1967–68 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team

1967–68 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball
Conference Big Ten Conference
Ranking
Coaches No. Not Ranked
AP No. Not Ranked
1967–68 record 11–13 (6–8 Big Ten)
Head coach Harv Schmidt
Assistant coach Dick Campbell
MVP Dave Scholz
Captain Ben Louis
Home arena Assembly Hall
1967–68 Big Ten Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
Ohio State 10 4   .714     21 8   .724
Iowa 10 4   .714     16 9   .640
Purdue 9 5   .643     15 9   .625
Northwestern 8 6   .571     13 10   .565
Wisconsin 7 7   .500     13 11   .542
Michigan State 6 8   .429     12 12   .500
Illinois 6 8   .429     11 13   .458
Michigan 6 8   .429     11 13   .458
Indiana 4 10   .286     10 14   .417
Minnesota 4 10   .286     7 17   .292
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1967–68 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team represented the University of Illinois.

Regular season

Harv Schmidt, the 1957 Illini MVP and team captain, returned to his alma mater in 1967 after serving as an assistant at New Mexico for three years. Schmidt succeeded legendary coach Harry Combes after his dismissal related to a "slush-fund" scandal that devastated both the basketball and football programs for many years into the future. Schmidt, originally from Kankakee, was the slender 6 foot 6 inch star Illini forward who came highly recommended as both a coach and recruiter. Unfortunately, he had never been a head coach before, but he was considered the best the under the circumstances. Within three years of his arrival, he had brought Illinois back to among the elite programs in the Big Ten. The beginning of his tenure marked what possibly was the high-water mark in fan enthusiasm. Illinois led the nation in attendance in 1970, averaging 16,128 per home contest, with students routinely camped out for tickets outside the state-of-the-art Assembly Hall.

Even though Schmidt lacked coaching experience, he believed in the importance of an aggressive, overplaying defense with the intent of frustrating opponents, generating turnovers and creating easy baskets. He was a stickler to detail and used scouting techniques to learn ways of shutting down opponents offenses. Schmidt was always teaching, as well as coaching his teams, in order to compete favorably against any competition.

Due to the scandal that plagued the Illini, Schmidt's first team was primarily made up of walk-ons. Expectations of the 1967–68 team were low, however, they began to surprise even the experts when, in just their second game of the season, the Illini took on hall of fame player Elvin Hayes and the nationally ranked Houston Cougars at the Assembly Hall. During the matchup, Randy Crews, a 6-foot 5 inch high school All-American guard from Bradley-Bourbonnais Community High School, became a defensive stopper in just his second varsity game by taking on the 6 foot 9 inch Hayes. The Illini were forced to use a slow-down style to keep the game close and stayed with the Cougars the whole game, losing by a final score of 54-46.

During the remainder of the season, the Illini defeated such teams as Georgia Tech, Texas El Paso, Notre Dame, Michigan State, Iowa and Michigan. Unfortunately, the Ilini would lose 7 of their last 9 games of the Big Ten season to finish with a 6-8 conference record and an 11-13 mark overall, good for a second straight 7th-place finish in the Big Ten.

Positive signs for the Illini included a freshman team that included future varsity players Greg Jackson, Fred Miller, Rick Howat and Bob Windmiller. As sophomores, they would combine with returnees Dave Scholz, Randy Crews, future New York Knicks draft pick Mike Price, Alabama transfer Jodie Harrison, Dennis Pace and walk-on Les Busboom to form the best group Schmidt would ever coach. Scholz would finish this season by being named 1st team All-American by the Helms Foundation and to the Converse honorable mention All-American team.

The 1967-68 team's starting lineup included Crews and Benny Louis at the forward spots, Price and Harrison as guards and Scholz at center.

Team

No. Player Hometown High School Class Position
11 Benny Louis Pinckneyville, Illinois Pinckneyville Community High School Sr. Forward
12 Paul Nitz Woodstock, Illinois Marian Central Catholic High School Jr. Forward/Center
15 Mike Price Indianapolis, Indiana Arsenal Technical High School So. Guard
24 Dan Kuemmerle Danville, Illinois Schlarman High School So. Forward/Guard
25 Steve Kohn Creve Coeur, Missouri Ladue High School So. Guard
30 Randy Crews Kankakee, Illinois Bradley-Bourbonnais Community High School So. Forward
32 Les Busboom Royal, Illinois St. Joseph-Ogden High School Jr. Guard
33 Jodie Harrison Streator, Illinois Streator High School Jr. Guard
34 Denny Pace Collinsville, Illinois Collinsville High School Jr. Forward/Guard
40 Dave Scholz Decatur, Illinois Decatur High School Jr. Forward/Center
42 Jim Skarda Lake Geneva, Wisconsin Badger High School So. Forward
43 Rich Crusius Bloomington, Illinois Bloomington High School Sr. Forward
44 Ron Armbrust Lincoln, Illinois Lincoln High School So. Guard
45 Bill Jones Chicago, Illinois Waller High School So. Guard

