TL;DR
David Mirkovic addressed Illinois fans during a Twitch stream, thanking them and expressing hopes for a national championship parade. Nearly 2,000 viewers tuned in as he prepared to discuss serious topics.
Apr. 16—GIFFORD — David Mirkovic started his Twitch stream a couple minutes after 2 p.m. Wednesday.
Nearly 2,000 people were already tuned in by the time the Illinois men's basketball forward popped up on the screen. More continued to log on as Mirkovic got closer to his self-imposed 2:25 p.m. deadline to "lock in" and discuss something serious.
Mirkovic was a couple minutes late on that front, too, distracted by the stream chat firing an unending thread of questions his way.
Then, he got down to business.
First was a thank you from Mirkovic to the Illinois fans — one he said he hoped would have come in person during a national championship parade.
Then came similar words of appreciation for the Illini coaching staff, his teammates and the team managers after a 28-win season included a run to the Final Four.
All that led to what the stream audience was impatiently waiting to hear.
"After long thoughts and a lot of thinking about my future with my agent and all of the staff, I decided to ...," Mirkovic said before the video cut out, sending the chat into a frenzy.
A few moments later, a memo appeared on screen.
A throwback to Michael Jordan's announcement that he was returning to the Chicago Bulls in 1995 after a year-plus away from the NBA to play baseball.
Mirkovic addressed his college basketball future with the same two-word announcement: "I'm back."
Then, the video feed on the Twitch stream restarted with Mirkovic wearing his No. 0 Illinois jersey and the cowboy hat that gained fame after the Illini's Elite Eight victory against Iowa on March 28 in Houston. A half-dozen Illinois team managers filled the room behind him.
"Ya'll thought I was leaving?" Mirkovic said after appearing back on screen. "Ya'll got scared? Ya'll actually don't know me like that?"
Brad Underwood wasn't watching Mirkovic's Wednesday afternoon stream. The 62-year-old Illinois coach hadn't even heard of Twitch before he found out that was how his standout freshman forward was going to announce his return for the 2026-27 season.
That Mirkovic would choose a unique method to publicize that decision, though, didn't surprise his coach.
"We all know he was going to be himself," Underwood said a few hours later on Wednesday evening, ahead of his annual Kickin' Cancer event at Gordyville USA in Gifford. "That's the beauty of Mirk. There's tremendous personality. There's tremendous talent. You're looking at a guy that's got an opportunity to live the old cliché that the best thing about freshmen is they become sophomores. I'm excited to see what that develops into."
Mirkovic's standout freshman season at Illinois was overshadowed in some ways by classmate Keaton Wagler turning into the Big Ten Freshman of the Year, a consensus Second Team All-American and the Jerry West Award winner. But the 6-foot-9, 250-pound Mirkovic did average 13.3 points on 48/37/76 shooting to go with a team-high eight rebounds and 2.6 assists per game.