Friday, February 25, 2005

Men's Cagers Set to Host Quakers,Tigers



It's a do-or-die weekend for the men's basketball team. With only four games remaining in the regular season, the Red (11-12, 6-4 Ivy) needs to run the table to have a shot at the Ivy title, and it will get a chance to make up some ground on league-leading Penn (15-8, 8-1 Ivy) when the two teams meet tonight at 7 p.m. at Newman Arena. Tomorrow, Princeton (12-11, 3-6 Ivy) comes to town for a 7 p.m. contest that will be televised on the YES Network. This weekend's games come just two weeks after Cornell played at Princeton and Penn. Also tomorrow, seniors Eric Taylor, Cody Toppert, and Chris Vandenberg will be honored as part of senior night. 

"Princeton's only played three games since we played them, and Penn's only played two games," said head coach Steve Donahue. "It's different because we know each other. Even in those two weeks for us, we've changed dramatically, just with injuries and guys playing."

After splitting last weekend's games against Dartmouth and Harvard, the Red needs four wins plus three Penn losses to clinch at least a share of the league title. If the two teams finished tied for first, they will then play each other in a one-game playoff at a neutral sit e. However, the last time Cornell beat Penn twice in one season was in 1989.

Against Dartmouth last Friday, the Red fell behind early and could not recover, losing 67-54. With sophomore point guard Graham Dow hampered by injury, freshman Jason Canady stepped up with a career and team-high 20 points against the Green, including 16 in the final nine minutes. Starting the following night, Canady put up 15 more points in the Red's 67-63 win at Harvard, and was named Ivy League Rookie of the Week for his efforts. Junior Ryan Rourke also had a big night against the Crimson, posting a career-high 27 points.

This weekend presents a formidable challenge for the Red, as the team has not swept Princeton and Penn at home since its Ivy title season in 1988. Two weeks ago, Cornell won its first game at Princeton since 1985, beating the Tigers 66-58. The next night at the Palestra, the Red had a chance to become only the fourth team ever in league history to sweep the Tigers and Quakers on the road, but dropped a 64-50 contest. Serving as an assistant coach at Penn for 10 years, Donahue is still winless against his mentor and Penn head coach Fran Dunphy. 

"We have to do the things we do well to win games, and for me, that's doing a real good job on the defensive boards, taking care of transition defense, and taking care of the ball, " Donahue said. "When we take care of the ball and our turnovers are in the 10-12 range, we usually are a very good basketball team, and that's what we need to do this weekend."

While Penn looked like it was ready to run away with the league title last weekend, Yale stunned the previously-undefeated Quakers with a 78-60 win in New Haven, CT. The Bulldogs built on a five-point lead at halftime, and limited Penn to 28.1 percent shooting in the second half. 

"It's a revenge game for a team that I know physically is able to match up with Penn. [Yale's win] doesn't surprise me," Donahue said. "[Penn's] a team that I think really understands how to win games, gets the maximum amount out of each guy -- one of those teams. But on any given night, anybody in this league can beat anybody. When Yale's at home and Penn has to go there after really beating [the Bulldogs] easily at the Palestra, that was a good opportunity for Yale to jump them."

Penn is led by senior guard Tim Begley, who has compiled a team-leading 14.0 points, 5.6 rebounds, and 4.8 assists per game. Sophomore guard Ibrahim Jaaber has upped his scoring average by almost five points per game from a year ago, and is second on the team in scoring with 11.0 points per game.

"Obviously, we can really look at our film and what we did well and what we didn't do well and try to correct it," Donahue said. "We're trying to execute and maybe come up with a wrinkle here and there to make us more successful than [when] we were down there."

Since its loss to Cornell two weeks ago, the Tigers have gone 2-1, most recently beating up on Brown 69-52 last Saturday. The reigning league champion, Princeton, is currently sixth in the conference standings. Senior center Judson Wallace is the team's leading scorer and rebounder, with 12.8 points and 5.2 rebounds per game, while senior guard Will Venable is second in scoring with 10.5 points per game.

