Basketball
Why Illinois basketball fans will never forget Ben Humrichous
Humrichous was the team’s best spot-up shooter and most versatile defender off the bench.
Illinois basketball will miss the 6-foot-9 shooter who came off the bench. Every great team needs stars. But the teams that reach the Final Four usually have something else too: players willing to sacrifice individual success for team success.
Few players embodied that better than Ben Humrichous.
When Humrichous arrived at Illinois after stops at Huntington University and Evansville, he was viewed primarily as a shooter. By the time his college career ended on the Final Four stage, he had become one of the most important role players on one of the best teams in program history.
His statistics won’t jump off the page. Humrichous averaged 5.8 points and 3.9 rebounds while shooting 36 percent from three-point range during his final season in Champaign. But his impact stretched far beyond the box score.
In an era where many players seek bigger roles and larger scoring opportunities, Humrichous embraced whatever Brad Underwood needed to win. He could have pursued a larger offensive role elsewhere. Instead, he returned to Illinois for one final season, determined to master the little things.
That mentality ultimately became his legacy.
The defensive growth
His greatest growth came on the defensive end. Underwood famously joked a year earlier that Humrichous would “give up 20 to Izzo’s mom.” By the end of his final season, he had transformed into one of Illinois’ most versatile defenders. The 6-foot-9 forward routinely guarded wings, forwards, and post players while helping anchor a defense that powered Illinois to Indianapolis.
Humrichous also embodied the traits Illinois fans have always appreciated. He played hard, accepted coaching, rebounded, defended, and never worried about touches or accolades. His focus remained on winning.
Perhaps most impressive was the perspective he carried throughout the journey. Following Illinois’ Final Four loss, Humrichous’ first reaction was gratitude. “Praise God for the gift that this was.”
From an under-recruited NAIA player during the COVID era to a Final Four contributor with NBA workouts already on his résumé, few players have traveled a more unlikely path.
The numbers tell part of the story. The way Ben Humrichous represented Illinois basketball tells the rest.
