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Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Men's basketball team of the University of Illinois

Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball
2025–26 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team
UniversityUniversity of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
First season1905–06; 120 years ago
All-time record1927–1074 (.642)
Athletic directorJosh Whitman
Head coachBrad Underwood (9th season)
ConferenceBig Ten
LocationChampaign, Illinois
ArenaState Farm Center
(capacity: 15,544)
NicknameFighting Illini
Student sectionOrange Krush
ColorsOrange and blue[1]
   
Uniforms
Home jersey
Team colours
Home
Away jersey
Team colours
Away
Alternate jersey
Team colours
Team colours
Alternate
NCAA tournament runner-up
2005
Other NCAA tournament results
Final Four1949, 1951, 1952, 1989, 2005
Elite Eight1942, 1949, 1951, 1952, 1963, 1984, 1989, 2001, 2005, 2024
Sweet Sixteen1951, 1952, 1963, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1989, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2024
Appearances1942, 1949, 1951, 1952, 1963, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2013, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025
Pre-tournament Premo-Porretta champions
1915
Pre-tournament Helms champions
1915, 1943
Conference tournament champions
2003, 2005, 2021, 2024
Conference regular-season champions
1915, 1917, 1924, 1935, 1937, 1942, 1943, 1949, 1951, 1952, 1963, 1984, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2022

TheIllinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team is anNCAA Division Icollege basketball team competing in theBig Ten Conference, that represents theUniversity of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. The Illini play their home games at theState Farm Center, located on theUniversity of Illinois Urbana-Champaign's campus inChampaign. Illinois has one pre-tournament national championship and non-NCAA tournament national championships in 1915 and 1943, awarded by thePremo-Porretta Power Poll. Illinois has appeared in theNCAA Division I men's basketball tournament 35 times, and has competed in 5Final Fours, 10Elite Eights, and has won 18 Big Ten regular season championships, and 4 Big Ten Tournament Championships.

The team is currently coached byBrad Underwood, who was hired on March 18, 2017. Through the end of the 2023–24 season, Illinois ranks 13th all-time inwinning percentage and 13th all-time inwins among all NCAA Division I men's college basketball programs.

History

[edit]
See also:List of Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball seasons

1906–12: Early years

[edit]
One of the first teams fielded by Illinois, 1905–06

The Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team began play during the1905–06 season withElwood Brown guiding the team to a 9–8 record as their first coach.Frank L. Pinckney took control of the team before the start of the1906–07 season. The team would win their first game but would end up dropping the next 10 contests.

Another coaching change led toFletcher Lane being in charge of the team for the1907–08 season. After starting the season 14–1 in non-conference, Illinois would finish the season losing five of their 11 conference games, ending the year third in theWestern Conference with a 20–6 (6–5) record.

Even though Lane led a successful season, his style of coaching was deemed subpar. Former Illini playerHerb Juul was then hired as the head coach of the1908–09 squad. The Illini would not see the same success as the season prior, finishing the season with a 7–6 (5–6) record. Despite the struggles, Juul became the first coach in Illinois history to return for more than one season. However, the1909–10 season would be his last as the Illini finished with a 5–4 (5–4) record.

Thomas E. Thompson took the reins before the1910–11 season. The Illini would finish fourth in the Western Conference after earning a 6–6 (6–5) record. The1911–12 season was Thompson's last year as head coach of the Illini after they finished with an 8–8 (4–8) record.

1912–20: Ralph Jones era

[edit]

Before the start of the1912–13 season, Illinois hired formerPurdue head coach,Ralph Jones. During his three seasons inWest Lafayette, Jones compiled a 32–9 record, while also winning the previous two Western Conference titles. During his first season with Illinois, Jones led the Illini to a 10–6 record which was Illinois' second 10-win season in school history.

During the1914–15 season, Illinois won their first-ever Big Ten title, going 16–0 (12–0). They were retroactively declared champion of that season by theHelms Athletic Foundation and thePremo-Porretta Power Poll. They would earn another Big Ten title during the1916–17 season, sharing it with Minnesota.

1936–47: Douglas Mills era

[edit]
The "Whiz Kids" during practice.

Before the start of the1936–37 season,Douglas R. Mills began acting as the head coach and athletic director of the Illinois men's basketball team. In his first season, the Illini finished with a 14–4 (10–2) record, which was good enough to share the Big Ten title with Minnesota.

BeforeWorld War II broke out, the Fighting Illini men's basketball program had achieved a status that had never been seen prior. Mills grouped a team of players, all around 6-foot-3, into a nearly undefeatable lineup later known as the "Whiz Kids". The1941–42 freshman and sophomore lineup ofArthur Smiley,Ken Menke,Andy Phillip,Gene Vance, Victor Wukovits, andArt Mathisen dominated the Big Ten by posting a 13–2 conference record and winning the conference title outright. It would be their first unanimous Big Ten championship since 1915.

The Illini finished1942–43 season with a 17–1 (12–0) record, winning their second-straight Big Ten title. Despite being ranked No. 1 in the nation, they opted not to play in the1943 NCAA tournament after three of their five starters were called to duty in World War II. At the end of the season, they were namedPremo-Porretto Pre-Associated Press Poll national champions.

The1946–47 season, would be Mills' last season as the head coach of the Illini. The team ended the season with a 14–6 (8–4) record, finishing one game behindWisconsin in the Big Ten standings. Under Mills, the Illini compiled a record of 151 wins and 66 losses while winning three conference championships in the process.

1947–67: Harry Combes era

[edit]

Champaign High School basketball coachHarry Combes was hired to succeedDoug Mills as Mills left the position to focus on his duties as theathletic director. Through his first five seasons as head coach, Combes led the Fighting Illini to three NCAA Final Four appearances in1949,1951, and1952.[2] During his tenure as coach, Combes increased the Fighting Illini's offensive output by changing their style of play. Combes implementedFull-court press defense, causingturnovers at a high rate which translated intoFast break points.[2]

In 1951, Combes signed the first black player to don an Illinois uniform, 3x All-State point guard Walt Moore of Mount Vernon. Along with teammate and future Illinois standout Max Hooper, Moore led the Rams to back-to-back state championship titles, culminating with a perfect 33–0 record in 1950.

During the1957–58 season,Mannie Jackson andGovoner Vaughn were inserted into the starting lineup as the first two African-Americans to start and letter in basketball at Illinois.[3] Combes also oversaw the Illini's move fromHuff Hall toAssembly Hall in1963 and during that same season the Illini won a fourth Big Ten Conference championship under Combes. However, the Illini lost to eventual national championLoyola (Chicago) in theElite Eight of the1963 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. The following1964–65 season, saw several upset victories over defending national championUCLA Bruins and national powerhouseKentucky Wildcats atMemorial Coliseum inLexington, Kentucky.[2]

Combes' tenure came to an end as a result of theUniversity of Illinois slush fund scandal. As head coach of the basketball team, he was primarily responsible for the basketball fund, and thus held a key role in the scandal. Assistant basketball coachHowie Braun also lost his job due to the scandal.

1967–74: Harv Schmidt era

[edit]

Former Illini playerHarv Schmidt was hired to fill the head coaching vacancy ten days after Combes' forced resignation. During his tenure, the Illini compiled an 89-77 overall record but went 43-55 in conference play. The team did not have any postseason appearances during his tenure.

1974–75: Gene Bartow year

[edit]

Gene Bartow would later sign a five-year contract to replace Schmidt in 1974, but he left after one season in which the Illini finished last place in the conference to replaceJohn Wooden at UCLA.

1975–96: Lou Henson era

[edit]

In 1975, after having takenNew Mexico State (and future Illinois assistant coachJimmy Collins) to the1970 Final Four,Lou Henson moved to the University of Illinois to replaceGene Bartow, after Bartow left Illinois to replace the legendaryJohn Wooden at UCLA. Henson would lead the Fighting Illini back to their glory after having a number of difficult years following the Illinois slush fund scandal (where Illinois was hit with severe penalties for infractions that other Big 10 schools had in years prior been punished much more leniently (according toSports Illustrated) at the time). In 21 years at Illinois, Henson garnered 423 wins and 224 losses (.654 winning percentage), and with a record of 214 wins and 164 losses (.567) in Big Ten Conference games. The 214 wins in Big Ten games were the third highest total ever at the time of his retirement. At Illinois, Henson coached many future NBA players, includingEddie Johnson,Derek Harper,Ken Norman,Nick Anderson,Kendall Gill,Kenny Battle,Marcus Liberty,Steve Bardo, andKiwane Garris.

Early 1980s

[edit]

In 1981, Illinois made strides in its return to the national spotlight with a 21–8 record, a third-place Big Ten finish and an invitation to the NCAA Tournament. The team received a first-round bye in the NCAA Tournament and beat Wyoming, 67–65, in Los Angeles to advance to the regionals in Salt Lake City, where Illinois lost to Kansas State, 57–52. During this season, the Fighting Illini led the Big Ten in scoring for the second consecutive season and were again led by Eddie Johnson and Mark Smith. Guards Craig Tucker and Derek Harper arrived to add backcourt punch, and Harper began his Illini career being named First-Team Freshman All-America by ESPN and ABC.

See also:1979–80 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team and1983–84 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team

Flyin' Illini

[edit]
See also:1988–89 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team

The top-seeded and top-ranked 1989 Illini were upset 83–81 in theFinal Four on a last second basket byMichigan'sSean Higgins, ending the school's deepest run in the tournament at that time. Illinois had beaten the Wolverines by 12 and 16 points in two previous meetings that season. The 1988–89 Illinois Fighting Illini team gained the moniker "Flyin' Illini" byDick Vitale during anESPN broadcast that season. The team also gained national prominence for its athletic players, such as NCAA slam dunk championsKenny Battle andKendall Gill, as well asLowell Hamilton,Nick Anderson,Marcus Liberty, andStephen Bardo.

