Belmont’s momentum didn’t blink Saturday. The Bruins, playing like a team that’s been stacking wins for weeks, handled Illinois (Chi.) 68-62 on February 7, 2026, extending a scorching run and reinforcing the gap between a 22-3 contender and a 13-12 group still searching for consistency.
In a game without published period-by-period scoring, the story still landed cleanly: Belmont executed just enough late to keep Illinois (Chi.) from flipping the result, and the Flames couldn’t find the extra possessions or finishing punch needed to turn a six-point margin into a statement win.
Game flow: Belmont stays in control, Illinois (Chi.) can’t finish the chase
The final score reflected a tight, possession-by-possession contest, but the bigger picture favored Belmont. The Bruins entered with a five-game winning streak (WWWWW) and left with it intact, showing the composure that typically travels with a 22-3 record.
Illinois (Chi.) came in trending up after a rough patch (LLWWW), and the Flames did enough to keep it within one late push. But Belmont’s ability to manage the closing minutes — turning a close game into a controlled finish — was the separator.
Turning point: late-game execution tilts it
With the game sitting inside a two-possession window, Illinois (Chi.) needed a clean run — a stop, a score, then another stop — to seize control. Instead, Belmont got the kind of endgame sequence good teams bank: enough scoring to maintain the cushion, enough defensive resistance to prevent a swing.
That’s how a six-point game becomes decisive. Not with a blowout stretch, but with the steadiness to avoid the mistakes that invite one.
What it means going forward
Belmont
At 22-3, Belmont continues to build a résumé around winning in different environments and game scripts. A 68-62 road-style grind is a useful data point for a team that’s been living in the win column — it shows the Bruins can win without needing a track meet or a perfect shooting night. The streak stays alive, and so does the pressure on the rest of the league to match their week-to-week consistency.
Illinois (Chi.)
Illinois (Chi.) falls to 13-12, and the frustration is familiar: competitive enough to be in the game, but not sharp enough to take it. The recent form (LLWWW) suggested the Flames were stabilizing; this one tested that progress. If they’re going to convert close losses into wins, it starts with late-game details — valuing possessions, generating clean looks, and getting stops without fouling or losing assignments.
Final
Belmont 68, Illinois (Chi.) 62 — February 7, 2026 (venue: TBD).

