Post Tribune (Sunday)

Instant Hoosier hero

Bazelak leads Indiana past Illini with late rally in debut

- By Michael Marot

BLOOMINGTO­N. — Connor Bazelak wanted a fresh start at Indiana.

He couldn’t have made a stronger first impression.

The Hoosiers new starting quarterbac­k threw one touchdown pass then finished the game by leading his team on a 75-yard drive, capped by Shaun Shivers’s 1-yard touchdown run with 23 seconds left to give Indiana a stunning 23-20 victory over Illinois on Friday night.

“That’s who he is, he’s extremely poised and it showed when you have to find an open receiver and show some poise,” coach Tom Allen said. “He just did what we needed to do. The bottom line, last time I checked, is we got more points than they did.”

No, it wasn’t pretty and it certainly didn’t go according to script.

But after eight straight losses and going winless in Big Ten play last year, this season and conference opener meant plenty for the Hoosiers and Bazelak, who transferre­d from Missouri. It was a relief.

“I know I wasn’t here last year, but these guys had a bad taste in their mouth,” Bazelak said. “I’m just excited we got a win tonight, 1-0.”

Bazelak was 28-of-52 passing for 330 yards and he was incredibly efficient when Indiana got the ball at its 25-yard line with 2:16 to play, down 20-16.

It was a frustratin­g finish for the Illini, who took the lead early in the third quarter and didn’t trail again until Shivers’ scoring run.

Chase Brown ran for 199 yards, becoming the first Illinois player to start a season with consecutiv­e 100-yard games since 1944. Tommy DeVito also threw two touchdown passes for Illinois (1-1, 0-1).

Still, it wasn’t enough in a slugfest that included Brown losing one of two fumbles, multiple players being injured and a series of replay reviews that brought the second half

to a stalemate. It featured just one score — DeVito’s go-ahead 16-yard TD pass to Brian Hightower early in the third quarter — until the final 2 ½ minutes.

And there were plenty of missed opportunit­ies including Indiana’s goalline stand in the fourth quarter. The Hoosiers stopped Brown on three straight runs and coach Bret Bielema blamed himself.

“That fourth-down call, that’s on me to make a better decision. I thought we could go up two scores and obviously we failed,” he said. “This is something we have to adjust. It’s plan and simple. It’s the No. 1 thing we have to eradicate from this program. Before you can win, you’ve got to prevent yourself from losing.”

While Indiana struggled to stop the run, Bazelak carved up the Illinois secondary in the first half and again on the final drive. His first completion as a Hoosier went for 40 yards — more than Illinois yielded in last weekend’s entire game.

Bazelak added three more completion­s of 24 or more yards during the first two quarters including a 52-yard TD pass to D.J. Matthews Jr. that helped stake Indiana to a 16-10 halftime lead.

His first pass in the third quarter, though, bounced off the hands of receiver Andison Coby and was picked off by Kendall Smith. Five plays later, Hightower lunged across the goal line to put Illinois up 17-16.

Bazelak answered with a perfect final drive.

“There’s a lot of power in finding a way to win a game like that ... the positives and belief — and finally getting a Big Ten win in our first game,” Allen said. “To go 75 yards and no timeouts ... Connor was awesome.”

Illinois blew other chances, too. Hugh Robertson’s first two punts went 12 and 23 yards and the Hoosiers capitalize­d on those by scoring 10 points.

Midway through the second quarter, it appeared Hightower made a contested 29-yard TD catch. But the pass was ruled incomplete on the field and a replay review let the call stand. Illinois settled for a field goal, a four-point swing.

 ?? JUSTIN CASTERLINE/GETTY ?? Connor Bazelak of Indiana throws a pass during the first quarter in the game against Illinois on Friday.
JUSTIN CASTERLINE/GETTY Connor Bazelak of Indiana throws a pass during the first quarter in the game against Illinois on Friday.
 ?? DOUG MCSCHOOLER/AP ?? Illinois wide receiver Isaiah Williams, left, is hit by Indiana defensive back Josh Sanguinett­i, right.
DOUG MCSCHOOLER/AP Illinois wide receiver Isaiah Williams, left, is hit by Indiana defensive back Josh Sanguinett­i, right.

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