Illini emphatically demonstrate who and where they are against Badgers

· Yahoo Sports

CHICAGO – On a macro level, tournament basketball is a prize fight. Each game is called a round. And each contest leaves one team standing while the other goes home empty-handed.

Few fights are draws. It’s a binary conclusion. It’s the beauty of the art and science of sport.

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When Illinois plays Wisconsin, the fights tend to be streetfight brawls that devolve into muck and end with two bruised parties. 

Greg Gard’s systemic, methodical discipline and Brad Underwood’s schematic freneticism and virtuoso offense combine to create an annual slugfest. Illinois can’t always out-talent Wisconsin despite its frequent skill edge. 

Illinois wins more games by knockout. They use their versatile weaponry to put teams on their heels, and eventually on their backs. Wisconsin wins more games by TKO. They hit enough shots against an opposing onslaught to weaken them. And when the opportunity arises, they strike with critical efficiency.

Throughout the 2025-26 campaign, Illinois has struggled against guard penetration. Despite the defensive prowess of senior Kylan Boswell, the Illini have been susceptible to guards who can get to the basket and create shots for themselves and others.

“They’re gonna take 52 or 53% of their shots from three. We lost because we gave them twos.” 

-Brad Underwood before Friday’s game against Wisconsin

In Champaign, Nick Boyd and Illini legacy John Blackwell knifed through the Illini defense with relative ease on the way to a stunning comeback victory. The two combined for 49 points in a 92-90 Badger overtime roadkill at State Farm.

At the time, the loss was an unacceptable throat punch. The Illini were up by 12 with nine minutes remaining in regulation. Wisconsin forced overtime and eventually prevailed.

That the game even went to overtime was an abomination. 

Friday presented an opportunity for the Illini to exorcise that demon. The Wisconsin debacle is a significant blight on an otherwise impeccable regular season.

(UCLA and Michigan State losses notwithstanding)

Which Illinois showed up?

An inauspicious start found the Illini early on. Nick Boyd opened the game looking like the lovechild of March Kemba Walker, Steph Curry, and Dillon Brooks. He jaw jacked with Kylan Boswell, rallied the Badger faithful with ostentatious swag, and made shots.

Meanwhile, Boswell sat with two fouls in the first minute.

(Apparently, Boyd got the memo about being a prizefighter.)

While that seemed like a death knell for an Illini squad in need of his leadership and toughness, it may have been the best thing that happened to Illinois all game. That second foul was the impetus for Andrej Stojakovic to enter the game for the first time. And the former McDonald’s All-American looked like every bit of the seven-figure star he was brought to Champaign to be.

He keyed a 23-3 run that brought the Illini ahead by 15. Illinois slowed Boyd’s pace and kept Wisconsin’s second-chance opportunities to a minimum.

Brad Underwood lauded his team’s defensive effort in an in-game hit with Andy Katz. The loss in Champaign had an impact. The Illini responded quickly to Wisconsin’s hot start.

A 12-0 Wisconsin run muted the instant optimism. In a make-and-miss economy, Illinois cratered with eight straight missed shots. Seven of those shots were behind the arc, and the familiar Illini narrative started rearing its ugly head.

In a game of runs, Illinois went into the locker room with a 36-30 halftime lead. 

The Illini defense held the potent Wisconsin offense to 30 points. Meanwhile, the paucity of late-half shotmaking kept Illinois behind its normally torrid scoring pace. 

This game was clearly being played on Wisconsin’s terms in the first half. Would the Illini assert stylistic authority in the second half?

Operation scorched nets kicked off the second half.

Illinois made 11 of its first 14 shots in the second half. Keaton Wagler and Tomislav Ivisic paced the early offensive dominance. It was the kind of start that reminded everyone what this Illinois team’s ceiling resembles.

And then, the levee broke.

The Badgers stuck around. There goes that ugly head again.

A 21-7 run brought Wisconsin ahead 68-67 with 4:41 remaining.

The script was all too familiar. Illinois got off to a comfortable lead, and Wisconsin’s guards scored their next 35 points. The “Killer Bees” assassinated the Illinois lead by beating Boswell, Stojakovic, and the Illini at all three levels. They combined for 69 of Wisconsin’s 91 points.

The Badgers shot 20 free throws in the second half. In the first half, they shot zero. That may wind up being the stat of the game.

At the end of regulation, the score was tied at 78. This was 120 miles up I-57 away from the last Badger disaster for the Illini. The madness of March spares no man.

Illinois was 3-7 from the foul line down the stretch, including two misses on the front end of one-and-ones. Meanwhile, Boyd and Blackwell made 21 of their 22 free throws.

The overtime comeback victory for the Badgers was almost academic. The Badgers out-executed the Illini down the stretch and came away with a berth in the tournament semifinals. They beat the Illini the same way they beat the Illini in Champaign.

And that begs the question: is there a systemic problem with this Illini squad? 

The optimistic view is that Illinois missed 31 of 40 threes and still almost won a game against the tournament’s 5 seed. The pessimistic view is that Illinois lost to the same team again after one of its most devastating defeats.

The realistic view is simple: Illinois’ run in the Big Ten Tournament is over. They head back to Champaign, winless in their now ill-fated business trip to the house that Michael Jordan built.

Nick Boyd doesn’t get to become a villain if the hero stops him.

What’s next for the Illini?

An uncertain selection Sunday awaits Illinois. On Friday in Chicago, the Illini demonstrated why the selection committee could approach them with reticence and skepticism. Sure, they could be the most dangerous team in the NCAA tournament. But in a big game against a team with less talent and lower expectations, the Illini lost a big lead, missed their free throws, and allowed Wisconsin’s guards to look like superstars.

Questionable calls aside, this was an abject failure in Chicago. The Badgers stole Illinois’ lunch money for the second time this season. This is not a Pizza Hut parking lot, Illini squad. This is a Prime 112 valet stand club. 

So, what do you think? Did Illinois play its way down to a 3 seed? How does this repeat performance against Wisconsin impact your view of their NCAA Tournament potential?

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