Illinois
What Tony Vitello hopes Tennessee baseball learned it tension-filled Illinois series
Tennessee baseball swept its final nonconference weekend before SEC play, but it didn’t come without a taste of tension in the finale.
That was fine with Vols coach Tony Vitello, who saw teaching points within the bubbling in Sunday’s finale as the Vols beat Illinois 8-3 to complete the sweep at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.
“It’s our job as coaches to correct guys, but I’d rather the fire be burning a little too hot and calm that down than guys not care,” Vitello said Sunday.
No. 8 Vols (16-1) smashed Illinois 24-1 in the middle game of the series Saturday after winning 6-3 in the Friday opener. The Vols have won 15 straight games and swept all three home weekends in nonconference play.
Here is what to know about the sweep:
What happened with Sunday’s tension, Blake Burke’s ejection
Sunday’s tension centered on quick-pitching by Illinois starter Jake Swartz and Tennessee’s response to it. The quick-pitching trend started about six years ago, Vitello said. He said UT has players who had been guilty of doing it and he did not intend to call our Swartz, but the way the game started “lit a match.”
“I think the way guys kind of handled a few situations needs to be corrected,” Vitello said.
The tension led to a warning being issued to both teams when Illinois catcher Camden Janik and Vols catcher Cal Stark had to be separated for exchanging words. Vols first baseman Blake Burke was ejected following a fifth-inning home run following remarks made to Janik as he crossed home plate.
“He’s a smart enough guy, he can see where the ball landed,” Vitello said. “There’s no need to do that so I don’t necessarily agree with Blake’s approach or some of our other guys’ approach in certain situations, how they handled it.”
Burke will miss Tuesday’s game against Eastern Kentucky because of a one-game suspension following the ejection. He is hitting .371 with six homers and 11 doubles.
Vitello said the focal point of a postgame talk with the team in right field Sunday centered on how to handle tension. He also felt the game never needed to get to such a place.
The lesson, however, served as good preparation for the intensity of SEC play. The Vols open at Alabama from March 15-17.
A.J. Causey does it again
A.J. Causey made his second straight Friday night start for Tennessee in place of sophomore A.J. Russell. He was excellent again.
The Jacksonville State transfer struck out 12 in six innings. He allowed on run on six hits and walked one.
“I think he already knew − and we did, too − that he is fully capable of being a starter,” Vitello said. “It’s going to be a matter of what’s best for the team.”
Causey made his first start against Bowling Green a week prior, striking out nine in seven innings of one-run baseball.
QB1: Tennessee baseball’s pitch for Omaha being led by Murfreesboro’s Drew Beam | Estes
Tennessee’s offense remains explosive and Reese Chapman had a big day
Tennessee hit a pair of grand slams on the weekend with Robin Villeneuve hitting one Sunday after Reese Chapman hit one Saturday.
Chapman’s came amid a 24-run eruption to clinch the series win. The Vols hit five homers, including a pair in the fifth inning. Chapman, a powerful left-handed outfielder, had a game-high six RBIs with the grand slam and a two-run double in the eighth.
“Good to see him have that day,” Vitello said. “But more than anything, good to see him get some information where he can just relax and be true to himself.”
Chapman has been buried in the outfield depth chart but remains a possible contributor.
Mike Wilson covers University of Tennessee athletics. Email him at michael.wilson@knoxnews.com and follow him on Twitter @ByMikeWilson. If you enjoy Mike’s coverage, consider a digital subscription that will allow you access to all of it.
Illinois
Illinois vs Iowa prediction, analysis, Elite Eight expert picks for men’s March Madness
The men’s 2026 NCAA Tournament continues with Elite Eight action Saturday with No. 3 Illinois vs. No. 9 Iowa on the two-game schedule.
USA TODAY Sports’ college basketball experts have analyzed all the angles and determined a path to victory for each side. Here’s everything you need to know before the Elite Eight matchup tips off.
USA TODAY has a team of journalists covering the men’s NCAA Tournament to keep you up to date with every point scored, rebound grabbed and game won in the 68-team tournament.
Illinois will win Elite Eight game vs Iowa if…
- John Leuzzi: It replicates what it did defensively against Houston.
- Jordan Mendoza: It controls the interior.
- Ehsan Kassim: Wagler can win the matchup against Stirtz.
- Austin Curtright: If its defense plays like it did against Houston.
Iowa will win Elite Eight game vs Illinois if…
- John Leuzzi: It limits Illinois on offensive rebounds, and second chance opportunities.
- Jordan Mendoza: it’s knocking down 3-pointers.
- Ehsan Kassim: Hawkeyes can make the game slower paced and Illinois misses shots.
- Austin Curtright: Its bench contributors of Alvaro Folgueiras, Tate Sage and others continue their strong play.
Illinois vs Iowa: 1 Stat to watch
- John Leuzzi: Bennett Stirtz vs. Keaton Wagler at the point guard battle.
- Jordan Mendoza: 3-point shot.
- Ehsan Kassim: Illinois 3-point shooting.
