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Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball

The Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team is an NCAA Division I college basketball team competing in the Big Ten Conference. Home games are played at the State Farm Center, located on the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign's campus in Champaign. Illinois has one pre-tournament national championship and one non-NCAA tournament national championship in 1915 and 1943, awarded by the Premo-Porretta Power Poll. Illinois has appeared in the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament 32 times, and has competed in 5 Final Fours, 9 Elite Eights, and has won 18 Big Ten regular season championships.

Illinois Fighting Illini
UniversityUniversity of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
All-time record1,857–1,037 (.642)
Athletic directorJosh Whitman
Head coachBrad Underwood (5th season)
ConferenceBig Ten
ArenaState Farm Center
(Capacity: 15,544)
NicknameFighting Illini
Student sectionOrange Krush
ColorsOrange and blue[1]
   
Uniforms
Home
Away
Alternate
Pre-tournament Premo-Porretta champions
1915
Pre-tournament Helms champions
1915
NCAA tournament runner-up
2005
NCAA tournament Final Four
1949, 1951, 1952, 1989, 2005
NCAA tournament Elite Eight
1942, 1949, 1951, 1952, 1963, 1984, 1989, 2001, 2005
NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen
1951, 1952, 1963, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1989, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005
NCAA tournament round of 32
1981, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1993, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2011, 2013, 2021, 2022
NCAA tournament appearances
1942, 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
Conference tournament champions
2003, 2005, 2021
Conference regular season champions
1915, 1917, 1924, 1935, 1937, 1942, 1943, 1949, 1951, 1952, 1963, 1984, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2022

The team is currently coached by Brad Underwood, who was hired on March 18, 2017. Through the end of the 2017–18 season, Illinois ranks 12th all-time in winning percentage and 15th all-time in wins among all NCAA Division I men's college basketball programs.

Eras of Illini Basketball

Early years

The Fighting Illini began play in 1906 with Elwood Brown as their first coach. In 1915, Illinois won their first ever Big Ten title, going 16–0 (and 12–0 in Big Ten play) under coach Ralph Jones. They were retroactively declared champion of that season by the Helms Athletic Foundation and the Premo-Porretta Power Poll. They won two more Big Ten titles in the next nine years, both shared titles. In 1935, they won the Big Ten once again, sharing it with Purdue. They won the Big Ten title five years later in 1942, their first unanimous Big Ten title since 1915.

When duty calls

 
The Whiz Kids

Prior to World War II breaking out, the Fighting Illini men's basketball program had achieved a status which it had never seen prior. Under the direction of head coach and athletic director Douglas R. Mills, the Illini grouped a team of players, all around 6' 3", into a nearly undefeatable lineup later to be known as "The Whiz Kids". As freshman and sophomores, the 1941–42 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team dominated the Big Ten conference basketball season by posting a 13–2 record, overall finishing with 18 wins and only 5 losses. A starting lineup of freshman and sophomores, Arthur "Jack" Smiley, Ken Menke, Andy Phillip, Ellis "Gene" Vance, Victor Wukovits and Art Mathisen, developed a winning attitude that would maintain for the next 15 years, a time period where the Illini would finish no less than third in the conference for 13 of them. Despite being ranked No. 1 in the nation, the 1943 Illinois men's basketball squad opted not to play in the NCAA Tournament when three of its five 'Whiz Kids' were called to duty in World War II.

Harry Combes era (1947–1967)

Champaign High School basketball coach Harry Combes was hired to succeed Doug Mills as Mills left the position to focus on his duties as the athletic director. Through his first five seasons as head coach, Combes led the Fighting Illini to three NCAA Final Four appearances in 1949, 1951, and 1952.[2] During his tenure as coach, Combes increased the Fighting Illini's offensive output by changing their style of play. Combes implemented Full-court press defense, causing turnovers at a high rate which translated into Fast 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 the 1957–58 season, Mannie Jackson and Govoner 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 from Huff Hall to Assembly Hall in 1963 and during that same season the Illini won a fourth Big Ten Conference championship under Combes. However, the Illini lost to eventual national champion Loyola (Chicago) in the Elite Eight of the 1963 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. The following 1964–65 season, saw several upset victories over defending national champion UCLA Bruins and national powerhouse Kentucky Wildcats at Memorial Coliseum in Lexington, Kentucky.[2]

Lou Henson era (1975–1996)

In 1975, after having taken New Mexico State (and future Illinois assistant coach Jimmy Collins) to the 1970 Final Four, Lou Henson moved to the University of Illinois to replace Gene Bartow, after Bartow left Illinois to replace the legendary John 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 to Sports 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, including Eddie Johnson, Derek Harper, Ken Norman, Nick Anderson, Kendall Gill, Kenny Battle, Marcus Liberty, Steve Bardo, and Kiwane Garris.

Early 1980s

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.

Flyin' Illini

The top-seeded and top-ranked 1989 Illini were upset 83–81 in the Final Four on a last second basket by Michigan's Sean 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" by Dick Vitale during an ESPN broadcast that season. The team also gained national prominence for its athletic players, such as NCAA slam dunk champions Kenny Battle and Kendall Gill, as well as Lowell Hamilton, Nick Anderson, Marcus Liberty, and Stephen Bardo.

1990s

The early 1990s Illini were dominated by players such as guards Andy Kauffman, Richard Keene, and Kiwane Garris, as well as centers Shelly Clark and Deon Thomas. Thomas was at the center of a report of misconduct by Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball assistant coach Bruce 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.

Lon Kruger era (1996–2000)

After longtime coach Lou Henson's departure, Illinois hired Lon 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 consecutive Illinois Mr. Basketball winners, inking Sergio McClain, Frank Williams, and Brian 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.

Bill Self era (2000–2003)

Illinois picked Tulsa coach Bill Self from a list of numerous candidates, including popular assistant Jimmy Collins, to succeed Kruger, who moved on to the NBA to coach the Atlanta 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 finalist Arizona 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 included Robert 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]

Bruce Weber era (2003–2012)

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 from Southern 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 the Missouri 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 the United Center in Chicago. 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, as Deron Williams (No. 3, Utah Jazz) and Luther Head (No. 24, Houston Rockets) were taken in the first round of the 2005 NBA draft, and James Augustine (No. 41, Orlando Magic) and Dee Brown (No. 46, Utah Jazz) were chosen in the second round of the 2006 NBA draft. Meyers Leonard was chosen 11th by the Portland Trail Blazers in the 2012 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.

2003–2004

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.

2004–2005

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 2005 Final 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, and Roger Powell, Jr.–would eventually play in the NBA. Williams and Brown both joined the Utah Jazz roster, while Luther Head went on to play for the Sacramento 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.

2005–2006

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 4829-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.

2006–2012

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 be 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.

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 to 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. Weber was fired by Illinois' new AD Mike Thomas after the 2011–12 season.

John Groce era (2012–2017)

 
Coach Groce

John Groce was hired by new athletic director Mike Thomas on March 28, 2012.[5] In the 2012–13 season the Illini were the 2012 Maui Invitational Tournament champions and later made the 2013 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament, losing their second game. The Illini lost 63–59 to the 2013 ACC men's basketball tournament champions Miami Hurricanes. The Illini spent 8 weeks nationally ranked in the 2012–13 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings, and for two weeks were ranked as high as 10th in the country.

In 2014, Groce continued Illinois' success in the month of 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.

The 2015–2016 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.

The 2016–2017 basketball season was another disappointing season for the Fighting Illini, as they finished the season at 18–14 and 8–10 in 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 the NIT as a 2-seed. The team was coached during the NIT by interim coach Jamall Walker, making it to the quarterfinals before being eliminated by the University of Central Florida.

Brad Underwood era (2017–present)

On March 18, 2017, Brad Underwood was hired by athletic director Josh Whitman.[7] Underwood previously coached at Stephen F. Austin from 2013 to 2016, before spending one year at Oklahoma State. In Underwood'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.

2018-19 season

While the 2018–19 season featured the debut of key pieces including Ayo Dosunmu, Giorgi Bezhanishvili, Andres Feliz, and Alan Griffin, the Illini posted one of the worst records in program history at 12–21 (7–13 in Big Ten). Despite the poor record, the Fighting Illini had many memorable moments such as upsetting #9 Michigan State at home and Freshman Giorgi Bezhanishvili scoring 35 points versus Rutgers, breaking the Illinois record for most points by a freshman in a game.

2019-20 season

This season was the freshman year of highly ranked center Kofi Cockburn. The Illini started off the season slow in the first game, barely beating Nicholls State 78–70 in OT. In the Big Ten-ACC Challenge, Illinois played Miami (FL) where they lost 81–79 after mounting a huge comeback and a charge being called against Dosunmu on the final play of the game. The next game they traveled to Maryland to play against the #3 ranked Terrapins and the Illini led by 14 at half. Maryland then outscored Illinois 34–19 in the second half and won the game by an Anthony Cowan free throw. The Illini next played the 5th ranked Michigan Wolverines at the State Farm Center and beat them 71–62 to improve to a 7–3 record. Over the next 12 games, the Illini went 10–2, including an Ayo Dosunmu game-winning shot at Michigan to give Illinois a 64–62 lead with 0.5 seconds on the clock. The Fighting Illini finished the season 21–10 with a 13–7 conference record and 4th in the Big Ten.

2020-21 season

This was the 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. The team went on to win the Big Ten tournament title 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.

Thomas E. Thompson 1910–1912 14–14 10–13
Ralph R. Jones 1912–1920 85–34 64–31 2
Frank J. Winters 1920–1922 25–12 14–10
J. Craig Ruby 1922–1936 148–95 94–74 2
Douglas R. Mills 1936–1947 151–66 88–47 3 1
Harry Combes 1947–1967 316–150 174–104 4 4
Harv Schmidt 1967–1974 89–77 43–55
Gene Bartow 1974–1975 8–18 4–14
Lou Henson 1975–1996 423–224 214–164 1 12
Lon Kruger 1996–2000 81–48 38–28 1 3
Bill Self 2000–2003 78–24 35–13 2 3
Bruce Weber 2003–2012 210–101 89–65 2 6
John Groce 2012–2017 95–74 37–53 1
Jamall Walker (interim) 2017 2–1
Brad Underwood 2017– 93–64 55–43 1 2
Totals 1857–1037 978–743 18 32

Facilities

 
State Farm Center

State Farm Center (1963–present)

The State Farm Center(nee The Assembly Hall) opened on March 2, 1963, and hosts the home games for the men and women's basketball teams. The architect of the Building was Max Abramovitz, an alumnus. It is internationally known for its unique engineering design. The stadium is the third largest dome in the state of Illinois following only the United Center and All-State Arena. The Illinois High School Association has also taken advantage of its size hosting numerous events including the men and women's state championships, along with the wrestling state championships. The stadium has also recently been named a landmark and joins Wrigley Field as the only two athletic sites on the list.

The stadium has been described as one of the toughest places to play because of the student section dubbed the "Orange Krush". The Orange Krush sits on three sides of the court, including around each basket. It has become customary for the fans of the stadium to wear orange to the games.

Ubben Basketball Practice Complex (1998–present)

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]

Huff Hall (1925–1963)

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 after George Huff, who was the school's athletic director from 1895 to 1935. Huff Hall is home to the University of Illinois Fighting Illini volleyball and wrestling teams. Prior to the opening of Assembly Hall in 1963, it was home to the basketball team as well.

 
Kenney Gym

Kenney Gym (1905–1925)

Kenney Gym Annex is a 5,000-seat multi-purpose arena which is the practice facility for the Fighting Illini gymnastics team. Prior to the opening of Huff 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.

