Sunday, January 31, 2010

Jeff Foote Featured on FanHouse.com


Bt John Walters
FanHouse.com
January 31, 2010

ITHACA, N.Y. -- There was a "Nerd Alert!" in college basketball Saturday night, as the top two titans in the Ivy League, Harvard and Cornell, met on the hardwood. Ordinarily such a contest would generate little outside interest beyond the campuses of the Ancient Eight, the hallways at Sports Illustrated (an inordinate number employees of which are Ivy-educated) and a niche cadre of Vegas gamblers.

Not this weekend. When the Crimson (14-3) visited the Big Red (17-3), fans at sold-out Newman Arena were treated to a matchup of two potential NCAA Tournament teams that featured, as it was billed, two potential NBA players. The Ivy League has never sent two representatives to March Madness in the same season. There are currently no Ivy League alums on an NBA roster and the last such player to be drafted, Penn's Jerome Allen, was taken in 1995 by the Minnesota Timberwolves.

Judging from Saturday night's result, an 86-50 Cornell victory, there will likely be just one Ivy League rep in the NCAAs come March. However, there may have been three, not two, players on the court who have NBA potential.

"No one thought he could play at any level," Cornell coach Steve Donahue said, recalling the days when his seven-foot senior center Jeff Foote arrived four years ago. "I had Division III people asking me, 'What are you doing with that kid?' "

Against Harvard, Foote, who stood 6-7 when he graduated high school in 2005, led the Big Red in scoring (16 points) and rebounds (9) while also blocking three shots. Teammate Ryan Wittman, Cornell's all-time leading scorer and the Ivy's all-time leader in three-point field goals, receives all the scouting buzz (rightfully so, but the 6-6 senior is also the son of former NBA player Randy Wittman), but as Donahue said, "Jeff is the key to our team."

Foote's performance (the Big Red student section chanted "Foote! Foote! Foote!" So clever, those Ivy Leaguers) overshadowed the marquee showdown between Wittman and Harvard senior Jeremy Lin. A 6-3 guard from Palo Alto, Calif. who was dubbed "Mr. Improbable" in high school, Lin has a Stephen Curry-esque touch and weaves through traffic with uncanny grace. He could become the first Asian-American to be selected in the NBA draft and has been featured lately in the pages of Sports Illustrated, Time and, because it's the Ivy League, Business Week.

The Sports Illustrated piece noted that Lin has been subject to racial taunts on the road, such as "Sweet and sour pork!" (Seriously? Why not instead, considering Lin's NBA aspirations, "No MSG!"?). The Big Red student section did not venture down that path, instead barraging Lin with chants that were simply crass, cliché and, most importantly, wildly inaccurate ("You suck!" and "Overrated!")

Wittman spent the first half in foul trouble -- picking up two quick fouls just two minutes into the contest -- while Lin spent the second half burdened with four fouls. Neither player was at his best, although Lin did lead all scorers with 19 points on an efficient 6 of 9 from the field and 7 of 8 from the line.

It was Foote, though, who was literally and often figuratively head and shoulders above the competition. And it is Foote whose long and unlikely trek to a school located less than 20 miles from his home is so remarkable.

"Jeff did not receive any scholarship offers out of high school," said his father Donald, who stands 6-9 and played at Niagara University (an older brother, Jesse, who is 6-11, played at the Rochester Institute of Technology). "We suggested Cornell, but he wanted to go away from home some."

Not too far, though. Foote enrolled with a good friend at St. Bonaventure in Olean, N.Y. He walked on to the team and red-shirted as a freshman in 2005-2006. Foote believed that he would receive a scholarship offer as a sophomore, but was surprised when he returned to campus and none was forthcoming.

"We dropped him off at school on a Monday," says Donald, "and by Friday he wanted to come home."

That is where fate and a bizarre moment of serendipity intervened. Earlier that year, in January 2006, Cornell guard Khaliq Gant was paralyzed while diving for a loose ball in practice. Gant dislocated the C-4 and C-5 vertebrae in his neck and was taken to the intensive care unit at Arnot Ogden Medical Center in Elmir, N.Y. Wanda Foote, Jeff's mother, is a nurse there.

Wanda Foote was impressed by the manner in which the entire Cornell basketball team would keep vigil with Gant. On the day that Gant, who has since regained the ability to walk, was discharged, the entire team arrived at 7 a.m. to see him off. One day during Gant's stay, Foote mentioned to Big Red assistant coach Zach Spiker that she happened to have a son who was seven feet tall and enjoyed playing basketball (imagine being a hoops recruiter and hearing that?).