Monday, February 21, 2005

Men's Hockey Extends Unbeaten Streak to 12 Games

Friday night at Lynah Rink featured a rare goaltender match-up in college hockey -- two Texas goaltenders. In the end, sophomore David McKee, from Irving, Texas, bested Rensselaer's Andrew Martin, from Plano, Texas, as No. 4 Cornell (19-4-3, 15-2-2 ECACHL) beat the Engineers (13-18-2, 5-13-1 ECACHL), 3-0.

"I played with [Martin] growing up," McKee said. "He went to college and played at Fairfield before I did, so he was playing in college way before I was. I was hoping for the opportunity and he's a good friend of mine actually, so it was a fun game to play."

McKee had a relatively easier night than his fellow Texan, as the Red peppered Martin with 34 shots on the night. Cornell was balanced offensively, with three different players scoring for the Red.

"I just thought we did a good job being patient throughout the whole course of the game," said head coach Mike Schafer '86. "It was a good first period, and I thought both teams played solid, feeling each other out."

While Cornell controlled possession throughout the first period, it had some of its best scoring chances in the last five minutes before the intermission. With 5:25 remaining, sophomore Byron Bitz stole the puck from behind the RPI net, and fed it to classmate Evan Salmela. Salmela then fired a shot from the right point which was blocked by the defense. Bitz recovered the puck in the low slot and wristed another shot, which Martin grabbed with a quick glove.

The Cornell power play unit saw its first action of the night after RPI's Vic Pereira drew a boarding penalty at 15:59. Quickly setting up in the Rensselaer zone, the first unit worked the puck around for nearly the entire two minutes.

"I was a little concerned, because you get out there that long, and all you can see in your mind is the guy coming out of the penalty box fresh," Schafer said. "All he has to do is get his hands on it and the other nine guys are done."

After RPI knocked the puck out to the neutral zone, senior assistant captain Charlie Cook brought it back in with time winding down on the man advantage. Freshman Topher Scott worked the puck around to junior assistant captain Matt Moulson, who fed it to an open Cook in the high slot. Cook's ensuing shot wobbled toward the goal, beating Martin just as Pereira stepped out of the box.

"We were moving the puck around quite a bit, I think we took seven or eight shots," Cook said. "Topher passed the puck out, I got a piece of it, didn't get too much on it, and it somehow found its way to the net. I think it just went up and down and went off the tip of [Martin's] glove."

The Red put the pressure on RPI at the start of the second period, as junior Jon Gleed took the puck in on net after senior Paul Varteressian's shot was blocked at the top of the right circle. While Cornell again held possession in the Rensselaer end, the Red's second goal came in transition.

Junior Daniel Pegoraro brought the puck up through the neutral zone, and beat the RPI defense as he crossed the blue line. Skating down to the right circle, Pegoraro dropped the puck back to a tailing Shane Hynes, who wristed it over Martin's right shoulder at 14:34.

The game got physical as the second period continued. RPI's Matt McNeely hit Moulson along the right boards in the Cornell zone, and was called for interference. The resulting scrum led to a charging penalty on Hynes, and the next six minutes saw little five-on-five play.

"[Rensselaer has] a good, solid, physical team, and there were a lot of big hits out there both ways," Schafer said. "It was the kind of game that our team relishes playing in -- a strong, physical, tough hockey game, and we're built for that type of event."

The Red power play saw some more ice time after Blake Pickett was called for holding at 11:15. After the man-advantage ended without a goal for Cornell, Scott Romfo was sent to the box for hitting from behind just 13 seconds after the end of the previous power play.

Cornell went to work again on the man advantage, and this time it was able to capitalize. Scott found senior captain Mike Knoepfli at the right point, and Knoepfli fired a shot that banged off the crossbar and in at 15:01.