Championships

National Championships

Year Coach Awarding body Record
1915 Ralph Jones Helms Athletic Foundation, Premo-Porretta Power Poll 16–0
1943 Douglas R. Mills Premo-Porretta Power Poll 17–1
Non-NCAA tournament championships 2

Big Ten Regular Season Championships

Year Coach Overall record Big Ten record
1915 Ralph Jones 16–0 12–0
1917§ Ralph Jones 13–3 10–2
1924§ J. Craig Ruby 11–6 8–4
1935§ J. Craig Ruby 15–5 9–3
1937§ Douglas R. Mills 14–4 10–2
1942 Douglas R. Mills 18–5 13–2
1943 Douglas R. Mills 17–1 12–0
1949 Harry Combes 21–4 10–2
1951 Harry Combes 22–5 13–1
1952 Harry Combes 22–4 12–2
1963§ Harry Combes 20–6 11–3
1984§ Lou Henson 26–5 15–3
1998§ Lon Kruger 23–10 13–3
2001§ Bill Self 27–8 13–3
2002§ Bill Self 26–9 11–5
2004 Bruce Weber 26–7 13–3
2005 Bruce Weber 37–2 15–1
2022§ Brad Underwood 22–8 15–5
Big Ten Regular Season Championships 18

§–Conference Co-champions

Big Ten tournament championships

Year Coach Opponent Score Site Record
2003 Bill Self Ohio State 72–59 Chicago 27–5
2005 Bruce Weber Wisconsin 54–43 Chicago 37–2
2021 Brad Underwood Ohio State 91–88 OT Indianapolis 23–6
Big Ten tournament championships 3

Statistical leaders

 
Former Fighting Illini Demetri McCamey

All-time leaders

Season leaders

Game leaders

Career milestones

1,500 points
Years Player Points
1991–94 Deon Thomas 2,129
1994–97 Kiwane Garris 1,948
2014–17 Malcolm Hill 1,817
2003–06 Dee Brown 1,812
2017–22 Trent Frazier 1,794
2000–03 Brian Cook 1,748
1999–02 Cory Bradford 1,735
2008–11 Demetri McCamey 1,718
1978–81 Eddie Johnson 1,692
2010–13 Brandon Paul 1,654
1978–81 Mark Smith 1,653
2019-22 Kofi Cockburn 1,546
1989–93 Andy Kaufmann 1,533
2018-21 Ayo Dosunmu 1,504
200 three-point field goals
Years Player Three-pointers
1999–02 Cory Bradford 327
2017–22 Trent Frazier 310
2003–06 Dee Brown 299
2010–13 D.J. Richardson 278
1993–96 Richard Keene 237
2008–11 Demetri McCamey 236
2004–07 Rich McBride 216
2010–13 Brandon Paul 211
2002–05 Luther Head 209
500 assists
Years Player Assists
1983–86 Bruce Douglas 765
2008–11 Demetri McCamey 733
2003–06 Dee Brown 674
2003–05 Deron Williams 594
1994–97 Kiwane Garris 502
750 rebounds
Years Player Rebounds
2003–06 James Augustine 1,023
2008–11 Mike Davis 909
2019-22 Kofi Cockburn 861
1983–86 Efrem Winters 853
1991–94 Deon Thomas 846
1978–81 Eddie Johnson 831
1963–65 Skip Thoren 830
2000–03 Brian Cook 815
1971–73 Nick Weatherspoon 803
1961–63 Dave Downey 790
150 blocks
Years Player Blocks
2012–15 Nnanna Egwu 201
1991–94 Deon Thomas 177
2008–11 Mike Tisdale 176
1979–81 Derek Holcomb 174
1979–82 James Griffin 156

Source for all statistical leaders[9]

Individual honors

Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame

The following 6 Fighting Illini have been inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame:

Year Player Inducted as a
1960 Henry Porter Contributor
1961 Andy Phillip Player
1971 Abe Saperstein Contributor
2004 Jerry Colangelo Contributor
2017 Mannie Jackson Contributor
2017 Bill Self Coach

Source[10]

National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame

The following 4 Fighting Illini have been inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame:

Year Player Inducted as a
2006 Andy Phillip Player
2007 Vic Bubas Contributor
2009 Gene Bartow Coach
2015 Lou Henson Coach

Olympians

International championships

Year Player Event Country Medal Ref
1959 Chicago George Bon Salle Pan American Games United States     [11]
1970 Yugoslavia Tal Brody FIBA World Championship United States   5th [12]
1974 Iran Tal Brody Basketball at the 1974 Asian Games Israel    
1974 Puerto Rico Rick Schmidt FIBA World Championship United States     [13]
1979 Mexico Craig Tucker Universiade United States     [14]
1984 Sweden Jens Kujawa FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship West Germany   5th [15]
1987 Greece Jens Kujawa FIBA EuroBasket West Germany   4th [16]
1993 Germany Jens Kujawa FIBA EuroBasket Germany     [17]
1997 Sicily Jerry Hester Universiade United States     [18]
1998 Greece Kiwane Garris FIBA World Championship United States     [19]
1999 Spain Cory Bradford Universiade United States     [20]
2000 Brazil Brian Cook FIBA Americas Under-20 Championship United States     [21]
2001 Japan Brian Cook FIBA Under-21 World Championship United States     [22]
2002 Venezuela Dee Brown FIBA Americas U18 Championship United States     [23]
2002 Venezuela Deron Williams FIBA Americas U18 Championship United States     [23]
2003 Greece Dee Brown FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup United States   5th [24]
2003 Greece Deron Williams FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup United States   5th [25]
2007 Las Vegas Deron Williams FIBA AmeriCup United States     [26]
2009 Poland Robert Archibald FIBA EuroBasket Great Britain   14th [27]
2010 San Antonio Jereme Richmond FIBA Americas U18 Championship United States     [28]
2011 Lithuania Robert Archibald FIBA EuroBasket Great Britain   13th [27]
2011 Latvia Meyers Leonard FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup United States   5th [29]
2011 Mexico Kendrick Nunn FIBA Americas Under-16 Championship United States     [30]
2012 Lithuania Kendrick Nunn FIBA Under-17 Basketball World Cup United States     [31]
2013 Puerto Rico Andres Feliz Centrobasket U17 Championship Dominican Republic     [32]
2014 Colorado Springs Andres Feliz FIBA Americas Under-18 Championship Dominican Republic     [33]
2015 Greece Andres Feliz FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup Dominican Republic   13th [33]
2015 Toronto Andres Feliz Pan American Games Dominican Republic   4th [33]
2016 China Myke Henry FIBA 3x3 World Cup United States     [34]
2018 Canada Ayo Dosunmu FIBA Americas Under-18 Championship United States     [35]

Consensus All-American

8 Illini were recognized as consensus first team All-Americans.[36]

NCAA Men's Basketball All-American

Key to abbreviations:
AP Associated Press, Arg Argosy, Ath Athletic Publications, BN Basketball News, BT Basketball Times, BKW Basketball Weekly, BW Basketball Writers of America, Col Colliers, Con Converse, CSAF Citizens Savings Athletic Foundation, Helms Helms Foundation, INS International News Service, K Kodak, Look Look magazine, MSG Madison Square Garden, NABC National Association of Basketball Coaches, NEA Newspaper Enterprise Association, Omaha Omaha World Newspaper, PM Pic Magazine, SN Sporting News, True True Magazine, UP United Press, W Wooden
1st First Team, 2nd Second Team, 3rd Third Team, HM Honorable Mention
1915 Ray Woods–1st (Helms)
1916 Ray Woods–1st (Helms)
1917 Ray Woods–1st (Helms), Clyde Alwood–1st (Helms)
1918 Earl Anderson–1st (Helms)
1920 Chuck Carney–1st (Helms)
1922 Chuck Carney–1st (Helms)
1937 Harry Combes–2nd (Omaha)
1938 Lou Boudreau–1st (MSG), Louis Dehner–3rd (Con)
1939 Louis Dehner–1st (MSG), 3rd (Con)
1940 Bill Hapac–1st (Helms, Con)
1942 Andy Phillip–1st (Helms), 2nd (PM), 3rd (Con), Jack Smiley–HM (SN), Art Mathisen–HM (SN), Ken Menke–HM (SN, Con), Gene Vance–HM (SN)
1943 Andy Phillip–1st (Con, PM, Helms, SN, AP, UP, NEA, Look,), Jack Smiley–3rd (Con), Art Mathisen–HM (Con), Gene Vance–HM (Con)
1944 Walt Kirk–HM (Con)
1945 Walt Kirk–1st (Helms, Con), 2nd (AM), HM (Con)
1946 Jack Burmaster–HM (SN), Bob Doster–HM (SN)
1947 Andy Phillip–1st (True, NABC), HM (Con), Jack Smiley–3rd (Helms), HM (Con), Gene Vance–HM (Con)
1948 Dwight Eddleman–2nd (AP), 3rd (Con, True), Jack Burmaster–HM (Con)
1949 Bill Erickson–1st (Helms, Col, NABC), 3rd (SN, UP), 4th (Con), Dwight Eddleman–1st (Con), 2nd (AP, UP)
1950 Bill Erickson–HM (Con)
1951 Don Sunderlage–2nd (Helms, SN), 3rd (UP, Con), HM (AP), Ted Beach–HM (Con), Rod Fletcher–HM (Con)
1952 Rod Fletcher–1st (Look, Con, Helms), 2nd (AP, UP, INS, NABC, Col, Ath), John Kerr–HM (AP, UP, Con), Irv Bemoras–HM (UP, Con), Jim Bredar–HM (UP, Con), Bob Peterson–HM (UP)
1953 Irv Bemoras–2nd (Con, Helms, Look), HM (AP), Jim Bredar–2nd (Con, Helms, Look, INS), 3rd (AP), John Kerr–HM (AP, INS, Con)
1954 John Kerr–2nd (Helms), 3rd (Look, AP, UP), 4th (Con)
1955 Bill Ridley–HM (AP, Con), Paul Judson–HM (INS, Con), George Bon Salle–HM (Con)
1956 Paul Judson–2nd (Con), 3rd (NABC, UP, NEA), HM (INS), Bill Ridley–2nd (Con), 3rd (NABC, UP, AP), Bruce Brothers–HM (Con), Harv Schmidt–HM (Con)
1957 Harv Schmidt–2nd (Con), George Bon Salle–2nd (NABC) HM (Con), Don Ohl–HM (AP, Con)
1958 Don Ohl–2nd (Con), 3rd (Helms), Govoner Vaughn–HM (Con)
1959 Roger Taylor–HM (Con)
1960 Mannie Jackson–HM (Con), Govoner Vaughn–HM (Con)
1961 Dave Downey–HM (Con), John Wessels–HM (Con)
1962 Dave Downey–HM (Con), Bill Burwell–HM (Con)
1963 Dave Downey–1st (Helms), 2nd (Con), HM (AP), Bill Small–HM (Con)
1964 Tal Brody–HM (SN, Con), Duane Thoren–HM (Con)
1965 Duane Thoren–1st (Helms), 2nd (AP, Con), 3rd (UPI, BN, NABC), Bogie Redmon–HM (Con), Tal Brody–1st (Helms), 2nd (SN, Con)
1966 Donnie Freeman–1st (Helms), 2nd (Con, BN), HM (UPI), Rich Jones–HM (Con)
1967 Jim Dawson–HM (Con), Dave Scholz–HM (Con)
1968 Dave Scholz–1st (Helms), HM (Con)
1969 Dave Scholz–1st (Helms), 3rd (AP), HM (Con)
1970 Mike Price–HM (Con)
1972 Nick Weatherspoon–HM (Con)
1973 Nick Weatherspoon–1st (CASF, Helms), HM (Con)
1974 Jeff Dawson–HM (Con)
1975 Rick Schmidt–HM (Con)
1977 Audie Matthews–HM (Con), Levi Cobb–HM (Con)
1983 Derek Harper–2nd (AP, Con), 3rd (BN)
1984 Bruce Douglas–3rd (UPI)
1987 Ken Norman–2nd (AP, BW, SN, K), 3rd (BT, NABC), HM (UPI)
1988 Nick Anderson–HM (SN), Kenny Battle–HM (SN)
1989 Nick Anderson–HM (AP, UPI, SN), Kenny Battle–HM (AP, UPI, SN), Kendall Gill–HM (SN)
1990 Kendall Gill–1st (UPI), 2nd (BKW), 3rd (AP, SN, NABC)
1994 Deon Thomas–HM (AP)
2001 Frank Williams–1st (W), 3rd (AP, NABC), Cory Bradford–HM (AP)
2002 Frank Williams–2nd (NABC) HM (AP)
2003 Brian Cook–2nd (SN), 3rd (AP, NABC, BT)
2004 Dee Brown–HM (AP)
2005 Dee Brown–1st (W, BW, SN) 2nd (AP, NABC, BT), Luther Head–2nd (AP, NABC, BW), Deron Williams–1st (W), 2nd (NABC, SN), 3rd (AP)
2006 Dee Brown–2nd (AP, BW, NABC)
2021 Ayo Dosunmu–1st
2021 Kofi Cockburn–2nd

 

Ray Woods–1917
Chuck Carney–1922
Andy Phillip–1943
Dee Brown–2005
Ayo Dosunmu–2021
Bruce Weber–2005
  • National Freshman of the Year
Kofi Cockburn–2020

 

Dee Brown–2006
Ayo Dosunmu–2021
Dee Brown–2006

 

  • NCAA All-Decade Team
Dwight "Dike" Eddleman–1940s
  • NCAA Final Four All-Tournament Team
Jim Bredar1952
Johnny "Red" Kerr1952
Luther Head & Deron Williams2005
  • NCAA Tournament Regional Most Outstanding Player
Nick Anderson–1989
Deron Williams–2005
Andy Phillip–1943
Dwight "Dike" Eddleman–1949
Don Sunderlage–1951
Johnny "Red" Kerr–1954
Jim Dawson–1967
Bruce Douglas–1984
Frank Williams–2001
Brian Cook–2003
Dee Brown–2005
Bruce Douglas–1985 & 1986
Stephen Bardo–1989
Dee Brown–2005
  • Big Ten Freshman of the Year
Cory Bradford–1999
Brian Cook–2000
D.J. Richardson–2010
Kofi Cockburn–2020
  • Big Ten Sixth Man of the Year
Andre Curbelo–2021
  • Big Ten tournament Most Outstanding Player
Brian Cook–2003
James Augustine–2005
Ayo Dosunmu–2021
Lou Henson–1993
Bruce Weber–2005

Jordan Brand Classic

Why is a player having played in a HS tournament relevant? This article is excessively long. Remove this section? Comment made March 26 '22.

