Illinois
Three-Dot Dash: Where will surging Illinois be in Top 25 on Sunday?
Illinois’ football team, still buzzing from its 31-24 win in overtime at Nebraska on Friday, is sure to move up from No. 24 in the new AP Top 25 that’s released early Sunday afternoon. Now 4-0 with a pair of wins against ranked teams, the Illini have earned a good bit of respect from voters.
So where will they be?
My prediction is the Illini will come in at No. 20, jumping four teams that lost — Northern Illinois, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. It’s very unlikely that USC, which lost a tight one at Michigan, will tumble far enough from No. 11 for the Illini to move up into the teens.
On the other hand, 13th-ranked Kansas State had just kicked off at BYU as this was being written. So there was potential after all, with a Wildcats loss, for the Illini to rise to No. 19.
Does any of this even matter in September? It feels a lot more like it does after the thrilling upset of the Cornhuskers than it did before it. A 4-0 start — Illinois’ first since 2011 — makes it a lot more tempting to begin thinking about how many wins this team can pile up in a season that began with modest expectations, most of the Big Ten previews out there having pegged Bret Bielema’s fourth Illini team for only five or six wins.
I predicted 7-5, which might end up short in the win column. Certainly, 8-4 seems achievable. Better than that? Sure, though I wouldn’t bet on it yet. Still, this has been the step forward Bielema needed for the sake of his reputation more so than for job security.
By the way, the 2011 team started out 6-0 before losing six straight, leading to Ron Zook’s dismissal. And the 2022 team was riding high at 7-1 before messing the bed in back-to-back games at home against seemingly inferior Michigan State and Purdue. As any Illini football fan knows, there is to be no taking anything for granted, not now, not ever.
THREE-DOT DASH
• IT WAS NICE KNOWING YOU, Northwestern. The Wildcats went to Washington for the Huskies’ first-ever Big Ten game, were held to 112 yards of offense and finished on the business end of a 24-5 beatdown. The total dud in Seattle was a throwback to the lost seasons of 2021 and 2022, and nobody cared to revisit those. My preseason prediction of 5-7 for the Wildcats (2-2) is looking rather generous. …
• YOU, TOO, NIU. How crazy is it that Northern Illinois lost at home to Buffalo in its first game since winning at Notre Dame? This, folks, is why God invented college football. …
• MICHIGAN BEAT USC 27-24, and the contrast in styles was delectable fun. The Wolverines can’t throw the ball and might never again try, but they sure can run it physically. The Trojans can throw it all over the yard when their offensive line holds up, and they can beat anybody in the conference if their defensive line holds up — clearly, though, Lincoln Riley’s roster is still a little too soft where it counts. Michigan had almost no business winning that game but did anyway, toughness being the difference in the end.
• WHAT MUST MACK BROWN have said to his North Carolina team after it gave up 70 points to James Madison? What must it have felt like for Tar Heels defensive coordinator Geoff Collins? If Collins ever interviews for another head coaching job, the first thing any athletic director will ask him is, “How did you give up 70 to JMU?” If I’m UNC, I seriously think about scheduling Dolly Madison instead next time. …
• IMAGINE THE HORROR of being a Nebraska fan. The Huskers have lost 25 straight games against ranked teams. Even more painful, they’re 8-31 in one-possession games since the start of 2018. And they’ve played overtime seven times over the last decade without scoring a point in any of the extra periods. It has to be sheer torture to watch.
• IS IT NEXT SATURDAY YET? Georgia at Alabama at 6:30 p.m. Hallelujah and God bless America. …
• MY HEISMAN TOP FIVE entering Week 5 are (1) Miami QB Cam Ward, (2) Ole Miss QB Jaxson Dart, (3) Alabama QB Jalen Milroe, (4) Colorado WR/DB Travis Hunter and (5) Boise State RB Ashton Jeanty.
Illinois
Late Heroics Lift Meseraull In Southern Illinois Center – SPEED SPORT
DU QUOIN, Ill. — Thomas Meseraull used late-race heroics to earn his 10th career feature win while battling inside the Southern Illinois Center with the POWRi National Midget League on Saturday night.
Meseraull led the final 10 laps of the feature honoring industry icon Junior Knepper at the Du Quoin State Fairgrounds.
High-point qualifier Zach Daum and fast-timer Brylee Kilmer battled as the green flag waved, with Daum gaining the initial advantage on the opening lap as Trey Marcham, Meseraull, Daniel Robinson and Kilmer all kept pace inside the early top five.
Leading steadily, Daum would appear in fine form inside the Southern Illinois Center as the laps ticked away, with Meseraull, Marham, Frank Flud, Robinson, Christopher Bell, Chris Andrews, Corbin Rueschenberg,and Kole Kirkman contending.
Using precision driving through lapped traffic, Meseraull would strike for the top spot with only 10 laps remaining as Daum stayed within striking distance while keeping Marcham, Flud and Daniel Robinson at bay.