"The credit's got to go to [Hynes] and [freshman] Ray [Sawada]," said Knoepfli. "All night on the power play, the goalie didn't see any of the shots that Moulson or I were shooting. They did a great job getting in his way, and I saw the top corner open and just shot it there."

The third period was relatively quiet, as neither team had many scoring chances. Pereira and Bitz were each called for two penalties in a row, resulting in four minutes of four-on-four play midway through the period.

McKee finished with 20 saves for his seventh shutout of the season, taking sole possession of second place in program history with 12. He is one shutout away from tying the all-time mark set by Ken Dryden '69.

Friday, February 18, 2005

Men's Hockey Hosts RPI, Union

With two weeks left in the regular season, the No. 4 men's hockey team (18-4-3, 14-2-2 ECACHL) sits atop the league standings with a four-point lead over Colgate. This weekend, the Red will try to move one step closer to clinching the No. 1 seed in the ECACHL tournament when it battles RPI (13-17-2, 5-12-1 ECACHL) and Union (11-18-1, 7-11-0 ECACHL) tonight and tomorrow at Lynah Rink. Both contests begin at 7 p.m.

"Everybody's fighting for position in the standings," said head coach Mike Schafer '86. "The reasons we're fighting for might be a little different than the reasons RPI and Union are fighting for, but everybody's trying to jockey and get themselves the best position in the standings. It's kind of the unique thing about our playoffs, going down the stretch drive here, everybody has the same thing at stake."

Tomorrow's senior night will honor Charlie Cook, Jeremy Downs, Mike Iggulden, Mike Knoepfli, and Paul Varteressian, as it will be the last regular season home game of their careers. The class of 2005 has racked up impressive credentials in its four years at Cornell, including a Frozen Four showing, two NCAA appearances, one ECACHL title, and three Ivy League titles. 

"Senior night is coming a little too soon," Cook said. "It's going to be a bittersweet experience, I'm sure, but I guess I'm ready."

Junior assistant captain Matt Moulson echoed Cook's sentiments.

"I've played with these guys for three years, it's sad to see a great bunch of guys, a good class leave," Moulson said. "Senior night always touches home with everyone. It'll be an emotional weekend."

After taking three points off of its travel partner, Colgate, two weeks ago, the Red further distanced itself last weekend with a four-point effort on the road against Princeton and Yale, while the Raiders only came away with three. Last Friday, Cornell blanked the Tigers 5-0, with five different players netting a goal. The Red's special teams accounted for three tallies, with Iggulden netting his second shorthanded goal of the season. Sophomore goalie David McKee recorded his sixth shutout of the season, which tied him for second all-time in program history with David LeNeveu '05. 

The next night against Yale, the Red fell behind early in the first period, but answered just 22 seconds later with a tally from sophomore Byron Bitz. Cornell tacked on two more scores in the period en route to a 5-2 victory. For the second night in a row, five different scorers recorded goals for the Red, and also for the second night in a row, Iggulden netted a shorthanded goal -- the eventual game-winner. 

During its trip to the Capital District in January, the Red took four points from Union and RPI. Another Iggulden shorthanded goal, this time in overtime, sealed a 2-1 victory over the Dutchmen, while the Red beat up on an under-manned Engineer squad the next night, winning 5-0.

"RPI will be a much different team than when we played up there," Schafer said. "Kirk MacDonald was out of the game, Oren Eizenman, two of their better players didn't play. You take two of anybody's top four scorers out of the game, you're going to have a whole different type of team."

MacDonald leads the team in scoring with 31 points, and last weekend, he scored the game-winner against Brown with nine seconds remaining in regulation. 3-3-0 in its last six conference games, the Engineers sit in tenth place in the conference standings, and will need two wins to remain in the hunt for home-ice in the first round of the conference playoffs. Union, currently in ninth, is only one point behind seventh place Clarkson and St. Lawrence. After starting conference play 6-2-0, the Dutchmen have dropped 11 of their last 12 conference games. Jordan Webb and Scott Seney are tied for the team league in scoring with 24 points, while goalies Kris Mayotte and Justin Mrazek have been splitting time between the pipes. 