1990s

[edit]

The early 1990s Illini were dominated by players such as guards Andy Kauffman, Richard Keene, and Kiwane Garris, as well as centers Shelly Clark andDeon Thomas. Thomas was at the center of a report of misconduct byIowa Hawkeyes men's basketball assistant coachBruce Pearl, who alleged that Thomas had been offered cash to attend Illinois. The Illini were suspended from postseason play for one season for unrelated violations uncovered during the investigation.

1996–00: Lon Kruger years

[edit]

After longtime coachLou Henson's departure, Illinois hiredLon Kruger to fill the vacancy for the 1996 season. Kruger was the 14th head basketball coach in program history. During his four-year tenure he compiled a 59–38 record. He immediately made an impact at Illinois leading them to a 22–10 record and a second round NCAA tournament appearance in his first year. This created excitement because of the ninth-place finish the Illini had taken just before his arrival. Kruger inherited players such as Victor Chukwudebe, Jerry Hester, Kevin Turner, Jerry Gee, Matt Heldman, Brian Johnson,Kiwane Garris and Cleotis Brown. During his four seasons at Illinois, three of which resulted in NCAA Tournament berths, (all three of which saw the Illini eliminated in the 2nd round) Kruger became the only Big Ten coach to successfully sign three consecutiveIllinois Mr. Basketball winners, inkingSergio McClain,Frank Williams, andBrian Cook between 1997 and 1999.Several times during his coaching tenure the Illini were predicted to be at the bottom of the Big Ten, however he overcame adversity each time performing far better than expected.

2000–03: Bill Self years

[edit]

Illinois picked Tulsa coachBill Self from a list of numerous candidates, including popular assistantJimmy Collins, to succeed Kruger, who moved on to theNBA to coach theAtlanta Hawks. Bill Self was hired to the Illini coaching staff as the 15th head coach in the history of the program. He spent his previous seven years as the head coach of Oral Roberts University and Tulsa University where he compiled an overall record of 129–71. In 2001, his first season at Illinois, Self coached his new Fighting Illini squad to a 27–8 record, a share of the Big Ten title, and a number 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. That 27-game winning season in Self's first year was the second most winning season in school history at that time. McClain, Cook and preseason Big Ten player of the year Cory Bradford led the Illini to the Elite Eight, where they fell to eventual finalistArizona in a much disputed contest. The Illini were accused of being overly physical most of the season, especially McClain and pesky guards Sean Harrington and Lucas Johnson (younger brother of former Illini forward Brian Johnson). The '01 Illini team also includedRobert Archibald,Damir Krupalija and Marcus Griffin. With mostly the same core, Illinois followed up the season with impressive 2002 and 2003 campaigns, but fell in the Sweet 16 in 2002. He was the first head coach in the Big Ten, since 1912, to lead his team to conference championships in each of his first two seasons. It was also the first time Illinois won back-to-back titles in 50 years. Self, also, had an overall record of 78–24 in his three years as Illinois head coach. Self left for Kansas after the 2003 season.[4]

2003–12: Bruce Weber era

[edit]

Bruce Weber served as the head coach of Illinois basketball for nine seasons from 2003 to 2012.

After Bill Self left, Illinois AD Ron Guenther hired Weber to coach the Fighting Illini on April 30, 2003. Weber came fromSouthern Illinois University (SIU) in Carbondale and was touted as a loyal coach, which was valued by the Illinois AD after both Kruger and Self left Champaign with relatively short tenures. In his five seasons as head coach at SIU, Weber took the Saluki program to the top of theMissouri Valley Conference, winning league titles in 2002 and 2003. He posted records of 28–8 and 24–7 in his last two seasons, leading the Salukis to back-to-back NCAA Tournament appearances, including a run to the Sweet 16 in 2002 with wins over Texas Tech and Georgia at theUnited Center inChicago. His .689 (62–28) winning percentage in MVC play ranked 12th in the long history of the league. Weber earned Missouri Valley Conference Coach of the Year honors following the 2003 season.

Illinois totaled 210 victories under Weber from 2004 to 2012. He ranks third on the Illinois career coaching wins list. He won 67.5 percent of his games while in charge of the Fighting Illini (210–101). Under Weber, the Illini had two Big Ten Championships (2004, 2005), two runner-up finishes (2006, 2009) and seven upper-division finishes.

Illinois had five players selected in the NBA draft under Weber, asDeron Williams (No. 3, Utah Jazz) andLuther Head (No. 24, Houston Rockets) were taken in the first round of the2005 NBA draft, andJames Augustine (No. 41, Orlando Magic) andDee Brown (No. 46, Utah Jazz) were chosen in the second round of the2006 NBA draft.Meyers Leonard was chosen 11th by thePortland Trail Blazers in the2012 NBA draft following Weber's final season. Utah's selection of Williams at No. 3 overall in the 2005 lottery made him the highest-drafted player in Illinois history.

It took just one season for Weber to etch his name in the Big Ten and Illinois record books after leading the Fighting Illini to its first outright Big Ten title in 52 years during the 2003–04 season. In leading his young team that featured just one senior on the roster, Weber became just the third coach in the history of the Big Ten to win an outright title in his first season. Illinois had to win 10 straight to end the regular season to claim the championship, including six-straight wins on the road. Illinois' 26 wins in 2003–04 tied the fourth-winningest season in school history. Weber also led the Illini to the Sweet 16 with NCAA Tournament victories over Murray State and Cincinnati.

Weber's second year at Illinois, the 2004–05 season, will be remembered as one of the greatest in Fighting Illini history, finishing 37–2 as the National Runner-Up in the NCAA tournament. In a remarkable year where Illinois celebrated its centennial season of basketball, the Illini reeled off 29 straight wins to start the year, tying the 12th-best start in NCAA Div. I history and the third-best start in Big Ten history. Illinois also secured its second-straight outright Big Ten championship with a 15–1 league record, as Weber became the first coach in Big Ten history to win consecutive outright titles in his first two seasons. Illinois then added a Big Ten tournament championship in addition to its regular season title. The Illini were ranked No. 1 in the nation for 15 straight weeks, including a first-ever No. 1 ranking in the final Associated Press poll.

They gained the #1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament and prevailed in one of the most memorable games in NCAA history against Arizona. Down 15 points with around 4 minutes left, the Illini rallied with a run led by Luther Head and Deron Williams. The game was sent into overtime and the Illini pulled off a one-point win to advance to the 2005Final Four in St. Louis. It was the Fighting Illini's first Final Four Appearance since the 1988–89 season. Against the Louisville Cardinals in the national semifinal game, the Illini posted their final victory of the season. All of the five Illini starters–Deron Williams,Luther Head,Dee Brown,James Augustine, andRoger Powell, Jr.–would eventually play in the NBA. Williams and Brown both joined theUtah Jazz roster, while Luther Head went on to play for theSacramento Kings.

With all that Illinois accomplished during the season, Weber swept the 2005 National Coach of the Year awards, claiming the following: the Naismith Award, the most prestigious coaching award in college basketball; the Henry Iba Award, presented by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association; and, the Adolph F. Rupp Cup. Weber was also named National Coach of the Year by the NABC, Associated Press, The Sporting News, Basketball Times, CBS/Chevrolet, Victor Awards and Nike Championship Basketball Clinic.

Despite losing three starters and 63 percent of its scoring from the 2004–05 NCAA runner-up squad, Weber directed the 2005–06 Illini to a third-consecutive 29-win season, a runner-up finish in the Big Ten, the second round of the NCAA Tournament, and a ranking among the nation's top 17 teams throughout the entire season. The Illini spent the majority of 2005–06 ranked in the Top 10 and recorded 26 wins on the year to tie the fourth-winningest season in school history. The Illini were given a number 4 seed in the NCAA tournament, where they beat Air Force in the opening round, before falling to the University of Washington in the second round.

The 2006–07 team finished with a record of 23–12 (9–7) and finished tied for fourth in the Big Ten. With a depleted roster that had six different players combine to miss a total of 58 games due to injury, the Illini still advanced to the NCAA Tournament. They were awarded a 12 seed and lost in the opening round to Virginia Tech.

The 2007–08 season was one of the worst seasons in Illinois history, highlighted by a string of close losses. The lone bright spot came as Illinois came on strong to win four of its last five and five of its final seven games, which culminated with a runner-up finish at the Big Ten tournament. Weber's Illini became the first No. 10 seed in the tournament's history to advance to the title game, winning three games in three days with victories over Penn State, No. 17 Purdue, and Minnesota to reach the championship game vs. No. 8 Wisconsin. However, with an overall record of 16–19 (5–13), the Illini were not selected to participate in postseason play.

Weber's 2008–09 UI squad was one of the most improved teams in the country finishing with a record of 24–10 (11–7). With 10 more regular season victories than it achieved the year before, Illinois posted the third-biggest turnaround in NCAA Division I and the second-biggest turnaround among BCS programs on the year. The Illini recorded 24 wins, ranking as the 10th winningest season in school history. Illinois was the Big Ten runner-up, earned a No. 5 seed in the 2009 NCAA Tournament, and finished the year ranked 24th in the Pomeroy rankings. The Illini lost in the first round of the NCAA tournament to the 12th-seeded Western Kentucky Hilltoppers.

During the 2009–10 season, the Illini finished 21–15 (10–8) and finished 5th in the Big Ten. The team was widely considered to be "on the bubble" for the NCAA tournament and missed the tournament field by a narrow margin. The Illini competed in the NIT, falling at home to the Dayton Flyers in the NIT Quarterfinals.

