1917–18 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team

1917–18 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball
Conference Big Ten Conference
1917–18 record 9–6 (6–6 Big Ten)
Head coach Ralph Jones
Captain George Halas
Earl Anderson
Home arena Kenney Gym
1917–18 Big Ten Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
Wisconsin 9 3   .750     14 3   .824
Minnesota 7 3   .700     13 3   .813
Northwestern 5 3   .625     7 4   .636
Illinois 6 6   .500     9 6   .600
Chicago 6 6   .500     14 10   .583
Purdue 5 5   .500     11 5   .688
Ohio State 5 5   .500     12 7   .632
Indiana 3 3   .500     10 4   .714
Iowa 4 6   .400     6 8   .429
Michigan 0 10   .000     6 12   .333
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1917–18 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team represented the University of Illinois.

Regular season

Under the direction of coach Ralph Jones, the 1917–18 season for the Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, was unusual because World War I was happening in Europe. Co-captain George Halas, for example, left the team in January 1918 to help out with the war effort.[1] In only the second season of having 10 members, the Big Ten Conference continued their 12-game schedule of home and road competitions. The Illini finished their season with an overall record of 9 wins and 6 losses and a 6 win 6 loss conference mark. The starting lineup included co-captain Earl Anderson and B.E. Mittleman at the forward positions, J.S. Probst and P.C. Taylor at center, and co-captain George Halas and Burt Ingwersen as guards.[2]

Roster

Player Position Class Hometown
Earl Anderson Right Forward Senior Columbus, Ohio
George Halas Right Guard, Left Guard Senior Chicago, Illinois
John S. Probst Center Sophomore East Aurora, Illinois
Paul C. Taylor Center Sophomore New Orleans, Louisiana
Charles W. Vail Left Guard Freshman Chicago, Illinois
Burt Ingwersen Right Guard Sophomore Urbana, Illinois
William K. Kopp Forward, Guard Freshman Beverly Farms, Massachusetts
Benjamin F. Mittleman Left Forward Junior
James Garfield Stevens Left Forward Junior Alfred, New York
Raymond Christian Haas Guard Sophomore Evansville, Indiana

[3]

Schedule

Source[4]

Date
Time, TV
Opponent Result Record Site (Attendance)
City, State
12/15/1917*
no, no
vs Millikin University W 40–13  1-0 (0-0)
Kenney Gym (199)
Urbana, IL

12/19/1917*
no, no
@ Millikin University W 31–13  2-0 (0-0)
Millikin Gymnasium (-)
Decatur, IL

1/5/1918*
no, no
vs Wabash College W 24–9  3-0 (0-0)
Kenney Gym (-)
Urbana, IL

1/9/1918
no, no
vs Purdue W 27–17  4-0 (1-0)
Kenney Gym (635)
Urbana, IL

1/14/1918
no, no
vs Minnesota W 28–17  5-0 (2-0)
Kenney Gym (1,008)
Urbana, IL

1/19/1918
no, no
vs Wisconsin L 21–22  5-1 (2-1)
Kenney Gym (1,108)
Urbana, IL

2/2/1918
no, no
@ University of Chicago L 19–23  5-2 (2-2)
Bartlett Gymnasium (-)
Chicago, IL

2/9/1918
no, no
vs Northwestern W 38–22  6-2 (3-2)
Kenney Gym (925)
Urbana, IL

2/11/1918
no, no
vs Ohio State W 35–21  7-2 (4-2)
Kenney Gym (673)
Urbana, IL

2/16/1918
no, no
@ Purdue L 26–29  7-3 (4-3)
Memorial Gymnasium (-)
West Lafayette, IN

2/18/1918
no, no
@ Ohio State W 26–23  8-3 (5-3)
The Armory (-)
Columbus, OH

2/23/1918
no, no
@ Wisconsin L 15–23  8-4 (5-4)
University of Wisconsin Armory and Gymnasium (-)
Madison, WI

2/25/1918
no, no
@ Minnesota L 22–35  8-5 (5-5)
University of Minnesota Armory (-)
Minneapolis, MN

3/2/1918
no, no
@ Northwestern L 14–29  8-6 (5-6)
Patten Gymnasium (-)
Evanston, IL

3/6/1918
no, no
vs University of Chicago W 20–17  9-6 (6-6)
Kenney Gym (518)
Urbana, IL
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.
All times are in Central Time.

Bold Italic connotes conference game

Player stats

Player Games Played Field Goals Free Throws Points
Earl Anderson[5] 156767201
Bert Ingwersen[6] 1524149
Paul Taylor[7] 1424048
J.S. Probst[8]1015030
Benjamin Mittleman[9] 713026
Charles Vail[10] 118016
J.G. Stevens[11] 75010
George Halas[12] 5102

Awards and honors

George Halas was enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame (1963), for his role in the development of the National Football League as well as for his coaching and playing for the Chicago Bears.

Earl Anderson was named a Consensus All-American for the 1917-18 season.

References

See also

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