"Union always gives us a difficult time, especially in their rink, and we just have to play our game at home in Lynah and keep the streak going," said junior Shane Hynes. The Red are unbeaten at home this season.

The Red will head up to the North Country next weekend for its final two games of the regular season against Clarkson and St. Lawrence. With a first-round bye in hand, Cornell will return to Lynah Rink three weeks from now for the second round of the ECACHL playoffs.

With two weeks left in the regular season, the No. 4 men's hockey team (18-4-3, 14-2-2 ECACHL) sits atop the league standings with a four-point lead over Colgate. This weekend, the Red will try to move one step closer to clinching the No. 1 seed in the ECACHL tournament when it battles RPI (13-17-2, 5-12-1 ECACHL) and Union (11-18-1, 7-11-0 ECACHL) tonight and tomorrow at Lynah Rink. Both contests begin at 7 p.m.
"Everybody's fighting for position in the standings," said head coach Mike Schafer '86. "The reasons we're fighting for might be a little different than the reasons RPI and Union are fighting for, but everybody's trying to jockey and get themselves the best position in the standings. It's kind of the unique thing about our playoffs, going down the stretch drive here, everybody has the same thing at stake."
Tomorrow's senior night will honor Charlie Cook, Jeremy Downs, Mike Iggulden, Mike Knoepfli, and Paul Varteressian, as it will be the last regular season home game of their careers. The class of 2005 has racked up impressive credentials in its four years at Cornell, including a Frozen Four showing, two NCAA appearances, one ECACHL title, and three Ivy League titles.
"Senior night is coming a little too soon," Cook said. "It's going to be a bittersweet experience, I'm sure, but I guess I'm ready."
Junior assistant captain Matt Moulson echoed Cook's sentiments.
"I've played with these guys for three years, it's sad to see a great bunch of guys, a good class leave," Moulson said. "Senior night always touches home with everyone. It'll be an emotional weekend."
After taking three points off of its travel partner, Colgate, two weeks ago, the Red further distanced itself last weekend with a four-point effort on the road against Princeton and Yale, while the Raiders only came away with three. Last Friday, Cornell blanked the Tigers 5-0, with five different players netting a goal. The Red's special teams accounted for three tallies, with Iggulden netting his second shorthanded goal of the season. Sophomore goalie David McKee recorded his sixth shutout of the season, which tied him for second all-time in program history with David LeNeveu '05.
The next night against Yale, the Red fell behind early in the first period, but answered just 22 seconds later with a tally from sophomore Byron Bitz. Cornell tacked on two more scores in the period en route to a 5-2 victory. For the second night in a row, five different scorers recorded goals for the Red, and also for the second night in a row, Iggulden netted a shorthanded goal -- the eventual game-winner.
During its trip to the Capital District in January, the Red took four points from Union and RPI. Another Iggulden shorthanded goal, this time in overtime, sealed a 2-1 victory over the Dutchmen, while the Red beat up on an under-manned Engineer squad the next night, winning 5-0.
"RPI will be a much different team than when we played up there," Schafer said. "Kirk MacDonald was out of the game, Oren Eizenman, two of their better players didn't play. You take two of anybody's top four scorers out of the game, you're going to have a whole different type of team."
MacDonald leads the team in scoring with 31 points, and last weekend, he scored the game-winner against Brown with nine seconds remaining in regulation. 3-3-0 in its last six conference games, the Engineers sit in tenth place in the conference standings, and will need two wins to remain in the hunt for home-ice in the first round of the conference playoffs. Union, currently in ninth, is only one point behind seventh place Clarkson and St. Lawrence. After starting conference play 6-2-0, the Dutchmen have dropped 11 of their last 12 conference games. Jordan Webb and Scott Seney are tied for the team league in scoring with 24 points, while goalies Kris Mayotte and Justin Mrazek have been splitting time between the pipes.
"Union always gives us a difficult time, especially in their rink, and we just have to play our game at home in Lynah and keep the streak going," said junior Shane Hynes. The Red are unbeaten at home this season.
The Red will head up to the North Country next weekend for its final two games of the regular season against Clarkson and St. Lawrence. With a first-round bye in hand, Cornell will return to Lynah Rink three weeks from now for the second round of the ECACHL playoffs.
- See more at: http://www.cornellsun.com/node/13880#sthash.zLH5QcQy.dpuf

