A three-hour thunderstorm that pushed back Friday's scheduled opener added another 17 hours to that wait.
But Saturday afternoon, Illinois finally delivered the cathartic blowout the team was looking for, dropping 38 first-half points on Kent State on the way to a 52-3 win.
Just eight days earlier, head coach Tim Beckman was abruptly fired after university-hired lawyers found evidence that he had interfered in medical decisions. The investigation, which continues, was sparked back in May by former offensive lineman Simon Cvijanovic's allegations that Beckman and others had pressured him to play hurt and misled him about injuries. Beckman has denied he did anything wrong and hinted he might sue over the remainder of his contract.
''We have all these things outside of us trying to get us off beat, and (the weather delay) was just another factor trying to get us off beat, and I think we handled it very well,'' said Illinois linebacker Mason Monheim, who grabbed one of the three interceptions Kent State quarterback Colin Reardon threw.
''There were a lot of happy faces out there,'' added Bill Cubit, the offensive coordinator who was named interim head coach when Beckman was fired.
Friday's delay sent the team, coaches and staff scrambling late at night to book hotel rooms in two cities, Champaign and Bloomington, about an hour northwest.
The brightest spot for Kent State might have been Shayne Hynes' 43-yard field goal with 8:30 left in the game, avoiding the shutout. The Flashes had two touchdowns wiped out by penalties, and Illinois blocked a second-quarter field goal attempt.
''You get down 21-zip real fast in the first quarter, it's tough to climb out of,'' Kent State coach Paul Haynes said, adding that Illinois played like a team with something to prove. ''Then you're playing a day later and all the madness of all that. It's just tough.''
On Saturday, the Illini put together the kind of dominating performance that will let them put the concerns of the past few months aside, at least for now.
The Illini offense didn't put up huge numbers on the day - 342 total yards - but it didn't have to. Three of Illinois' touchdowns were on single-play drives, covering 5, 6 and 7 yards.
Junior Wes Lunt looked like the surgical quarterback Illinois hoped he would be when he transferred from Oklahoma State after the 2012 season. He was 11 of 19 for 162 yards and four touchdowns before he left the game in the third quarter.
Lunt and redshirt freshman Chayce Crouch spread the ball around, too, combining to hit 10 different receivers. None of the receivers caught more than two balls, but combined for touchdowns.
And the defense, always a sore spot under Beckman, gave up just 245 yards, including 59 on the ground. Kent State was 3-18 on third-down conversions. Seven times the Flashes were forced off the field after running three plays or less.
But for Illinois, there were still reminders of the mistake-prone teams of Beckman's three seasons in Champaign.
One ugly first-quarter sequence included three straight penalties - a hold that wiped out a 19-yard run, a delay of game and an illegal formation.
Even then, though, Kent State let the Illini off the hook.
Ernest Calhoun fumbled the punt Golden Flash defense forced. Davontay Kwaaning recovered it under a pile of orange jerseys at the Kent State 28-yard line.
Five plays later the Illini were in the end zone again, this time a 21-yard pass from Lunt to Josh Ferguson for a 21-0 lead with more than five minutes left in the first quarter.
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