After re-watching the UTRGV game, I will not say the Illini played a terrible game. The Vaqueros deserve a lot of credit for their effort on both ends. What the did for almost 40 minutes was hit tough, mostly contested, quick shots. 42% from the arc was not simply shooting wide open threes, of which there were very few, but quick, contested threes that just kept finding the bottom of the net. The Illini had far more uncontested threes, hit some, but missed too many. For some reason, KB was not very aggressive on offense while Wagler had a tough shooting night but did some little things well. This was the type of game that, in some previous years, would see the Illini chasing a 3-5 pt. deficit into the final 5 minutes when a bounce, a call, or a lip out could spell doom. But that did not happen.
Sure, there were many lessons to learn, but that is why this game was played. It was a good thing to get this win on a tough night of Illini play....but it was a win.
What was noticeable was that UTRGV quickness exposed problems that this team may not be able to fix. Teams like Purdie or UConn have the patience and expertise to work to get the math-ups they want....quick guards on a big vic ...and exploit their advantage. As long as our guys are willing to listen and work hard doing what is asked, those can...maybe....be held to a minimum. But a quick guard who can finish or pull up and hit jumpers will always be a challenge for Tomi, David, or Z.
The point is, this semi-comfortable 14 point win was not as bad of a thing as we paint it to be....especially if this group of young Illini can hold their turkey consumption to a reasonable level and come back like the Fighting Illini for 40 minutes of their best effort on Friday. We will soon know.