Illinois rebounded in 2010–11 to finish 20–14 (9–9) and tied for fourth in the Big Ten. The Illini were selected to join the NCAA tournament as a #9 seed, where they defeated the #8 seeded UNLV Rebels setting up a matchup with the #1 seeded Kansas Jayhawks and former coach Bill Self. Kansas proved to be too much for the Illini, and the season came to an end in the round of 32.

In 2011–12, Weber's last as coach of the Illini, the team finished 17–15 (6–12), good for 9th in the conference. The team did not compete in the postseason. Illinois' new AD Mike Thomas fired Weber after the 2011–12 season.

2012–17: John Groce era

[edit]
Coach Groce

John Groce was hired by the new athletic directorMike Thomas on March 28, 2012.[5] During the2012–13 season, the Illini were theMaui Invitational champions and later made theNCAA tournament, losing their second game to theMiami Hurricanes by a score of 63–59. The Illini spent eight weeks nationally ranked in theNCAA Division I rankings, and for two weeks were ranked as high as 10th in the country.

The2013–14 season saw major roster turnover, with nine players leaving and nine players joining the program. This season was one to forget, as the Illini would ultimately miss the NCAA Tournament and lose in the second round of the NIT.

In2014, Groce continued Illinois' success in November, improving to 21–0 under Groce and 32–0 overall during the past four seasons. Illinois is the only program in the nation with an undefeated November record dating back to 2011.[6] The 2014–2015 season was once again disappointing for the Illini. Illinois finished with a record of 19–14, finishing tied for 7th place in the Big Ten with a record of 9–9. The Illini were then beaten in the first round of the NIT.

The2015–16 season ended with the fewest total wins in almost 20 years since the 98–99 Lon Kruger crew won only 14 games. Groce's squad finished with a record of 15–19, taking 12th place in the Big Ten and receiving no post-season tournament invitations.

The2016–17 season was another disappointing season for the Fighting Illini, as they finished the season at 18–14 and 8–10 in the conference, failing to make the NCAA Tournament for the fourth consecutive year. On March 11, 2017, the university announced via press release that Groce had been relieved of his duties as head men's basketball coach. The next day, the team was put into theNIT as a 2-seed. The team was coached during the NIT by interim coachJamall Walker, making it to the quarterfinals before being eliminated by theUniversity of Central Florida.

2017–present: Brad Underwood era

[edit]

On March 18, 2017, Brad Underwood was hired by athletic director Josh Whitman.[7] Underwood previously coached atStephen F. Austin from 2013 to 2016, before spending one year atOklahoma State. InUnderwood's first season at Illinois, the team won each of their first five contests. After beginning conference play 0–8, they ended the season with a record of 14–18.

While the2018–19 season featured the debut of key pieces includingAyo Dosunmu,Giorgi Bezhanishvili,Andres Feliz, andAlan Griffin, the Illini posted one of the worst records in program history at 12–21 (7–13 in Big Ten). Despite the poor record, Illinois had many memorable moments such as upsetting #9Michigan State at home and Bezhanishvili scoring 35 points againstRutgers, breaking the Illini record for most points by a freshman in a single game.

The2019–20 season was the freshman year of highly ranked centerKofi Cockburn. The Illini started the season slow in the first game, barely beatingNicholls State 78–70 in overtime. During the ACC–Big Ten Challenge, Illinois playedMiami where they lost 81–79 after they mounted a huge comeback before a charge was called against Dosunmu on the game's final play. The next game they traveled toCollege Park to play against #3Maryland. The Illini led by 14 at the half, but Maryland outscored Illinois 34–19 in the second half and won the game by anAnthony Cowan free throw. The Illini next played #5Michigan at the State Farm Center. They would beat the Wolverines 71–62 to improve to 7–3 on the season. Over the next 12 games, the Illini went 10–2, including Dosunmu's game-winning shot during their second matchup against Michigan to give Illinois a 64–62 lead with half a second left on the clock. Illinois would finish the season with a 21–10 (13–7) record which would be good enough for 4th in theBig Ten. They would also finish ranked 21st in theAP Poll and 22nd in theCoaches Poll.

The2020–21 season that Underwood finally had mostly his recruits running the team and it certainly showed on the court. After much deliberation, Ayo Dosunmu returned to Illinois for his junior season instead of going to the NBA. He, along with Kofi Cockburn, helped make Illinois into a top-10 team. They went 16-4 (0.800) in the B1G conference but had a worse record than Michigan (14-3, 0.824), and therefore did not earn even a share of the title. This title was disputed as Michigan had failed to play three extra games because of COVID protocols, and only one loss in those three games would have given Illinois the title; Illinois had beaten Michigan by 23 without leading scorer Ayo Dosunmu in Ann Arbor. The team went on to win the Big Ten tournament title, however, after a hard-fought, overtime 91–88 win over OSU. Illinois became a #1 seed in the NCAA Tournament for the 4th time in school history. They were upset by Loyola-Chicago in the 2nd round and finished the season 24–7. Dosunmu became the first player in Illini history to earn 1st-team All-America honors by the AP. Cockburn was named to the AP All-American 2nd-team.

Before the2021–22 season, Underwood's assistant coaching staff completely turned over, with Chin Coleman and Orlando Antigua going to Kentucky and Stephen Gentry returning to Gonzaga. Ayo Dosunmu was drafted by the Chicago Bulls and Adam Miller transferred to LSU, leading to André Curbelo being expected to serve as the primary ball handler. Unfortunately, Curbelo suffered a concussion prior to the season opener that would continue to affect him throughout the season. The team was led by fifth-year players Trent Frazier and Da'Monte Williams. Kofi Cockburn returned for his junior year but was suspended for the first three games for selling his team jerseys during the off-season. The team tied with Wisconsin for a share of the Big Ten regular season title, with a record of 15-5. Due to the tiebreaker rules, the team was seeded first in the Big Ten Tournament but lost its first game to ninth-seeded Indiana. The team was given the #4 seed in the South region of the NCAA tournament. After a 54-53 victory against Chattanooga, the team lost in the second round to Houston. Cockburn was named to the AP All-American 1st-team.

The roster suffered from some major turnover before the2022–23 season, with five players transferring out of the program, four players graduating, and Kofi Cockburn electing to stay in the NBA draft (and ultimately going undrafted). Three players transferred into the program and six freshmen were recruited. As a result of the roster changes, the team would be led byTerrence Shannon Jr. andColeman Hawkins. The Illini would secure two major wins in non-conference play, beating #8 UCLA in the Continental Tire Main Event semifinal and #2 Texas in the Jimmy V Classic. Both Zacharie Perrin and Skyy Clark left the program during the season. Ultimately the season was a step back for the program, as due to tiebreaker rules, the team received a seven seed and lost to Penn State in their first game of the Big Ten Tournament. The team then received the #9 seed in the West region and lost in the first round of the NCAA Tournament to Arkansas. For the first time since Underwood's second season, the team finished the season unranked in the AP Poll.

The2023-24 season would be one to remember. Three pivotal graduate transfers,Marcus Domask,Quincy Guerrier, andJustin Harmon joined the team, with Domask and Guerrier starting most games. The Illini went on an undefeated trip to Spain and then beat #1 ranked Kansas in a televised exhibition game. The team lost only two games to non-NCAA tournament teams, once to Penn State and once to Maryland. After finishing second in the Big Ten standings, the team ultimately won the Big Ten Tournament, prevailing over Wisconsin. The team was selected to the NCAA tournament as the #3 seed in the East region. For the first time in Underwood's tenure, the team made the Sweet Sixteen, where it beat the #2 seed, Iowa State. For the first time since the 2004–05 season, the team made the Elite Eight, where it lost to #1-overall and eventual national champion UConn.

Major turnover again beset the Illini prior to the2024-25 season. Terrence Shannon Jr. was drafted by the Minnesota Timberwolves and every scholarship player from the prior season save two, Ty Rodgers (who ultimately redshirted) and Dra Gibbs-Lawhorn, left the program. Assistant coaches Chester Frazier and Tim Anderson left the program, leading to the return of Orlando Antigua and the temporary promotion of Kwa Jones. The Illini had one of its strongest freshmen classes in its history, including 2025 first round picksKasparas Jakučionis andWill Riley. Following a season plagued by injury and illness, the Illini made the NCAA Tournament as the #6 seed in the Midwest region. The team won its first game against Xavier and then lost the following game to Kentucky.

Records by Coach

[edit]
CoachYearsRecordConference

Record

Conference

Champion

NCAA

Bids

Thomas E. Thompson1910–191214–1410–13
Ralph R. Jones1912–192085–3464–312
Frank J. Winters1920–192225–1214–10
J. Craig Ruby1922–1936148–9594–742
Douglas R. Mills1936–1947151–6688–4731
Harry Combes1947–1967316–150174–10444
Harv Schmidt1967–197489–7743–55
Gene Bartow1974–19758–184–14
Lou Henson1975–1996423–224214–164112
Lon Kruger1996–200081–4838–2813
Bill Self2000–200378–2435–1323
Bruce Weber2003–2012210–10189–6526
John Groce2012–201795–7437–531
Jamall Walker (interim)20172–1
Brad Underwood2017–132-8575-5615
Totals1896–1058998–7561834

Championships

[edit]

National championships

[edit]
YearCoachSelectorRecord
1915Ralph JonesHelms Athletic Foundation,Premo-Porretta Power Poll16–0
1943Douglas R. MillsPremo-Porretta Power Poll17–1

Conference championships

[edit]

Regular season

[edit]
SeasonConferenceCoachOverallConference
1914–15Western ConferenceRalph Jones16–012–0
1916–1713–310–2
1923–24Big Ten ConferenceJ. Craig Ruby11–68–4
1934–3515–59–3
1936–37Douglas R. Mills14–410–2
1941–4218–513–2
1942–4317–112–0
1948–49Harry Combes21–410–2
1950–5122–513–1
1951–5222–412–2
1962–6320–611–3
1983–84Lou Henson26–515–3
1997–98Lon Kruger23–1013–3
2000–01Bill Self27–813–3
2001–0226–911–5
2003–04Bruce Weber26–713–3
2004–0537–215–1
2021–22Brad Underwood23–1015–5

† – Conference co-champions

Tournament

[edit]
YearConferenceCoachSiteOpponentScore
2003Big Ten ConferenceBill SelfUnited Center (Chicago, Illinois)Ohio State72–59
2005Bruce WeberUnited Center (Chicago, Illinois)Wisconsin54–43
2021Brad UnderwoodLucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis, Indiana)Ohio State91–88OT
2024Target Center (Minneapolis, Minnesota)Wisconsin93–87

Postseason history

[edit]

NCAA Division I Tournament

[edit]

Seeding

[edit]

TheNCAA began seeding the tournament with the1979 edition.

