1947–48 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team

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1947–48 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball
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Conference Big Ten Conference
1947–48 record 15–5 (7–5 Big Ten)
Head coach Harry Combes
Assistant coach Howie Braun
Assistant coach Wally Roettger
MVP Jack Burmaster
Captain Jack Burmaster
Home arena Huff Hall
Seasons
« 1946–47 1948–49 »
1947–48 Big Nine Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
Michigan 10 2   .833     16 6   .727
Iowa 8 4   .667     15 4   .789
Illinois 7 5   .583     15 5   .750
Wisconsin 7 5   .583     12 8   .600
Purdue 6 6   .500     11 9   .550
Minnesota 5 7   .417     10 10   .500
Ohio State 5 7   .417     10 10   .500
Indiana 3 9   .250     8 12   .400
Northwestern 3 9   .250     6 14   .300
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1947–48 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team represented the University of Illinois.

Regular season

After 11 seasons that included three Big Ten Conference championships and a trip to the NCAA tournament, Doug Mills would remove himself as head coach of the Fighting Illini, however; he would remain as the University of Illinois athletic director until 1966. Replacing Mills would be a former Illini player, Harry Combes. Ironically, Combes was a senior during Mills' first season with the Fighting Illini, a team that would win the conference championship. During Combes' 20 years as head coach, the Illini would win 316 games while losing only 150, a .678 winning percentage. During conference play, his teams would win 174 times while only losing 104 games. Combes still owns several Illini coaching records including winning 4 conference championships. Combes most significant feat over his 20 years would be his back-to-back NCAA tournament third-place finishes in 1951 and 1952. Combes came to Illinois after spending five seasons at Champaign High School where he served as boys basketball and baseball coach. While at Champaign High School, from 1939 to 1947, he compiled an impressive of 254-46 record in basketball and an equally substantial baseball record of 70-26-2 (.724) over a five-year period (1937–1942).

With the 'Whiz Kids' gone, a fresh start with a couple of All-American athletes would be the focus for the new head coach. Bill Erickson, Dwight Eddleman, Jack Burmaster, Wally Osterkorn, Fred Green, Burdette Thurlby and Jim Marks would return from a team that finished with an overall record of 14-6, placing second in the Big Ten.

Roster

No Player Position Height Weight Class Hometown High School
7 Robert Menke Center 6' 3" 185 Junior Elgin, Illinois Elgin High School
9 Dick Foley Guard 6' 0" 160 Junior Paris, Illinois Paris High School
11 Jack Burmaster (captain) Forward 6' 2" 188 Senior Elgin, Illinois Elgin High School
13 Walter Osterkorn Center 6' 4" 205 Sophomore Chicago, Illinois Amundsen High School
14 Burdette Thurlby Forward 6' 2" 180 Sophomore Kirkland, Illinois Kirkland High School
16 Bob Doster Forward 6' 1" 170 Junior Decatur, Illinois Decatur High School
17 Joseph Rodriguez Guard 5' 10" 165 Senior Niagara Falls, New York Niagara Falls High School
19 Bob Rowe Center 6' 7" 200 Junior Warren, Illinois Warren High School
21 Walt Kersulis Center 6' 4" 190 Sophomore East St. Louis, Illinois East St. Louis Senior High School
22 Van Anderson Forward 6' 2" 190 Sophomore Sullivan, Illinois Sullivan Community High School
24 Benton Odum Forward 6-1/2 175 Sophomore Marion, Illinois Marion High School
26 Stanley Fronczak Guard 6' 2" 200 Senior Brooklyn, New York Brooklyn High School
27 Jim Marks Forward 6' 1" 175 Junior Edwardsville, Illinois Edwardsville High School
29 Dwight Humphrey Forward 5' 9" 145 Junior Moline, Illinois Moline High School
33 Bill Erickson Forward 6' 1" 174 Sophomore Rockford, Illinois East High School
40 Dwight Eddleman Forward 6' 2" 190 Junior Centralia, Illinois Centralia High School
48 Fred Green Center 6' 7" 206 Junior Urbana, Illinois Urbana High School

Record

Date Opponent Score Result Location Attendance
December 5, 1947 Coe 67–27 Win Champaign, IL 6,905
December 8, 1947 Notre Dame 40–38 Win Champaign, IL 6,905
December 13, 1947 Pittsburgh 70–33 Win Champaign, IL 6,905
December 20, 1947 Penn 70–44 Win Philadelphia, PA 2,500
December 22, 1947 Washington State 71–35 Win Champaign, IL 5,196
December 23, 1947 Washington State 59–42 Win Champaign, IL 4,142
January 1, 1948 Harvard 77–41 Win Champaign, IL 6,905
January 3, 1948 Wisconsin 47–52 Loss Madison, WI 13,000
January 5, 1948 Northwestern 52–47 Win Champaign, IL 6,905
January 10, 1948 Ohio State 61-58 Win Champaign, IL 6,905
January 17, 1948 Minnesota 51–59 Loss Minneapolis, MN 16,690
January 19, 1948 Indiana 46–45 Win Champaign, IL 6,905
January 24, 1948 Wisconsin 57–36 Win Champaign, IL 6,905
January 28, 1948 Marquette 88–66 Win Milwaukee, WI 5,200
February 7, 1948 Michigan 57–66 Loss Champaign, IL 6,905
February 9, 1948 Iowa 61–70 Loss Iowa City, IA 16,048
February 14, 1948 Ohio State 50–57 Loss Columbus, OH 4,449
February 21, 1948 Purdue 98–54 Win West Lafayette, IN 6,905
February 28, 1948 Northwestern 60–43 Win Chicago, IL 17,680
March 1, 1948 Indiana 52–51 Win Bloomington, IN 10,500

Bold Italic connotes conference game

Player stats

Player Games Played Field Goals Free Throws Points
Dwight Eddleman 20 115 47 277
Jack Burmaster 18 72 34 178
Bill Erickson 18 55 37 147
Wally Osterkorn 15 48 45 141
Fred Green 18 43 21 107
Jim Marks 15 33 18 84
Burdette Thurlby 17 28 18 74
Walt Kersulis 15 25 18 68
Van Anderson 14 21 8 50
Stan Fronczak 17 21 7 49
Dick Foley 16 13 6 32
Bob Doster 7 3 4 10
Cliff Fulton 5 3 0 6
Benton Odum 2 2 0 4
Joe Rodriguez 2 1 1 3
Tom Gallagher 6 1 0 2
Bob Menke 1 1 0 2
Robert Rowe 1 0 0 0
Dwight Humphrey 5 0 0 0

[2]

Awards and honors

Team players drafted into the NBA

Round Pick Player NBA Club
2 - Jack Burmaster St. Louis Bombers

[4]

References