The following 4 Jordan Brand Classic participants have played for Illinois:[37]

Year Player High School Hometown
2002 Dee Brown Proviso East Maywood, Illinois
2015 Jalen Coleman-Lands La Lumiere School Indianapolis, Indiana
2018 Ayo Dosunmu Morgan Park High School Chicago, Illinois
2020 Adam Miller Morgan Park High School Peoria, Illinois

Nike Hoop Summit

Why is a player having played in a HS tournament relevant? This article is excessively long. Remove this section? Comment made March 26 '22.

The following 4 Fighting Illini have played in the Nike Hoop Summit:

Year Player High School Hometown
2010 Meyers Leonard Robinson High School Robinson, Illinois
2016 Andres Feliz West Oaks Academy Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
2018 Kofi Cockburn Christ the King Regional High School Kingston, Jamaica
2019 Kofi Cockburn Oak Hill Academy Kingston, Jamaica
2019 Andre Curbelo Long Island Lutheran Vega Baja, Puerto Rico

McDonald's All-Americans

Why is a player having played in a HS tournament relevant? This article is excessively long. Remove this section? Comment made March 26 '22.

The following 13 McDonald's All-Americans have played for Illinois:[38]

Year Player High School Hometown
1980 Derek Harper North Shore (FL) Royston, Georgia
1982 Bruce Douglas Quincy Senior High School Quincy, Illinois
1982 Efrem Winters King College Prep Chicago
1985 Lowell Hamilton Providence St. Mel School Chicago
1986 Nick Anderson Simeon Career Academy Chicago
1987 Marcus Liberty King College Prep Chicago
1989 Deon Thomas Simeon Career Academy Chicago
1992 Richard Keene Collinsville High School Collinsville, Illinois
1997 Marcus Griffin Manual High School Peoria, Illinois
1998 Frank Williams Manual High School Peoria, Illinois
1999 Brian Cook Lincoln Community High School Lincoln, Illinois
2002 Dee Brown Proviso East Maywood, Illinois
2010 Jereme Richmond Waukegan High School Waukegan, Illinois

Mr. Basketball

Why is a player having played in a HS tournament relevant? This article is excessively long. Remove this section? Comment made March 26 '22.

The following 15 Mr. Basketball award winners have played for Illinois:

Year Player High school Hometown
1982 Bruce Douglas Quincy Senior High School Quincy, Illinois
1986 Nick Anderson Simeon Career Academy Chicago
1987 Marcus Liberty King College Prep Chicago
1989 Deon Thomas Simeon Career Academy Chicago
1994 Jarrod Gee St. Martin de Porres Chicago
1997 Sergio McClain Manual High School Peoria, Illinois
1998 Frank Williams Manual High School Peoria, Illinois
1999 Brian Cook Lincoln Community High School Lincoln, Illinois
2002 Dee Brown Proviso East Maywood, Illinois
2009 Brandon Paul Warren Township High School Gurnee, Illinois
2010 Jereme Richmond Waukegan High School Waukegan, Illinois
2014 Leron Black White Station High School Memphis, Tennessee
2017 Mark Smith Edwardsville High School Edwardsville, Illinois
2020 Adam Miller Morgan Park High School Chicago
2021 Brandin Podziemski St. John's Northwestern Military Academy Muskego, Wisconsin

Fighting Illini of note

Fighting Illini in the NBA[39]
NBA Draft Selections
Total selected: 73
1st round: 15
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

Draft Year Pick Player Selected by Professional career
1951 9 Don Sunderlage Philadelphia Warriors 1953–1955
1954 9 Johnny Kerr Syracuse Nationals 1954–1966
1957 7 George Bon Salle Syracuse Nationals 1957–1962
1970 17 Mike Price New York Knicks 1970–1973
1973 13 Nick Weatherspoon Capital Bullets 1973–1980
1983 11 Derek Harper Dallas Mavericks 1983–1999
1987 19 Ken Norman Los Angeles Clippers 1987–1997
1989 11 Nick Anderson Orlando Magic 1989–2002
1989 27 Kenny Battle Detroit Pistons 1989–2000
1990 5 Kendall Gill Charlotte Hornets 1990–2005
2002 25 Frank Williams Denver Nuggets 2002–2010
2002 24 Brian Cook Los Angeles Lakers 2003–2015
2005 3 Deron Williams Utah Jazz 2005–2017
2005 24 Luther Head Houston Rockets 2005–2018
2012 11 Meyers Leonard Portland Trail Blazers 2012–present

Fighting Illini in the NBA

Position Name Height Weight (lbs.) Hometown Draft year Pick Current NBA team
SG/SF Malcolm Hill 6'6" 220 Belleville, Illinois 2017 Undrafted Chicago Bulls
SG Kendrick Nunn 6'2" 190 Chicago, Illinois 2018 Undrafted Los Angeles Lakers
PG Ayo Dosunmu 6'5" 200 Chicago, Illinois 2021 38th Chicago Bulls

Fighting Illini in the NBA G League

Position Name Height Weight (lbs.) Hometown Draft Year Pick Current G League Team
PF Giorgi Bezhanishvili 6'9" 245 Rustavi, Georgia 2021 Undrafted Grand Rapids Gold
SG Alan Griffin 6'5" 190 Waltham, Massachusetts 2021 Undrafted Rio Grande Valley Vipers
PG Jaylon Tate 6'3" 180 Chicago, Illinois 2017 Undrafted Santa Cruz Warriors

Fighting Illini playing internationally

Position Name Height Weight (lbs.) Hometown Years with
Illinois
Professional Team Country
PF Leron Black 6'7" 220 Memphis, Tennessee 2014–2018 Abejas de León   Mexico[40]
C Brian Carlwell 6'11" 265 Maywood, Illinois 2006–2008 Mandurah Magic   Australia[41]
PF/C Nnanna Egwu 6'11" 250 Chicago, Illinois 2011–2015 Earth Friends Tokyo Z   Japan[42]
G/F Myke Henry 6'6" 230 Chicago, Illinois 2011–2013 Pallacanestro Trieste   Italy[43]
G Rayvonte Rice 6'5" 234 Champaign, Illinois 2013–2015 Soles de Mexicali   Mexico[44]
SG Jamar Smith 6'3" 185 Peoria, Illinois 2006–2007 BC UNICS   Russia[45]
SF Matic Vessel 6'9" 215 Ljubljana, Slovenia 2018 KK Škofja Loka   Slovenia[46]

Fighting Illini currently coaching

Name Years with
Illinois
Current Team Position League
Dee Brown 2002–2006 Roosevelt Head Coach CCAC (NAIA)
Chester Frazier 2005-2009 Illinois Assistant Coach Big Ten Conference
Jerrance Howard 2000–2004 Kansas Assistant Coach Big 12 Conference
Roger Powell 2001–2005 Gonzaga Assistant Coach West Coast Conference
Brian Randle 2003–2008 Phoenix Suns Assistant Coach NBA

Fighting Illini basketball media members

Name Years with
Illinois
Media Outlet Role Current Team
Nick Anderson 1987–1989 Fox Sports Florida Commentator Orlando Magic
Stephen Bardo 1986–1990 Big Ten Network College Basketball Analyst Big Ten Conference
Kendall Gill 1986–1990 NBC Sports Chicago Commentator Chicago Bulls
Derek Harper 1980–1983 Fox Sports Southwest Color Commentator Dallas Mavericks
Eddie Johnson 1977–1981 Fox Sports Arizona Play-by-play Commentator Phoenix Suns
Deon Thomas 1991-1994 Fighting Illini Sports Network Color Commentator Fighting Illini Men's basketball

Illinois honored players

All-Century Team

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.[47]

Honored jerseys

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 of State Farm Center. A total of 34 men's players have their jersey honored. To have his jersey honored, a player must have met one of the following criteria:

No. Player Pos. Career National POY National HOF US Olympian Big Ten POY Consensus All-American Illinois All-Century Basketball Pioneer
1 Ray Woods G 1915–17  Y          Y  
2 Chuck Carney F 1920–22  Y          Y  
19 Bill Hapac F 1938–40          Y    
47 Andy Phillip F 1942–43, 1947  Y  Y    Y    Y  
25 Gene Vance G 1942–43, 1947            Y  
14 Walt Kirk G 1942–43, 1947          Y    
40 Dwight "Dike" Eddleman F 1947–49      Y  Y    Y  
33 Bill Erickson G 1947–50          Y    
11 Don Sunderlage G 1949–51        Y      
37 Rod Fletcher G 1950–52        Y      
22 Johnny "Red" Kerr C 1952–54        Y    Y  
35 Govoner Vaughn F 1958–60              Y
30 Mannie Jackson G 1958–60    Y          Y
23 Jerry Colangelo G 1960–62    Y          
40 Dave Downey F 1961–63            Y  
35 Duane "Skip" Thoren C 1963–65            Y  
12 Tal Brody G 1963–65              Y
15 Donnie Freeman F 1963–66          Y  
24 Jim Dawson G 1965–67        Y      
12 Nick Weatherspoon F 1971–73            Y  
33 Eddie Johnson F 1978–81            Y  
12 Derek Harper G 1981–83            Y  
25 Bruce Douglas G 1983–86            Y  
33 Ken Norman F 1985–87          Y  Y  
33 Kenny Battle F 1988–89            Y  
25 Nick Anderson F 1988–89            Y  
13 Kendall Gill G 1987–90          Y  Y  
25 Deon Thomas F/C 1991–94            Y  
20 Frank Williams G 2000–02        Y    Y  
34 Brian Cook F 2000–03        Y    Y  
4 Luther Head G 2002–05          Y    
5 Deron Williams G 2003–05      Y    Y    
11 Dee Brown G 2003–06  Y      Y  Y    
11 Ayo Dosunmu G 2019-21          Y    

Dike Eddleman Award

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 Olympian Dwight "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.[48] The following list includes Illini basketball players who earned the award.

Player Years played Year awarded
Bill Hapac 1937–1940 1940
John Drish 1937–1941 1941
Andy Phillip 1942–43, 1947 1942, 1943
Walton Kirk 1943–1947 1945
Dike Eddleman 1945–1949 1948, 1949
Don Sunderlage 1948–1951 1951
Clive Follmer 1950–1953 1953
Paul Judson 1953–1956 1955
Doug Mills 1959–1962 1962
Jim Dawson 1963–1967 1967
Dave Scholz 1966–1969 1968, 1969
Mike Price 1967–1970 1970
Kendall Gill 1986–1990 1990
Deron Williams 2002–2005 2005

Big Ten Medal of Honor

Since 1915, the Big Ten Medal of Honor has been awarded annually at each conference school to a male and female senior student-athlete who demonstrates proficiency in scholarship and athletics. The award has become the top annual award the University of Illinois Division of Intercollegiate Athletics bestows.[49] The following list includes Illini basketball players who earned the award.[50]

Player Years played Year awarded
Edward A. Williford 1913–1915 1915
Clyde Alwood 1914–1917 1917
John B. Felmley 1915-1920 1920
Otto Vogel 1920-1922 1923
Walter Roettger 1921–1925 1924
John Mauer 1922–1926 1926
Harry Combes 1935–1937 1937
William Hocking 1939–1942 1942
Donald Delaney 1943–1945 1942
Dike Eddleman 1945–1949 1949
Clive Follmer 1950–1953 1953
Dave Downey 1960–1963 1963
Bogie Redmon 1962–1965 1965
Jack Ingram 2003–2005 2005
Dee Brown 2003-2006 2006
Warren Carter 2003–2007 2007
Trent Meacham 2005-2009 2009
Brandon Paul 2009–2013 2013

Postseason

NCAA Tournament seeding history

The NCAA began seeding the tournament with the 1979 edition.

Years → '1979-80 '81 '82 '83 '84 '85 '86 '87 '88 '89 '90 '91-2 '93 '94 '95 '96 '97 '98 '99 '00
Seeds → - 4 - 7 2 3 4 3 3 1 5 - 6 8 11 - 6 5 - 4
Coach → Henson Kruger
Years → '2001 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14-17 '18-19 '20 '21 '22
Seeds → 1 4 4 5 1 4 12 - 5 - 9 - 7 - - x 1 4
Coach → Self Weber Groce Underwood

NCAA tournament results

The Fighting Illini have appeared in the NCAA tournament 31 times. Their combined record is 41–32.