Holding steady over a late-race restart, Meseraull would not be denied in earning his second POWRi National Midget feature win inside the Southern Illinois Center over the past three years.
“This Ford was hooked up and ripping’ tonight,” said Meseraull. “Feels great to finally get it done in 2025 after having a rough year. This place can turn into bumper cars, and you’ve got to do what you’ve got to do to get it done here.”
Remaining up front early-leader of 30 laps, Daum would place runner-up with Marcham finalizing the podium placements. Hard-charging from starting 19th, Kyle Jones finished fourth, with Robinson fifth.
The finish:
Feature (40 Laps): 1. 7S-Thomas Meseraull[3]; 2. 5D-Zach Daum[1]; 3. 32-Trey Marcham[5]; 4. 7TX-Kyle Jones[19]; 5. 57-Daniel Robinson[7]; 6. 81F-Frank Flud[6]; 7. 95-Chris Andrews[10]; 8. 6-Brylee Kilmer[4]; 9. 17R-Rylan Gray[15]; 10. 14J-Wout Hoffmans[22]; 11. 23-Devon Dobie[17]; 12. 77J-John Klabunde[21]; 13. 67-Kole Kirkman[8]; 14. 15V-Cole Vanderheiden[12]; 15. 15-RJ Corson[16]; 16. 23T-Ashton Thompson[13]; 17. 26-Corbin Rueschenberg[14]; 18. 21-Christopher Bell[9]; 19. 7G-Parker Perry[11]; 20. 2F-Casey Friedrichsen[20]; 21. 4-Kale Drake[2]; 22. 71C-Gunnar Pike[18]
Illinois
Illinois State defeats Villanova in the 2025 FCS playoff semifinals, advances to national title
Illinois State dominated Villanova on the road from start to finish en route to a 30-14 FCS semifinal win.
Illinois State set the tone early with a 53-yard bomb to star wide receiver Daniel Sobkowicz who finished with seven catches for 97 yards and two touchdowns. His second touchdown put the Redbirds up 21-6 entering halftime, putting the game out of reach.
In the second half, Illinois State leaned on a third-straight career-high day on the ground from running back Victor Dawson, who rushed for 155 yards after going for 148 and 137 in his last two games. Dawson and the ground attack dominated the time of possession for 36:48. Click or tap here for final stats from the game.
HOW ABOUT THOSE REDBIRDS!!!!!!!!!#ValleyFootball x #FCS x @RedbirdFB x @ISURedbirds x @NCAA_FCS x @ESPNCFB x @espn pic.twitter.com/otoo7t1YoM
— Valley Football (@ValleyFootball) December 21, 2025
Illinois State becomes the first team in the 24-team FCS playoff era to make the national championship game after playing all road games and only the second unseeded team in the 24-team era to make the national championship game.
Overall, it’ll be Illinois State’s first FCS Championship game appearance since 2014. The Redbirds have never won a national championship.
You can catch the 2025-26 FCS Championship Game on Monday, January 5, 2026 at theFirstBank Stadium on the campus of Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee.
Illinois
I’m grateful for Illinois legalizing physician-assisted suicide | Letter
When I became disabled due to a traumatic injury at 17, the first thing I felt was a tremendous loss of control over my life. I’ve worked since then to regain and retain it.
It’s why I embrace the fundamental principle of the independent living movement and the disability rights and justice movement – that all of us have and deserve the right to self-determination and to make our own decisions, including decisions about the services and care we receive.
That is why I am grateful to Gov. Pritzker and the Illinois General Assembly for passing a new law that legalizes Medical Aid in Dying (SB 1950), the End of Life Options Act.
Death elicits fear. It certainly represents the ultimate loss of control. We all hope that it will be peaceful and without great suffering.
For many of us who have experienced marginalization because of disability or age, poverty, race, and other socially imposed constructs, we fear being devalued or dismissed in decision-making in systems, including in chronic or acute health care situations. This law relates specifically to terminal illness, not chronic or acute care. And disability should not be conflated with terminal illness.
The ability to control the decision-making process in the End of Life Options Act is detailed and robust. It’s a high bar to be eligible to participate.
It requires you to be able to be fully in control of the decision-making process and of the administration of medication, only when you have a prognosis of less than six months or less to live. It requires consultation with at least two different medical professionals. It has strong provisions that prevent anyone from assisting or exerting undue influence, including any person to whom you might have already given health care power of attorney.
Medical aid in dying is a trusted and time-tested medical practice that is part of the full spectrum of end-of-life care options, including hospice and palliative care. People move across the country to access it. Those with terminal illness who are unable to relocate because of disability or income need the equity that comes from being able to access options where we live.
As someone who has learned to never take it for granted, I want this right to self-determination to extend through the final days of my life if I should face a terminal illness.
I am grateful that Illinois has joined the many other states who support this additional end of life care option for all who are facing terminal illness.
Beth Langen,Springfield
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