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Tamin Lipsey 'expecting' to play in Iowa State's first-round NCAA Tournament game

Tamin Lipsey 'expecting' to play in Iowa State's first-round NCAA Tournament game
THEY DON’T PLAY UNTIL FRIDAY. JEFF. NO, THEY DON’T PLAY UNTIL FRIDAY, WHICH MEANS WE CAN’T BE IN THE ARENA UNTIL THURSDAY. SHANNON. WHICH MEANS WE ARE OUTSIDE IN THE COLD HERE IN MILWAUKEE. BUT HEY, WE ARE IN MILWAUKEE AND IT’S A DRIVE THAT’S ABOUT 5.5 HOURS, RIGHT? AND I’VE LEARNED IN MY TIME LIVING IN THE MIDWEST THAT 5.5 HOURS FOR THE COMMON MIDWESTERNER, THAT IS GOOD ENOUGH FOR THEM. AND YOU’RE GOING TO HAVE A LOT OF IOWA STATE FANS MAKE THEIR WAY HERE TO MILWAUKEE, JUST LIKE THEY DID A FEW YEARS AGO WHEN IOWA STATE WAS HERE. AND THEY MADE THEIR SWEET 16 RUN. WE’RE GOING TO BE SEEING A LOT OF CARDINAL AND GOLD HERE OVER THE NEXT FEW DAYS, HOPEFULLY THROUGH SUNDAY. AND THAT’S GOING TO PLAY HUGE FOR THE CYCLONES. ALL THE ADVANTAGES THEY CAN GET. THEY’LL TAKE THEM. AND THAT IS CERTAINLY ONE. THE GREAT THING ABOUT BEING A CYCLONE IS THAT WE KNOW OUR FANS ARE GOING TO FOLLOW US. WE KNOW THEY’RE GOING TO MAKE THE SACRIFICES AND THE CHOICES TO BE THERE. IT’S BEEN AMAZING TO ME AS I’VE COME BACK, THE SUPPORT WE’VE HAD AWAY FROM HILTON. IT’S REALLY COOL. I HONESTLY, I DIDN’T THINK WE WERE GOING TO GET TO GO TO MILWAUKEE BECAUSE EVERY BRACKET HAD US NOT GOING THERE, SO IT WAS A SURPRISE. BUT IT’S REALLY COOL TO GO BACK HOME. TO IOWA STATE AND LIPSCOMB, THE THREE VERSE 14 MATCHUP AT 1230 ON TNT ON FRIDAY IOWA STATE IS THREE AND ONE. AND NCAA TOURNAMENT GAMES PLAYED IN MILWAUKEE. HOPI
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Tamin Lipsey 'expecting' to play in Iowa State's first-round NCAA Tournament game
Iowa State won’t have second-leading scorer Keshon Gilbert for the NCAA Tournament, but the Cyclones may be getting another guard back.Tamin Lipsey expressed cautious optimism that he’d be available Friday when Iowa State, the No. 3 seed in the South Region, faces Lipscomb (25-9) in the first round. Lipsey had missed Iowa State’s Big 12 Tournament quarterfinal loss to BYU with a groin issue.“It’s felt a lot better every day,” Lipsey said Thursday. “So I’m expecting to go out there and play, and I hope I can go out and feel the best I can. … I feel like I’m trending in a positive direction and feel good about it.”Lipsey’s return would be a major boost to the Iowa State defense. The 6-foot-1 guard has a school-record 235 career steals and is averaging 10.8 points and 3.2 assists this season.Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger said Lipsey is playing as well as he has in his three seasons with the Cyclones. Lipsey played through a fractured thumb earlier this season, and teammates have praised his toughness.“Tough as nails, as they would say,” guard Curtis Jones said. “He’ll play through a lot, especially now that it’s March. It’s win or go home. I feel like he would play through a broken bone. As long as he can get out there and run and pass, I think that’s all he needs to do to make an impact on a team.”Iowa State (24-9) is adapting to the absence of Gilbert, who had a team-high 4.1 assists per game. His 13.4 points per game rank behind only Jones’ 17.1.Gilbert already had missed four of Iowa State’s last seven games. After missing the regular-season finale against Kansas State, Gilbert returned to play 10 1/2 minutes in a Big 12 Tournament victory over Cincinnati, but he was held out for the BYU game and won’t play again this season.The injuries have tested Iowa State’s depth, one of its hallmarks. The Cyclones are one of only 31 Division I teams — and 11 in this tournament — to have four players scoring at least 10 points per game.“On any good team, when you have adversity and challenges it’s important, the next-man-up mentality” Otzelberger said. “And you gain strength collectively from the group and pouring into the group. Our team has done a fantastic job of that, and that’s allowed them to continue to elevate.”Gilbert’s injury has resulted in an expanded role for Nate Heise, a Northern Iowa transfer getting his first taste of March Madness as a fifth-year senior. The 6-4 guard has played as many as 30 minutes five times this season, four of them in Iowa State’s last seven games.“Obviously you want everyone to be at full strength, but that’s just not the case right now,” Heise said. “It’s been a little different role for everybody. It’s been a little different compared to the beginning of the year, but I’ve really enjoyed it. I look forward to it.”Lipscomb coach Lennie Acuff didn't expect Iowa State’s injuries to play a major role in Friday’s game. Acuff recalled how his own team responded when forward Dylan Faulkner, who averaged 10.5 points per game, broke his foot in January, ending his season.“We just had other guys step up,” Acuff said. “A lot of times when you have a proud program that’s built on winning and culture, that’s what happens. We don’t expect anything less than their best tomorrow.”