Year Seed Round Opponent Results
1942 Elite Eight
Regional 3rd Place Game
Kentucky
Penn State
L 44–46
L 34–41
1949 Elite Eight
Final Four
National 3rd Place Game
Yale
Kentucky
Oregon State
W 71–67
L 47–76
W 57–53
1951 Sweet 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
1952 Sweet 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
1963 Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Bowling Green
Loyola–Chicago
W 70–67
L 64–79
1981 #4 Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#5 Wyoming
#8 Kansas State
W 67–65
L 52–57
1983 #7 First Round #10 Utah L 49–52
1984 #2 Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#7 Villanova
#3 Maryland
#1 Kentucky
W 64–56
W 72–70
L 51–54
1985 #3 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#14 Northeastern
#6 Georgia
#2 Georgia Tech
W 76–57
W 74–58
L 53–61
1986 #4 First Round
Second Round
#13 Fairfield
#5 Alabama
W 75–51
L 56–58
1987 #3 First Round #14 Austin Peay L 67–68
1988 #3 First Round
Second Round
#14 UTSA
#6 Villanova
W 81–72
L 63–66
1989 #1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
#16 McNeese State
#9 Ball State
#4 Louisville
#2 Syracuse
#3 Michigan
W 77–71
W 72–60
W 83–69
W 89–86
L 81–83
1990 #5 First Round #12 Dayton L 86–88
1993 #6 First Round
Second Round
#11 Long Beach State
#3 Vanderbilt
W 75–72
L 68–85
1994 #8 First Round #9 Georgetown L 77–84
1995 #11 First Round #6 Tulsa L 62–68
1997 #6 First Round
Second Round
#11 USC
#14 Chattanooga
W 90–77
L 63–75
1998 #5 First Round
Second Round
#12 South Alabama
#4 Maryland
W 64–51
L 61–67
2000 #4 First Round
Second Round
#13 Penn
#5 Florida
W 68–58
L 76–93
2001 #1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#16 Northwestern State
#9 Charlotte
#4 Kansas
#2 Arizona
W 96–54
W 79–61
W 80–64
L 81–87
2002 #4 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#13 San Diego State
#12 Creighton
#1 Kansas
W 93–64
W 72–60
L 69–73
2003 #4 First Round
Second Round
#13 WKU
#5 Notre Dame
W 65–60
L 60–68
2004 #5 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#12 Murray State
#4 Cincinnati
#1 Duke
W 72–53
W 92–68
L 62–72
2005 #1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
#16 Fairleigh Dickinson
#9 Nevada
#12 Milwaukee
#3 Arizona
#4 Louisville
#1 North Carolina
W 67–55
W 71–59
W 77–63
W 90–89 OT
W 72–57
L 70–75
2006 #4 First Round
Second Round
#13 Air Force
#5 Washington
W 78–69
L 64–67
2007 #12 First Round #5 Virginia Tech L 52–54
2009 #5 First Round #12 WKU L 72–76
2011 #9 Second Round
Third Round
#8 UNLV
#1 Kansas
W 73–62
L 59–73
2013 #7 Second Round
Third Round
#10 Colorado
#2 Miami (FL)
W 57–49
L 59–63
2021 #1 First Round
Second Round
#16 Drexel
#8 Loyola–Chicago
W 78–49
L 58–71
2022 #4 First Round
Second Round
#13 Chattanooga
#5 Houston
W 54–53
L 53–68


NIT results

The Fighting Illini have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) seven times. Their combined record is 10–7.

Year Round Opponent Result
1980 First 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
1982 First Round
Second Round
LIU Brooklyn
Dayton
W 126–78
L 58–61
1996 First Round Alabama L 69–72
2010 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Stony Brook
Kent State
Dayton
W 76–66
W 75–58
L 71–77
2014 First Round
Second Round
Boston University
Clemson
W 66–62
L 49–50
2015 First Round Alabama L 58–79
2017 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Valparaiso
Boise State
UCF
W 82–57
W 71–56
L 58–68

Head-to-head Big Ten records

Team Total meetings Wins Losses Pct. Home record Road record Neutral record
Indiana 183 90 93 .492 54–34 30–57 6–2
Iowa 165 89 76 .539 64–17 23–56 2–3
Maryland 19 7 11 .333 2–4 1–6 4–2
Michigan 175 90 85 .514 57–28 31–52 2–5
Michigan State 123 60 63 .488 39–21 20–39 1–3
Minnesota 195 127 68 .651 74–19 47–48 6–1
Nebraska 27 19 8 .704 14–2 5–5 0–1
Northwestern 182 140 42 .769 71–14 64–28 5–0
Ohio State 187 108 80 .574 62–27 43–49 3–3
Penn State 49 30 19 .612 14–8 13–10 3–1
Purdue 193 90 103 .466 59–37 29–63 2–3
Rutgers 14 10 4 .714 6–0 3–3 2–0
Wisconsin 202 113 89 .559 69–28 41–58 3–3

Men's basketball records at Kenney Gym and Huff Hall

Season Wins Losses Win pct. Total attendance Season Wins Losses Win pct. Total attendance
1905–06 6 0 1.000 N/R 1925–26 6 3 0.667 N/R
1906–07 0 4 0.000 N/R 1926–27 8 3 0.727 61,590
1907–08 3 2 0.600 N/R 1927–28 3 5 0.375 48,202
1908–09 5 1 0.833 N/R 1928–29 8 3 0.727 30,139*
1909–10 3 2 0.600 N/R 1929–30 5 4 0.556 49,418*
1910–11 3 2 0.600 N/R 1930–31 7 3 0.700 52,440
1911–12 4 3 0.571 N/R 1931–32 8 2 0.800 57,000
1912–13 6 2 0.750 N/R 1932–33 8 3 0.727 34,500*
1913–14 5 2 0.714 N/R 1933–34 9 1 0.900 55,500
1914–15 9 0 1.000 N/R 1934–35 8 2 0.800 62,000
1915–16 6 1 0.857 16,644* 1935–36 7 3 0.700 78,028
1916–17 9 1 0.900 6,417* 1936–37 7 2 0.778 63,238
1917–18 7 1 0.875 5,066* 1937–38 7 2 0.778 63,600
1918–19 3 5 0.375 10,739 1938–39 9 1 0.900 57,933
1919–20 6 1 0.857 24,250* 1939–40 10 1 0.909 55,513
1920–21 6 4 0.600 34,875 1940–41 8 2 0.800 52,751
1921–22 10 2 0.833 40,112 1941–42 12 1 0.923 65,357
1922–23 6 3 0.667 8,424* 1942–43 10 0 1.000 62,648
1923–24 8 3 0.727 41,848 1943–44 6 4 0.600 29,812
1924–25 9 0 1.000 36,222 1944–45 7 3 0.700 44,951
Kenney Gym Totals 94 39 .707 224,597* 1945–46 11 2 0.846 66,553
Kenney Gym Facts 1946–47 10 1 0.909 77,808*
Fighting Illini played 20 years in Kenney Gym 1947–48 11 1 0.917 78,388
Attendance averaged 2,739 fans per game 1948–49 14 0 1.000 49,036*
Single game attendance record: January 24, 1925 vs. Iowa–4,725 1949–50 11 2 0.846 83,736
Hosted 3 Big Ten Champions (1915, 1917, 1924) 1950–51 12 1 0.923 75,116
Hosted 1 National Champion (1915) 1951–52 12 0 1.000 57,788*
Produced 6 All-Americans 1952–53 12 1 0.923 79,957*
Developed 2 National Players of the Year 1953–54 10 3 0.769 77,378
1954–55 9 2 0.818 64,721
Huff Hall Facts 1955–56 12 0 1.000 63,912
Fighting Illini played 38 years in Huff Hall 1956–57 9 2 0.818 68,448
Attendance averaged 7,025 fans per game 1957–58 10 3 0.769 76,032
Single game attendance record: February 22, 1937 vs. Wisconsin–9,000 1958–59 9 3 0.750 68,292
Hosted 8 Big Ten Champions (1935, 1937, 1942, 1943, 1949, 1951, 1952, 1963) 1959–60 10 2 0.833 74,719
Hosted 1 National Champion (1943) & 3 Final Four teams (1949, 1951, 1952) 1960–61 7 3 0.700 60,457
Produced 33 All-Americans 1961–62 8 4 0.667 75,376
Developed 1 National Player of the Year 1962–63** 9 0 1.000 61,025
Combined Totals 433 116 .789 2,507,959* Huff Hall Totals 339 77 .815 2,283,362*

Notes:

  • *Denotes incomplete or partial records.
  • **Played 9 games at Huff Hall but played final 2 games at Assembly Hall.
  • (N/R) denotes no records[51]

See also

References

  1. ^ "University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Visual Identity: Color". Retrieved November 13, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Tate, Loren (January 22, 2012). "Harry Combes knew about offense". News-Gazette. Retrieved December 18, 2014.
  3. ^ "Three Illini Basketball Legends Join Honored Jerseys". University of Illinois Alumni Association. Retrieved December 18, 2014.
  4. ^ . illinihq.com. Archived from the original on July 13, 2011.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on June 25, 2013. Retrieved August 9, 2013.
  6. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved November 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. Retrieved March 2, 2022.
  9. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on December 22, 2014. Retrieved January 15, 2015.
  10. ^ "Illini Basketball Honors and Tradition" (PDF). Retrieved December 27, 2018.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on July 29, 2014. Retrieved June 17, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on October 11, 2014. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  13. ^ "2011-12 Fighting Illini Men's Basketball Record Book".
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on July 29, 2014. Retrieved June 17, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. ^ "Jens Kujawa | European Championship for Men (1993) | FIBA Europe".
  16. ^ "Jens Kujawa | European Championship for Men (1993) | FIBA Europe".
  17. ^ "Jens Kujawa | European Championship for Men (1993) | FIBA Europe".
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on January 30, 2017. Retrieved June 17, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  19. ^ "2011-12 Fighting Illini Men's Basketball Record Book".
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  21. ^ "2011-12 Fighting Illini Men's Basketball Record Book".
  22. ^ "2011-12 Fighting Illini Men's Basketball Record Book".
  23. ^ a b . www.usab.com. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015.
  24. ^ "Seventh Fiba Men's Junior World Championship -- 2003".
  25. ^ "Seventh Fiba Men's Junior World Championship -- 2003".
  26. ^ "2017-18 ILL Record Book-6 Tradition" (PDF).
  27. ^ a b "Robert Archibald Player Profile, Toronto Raptors, NBA Stats, NCAA Stats, International Stats, Events Stats, Game Logs, Bests, Awards - RealGM".
  28. ^ . www.usab.com. Archived from the original on April 6, 2015.
  29. ^ "Tenth Fiba Men's U19 World Championship – 2011".
  30. ^ "Second Fiba Americas U16 Championship for Men -- 2011".
  31. ^ . www.usab.com. Archived from the original on September 7, 2015.
  32. ^ https://archive.fiba.com/pages/eng/fa/event/p/cid//sid/9648/_/2017_Centrobasket_U17_Championship_for_Men/index.html[bare URL]
  33. ^ a b c "TUPPER: Feliz would be a good Illini fit".
  34. ^ . www.usab.com. Archived from the original on November 7, 2017.
  35. ^ "USA Men's U18 Team Brings Home Gold, Downs Canada 113-74".
  36. ^ Illinois basketball, Media guide (Summer 2018). "2018_19_ILLINI_MBB_Record_Book" (PDF). ILLINI MBB Media Guide: 148.
  37. ^ "All-Time JBC Alumni". Jordan Brand. 2018. Retrieved June 4, 2018.
  38. ^ (PDF). McDonald's. December 1, 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 7, 2013. Retrieved January 9, 2015.
  39. ^ . Archived from the original on April 22, 2010. Retrieved May 3, 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  40. ^ "Leron Black Player Profile". EuroLeague Basketball. Retrieved December 27, 2018.
  41. ^ "Brian Carlwell Player Profile". LatinBasket. Retrieved July 21, 2016.
  42. ^ "Nnanna Egwu Player Profile". EuroBasket. Retrieved December 27, 2018.
  43. ^ "Myke Henry Player Profile". EuroBasket. Retrieved December 27, 2018.
  44. ^ "Rayvonte Rice Player Profile". EuroBasket. Retrieved December 27, 2018.
  45. ^ "Jamar Smith Player Profile". EuroBasket. Retrieved November 12, 2018.
  46. ^ "Matic Vessel Player Profile". EuroBasket. Retrieved December 27, 2018.
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on June 9, 2011. Retrieved January 2, 2011.
  48. ^ Dike Eddleman AOTY Award
  49. ^ Big Ten Medal of Honor Award
  50. ^ BigTen.org
  51. ^ Men's basketball all-time records February 10, 2015, at the Wayback Machine

