The math finally drowned Northwestern.
The Wildcats (20-28-1, 7-20 B1G) entered Champaign needing a big showing to keep its Big Ten Tournament pulse alive.
Three games later, NU heads back to Evanston riding an L-shaped broomstick after being shellacked by rival Illinois (27-23, 13-14 B1G) and eliminated from postseason contention.
The ’Cats have been mathematically eliminated from Big Ten Tournament contention. Even if Northwestern sweeps Rutgers next week, the best it can end with is 10 conference wins. With multiple teams already at 11 wins and tiebreakers that would’ve stacked against them anyway, there is no path to Omaha for Ben Greenspan’s crew.
Here’s the recap of the deflating trip down I-57.
Game 1: Illinois 12, Northwestern 0 (run-rule)
Ryan Weaver started his outing off strong and looked like he was maybe destined for a big day, emphatically freezing AJ Putty to end the first.
As it turns out, that would instead be the beginning of the end.
Illinois rectified its quiet first inning with a loud second one. Collin Jennings jumped on a fastball and sent it over the right field wall, an opposite-field shot that put the Illini up 1-0.
That felt more like a warning shot than an actual threat, as the real damage came in the third. Six runs. Five hits. A hit batter. A wild pitch. A sacrifice fly. Northwestern starter Ryan Weaver couldn’t get out of the inning and by the time Alex Grant jogged in from the bullpen, the scoreboard already read 8-0 Illinois.
The fourth inning was more of the same. Jack Zebig doubled and scored on a Kyle Schupmann single. Jennings tripled to right, scoring another. Illinois continued to hammer Grant and make him uncomfortable, leading 12-0 by the end of the fourth.
Northwestern’s offense mustered a lackluster three hits. Jackson Freeman doubled in the second — the highlight of a dark Northwestern night. Ryan Kucherak stole a base in the third and got stranded.
That was the story of the offense. Eight runners left on base in game one. A night that hitting coach Tyler Rost would like to forget.
After six and a half innings, Illinois secured the run-rule shutout win, sending Northwestern packing in hopes of a better Saturday.
Game 2: Illinois 4, Northwestern 3
For ’Cats faithful, this one hurt worse because it was right there. A win on national television in sight for Northwestern was snatched away in the game’s dying moments.
Illinois jumped out to a 3-0 lead. One run in the first, two in the second. The Illini looked comfortable, coasting off the momentum of Friday’s beating.
Then, Owen McElfatrick happened.
The senior slugged his 35th career home run in the top of the sixth, a solo shot that brought him within one of Eric Mogentale’s program record. More importantly, it got Northwestern on the board.
The first run of the weekend for the Wildcats. The spark NU had been missing all weekend.
Matt Kouser kept the ‘Cats in it, delivering his fourth quality start in five appearances. Three runs on six hits over six innings. Three strikeouts. Three walks. Exactly what Northwestern needed.
In the eighth, McElfatrick struck again, driving in Marty Kaplan with his second base hit of the day. The Wildcats found themselves breathing down Illinois’ neck heading into the top of the ninth.
Jay Slater crushed a double to dead center and was promptly pinch-ran for a speedier Charlie Caruso. Then, Jake Yang worked a two-out walk to give the ‘Cats runners at the corners.
Jackson Freeman delivered.
While the hit was later ruled an error, Freeman worked an impressive 3-2 count after falling behind and it looked like the momentum was all-NU.
Things can never be that simple in sports and that’s especially the case in baseball.
Illinois’ Will Johannes stepped up to the plate in the bottom of the ninth and after taking ball one, lasered the first pitch in the zone over the right field wall.
Just like that, all that promise in a must-win game was out the window. The Illini had walked it off. On to game three.
Game 3: Illinois 10, Northwestern 3
By Sunday, the situation was dire. Another loss would mean the ‘Cats hopes of a tournament berth were over.
Illinois scored four in the first, two in the second, one in the third, two in the fourth, one in the eighth. Sam Hliboki lasted one inning, allowing four runs on three hits.
Jack Lausch provided the only real muscle on Sunday. His 14th home run of the season cleared the center field wall in the sixth. That is tied for fourth-most in a single season in program history.
Jake Yang and Nick Barron added RBI singles in the ninth.
Too little, too late.
Garrett Shearer threw four innings of one-run relief — something to build on for next year.
But next year is not now. Now is a 10-3 loss and a sweep and a season that leaves Northwestern with nothing to play for except its own pride.
What’s next?
Northwestern has not made the Big Ten Tournament since 2017, when it nearly had the “bloodiest” conference title in Big Ten history after beating three of the top four seeds to stumble into the finals.
This weekend, the ‘Cats were officially eliminated for the ninth straight season.
For a team that entered April with hopes of climbing out of the Big Ten basement, the slide is complete.
An exciting series win versus Michigan State at the start of last month had fans dreaming for more. Since that consequential April 5 afternoon in Evanston, Northwestern is 2-13 in Big Ten play.
That is why it is where it is and some of those tough close losses hurt more more now.
The only thing left is a final series against Rutgers, where the ’Cats could potentially play spoiler for the Scarlet Nights, who currently are in a four-way tie for the final three spots in the tournament. It’s also a time to celebrate the seniors who will play for the last time in Evanston.
After this Sunday the season is over. The wait for next year begins. Again.