Wednesday, February 16, 2005

NHL Judgment Day Arrives

The 2004-05 NHL season hangs in the balance as I write this, with the players' association having until 11 a.m. EST today to agree to a new collective bargaining agreement, which would include a $44.7 million individual team cap. If it does not, Bettman '74 will cancel the season at 1 p.m.

When the lockout began exactly five months ago today, hockey fans and players alike anticipated a long labor dispute. After months of negotiation, there is finally closure on this unfortunate season. Whether the season is indeed cancelled or an extremely shortened season is played, there is already a stain on the game.

Let's say there is a shortened season. How many games are they going to squeeze in? Well, if the season started at the beginning of March, under the current schedule, there would be about 20 games left. That's certainly not enough to compile any meaningful results. If the league pushes the playoffs back, we're looking at hockey in July, and that would definitely interfere with the start of next season. So, even if the players do agree to this salary cap, a shortened season is still a terrible idea.

Instead of a 20-game "season," the NHL should instead put together a 20-game exhibition schedule for every team. That way, the fans get their hockey, the players can get reacquainted with their teammates, and the league can make some money. Put the Stanley Cup away for one year, but still bring hockey back into the American sports landscape.

However, the season will probably be cancelled and the possibility of an exhibition season is also unlikely. It looks like the NHL -- and its players, because they're just as much at fault -- will be writing an unfortunate chapter into the history book of modern sports.

If this deal does not get done today, negotiations need to continue immediately. Even though this labor dispute has been on the horizon for almost two years, postponing the new CBA is not an option. Obviously, some sort of salary cap should be implemented, but the league's marketing department needs to kick into overdrive to win back its fan base and maybe attract some new fans.

There's also the 2006 Olympics and the 2005 draft to worry about. If this season is lost, then NHL players will not be playing in Turin next year. With the potential next Wayne Gretzky entering the league next year in Sidney Crosby, a fair draft order needs to be established.

This whole thing comes at a difficult time for the American sports fan. With the Super Bowl finished and March Madness still weeks away, the next few weeks are arguably one of the most boring sports periods of the year. With no hockey, it's been all basketball, all the time, on SportsCenter. ESPN is so desperate for material that it's been recycling segments from a week ago. It also tried to hype up the Pro Bowl, but no serious sports fan was going to watch that game for more than five minutes anyway.

America is a four-sport country. We don't have the attention span or the craziness to devote ourselves to only one single sport. With Europeans enjoying NHL players over in their hockey leagues, Americans should take something back -- namely European soccer. Now, obviously the world's best soccer players aren't going to transfer to the MLS, but they are easily accessible through Fox Soccer Channel. Formerly Fox Sports World, Fox Soccer Channel features matches from the English, German, French, and Argentinean leagues, as well as the Champions League and World Cup qualifiers.

While most Americans aren't really enamored with the game, there are many parallels to our sports: $100 million-plus payrolls (see Chelsea and Manchester United), intense rivalries, multiple leagues to follow, fan violence (AS Roma was forced to play a December game in an empty stadium after one of its fans threw a coin at a referee), and more. And, since there are no commercials during soccer broadcasts (except during halftime), watching soccer will probably increase the average attention span in this country. While many consider soccer boring at first glance, there is an incredible amount of excitement, talent, and creativity in the game -- evidenced by the occasional soccer play that makes it into SportCenter's Top 10 Plays. It's usually pretty amazing.

