IOWA CITY, Iowa โ Thereโs a new post coach in town. But donโt call her the โPost Whispererโ โ that moniker is forever tied to her boss.
In her first season as assistant coach at Iowa, Randi Henderson was handed the reins as the Hawkeyesโ post coach by new head coach Jan Jensen, who has molded good-to-great bigs from Megan Gustafson to Monika Czinano โ and even Henderson herself.ย ย
โI think that title [Post Whisperer] should be retired in the rafters next to Megan Gustafson and all the others,โ Henderson told The Next.ย โI think if you look back at the post players that Jan’s coached, Bethany Doolittle is a much different post player than Megan, and I was much different than both of those, and she’s had success with all different types of post players.
โI believe that same thing, and I think finding what the post players are good at and really capitalizing on those things is what she’s done so well, and I hope to carry on that same mindset and ability,โ Henderson added. โBut the ‘Post Whisperer’ deserves to have her jersey retired.โย

Battle of the bigs
After playing Hannah Stuelke at center last season throughout the Hawkeyesโ second straight Final Four run, Jensen is glad the 6’2 junior can return to her natural power forward position with several strong centers on the roster. But Jensen has no regrets about having played Stuelke at center last season.ย
โShe’s going to be able to do the things that we’re going to need a really strong four player to be able to do, because I know she can do it at the five, up until you play a 6’7 [Kamilla Cardoso of South Carolina in the National Championship game],โ Jansen told reporters after Iowaโs 110-55 win over Missouri Western in an exhibition game Oct. 30. โYou know, everybody last year thought we were like, โOh, well, she’s playing the five,โ but there was only going to be a couple people in the country we were going to have trouble with. And when we got to South Carolina, nobody could beat that. Iโll stick to that. She can play both, but I think it would behoove us if we can keep her at the four.โย
That seems likely as there is a burgeoning battle at center between 6โ4 senior Addison OโGrady and 6โ4 freshman Ava Heiden, a four-star recruit from Sherwood, Oregon.ย
While OโGrady is more experienced, Heiden impressed the coaching staff during summer workouts and early season practices, earning her the start in the secret scrimmage against St Thomas. But she was sidelined with an illness right before the Missouri Western game, giving OโGrady a chance to shine in practice and start the exhibition contest.ย

โShe [OโGrady] had a super week of practice, and was able to capitalize when Ava was under the weather,โ Jensen said after last Wednesdayโs game. โAva didnโt bat an eye and feel badly for herself, just battling.โ
While OโGrady got the start, both her and Heiden played about the same minutes with similar stats. In 14:59, OโGrady had eight points and two rebounds, while Heiden had 10 points and four rebounds in 12:43.
โAddi has a little more experience; she knows what we want a little more,โ Jensen said last week. โI really want it to be competitive and reward that and everybody stays hungry. Itโs kind of neck and neck. I donโt know if weโve seen a big separation, but weโre going to need them both. And that’s where we have to go back to not glorifying the starters. I try to call them sometimes โthe people who begin the game.โโ
During a press conference Monday, Jensen indicated that OโGrady would start again against Northern Illinois this Wednesday in the Hawkeyesโ season opener in Carver-Hawkeye Arena.
โIt likely will be Addi, but theyโre battling it out in a really great way,โ Jensen said. โOur goal is to just keep them both confident and playing freer.โ
โThey both give us a really good look in a different way,โ she added. โAddiโs got a little height. Sheโs really got pretty good timing and is an enforcer on defense. Avaโs really mobile. She can get down the floor and when she puts it all together, she can be a different type of matchup.โ
Staying the course
While basketball is increasingly becoming positionless, Iowa, for the most part, will continue to be a traditional back-to-the-basket post program, Henderson told The Next at media day in October.
โThere’s different strategies, but the post position is a unique position that has some things that stay the same, and Jan has really mastered those things,โ she said. โI think you have to have a true post to be a true post school. And I think we have some ability to utilize the true five still, which does make you hard to guard and opens up the perimeter. And thereโs a lot of benefits to that.โ