External links

  • Official website  

illinois, fighting, illini, basketball, team, ncaa, division, college, basketball, team, competing, conference, home, games, played, state, farm, center, located, university, illinois, urbana, champaign, campus, champaign, illinois, tournament, national, champ. The Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball team is an NCAA Division I college basketball team competing in the Big Ten Conference Home games are played at the State Farm Center located on the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign s campus in Champaign Illinois has one pre tournament national championship and one non NCAA tournament national championship in 1915 and 1943 awarded by the Premo Porretta Power Poll Illinois has appeared in the NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament 32 times and has competed in 5 Final Fours 9 Elite Eights and has won 18 Big Ten regular season championships Illinois Fighting Illini2022 23 Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball teamUniversityUniversity of Illinois Urbana ChampaignAll time record1 857 1 037 642 Athletic directorJosh WhitmanHead coachBrad Underwood 5th season ConferenceBig TenArenaState Farm Center Capacity 15 544 NicknameFighting IlliniStudent sectionOrange KrushColorsOrange and blue 1 UniformsHome Away AlternatePre tournament Premo Porretta champions1915Pre tournament Helms champions1915NCAA tournament runner up2005NCAA tournament Final Four1949 1951 1952 1989 2005NCAA tournament Elite Eight1942 1949 1951 1952 1963 1984 1989 2001 2005NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen1951 1952 1963 1981 1984 1985 1989 2001 2002 2004 2005NCAA tournament round of 321981 1984 1985 1986 1988 1989 1993 1997 1998 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2011 2013 2021 2022NCAA tournament 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 2022Conference tournament champions2003 2005 2021Conference regular season champions1915 1917 1924 1935 1937 1942 1943 1949 1951 1952 1963 1984 1998 2001 2002 2004 2005 2022The team is currently coached by Brad Underwood who was hired on March 18 2017 Through the end of the 2017 18 season Illinois ranks 12th all time in winning percentage and 15th all time in wins among all NCAA Division I men s college basketball programs Contents 1 Eras of Illini Basketball 1 1 Early years 1 2 When duty calls 1 3 Harry Combes era 1947 1967 1 4 Lou Henson era 1975 1996 1 4 1 Early 1980s 1 4 2 Flyin Illini 1 4 3 1990s 1 5 Lon Kruger era 1996 2000 1 6 Bill Self era 2000 2003 1 7 Bruce Weber era 2003 2012 1 7 1 2003 2004 1 7 2 2004 2005 1 7 3 2005 2006 1 7 4 2006 2012 1 8 John Groce era 2012 2017 1 9 Brad Underwood era 2017 present 1 9 1 2018 19 season 1 9 2 2019 20 season 1 9 3 2020 21 season 2 Facilities 2 1 State Farm Center 1963 present 2 2 Ubben Basketball Practice Complex 1998 present 2 3 Huff Hall 1925 1963 2 4 Kenney Gym 1905 1925 3 Championships 3 1 National Championships 3 2 Big Ten Regular Season Championships 3 3 Big Ten tournament championships 4 Statistical leaders 4 1 All time leaders 4 2 Season leaders 4 3 Game leaders 4 4 Career milestones 5 Individual honors 5 1 Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame 5 2 National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame 5 3 Olympians 5 4 International championships 5 5 Consensus All American 5 6 NCAA Men s Basketball All American 5 7 Jordan Brand Classic 5 8 Nike Hoop Summit 5 9 McDonald s All Americans 5 10 Mr Basketball 6 Fighting Illini of note 6 1 First round NBA draft picks 6 2 Fighting Illini in the NBA 6 3 Fighting Illini in the NBA G League 6 4 Fighting Illini playing internationally 6 5 Fighting Illini currently coaching 6 6 Fighting Illini basketball media members 7 Illinois honored players 7 1 All Century Team 7 2 Honored jerseys 7 3 Dike Eddleman Award 7 4 Big Ten Medal of Honor 8 Postseason 8 1 NCAA Tournament seeding history 8 2 NCAA tournament results 8 3 NIT results 9 Head to head Big Ten records 9 1 Men s basketball records at Kenney Gym and Huff Hall 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEras of Illini Basketball EditSee also List of Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball seasons Early years Edit The Fighting Illini began play in 1906 with Elwood Brown as their first coach In 1915 Illinois won their first ever Big Ten title going 16 0 and 12 0 in Big Ten play under coach Ralph Jones They were retroactively declared champion of that season by the Helms Athletic Foundation and the Premo Porretta Power Poll They won two more Big Ten titles in the next nine years both shared titles In 1935 they won the Big Ten once again sharing it with Purdue They won the Big Ten title five years later in 1942 their first unanimous Big Ten title since 1915 When duty calls Edit The Whiz Kids See also 1942 43 Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball team Prior to World War II breaking out the Fighting Illini men s basketball program had achieved a status which it had never seen prior Under the direction of head coach and athletic director Douglas R Mills the Illini grouped a team of players all around 6 3 into a nearly undefeatable lineup later to be known as The Whiz Kids As freshman and sophomores the 1941 42 Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball team dominated the Big Ten conference basketball season by posting a 13 2 record overall finishing with 18 wins and only 5 losses A starting lineup of freshman and sophomores Arthur Jack Smiley Ken Menke Andy Phillip Ellis Gene Vance Victor Wukovits and Art Mathisen developed a winning attitude that would maintain for the next 15 years a time period where the Illini would finish no less than third in the conference for 13 of them Despite being ranked No 1 in the nation the 1943 Illinois men s basketball squad opted not to play in the NCAA Tournament when three of its five Whiz Kids were called to duty in World War II Harry Combes era 1947 1967 Edit Champaign High School basketball coach Harry Combes was hired to succeed Doug Mills as Mills left the position to focus on his duties as the athletic director Through his first five seasons as head coach Combes led the Fighting Illini to three NCAA Final Four appearances in 1949 1951 and 1952 2 During his tenure as coach Combes increased the Fighting Illini s offensive output by changing their style of play Combes implemented Full court press defense causing turnovers at a high rate which translated into Fast 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 the 1957 58 season Mannie Jackson and Govoner 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 from Huff Hall to Assembly Hall in 1963 and during that same season the Illini won a fourth Big Ten Conference championship under Combes However the Illini lost to eventual national champion Loyola Chicago in the Elite Eight of the 1963 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament The following 1964 65 season saw several upset victories over defending national champion UCLA Bruins and national powerhouse Kentucky Wildcats at Memorial Coliseum in Lexington Kentucky 2 Lou Henson era 1975 1996 Edit In 1975 after having taken New Mexico State and future Illinois assistant coach Jimmy Collins to the 1970 Final Four Lou Henson moved to the University of Illinois to replace Gene Bartow after Bartow left Illinois to replace the legendary John 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 to Sports 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 including Eddie Johnson Derek Harper Ken Norman Nick Anderson Kendall Gill Kenny Battle Marcus Liberty Steve Bardo and Kiwane 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 and 1983 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 the Final Four on a last second basket by Michigan s Sean 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 by Dick Vitale during an ESPN broadcast that season The team also gained national prominence for its athletic players such as NCAA slam dunk champions Kenny Battle and Kendall Gill as well as Lowell Hamilton Nick Anderson Marcus Liberty and Stephen 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 and Deon Thomas Thomas was at the center of a report of misconduct by Iowa Hawkeyes men s basketball assistant coach Bruce 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 Lon Kruger era 1996 2000 Edit After longtime coach Lou Henson s departure Illinois hired Lon 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 consecutive Illinois Mr Basketball winners inking Sergio McClain Frank Williams and Brian 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 Bill Self era 2000 2003 Edit Illinois picked Tulsa coach Bill Self from a list of numerous candidates including popular assistant Jimmy Collins to succeed Kruger who moved on to the NBA to coach the Atlanta 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 finalist Arizona 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 included Robert 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 Bruce Weber era 2003 2012 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 from Southern 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 the Missouri 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 the United Center in Chicago 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 as Deron Williams No 3 Utah Jazz and Luther Head No 24 Houston Rockets were taken in the first round of the 2005 NBA draft and James Augustine No 41 Orlando Magic and Dee Brown No 46 Utah Jazz were chosen in the second round of the 2006 NBA draft Meyers Leonard was chosen 11th by the Portland Trail Blazers in the 2012 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 2003 2004 Edit See also 2003 04 Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball team 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 2004 2005 Edit See also 2004 05 Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball team 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 2005 Final 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 and Roger Powell Jr would eventually play in the NBA Williams and Brown both joined the Utah Jazz roster while Luther Head went on to play for the Sacramento 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 2005 2006 Edit See also 2005 06 Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball team 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 4829 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 2006 2012 Edit See also 2006 07 Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball team 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 See also 2007 08 Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball team The 2007 08 season was one of the worst seasons in Illinois history highlighted be 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 See also 2008 09 Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball team 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 See also 2009 10 Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball team 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 See also 2010 11 Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball team 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 to much for the Illini and the season came to an end in the round of 32 See also 2011 12 Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball team 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 Weber was fired by Illinois new AD Mike Thomas after the 2011 12 season John Groce era 2012 2017 Edit See also 2012 13 Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball team Coach Groce John Groce was hired by new athletic director Mike Thomas on March 28 2012 5 In the 2012 13 season the Illini were the 2012 Maui Invitational Tournament champions and later made the 2013 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament losing their second game The Illini lost 63 59 to the 2013 ACC men s basketball tournament champions Miami Hurricanes The Illini spent 8 weeks nationally ranked in the 2012 13 NCAA Division I men s basketball rankings and for two weeks were ranked as high as 10th in the country In 2014 Groce continued Illinois success in the month of 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 The 2015 2016 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 The 2016 2017 basketball season was another disappointing season for the Fighting Illini as they finished the season at 18 