Final Jan 8
L-MD 72 3.0 o140.0
ARMY 74 -3.0 u140.0
Final Jan 8
NAVY 59 2.5 o140.5
HC 70 -2.5 u140.5
Final Jan 8
CCAR 51 7.5 o126.0
APP 74 -7.5 u126.0
Final Jan 8
L-IL 79 -2.0 o148.0
LAS 68 2.0 u148.0
Final Jan 8
NKU 61 2.5 o136.0
YSU 72 -2.5 u136.0
Final Jan 8
CONN 66 1.0 o142.0
VILL 68 -1.0 u142.0
Final OT Jan 8
DEP 80 2.5 o133.0
HALL 85 -2.5 u133.0
Final Jan 8
FSU 80 2.5 o152.5
MIA 65 -2.5 u152.5
Final Jan 8
FOR 61 17.0 o145.0
VCU 73 -17.0 u145.0
Final Jan 8
HP 93 -8.5 o153.5
CHSO 79 8.5 u153.5
Final Jan 8
CLEV 80 2.0 o139.5
RMU 69 -2.0 u139.5
Final Jan 8
TEM 79 3.5 o145.5
ECU 80 -3.5 u145.5
Final Jan 8
MISS 73 3.5 o148.5
ARK 66 -3.5 u148.5
Final Jan 8
MURR 71 5.5 o138.0
UNI 68 -5.5 u138.0
Final Jan 8
UNCA 76 4.0 o153.5
LONG 85 -4.0 u153.5
Final Jan 8
GW 75 6.0 o152.0
URI 67 -6.0 u152.0
Final Jan 8
ND 65 2.5 o138.5
NCST 66 -2.5 u138.5
Final Jan 8
RICH 58 11.5 o130.0
GMU 64 -11.5 u130.0
Final Jan 8
ALA 88 -11.5 o157.0
SCAR 68 11.5 u157.0
Final Jan 8
WCU 69 12.5 o144.5
WOF 77 -12.5 u144.5
Final Jan 8
AMER 54 3.0 o124.5
BU 60 -3.0 u124.5
Final Jan 8
DAY 72 -10.5 o147.5
MASS 76 10.5 u147.5
Final Jan 8
DRKE 64 1.5 o126.5
BRAD 57 -1.5 u126.5
Final Jan 8
WIN 83 -3.5 o159.5
WEBB 89 3.5 u159.5
Final Jan 8
ETSU 70 -2.0 o151.5
MER 68 2.0 u151.5
Final OT Jan 8
FUR 67 -14.0 o138.0
CIT 63 14.0 u138.0
Final Jan 8
MILW 73 3.0 o155.5
IPFW 78 -3.0 u155.5
Final OT Jan 8
LAF 62 3.5 o131.5
BUCK 65 -3.5 u131.5
Final Jan 8
LEH 62 6.5 o138.5
COLG 67 -6.5 u138.5
Final Jan 8
PRE 67 -3.5 o148.0
SCUS 77 3.5 u148.0
Final OT Jan 8
JOES 81 -3.0 o134.0
DUQ 85 3.0 u134.0
Final Jan 8
FAU 75 -5.5 o154.0
CHAR 64 5.5 u154.0
Final Jan 8
COLO 74 6.0 o149.0
UCF 75 -6.0 u149.0
Final Jan 8
USC 69 6.0 o149.0
IND 82 -6.0 u149.0
Final Jan 8
SIU 86 9.5 o156.0
BEL 90 -9.5 u156.0
Final OT Jan 8
INST 95 1.5 o162.0
VALP 98 -1.5 u162.0
Final Jan 8
ILST 51 -5.5 o130.5
EVAN 69 5.5 u130.5
Final Jan 8
SBON 68 3.5 o141.5
SLU 73 -3.5 u141.5
Final Jan 8
BUT 65 3.0 o137.0
PROV 84 -3.0 u137.0
Final OT Jan 8
GASO 78 3.0 o155.0
GAST 82 -3.0 u155.0
Final Jan 8
UMKC 58 1.5 o137.5
NEOM 77 -1.5 u137.5
Final Jan 8
ASU 55 14.0 o144.5
KU 74 -14.0 u144.5
Final Jan 8
PSU 52 7.0 o163.0
ILL 91 -7.0 u163.0
Final Jan 8
VT 59 9.0 o142.5
STAN 70 -9.0 u142.5
Final Jan 8
TAM 80 2.5 o147.0
OKLA 78 -2.5 u147.0
Final Jan 8
SDST 72 2.0 o156.0
STT 73 -2.0 u156.0
Final Jan 8
USD 80 31.5 o157.0
GONZ 93 -31.5 u157.0
Final Jan 8
RICE 59 11.0 o122.5
UNT 81 -11.0 u122.5
Final Jan 8
AFA 38 18.5 o130.0
SDSU 67 -18.5 u130.0
Final Jan 8
UVA 61 4.0 o128.5
CAL 75 -4.0 u128.5
Penn State 8th Big Ten12-4
Illinois 3rd Big Ten12-3