Two of Iowaโs most dominant post players, Gustafson and Czinano, followed the Jan Jensen textbook to a tee โ nimble footwork, getting in position down low early, taking few dribbles and even fewer 3-pointers.ย
Both are in the top three on Iowaโs all-time scoring list and have only one made 3-pointer between them. Of Gustafsonโs 2,804 points scored between 2015-2019, only three were from a 3-pointer made her senior year. The only other 3-pointer she attempted was when she was a sophomore. Czinano, who ended up with 2,413 points between 2018-2023, didnโt attempt a 3-pointer until her fifth year, going 0-for-1 in her career.ย
Gustafson has since transformed her game to fit the WNBA style by consistently shooting 3-pointers. From going just 1-for-9 from beyond the arc during her rookie season in 2019 with the Dallas Wings, she made 22 of 57 3-point attempts in 2024 with the Las Vegas Aces.ย

โThe game evolves, and thatโs what players want โ they want to develop,โ Henderson said. โMegan’s size made it so that she had to evolve to a little bit more of a face-up, which is crazy, because she’s 6โ3 โ which is smaller.
โThere is no college program that can completely prepare you for the pros,โ she added. โThe truth of the matter is that you canโt skip the steps. You donโt get to become a pro your freshman year of college. You get to become a really good freshman, and then you become a really good sophomore, and then you keep adding things to your game so that what you’re doing is preparing yourself for the shift you have to take when you get to the pros. Thatโs what I think our job is. And if a player takes it one year at a time, she’ll be prepared for taking that next step when she becomes a pro and adding even more to her game while she’s feeling like a freshman in college again.โ
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While Henderson admits Gustafson could have been used more in face-up situations in college, she โstill is a Naismith Player of the Year with her back to the basket. โฆ You want to prepare them for the pros, but their responsibility as a college basketball coach is to do both. And I think that good college coaches prepare them for the work it’s going to take to become the pro they need to be. And it is evident that Lisa [Bluder] and Jan prepared Megan for the work, because she has put it in.โ
Iowaโs post development draws top recruits like Heiden, who looks to have a big role as a freshman this season.
โBeing part of a team that utilizes posts in the best way they can is important to me. Some of the schools that didnโt do that as much were immediately checked off the list,โย Heiden told The Next. โJan, just being who she is and having the skills that she does โฆ sheโs a big reason I came here. Even though she moved up to the head coaching position, sheโs still teaching me the best she can. And Iโm definitely building a bond with Randi. I think weโre meshing well together.โ

Full circle
Henderson, then Randi Peterson, was named Miss Iowa Basketball in 1997 after her senior year at Cedar Falls High School in Cedar Falls, Iowa. That fall, she started her collegiate career at the University of Iowa where she was a backup center to Tangela Smith, who was named the 1998 Big Ten Player of the Year before embarking on a 13-year career in the WNBA.ย
Henderson was the Hawkeyesโ starting center the next three seasons, including her senior year in which new head coach Lisa Bluder led the team to the Big Ten Tournament championship. Jensen, Bluderโs top assistant, helped Peterson develop into an All-Big Ten post player.ย
She then went into coaching, which included a stop at Minnesota-Morris; nine seasons at Coe College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa; two seasons as assistant coach at University of North Carolina at Charlotte; and seven seasons as head coach at Washington University in St. Louis.
At Washington, she coached d3hoops.com All-American posts Madeline Homoly (2018-19) and Maya Arnott (2022-23), and center Lexy Harris, who was named the 2024 d3hoops.com National Rookie of the Year.
When Jensen called her early this summer to talk about the Iowa assistant coach spot left open when Jensen was promoted to head coach, Henderson was honored, but had a lot to consider.ย
โI think I always thought, ‘Man, it’d be super cool to give back to the coaching staff that gave me so much.’ I stayed connected with them throughout my career, calling Jan or Lisa when I needed things or really felt like I screwed up as a coach. They were always just a phone call away and supportive of my life outside of basketball,โ she said. โBut I loved being in St Louis. I loved WashU and my experience, so we actually were not at all planning to move.โ
Henderson and her husband, former Iowa basketball player Duez Henderson, have two young children in first and second grade.
โMoving your kids is always hard, and getting them new schools and away from their neighbors, and trying to get them to believe this is better,โ she said. โThe kids are a little harder sell, but they’re coming along. And I think the community here has been really great, and my family is close.โ
Watching their mom coach in a sold-out Carver-Hawkeye Arena should really make the kids come around, she added.