Iowa State won’t have second-leading scorer Keshon Gilbert for the NCAA Tournament, but the Cyclones may be getting another guard back.

Tamin Lipsey expressed cautious optimism that he’d be available Friday when Iowa State, the No. 3 seed in the South Region, faces Lipscomb (25-9) in the first round. Lipsey had missed Iowa State’s Big 12 Tournament quarterfinal loss to BYU with a groin issue.

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“It’s felt a lot better every day,” Lipsey said Thursday. “So I’m expecting to go out there and play, and I hope I can go out and feel the best I can. … I feel like I’m trending in a positive direction and feel good about it.”

Lipsey’s return would be a major boost to the Iowa State defense. The 6-foot-1 guard has a school-record 235 career steals and is averaging 10.8 points and 3.2 assists this season.

Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger said Lipsey is playing as well as he has in his three seasons with the Cyclones. Lipsey played through a fractured thumb earlier this season, and teammates have praised his toughness.

“Tough as nails, as they would say,” guard Curtis Jones said. “He’ll play through a lot, especially now that it’s March. It’s win or go home. I feel like he would play through a broken bone. As long as he can get out there and run and pass, I think that’s all he needs to do to make an impact on a team.”

Iowa State (24-9) is adapting to the absence of Gilbert, who had a team-high 4.1 assists per game. His 13.4 points per game rank behind only Jones’ 17.1.

Gilbert already had missed four of Iowa State’s last seven games. After missing the regular-season finale against Kansas State, Gilbert returned to play 10 1/2 minutes in a Big 12 Tournament victory over Cincinnati, but he was held out for the BYU game and won’t play again this season.

The injuries have tested Iowa State’s depth, one of its hallmarks. The Cyclones are one of only 31 Division I teams — and 11 in this tournament — to have four players scoring at least 10 points per game.

“On any good team, when you have adversity and challenges it’s important, the next-man-up mentality” Otzelberger said. “And you gain strength collectively from the group and pouring into the group. Our team has done a fantastic job of that, and that’s allowed them to continue to elevate.”

Gilbert’s injury has resulted in an expanded role for Nate Heise, a Northern Iowa transfer getting his first taste of March Madness as a fifth-year senior. The 6-4 guard has played as many as 30 minutes five times this season, four of them in Iowa State’s last seven games.

“Obviously you want everyone to be at full strength, but that’s just not the case right now,” Heise said. “It’s been a little different role for everybody. It’s been a little different compared to the beginning of the year, but I’ve really enjoyed it. I look forward to it.”

Lipscomb coach Lennie Acuff didn't expect Iowa State’s injuries to play a major role in Friday’s game. Acuff recalled how his own team responded when forward Dylan Faulkner, who averaged 10.5 points per game, broke his foot in January, ending his season.

“We just had other guys step up,” Acuff said. “A lot of times when you have a proud program that’s built on winning and culture, that’s what happens. We don’t expect anything less than their best tomorrow.”