UConn’s nonconference slate picked up another marquee date, with the Huskies set to meet Illinois on Friday, Dec. 4 at the United Center in Chicago.
The matchup is a return engagement from last season’s meeting at Madison Square Garden, and it adds another high-profile opponent to what is shaping up to be a brutal early schedule for UConn.
The Huskies have owned this series lately. They are 5-1 all-time against Illinois and have won the last five meetings, a stretch that includes victories in the 2026 Final Four and the 2024 East Regional Final.
Last season, UConn knocked off the Illini 71-62 in the national semifinals. The year before that, the Huskies delivered one of their most emphatic tournament runs, ripping off a 30-0 run to bury Illinois 77-52 in the Elite Eight on the way to a national championship.
A tipoff time and TV designation have not been announced.
Illinois is one piece of a nonconference schedule that could be the toughest in UConn history. The Huskies are also lined up to face Michigan, Duke, Kansas, Arizona, Syracuse, Virginia and Ohio State.
“It’s an arduous schedule. We’re banking on the fact that we’ve been very successful in nonconference games because of what we do in the summer and then our style of play, for people who haven’t played against us, gives us some type of small advantage,” UConn coach Dan Hurley said last month.
“You’re trying to play nonconference games versus the best teams so that, twofold, you can identify how good you are and where you need to get better, real true tests, and they’re games that move the needle for you relative to getting in the tournament, and then put you in a situation where you have a good seed for the tournament. Those are not the games that hurt you if you lose them.”
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