When Brad Underwood was introduced as Illinois men’s basketball coach seven years ago in Champaign, the idea of a national title seemed far-fetched.
The John Groce era was a disaster and Underwood had never coached a team past the second round of the NCAA Tournament in three attempts at Stephen F. Austin and one year at Oklahoma State.
“I dream big,” Underwood said that day in 2017. “Winning a national championship is something that can happen here.”
Underwood turned the program around in its third season in 2020, going 21-10, but the NCAA Tournament was canceled due to the pandemic. Early tournament exits the last three seasons took their toll, and a growing reputation as a good recruiter who couldn’t coach in March made Underwood suspect to a sizable number of Illini fans.
Underwood’s animated personality on the bench — shouting at players and waving his arms like a graduate of the Bobby Knight School of Coaching through Intimidation — made him an easy target after losses. He sometimes lambasted his players’ effort after games, including an epic rant following a loss to Penn State in December 2022 when he delivered a Bronx cheer during his postgame press conference and said: “The lack of leadership on this team is zero. It’s none. It’s inexcusable.”
Fast-forward to last Saturday’s second-round tournament win over Duquesne in Omaha, Neb., which ended the school’s 19-year drought since their last Sweet 16 appearance in 2005. A celebratory Underwood was seen blasting his players with a super-soaker squirt gun in the postgame locker room, like an overgrown kid on a sugar high.
“You’ve got to celebrate winning,” he said afterward. “That’s one thing I’ve always been big on and we did that today.”
The players were surprised by the sneak attack from Underwood and his staff, but enjoyed seeing their coach let his slicked-back hair down.
“Big moment,” junior forward Dain Dainja said. “The coaches came in here with their water guns and got us hyped a little bit. We were all so locked in, like ‘Next game.’ We love winning and definitely have to celebrate these moments.”
The win got Illinois over the hump, but a much bigger challenge awaits in Boston. The third-seeded Illini head into Thursday’s Sweet 16 game against No. 2 seed Iowa State as slight underdogs, and would likely be a bigger underdog Saturday if they meet top-seed UConn for a shot at the Final Four in Glendale, Ariz.
No one feels like an underdog in the Illini locker room. They’ve played their best ball of the season since Underwood criticized their effort in a March 5 loss to Purdue, when he warned them that not going after loose balls or rebounding would lead to another early exit.
“That’s what sends you home in March,” he said.
They’ve won six straight since that night, including three in the Big Ten Tournament and two wins in the Omaha regional over Morehead State and Duquesne.
The Underwood you see looking like a mad man on your flat-screen TV isn’t necessarily the guy the players know. Senior forward Coleman Hawkins, one of the leaders Underwood criticized in 2022, said the coach is misunderstood.
“It’s cool playing for him,” Hawkins said. “Once you’ve been around him for four years like I’ve been, you can tell he’s just like us. He’s goofy. He laughs. He tells funny jokes.
“The intensity is something I look past now. It doesn’t really affect me. He’s a cool guy and especially off the court, you wouldn’t expect it, but he’s really a funny guy.”
Perhaps there is a method to his madness after all. After all, he is a disciple of Bob Huggins, learning from the master of mind games when he was an assistant at Kansas State.
“He gets the most out of his players,” junior guard Luke Goode said. “He expects greatness and you wouldn’t want it any other way as a player. If you don’t have a coach that is going to push you every day and push the team to be the best it can be, you wouldn’t want to be there. He’s definitely intense, but he’s a great coach.”
Do Illini players just have to have thicker skins?
“Yeah, you do, a little bit,” Goode replied. “He’s going to get on you. But at the end of the day, he loves you. You’re one of his players, one of his guys. If you can get your head wrapped around that idea that he’s just doing it for the best of you and the team, it’s not that big of a deal.”
Swingman Marcus Domask, a grad transfer from Southern Illinois, has adjusted well to Underwood’s coaching style.
“He gets intense at times, but I really like playing for him,” Domask said. “Coach has really good relationships with all his players and when you have those types of relationships off the court, when he gets at us on the court you don’t take it personal.
“There are times during practice when he tries to get under our skin, tries to get us frustrated and sped up. All he is doing is trying to prep us for what (other teams) are going to try to do to us.”
The Illini have heard all season about their lack of success in the NCAA Tournament. Ditto Underwood, who insisted there never was a monkey on his back and that it was all a media creation.
“You guys could take this wrong, but I always thought I’d get here and beyond,” he said of the Sweet 16.
The Illini finally got there. Now it’s time to see if they get to the “beyond” part, which would mean two wins in Boston for their first Final Four appearance since the 2005 team that lost to North Carolina in the title game. In his 36th year of coaching, Underwood can almost taste it.
“I go in with a feeling of respect for the opponent and how good they are and what they do, but I never go in with the mindset that we’ve got no chance,” Underwood said. “Maybe if we were playing the Celtics in Boston I might feel different. But we’ve shown we can play with the best.”