Illinois
Illinois dropped from AP Top 25

Despite winning two games last week, Illinois was dropped out of the AP Top 25 this week.
The Illini checked in at No. 23 in last week’s poll, but were unranked in the new poll on Monday.
This is likely due to Illinois’ loss to No. 4 Marquette, as well as two less-than-stellar performances against Valparaiso and Southern on Friday and Sunday.
Now, you can think what you want about the rankings this time of year. They don’t mean much, but they also don’t make a lot of sense.
Hold up, Illinois loses to #4 Marquette by 7 in a game they absolutely could have won, they drop out of the top 25 but FAU loses to Bryant and is still in and USC loses to UC Irvine and is still in. There are many more weird examples, how dumb are these voters
— Brandon Wildman (@brandon_wildman) November 20, 2023
Illinois is back in action Friday night against Western Illinois. The Illini started the season at No. 25.

Illinois
College Wrap: Rutgers men’s basketball drops Big Ten opener to Illinois

PISCATAWAY — Terrence Shannon Jr. had 23 points and 10 rebounds, and No. 24 Illinois beat Rutgers 76-58 on Saturday in the Big Ten opener for both schools.
Marcus Domask added 15 points for the Illini (6-1), who won at Rutgers for the first time since Feb. 25, 2018.
Austin Williams and Aundre Hyatt scored nine points apiece for the Scarlet Knights (5-2), whose five-game winning streak ended.
The game featured the top two defenses in the Big Ten, with Rutgers holding opponents to 55.5 points and Illinois allowing 58.7. Rutgers shot 33.3% from the field (20 of 60).
Illinois went on a 17-2 spurt midway through the second half to take its largest lead at 67-44. Shannon made three 3s during the run.
The Illini opened the game on a 14-2 run, with Quincy Guerrier contributing seven points, but Rutgers closed within 41-36 at halftime thanks to an 18-9 run over the final 7:06.
TCNJ 76, NJCU 70
EWING — Khalid Bakare came off the bench to score 14 points and lead four in double figures as the Lions (7-1, 3-0) held off the Gothic Knights (2-5, 1-2). David Alexandre added 12 points and nine rebounds as TCNJ won its fifth in a row.
Women’s Basketball
Monmouth 62, Rider 42
LAWRENCEVILLE — Kaci Donovan scored 23 points and the defending CAA champion Hawks (3-4) rode a hot start to down their former MAAC rival Broncs (2-5). Taylor Langan tallied 14 points for Rider, which has lost three in a row.
NJCU 69, TCNJ 62
EWING — Izzy Leazier put in 19 points, but the Lions (3-4 1-2) couldn’t slow down All-American guard Damaris Rodriguez, who scored a game-high 28 points for the Gothic Knights (4-2, 3-0).
Illinois
Illinois High School Boys Basketball Schedule, Live Streams in Jackson County Today – December 2

Searching for how to watch high school basketball games in Jackson County, Illinois today? We’ve got what you need.
Follow high school basketball this season on the NFHS Network! Keep tabs on your family or alma mater and tune in!
Jackson County, Illinois High School Boys Basketball Games Today
Herrin High School at Murphysboro High School
- Game Time: 3:30 PM CT on December 2
- Location: DuQuoin, IL
- Conference: Southern Ill. River-to-River
- How to Stream: Watch Here
© 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
Illinois
Eye On Illinois: State Police looking to consolidate, triage corruption tips
:quality(70):focal(284x243:294x253)/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/shawmedia/5WJFJII57FB43HI5ECJQAZDMRU.jpg)
Do you think your state Senator is on the take? Is the city building inspector turning a blind eye to obvious violations? Is the school district CFO skimming off the top?
These and other examples of public corruption are often rumored and rarely corroborated, but perhaps a new Illinois State Police tool can improve outcomes. The agency issued a news release Thursday detailing its new online form allowing average Illinoisans to report public corruption directly to the Special Investigations Unit (tinyurl.com/ISPcorruption).
Reports do not need a name or location, but do require a phone number and email address. Respondents must name the government agency involved, the name and title of the reported subject and offer a detailed summary. The form has optional fields to indicate other agencies notified along with information on witnesses.
“Examples of public corruption may include an elected official steering contracts to friends in exchange for a monetary kickback, overbilling a contractor and embezzling the money, personally benefiting from federal/state-funded programs, wire fraud and money laundering,” according to the release. “Having allegations reported to one place will streamline the process and allow ISP to respond more quickly. ISP will triage all online submissions and determine the correct agency to handle the investigation.”
Thursday’s column explored ISP’s fresh data on its updated Clear and Present Danger report system. Here’s hoping the agency is similarly detailed on this new effort nine months from now.
RECONSIDERED PRAISE: On Aug. 23, I examined General Assembly turnover data. That column included “a little praise for state Sen. Tom Bennett, R-Gibson City, and state Reps. Mike Marron, R-Fithian, and Lance Yednock, D-Ottawa, who recently announced they won’t seek reelection in 2024. All three men have committed to completing their terms and did so with enough time for candidates of all parties to mount clean, incumbent-free campaigns.
“These moves are refreshingly distinct from the mid-term resignation/appointment process, which often triggers downstream vacancies. Retiring without leaving voters a direct voice in your replacement shows sincere respect for the office.”
Some slight reconsideration is in order. On Monday, Marron announced he would be leaving his post earlier, resigning Dec. 18 to begin working as president and CEO of Vermilion Advantage, a chamber of commerce based in Danville.
“My new position is nonpartisan, and I am therefore removing myself from all political activity,” Marron said in a news release announcing the change.
That’s fair, but this choice still creates a vacancy, which means party officials will name a replacement who can enter the 2024 campaign as an incumbent, the end result being another person serving in Springfield without being directly elected – a problem made only worse when the departing lawmaker also has the political power to name their own replacement.
• Scott T. Holland writes about state government issues for Shaw Media. Follow him on Twitter @sth749. He can be reached at sholland@shawmedia.com.
-
Science1 week ago
USC neuroscientist faces scrutiny following allegations of data manipulation
-
Business1 week ago
As most stores close for Thanksgiving, Black Friday may bring the biggest crowds since before COVID
-
Business1 week ago
Column: An exhaustive debunking of the dumbest myths about Social Security
-
Movie Reviews1 week ago
Movie Review | Tom Blyth, Rachel Zegler shine in latest ‘Hunger Games’ movie
-
Politics1 week ago
Pope Francis dines with transgender women for Vatican luncheon
-
Politics1 week ago
Sen Kennedy’s IQ dig at VP Harris sparks backlash from White House, DNC
-
Technology1 week ago
The best Black Friday deals you can still get for under $25
-
World1 week ago
Violent protests in Dublin after children injured in knife attack