14 and 8 10 in 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 the NIT as a 2 seed The team was coached during the NIT by interim coach Jamall Walker making it to the quarterfinals before being eliminated by the University of Central Florida Brad Underwood era 2017 present Edit On March 18 2017 Brad Underwood was hired by athletic director Josh Whitman 7 Underwood previously coached at Stephen F Austin from 2013 to 2016 before spending one year at Oklahoma State In Underwood 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 2018 19 season Edit While the 2018 19 season featured the debut of key pieces including Ayo Dosunmu Giorgi Bezhanishvili Andres Feliz and Alan Griffin the Illini posted one of the worst records in program history at 12 21 7 13 in Big Ten Despite the poor record the Fighting Illini had many memorable moments such as upsetting 9 Michigan State at home and Freshman Giorgi Bezhanishvili scoring 35 points versus Rutgers breaking the Illinois record for most points by a freshman in a game 2019 20 season Edit This season was the freshman year of highly ranked center Kofi Cockburn The Illini started off the season slow in the first game barely beating Nicholls State 78 70 in OT In the Big Ten ACC Challenge Illinois played Miami FL where they lost 81 79 after mounting a huge comeback and a charge being called against Dosunmu on the final play of the game The next game they traveled to Maryland to play against the 3 ranked Terrapins and the Illini led by 14 at half Maryland then outscored Illinois 34 19 in the second half and won the game by an Anthony Cowan free throw The Illini next played the 5th ranked Michigan Wolverines at the State Farm Center and beat them 71 62 to improve to a 7 3 record Over the next 12 games the Illini went 10 2 including an Ayo Dosunmu game winning shot at Michigan to give Illinois a 64 62 lead with 0 5 seconds on the clock The Fighting Illini finished the season 21 10 with a 13 7 conference record and 4th in the Big Ten 2020 21 season Edit This was the 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 The team went on to win the Big Ten tournament title 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 Thomas E Thompson 1910 1912 14 14 10 13Ralph R Jones 1912 1920 85 34 64 31 2Frank J Winters 1920 1922 25 12 14 10J Craig Ruby 1922 1936 148 95 94 74 2Douglas R Mills 1936 1947 151 66 88 47 3 1Harry Combes 1947 1967 316 150 174 104 4 4Harv Schmidt 1967 1974 89 77 43 55Gene Bartow 1974 1975 8 18 4 14Lou Henson 1975 1996 423 224 214 164 1 12Lon Kruger 1996 2000 81 48 38 28 1 3Bill Self 2000 2003 78 24 35 13 2 3Bruce Weber 2003 2012 210 101 89 65 2 6John Groce 2012 2017 95 74 37 53 1Jamall Walker interim 2017 2 1Brad Underwood 2017 93 64 55 43 1 2Totals 1857 1037 978 743 18 32Facilities Edit State Farm Center State Farm Center 1963 present Edit The State Farm Center nee The Assembly Hall opened on March 2 1963 and hosts the home games for the men and women s basketball teams The architect of the Building was Max Abramovitz an alumnus It is internationally known for its unique engineering design The stadium is the third largest dome in the state of Illinois following only the United Center and All State Arena The Illinois High School Association has also taken advantage of its size hosting numerous events including the men and women s state championships along with the wrestling state championships The stadium has also recently been named a landmark and joins Wrigley Field as the only two athletic sites on the list The stadium has been described as one of the toughest places to play because of the student section dubbed the Orange Krush The Orange Krush sits on three sides of the court including around each basket It has become customary for the fans of the stadium to wear orange to the games Ubben Basketball Practice 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 Huff Hall 1925 1963 Edit 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 after George Huff who was the school s athletic director from 1895 to 1935 Huff Hall is home to the University of Illinois Fighting Illini volleyball and wrestling teams Prior to the opening of Assembly Hall in 1963 it was home to the basketball team as well Kenney Gym Kenney Gym 1905 1925 Edit Kenney Gym Annex is a 5 000 seat multi purpose arena which is the practice facility for the Fighting Illini gymnastics team Prior to the opening of Huff 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 Championships EditNational Championships Edit Year Coach Awarding body Record1915 Ralph Jones Helms Athletic Foundation Premo Porretta Power Poll 16 01943 Douglas R Mills Premo Porretta Power Poll 17 1Non NCAA tournament championships 2Big Ten Regular Season Championships Edit Year Coach Overall record Big Ten record1915 Ralph Jones 16 0 12 01917 Ralph Jones 13 3 10 21924 J Craig Ruby 11 6 8 41935 J Craig Ruby 15 5 9 31937 Douglas R Mills 14 4 10 21942 Douglas R Mills 18 5 13 21943 Douglas R Mills 17 1 12 01949 Harry Combes 21 4 10 21951 Harry Combes 22 5 13 11952 Harry Combes 22 4 12 21963 Harry Combes 20 6 11 31984 Lou Henson 26 5 15 31998 Lon Kruger 23 10 13 32001 Bill Self 27 8 13 32002 Bill Self 26 9 11 52004 Bruce Weber 26 7 13 32005 Bruce Weber 37 2 15 12022 Brad Underwood 22 8 15 5Big Ten Regular Season Championships 18 Conference Co champions Big Ten tournament championships Edit Year Coach Opponent Score Site Record2003 Bill Self Ohio State 72 59 Chicago 27 52005 Bruce Weber Wisconsin 54 43 Chicago 37 22021 Brad Underwood Ohio State 91 88 OT Indianapolis 23 6Big Ten tournament championships 3Statistical leaders Edit Former Fighting Illini Demetri McCamey All time leaders Edit Points Deon Thomas 2 129 Assists Bruce Douglas 765 Rebounds James Augustine 1 023 Steals Bruce Douglas 324 Blocks Nnanna Egwu 201 Season leaders Edit Points Donnie Freeman 668 1966 Assists Deron Williams 264 2005 Rebounds Skip Thoren 349 1965 Steals Kenny Battle 89 1989 Blocks Derek Holcomb 86 1979 Game leaders Edit Points Dave Downey 53 1963 Assists Demetri McCamey 16 2010 Tony Wysinger 16 1986 Rebounds Skip Thoren 24 1963 Steals Bruce Douglas 8 1984 Blocks Derek Holcomb 11 1978 Career milestones Edit 1 500 points Years Player Points1991 94 Deon Thomas 2 1291994 97 Kiwane Garris 1 9482014 17 Malcolm Hill 1 8172003 06 Dee Brown 1 8122017 22 Trent Frazier 1 7942000 03 Brian Cook 1 7481999 02 Cory Bradford 1 7352008 11 Demetri McCamey 1 7181978 81 Eddie Johnson 1 6922010 13 Brandon Paul 1 6541978 81 Mark Smith 1 6532019 22 Kofi Cockburn 1 5461989 93 Andy Kaufmann 1 5332018 21 Ayo Dosunmu 1 504200 three point field goals Years Player Three pointers1999 02 Cory Bradford 3272017 22 Trent Frazier 3102003 06 Dee Brown 2992010 13 D J Richardson 2781993 96 Richard Keene 2372008 11 Demetri McCamey 2362004 07 Rich McBride 2162010 13 Brandon Paul 2112002 05 Luther Head 209500 assists Years Player Assists1983 86 Bruce Douglas 7652008 11 Demetri McCamey 7332003 06 Dee Brown 6742003 05 Deron Williams 5941994 97 Kiwane Garris 502750 rebounds Years Player Rebounds2003 06 James Augustine 1 0232008 11 Mike Davis 9092019 22 Kofi Cockburn 8611983 86 Efrem Winters 8531991 94 Deon Thomas 8461978 81 Eddie Johnson 8311963 65 Skip Thoren 8302000 03 Brian Cook 8151971 73 Nick Weatherspoon 8031961 63 Dave Downey 790150 blocks Years Player Blocks2012 15 Nnanna Egwu 2011991 94 Deon Thomas 1772008 11 Mike Tisdale 1761979 81 Derek Holcomb 1741979 82 James Griffin 156 Source for all statistical leaders 9 Individual honors EditNaismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Edit The following 6 Fighting Illini have been inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame Year Player Inducted as a1960 Henry Porter Contributor1961 Andy Phillip Player1971 Abe Saperstein Contributor2004 Jerry Colangelo Contributor2017 Mannie Jackson Contributor2017 Bill Self CoachSource 10 National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame Edit The following 4 Fighting Illini have been inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame Year Player Inducted as a2006 Andy Phillip Player2007 Vic Bubas Contributor2009 Gene Bartow Coach2015 Lou Henson Coach Olympians Edit Year Player Event Country Medal1948 London Dwight Eddleman High Jump United States 4th1992 Barcelona Jens Kujawa Basketball Germany 7th2008 Beijing Deron Williams Basketball United States 2012 London Robert Archibald Basketball Great Britain 9th2012 London Deron Williams Basketball United States International championships Edit Year Player Event Country Medal Ref1959 Chicago George Bon Salle Pan American Games United States 11 1970 Yugoslavia Tal Brody FIBA World Championship United States 5th 12 1974 Iran Tal Brody Basketball at the 1974 Asian Games Israel 1974 Puerto Rico Rick Schmidt FIBA World Championship United States 13 1979 Mexico Craig Tucker Universiade United States 14 1984 Sweden Jens Kujawa FIBA Europe Under 18 Championship West Germany 5th 15 1987 Greece Jens Kujawa FIBA EuroBasket West Germany 4th 16 1993 Germany Jens Kujawa FIBA EuroBasket Germany 17 1997 Sicily Jerry Hester Universiade United States 18 1998 Greece Kiwane Garris FIBA World Championship United States 19 1999 Spain Cory Bradford Universiade United States 20 2000 Brazil Brian Cook FIBA Americas Under 20 Championship United States 21 2001 Japan Brian Cook FIBA Under 21 World Championship United States 22 2002 Venezuela Dee Brown FIBA Americas U18 Championship United States 23 2002 Venezuela Deron Williams FIBA Americas U18 Championship United States 23 2003 Greece Dee Brown FIBA Under 19 Basketball World Cup United States 5th 24 2003 Greece Deron Williams FIBA Under 19 Basketball World Cup United States 5th 25 2007 Las Vegas Deron Williams FIBA AmeriCup United States 26 2009 Poland Robert Archibald FIBA EuroBasket Great Britain 14th 27 2010 San Antonio Jereme Richmond FIBA Americas U18 Championship United States 28 2011 Lithuania Robert Archibald FIBA EuroBasket Great Britain 13th 27 2011 Latvia Meyers Leonard FIBA Under 19 Basketball World Cup United States 5th 29 2011 Mexico Kendrick Nunn FIBA Americas Under 16 Championship United States 30 2012 Lithuania Kendrick Nunn FIBA Under 17 Basketball World Cup United States 31 2013 Puerto Rico Andres Feliz Centrobasket U17 Championship Dominican Republic 32 2014 Colorado Springs Andres Feliz FIBA Americas Under 18 Championship Dominican Republic 33 2015 Greece Andres Feliz FIBA Under 19 Basketball World Cup Dominican Republic 13th 33 2015 Toronto Andres Feliz Pan American Games Dominican Republic 4th 33 2016 China Myke Henry FIBA 3x3 World Cup United States 34 2018 Canada Ayo Dosunmu FIBA Americas Under 18 Championship United States 35 Consensus All American Edit 8 Illini were recognized as consensus first team All Americans 36 Player Year s Bill Hapac 1940Andy Phillip 1942 amp 1943Walt Kirk 1945Rod Fletcher 1952Dee Brown 2005Ayo Dosunmu 2021Kofi Cockburn 2022NCAA Men s Basketball All American Edit Key to abbreviations AP Associated Press Arg Argosy Ath Athletic Publications BN Basketball News BT Basketball Times BKW Basketball Weekly BW Basketball Writers of America Col Colliers Con Converse CSAF Citizens Savings Athletic Foundation Helms Helms Foundation INS International News Service K Kodak Look Look magazine MSG Madison Square Garden NABC National Association of Basketball Coaches NEA Newspaper Enterprise Association Omaha Omaha World Newspaper PM Pic Magazine SN Sporting News True True Magazine UP United Press W Wooden 1st First Team 2nd Second Team 3rd Third Team HM Honorable Mention Tal Brody Brian Cook Dee Brown 1915 Ray Woods 1st Helms 1916 Ray Woods 1st Helms 1917 Ray Woods 1st Helms Clyde Alwood 1st Helms 1918 Earl Anderson 1st Helms 1920 Chuck Carney 1st Helms 1922 Chuck Carney 1st Helms 1937 Harry Combes 2nd Omaha 1938 Lou Boudreau 1st MSG Louis Dehner 3rd Con 1939 Louis Dehner 1st MSG 3rd Con 1940 Bill Hapac 1st Helms Con 1942 Andy Phillip 1st Helms 2nd PM 3rd Con Jack Smiley HM SN Art Mathisen HM SN Ken Menke HM SN Con Gene Vance HM SN 1943 Andy Phillip 1st Con PM Helms SN AP UP NEA Look Jack Smiley 3rd Con Art Mathisen HM Con Gene Vance HM Con 1944 Walt Kirk HM Con 1945 Walt Kirk 1st Helms Con 2nd AM HM Con 1946 Jack Burmaster HM SN Bob Doster HM SN 1947 Andy Phillip 1st True NABC HM Con Jack Smiley 3rd Helms HM Con Gene Vance HM Con 1948 Dwight Eddleman 2nd AP 3rd Con True Jack Burmaster HM Con 1949 Bill Erickson 1st Helms Col NABC 3rd SN UP 4th Con Dwight Eddleman 1st Con 2nd AP UP 1950 Bill Erickson HM Con 1951 Don