CoachHenson
Years'79'80'81'82'83'84'85'86'87'88'89'90'91'92'93'94'95'96
Seeds4723433156811
CoachKrugerSelfWeberGroce
Years'97'98'99'00'01'02'03'04'05'06'07'08'09'10'11'12'13'14'15'16'17
Seeds65414451412597
CoachUnderwood
Years'18'19'20'21'22'23'24'25
Seedsx14936

Results

[edit]
YearSeedRoundOpponentResults
1942Elite Eight
Regional 3rd-place game
Kentucky
Penn State
L 44–46
L 34–41
1949Elite Eight
Final Four
National 3rd-place game
Yale
Kentucky
Oregon State
W 71–67
L 47–76
W 57–53
1951Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National 3rd-place game
Columbia
NC State
Kentucky
Oklahoma A&M
W 79–71
W 84–70
L 74–76
W 61–46
1952Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National 3rd-place game
Dayton
Duquesne
St. John's
Santa Clara
W 80–61
W 74–68
L 59–61
W 67–64
1963Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Bowling Green
Loyola–Chicago
W 70–67
L 64–79
1981#4Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#5Wyoming
#8Kansas State
W 67–65
L 52–57
1983#7First Round#10UtahL 49–52
1984#2Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#7Villanova
#3Maryland
#1Kentucky
W 64–56
W 72–70
L 51–54
1985#3First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#14Northeastern
#6Georgia
#2Georgia Tech
W 76–57
W 74–58
L 53–61
1986#4First Round
Second Round
#13Fairfield
#5Alabama
W 75–51
L 56–58
1987#3First Round#14Austin PeayL 67–68
1988#3First Round
Second Round
#14Texas-San Antonio
#6Villanova
W 81–72
L 63–66
1989#1First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
#16McNeese State
#9Ball State
#4Louisville
#2Syracuse
#3Michigan
W 77–71
W 72–60
W 83–69
W 89–86
L 81–83
1990#5First Round#12DaytonL 86–88
1993#6First Round
Second Round
#11Long Beach State
#3Vanderbilt
W 75–72
L 68–85
1994#8First Round#9GeorgetownL 77–84
1995#11First Round#6TulsaL 62–68
1997#6First Round
Second Round
#11Southern California
#14UT Chattanooga
W 90–77
L 63–75
1998#5First Round
Second Round
#12South Alabama
#4Maryland
W 64–51
L 61–67
2000#4First Round
Second Round
#13Penn
#5Florida
W 68–58
L 76–93
2001#1First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#16Northwestern State
#9Charlotte
#4Kansas
#2Arizona
W 96–54
W 79–61
W 80–64
L 81–87
2002#4First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#13San Diego State
#12Creighton
#1Kansas
W 93–64
W 72–60
L 69–73
2003#4First Round
Second Round
#13Western Kentucky
#5Notre Dame
W 65–60
L 60–68
2004#5First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#12Murray State
#4Cincinnati
#1Duke
W 72–53
W 92–68
L 62–72
2005#1First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
#16Fairleigh Dickinson
#9Nevada
#12Milwaukee
#3Arizona
#4Louisville
#1North Carolina
W 67–55
W 71–59
W 77–63
W 90–89OT
W 72–57
L 70–75
2006#4First Round
Second Round
#13Air Force
#5Washington
W 78–69
L 64–67
2007#12First Round#5Virginia TechL 52–54
2009#5First Round#12Western KentuckyL 72–76
2011#9First Round
Second Round
#8UNLV
#1Kansas
W 73–62
L 59–73
2013#7First Round
Second Round
#10Colorado
#2Miami
W 57–49
L 59–63
2021#1First Round
Second Round
#16Drexel
#8Loyola–Chicago
W 78–49
L 58–71
2022#4First Round
Second Round
#13Chattanooga
#5Houston
W 54–53
L 53–68
2023#9First Round#8ArkansasL 63–73
2024#3First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#14Morehead State
#11Duquesne
#2Iowa State
#1UConn
W 85–69
W 89–63
W 72–69
L 52–77
2025#6First Round
Second Round
#11Xavier
#3Kentucky
W 86–73
L 75-84

National Invitational Tournament

[edit]

Seeding

[edit]

TheNIT began seeding the tournament with the2006 edition.

Years →'06'07'08'09'10'11'12'13'14'15'16'17'18'19'20'21'22'23'24'25
Seeds →1232x

Results

[edit]
YearSeedRoundOpponentResult
1980First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
3rd Place Game
Loyola-Chicago
Illinois State
Murray State
Minnesota
UNLV
W 105–87
W 75–65
W 65–63
L 63–65
W 84–74
1982First Round
Second Round
LIU
Dayton
W 126–78
L 58–61
1996First RoundAlabamaL 69–72
2010#1First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Stony Brook
Kent State
Dayton
W 76–66
W 75–58
L 71–77
2014#2First Round
Second Round
Boston University
Clemson
W 66–62
L 49–50
2015#3First RoundAlabamaL 58–79
2017#2First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Valparaiso
Boise State
UCF
W 82–57
W 71–56
L 58–68

Facilities

[edit]
Kenney Gym

Kenney Gym (1905–1925)

[edit]
Main article:Kenney Gym and Kenney Gym Annex

Kenney Gym Annex is a 5,000-seat multi-purpose arena that is the practice facility for the Fighting Illini gymnastics team. Before the opening ofHuff Hall in 1925, Kenney Gym housed the Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team. It also was home to the Women's Volleyball program from 1974 until 1989, after which the program moved to Huff Hall in 1990.

Huff Hall (1925–1963)

[edit]
Main article:Huff Hall

Huff Hall is a 4,050-seat multi-purpose arena in Champaign, Illinois, United States. The arena opened in 1925 and was known as Huff Gymnasium until the 1990s. It is named afterGeorge Huff, the school's athletic director from 1895 to 1935. Huff Hall is home to the University of Illinois Fighting Illini volleyball and wrestling teams. Before the opening of Assembly Hall in 1963, it was home to the basketball team as well.

State Farm Center

State Farm Center (1963–)

[edit]
Main article:State Farm Center

Assembly Hall opened on March 2, 1963, and hosts the home games for the men's and women's basketball teams.Max Abramovitz, an Illinois alumnus, was the lead architect behind the building of the indoor arena. At the time of its opening, Assembly Hall could hold 16,128 people, making it the largest dome structure inNorth America until theHouston Astrodome opened in 1965.

In 2008, school officials, led by athletic directorRon Guenther, conducted a study to decide whether to refurbish the Assembly Hall or build a new basketball arena. In 2010, they decided to keep the arena. In 2014, renovations began under the watch ofAECOM, an architectural firm based out ofDallas Texas. The estimated cost of the project was estimated to be around $169.5 million and in turnState Farm Insurance decided to buy the naming rights of the stadium.

Ubben Basketball Complex (1998–present)

[edit]

The 2-story, 40,000-square-foot building is home to the University of Illinois Men's and Women's basketball programs. The facility includes offices, locker areas, weight training facilities and team meeting rooms in addition to the practice basketball courts. The Illinois Champions Campaign was a major catalyst of the $40 million renovation.[8]

Prairie Capital Convention Center (2015)

[edit]
Main article:Bank of Springfield Center

In November 2015, the arena hosted the team for five games while renovations to theState Farm Center were completed.[9]

Rivalries

[edit]

Indiana Hoosiers

[edit]
Main article:Illinois–Indiana men's basketball rivalry

Illinois andIndiana's rivalry started because the teams share a state border and they are located about 153 miles (246 km) apart. They have played annually since 1906. Indiana currently leads the series 96–93. The teams have played each other in five top-ten matchups, the first coming in 1952 when 2nd-rankedIllinois beat 4th-rankedIndiana 78–66. The longest winning streak was when Indiana won nine consecutive matchups from 1972 to 1977.

Iowa Hawkeyes

[edit]
Main article:Illinois–Iowa men's basketball rivalry

Northwestern Wildcats

[edit]
Main article:Illinois–Northwestern men's basketball rivalry

Missouri Tigers

[edit]
Main article:Braggin' Rights

Notable Illini players, coaches, and associates

[edit]

Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Famers

[edit]
Main article:Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
ClassInducteeTenureCategory
1960H. V. PorterContributor
1961Andy Phillip1941–1943, 1946–1947Player
1971Abe Saperstein1920Contributor
2004Jerry Colangelo1960–1962Contributor
2017Mannie Jackson1957–1960Contributor
2017Bill Self2000–2003Coach
2025Deron Williams2002–2005Team*

*As a member of the 2008 U.S. men's Olympic basketball team, popularized as theRedeem Team

National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Famers

[edit]
Main article:National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame
YearInducteeTenureCategory
2006Andy Phillip1941–1943, 1946–1947Player
2007Vic Bubas1944–1945Contributor
2009Gene Bartow1974–1975Coach
2015Lou Henson1975–1996Coach

Award winners

[edit]

National awards

[edit]

Conference awards

[edit]

NCAA All-Americans

[edit]
All-AmericansAndy Phillip (top left),Bill Hapac (top right),Ayo Dosunmu (bottom left), andKofi Cockburn (bottom right).

