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3 Reasons Why Illinois Football is Poised for a 2026 Surprise

The Illini are looking to build off two very successful seasons with a lot of new faces on the roster.

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Illinois football defensive lineman Joe Barna in the 2025 Music CIty Bowl.
Credit to Vincent Bruington; Photographer with Armchair Illini

2026 is being framed as a reset for Illinois football. After losing their quarterback of the past three years, a majority of their starting offensive and defensive line, and bringing in a new defensive staff, many are worried about how the Illini will hold up in a tough Big Ten conference. Despite the turnover, there is a lot to like about this upcoming season. With some key returners such as Matthew Bailey, Xavier Scott, Ca’lil Valentine, Collin Dixon, and more, Illinois football can surprise a lot of people in 2026.

  1. The Schedule Gives Them a Shot

Illinois doesn’t need to be elite out of the gate to stack wins. A manageable nonconference stretch (UAB, Duke, Southern Illinois) offers time to settle in. Afterward, they will get a chance to play the top-ranked Ohio State and Oregon. However, after those games, the Big Ten slate is filled with swing games. Michigan State, Maryland, and Nebraska all feel like toss-up games that Illinois can handle. If Illinois can be successful early, the path to eight wins is easily attainable. 

  1. A Defense Built to Attack

The biggest offseason swing came on the defensive side, where Bret Bielema brought in former Montana head coach Bobby Hauck with one goal in mind: disrupt opposing offenses. In the past three seasons, Bret Bielema has found that the defense has been rather passive. Aaron Henry’s defense tended to react to what offenses were doing rather than imposing their own will on teams. Bobby Hauck is the antithesis of this, as his new defense is meant to be aggressive and imposing. 

“It’s very disruptive. It’s very non-traditional,” offensive coordinator Barry Lunney Jr. said this spring. “It really presses and challenges your rules.”

That’s the point. This isn’t a read-and-react defense waiting on mistakes. It’s designed to create them. With all of the returners in the secondary, this should make for a fun style if they can stop the run. With fewer proven names along the defensive line, Illinois is leaning into development. They are hoping that the confusion, pressure, and unpredictability of this new scheme will level the playing field.

  1. Bielema Has Earned the Benefit of the Doubt

This isn’t unfamiliar territory. Over the last three seasons, Bielema has led Illinois to a 24–14 record. This level of success is something the program has not achieved in over a decade. More importantly, the Illini have consistently beaten preseason expectations during that stretch, turning bowl appearances into a baseline instead of a breakthrough.

It may not look like a contender in May. But Illinois football has made a habit of becoming one when it matters.

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