NCAAF

Kansas Jayhawks at Iowa State Cyclones

· NCAA - Football
7-2, 2-2 Away
Final
28 - 21
5-4, 3-2 Home

No. 22 Kansas holds off Iowa State 28-21 to reach 7-win mark for first time since 2008

Jason Bean airs out this 80-yard dime to Lawrence Arnold to move Kansas up 28-18 on Iowa State.

The Jayhawks (7-2, 4-2 Big 12) won consecutive conference games for the first time since 2008. They also reached the seven-win benchmark and won in Ames for the first time since that ’08 season.

“This is a great college environment,” Bean said of Iowa State’s Jack Trice Stadium. “It’s a tough environment for any team to come in and play.”

Iowa State (5-4, 4-2) began the day in a five-way tie for first place in the Big 12, but the Cyclones’ comeback bid came up short after they trailed 21-3 with 9:24 left in the third quarter.

“We never put our head down,” Iowa State quarterback Rocco Becht said. “We kept fighting. That’s what I love about this team.”

Bean completed 14 of 23 passes, his biggest one to Arnold giving Kansas a 10-point cushion right after Iowa State had scored to make it 21-18. Arnold got behind the secondary to make the catch at the 50 and ran the rest of the way untouched.

“It was a play we worked on all week,” Bean said. “I felt like all game we were baiting them to come down low enough to get past them on that play. I delivered the ball to (Arnold) and he did the rest.”

A field goal got the Cyclones within 28-21 with 4:53 left. The Jayhawks were able to pick up two first downs on their final possession to run out the clock.

“We don’t get too high. We don’t get too low,” said Arnold, who finished with 112 yards on three catches. “It was just keeping your composure and making sure we did what we had to.”

Kansas’ Devin Neal scored the first of his two touchdowns on the game’s opening series, capping a nine-play, 87-yard drive.

Mello Dotson returned an interception 50 yards for Kansas’ second touchdown, and his second pick-six in two games. The Jayhawks missed two field goals before Iowa State trimmed the margin to 14-3 on Chase Contreraz’s 35-yard kick before halftime.

Neal’s second touchdown completed a 75-yard drive to start the third quarter and gave Kansas a 21-3 lead.

“I feel like it was a lack of detail on our part,” Cyclone receiver Jaylin Noel said of Iowa State’s slow start. “Just little things. Jumping offsides, holding personal fouls. It’s hard to win when you get those type of penalties.”

POLL IMPLICATIONS

The first two times Kansas was in the Top 25 this season, it lost its next game. The Jayhawks should stay in the rankings a second straight week.

INJURY REPORT

Kansas' Dotson appeared woozy after hitting his head while making a diving tackle of Dimitri Stanley with 10 seconds left in the first half. Athletic trainers tended to Dotson on the field for a few minutes, but he was able to walk off the field on his own.

Bean grabbed the back of his left leg after ISU’s Will McLaughlin hit him low after he threw a pass in the second half. No. 3 quarterback Cole Ballard came on to take one snap.

NOT GAINING ON THE GROUND

Iowa State's defense neutralized the top running back duo in the Power Five. Neal and Daniel Hishaw came into Saturday with a combined 1,259 rushing yards on the season but netted a combined 86 yards on 30 carries. Neal ended up with 57 rushing yards and two touchdowns.

UP NEXT

Kansas hosts Texas Tech on Saturday.

Iowa State visits BYU on Saturday.

Get alerts on the latest AP Top 25 poll throughout the season. Sign up here

How To Watch

How can I watch Kansas Jayhawks vs. Iowa State Cyclones?
  • TV Channel: Jayhawks at Cyclones 2021 College Football, week 10, is broadcasted on ESPN.
  • Online streaming: Sign up for Fubo.

Matchup Prediction

Cyclones: 54.4%
Jayhawks: 45.6%
*According to ESPN's Basketball Power Index

Scoring Summary

KU TD 1st Period 8:40 Devin Neal 6 Yd Run (Seth Keller Kick)
KU TD 2nd Period 10:21 Mello Dotson 50 Yd Interception Return (Seth Keller Kick)
ISU FG 2nd Period 0:03 Chase Contreraz 35 Yd Field Goal
KU TD 3rd Period 9:24 Devin Neal 1 Yd Run (Owen Piepergerdes Kick)
ISU TD 3rd Period 3:59 Eli Sanders 6 Yd Run (Eli Sanders Run for Two-Point Conversion)
ISU TD 4th Period 8:11 Rocco Becht 2 Yd Run (Chase Contreraz Kick)
KU TD 4th Period 7:51 Lawrence Arnold 80 Yd pass from Jason Bean (Owen Piepergerdes Kick)
ISU FG 4th Period 4:53 Chase Contreraz 29 Yd Field Goal

Statistics

https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/ncaa/500/2305.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originKU https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/ncaa/500/66.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originISU
16 1st Downs 16
6-13 3rd down efficiency 6-12
1-1 4th down efficiency 0-1
361 Total Yards 333
287 Passing 258
14-23 Comp-Att 21-27
12.5 Yards per pass 9.6
74 Rushing 75
35 Rushing Attempts 29
2.1 Yards per rush 2.6
8-80 Penalties 7-65
0 Turnovers 1
0 Fumbles lost 0
0 Interceptions thrown 1
30:27 Possession 29:33

Game Information

Jack Trice Stadium

Location: Ames, IA
Attendance: 61,500 · Capacity:
Full Standings

College Football News

Michigan to begin selling alcohol at football games this season

Michigan to begin selling alcohol at football games this season

Michigan will begin selling alcohol at home games this season after the successful rollout of alcohol sales at its hockey and basketball arenas over the past academic year.

The key storylines leading up to the 2024 college football season

The key storylines leading up to the 2024 college football season

Check out some of the most important storylines and numbers as the 2024 college football season nears.

Why an NCAA antitrust settlement will leave lots of questions unanswered

Why an NCAA antitrust settlement will leave lots of questions unanswered

A settlement worth more than $2.7 billion could be reached next week. But plenty of questions regarding implementation will remain.

Ewers, Hunter and Edwards featured on video game cover

Ewers, Hunter and Edwards featured on video game cover

Quinn Ewers, Travis Hunter and Donovan Edwards take part in the EA Sports College Football 25 video game cover shoot.

Travis Hunter, Quinn Ewers, Donovan Edwards share EA Sports cover

Travis Hunter, Quinn Ewers, Donovan Edwards share EA Sports cover

Colorado two-way star Travis Hunter, Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers and Michigan running back Donovan Edwards are sharing the cover of EA Sports College Football 25, set to be released July 19.