For like 8 years I lived about 10 minutes away from Welsh Ryan. One of my great disappointments is never going to a game there before moving out of the city.Just some random info semi-related to this game for those who find it interesting.I made the claim earlier that NU fans get up for this game, or something to that general effect. Well, I didn't want that claim to stand without evidence, so I looked at NU's average attendance by opponent since it unveiled the renovated Welsh-Ryan Arena about 8 years ago. If a number of sellouts is not in parentheses, it is because the number is zero.
Illinois: 7,039 (7 sellouts)
Indiana: 7,039 (4 sellouts)
Purdue: 6,806 (4 sellouts)
Iowa: 6,678 (3 sellouts)
Michigan: 6,432 (1 sellout)
Michigan State: 6,382 (2 sellouts)
UCLA: 6,099
--- Overall Average: 6,073 ---
Wisconsin: 5,887 (2 sellouts)
Ohio State: 5,739
Minnesota: 5,711 (1 sellout)
Penn State: 5,594 (1 sellout)
Nebraska: 5,468 (1 sellout)
USC: 5,440
Rutgers: 5,178
Maryland: 4,864
So while there are obviously tons of Illini fans attendance each time we play there, other Big Ten fan bases also bring a lot of fans to WRA. I would say 7 sellouts in 7 years (with fans) indicates that the NU fan base also attends the game vs. us more regularly and more intentionally than vs. other Big Ten teams. This also jives with my more subjective perception that their student section and general fan base seems to be more energized and into the game when we come to town than a lot of other times I have seen them on TV.
Hopefully we bring a large and rowdy contingent of Illini fans (seriously, we need the energy that our fans at the UC had, that was fantastic!) to help to negate any rowdiness on the part of the nerds. Jump on them early, get OUR crowd into it and never let them back in the game! I'm going optimistic mode.
#13 Illinois 84
Northwestern 70
The main reason is that I already had season tickets to our home games and I just couldn't bring myself to pay the same amount for a single game at Northwestern as I was paying for an entire season in Champaign.
My go-to move for Chicago sporting events was to go grab a drink or something near the stadium and then check the secondary market for deeply discounted tickets that people were trying to dump. Buy em, walk to the stadium, get to our seats before tip off, first pitch, kick off, etc. But this never worked for the NU games. Too much demand, not enough supply.