"No one ever actually told me I was seven feet," says Jeff Foote. "I realized it when I stepped on the scale my freshman year at St. Bonaventure and the scale didn't go high enough to measure me. It topped out at 6-11."

Within a year all seven feet of Jeff Foote were at Cornell. The problem was that he only weighed 208 pounds and he wasn't very good. "Jeff always wore a T-shirt when he played, a XXX-Large, to hide his arms," says Donald. "But he worked hard and he's now up to 265 pounds."

Foote no longer dons a T-shirt when he plays. Last summer Foote spent three weeks at the Eden Prairie, Minn., home of Ryan Wittman. Randy Wittman, who won a national championship with the Indiana Hoosiers in 1981 and is now an assistant coach with the Washington Wizards, drilled both players, stressing the importance of fundamentals and strength-training. When Cornell played at Kansas earlier this month, Foote dueled 6-11 Cole Aldrich, the top post player in the nation, to a virtual draw, scoring 12 points and grabbing six boards to Aldrich's 13 and nine. The Big Red nearly handed the then undefeated Jayhawks their first loss of the season, blowing a lead in the final minute in Lawrence.

"I've never been around an athlete who's made greater strides," says Cornell head coach Donahue. "People ask me all the time who's responsible for Jeff's transformation. Jeff's responsible."

Meanwhile, the Ivy League transformation, at least for this season, is nearly as remarkable. Of Harvard's four losses, two were to Top 25 teams -- Connecticut and Georgetown on the road -- while a third may have been to a new Top 25, Cornell. Of the Big Red's three losses, two have come to teams -- Syracuse and Kansas -- that will be in this week's top five. Those also took place on their opponents' home floors.

"I feel very comfortable playing any team in the country on a neutral court," Donahue said when asked if the Big Red, whose five starters all scored in double figures against the Crimson, deserved to be ranked this week. "We have the ability with our depth, size and experience to create problems for teams."

Come March, when all the games are played on a neutral floor, look for Cornell to create problems for someone in the NCAAs. And not just in the first round.

George Mason vs James Madison Video Highlights



[Video by Thuc Phan]

News and Notes: Afternoon Edition

Below, some afternoon news and notes...


  • The Hoops Report writes:

ITHACA, N.Y. – In 2006, when then-Cornell basketball player Khaliq Gant checked into a local hospital in nearby Elmira to rehab an injury, one of the nurses who attended to him was Wanda Foote.

The two got to talking. Wanda informed Khaliq she had a son who played basketball. His name: Jeff Foote, a rail-thin 6-foot-9 product that wasn't on anyone's mind, much less Cornell's radar.



After walking on to St. Bonaventure and not playing at all during the 2005-06 season, Foote was looking at new colleges. She implored her son to check out Cornell, less than 20 miles from where he played high school basketball at Spencer-Van Etten High School.

Most didn't know who he was then, but now they do.

Foote, who was churned away by Division III programs prior to college, sprouted to 7-feet, added 57 pounds of muscle, and five inches to his vertical.

And he's become Cornell's most important player.

It's not senior Ryan Wittman, the sharp-shooting forward who has been on the scouts' radar for a while (there were whispers around the arena Wittman will be invited to participate in the Portsmouth Invitational Tournament). It's not senior point guard Louis Dale, who orchestrates the Cornell attack with NFL quarterback-like precision.

If you don't believe that Foote is the team's most indispensable player, well then hear what long-time Big Red head coach Steve Donahue said after his team's 86-50 stomping of Harvard at Newman Arena in one of Ivy League's most touted matchups since the Penn-Princeton clashes from the mid 1990s.

"This was a game where we really had to utilize Jeff," said Donahue of Foote, who amassed 16 points, nine rebounds, blocked three shots and dished out four assists. "Even when he came here, I had people in Division III say ‘What are you doing with that kid?' They said he's not going to be good.

"Now, we have NBA teams talking about him. He's more than that, if he was 6-7, he'd be a very good player. Seven foot makes him really special."

The game plan for Cornell (18-3, 4-0 Ivy League) was put in place from the get-go. Foote used his size and pivot moves which he's developed over the past three seasons to his advantage. He exploited the big men that guarded him - Doug Miller, Keith Wright and Andrew Van Nest – in different ways. If it wasn't by his passes out of the slow-developing double teams, he beat them with soft baby hooks, and emphatic dunks. His dunk with 9:26 left in the first half nullified a 7-0 Harvard run where the Crimson pared down the lead to 19-17. After his dunk, the Big Red went on a 16-0 run; game, set, match.

