I went to the final regular-season game at State Farm Center on Tuesday. It was Senior Night when Illinois hosted Oregon and it was great to see Ben Humrichous and Kylan Boswell be honored before the game. However, another player was also receiving senior accolades: AJ Redd.

There are players who arrive at a program with fanfare and expectations. AJ Redd was not one of those players. The Chicago native came to Illinois as a student manager, someone who carries bags, does laundry, and sets up drills and exists, largely, in the background. What he has become over the past four years is something far more interesting than any highly recruited prospect.

Redd eventually earned his way onto the court as a walk-on, grinding through practices, earning the respect of his coaches and teammates one day at a time. Redd stayed for all four years. He became, fittingly, the only true four-year player honored on Senior Night.

The game played out exactly as it should have. Orange Krush began chanting his name early in the second half. When Coach Underwood sent Redd onto the floor with about three and a half minutes remaining, the roar from the crowd set the tone for what followed.

What followed was, first, a nearly 28-foot pull-up three that clanged off nothing. Underwood called a timeout. The coach was not amused. “He’s done one dumb thing in four years,” Underwood said afterward in the locker room, which was both a rebuke and, quietly, a tribute.

The redemption came quickly. A between-the-legs, backward bounce pass from Mihalio Petrovich found Redd in transition on the left wing, and he buried the three-pointer. State Farm Center came unglued. Then, just to complete the story properly, Redd drove hard to the basket against an Oregon defender and finished the layup, giving him five points, a new career high, in his final minutes as an Illini on his home court.

Andrej Stojakovic, who has only known Redd for nine months and was the real star of the game with 21 points and 12 rebounds, said simply: “No one can replace what he brings to this team.”

The manager-turned-walk-on had more points on Senior Night than the leader of this team, Kylan Boswell. That’s something.

What a great moment for the young man.