By RON MALY
The rich are getting richer.
By that, I'm referring to Fred Hoiberg, Iowa State's basketball coach.
Hoiberg not only received a $600,000 pay raise recently, but also continues banking talented basketball players for his powerful Cyclones program.
The latest player who says he'll be wearing an Iowa State uniform is Hallice Cooke, a 6-3 guard who decided to become a Cyclone a few hours after Oregon State named a new coach.
How's that for giving the new guy a vote of confidence?
Cooke's decision to transfer to Iowa State came at the end of the same day that 7-1 Georgios Tsalmpoiuris, a center from Greece, said he will be a Cyclone as a freshman.
The only difference is that Tsalmpoluris will be eligible in the upcoming season, but Cooke won't be eligible until after he sits out the 2014-2015 season to satisfy NCAA transfer rules.
Cooke made his own announcement about transferring. He posted it on Instagram.
He is the 12th transfer to become part of Hoiberg's program.
The man they call The Mayor began coaching at his alma mater in 2010.
He gets transfers from other schools just as often as rumors circulate that he's investigating an NBA job.
Indeed, Hoiberg has a great thing going. People keep spreading rumors that he's possibly going to the NBA, Iowa State consequently gives him a pay raise and he stays in Ames.
Kind of reminds me of when Forest Evashevski was Iowa's football coach in the 1950s and early-1960s.
Once it became evident that the man they called Evy was going to be a big winner at Iowa, rumors began spreading that he'd likely become the coach at his alma mater, Michigan.
Evy loved the rumors, Iowa didn't.
But he didn't leave Iowa City until after he'd quit coaching and he was pushed out as Iowa's athletic director in the Sixties.
Some Kool-Aid drinkers are thinking Iowa State will become a top-5 team nationally once Tsalmpoluris and Cooke get their feet on the ground in Ames, and team up with Hoiberg's other strong recruits.
They'll get no argument from me on that.
For all I know, Iowa State could be a top-3 program [behind possibly Kentucky, whose coach cheats, and Duke, whose coach is Coach K, who doesn't cheat but knows how to both recruit and coach].
I say that because of Hoiberg's coaching ability and the players he's attracting.
Cooke was one of the best freshmen in the Pac-12 Conference in the 2013-2014 season.
He averaged 8.2 points and shot 45.6 percent from the 3-point stripe.
That's music to the ears of Cyclone fans, who love watching the Cyclones run and drill 3-pointers.
Cooke played that well while on a team
coached by Barack Obama's brother-in-law.
Oregon State's record this past season was 16-16, then the guy was fired.
In other words, he didn't do any better than Obama is doing in his job.