Schedule

Source[2]

Date
time, TV
Rank# Opponent# Result Record Site (attendance)
city, state
12/2/1967*
no, no
No. NR vs.Butler W 75-57  1-0
Hinkle Fieldhouse (5,875)
Indianapolis

12/9/1967*
no, no
No. NR vs. Houston L 46-54  1-1
Assembly Hall (7,605)
Champaign, Illinois

12/14/1967*
no, no
No. NR vs. BYU W 63-55  2-1
Assembly Hall (6,842)
Champaign, Illinois

12/15/1967*
no, no
No. NR @ Tennessee
Volunteer Classic
L 42-66  2-2
Stokely Athletic Center (8,500)
Knoxville, Tennessee

12/16/1967*
no, no
No. NR vs. Army
Volunteer Classic
L 57-65  2-3
Stokely Athletic Center (9,650)
Knoxville, Tennessee

12/22/1967*
no, no
No. NR @ Stanford L 72-74  2-4
Maples Pavilion (1,800)
Stanford, California

12/23/1967*
no, no
No. NR @ California L 72-89  2-5
Haas Pavilion (3,400)
Berkeley, California

12/28/1967*
no, no
No. NR vs. Georgia Tech W 65-54  3-5
Chicago Stadium (5,212)
Chicago

12/30/1967*
no, no
No. NR vs. UTEP W 68-50  4-5
Chicago Stadium (5,108)
Chicago

1/6/1968
no, no
No. NR vs. Michigan State W 66-56  5-5 (1-0)
Assembly Hall (7,932)
Champaign, Illinois

1/9/1968
no, no
No. NR vs. Indiana L 60-61 ot 5-6 (1-1)
Assembly Hall (6,396)
Champaign, Il

1/13/1968
no, no
No. NR @ Minnesota W 61-60  6-6 (2-1)
Williams Arena (6,676)
Minneapolis

1/27/1968*
no, no
No. NR vs. Notre Dame W 68-67  7-6
Chicago Stadium (13,472)
Chicago

2/3/1968
no, no
No. NR vs. Iowa W 66-63  8-6 (3-1)
Assembly Hall (8,553)
Champaign, Illinois

2/6/1968
no, no
No. NR @ Wisconsin W 68-60  9-6 (4-1)
Wisconsin Field House (10,094)
Madison, Wisconsin

2/10/1968
no, no
No. NR @ Northwestern L 71-78  9-7 (4-2)
Welsh-Ryan Arena (8,349)
Evanston, Illinois

2/13/1968
no, no
No. NR vs. Michigan L 65-67  9-8 (4-3)
Assembly Hall (8,850)
Champaign, Illinois

2/17/1968
no, no
No. NR vs. Purdue L 68-75  9-9 (4-4)
Assembly Hall (11,941)
Champaign, Illinois

2/20/1968
no, no
No. NR @ Michigan W 72-64  10-9 (5-4)
Crisler Arena (6,500)
Ann Arbor, Michigan

2/24/1968
no, no
No. NR vs. Northwestern W 62-61  11-9 (6-4)
Assembly Hall (12,857)
Champaign, Illinois

2/26/1968
no, no
No. NR @ Ohio State L 75-95  11-10 (6-5)
St. John Arena (12,591)
Columbus, Ohio

3/2/1968
no, no
No. NR @ Iowa L 56-61  11-11 (6-6)
Iowa Field House (12,900)
Iowa City, Iowa

3/4/1968
no, no
No. NR vs. Ohio State L 64-67  11-12 (6-7)
Assembly Hall (9,227)
Champaign, Illinois

3/9/1968
no, no
No. NR @ Michigan State L 59-62  11-13 (6-8)
Jenison Fieldhouse (5,112)
East Lansing, Michigan
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.
All times are in Central Time.

Player stats

Player Games Played Field Goals Free Throws Rebounds Points
Dave Scholz[3] 2422383230529
Jodie Harrison[4] 248861100237
Randy Crews[5] 238860155236
Mike Price[6] 247162123204
Denny Pace[7] 19532256128
Benny Louis[8] 2437195093
Les Busboom[9] 2433209286

Awards and honors

Team players drafted into the NBA

Round Pick Player NBA Club
25Ron Dunlap*Chicago Bulls

[11]

*Dunlap was forced to skip his last two years of basketball due to the "Slush-Fund" scandal in 1966.

References

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