Illinois has had a total of 34 players who have claimedAll-American status.

† =Consensus All-American

Illinois All-Century Team

[edit]

In 2004, during the celebration of the program's 100th year of basketball as a varsity sport, the University of Illinois Division of Intercollegiate Athletics announced its All-Century Team. The 20-man team was selected after online voting by fans and the Illinois Basketball Centennial Committee. The honorees were feted during the Illinois Basketball Centennial Reunion Weekend, Jan. 28–30, 2005.[24]

 † Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame inductee.
 ‡ National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame inductee.
 §  Illinois Basketball Coaches Association Hall of Fame inductee.

PositionPlayerTenureHonors
GuardRay Woods1914–1917
GuardAndy Phillip†‡§1941–1943, 1946–1947
GuardGene Vance§1941–1943, 1946–1947
GuardDonnie Freeman§1963–1966
  • First-team All-American (1966)
  • First-team All-Big Ten (1966)
  • Third-team All-Big Ten (1965)
GuardDerek Harper1980–1983
  • Second-team All-American (1983)
  • First-team All-Big Ten (1983)
GuardBruce Douglas§1982–1986
  • Co–Big Ten Player of the Year (1984)
  • 2× Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year (1985, 1986)
  • Third-team All-American (1984)
  • First-team All-Big Ten (1984)
  • 2× Second-team All-Big Ten (1985, 1986)
  • NCAA All-Regional Team (1984)
GuardNick Anderson§1987–1989
  • First-team All-Big Ten (1989)
  • Second-team All-Big Ten (1988)
  • NCAA Regional Most Outstanding Player (1989)
  • NCAA All-Regional Team (1989)
GuardKendall Gill§1986–1990
  • University of Illinois Athlete of the Year (1990)
  • Kenny Battle Leadership Award (1989)
  • Consensus Second-team All-American (1990)
  • First-team All-Big Ten (1990)
  • NCAA All-Regional Team (1989)
GuardFrank Williams§1999–2002
ForwardDwight "Dike" Eddleman§1945–1949
ForwardDave Downey§1960–1963
  • Big Ten Medal of Honor (1963)
  • First-team All-American (1963)
  • First-team All-Big Ten (1963)
  • 2× Second-team All-Big Ten (1961, 1962)
  • NCAA All-Regional Team (1963)
ForwardNick Weatherspoon1970–1973
  • First-team All-Big Ten (1973)
ForwardEddie Johnson1977–1981
  • First-team All-Big Ten (1981)
  • Second-team All-Big Ten (1980)
ForwardKen Norman§1984–1987
  • Consensus Second-team All-American (1987)
  • 2× First-team All-Big Ten (1986, 1987)
ForwardKenny Battle§1987–1989
  • Second-team All-Big Ten (1989)
  • Third-team All-Big Ten (1988)
  • NCAA All-Regional Team (1989)
ForwardDeon Thomas§1990–1994
  • University of Illinois Freshman of the Year (1991)
  • 3× Second-team All-Big Ten (1992, 1993, 1994)
  • Third-team All-Big Ten (1991)
CenterChuck Carney§1920–1922
CenterJohnny "Red" Kerr§1951–1954
  • Chicago Tribune Silver Basketball (1954)
  • Third-team All-American (1954)
  • First-team All-Big Ten (1954)
  • 2× Second-team All-Big Ten (1952, 1953)
  • NCAA Final Four All-Tournament Team (1952)
CenterSkip Thoren§1962–1965
  • First-team All-American (1965)
  • First-team All-Big Ten (1965)
  • Second-team All-Big Ten (1964)
CenterBrian Cook§1999–2003

Statistical leaders

[edit]
Former Fighting IlliniDemetri McCamey

All-time records

[edit]
All-time records
RecordPlayerTenureStatistic
Games playedDa'Monte Williams2017–22159
Minutes playedTrent Frazier2017–224,881
PointsDeon Thomas1990–942,129
AssistsBruce Douglas1982–86765
StealsBruce Douglas1982–86324
BlocksNnanna Egwu2011–15201
Field goals madeDeon Thomas1990–94803
Field goals attemptedEddie Johnson1977–811,658
Field goal percentageKen Norman1984–87.609
Three-pointers madeCory Bradford1997–02327
Three-pointers attemptedTrent Frazier2017–22882
Three-point percentageCory Bradford1997–02.388
Free throws madeKiwane Garris1993–97615
Free throws attemptedDeon Thomas1990–94790
Free throw percentageKiwane Garris1993–97.830

Single-season leaders

[edit]
Most minutes played
PlayerSeasonStat
Deron Williams2004–051,315
Luther Head2004–051,297
Dee Brown2004–051,272
Demetri McCamey2009–101,241
D. J. Richardson2012–131,218
Most points scored
PlayerSeasonStat
Terrence Shannon Jr.2023–24736
Don Freeman1965–66668
Andy Kaufmann1990–91660
Nick Anderson1988–89647
Ken Norman1986–87641
Most assists
PlayerSeasonStat
Deron Williams2004–05264
Demetri McCamey2009–10254
Demetri McCamey2010–11208
Bruce Douglas1984–85200
Bruce Douglas1985–86199
Most steals
PlayerSeasonStat
Kenny Battle1988–8989
Bruce Douglas1985–8688
Bruce Douglas1984–8585
Bruce Douglas1982–8378
Frank Williams1999–200074
Most shots blocked
PlayerSeasonStat
Derek Holcomb1978–7986
Nnanna Egwu2013–1473
Meyers Leonard2011–1260
Mike Tisdale2009–1059
Nnanna Egwu2014–1559
Most field goals made
PlayerSeasonStat
Eddie Johnson1979–80266
Nick Anderson1988–89262
Don Freeman1965–66258
Ken Norman1986–87256
Nick Weatherspoon1972–73247
Most field goals attempted
PlayerSeasonStat
Don Freeman1965–66595
Eddie Johnson1979–80576
Dave Scholz1967–68541
Nick Weatherspoon1972–73540
Johnny Kerr1953–54520
Highest field goal percentage(min. 170 attempts)
PlayerSeasonStat
Robert Archibald2001–02.659
Kofi Cockburn2020–21.654
Ken Norman1985–86.641
Dain Dainja2022–23.636
James Augustine2003–04.635
Most three-pointers made
PlayerSeasonStat
Luther Head2004–05116
Most three-pointers attempted
PlayerSeasonStat
Luther Head2004–05283
Highest three-point percentage
PlayerSeasonStat
Tom Michael1991–9249.3%
Most free throws made
PlayerSeasonStat
Terrence Shannon Jr.2023–24221
Most free throws attempted
PlayerSeasonStat
Terrence Shannon Jr.2023–24276
Highest free throw percentage
PlayerSeasonStat
Marcus Domask2023–2487.5%

Game leaders

[edit]

Career milestones

[edit]
1,500 points
YearsPlayerPoints
1991–94Deon Thomas2,129
1994–97Kiwane Garris1,948
2014–17Malcolm Hill1,817
2003–06Dee Brown1,812
2017–22Trent Frazier1,794
2000–03Brian Cook1,748
1999–02Cory Bradford1,735
2008–11Demetri McCamey1,718
1978–81Eddie Johnson1,692
2010–13Brandon Paul1,654
1978–81Mark Smith1,653
2019-22Kofi Cockburn1,546
1989–93Andy Kaufmann1,533
2018-21Ayo Dosunmu1,504
200 three-point field goals
YearsPlayerThree-pointers
1999–02Cory Bradford327
2017–22Trent Frazier310
2003–06Dee Brown299
2010–13D.J. Richardson278
1993–96Richard Keene237
2008–11Demetri McCamey236
2004–07Rich McBride216
2010–13Brandon Paul211
2002–05Luther Head209
500 assists
YearsPlayerAssists
1983–86Bruce Douglas765
2008–11Demetri McCamey733
2003–06Dee Brown674
2003–05Deron Williams594
1994–97Kiwane Garris502
750 rebounds
YearsPlayerRebounds
2003–06James Augustine1,023
2008–11Mike Davis909
2019-22Kofi Cockburn861
1983–86Efrem Winters853
1991–94Deon Thomas846
1978–81Eddie Johnson831
1963–65Skip Thoren830
2000–03Brian Cook815
1971–73Nick Weatherspoon803
1961–63Dave Downey790
150 blocks
YearsPlayerBlocks
2012–15Nnanna Egwu201
1991–94Deon Thomas177
2008–11Mike Tisdale176
1979–81Derek Holcomb174
1979–82James Griffin156

Source for all statistical leaders[25]

Illini in the NBA and professional basketball

[edit]
See also:List of Illinois Fighting Illini in the NBA draft andCategory:Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball players
Fighting Illini in the NBA[26]
NBA Draft Selections
Total selected:79
1st round:19
Lottery Picks in Draft:3
Notable achievements
Olympic Gold Medal Winners:1 player twice
NBA Champions:4
Naismith Basketball-Hall-of-Famers:5

