Illinois didn’t just add another body this offseason when it brought in Providence transfer Stefan Vaaks. It filled a glaring hole.
The Illini already had size, shooting, IQ and playmaking back in the fold with David Mirkovic, Andrej Stojakovic, Jake Davis, Tomislav Ivisic and Zvonimir Ivisic. What they still lacked was the perimeter engine - the backcourt player who could create, facilitate and also carry a scoring load when the offense needed a bucket.
Freshman Quentin Coleman might grow into that role, but relying on a first-year player to handle it is a gamble. Vaaks changes the equation.
At 6-foot-7, he brings length, shot-making and real off-the-dribble juice. He can get to the rim, he can shoot it off the catch, and he can shoot it off the bounce.
He also gives Illinois something it badly needed: a player who can make plays for others. He led Providence in assists last season, and that part of his game already stood out to Brad Underwood in the early summer work in Champaign.
“We only had a few days with him on the court,” Underwood said on Tuesday. “Just great vision.
Very, very good shooter. It’s more about him with [strength and conditioning coach Adam Fletcher] at that time.
He’s got great strength. Great physical size.
We’ll get dialed in a little more as to strengths and weaknesses within the framework of what we’re doing.
“But his shooting is, no nonsense, it’s really good. He can really do that.
He can shoot it off the bounce. But, like, his playmaking and the little bit that we saw ... we have got to continue to pair that with our other players and see how it all comes together.”
Underwood’s integration of Vaaks is still taking shape, which makes sense in early July. But the early read is clear: the shot is real, and so is the passing.
That’s what makes Vaaks so valuable for Illinois. He also looks like the kind of player who can close games.
Mirkovic is a big-time talent, but a big man usually isn’t your first choice when the possession matters most. Stojakovic can be a featured option for stretches, but his lack of shooting makes it difficult to lean on him as the automatic late-game answer.
Vaaks gives the Illini something closer to the classic Underwood closer. The list of those guys in this era is strong: Keaton Wagler, Terrence Shannon Jr., Ayo Dosunmu, and at times Kasparas Jakucionis and Will Riley. What they shared was a weapon Illinois now has again - shooting off the bounce.
That skill changes everything for a defense. You can load up on a slasher.
You can collapse on a big. You can chase a shooter off the line.
But a gifted off-the-bounce scorer forces a different kind of problem. There isn’t a clean schematic fix.
The best a defense can usually do is put its top defender on the ball and hope it holds.
That’s the kind of stress Vaaks can bring for Illinois in 2026-27, especially when the game tightens up. Go over a screen, and he can drive.
Go under, and he can make you pay. Send help, and he can find the open man.
The bonus is what he does without the ball, too. He led the Big East in three-pointers made and percentage as a freshman, which means defenses can’t afford to relax for even a second when he’s on the floor.
For Illinois, that’s the full package: scoring, shooting, playmaking and constant pressure on the other side’s coverage. The only real question now is how Underwood and his staff will use him to get the most out of all of it. If the past is any guide, they’ll find the right answer.
In Other News...
Illinois Just Made A Season Defining Bet On Its Offense
Illinois is making a clear offensive gamble heading into the new season, and it starts with the quarterback room. The program is betting on Katin Houser, whose path has already included a rocky stint at Michigan State and a much more productive year at East Carolina, where he settled in and showed the kind of growth that can change a teams ceiling. For a roster trying to take a real step forward, the appeal is obvious: if Houser is closer to the player he became last fall than the one he was earlier in his career, Illinois can ask a lot more of its offense.
The risk is just as obvious, because this is the sort of move that can either stabilize a season or leave a team searching again by midyear. Housers current version is what will decide how high Illinois can climb, and that makes the position one of the most important storylines in the Big Ten race. The Illini have chosen upside over comfort, and now the rest of the season hangs on whether that bet pays off. [Read more 🡒]
Illinois Women Are Letting Fans Inside A Program On The Rise
Illinois womens basketball is spending the offseason in a very public way, with Shauna Green and a core led by Berry Wallace, Destiny Jackson and Cearah Parchment preparing for the 2026-27 season after a breakthrough year. The program is leaning into the momentum, and it is doing so by inviting fans closer to the process than most teams ever do, giving a fuller look at how a rising roster is handling the months between seasons.
The latest step is a new behind-the-scenes summer documentary series that follows the team through workouts, team activities and the early stages of building chemistry with newcomers. With more than 90% of last seasons roster back, Illinois has the kind of continuity that can make a good team even more dangerous, and the series is designed to show how the returning group and the new pieces are fitting together as the Illini try to take another step forward. [Read more 🡒]
Ben Humrichous Just Got A Brooklyn Chance Illini Fans Will Watch
Ben Humrichous has landed a Brooklyn opportunity that gives him a real stage to make an early impression after his time with Illinois. The rookie signed an Exhibit 10 deal with the Nets and is on their Summer League roster, putting him in a setting built largely around rookies and first-year players, where every rep matters and a shooter can quickly get noticed.
For Illinois fans, the appeal is obvious because Humrichous best path forward is the one that translates cleanly in this kind of setting. Brooklyn will be watching how his shooting carries over against NBA-caliber competition, and the Summer League roster spot gives him a chance to show he belongs in the conversation as the summer unfolds. [Read more 🡒]
