Looking back Back in the spring of
2008, fans were calling for head coach Weber's head on a platter,
and the Internet "know-it-all" geniuses were quickly compiling lists
of potential replacements. Last fall, many an Illini fan went on the
record as saying a 16-19 finish in '08-'09
would be nice. Some wondered if Illinois could beat anyone in the
Big Ten other than Indiana and Northwestern. These so-called fans
couldn't have missed the mark more.
Last season, Bruce Weber's Fighting Illini significantly exceeded
expectations -- rolling to a second-place finish in the Big Ten and
returning to the NCAA tournament after a one-year absence. After the
train wreck season of 2007-2008 (16-19 record and just five
conference wins), Illinois gave its fan base some reasons to be
excited about basketball once again. Led by a trio of seniors --
Chet Frazer, Trent Meacham and Calvin Brock -- Illinois won many a
game where the talent on the opposing bench appeared to be more
athletic and more talented. Weber did a great job of getting the
very most he could out of the '08-'09
Illini. And despite finishing poorly and losing four of their last
five games, Illinois still had much to feel good about.
Among the highlights from 2008-2009:
24 wins -- the
most since Dee Brown wore the orange and blue.
Conference road
victories at Purdue and at Ohio State -- two very difficult
venues in which to escape with wins.
An unbelievable
comeback on the road at Northwestern -- down 14 points with just
under six minutes to play, Illinois refused to quit and won on a
Demetri McCamey bank shot with 2.9 seconds to play.
Season sweeps against rivals Indiana,
Purdue and Ohio State.
Assessing the present
So where do the Illini stand right now? you may be asking. Three
and a half weeks into the official start of the practice season,
Illinois looks to be in pretty good shape. Gone are longtime
starters Frazier and Meacham, but the Illini do return three
starters in point guard Demetri McCamey, power forward Mike Davis
and center Mike Tisdale. These three combined for 100 starts last
season and among themselves averaged 33 points each game. Not a bad
starting point for coach Weber.
Several veterans return to the Illini this year as well,
including guard Alex Legion, the transfer from Kentucky who never
really got going last year, and senior Dominique Keller, who can
play the three, four or five positions on the court. Both have the
potential to score in bunches for the boys in orange and blue, but
both can also be guilty of what we call the "World B. Free" syndrome
-- players who never see a shot that is not worth taking. In fact,
Weber, when asked about a bad shot taken by Keller in the first
exhibition game, responded with this nugget: "That shot was one of
the worst shots in the history of the Assembly Hall." Throw in Rich
Semrau, Billy Cole and Jeff Jordan, and the bench should be pretty
strong in 2009-2010.
The best part of all in the minds of many revolves around the
four new faces on the court for Illinois this season. Joseph
Bertrand, Tyler Griffey, Brandon Paul and D.J. Richardson represent
the best recruiting class to enter Illinois since the fall of 2002,
when James Augustine, Dee Brown and Deron Williams made the leap
from H.S. hoopster to Big Ten starter. And Weber couldn't be more
excited, sharing recently that three of the freshmen (Griffey, Paul
and Richardson) are in his "top seven" as of the first of November.
We were pretty excited with the play of all four freshmen during the
first couple of exhibition games but are especially excited with the
all-around game of Richardson, the cat-quick guard from Peoria, and
the slash-and-dash game of Paul, the Dwayne Wade look-alike from
Gurnee Warren. Griffey looks to be a strong power forward, and
Bertrand could develop into a tall defensive stopper who might just
remind some of one Stephen Bardo.
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As this article goes to post, four starting spots appear to be
locked up -- Davis, McCamey, Richardson and Tisdale (although Mike
Davis needs to kick it up a notch), while three players could claim
that fifth starting nod -- Keller, Legion or Paul. We look for a
nine- or 10-man rotation early, but expect Weber to settle on a
regular eight-man rotation by the time the conference season rolls
around.
The nonconference schedule starts favorably, but December games
at Clemson, at Georgia, in St. Louis vs. Missouri and at the United
Center against Gonzaga will test Illinois. A repeat of last season's
12-1 nonconference run would seem unlikely at this venture. And in
terms of the Big Ten, the conference has not been better from one
through seven since the early 1990s, meaning a repeat of last year's
second-place finish could prove difficult at best.
Predicting the future
What will 2009-2010 bring for Illinois basketball? The honest
answer is we have absolutely no idea. However, we do see at least
five things happening this year:
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Illinois will have
a better and more balanced team than 2008-2009, although their
season record and conference finish may not reflect such. Look
for Illinois to win 10 or 11 nonconference games and finish
fourth or fifth in the conference race.
Illinois will
start at least two freshmen for much of the season, and we see
D.J. Richardson winning the Big Ten Freshman of the Year award.
We also expect Brandon Paul to have a couple of monster scoring
games, and more than once a Kendall Gill comparison will be
offered up. And Tyler Griffey will steal minutes from Keller and
Semrau and become the first big man off the bench to spot Davis
or Tisdale.
Illinois will
return to the "Big Dance" for the second straight year and will
win an NCAA tourney game for the first time since the Dee Brown
era (quick -- who was the last team Illinois beat in the NCAA
tourney?).
The two Mikes will
be disappointments in the minds of some -- not because they will
play poorly, but because the level of expectation is
ridiculously high at this point. Mike Davis will not lead the
nation in rebounding and Mike Tisdale will continue to struggle
at times, but both will be key contributors on a very balanced
team.
This team will remind many of the
2002-2003 team (Brian Cook's final year) in that a few returning
veterans will play major roles on the team, but the buzz about
Illinois will revolve around the freshmen and their impact on
the program. Illinois will probably play really well at times
and also have a couple of games similar to last season, like the
road trip to Minnesota and the home game against Penn State.
My humble advice for all
Don't expect too much too quick. The two "wild cards" for this
year appear to be point guard Demetri McCamey and shooter Alex
Legion. If they both put regular strong streaks together, we've
severely underestimated this year's team -- the sky could literally
be the limit. If we see more inconsistency and pine time for these
two, a below .500 conference mark isn't out of the question. The
word inside the program is no one has matured as much as McCamey in
the offseason, and no one can dominate practice offensively like
Legion can. The time for talk is over, however, and it is "put
up or shut up" time. Are you ready for
some hoops? We sure are!
[By GREG TAYLOR]
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