BLOOMINGTON, Ind.—A.J. Jenkins blew right past Indiana’s busted coverage. Twice. Nathan Scheelhaase made the right read and the perfect throw — both times. The big-play tandem hooked up for scoring passes of 77 and 67 yards in the first half Saturday, rallying No. 19 Illinois from an early 10-point deficit to a 41-20 victory.This was not just another weekly test for Illinois (6-0, 2-0 Big Ten). The Illini needed to prove they could win on the road, stay among the shrinking unbeaten ranks and prove that those last three 3-point victories were the aberration, not the norm. They accomplished all three three by making the Hoosiers (1-5, 0-2) pay for three big mistakes — on the two TD passes from Scheelhaase to Jenkins and a 66-yard fumble recovery for a score that changed the game. Scheelhaase finished 12 of 22 for 210 yards with three TDs. Jenkins, the Big Ten’s top receiver, had six receptions for 182 yards and two scores.The victory puts Illinois in position to match the 7-0 start of the 1951 team next week when Ohio State visits Champaign.Illinois’ success came as no surprise to Indiana coach Kevin Wilson, who had warned his players all week that the Illini would convert mistakes into scores. They did. The Hoosiers have now lost three straight overall and 13 in a row against ranked opponents, dating to a 31-28 victory over then No. 13 Iowa on Oct. 14, 2006. Now they’ll hit the road for back-to-back road games at No. 4 Wisconsin and Iowa with a still unsettled quarterback rotation. This one was wild and wacky, though.Hoosiers freshman Shane Wynn took the opening kickoff at the 1-yard line, found a hole up the middle and sprinted 99 yards for a TD to make it 7-0 just 12 seconds into the game. On Illinois’ second series, Donovonn Young dropped a handoff near midfield. Brandon McGhee recovered for Indiana and six plays later, Mitch Ewald made a 44-yard field goal to give Indiana a 10-0 lead.Illinois then took matters into its own hands. The Illini picked up an all-out blitz, giving Scheelhaase just enough time to loft a pass to the wide open Jenkins, who caught the ball, turned inside of one defender and had nobody else to beat en route to the 77-yard play that made it 10-7. The Hoosiers were back in field-goal range again on their next series, only this time, Whitney Mercilus stripped the ball from Kiel on a sack, and Tavon Wilson scooped it up and raced 66 yards to give Illinois a 14-10 lead. The Illini never trailed again, even holding the Hoosiers to a field goal after they recovered a fumble at the Illinois 3