Chicago Sun-Times

PIGS CAN FLY, BUT THEY’RE ALSO FLAWED

Stumbling Illini face wildly athletic Razorbacks

- STEVE GREENBERG COLLEGE BASKETBALL sgreenberg@suntimes.com | @SLGreenber­g

DES MOINES, Iowa — OK, so Arkansas, Illinois’ first-round opponent in the NCAA Tournament, is somewhat long and athletic.

Take freshman guard Anthony Black, for example, who stands 6-7, has a 42½-inch vertical jump and is an expected 2023 NBA lottery pick.

Or freshman guard Nick Smith Jr., who’s 6-5, matches Black’s 42½-inch ups and likewise is projected for the lottery.

Or junior guard Ricky Council IV, the Razorbacks’ 6-6 leading scorer who — with his 46-inch vertical — makes Black and Smith look, well, maybe a hair less spectacula­r.

Or freshman Jordan Walsh, a 6-7 swingman who jumps as high as Council, and, dear lord, what the heck is in the water down in Fayettevil­le, Arkansas?

“Arkansas is a different type of team than what we see in the Big Ten,” Illini coach Brad Underwood astutely observed.

No, the Iowas, Wisconsins and Minnesotas of the world generally don’t fly like these Razorbacks. The Penn States, Michigan States and North westerns don’t, either. Let’s just expand the list to all 14 Big Ten schools, come to think of it.

Fortunatel­y for the ninth-seeded Illini, Thursday’s matchup won’t be a jumping contest. At least they’d sure as heck better hope not. Eighth-seeded Arkansas is a wildly athletic team that neverthele­ss has all sorts of flaws, among them being very young, being very inconsiste­nt and not being particular­ly adept at shooting the basketball.

The Illini can relate to all those characteri­stics themselves.

The Illini have lost six of their last 10 games. The Hogs have lost six of nine. If one of these teams is supposed to feel superior to — or be afraid of — the other, it’s pretty much impossible to understand why.

“I think we’re still evolving and still improving,” Arkansas coach Eric Musselman said.

“It’s never easy to come together in a very quick amount of time,” Underwood said.

It’s March, isn’t it? Seems a little late in the season to be referring to what hasn’t happened yet.

Each coach did throw a lot of new pieces together, though, and that was always going to come with challenges in both cases. Illinois lost not only All-Americans Ayo Dosunmu and Kofi Cockburn the last couple of years, but all five starters from last season’s team.

Whether or not this Illini roster makes good sense in regard to “fit,” it sure looked like it didn’t back when the team was getting off to an 0-3 start in Big Ten play. A 7-1 conference stretch appeared to right the ship, but it didn’t last, and the Illini are somewhat stumbling into Wells Fargo Arena with marks of 3-7 on the road and 2-3 at neutral sites.

“If I’m answering truthfully,” said Coleman Hawkins, who was the Illini’s most experience­d returning player, “I would say the beginning was very frustratin­g for me. I was used to guys who kind of knew what they were doing. That isn’t anyone’s fault . . . .

“Last year’s team and the year before did a great job of closing out games . . . [and] I was used to a team who went in and we were road warriors. We were tough. We were veterans. We knew what we were going to go out and do. We were locked into attention to detail. There were very limited mistakes.”

Sounds kind of like night and day, doesn’t it? For Hawkins — who saved last March’s tournament-opening victory against Chattanoog­a with a last-second blocked shot — it became a personal struggle, too.

“I think with that frustratio­n, there was kind of a loss of motivation for myself,” he said. “I wouldn’t say for anybody else, [but] I was just kind of lost as far as, ‘Is it my fault? Am I not leading those guys the right way?’ ’’

But Hawkins has come back around and says the Illini are “going to shock some people.”

Matthew Mayer, a senior who transferre­d in from Baylor, where he won a national championsh­ip, expressed a calm confidence in the team.

“You see those barriers of ‘Sweet 16,’ ‘Elite Eight,’ all these labels,” he said. “Just win another game and keep advancing. Like, there’s no secret to it.”

What does Underwood want to see? “Belief,” he said. “You’ve got to believe you can win . . . .

“This team has a great personalit­y to handle that, and I really believe it.”

It’s March, isn’t it? Now had better be the time.

 ?? CHRIS COVATTA/GETTY IMAGES ?? Junior guard Ricky Council IV, who has a 46-inch vertical jump, is only one of Arkansas’ bevy of leapers. Council is the Razorbacks’ leading scorer.
CHRIS COVATTA/GETTY IMAGES Junior guard Ricky Council IV, who has a 46-inch vertical jump, is only one of Arkansas’ bevy of leapers. Council is the Razorbacks’ leading scorer.
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