First round NBA draft picks

[edit]
Draft YearPickPlayerSelected byProfessional career
19519Don SunderlagePhiladelphia Warriors1953–1955
19549Johnny KerrSyracuse Nationals1954–1966
19577George Bon SalleSyracuse Nationals1957–1962
197017Mike PriceNew York Knicks1970–1973
197313Nick WeatherspoonCapital Bullets1973–1980
198311Derek HarperDallas Mavericks1983–1999
198719Ken NormanLos Angeles Clippers1987–1997
198911Nick AndersonOrlando Magic1989–2002
198927Kenny BattleDetroit Pistons1989–2000
19905Kendall GillCharlotte Hornets1990–2005
200225Frank WilliamsDenver Nuggets2002–2010
200224Brian CookLos Angeles Lakers2003–2015
20053Deron WilliamsUtah Jazz2005–2017
200524Luther HeadHouston Rockets2005–2018
201211Meyers LeonardPortland Trail Blazers2012–2023
202319Brandin PodziemskiGolden State Warriors2023–present
202427Terrence Shannon Jr.Minnesota Timberwolves2024–present
202520Kasparas JakučionisMiami Heat2025–present
202521Will RileyUtah Jazz2025–present

Fighting Illini in the NBA

[edit]
PositionNameHeightWeight (lbs.)HometownDraft yearPickCurrent NBA team
PG/SGKasparas Jakučionis6'6"200Vilnius, Lithuania202520thMiami Heat
SFWill Riley6'8"180Kitchener, Ontario, Canada202521stWashington Wizards
SGTerrence Shannon Jr.6'6"215Chicago, Illinois202427thMinnesota Timberwolves
SGBrandin Podziemski6'4"205Greenfield, Wisconsin202319thGolden State Warriors
PGAyo Dosunmu6'5"200Chicago, Illinois202138thChicago Bulls

Fighting Illini in the NBA G League

[edit]
PositionNameHeightWeight (lbs.)HometownDraft YearPickCurrent G League Team
SGJustin Harmon6'4"180Chicago, Illinois2024UndraftedSalt Lake City Stars

Fighting Illini playing internationally

[edit]
PositionNameHeightWeight (lbs.)HometownYears with
Illinois
Professional TeamCountry
CKofi Cockburn7'0"293Kingston, Jamaica2019–2022Seoul Samsung ThundersSouth Korea[27]
PGAndrés Feliz6'2"195Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic2018–2020Real Madrid BaloncestoSpain[28]
PFMichael Finke6'10"220Champaign, Illinois2016-2019Yamagata WyvernsJapan[29]
PGTrent Frazier6'2"155Boynton Beach, Florida2017–2022BC Zenit Saint PetersburgRussia[30]
SGJacob Grandison6'6"190San Francisco, California2020–2022CB Menorca Spain[31]
G/FMyke Henry6'6"230Chicago, Illinois2011–2013Satria Muda PertaminaIndonesia[32]
SGKipper Nichols6'6"220Cleveland, Ohio2017-2020Sheffield SharksEngland[33]
GTe'Jon Lucas6'1"187Milwaukee, Wisconsin2016–2018Bristol Flyers England[34]
SGKendrick Nunn6'2"190Chicago, Illinois2013-2016Panathinaikos B.C.Greece[35]
GBrandon Paul6'4"200Gurnee, Illinois2009–2013Élan ChalonFrance[36]
GRayvonte Rice6'5"234Champaign, Illinois2013–2015Guangdong Southern TigersChina
SGJamar Smith6'3"185Peoria, Illinois2006–2007Pallacanestro ReggianaItaly[37]
SGMark Smith6'4"225Decatur, Illinois2017–2018Nagasaki Velca Japan[38]
SGAlfonso Plummer6'1"180Fajardo, Puerto Rico2021-2022Ratiopharm UlmGermany[39]
SG/SFMarcus Domask6'6"215Waupun, Wisconsin2023-2024Skyliners Frankfurt Germany[40]
PFGiorgi Bezhanishvili6'9"245Rustavi,Georgia2018-2021Fundación CB Granada Spain
SF/PFQuincy Guerrier6'8"220Montreal, Quebec2023-2024Montreal AllianceCanada

Fighting Illini currently coaching

[edit]
NameYears with
Illinois
Current TeamPositionLeague
Leron Black2014–18Rip City RemixAssistant coachNBA G League
Dee Brown2002–06RooseveltHead coachCCAC[permanent dead link] (NAIA)
Chester Frazier2005-09West VirginiaAssociate Head CoachBig 12 Conference
Jerrance Howard2000–04Southern IllinoisAssistant coachMissouri Valley Conference
Roger Powell2001–05ValparaisoHead coachMissouri Valley Conference
Brian Randle2003–08Detroit PistonsAssistant coachNBA
Tyler Underwood2017-21IllinoisAssistant coachBig Ten Conference

Fighting Illini basketball media members

[edit]
NameYears with
Illinois
Media OutletRoleCurrent Team
Nick Anderson1987–1989Fox Sports FloridaCommentatorOrlando Magic
Stephen Bardo1986–1990Big Ten NetworkCollege Basketball AnalystBig Ten Conference
Kendall Gill1986–1990NBC Sports ChicagoCommentatorChicago Bulls
Derek Harper1980–1983Fox Sports SouthwestColor CommentatorDallas Mavericks
Eddie Johnson1977–1981Fox Sports ArizonaPlay-by-play CommentatorPhoenix Suns
Deon Thomas1991-1994Fighting Illini Sports NetworkColor CommentatorFighting Illini Men's basketball

High school honors

[edit]

Jordan Brand Classic

[edit]

The following 6Jordan Brand Classic participants have played for Illinois:[41]

YearPlayerHigh SchoolHometown
2002Dee BrownProviso EastMaywood, Illinois
2015Jalen Coleman-LandsLa Lumiere SchoolIndianapolis, Indiana
2018Ayo DosunmuMorgan Park High SchoolChicago, Illinois
2020Adam MillerMorgan Park High SchoolPeoria, Illinois
2022Skyy ClarkMontverde AcademyNashville, Tennessee
2022Ty RodgersThornton Township High SchoolGrand Blanc, Michigan

Nike Hoop Summit

[edit]

The following 9 Fighting Illini have played in theNike Hoop Summit:

YearPlayerHigh SchoolHometown
2010Meyers LeonardRobinson High SchoolRobinson, Illinois
2016Andres FelizWest Oaks AcademySanto Domingo, Dominican Republic
2018Kofi CockburnChrist the King Regional High SchoolKingston, Jamaica
2019Kofi CockburnOak Hill AcademyKingston, Jamaica
2019Andre CurbeloLong Island LutheranVega Baja, Puerto Rico
2020Adam MillerMorgan Park High SchoolPeoria, Illinois
2023Andrej StojakovićJesuitThessaloniki, Greece
2024Morez JohnsonThornton Township HSHarvey, Illinois
2024Kasparas JakucionisFC Barcelona BàsquetVilnius, Lithuania
2025David MirkovicSC DerbyPodgorica, Montenegro

McDonald's All-Americans

[edit]

The following 14McDonald's All-Americans have played for Illinois:[42]

YearPlayerHigh SchoolHometown
1980Derek HarperNorth Shore (FL)Royston, Georgia
1982Bruce DouglasQuincy Senior High SchoolQuincy, Illinois
1982Efrem WintersKing College PrepChicago
1985Lowell HamiltonProvidence St. Mel SchoolChicago
1986Nick AndersonSimeon Career AcademyChicago
1987Marcus LibertyKing College PrepChicago
1989Deon ThomasSimeon Career AcademyChicago
1992Richard KeeneCollinsville High SchoolCollinsville, Illinois
1997Marcus GriffinManual High SchoolPeoria, Illinois
1998Frank WilliamsManual High SchoolPeoria, Illinois
1999Brian CookLincoln Community High SchoolLincoln, Illinois
2002Dee BrownProviso EastMaywood, Illinois
2010Jereme RichmondWaukegan High SchoolWaukegan, Illinois
2023Andrej StojakovićJesuitThessaloniki, Greece

Mr. Basketball

[edit]

The following 17Mr. Basketball award winners have played for Illinois:

YearPlayerHigh schoolHometown
1982Bruce DouglasQuincy Senior High SchoolQuincy, Illinois
1986Nick AndersonSimeon Career AcademyChicago
1987Marcus LibertyKing College PrepChicago
1989Deon ThomasSimeon Career AcademyChicago
1994Jarrod GeeSt. Martin de PorresChicago
1997Sergio McClainManual High SchoolPeoria, Illinois
1998Frank WilliamsManual High SchoolPeoria, Illinois
1999Brian CookLincoln Community High SchoolLincoln, Illinois
2002Dee BrownProviso EastMaywood, Illinois
2009Brandon PaulWarren Township High SchoolGurnee, Illinois
2010Jereme RichmondWaukegan High SchoolWaukegan, Illinois
2014Leron BlackWhite Station High SchoolMemphis, Tennessee
2017Mark SmithEdwardsville High SchoolEdwardsville, Illinois
2019Marcus DomaskWaupun AreaWaupun, Wisconsin
2020Adam MillerMorgan Park High SchoolChicago
2021Brandin PodziemskiSt. John's Northwestern Military AcademyMuskego, Wisconsin
2024Morez JohnsonThornton Township High SchoolChicago

International honors

[edit]

Olympians

[edit]
YearPlayerEventCountryMedal
1948 LondonDwight EddlemanHigh JumpUnited StatesUnited States4th
1992 BarcelonaJens KujawaBasketballGermanyGermany7th
2008 BeijingDeron WilliamsBasketballUnited StatesUnited States
2012 LondonRobert ArchibaldBasketballGreat BritainUnited Kingdom9th
2012 LondonDeron WilliamsBasketballUnited StatesUnited States

