Higher-seeded Illini heading to Florida?

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Higher-seeded Illini heading to Florida? Blame it on Broadway


Illinois is the higher seed in tonight's NIT contest against Central Florida, but the Illini won't have home-court advantage.

Blame the lullaby of Broadway.

State Farm Center long ago scheduled the musical "42nd Street" for tonight as part of the WCIA 3 Broadway Series, bumping the Illini to Orlando, Fla., for spring break.

Not a bad place to be if you're a college student, but certainly not the team's preference.

If the Illini win, they will head to New York's Madison Square Garden for the NIT version of the Final Four.

Kevin Ullestad, director of State Farm Center, said the Broadway touring show was booked last summer, long before the UI's postseason fate was known.

"Obviously, we would have liked to have the game. It's just a matter of scheduling," he said.

"It's a continual evolution as far as booking. We're a multipurpose facility, that's the thing everybody needs to remember."

State Farm Center is co-managed by athletics and the Student Affairs Office on campus.

Students pay about $212 a year in fees to support the arena, which hosts everything from monster truck shows to rock concerts to commencement ceremonies, in addition to men's and women's basketball.


Ullestad juggles student programming with athletic dates, including football games, so a concert doesn't fall alongside a night game at Memorial Stadium because of the parking crunch. Currently, he's lining up basketball for next fall but has to wait for the final Big Ten schedule to come out in late summer.

"It's a constant whirlwind of when you're grabbing dates to set aside for different events for campus athletics to consider," he said.

The Division of Intercollegiate Athletics knew that the arena was open for the NIT's first two rounds but that hosting a third game would be an issue, said spokesman Kent Brown.

"We knew in advance that this was a possibility if Illinois State were to lose and we were to advance," Brown said.

The ISU Redbirds were a No. 1 seed and would have hosted the Illini tonight if they hadn't lost to Central Florida on Monday night.

"The building we have is a multipurpose facility, so we always know there could be conflicts. When you're playing in the NIT, those are the things you have to deal with," he said.

The NCAA owns and manages the NIT and, working with ESPN, schedules the games around the larger NCAA tournament, Brown said.

The dates are predictable. The first round of the NIT is played on the Tuesday and Wednesday following the NCAA tournament's Selection Sunday (this year, March 12), Brown said. The second-round games are played from Thursday of that week through the following Monday, and the third-round games are Tuesday and Wednesday.

But Brown and Ullestad said State Farm Center has never held open blocks of dates for a potential NIT game. Ullestad said the basketball staff contacted him about a month ago to check available NIT dates.

"Even though we work with the State Farm Center and help manage that and work with them on blocking out dates so it's available for games, the first priority isn't always blocking out for NIT games," Brown said. "In all honesty, our goals aren't to host NIT games every year; our goals are to play in the NCAA tournament.


"It is asking a lot when they're trying to schedule other programming," Brown added.

Moving tonight's third-round game up a day to Tuesday wasn't possible, Brown said, as it would have meant back-to-back games for both teams. And State Farm Center needed time to turn the arena around for "42nd Street."

After defeating Boise State on Monday night, the Illini left for Orlando on Tuesday.

"It would have been easier from a logistics standpoint to not have to travel to Orlando on such a short turnaround," Brown said.

The team has been forced on the road before during the NIT, once when the arena hosted a circus, another year by a concert and more recently because of the massive renovation project there, Brown said.

The Broadway series, which also included "Once" on March 6 and "Pippin" on April 14, is booked months in advance through multiple agencies, Ullestad said.

"Broadway does well for us," he said, adding that it's part of the arena's commitment to a diverse lineup of shows.

Among Big Ten schools, only Illinois, Ohio State and Penn State have athletic facilities that serve as multipurpose arenas, Ullestad said, and that versatility helped the UI land Garth Brooks for four shows next month. The arena has been working on it for two years, keeping multiple dates open until the singer decided on late April.

"You won't see that at Iowa or Purdue," Ullestad said. "We're the smallest market this tour's playing."
 

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UCF focused headed into NIT quarterfinals against Illinois



Weather he?s hitting a momentum-shifting 3-pointer, executing a head-turning crossover or icing a game-with free throws, UCF guard B.J. Taylor always knows when to turn up.

During the past three games, Taylor has led his team in scoring and turns up his aggressive offensive moves in the second half.

Taylor said he likes high-pressure moments.

In fact, he lives for it and his teammates will be counting on those clutch plays again when No. 4 seed UCF hosts No. 2 seed Illinois in the quarterfinals of the NIT Wednesday night. ESPN 2 will broadcast the game scheduled to start 7 p.m.

In a tense situation against Illinois State Monday night, UCF coach Johnny Dawkins called for Taylor to run a box set play that would allow him to push the ball up the court quickly to either take a Hail Mary shot or distribute to a teammate. Although the Knights practice it often, they?ve only run the play in a game twice this season.

The first time was against UMass when Nick Banyard hit a game-winning 3-pointer with one second left.

But instead of going for a basket, Taylor noticed a weakness he could exploit in his defender.

?Once I got to the sideline, I saw that the defender didn?t cut it off too well, so I just knew I could attack his hip and get the foul,? Taylor said. ?I was glad the ref made the call and I was able to go to the line and knock down the free throws.?

His intense stare at the free-throw line as he hit the shots that would knock out No. 1 seed Illinois State spoke of a confidence and complete focus groomed by Dawkins and his staff all season long.

Few people would have expected the UCF basketball team to be capable of digging itself out of an 18-point deficit ? much less on the road ? before the season started.

But the Knights? impressive victory Monday night only cemented this is indeed a new team and new era for the UCF basketball program.

A victory against Illinois, a Big Ten team that was on the bubble for an NCAA Tournament bid and the highest seed remaining in the NIT field, would extend an already historic season that?s seen UCF advance to its first NIT quarterfinals.

The Knights stand just one win away from traveling to Madison Square Garden for the semifinals Tuesday.

But first, UCF has important business to handle at CFE Arena.



?We need to make sure that we stick to our defensive principles, we need to make sure that we focus on what got us here and I feel like we have to make sure that we don?t focus on the next step,? UCF senior guard Matt Williams said. ?We just have to take care of Illinois and then after the game is over we can worry about our next step.?

Taylor said Dawkins does a good job of keeping players focused and grounded. There?s no talk about New York or potential titles or even yesterday.

?He always tells us if you don?t handle business tomorrow night, then none of that stuff in the future matters,? Taylor said.

For the seniors, the game represents one last chance to play in front of a home crowd.

The Knights are hoping for their first sellout, with tickets priced at $4 for students after the first 200 are admitted free of charge, $12 for the general public and $20 for club seats.

UCF?s largest previous announced crowd was 9,825 during a 2009 matchup with Memphis.

The school?s social media push to sell tickets received an endorsement from Orlando mayor Buddy Dyer. And Tuesday morning, UCF defensive lineman Jamiyus Pittman said he expected the entire football team to be in attendance to witness one of the greatest basketball runs in school history.

UCF?s win against Illinois State Monday night gave the program 23 wins, the third most in school history since becoming a Division I program.

?Like I?ve been saying, this is the best school in the country and I love the city of Orlando. . . . I think we?re becoming something that people can be proud of around here in this community and that?s what we want to be,? Taylor said. ?We want to make Orlando proud and we want the city to come out and support us.?
 
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