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RONNIE MILLER/WORLD-HERALD NEWS SERVICE


College Football: Iowa State defense starts to scare opponents

Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier

AMES, Iowa — Paul Rhoads, a hard-hitting safety during his playing days, now demands physical play from Iowa State defenders.

And, of late, his demands have been met.

David Sims and James Smith have repeatedly separated foes from the football. Jesse Smith has pursued opponents from sideline-to-sideline. Fred Garrin has loomed large on short-yardage situations.

As a result, the Cyclones' defense has held three league opponents to 10 points or less — the first season in which that has happened since 1965.

The unit also ranks third nationally in red-zone defense, and no Big 12 rival has more takeaways (29).

Those are key reasons why Iowa State (6-5) is one win away from guaranteeing itself a bowl bid as it heads to Missouri (6-4) today.

“They keep maturing, improving and listening to coaching,” Rhoads said.

“We had our first padded practice back in the spring, and our tackling was so bad — and the desire to tackle and play physical was so far off — it left us scared. But they've come a long way.”

Iowa State still has some deficiencies defensively. A lack of overall speed, for example, was apparent in one-sided losses to Iowa, Texas A&M and Oklahoma State. But Rhoads has been encouraged by his club's absorbtion of new schemes and its willingness to tackle with better technique.


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