International championships

[edit]
YearPlayerEventCountryMedalRef
1959 ChicagoGeorge Bon SallePan American GamesUnited StatesUnited States[43]
1970 YugoslaviaTal BrodyFIBA World ChampionshipUnited StatesUnited States5th[44]
1974 IranTal BrodyBasketball at the 1974 Asian GamesIsraelIsrael
1974 Puerto RicoRick SchmidtFIBA World ChampionshipUnited StatesUnited States[45]
1979 MexicoCraig TuckerUniversiadeUnited StatesUnited States[46]
1984 SwedenJens KujawaFIBA Europe Under-18 ChampionshipWest GermanyGermany5th[47]
1987 GreeceJens KujawaFIBA EuroBasketWest GermanyGermany4th[48]
1993 GermanyJens KujawaFIBA EuroBasketGermanyGermany[49]
1997 SicilyJerry HesterUniversiadeUnited StatesUnited States[50]
1998 GreeceKiwane GarrisFIBA World ChampionshipUnited StatesUnited States[51]
1999 SpainCory BradfordUniversiadeUnited StatesUnited States[52]
2000 BrazilBrian CookFIBA Americas Under-20 ChampionshipUnited StatesUnited States[53]
2001 JapanBrian CookFIBA Under-21 World ChampionshipUnited StatesUnited States[54]
2002 VenezuelaDee BrownFIBA Americas U18 ChampionshipUnited StatesUnited States[55]
2002 VenezuelaDeron WilliamsFIBA Americas U18 ChampionshipUnited StatesUnited States[55]
2003 GreeceDee BrownFIBA Under-19 Basketball World CupUnited StatesUnited States5th[56]
2003 GreeceDeron WilliamsFIBA Under-19 Basketball World CupUnited StatesUnited States5th[57]
2007 Las VegasDeron WilliamsFIBA AmeriCupUnited StatesUnited States[58]
2009 PolandRobert ArchibaldFIBA EuroBasketGreat BritainUnited Kingdom14th[59]
2010 San AntonioJereme RichmondFIBA Americas U18 ChampionshipUnited StatesUnited States[60]
2011 LithuaniaRobert ArchibaldFIBA EuroBasketGreat BritainUnited Kingdom13th[59]
2011 LatviaMeyers LeonardFIBA Under-19 Basketball World CupUnited StatesUnited States5th[61]
2011 MexicoKendrick NunnFIBA Americas Under-16 ChampionshipUnited StatesUnited States[62]
2012 LithuaniaKendrick NunnFIBA Under-17 Basketball World CupUnited StatesUnited States[63]
2013 Puerto RicoAndres FelizCentrobasket U17 ChampionshipDominican RepublicDominican Republic[64]
2014 Colorado SpringsAndres FelizFIBA Americas Under-18 ChampionshipDominican RepublicDominican Republic[65]
2015 GreeceAndres FelizFIBA Under-19 Basketball World CupDominican RepublicDominican Republic13th[65]
2015 TorontoAndres FelizPan American GamesDominican RepublicDominican Republic4th[65]
2016 Puerto RicoAndré CurbeloCentrobasket U15 ChampionshipPuerto RicoPuerto Rico[66]
2016 ChinaMyke HenryFIBA 3x3 World CupUnited StatesUnited States[67]
2017 ArgentinaAndré CurbeloFIBA Americas Under-16 ChampionshipPuerto RicoPuerto Rico[66]
2018 ArgentinaAndré CurbeloFIBA Under-17 World CupPuerto RicoPuerto Rico[66]
2018 CanadaAyo DosunmuFIBA Americas Under-18 ChampionshipUnited StatesUnited States[68]
2018 SerbiaTomislav IvisicFIBA U16 European ChampionshipCroatiaCroatia[69]
2019 ItalyTomislav IvisicFIBA U16 European ChampionshipCroatiaCroatia8th[69]
2019 ItalyZvonimir IvisicFIBA U16 European ChampionshipCroatiaCroatia8th[70]
2019 GreeceAndré CurbeloFIBA Under-19 World CupPuerto RicoPuerto Rico6th[66]
2019 Puerto RicoRJ MeléndezCentrobasket U17 ChampionshipPuerto RicoPuerto Rico[71]
2021 LatviaAdam MillerFIBA Under-19 Basketball World CupUnited StatesUnited States[72]
2022 TijuanaTy RodgersFIBA Under-18 Americas ChampionshipUnited StatesUnited States[73]
2022 North MacedoniaKasparas JakučionisFIBA U16 EuroBasketLithuaniaLithuania[74]
2023 GreeceTomislav IvisicFIBA U20 European ChampionshipCroatiaCroatia14th[69]
2023 GreeceZvonimir IvisicFIBA U20 European ChampionshipCroatiaCroatia14th[70]
2023 SerbiaKasparas JakučionisFIBA U18 EuroBasketLithuaniaLithuania11th[74]
2024 Buenos AresMorez Johnson Jr.FIBA Under-18 Americas ChampionshipUnited StatesUnited States[75]
2024 FinlandKasparas JakučionisFIBA U18 EuroBasketLithuaniaLithuania6th[74]

Illinois honored players

[edit]

Honored jerseys

[edit]

The University of Illinois has honored its most decorated basketball players in school history by hanging a banner with their name and number from the rafters ofState Farm Center, along with their career years in terms of spring semesters. As of 2025[update], a total of 36 players have had their jersey honored. To have his jersey honored, a player must have met one of the following criteria:

To have an honored jersey hung in the State Farm Center, a player must have achieved one of the following criteria:

1) National Player of the Year

2) Enshrined in the National Basketball Hall of Fame

3) Big Ten Player of the Year

4) Consensus First- or Second-Team All-American

5) Illinois All-Century Team Member

6) Individual whose pioneering efforts made a significant impact on Illinois and international basketball[76]

No.PlayerPos.CareerNational POYNational HOFUS OlympianBig Ten POYConsensus All-AmericanIllinois All-Century (voted 2004)Basketball Pioneer
1Ray WoodsG1915–17Green tickY    Green tickY 
2Chuck CarneyF1920–22Green tickY    Green tickY 
19Bill HapacF1938–40    Green tickY  
47Andy PhillipF1942–43, 1947Green tickYGreen tickY Green tickY Green tickY 
25Gene VanceG1942–43, 1947     Green tickY 
14Walt KirkG1942–43, 1947    Green tickY  
40Dwight "Dike" EddlemanF1947–49  Green tickYGreen tickY Green tickY 
33Bill EricksonG1947–50    Green tickY  
11Don SunderlageG1949–51   Green tickY   
37Rod FletcherG1950–52   Green tickY   
22Johnny "Red" KerrC1952–54   Green tickY Green tickY 
35Govoner VaughnF1958–60      Green tickY
30Mannie JacksonG1958–60 Green tickY    Green tickY
23Jerry ColangeloG1960–62 Green tickY     
40Dave DowneyF1961–63     Green tickY 
35Duane "Skip" ThorenC1963–65     Green tickY 
12Tal BrodyG1963–65      Green tickY
15Donnie FreemanF1963–66    Green tickY 
24Jim DawsonG1965–67   Green tickY   
12Nick WeatherspoonF1971–73     Green tickY 
33Eddie JohnsonF1978–81     Green tickY 
12Derek HarperG1981–83     Green tickY 
25Bruce DouglasG1983–86     Green tickY 
33Ken NormanF1985–87    Green tickYGreen tickY 
33Kenny BattleF1988–89     Green tickY 
25Nick AndersonF1988–89     Green tickY 
13Kendall GillG1987–90    Green tickYGreen tickY 
25Deon ThomasF/C1991–94     Green tickY 
20Frank WilliamsG2000–02   Green tickY Green tickY 
34Brian CookF2000–03   Green tickY Green tickY 
4Luther HeadG2002–05    Green tickY  
5Deron WilliamsG2003–05  Green tickY Green tickY  
11Dee BrownG2003–06Green tickY  Green tickYGreen tickY  
11Ayo DosunmuG2019–21    Green tickY  
21Kofi CockburnC2020–22    Green tickY  
0Terrence Shannon Jr.G2023–24       
HONORED JERSEYS

#1
RAY
WOODS
1915–17

#1
CHUCK
CARNEY
1920–22

#19
BILL
HAPAC
1938–40

#47
ANDY
PHILLIP
1942–43, 1947

#25
GENE
VANCE
1942–43, 1947

#14
WALT
KIRK
1944–45, 1947

#40
DWIGHT "DIKE"
EDDLEMAN
1947–49

#33
BILL
ERICKSON
1947–50

#11
DON
SUNDERLAGE
1949–51

#37
ROD
FLETCHER
1950–52

#22
JOHN "RED"
KERR
1952–54

#35
GOVONER
VAUGHN
1958–60

#30
MANNIE
JACKSON
1958–60

#23
JERRY
COLANGELO
1960–62

#40
DAVE
DOWNEY
1961-63

#35
DUANE "SKIP"
THOREN
1963–65

#12
TAL
BRODY
1963–65

#15
DON
FREEMAN
1964–66

#24
JIM
DAWSON
1965–67

#12
NICK
WEATHERSPOON
1971–73

#33
EDDIE
JOHNSON
1978–81

#12
DEREK
HARPER
1981–83

#25
BRUCE
DOUGLAS
1983–86

#33
KEN
NORMAN
1985–87

#33
KENNY
BATTLE
1988–89

#25
NICK
ANDERSON
1988–89

#13
KENDALL
GILL
1987–90

#25
DEON
THOMAS
1991–94

#30
FRANK
WILLIAMS
2000–02

#34
BRIAN
COOK
2000–03

#4
LUTHER
HEAD
2002–05

#5
DERON
WILLIAMS
2003–05

#11
DEE
BROWN
2003–06

#11
AYO
DOSUNMU
2019–21

#21
KOFI
COCKBURN
2020–22

#0
TERRENCE
SHANNON JR.
2023–24

Dike Eddleman Award

[edit]

The University of Illinois Athlete of the Year was first awarded in 1940. The award was annually given to a male student-athlete until it was discontinued in 1973. Revived in 1983, the University of Illinois now recognizes both male and female athletes who have distinguished themselves in athletic achievement. In 1993, the awards were named in honor of former OlympianDwight "Dike" Eddleman, who participated in basketball, football and track and field in 1943 and 1946–49, earning a combined 11 varsity letters during that timeframe.[77] The following list includes Illini basketball players who earned the award.