- Austin Curtright: Illinois’ defense has been outstanding in the NCAA Tournament, despite ranking outside the top 20 in KenPom’s adjusted defensive efficiency.
Illinois vs Iowa Elite Eight prediction
- John Leuzzi: Iowa
- Jordan Mendoza: Illinois
- Ehsan Kassim: Illinois
- Austin Curtright: Illinois
3 Illinois vs 9 Iowa
- Opening Moneyline: Illinois (-275), Iowa (+227)
- Opening Spread: Illinois (-6.5)
- Opening Total: 139.5
How to Watch Illinois vs Iowa in the Elite Eight
No. 3 Illinois takes on No. 9 Iowa at Toyota Center on March 28 at 6:09 PM The game is airing on TBS.
Stream March Madness on Sling
2026 Men’s March Madness full schedule
See the schedule, live scores and results for all of the NCAA Tournament action here.
- March 17-18: First Four
- March 19-20: First Round
- March 21-22: Second Round
- March 26-27: Sweet 16
- March 28-29: Elite 8
- April 4: Final Four
- April 6: National Championship
Illinois
Bears stadium deal should not include lawmaker perks or raise property taxes
Publicly funded stadium deals can involve questionable incentives for politicians. The megaprojects bill in Illinois would drive up neighbors’ property taxes.
Any deal between Illinois and the Chicago Bears for a new stadium must avoid giveaways to lawmakers and property tax increases for others.
The Bears own the former Arlington Park Racecourse in Arlington Heights and have said they’re also considering Northwest Indiana for a stadium development. A bill in the Illinois General Assembly would offer property tax breaks to such “megaprojects.”
Agreements for publicly funded stadiums in other cities often have included luxury suites and free tickets for lawmakers. Local officials in Kansas City have been criticized for getting access to tickets and suites during ongoing stadium negotiations. Officials in Arizona have repeatedly used free access to publicly funded stadiums to host guests.
A bill in Ohio would prohibit state lawmakers from knowingly accepting free or discounted tickets to pro sports events. The proposal comes amid negotiations with the Cleveland Browns over public funding for a new stadium.
Offering free admission and luxury suites to lawmakers who make decisions about publicly funding stadiums creates a clear conflict of interest.
From a taxpayer perspective, such perks can divert public resources if lawmakers have an incentive to offer a team or other megaproject a tax break when that revenue could go toward broadly shared public benefits. From a free-market standpoint, these arrangements distort competition by subsidizing select teams and projects rather than encouraging municipalities to make themselves attractive for private investment.
Illinois legislators should ensure that any stadium agreement with the Bears does not include free tickets or luxury accommodations for lawmakers.
Perks for politicians are only half the story. The proposed incentive package in Springfield, HB 910 House Amendment 1, would be devastating for taxpayers.
Much of the current discussion revolves around the massive property tax reductions the bill would provide for so-called megaprojects as an attempt to spur economic development.
While negotiating targeted tax incentives is bad policy to begin with, the legislation would make Illinois’ property tax crisis even worse for other taxpayers. Although approved megaprojects would pay steeply discounted property taxes, a clause in the bill allows a taxing body to count the cash value of the megaproject in its total assessed value.
In other words, taxing bodies can still increase taxes as if the project were paying normal tax rates, generating increased revenue, but the project would not pay those higher taxes. Neighboring businesses, homeowners and renters would pay more to make up for the team’s discount.
Here is some of what’s in the bill, which has passed out of committee and could be called for a full House vote any time:
- To qualify, a project must have at least $500 million in eligible costs, which can include the property purchase and can be retroactive up to five years before the megaproject certificate is issued. The project must be completed within seven to 10 years, but that can be extended by five years. The site must be operated for at least 20 years; the tax incentive would last at least 23 years and up to 40 years.
- The megaproject’s assessment would be frozen so that its property tax bill is calculated on the “base year” of the project, meaning the value of the property before any improvements, such as a stadium.
- However, for purposes of issuing bonds and property tax extension limitation calculations, the taxing body could use the current fair cash value of the property. In other words, new development, which is generally exempt from Property Tax Extension Limitation Laws, would allow for the levy to grow beyond the limited rate, which other taxpayers will have to cover.
The bill’s “incentive agreement” allows for separate payments from the megaproject entity, such as the Bears, or an alternative source, to affected taxing bodies in addition to property taxes bill. The payment amount would be negotiated with taxing bodies.
Illinoisans already pay the highest property taxes in the nation. Homeowners in Arlington Heights pay average annual property taxes of more than $8,000. HB910 would make it even worse. One simple solution is to strike this language from the bill:
“Projects to be valued at fair cash value for purposes of bonded indebtedness and limitations on property tax extensions. Projects to which an assessment freeze applies pursuant to this Division shall be valued at their fair cash value for purposes of calculating a municipality’s general obligation bond limits and a taxing district’s limitation on tax extensions.”
Removing that language would ensure that businesses, homeowners and renters in the megaproject area would not face higher property taxes because of an incentive agreement.
Illinois
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