-11 center Luka Garza – 12.9 points, 4.4 rebounds per game

PLAYER TO WATCH – Jordan Bohannon – If there’s a hole in the grinding defense of the Bearcats it’s that they have a weakness defending the three point shot. They are allowing opponents to make 35% from three this year and that’s a pretty high number. They are also more of a zone team than man to man this year due to a relatively thin bench, so that means opportunity will be knocking for Bohannon to get going from deep. If he does, Iowa’s chances of winning will be on the rise.

KEY MATCHUP – Isaiah Moss vs. Jarron Cumberland – From Iowa’s perspective, there’s no bigger head to head battle in this game. Cumberland is by far the best player on the Bearcat roster and when he goes well, they usually win. He’s a creative player who is a natural scorer. Cumberland is comfortable shooting the three ball and he is also very effective off the dribble and scoring in the midrange game with short jumpers and floaters. Moss is Iowa’s best option from a physical perspective, but he has to be disciplined and also make Cumberland work on the other end of the floor.

STATS AND NOTES

Iowa is 4-1 in neutral site games this season, beating Oregon and UCONN in the 2K Classic at Madison Square Garden, UNI at Wells Fargo Arena in Des Moines, and Illinois in the Big Ten Tournament. The only loss was to Michigan in the Big Ten Tournament.

Cincinnati is 5-0 in neutral site games this season, including winning the AAC Tournament this past weekend in Memphis.

This is Iowa’s 26th trip to the NCAA Tournament and fourth in six years under Fran McCaffery. Iowa is 2-3 under McCaffery in NCAA Tournament games. The Hawkeyes are 0-1 as a 10 seed in the NCAA Tournament and that loss was to Cincinnati in 2005. Iowa is 29-27 overall in NCAA Tournament games.

KenPom.com has Cincinnati rated 32nd in the country and Iowa at 36tht. The new NCAA selection committee tool, NET, which has replaced the RPI, has Iowa rated 43rd in the country and Cincinnati rated 25th. KenPom.com projects Cincinnati winning this game, 71-70.

Four Iowa players were recognized by the Big Ten. Tyler Cook was named 2nd team All Big Ten by the media and third team by the coaches. Jordan Bohannon was named 3rd team by the coaches and honorable mention by the media. Luka Garza earned honorable mention honors by the media. Joe Wieskamp was named to the Big Ten’s All Freshman team.

Bohannon is one of three players from a major conference with more than 300 assists and 150 three pointers thru their sophomore season. He is the only player nationally in the past 25 years to have 150 assists and more than 80 three pointers in his freshman and sophomore season. Bohannon scored his 1,000th career point earlier this season. He now has 1,191 points, which is 24th on Iowa’s all-time list. He is 34 assists from becoming the 6th Hawkeye to score 1,000 points and dish out 500 assists.

Bohannon is 2nd all-time in Iowa basketball history for number of made three point field goals with 260. He is just two three pointers from tying Jeff Horner for the top spot all-time in school history. Bohannon is also 7th in Iowa history in assists with 466.

Tyler Cook is now the 20th player in Iowa basketball history to have 1,100 points and 500 rebounds. Cook has now scored 1,299 points in his Iowa career, which is 20th on Iowa’s all-time scoring list.

Senior forward Nicholas Baer is the only player in program history to have 725 points, 500 rebounds, 100 blocks, make 100 three pointers, and 100 steals. Baer is tied for 8th all-time at Iowa with 120 career blocked shots. The 120 blocks ties him with Michael Payne.

Freshman wing Joe Wieskamp led the Hawkeyes in scoring in the first game of his college career and posted his first career double-double against Pitt in the Big Ten-ACC Challenge. Wieskamp was named Big Ten freshman of the week twice this season.

Iowa will have three players redshirting this year. True freshman guard C.J. Fredrick and sophomore forward Jack Nunge has opted to redshirt in the 2018-19 season. After returning to action against Iowa State, junior forward Cordell Pemsl decided to have surgery to remove hardware from his knee and will now redshirt.

Iowa is 4-1 this season in games played on a Friday. Under Fran McCaffery, Iowa is 21-11 in games played on a Friday. This will be Iowa’s first game this season on CBS. The Hawkeyes are 1-2 under Fran McCaffery in games on CBS.

THE PICK

This has been an interesting Iowa basketball season.

The year started with modest expectations coming off a very disappointing year. Then the Hawkeyes went out and won the 2K Classic to begin the season and the expectations went up a bit.

From there, even after a rocky start in Big Ten play, Iowa fans were getting pretty excited about this year’s team, particularly after the Hawkeyes knocked off Michigan on February 1st. After the Hawkeyes won back to back games with amazing endings over Northwestern and Rutgers, Iowa fans thought that perhaps this was a special year.

Then the rest of the schedule happened and Iowa limped to the finish line, losing five or their last six, with four of those defeats by double figures.

The start of the NCAA Tournament offers the Hawkeyes an opportunity to change the script once again for this season. If Iowa were to make a bit of a run and win a couple of games, the narrative of this season would change once again.

Iowa starts that journey in Columbus, OH against Cincinnati on Friday. Obviously playing the Bearcats about 90 minutes from their campus is less than ideal, but it’s not like the Hawkeyes haven’t faced a hostile crowd in Columbus.

First, a little bit about the Bearcats. They are a coming into the NCAA Tournament off their best win of the season. Cincinnati won the AAC conference tournament in Memphis this past weekend and beat Houston to do it.

They feature one of the better players that many fans don’t know about in Jarron Cumberland. He’s a 6-5 guard who is crafty and relatively explosive off the bounce. Cumberland can shoot it from the outside and has an old school mid-range game as well.

Another area that Cincinnati excels is getting on the glass. They have outrebounded their opponents by five a game this season and they are particularly good on the offensive glass. That’s been an area of concern for Iowa in recent weeks, especially when they have been in their 3-2 zone, so that will be something to watch during the game.

On the defensive end of the floor, Cincinnati is traditionally physical and tough. This year is no exception. They will play some man to man, but this year they have played a lot more zone defense due to a fairly limited bench. The Bearcats will press a bit and that will be a challenge for Iowa’s guards.

If there’s a big opening for the Hawkeyes it’s that the Bearcats have allowed opponents to shoot 35% from three. As we have seen this season, if Iowa gets going from three, they are a very tough team. It’s going to be important for Jordan Bohannon, Isaiah Moss, Joe Wieskamp, and Nicholas Baer to shoot the ball well from distance in this game. Luka Garza, Tyler Cook, and Ryan Kriener are going to have to have one of their better rebounding games of the year.

How does Iowa pull the surprise in Columbus? Make more than 10 three pointers. Allow fewer than 7 offensive rebounds. Limit turnovers to under a dozen. Finally, shoot better than 70% from the foul line and get there 20-25 times.

This is a game that Iowa can win, but will they? Iowa just hasn’t trended well in the later portion of the season. That’s hard to ignore. A win over a struggling Illinois team doesn’t change that narrative. I think Iowa plays better than they have, but in the end, Cincinnati’s toughness wins out. CINCINNATI 74 IOWA 68
 
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