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1941–42 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team

1941–42 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball
1941–42 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team.jpg
Conference Big Ten Conference
1941–42 record 18–5 (13–2 Big Ten)
Head coach Douglas R. Mills
Assistant coach Howie Braun
Assistant coach Wally Roettger
Assistant coach Lou Boudreau
David M. Bullock (Trainer)
MVP Andy Phillip
Captain William Hocking
Home arena Huff Hall
Seasons
← 1940–41
1942–43 →
1941–42 Big Ten Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
Illinois 13 2   .867     18 5   .783
Indiana 10 5   .667     15 6   .714
Wisconsin 10 5   .667     14 7   .667
Iowa 10 5   .667     12 8   .600
Minnesota 9 6   .600     15 6   .714
Purdue 9 6   .600     14 7   .667
Northwestern 5 10   .333     8 13   .381
Michigan 5 10   .333     6 14   .300
Ohio State 4 11   .267     6 14   .300
Chicago 0 15   .000     1 20   .048
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1941–42 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team represented the University of Illinois.

The Illinois Fighting Illini finished the season with a record of 18 wins and 5 losses. Under the direction of head coach and athletic director Douglas Mills, the Illini grouped a team of players, all around 6' 3", into a nearly undefeatable lineup later to be known as "The Whiz Kids". This group captured the attention of the entire nation while winning back-to-back conference titles and combining for a 35-6 record, 25-2 in the Big Ten over those two seasons. They dazzled crowds everywhere averaging 58 points per game, while most teams were averaging in the low 40s. Primarily made up of sophomores, they dominated the 1941-42 conference basketball season by posting a 13 – 2 record. A starting lineup consisting of Arthur "Jack" Smiley, Ken Menke, Andy Phillip, Ellis "Gene" Vance, Victor Wukovits and Art Mathison, developed a winning attitude that would maintain for the next 15 years, a time period where the Illini would finish no less than third in the conference for 13 of them. The 1942 NCAA tournament was only in its fourth year of existence and was staged around the collegiate basketball coaches convention being held at Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana. The warm weather and unsufferable humidity caused the young Illini to lose two games in a period of two days.

The final living Whiz Kid, Gene Vance, died in 2012.

Bold Italic connotes conference game



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