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."
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