Illinois players douse head coach Shauna Green with water in the locker room after their upset of Indiana.
Illinois head coach Shauna Green and her team celebrate after beating Indiana at State Farm Center in Champaign, Ill., on Feb. 19, 2024. (Photo credit: Madison Dabrowski/Illinois Athletics)

Shauna Green has been a college basketball coach for eight seasons. None have been more challenging than this one at Illinois.

Last year, she took Illinois โ€”ย one of the worst Power Five programs in womenโ€™s college basketball before she arrived โ€” to the NCAA Tournament. This year, injuries, a tougher schedule and some bad luck have the Illini at 13-12 overall and 7-8 in the Big Ten.

But on Monday, Illinois pulled off a shocker, blowing out No. 14 Indiana, 86-66, to maintain a sliver of hope for an NCAA Tournament bid. The win served as proof that this isn’t just a lost season in Champaign, even though things havenโ€™t gone as expected.

โ€œWe’ve just learned so much through this year,โ€ Green told The Next. โ€œUnfortunately, a lot [came] through some tough times, but just so proud of these guys because they’ve never given up. They’ve stayed together.โ€

The Illini have finally started to gel after a 2-6 start to conference play. In addition to Mondayโ€™s win over Indiana, Illinois also recently picked up wins at Michigan and Penn State, two other teams on the NCAA Tournament bubble. To turn things around, itโ€™s taken a sense of humility, a willingness to be brutally honest and the ability to be vulnerable at times.

โ€œItโ€™s been challenging,โ€ Green said. โ€œItโ€™s been my most challenging year in my years of head coaching, but I also think itโ€™s probably been the most growth Iโ€™ve had personally and trying to figure out how to keep a team together, how to continue to motivate and lead through tough times. 

โ€œItโ€™s easy to lead when youโ€™re winning games. Itโ€™s really, really challenging for our team and for myself through some of that adversity.”


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Illinois had every reason to feel confident entering the 2023-24 season. The program was coming off its first NCAA Tournament appearance in two decades, it returned all five starters, and it was the second year in Greenโ€™s system. That meant the offseason was less about learning new terminology and more about building off of recent success.

The Illini were even ranked 23rd in the preseason AP poll โ€” a far cry from the previous year, when Green told her team, โ€œEveryoneโ€™s gonna think we suck.โ€

As well as last year had gone, Green tried to keep the perspective that the road to consistent success would be bumpy. 

โ€œI had a realistic understanding of where this program was when we took over. It was one of the worst Power Five programs in the country, if youโ€™re being completely honest,โ€ she said. โ€œWhat we did last year was obviously all credit to our players, for them believing and executing. And then we come into this season, weโ€™re ranked. Thatโ€™s a whole new position for our players. Last year, we had zero expectations. This year we have expectations and more pressure.โ€

It didnโ€™t help that senior guard Makira Cook, last yearโ€™s leading scorer who averaged 18.3 points per game, suffered a concussion in the preseason and missed the first three games. 

Even after returning against Notre Dame on Nov. 18, it took a while for Cook to find her stride. In her first six games, she averaged just 11 points and shot under 35% from the field. Since then, sheโ€™s averaging over 16 points and shooting over 39%.

In the win over Indiana, she led the team with 22 points, while senior forward Kendall Bostic โ€” whoโ€™s averaging a double-double this season โ€”ย had 12 points and 11 rebounds. The Illini also received strong contributions from guards Genesis Bryant (15 points, four rebounds) and Adalia McKenzie (14 points, four rebounds, three assists).

But one of the biggest differences between Illinois last year and this year has been the outcomes of games decided by 10 points or fewer. Last year, the Illini were 8-4 in those games; this year, theyโ€™re 2-9, including early-season losses to Marquette (by four points), Missouri (three points) and Arkansas (one point).

Perhaps itโ€™s just regression to the mean after overperforming in close games a year ago.

โ€œIn most of those games, if not all of them, Iโ€™m like, โ€˜Wow, we got the shot.โ€™ I donโ€™t even know if I wouldโ€™ve called something different in those early games,โ€ Green said. โ€œ… We had some really good looks [by] the people you want taking them. We didnโ€™t make them, where last year, we made some of them. So I donโ€™t know if thatโ€™s luck. I don’t know what it is. But itโ€™s frustrating.โ€

That frustration speaks to the challenge Green has grappled with all season. She always reminds her players that all you can control is yourself. Yet as the head coach, she feels the weight of responsibility to not just control herself, but also get everyone on the same page and put them in position to win.

Before the season, Green brought on sports psychologist Dr. Becky Cook to work with the players and herself. Cook had previously worked with Greenโ€™s teams at Dayton. 

โ€œSheโ€™s helped me a lot as well,โ€ Green said. โ€œYou can never think that youโ€™re perfect. As a head coach and as a leader, you gotta be vulnerable, too, and I admit it to our players sometimes. Iโ€™m like, โ€˜I wasnโ€™t at my best there,โ€™ and, โ€˜Iโ€™m working on this, and Iโ€™m trying to get better.โ€™ And then asking them, โ€˜What do you guys need? … Help me help you.โ€™โ€

Having these conversations, Green said, has spurred growth from everyone in the program.

โ€œWe all want the same thing,โ€ she said. โ€œWhen youโ€™re vulnerable and you go through some of that, myself and the team, then you can become more connected and you trust and thereโ€™s more respect. Then … when you beat a team like [Indiana], knowing what weโ€™ve been through, I think it makes it even that much more rewarding.โ€

Green couldnโ€™t have handpicked a tougher last four games for Illinoisโ€™ regular-season schedule: Indiana, Iowa, Michigan State and Nebraska. Those are four of the top five teams in the league.

The next stop will be Iowa City on Sunday. The Illini will play in front of a sellout crowd eager for Caitlin Clark and the Hawkeyes to avenge an 86-69 loss to Indiana on Thursday.ย 

Even with the win over Indiana, Illinois probably needs to finish at least 2-1 and then win at least two games in the Big Ten Tournament to have a chance of snagging an NCAA Tournament bid. 

But Greenโ€™s not thinking that far ahead. The sole focus right now is on Iowa and how her group can hand the Hawkeyes their third loss in four games.

Itโ€™s going to be an uphill climb, just like this entire season. Thatโ€™s what Green hopes her players take away from this year, though. Itโ€™s one thing to ride the wave of success; itโ€™s another to learn how to dig down when things arenโ€™t going well and figure out a way to improve.

โ€œI tell our team this all the time,โ€ Green said. โ€œMaybe it didnโ€™t go [as] we planned it to go this year, but I could not be more proud of the group, of just being resilient, sticking together, continuing to believe and work. I think this is the best life lesson you could probably get, how sport can relate to life. You never give up. You keep fighting. You stay together. You put your head down and you just keep working.โ€

Eric Rynston-Lobel has been a contributor to The IX Basketball since August 2022. He covered Northwestern women's basketball extensively in his four years as a student there for WNUR, previously worked...

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