Even though professional hockey is most likely on hiatus for the next few months, college hockey fans will still have another two months to get their hockey fix. And, while the Stanley Cup probably won't be lifted this year, a regular hockey event still occurred -- that would be Boston University winning the Beanpot.

Friday, February 11, 2005

Men's Basketball Battles Princeton, Penn



Last year, the men's basketball team had a 5-1 league record heading into the Penn-Princeton weekend at Newman Arena, with a chance to grab first place in the conference standings. This year, first place is also in reach, and the Red (9-10, 4-2 Ivy) can take a big step towards the top of the conference when it travels to face Princeton (10-8, 1-3 Ivy) and Penn (12-7, 5-0 Ivy) tonight and tomorrow.

With Penn rallying to defeat Princeton earlier this week, Cornell, which currently sits alone in second place, will need some help from its travel partner to get to first place this weekend.

"I think fans and other people look at the bigger picture more than the player and the coaches," said head coach Steve Donahue. "Our job is to go down there [tonight] right now and win, and figure out the best way to beat a good basketball team. That's our job and obviously we haven't had great success down there because they're good."

After starting the conference slate with a 2-2 record, the Red posted two big home wins last weekend. On Friday night, Brown's Jason Forte, the 2004 Ivy League Player of the Year, set a Newman Arena record with 36 points, but it was senior Cody Toppert's two free throws with 3.5 seconds in regulation that made the difference, as the Red topped the Bears, 76-75.

Saturday's game was equally exciting, as the Red needed double-overtime to dispatch Yale. Down by five with 1:15 remaining in the first overtime, the Red rallied back and junior Lenny Collins tied the game with a three with only 13 seconds remaining in the first extra session. The Red hit its free throws in the last minute of the second overtime and came away with the 87-82 win. Collins, who racked up 20 and 21 points against Brown and Yale, respectively, was named Co-Ivy League Player of the Week on Monday.

Penn and Princeton have been dominating the Ivy League for the past 16 years, with no other team earning the league's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament since 1988, when Cornell won the Ivy title outright. After compiling a 13-1 league record last year and the Ivy title, Princeton's coach, John Thompson III, accepted the head coaching job at Georgetown.

The Tigers replaced Thompson with one of their own, Joe Scott, who previously was the head coach at Air Force. Scott's squad was given the nod as the preseason Ivy favorite, but has a posted a disappointing 1-4 start in the conference. The Tigers' fourth loss came at the hands of the Quakers, who overcame an 18-point deficit to force overtime at the Palestra. After not allowing Princeton a field goal in the final 8:33 of regulation, Penn pulled ahead in the overtime for the 70-62 win.

"It was a wild game. As crazy a game as I've seen next to the one that I was involved with in 2000, where we had that 27-point lead evaporate," Donahue said. "So, I can feel for Princeton in this case. Those things happen. It's hard to imagine them happening, but it happens. I'm sure the kids will bounce back quicker than the coaches."

The Tigers return four starters from last year's squad, including senior center Judson Wallace, who leads the team in scoring with 14.0 points and 5.6 rebounds per game, and senior guard Will Venable, the team's second leading scorer with 10.5 points per game.

"I think there's obviously always an adjustment period with a new coach and even though they say it's the same system, coach Scott is different than John Thompson was," Donahue said. "Our league is better than it's been. We're balanced. Each team has three or four very good players. I think that has more to do with it than Princeton not playing well."

The Quakers currently hold the top spot in the conference with a 5-0 record. Along with its win against Princeton, Penn's other notable win this season came against Philadelphia Big Five opponent, St. Joseph's. Senior guard Tim Begley leads the team in scoring and rebounding with 13.8 points and 5.8 rebounds per game.

This weekend marks the Red's first away games in almost a month. After entertaining Ivy foes at home for three straight weeks, Cornell heads out on the road for a crucial two-week stretch starting tonight.