"There are certain games where we talk about it and this was a game we had to (utilize Jeff) because (Harvard) scrambles around so well on defense that if you continue to do (play their style), it wears you down," said Donahue.

"We have the luxury just slowing things down, dump it inside and make them guard Jeff and at this point in his career, he's extremely effective scoring the basketball, making good decisions, and we wanted him to look to score."

Foote was surprised somewhat the double teams weren't coming quickly.

"I felt like I had a little bit of advantage and I put down that little extra strength and that helped me out," said Foote, who's averaging 12.4 points and 8.4 rebounds per game. "I think I was able to get into my moves and lack of a double team really helped out."

Harvard (14-4, 3-1 Ivy League), which was slow to double-team Foote because the presence of Cornell's long range bombers – the Big Red hit 12-of-27 on three-pointers, led by Jon Jacques with four makes – couldn't offset Foote's impact. Even when their star, Jeremy Lin, who was bottled up for most of the night – he committed eight turnovers in the game - before scoring 15 of his 19 points in the second half, drove inside, Foote was there to block one of his shots or force several errant passes that often landed up on the sidelines.

"I think Foote's the key to their team," said Harvard coach Tommy Amaker. "He does so much dirty work, scores on the inside, is a great passer and very unselfish big man.

"I'm very fond of his game, and I'm an admirer of how he plays and I mentioned that to my kids after the game. He's a guy that makes the biggest difference and certainly played that way tonight."

Cornell, which has won 16 of 17 and its only loss during that stretch was a narrow loss to Kansas at Phog Allen Fieldhouse, is now in the driver's seat for a third straight Ivy League title. And after getting a No. 14 seed in last year's NCAA tournament and losing to Missouri in the first round, the Big Red are not worried about seeding but a few of the players wanted enough votes to crack the Top 25.

"It will be a great achievement for our team," said Dale, who finished with 13 points, five assists and no turnovers, about cracking the Top 25. "It's something that would be great because we're worthy enough to be in the Top 25."

Jacques spoke like a coach but opened up at the end of his answer when asked about cracking the polls.

"Like coach says all the time, the ratings don't matter to us; we want to focus on ourselves and get better each day," said Jacques. "The rankings are up to (the media) but it would be cool to be in the Top 25."

Donahue responded to Jacques's answer with "you get the real answer in the second part of his answer."

Laughter broke out in the press room.

These are definitely good times in Ithaca.

But in order to climb higher mountains, the Big Red will need Foote to continue his amazing metamorphic development.

"If you guys saw him as a senior in high school, then you will see what I've seen," said Donahue. "I have never been around a kid who's made such great strides on his game. People say ‘Who's responsible?'

"He's responsible. No one has worked harder to be better. He came in college and no thought he could play at any level and I think he used that as great motivation."

News and Notes

Below, some news and notes...
  • Our compilation of media recaps from Saturday's Cornell win over Harvard can viewed by clicking here.
  • There are a lot of comments and observations in the media about the great crowd and band atmosphere at Saturday's game in Ithaca. We noticed that several former members of the 2008-2009 Cornell basketball team were in attendance, including Khaliq Gant, Conor Mullen, Adam Gore, Jason Battle and Marc Van Burck.
  • More details further down below, but Cornell's RPI shot from No. 45 on Saturday to No. 33 today, following Cornell's "schooling" of Harvard in Ithaca. Cornell is No. 41 in the Pomeroy Ratings and No. 30 in the Sagarin Ratings.


Kentucky and Cornell make statements in their respective leagues. Both the Wildcats and Big Red hosted key games on Saturday and both took care of business. Kentucky knocked off Vanderbilt 85-72, leading essentially from start to finish thanks to three three-point plays from freshman big man DeMarcus Cousins. He and Patrick Patterson looked as comfortable playing together as they have in SEC play to this point, combining for 33 points and 14 rebounds while Darnell Dodson added 16 points and seven rebounds. Eric Bledsoe added 13 and seven boards off the bench while the Commodores were led by Jermaine Beal, who finished with 19 points. The Wildcats shared the basketball (15 assists on 24 baskets) and dominated the boards (39-21 edge) but they've still got work to do when it comes to valuing the basketball (17 turnovers). This much is certain, if some disregarded it following their loss to South Carolina on Tuesday: Kentucky is the favorite to win the SEC.