PlayerYears playedYear awarded
Bill Hapac1937–401940
John Drish1937–411941
Andy Phillip1942–43, 19471942, 1943
Walton Kirk1943–471945
Dike Eddleman1945–491948, 1949
Don Sunderlage1948–511951
Clive Follmer1950–531953
Paul Judson1953–561955
Doug Mills1959–621962
Jim Dawson1963–671967
Dave Scholz1966–691968, 1969
Mike Price1967–701970
Kendall Gill1986–901990
Deron Williams2002–052005
Ayo Dosunmu2018-212020, 2021
Kofi Cockburn2019-222022
Terrence Shannon Jr.2022-242024

Head-to-head Big Ten records

[edit]
TeamTotal meetingsWinsLossesPct.Home recordRoad recordNeutral record
Indiana1839093.49254–3430–576–2
Iowa1658976.53964–1723–562–3
Maryland19711.3332–41–64–2
Michigan1759085.51457–2831–522–5
Michigan State1236063.48839–2120–391–3
Minnesota19512768.65174–1947–486–1
Nebraska27198.70414–25–50–1
Northwestern18214042.76971–1464–285–0
Ohio State18710880.57462–2743–493–3
Oregon642.6671-01-02-2
Penn State493019.61214–813–103–1
Purdue19390103.46659–3729–632–3
Rutgers14104.7146–03–32–0
UCLA1046.4002-22-40-0
USC936.3332-20-41-0
Washington312.3331-00-10-1
Wisconsin20211389.55969–2841–583–3

Men's basketball records at Kenney Gym and Huff Hall

[edit]
SeasonWinsLossesWin pct.Total attendanceSeasonWinsLossesWin pct.Total attendance
1905–06601.000N/R1925–26630.667N/R
1906–07040.000N/R1926–27830.72761,590
1907–08320.600N/R1927–28350.37548,202
1908–09510.833N/R1928–29830.72730,139*
1909–10320.600N/R1929–30540.55649,418*
1910–11320.600N/R1930–31730.70052,440
1911–12430.571N/R1931–32820.80057,000
1912–13620.750N/R1932–33830.72734,500*
1913–14520.714N/R1933–34910.90055,500
1914–15901.000N/R1934–35820.80062,000
1915–16610.85716,644*1935–36730.70078,028
1916–17910.9006,417*1936–37720.77863,238
1917–18710.8755,066*1937–38720.77863,600
1918–19350.37510,7391938–39910.90057,933
1919–20610.85724,250*1939–401010.90955,513
1920–21640.60034,8751940–41820.80052,751
1921–221020.83340,1121941–421210.92365,357
1922–23630.6678,424*1942–431001.00062,648
1923–24830.72741,8481943–44640.60029,812
1924–25901.00036,2221944–45730.70044,951
Kenney Gym Totals9439.707224,597*1945–461120.84666,553
Kenney Gym Facts1946–471010.90977,808*
Fighting Illini played 20 years in Kenney Gym1947–481110.91778,388
Attendance averaged 2,739 fans per game1948–491401.00049,036*
Single game attendance record: January 24, 1925 vs. Iowa–4,7251949–501120.84683,736
Hosted 3Big Ten Champions (1915, 1917, 1924)1950–511210.92375,116
Hosted 1 National Champion (1915)1951–521201.00057,788*
Produced 6All-Americans1952–531210.92379,957*
Developed 2National Players of the Year1953–541030.76977,378
1954–55920.81864,721
Huff Hall Facts1955–561201.00063,912
Fighting Illini played 38 years in Huff Hall1956–57920.81868,448
Attendance averaged 7,025 fans per game1957–581030.76976,032
Single game attendance record: February 22, 1937 vs. Wisconsin–9,0001958–59930.75068,292
Hosted 8Big Ten Champions (1935, 1937, 1942, 1943, 1949, 1951, 1952, 1963)1959–601020.83374,719
Hosted 1 National Champion (1943) & 3 Final Four teams (1949, 1951, 1952)1960–61730.70060,457
Produced 33All-Americans1961–62840.66775,376
Developed 1National Player of the Year1962–63**901.00061,025
Combined Totals433116.7892,507,959*Huff Hall Totals33977.8152,283,362*

Notes:

  • *Denotes incomplete or partial records.
  • **Played 9 games at Huff Hall but played final 2 games atAssembly Hall.
  • (N/R) denotesno records[78]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^abcTate, Loren (January 22, 2012)."Harry Combes knew about offense". News-Gazette. RetrievedDecember 18, 2014.
  3. ^"Three Illini Basketball Legends Join Honored Jerseys".University of Illinois Alumni Association. RetrievedDecember 18, 2014.
  4. ^"If not Illinois, then who? - Illinois Fighting Illini Sports Men's Basketball News - IlliniHQ.com".illinihq.com. Archived fromthe original on July 13, 2011.
  5. ^"FIGHTINGILLINI.COM - John Groce Bio". Archived fromthe original on June 25, 2013. RetrievedAugust 9, 2013.
  6. ^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on March 4, 2016. RetrievedNovember 29, 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^"Illinois snags OSU's Underwood as new coach". March 18, 2017.
  8. ^"Ubben Basketball Complex".University of Illinois Athletics. RetrievedMarch 2, 2022.
  9. ^"PCCC to host Illini Basketball for 5 games in November 2015" (Press release). University of Illinois. October 30, 2014. RetrievedOctober 30, 2014.
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  12. ^"Dosunmu Named USA Today National Player of the Year". March 17, 2021.
  13. ^"Hoophall Awards".
  14. ^"Men's Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award Winners".
  15. ^"Naismith Coach of the Year Winner".
  16. ^"AP Coach of the Year Winner".
  17. ^"NABC Division I Coach of the Year Winner".
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  19. ^"Bruce Weber - Men's Basketball Coach".
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  21. ^"Adolph Rupp Cup Winner".
  22. ^"Basketball Times Coach of the Year Winner".
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  47. ^"Jens Kujawa | European Championship for Men (1993) | FIBA Europe".
  48. ^"Jens Kujawa | European Championship for Men (1993) | FIBA Europe".
  49. ^"Jens Kujawa | European Championship for Men (1993) | FIBA Europe".
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  56. ^"Seventh Fiba Men's Junior World Championship -- 2003". Archived fromthe original on September 7, 2015.
  57. ^"Seventh Fiba Men's Junior World Championship -- 2003". Archived fromthe original on September 7, 2015.
  58. ^"2017-18 ILL Record Book-6 Tradition"(PDF).
  59. ^ab"Robert Archibald Player Profile, Toronto Raptors, NBA Stats, NCAA Stats, International Stats, Events Stats, Game Logs, Bests, Awards - RealGM".
  60. ^"SEVENTH FIBA AMERICAS U18 CHAMPIONSHIP FOR MEN -- 2010".www.usab.com. Archived fromthe original on April 6, 2015.
  61. ^"Tenth Fiba Men's U19 World Championship – 2011". Archived fromthe original on April 6, 2015.
  62. ^"Second Fiba Americas U16 Championship for Men -- 2011". Archived fromthe original on September 6, 2015.
  63. ^"SECOND 2012 FIBA U17 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP FOR MEN -- 2012".www.usab.com. Archived fromthe original on September 7, 2015.
  64. ^"2013 Centrobasket U17 Championship for Men".archive.fiba.com. August 2013. Archived fromthe original on June 17, 2018. RetrievedJuly 6, 2024.
  65. ^abc"TUPPER: Feliz would be a good Illini fit". April 7, 2018.
  66. ^abcd"Andre Jael Curbelo Rodriguez (Puerto Rico) - Basketball Stats, Height, Age | FIBA Basketball".
  67. ^"THIRD FIBA 3x3 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP FOR MEN -- 2016".www.usab.com. Archived fromthe original on November 7, 2017.
  68. ^"USA Men's U18 Team Brings Home Gold, Downs Canada 113-74". Archived fromthe original on June 17, 2018.
  69. ^abc"Tomislav Ivisic (Croatia) - Basketball Stats, Height, Age | FIBA Basketball".
  70. ^ab"Zvonimir Ivisic (Croatia) - Basketball Stats, Height, Age | FIBA Basketball".
  71. ^"RJ Melendez - 2022-23 - Men's Basketball".
  72. ^"LSU signee Adam Miller's strong first half helps Team USA win gold at FIBA U19 World Cup". July 11, 2021.
  73. ^"Rodgers Wins Gold with USA at FIBA U18 Americas Championship". June 12, 2022.
  74. ^abc"Kasparas Jakucionis (Lithuania) - Basketball Stats, Height, Age | FIBA Basketball".
  75. ^"Morez Johnson Jr".
  76. ^"HONORED JERSEYS".
  77. ^Dike Eddleman AOTY Award
  78. ^Men's basketball all-time recordsArchived February 10, 2015, at theWayback Machine

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