"I think over the last two years, we've been a good road team," Donahue said. "We had a winning record on the road last year. I think our guys now look forward to the road. I wouldn't want to play two more home games; it's almost gets monotonous. Now you need the change and the challenge. We put ourselves in a chance to compete for this, so now we have to go play our best basketball on the road."

Monday, February 7, 2005

Men's Basketball Defeats Brown, Yale at Home



Three years ago against Brown, then-freshman Cody Toppert had a chance to tie the Bears in the waning seconds of the game. Unfortunately for the Red, his three-pointer was off, and Brown escaped Newman Arena with a win. Last year against Brown, Toppert's three also missed the mark in the last few seconds. This past Friday night, Toppert again found himself in a similar situation -- the ball in his hands, and a chance to tie Brown. Except this time, he was at the foul line. 

A career 85 percent free-throw shooter, Toppert nailed two shots from the charity stripe with 3.5 seconds remaining in regulation to give the Red (8-10, 3-2 Ivy) a 76-75 victory over Brown (8-9, 1-2 Ivy). 

"Every game is so important in this league because there's no league tournament," said Cornell head coach Steve Donahue. "To stay in it, you have to win, especially at home. I thought we played a spirited game."

Coming off a split at home last weekend against Harvard and Dartmouth, the Red needed a strong showing against Brown to keep pace in the Ivy standings. The Bears presented a formidable challenge, as they featured the league's leading scorer and reigning Ivy League Player of the Year, Jason Forte. Last weekend, Brown knocked off 2004 Ivy champion Princeton on the road, behind a 17-point effort from Forte. 

On Friday, things started out slow for Cornell, as the Red shot 2-for-13 in the first nine minutes of the game. With 8:05 to play in the half, the Red was staring at a 12-point deficit, as Brown led 20-8.
"In the first six to eight minutes, we were tentative on offense," said junior Lenny Collins. "Coach got into us during a timeout, and we started getting the ball to the basket. Our intensity began on the defensive end, and spilled over to the offense."

The Red offense came to life, as it rattled off a 13-0 run over the next four minutes to take a 21-20 lead. Sophomore Graham Dow, who returned to the game after taking a shot to the face, sparked the Red during the run by scoring on consecutive layups off of picks from the top of the key. 

"The steady play of Graham Dow is why we're a different team this year," Donahue said. "The whole team is feeding off him. He can defensively control a game, and he makes us a better team."

The teams went into the locker room knotted at 27, after Toppert tied the game with a three-pointer with 22 seconds left in the first half. Brown grabbed an early lead after the break, but the Red answered by holding on to a lead for nearly 10 minutes. Forte, who netted eights points in the first half, exploded for 28 second-half points, setting a Newman Arena record with 36 on the evening. He made a huge impact at the free-throw line, connecting on 11 of 13 shots from the line in the second half.

"Forte is a great player. We've been going at it ever since we entered the league," said Toppert. "He did a great job getting to the foul line. It was back and forth during the second half, and it was important for us to answer him."

Toppert nailed a three with 1:44 remaining to give the Red a 74-71 edge, but Brown responded with two layups to grab a one-point lead with 11 seconds remaining. On the ensuing in-bounds, Toppert received a full-court pass on the left side, and drove in for the layup, but missed. Sophomore Andrew Naeve grabbed the rebound and put up another layup, but he couldn't connect either. Naeve then grabbed the rebound from his own shot, and kicked it out to Toppert, who was fouled. After Toppert made his free throws, Brown had one last chance with 3.5 seconds left, drawing up a play that put the ball in Forte's hands at half-court. He dribbled up the right side, but Collins and Dow defended him well, causing Forte to slip and lose possession as time ran out.

"I was thinking toward the end that the team with the ball last may win the game," Donahue said. "We did a good job not fouling at the end. It's nerve-racking as a coach to watch."

Toppert finished the game with a team-high 22 points, 19 of those coming in the second half. Collins had a solid night as well, chipping in 20, while senior captain Eric Taylor put up 10 points. Forte was the only Brown player in double-figures on the evening.