As for Cornell, they stamped themselves the clear favorite in the Ivy League with their 86-50 beating of Harvard in Ithaca. For those who talked about the possibility of the Ancient Eight grabbing an at-large bid the Big Red may have beaten that idea out of the Crimson. All five starters reached double figures with Jeff Foote's 16 points, nine rebounds, four assists and three blocks leading the why while Harvard's Jeremy Lin scored 19 but no other player scored more than eight (Dee Giger). Harvard turned the ball over twenty-five times and shot 36.1% from the field while the Big Red finished with just eight turnovers and twenty-two assists. Steve Donahue's team is simply too good to be given the number of opportunities they were presented via Crimson turnovers, and they're a team people should consider when filling out their brackets in March.

  • The twittersphere was full of tweets about the action and results of last nights game. Here are some of those tweets:
Pete Thamel of the New York Times writes, "Congrats to @JJaques_25 and Cornell for their 86-50 win over Harvard. That should end the talk of the Ivy being a two-bid league."

Pablo Torre, a recent Harvard graduate and the writer for Sports Illustrated tweets, "Cornell brutalizes Harvard."

Yanni Hufnagel, a Cornell alum and current Harvard assistant writes, "Coach D has built something incredibly special - that enviroment tonight was tremendous. Not sure people realize what it used 2 be like." He continues, "Cornell is talented, they play hard, and they play together - as unselfish a team as I've seen. It's a winning formula."

Jameson Flemming of Bleacher Report writes, "Cornell's band is playing Riverdance theme. They seriously sound like a symphony band. It's unbelievable how good they are."
  • Following Kansas' overtime win over Kansas State, Kansas coach Bill Self told the media, "I think we took time with about 16 seconds and we did the same thing that we did against Cornell which was a tight game."
  • Here is a head scratcher, the folks at the Columbia Spectator seem to believe that the Lions "are very much alive" in the 14-game Ivy League Tournament, despite starting league play with a 1-3 record. Ok, maybe alive, but definitely on life support, and the prognosis is not very good.
  • ESPN's College Basketball Nation writes, "Here’s what’s great about the Ivy League. You go, you dress and maybe you can get into the game. Cornell played 18 players in the first strike against Harvard in the Ivy League chase."

Earlier this evening, I lamented about the lack of television coverage for the first meeting of the season between Ivy powers Harvard and Cornell.

The Big Red made sure the contest wasn't much of a competitive exercise.

Thanks to a balanced attack featuring five starters who all hit double figures, Cornell blew out Harvard in Ithaca by an 86-50 score. The only consolation for the Crimson is a small one. Their star, Jeremy Lin, was the game's leading scorer. Lin managed to score 19.

The two meet again on Friday, February 19th in Cambridge. Harvard will have to win that one and all of the rest of their Ivy League games to have any chance at keeping the Big Red out of the NCAAs, unless the Big Red stumble along the way.

If Cornell keeps winning, though, expect them to get the kind of seed Penn and Princeton got for much of the 90s and early 2000s, not the 13 or 14 seed the Ivy champ has received in recent tournaments.

  • Cornell RPI Watch: The RPI (Rating Percentage Index) is a measure of strength of schedule and how a team does against that schedule. It does not consider the margin of victory, but only whether or not a team won and where the game was played (home/away/neutral court). The formula is 25% team winning percentage (WP), 50% opponents' average winning percentage (OWP), and 25% opponents' opponents' average winning percentage (OOWP). (See: CollegeRPI.com for a further explanation of the formula.) The RPI may be the most influential factor in NCAA Tournament seeding. Cornell's (18-3) RPI rank as of January 31 is No. 33 out of 347 total Division I teams.
Neither the Ken Pomeroy or Jeff Sagarin rankings are used by the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee. Nevertheless, the KenPom.com site ranks Cornell No. 41 in the nation, while the Sagarin rankings have Cornell at No. 30. Both sites are predominantly used by fans and the media.
  • Below are links to our game recaps from each of Cornell's games this season. Associated press recaps courtesy of Rivals.com/YahooSports.com are always available by clicking on Cornell's schedule/results on the right column of this blog.
  1. at Alabama (W 71-67)
  2. at UMass (W 74-61)
  3. vs. Seton Hall (L 79-89)
  4. at Syracuse (L 73-88)
  5. Toledo (Phil.) (W 78-60)
  6. Vermont (Phil.) (W 67-59)
  7. at Drexel (W 61-54)
  8. at Bucknell (W 104-98) (OT)
  9. vs. St. Joseph's (W 78-66)
  10. Davidson (W 91-88) (OT)
  11. at St. John's W 71-66
  12. at La Salle (W 78-75)
  13. vs. PSU Behrend (W 73-49)
  14. vs. Bryant (W 75-49)
  15. at Kansas (L 66-71)
  16. at South Dakota (W 71-65)
  17. vs. Clarkson (W 82-37)
  18. vs Columbia (W 74-53)
  19. at Columbia (W 77-51)
  20. vs. Dartmouth (W 71-37)
  21. vs. Harvard (W 86-50)
Friday, November 13
Yale 86 Sacred Heart 92 (Connecticut Six) Box Score - Recap
Brown 68 St. Francis (N.Y.) 64 Box Score - Recap
Dartmouth 58 Boston College 89 Box Score - Recap
Harvard 87 Holy Cross 77 Box Score - Recap
Penn 55 Penn State 70 Box Score - Recap