Sunderlage 2nd Helms SN 3rd UP Con HM AP Ted Beach HM Con Rod Fletcher HM Con 1952 Rod Fletcher 1st Look Con Helms 2nd AP UP INS NABC Col Ath John Kerr HM AP UP Con Irv Bemoras HM UP Con Jim Bredar HM UP Con Bob Peterson HM UP 1953 Irv Bemoras 2nd Con Helms Look HM AP Jim Bredar 2nd Con Helms Look INS 3rd AP John Kerr HM AP INS Con 1954 John Kerr 2nd Helms 3rd Look AP UP 4th Con 1955 Bill Ridley HM AP Con Paul Judson HM INS Con George Bon Salle HM Con 1956 Paul Judson 2nd Con 3rd NABC UP NEA HM INS Bill Ridley 2nd Con 3rd NABC UP AP Bruce Brothers HM Con Harv Schmidt HM Con 1957 Harv Schmidt 2nd Con George Bon Salle 2nd NABC HM Con Don Ohl HM AP Con 1958 Don Ohl 2nd Con 3rd Helms Govoner Vaughn HM Con 1959 Roger Taylor HM Con 1960 Mannie Jackson HM Con Govoner Vaughn HM Con 1961 Dave Downey HM Con John Wessels HM Con 1962 Dave Downey HM Con Bill Burwell HM Con 1963 Dave Downey 1st Helms 2nd Con HM AP Bill Small HM Con 1964 Tal Brody HM SN Con Duane Thoren HM Con 1965 Duane Thoren 1st Helms 2nd AP Con 3rd UPI BN NABC Bogie Redmon HM Con Tal Brody 1st Helms 2nd SN Con 1966 Donnie Freeman 1st Helms 2nd Con BN HM UPI Rich Jones HM Con 1967 Jim Dawson HM Con Dave Scholz HM Con 1968 Dave Scholz 1st Helms HM Con 1969 Dave Scholz 1st Helms 3rd AP HM Con 1970 Mike Price HM Con 1972 Nick Weatherspoon HM Con 1973 Nick Weatherspoon 1st CASF Helms HM Con 1974 Jeff Dawson HM Con 1975 Rick Schmidt HM Con 1977 Audie Matthews HM Con Levi Cobb HM Con 1983 Derek Harper 2nd AP Con 3rd BN 1984 Bruce Douglas 3rd UPI 1987 Ken Norman 2nd AP BW SN K 3rd BT NABC HM UPI 1988 Nick Anderson HM SN Kenny Battle HM SN 1989 Nick Anderson HM AP UPI SN Kenny Battle HM AP UPI SN Kendall Gill HM SN 1990 Kendall Gill 1st UPI 2nd BKW 3rd AP SN NABC 1994 Deon Thomas HM AP 2001 Frank Williams 1st W 3rd AP NABC Cory Bradford HM AP 2002 Frank Williams 2nd NABC HM AP 2003 Brian Cook 2nd SN 3rd AP NABC BT 2004 Dee Brown HM AP 2005 Dee Brown 1st W BW SN 2nd AP NABC BT Luther Head 2nd AP NABC BW Deron Williams 1st W 2nd NABC SN 3rd AP 2006 Dee Brown 2nd AP BW NABC 2021 Ayo Dosunmu 1st 2021 Kofi Cockburn 2nd National Player of the YearRay Woods 1917 Chuck Carney 1922 Andy Phillip 1943 Dee Brown 2005 Ayo Dosunmu 2021National Coach of the YearBruce Weber 2005National Freshman of the YearKofi Cockburn 2020 Bob Cousy AwardDee Brown 2006 Ayo Dosunmu 2021Frances Pomeroy Naismith AwardDee Brown 2006 NCAA All Decade TeamDwight Dike Eddleman 1940sNCAA Final Four All Tournament TeamJim Bredar 1952 Johnny Red Kerr 1952 Luther Head amp Deron Williams 2005NCAA Tournament Regional Most Outstanding PlayerNick Anderson 1989 Deron Williams 2005Big Ten Player of the YearAndy Phillip 1943 Dwight Dike Eddleman 1949 Don Sunderlage 1951 Johnny Red Kerr 1954 Jim Dawson 1967 Bruce Douglas 1984 Frank Williams 2001 Brian Cook 2003 Dee Brown 2005Big Ten Defensive Player of the YearBruce Douglas 1985 amp 1986 Stephen Bardo 1989 Dee Brown 2005Big Ten Freshman of the YearCory Bradford 1999 Brian Cook 2000 D J Richardson 2010 Kofi Cockburn 2020Big Ten Sixth Man of the YearAndre Curbelo 2021Big Ten tournament Most Outstanding PlayerBrian Cook 2003 James Augustine 2005 Ayo Dosunmu 2021Big Ten Coach of the YearLou Henson 1993 Bruce Weber 2005 Jordan Brand Classic Edit Why is a player having played in a HS tournament relevant This article is excessively long Remove this section Comment made March 26 22 The following 4 Jordan Brand Classic participants have played for Illinois 37 Year Player High School Hometown2002 Dee Brown Proviso East Maywood Illinois2015 Jalen Coleman Lands La Lumiere School Indianapolis Indiana2018 Ayo Dosunmu Morgan Park High School Chicago Illinois2020 Adam Miller Morgan Park High School Peoria IllinoisNike Hoop Summit Edit Why is a player having played in a HS tournament relevant This article is excessively long Remove this section Comment made March 26 22 The following 4 Fighting Illini have played in the Nike Hoop Summit Year Player High School Hometown2010 Meyers Leonard Robinson High School Robinson Illinois2016 Andres Feliz West Oaks Academy Santo Domingo Dominican Republic2018 Kofi Cockburn Christ the King Regional High School Kingston Jamaica2019 Kofi Cockburn Oak Hill Academy Kingston Jamaica2019 Andre Curbelo Long Island Lutheran Vega Baja Puerto RicoMcDonald s All Americans Edit Why is a player having played in a HS tournament relevant This article is excessively long Remove this section Comment made March 26 22 The following 13 McDonald s All Americans have played for Illinois 38 Year Player High School Hometown1980 Derek Harper North Shore FL Royston Georgia1982 Bruce Douglas Quincy Senior High School Quincy Illinois1982 Efrem Winters King College Prep Chicago1985 Lowell Hamilton Providence St Mel School Chicago1986 Nick Anderson Simeon Career Academy Chicago1987 Marcus Liberty King College Prep Chicago1989 Deon Thomas Simeon Career Academy Chicago1992 Richard Keene Collinsville High School Collinsville Illinois1997 Marcus Griffin Manual High School Peoria Illinois1998 Frank Williams Manual High School Peoria Illinois1999 Brian Cook Lincoln Community High School Lincoln Illinois2002 Dee Brown Proviso East Maywood Illinois2010 Jereme Richmond Waukegan High School Waukegan IllinoisMr Basketball Edit Why is a player having played in a HS tournament relevant This article is excessively long Remove this section Comment made March 26 22 The following 15 Mr Basketball award winners have played for Illinois Year Player High school Hometown1982 Bruce Douglas Quincy Senior High School Quincy Illinois1986 Nick Anderson Simeon Career Academy Chicago1987 Marcus Liberty King College Prep Chicago1989 Deon Thomas Simeon Career Academy Chicago1994 Jarrod Gee St Martin de Porres Chicago1997 Sergio McClain Manual High School Peoria Illinois1998 Frank Williams Manual High School Peoria Illinois1999 Brian Cook Lincoln Community High School Lincoln Illinois2002 Dee Brown Proviso East Maywood Illinois2009 Brandon Paul Warren Township High School Gurnee Illinois2010 Jereme Richmond Waukegan High School Waukegan Illinois2014 Leron Black White Station High School Memphis Tennessee2017 Mark Smith Edwardsville High School Edwardsville Illinois2020 Adam Miller Morgan Park High School Chicago2021 Brandin Podziemski St John s Northwestern Military Academy Muskego WisconsinFighting Illini of note EditSee also List of Illinois Fighting Illini in the NBA draft and Category Illinois Fighting Illini men s basketball players Fighting Illini in the NBA 39 NBA Draft SelectionsTotal selected 731st round 15Lottery Picks in Draft 3Notable achievementsOlympic Gold Medal Winners 1 player twiceNBA Champions 4Naismith Basketball Hall of Famers 5First round NBA draft picks Edit Draft Year Pick Player Selected by Professional career1951 9 Don Sunderlage Philadelphia Warriors 1953 19551954 9 Johnny Kerr Syracuse Nationals 1954 19661957 7 George Bon Salle Syracuse Nationals 1957 19621970 17 Mike Price New York Knicks 1970 19731973 13 Nick Weatherspoon Capital Bullets 1973 19801983 11 Derek Harper Dallas Mavericks 1983 19991987 19 Ken Norman Los Angeles Clippers 1987 19971989 11 Nick Anderson Orlando Magic 1989 20021989 27 Kenny Battle Detroit Pistons 1989 20001990 5 Kendall Gill Charlotte Hornets 1990 20052002 25 Frank Williams Denver Nuggets 2002 20102002 24 Brian Cook Los Angeles Lakers 2003 20152005 3 Deron Williams Utah Jazz 2005 20172005 24 Luther Head Houston Rockets 2005 20182012 11 Meyers Leonard Portland Trail Blazers 2012 presentFighting Illini in the NBA Edit Position Name Height Weight lbs Hometown Draft year Pick Current NBA teamSG SF Malcolm Hill 6 6 220 Belleville Illinois 2017 Undrafted Chicago BullsSG Kendrick Nunn 6 2 190 Chicago Illinois 2018 Undrafted Los Angeles LakersPG Ayo Dosunmu 6 5 200 Chicago Illinois 2021 38th Chicago BullsFighting Illini in the NBA G League Edit Position Name Height Weight lbs Hometown Draft Year Pick Current G League TeamPF Giorgi Bezhanishvili 6 9 245 Rustavi Georgia 2021 Undrafted Grand Rapids GoldSG Alan Griffin 6 5 190 Waltham Massachusetts 2021 Undrafted Rio Grande Valley VipersPG Jaylon Tate 6 3 180 Chicago Illinois 2017 Undrafted Santa Cruz WarriorsFighting Illini playing internationally Edit Position Name Height Weight lbs Hometown Years withIllinois Professional Team CountryPF Leron Black 6 7 220 Memphis Tennessee 2014 2018 Abejas de Leon Mexico 40 C Brian Carlwell 6 11 265 Maywood Illinois 2006 2008 Mandurah Magic Australia 41 PF C Nnanna Egwu 6 11 250 Chicago Illinois 2011 2015 Earth Friends Tokyo Z Japan 42 G F Myke Henry 6 6 230 Chicago Illinois 2011 2013 Pallacanestro Trieste Italy 43 G Rayvonte Rice 6 5 234 Champaign Illinois 2013 2015 Soles de Mexicali Mexico 44 SG Jamar Smith 6 3 185 Peoria Illinois 2006 2007 BC UNICS Russia 45 SF Matic Vessel 6 9 215 Ljubljana Slovenia 2018 KK Skofja Loka Slovenia 46 Fighting Illini currently coaching Edit Name Years withIllinois Current Team Position LeagueDee Brown 2002 2006 Roosevelt Head Coach CCAC NAIA Chester Frazier 2005 2009 Illinois Assistant Coach Big Ten ConferenceJerrance Howard 2000 2004 Kansas Assistant Coach Big 12 ConferenceRoger Powell 2001 2005 Gonzaga Assistant Coach West Coast ConferenceBrian Randle 2003 2008 Phoenix Suns Assistant Coach NBAFighting Illini basketball media members Edit Name Years withIllinois Media Outlet Role Current TeamNick Anderson 1987 1989 Fox Sports Florida Commentator Orlando MagicStephen Bardo 1986 1990 Big Ten Network College Basketball Analyst Big Ten ConferenceKendall Gill 1986 1990 NBC Sports Chicago Commentator Chicago BullsDerek Harper 1980 1983 Fox Sports Southwest Color Commentator Dallas MavericksEddie Johnson 1977 1981 Fox Sports Arizona Play by play Commentator Phoenix SunsDeon Thomas 1991 1994 Fighting Illini Sports Network Color Commentator Fighting Illini Men s basketballIllinois honored players EditAll 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 47 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 of State Farm Center A total of 34 men s players have their jersey honored To have his jersey honored a player must have met one of the following criteria National Player of the Year Enshrined in the National Basketball Hall of Fame Member of an American Olympic team Big Ten Player of the Year First or second team Consensus All America Illinois All Century Team Member Individual whose pioneering efforts made a significant impact on Illinois and international basketballNo Player Pos Career National POY National HOF US Olympian Big Ten POY Consensus All American Illinois All Century Basketball Pioneer1 Ray Woods G 1915 17 Y Y 2 Chuck Carney F 1920 22 Y Y 19 Bill Hapac F 1938 40 Y 47 Andy Phillip F 1942 43 1947 Y Y Y Y 25 Gene Vance G 1942 43 1947 Y 14 Walt Kirk G 1942 43 1947 Y 40 Dwight Dike Eddleman F 1947 49 Y Y Y 33 Bill Erickson G 1947 50 Y 11 Don Sunderlage G 1949 51 Y 37 Rod Fletcher G 1950 52 Y 22 Johnny Red Kerr C 1952 54 Y Y 35 Govoner Vaughn F 1958 60 Y30 Mannie Jackson G 1958 60 Y Y23 Jerry Colangelo G 1960 62 Y 40 Dave Downey F 1961 63 Y 35 Duane Skip Thoren C 1963 65 Y 12 Tal Brody G 1963 65 Y15 Donnie Freeman F 1963 66 Y 24 Jim Dawson G 1965 67 Y 12 Nick Weatherspoon F 1971 73 Y 33 Eddie Johnson F 1978 81 Y 12 Derek Harper G 1981 83 Y 25 Bruce Douglas G 1983 86 Y 33 Ken Norman F 1985 87 Y Y 33 Kenny Battle F 1988 89 Y 25 Nick Anderson F 1988 89 Y 13 Kendall Gill G 1987 90 Y Y 25 Deon Thomas F C 1991 94 Y 20 Frank Williams G 2000 02 Y Y 34 Brian Cook F 2000 03 Y Y 4 Luther Head G 2002 05 Y 5 Deron Williams G 2003 05 Y Y 11 Dee Brown G 2003 06 Y Y Y 11 Ayo Dosunmu G 2019 21 Y 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 Olympian Dwight 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 48 The following list includes Illini basketball players who earned the award Player Years played Year awardedBill Hapac 1937 1940 1940John Drish 1937 1941 1941Andy Phillip 1942 43 1947 1942 1943Walton Kirk 1943 1947 1945Dike Eddleman 1945 1949 1948 1949Don Sunderlage 1948 1951 1951Clive Follmer 1950 1953 1953Paul Judson 1953 1956 1955Doug Mills 1959 1962 1962Jim Dawson 1963 1967 1967Dave Scholz 1966 1969 1968 1969Mike Price 1967 1970 1970Kendall Gill 1986 1990 1990Deron Williams 2002 2005 2005Big Ten Medal of Honor Edit Since 1915 the Big Ten Medal of Honor has been awarded annually at each conference school to a male and female senior student athlete who demonstrates proficiency in scholarship and athletics The award has become the top annual award the University of Illinois Division of Intercollegiate Athletics