Penn State @ Illinois preview

State Farm Center

Last Meeting ( Feb 21, 2024 ) Illinois 89, Penn St. 90

As Illinois worked its offseason recruiting magic and brought in eight new players for the 2024-25 season, Louisville transfer Tre White was not one of the headline acquisitions.

The 6-foot-7 junior wasn't a five-star freshman like Will Riley. He wasn't a much-coveted international standout like likely lottery pick Kasparas Jakucionis or Tomislav Ivisic. He wasn't the local hero returning home like Kylan Boswell. He wasn't even sure to be a starter.

But as No. 13 Illinois (11-3, 3-1 Big Ten) enters Wednesday's Big Ten game against Penn State (12-3, 2-2) in Champaign, Ill., the 6-foot-7 White has been living up to his billing as a top-40 recruit in the Class of 2022. All of his metrics are up from his freshman year at Southern California and last year at Louisville.

During Illinois' Pacific Northwest sweep last week at Oregon and Washington, White piled up a team-high 37 points and 18 rebounds. He also did the little things. With Illinois clinging to a two-point lead in the final 20 seconds Sunday at Washington, White swatted the ball out of DJ Davis' hands, then leaped to dive on the loose ball to force a jump that became Illinois' clinching possession.

To put White's recent excellence into perspective, he averaged 7.1 points in 17.4 minutes per game while attempting 14 free throws in Illinois' first eight games. In the last six games, he has delivered 15.5 points in 27.5 minutes per game while getting to the line 32 times.

"Tre's really good," said Illinois coach Brad Underwood. "We've got to make sure we understand that Tre's a really good player. He's doing it driving the basketball. Defensively, he's locked in. He's guarding really good players every single night. He's learning to compete to win. Not just play hard, but to compete. Those are different. And I'm really proud of him. He has been exceptional."

Illinois needs White and the rest of its players to maintain that competitiveness level because that has been Penn State's calling card during the Nittany Lions' rise to the Top 40 of the KenPom rankings and Top 50 of the NET.

That competitiveness is what coach Mike Rhoades felt was lacking for much of Sunday's 77-71 loss to Indiana. The Nittany Lions trailed by 16 with 10 minutes to play before getting within two with the ball.

"When we trust what we do and we have this urgency, we're a downhill team," Rhoades said. "We have multiple guys that can get downhill and make plays for themselves and each other."

Ace Baldwin Jr. continues to lead the way offensively and defensively -- he ranks fourth nationally in assists (8.4 per game) and fifth in free-throw shooting (94.5 percent) while adding 2.1 steals per game -- but Penn State also needs shooter Zach Hicks to be on target.

Since drilling 6 of 10 3-pointers Dec. 10 against Rutgers, which propelled him to 50.8 percent on 3-pointers for the year, Hicks has canned just 7 of 27 attempts over the last five games.

"He's got to continue to keep moving and hunting shots," Rhoades said. "We've got to find him more. We've got to find a way to loosen him up more."

--Field Level Media

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