Saturday, November 14

Princeton 71 Central Michigan 68 Box Score - Recap
Cornell 71 Alabama 67 Box Score - Recap


Sunday, November 15

Brown 55 Virginia Tech 69 Box Score - Recap
William & Mary 85 Harvard 87 (3OT) Box Score - Recap
Dartmouth 44 George Mason 60 Box Score - Recap

Monday, November 16

Yale 63 Hofstra 68 (NIT at Storrs CT)
Box Score - Recap

Penn 65 Villanova 103 Box Score - Recap

Tuesday, November 17

Yale 65 Colgate 55 (NIT Storrs CT)
Box Score - Recap

Columbia53 DePaul 59 [SNY] Box Score - Recap

Wednesday, November 18

Rhode Island 78 Brown 57
Box Score - Recap

Manhattan 54 Princeton 61 Box Score - Recap
Cornell 74 UMass 61 Box Score - Recap

Friday, November 20

Brown 76 St. John's 79
Box Score - Recap

Longwood 61 Columbia 72 Box Score - Recap
Seton Hall 89 Cornell 79 Box Score - Recap
Bryant 51 Harvard 77
Box Score - Recap


Saturday, November 21

Army 56 Princeton 52
Box Score - Recap

Dartmouth 60 Furman 83 Box Score - Recap
Delaware 97 Penn 94 2OT Box Score - Recap
Quinnipiac 71 Yale 64 Box Score - Recap

Sunday, November 22

Maine 62 Brown 75
Box Score - Recap


Monday, November 23

Harvard 53 Army 56
Box Score - Recap

Charlotte 88. Yale 74 NIT Box Score - Recap

Tuesday, November 24

Princeton 50 George Washington 65 Box Score - Recap
Cornell 73 Syracuse 88 Box Score - Recap
Loyola (Md.) 58 Dartmouth 41
Box Score - Recap

Bucknell 59 Columbia 73 Box Score - Recap
Drexel 58 Penn 49 Box Score - Recap
Elon 65 Yale 69 NIT Box Score - Recap

Wednesday, November 25

Brown 70 Bryant 68 Box Score - Recap
New Hampshire 60 Harvard 78 Box Score - Recap

Friday, November 27

Cornell 78. Toledo 60 (Legends Classic at Philadelphia, Pa.) Box Score - Recap
Brown 79 Siena 99 (Philadelphia Hoops Classic) Box Score - Recap
Yale 48 Army 64 Box Score - Recap
Hartford 56 Dartmouth 68 Box Score - Recap


Saturday, November 28

Cornell 67 Vermont 59
(Legends Classic at Philadelphia, Pa.) Box Score - Recap

Brown 79 Siena 99 (Philadelphia Hoops Classic) Box Score - Recap
Yale 48 Army 64 Box Score - Recap
Hartford 56 Dartmouth 68 Box Score - Recap

Sunday, November 29

Cornell 61 Drexel 54 (Legends Classic at Philadelphia, Pa.) Box Score - Recap
Harvard 78 Boston U. 70 Box Score - Recap
Princeton 60 California 81 [CSN California] Box Score - Recap

Monday, November 30

Columbia 55 Sacred Heart 60 Box Score - Recap

Tuesday, December 1

Vermont 63 Dartmouth 58 Box Score - Recap


Wednesday, December 2

Holy Cross 85 Brown 79 (OT)
Box Score - Recap
Cornell 104 Bucknell 98 (OT)
Box Score - Recap
Yale 48 Hartford 46
Box Score - Recap
Rice 64 Harvard 85
Box Score - Recap

