Keaton Wagler’s fearless 19-point night powers No. 16 Illinois past No. 19 Iowa 75-69, proving the Illini are the Big Ten’s most dangerous road outfit and exposing Iowa’s late-game flaw without star guard Bennett Stirtz on the floor.
Instant Takeaways: Why This Win Reshapes the Big Ten Race
Illinois walked into one of the loudest venues in the league, absorbed Iowa’s best counter-punch, and still left with a 75-69 victory that vaults Brad Underwood’s crew into a tie for third at 4-1. The Illini are now 3-0 in true road games inside the conference—matching Purdue for the best away mark—and every opponent left on their schedule just felt the temperature rise.
Wagler Delivers the Knockout Sequence
The sophomore guard’s 19 points came in every flavor: transition three, baseline floater, two fearless drives through contact, and the dagger pull-up with 1:08 left that shoved Illinois back to a six-point cushion. Wagler is averaging 14.2 ppg in Big Ten play, but Sunday was the first time he’s been the outright scoring leader in a ranked matchup—exactly the secondary scoring Underwood has pleaded for since conference play opened.
Stojakovic & Boswell Form a 34-Point Safety Net
Andrej Stojakovic (17 pts, 5-9 FG) punished Iowa’s late rotations with two corner triples, while Kylan Boswell added 17 and orchestrated the offense to a tidy 1.19 points-per-possession clip. When Iowa surged within four, it was Boswell’s refusal to overdribble—quick reversals that found Wagler in rhythm—that stalled the comeback.
Iowa’s Rally Was Real—Until It Wasn’t
Fran McCaffery’s group erased a 17-point second-half hole and had four separate possessions to cut the margin to one or two, but the common thread was the absence of leading scorer Bennett Stirtz. Stirtz picked up his fourth foul at 11:36; over the next seven minutes Iowa outscored Illinois 18-10 yet never took the lead. When Stirtz returned, he missed a point-blank layup that would have made it 71-69 with 55 seconds left—Illinois rebounded, hit free throws, and the Hawkeye momentum flat-lined.
Hawkeye Box Score Blues
- Tavion Banks: 16 pts, 6-15 FG—solid, but zero second-chance buckets
- Tate Sage: 13 pts off the bench, yet 3 turnovers in the final four minutes
- Stirtz: held 6 points below season average; 4 fouls limit him to 27 minutes
- Team: 9-17 at the line, worst single-game clip (52.9%) since last February
Illinois’ Road Formula: Defense + Tempo Control
The Illini opened on an 8-0 burst, forcing Iowa into four empty trips, and never trailed. They held the Hawkeyes to 0.98 PPP—Iowa’s second-woroute mark of the season—by switching every flare screen and running shooters off the arc (Iowa 6-24 from three). On offense, Illinois milked clock when needed, turning the game into a half-court chess match Iowa couldn’t solve without its best perimeter creator.
Bracketology Ripple: Illini Rise, Hawkeyes Slide
With the win, Illinois climbs inside the top-15 of every predictive metric (KenPom 12, NET 11) and owns three Quadrant-1 victories, tying them with Michigan State for the most in the Big Ten. Iowa, meanwhile, drops to 2-3 in league play and 0-2 at home against ranked foes—enough to nudge them toward the 7/10 seed line in early brackets. The Hawkeyes still travel to Maryland and Indiana this week; slip again and they’ll be flirting with the cut-line come March.
What’s Next
Illinois returns to Champaign for a Wednesday date with surging Northwestern, while Iowa heads to College Park on Thursday to face a Maryland team that just upset Wisconsin. Circle Jan. 26 on your calendar: the rematch in the State Farm Center could decide double-bye positioning in the Big Ten tournament.
For the fastest, most authoritative breakdown of every big game, keep your eyes on onlytrustedinfo.com—where the narrative hits before the nets stop swinging.