bestows 49 The following list includes Illini basketball players who earned the award 50 Player Years played Year awardedEdward A Williford 1913 1915 1915Clyde Alwood 1914 1917 1917John B Felmley 1915 1920 1920Otto Vogel 1920 1922 1923Walter Roettger 1921 1925 1924John Mauer 1922 1926 1926Harry Combes 1935 1937 1937William Hocking 1939 1942 1942Donald Delaney 1943 1945 1942Dike Eddleman 1945 1949 1949Clive Follmer 1950 1953 1953Dave Downey 1960 1963 1963Bogie Redmon 1962 1965 1965Jack Ingram 2003 2005 2005Dee Brown 2003 2006 2006Warren Carter 2003 2007 2007Trent Meacham 2005 2009 2009Brandon Paul 2009 2013 2013Postseason EditNCAA Tournament seeding history Edit The NCAA began seeding the tournament with the 1979 edition Years 1979 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 2 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00Seeds 4 7 2 3 4 3 3 1 5 6 8 11 6 5 4Coach Henson KrugerYears 2001 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 17 18 19 20 21 22Seeds 1 4 4 5 1 4 12 5 9 7 x 1 4Coach Self Weber Groce UnderwoodNCAA tournament results Edit The Fighting Illini have appeared in the NCAA tournament 31 times Their combined record is 41 32 Year Seed Round Opponent Results1942 Elite EightRegional 3rd Place Game KentuckyPenn State L 44 46L 34 411949 Elite EightFinal FourNational 3rd Place Game YaleKentuckyOregon State W 71 67L 47 76W 57 531951 Sweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational 3rd Place Game ColumbiaNC StateKentuckyOklahoma A amp M W 79 71W 84 70L 74 76W 61 461952 Sweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational 3rd Place Game DaytonDuquesneSt John sSanta Clara W 80 61W 74 68L 59 61W 67 641963 Sweet SixteenElite Eight Bowling GreenLoyola Chicago W 70 67L 64 791981 4 Second RoundSweet Sixteen 5 Wyoming 8 Kansas State W 67 65L 52 571983 7 First Round 10 Utah L 49 521984 2 Second RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight 7 Villanova 3 Maryland 1 Kentucky W 64 56W 72 70L 51 541985 3 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 14 Northeastern 6 Georgia 2 Georgia Tech W 76 57W 74 58L 53 611986 4 First RoundSecond Round 13 Fairfield 5 Alabama W 75 51L 56 581987 3 First Round 14 Austin Peay L 67 681988 3 First RoundSecond Round 14 UTSA 6 Villanova W 81 72L 63 661989 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal Four 16 McNeese State 9 Ball State 4 Louisville 2 Syracuse 3 Michigan W 77 71W 72 60W 83 69W 89 86L 81 831990 5 First Round 12 Dayton L 86 881993 6 First RoundSecond Round 11 Long Beach State 3 Vanderbilt W 75 72L 68 851994 8 First Round 9 Georgetown L 77 841995 11 First Round 6 Tulsa L 62 681997 6 First RoundSecond Round 11 USC 14 Chattanooga W 90 77L 63 751998 5 First RoundSecond Round 12 South Alabama 4 Maryland W 64 51L 61 672000 4 First RoundSecond Round 13 Penn 5 Florida W 68 58L 76 932001 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight 16 Northwestern State 9 Charlotte 4 Kansas 2 Arizona W 96 54W 79 61W 80 64L 81 872002 4 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 13 San Diego State 12 Creighton 1 Kansas W 93 64W 72 60L 69 732003 4 First RoundSecond Round 13 WKU 5 Notre Dame W 65 60L 60 682004 5 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 12 Murray State 4 Cincinnati 1 Duke W 72 53W 92 68L 62 722005 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational Championship 16 Fairleigh Dickinson 9 Nevada 12 Milwaukee 3 Arizona 4 Louisville 1 North Carolina W 67 55W 71 59W 77 63W 90 89 OTW 72 57L 70 752006 4 First RoundSecond Round 13 Air Force 5 Washington W 78 69L 64 672007 12 First Round 5 Virginia Tech L 52 542009 5 First Round 12 WKU L 72 762011 9 Second RoundThird Round 8 UNLV 1 Kansas W 73 62L 59 732013 7 Second RoundThird Round 10 Colorado 2 Miami FL W 57 49L 59 632021 1 First RoundSecond Round 16 Drexel 8 Loyola Chicago W 78 49 L 58 712022 4 First RoundSecond Round 13 Chattanooga 5 Houston W 54 53 L 53 68 NIT results Edit The Fighting Illini have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament NIT seven times Their combined record is 10 7 Year Round Opponent Result1980 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinals3rd Place Game Loyola ChicagoIllinois StateMurray StateMinnesotaUNLV W 105 87W 75 65W 65 63L 63 65W 84 741982 First RoundSecond Round LIU BrooklynDayton W 126 78L 58 611996 First Round Alabama L 69 722010 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinals Stony BrookKent StateDayton W 76 66W 75 58L 71 772014 First RoundSecond Round Boston UniversityClemson W 66 62L 49 502015 First Round Alabama L 58 792017 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinals ValparaisoBoise StateUCF W 82 57W 71 56L 58 68Head to head Big Ten records EditTeam Total meetings Wins Losses Pct Home record Road record Neutral recordIndiana 183 90 93 492 54 34 30 57 6 2Iowa 165 89 76 539 64 17 23 56 2 3Maryland 19 7 11 333 2 4 1 6 4 2Michigan 175 90 85 514 57 28 31 52 2 5Michigan State 123 60 63 488 39 21 20 39 1 3Minnesota 195 127 68 651 74 19 47 48 6 1Nebraska 27 19 8 704 14 2 5 5 0 1Northwestern 182 140 42 769 71 14 64 28 5 0Ohio State 187 108 80 574 62 27 43 49 3 3Penn State 49 30 19 612 14 8 13 10 3 1Purdue 193 90 103 466 59 37 29 63 2 3Rutgers 14 10 4 714 6 0 3 3 2 0Wisconsin 202 113 89 559 69 28 41 58 3 3Men s basketball records at Kenney Gym and Huff Hall Edit Season Wins Losses Win pct Total attendance Season Wins Losses Win pct Total attendance1905 06 6 0 1 000 N R 1925 26 6 3 0 667 N R1906 07 0 4 0 000 N R 1926 27 8 3 0 727 61 5901907 08 3 2 0 600 N R 1927 28 3 5 0 375 48 2021908 09 5 1 0 833 N R 1928 29 8 3 0 727 30 139 1909 10 3 2 0 600 N R 1929 30 5 4 0 556 49 418 1910 11 3 2 0 600 N R 1930 31 7 3 0 700 52 4401911 12 4 3 0 571 N R 1931 32 8 2 0 800 57 0001912 13 6 2 0 750 N R 1932 33 8 3 0 727 34 500 1913 14 5 2 0 714 N R 1933 34 9 1 0 900 55 5001914 15 9 0 1 000 N R 1934 35 8 2 0 800 62 0001915 16 6 1 0 857 16 644 1935 36 7 3 0 700 78 0281916 17 9 1 0 900 6 417 1936 37 7 2 0 778 63 2381917 18 7 1 0 875 5 066 1937 38 7 2 0 778 63 6001918 19 3 5 0 375 10 739 1938 39 9 1 0 900 57 9331919 20 6 1 0 857 24 250 1939 40 10 1 0 909 55 5131920 21 6 4 0 600 34 875 1940 41 8 2 0 800 52 7511921 22 10 2 0 833 40 112 1941 42 12 1 0 923 65 3571922 23 6 3 0 667 8 424 1942 43 10 0 1 000 62 6481923 24 8 3 0 727 41 848 1943 44 6 4 0 600 29 8121924 25 9 0 1 000 36 222 1944 45 7 3 0 700 44 951Kenney Gym Totals 94 39 707 224 597 1945 46 11 2 0 846 66 553Kenney Gym Facts 1946 47 10 1 0 909 77 808 Fighting Illini played 20 years in Kenney Gym 1947 48 11 1 0 917 78 388Attendance averaged 2 739 fans per game 1948 49 14 0 1 000 49 036 Single game attendance record January 24 1925 vs Iowa 4 725 1949 50 11 2 0 846 83 736Hosted 3 Big Ten Champions 1915 1917 1924 1950 51 12 1 0 923 75 116Hosted 1 National Champion 1915 1951 52 12 0 1 000 57 788 Produced 6 All Americans 1952 53 12 1 0 923 79 957 Developed 2 National Players of the Year 1953 54 10 3 0 769 77 3781954 55 9 2 0 818 64 721Huff Hall Facts 1955 56 12 0 1 000 63 912Fighting Illini played 38 years in Huff Hall 1956 57 9 2 0 818 68 448Attendance averaged 7 025 fans per game 1957 58 10 3 0 769 76 032Single game attendance record February 22 1937 vs Wisconsin 9 000 1958 59 9 3 0 750 68 292Hosted 8 Big Ten Champions 1935 1937 1942 1943 1949 1951 1952 1963 1959 60 10 2 0 833 74 719Hosted 1 National Champion 1943 amp 3 Final Four teams 1949 1951 1952 1960 61 7 3 0 700 60 457Produced 33 All Americans 1961 62 8 4 0 667 75 376Developed 1 National Player of the Year 1962 63 9 0 1 000 61 025Combined Totals 433 116 789 2 507 959 Huff Hall Totals 339 77 815 2 283 362 Notes Denotes incomplete or partial records Played 9 games at Huff Hall but played final 2 games at Assembly Hall N R denotes no records 51 See also EditNCAA Men s Division I Final Four appearances by coaches ACC Big Ten ChallengeReferences Edit University of Illinois Urbana Champaign Visual Identity Color Retrieved November 13 2022 a b c Tate Loren January 22 2012 Harry Combes knew about offense News Gazette Retrieved December 18 2014 Three Illini Basketball Legends Join Honored Jerseys University of Illinois Alumni Association Retrieved December 18 2014 If not Illinois then who Illinois Fighting Illini Sports Men s Basketball News IlliniHQ com illinihq com Archived from the original on July 13 2011 FIGHTINGILLINI COM John Groce Bio Archived from the original on June 25 2013 Retrieved August 9 2013 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 Retrieved November 29 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Illinois snags OSU s Underwood as new coach March 18 2017 Ubben Basketball Complex University of Illinois Athletics Retrieved March 2 2022 Illini Basketball History PDF Archived from the original PDF on December 22 2014 Retrieved January 15 2015 Illini Basketball Honors and Tradition PDF Retrieved December 27 2018 Archived copy Archived from the original on July 29 2014 Retrieved June 17 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Usab Sixth World Championship 1970 Archived from the original on October 11 2014 Retrieved June 17 2018 2011 12 Fighting Illini Men s Basketball Record Book Archived copy Archived from the original on July 29 2014 Retrieved June 17 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Jens Kujawa European Championship for Men 1993 FIBA Europe Jens Kujawa European Championship for Men 1993 FIBA Europe Jens Kujawa European Championship for Men 1993 FIBA Europe Archived copy Archived from the original on January 30 2017 Retrieved June 17 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link 2011 12 Fighting Illini Men s Basketball Record Book USA Basketball TWENTIETH WORLD UNIVERSITY GAMES 1999 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved June 17 2018 2011 12 Fighting Illini Men s Basketball Record Book 2011 12 Fighting Illini Men s Basketball Record Book a b FOURTH JUNIOR WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP QUALIFYING TOURNAMENT 2002 www usab com Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Seventh Fiba Men s Junior World Championship 2003 Seventh Fiba Men s Junior World Championship 2003 2017 18 ILL Record Book 6 Tradition PDF a b Robert Archibald Player Profile Toronto Raptors NBA Stats NCAA Stats International Stats Events Stats Game Logs Bests Awards RealGM SEVENTH FIBA AMERICAS U18 CHAMPIONSHIP FOR MEN 2010 www usab com Archived from the original on April 6 2015 Tenth Fiba Men s U19 World Championship 2011 Second Fiba Americas U16 Championship for Men 2011 SECOND 2012 FIBA U17 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP FOR MEN 2012 www usab com Archived from the original on September 7 2015 https archive fiba com pages eng fa event p cid sid 9648 2017 Centrobasket U17 Championship for Men index html bare URL a b c TUPPER Feliz would be a good Illini fit THIRD FIBA 3x3 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP FOR MEN 2016 www usab com Archived from the original on November 7 2017 USA Men s U18 Team Brings Home Gold Downs Canada 113 74 Illinois basketball Media guide Summer 2018 2018 19 ILLINI MBB Record Book PDF ILLINI MBB Media Guide 148 All Time JBC Alumni Jordan Brand 2018 Retrieved June 4 2018 Boy s Alumni PDF McDonald s December 1 2013 Archived from the original PDF on May 7 2013 Retrieved January 9 2015 Archived copy Archived from the original on April 22 2010 Retrieved May 3 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Leron Black Player Profile EuroLeague Basketball Retrieved December 27 2018 Brian Carlwell Player Profile LatinBasket Retrieved July 21 2016 Nnanna Egwu Player Profile EuroBasket Retrieved December 27 2018 Myke Henry Player Profile EuroBasket Retrieved December 27 2018 Rayvonte Rice Player Profile EuroBasket Retrieved December 27 2018 Jamar Smith Player Profile EuroBasket Retrieved November 12 2018 Matic Vessel Player Profile EuroBasket Retrieved December 27 2018 University of Illinois Unveils Basketball All Century Team FIGHTINGILLINI COM THE OFFICIAL HOME OF UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS ATHLETICS Archived from the original on June 9 2011 Retrieved January 2 2011 Dike Eddleman AOTY Award Big Ten Medal of Honor Award BigTen org Men s basketball all time records Archived February 10 2015 at the Wayback MachineExternal links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Illinois Fighting Illini men 27s basketball amp oldid 1135800342, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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