Thursday, December 3

Lehigh 75 Columbia 70
Box Score - Recap
Princeton 44 Rutgers 58
Box Score - Recap

Friday, December 4

Penn
67 Navy 73 [CBS College Sports] Box Score - Recap

Saturday, December 5
Columbia 60 Stony Brook 63
Box Score - Recap
Brown 55 Minnesota 91 Box Score - Recap

Sunday, December 6

Harvard 73 UConn 79 [SNY/ESPN Fullcourt]
Box Score - Recap
Lafayette 48 Princeton 62
Box Score - Recap
Cornell 78 St. Joseph's (PA) 66 Box Score - Recap

Monday, December 7
Brown 62 Providence 78
Box Score - Recap
Vermont 72 Yale 60 Box Score - Recap

Tuesday, December 8
Columbia 102 Wagner 91
Box Score - Recap
Albany 78 Penn 60 Box Score - Recap

Wednesday, December 9
Harvard 74 Boston College
67 Box Score - Recap
Bryant 54 Yale 69 Box Score - Recap

Saturday, December 12
Columbia 69 Bryant 57
Box Score - Recap
Army 59 Dartmouth 46 Box Score - Recap
Penn 75 Monmouth 80 Box Score - Recap

Sunday, December 13
Princeton 65 UNC Greensboro 50
Box Score - Recap
Lyndon State 54 Dartmouth 83 Box Score

Wednesday, December 16
Monmouth 42 Princeton46
Box Score - Recap

Thursday, December 17
Dartmouth 58 Lehigh 66
Box Score - Recap

Sunday, December 20
Cornell 91 Davidson 88 [
MSG Holiday Festival, Fox Sports Atlantic/MSG] Box Score - Recap
Dartmouth 59 New Hampshire 69 Box Score - Recap
Princeton at Maine- Weather Cancellation

Monday, December 21
Yale 78 Providence 87
Box Score - Recap
Cornell 71 St. John's 66 [MSG Holiday Festival, Fox Sports Atlantic/MSG] Box Score - Recap

Tuesday, December 22
Colgate 63 Dartmouth 44
Box Score - Recap

Wednesday, December 23
Harvard 70 Georgetown 86 [ESPN Full Court/ MyTV9/ SNY]
Box Score - Recap
Columbia 51 Quinnipiac 63 Box Score - Recap

Monday, December 28

MIT 61 Harvard 88
Box Score
Kean 63 Brown 74 Box Score - Recap
Penn 50 Davidson 79 Box Score - Recap

Tuesday, December 29
Yale 59 Colorado 70 [FSN Rocky Mountain]
Box Score - Recap
Cornell 78 La Salle 75
Box Score - Recap

Wednesday, December 30
Dartmouth 51 Quinnipiac 73 [NESN]
Box Score - Recap
Brown 78 Sacred Heart 83
Box Score - Recap
George Washington 53 Harvard 66 Box Score - Recap
Maine 65 Columbia 59 Box Score - Recap
Wagner 42 Princeton 45 Box Score - Recap

Thursday, December 31
Yale 71 Colorado State 93
Box Score - Recap
Penn St. Erie-The Behrend College 59 Cornell 73 Box Score - Recap
Penn 55 Duke 114 [ESPN2]
Box Score - Recap

Saturday, January 2
American 76 Brown 68
Box Score - Recap
Bryant 49 Cornell 75 Box Score - Recap
Harvard at Seattle, 5:10 pm
Princeton 70 St. Joseph's 62 [The Comcast Network]
Box Score - Recap

Sunday, January 3
Penn 62 Lafayette 77
Box Score - Recap
Yale 68 Albany 89 [Time Warner Cable (TW3)] Box Score - Recap

Monday, January 4
Wagner 71 Brown 72 Box Score - Recap
American 51 Columbia 56 Box Score - Recap
Bucknell 43 Dartmouth 49 Box Score - Recap
Princeton 50 Maine 52 Box Score - Recap
Harvard 74 Santa Clara Box Score - Recap

Tuesday, January 5
Yale 69 Lehigh 75
Box Score - Recap

Wednesday, January 6
Brown 51 Army 59 Box Score - Recap
Columbia 74 Lafayette 91 Box Score - Recap
Penn 82 UMBC 71 Box Score - Recap
Princeton 77 Marist 58 Box Score - Recap
Cornell 66 Kansas 71 (ESPN Fullcourt/ESPN360) Box Score - Recap

Thursday, January 7
Albertus Magnus 71 Yale 92
Box Score

Friday, January 8
Cornell 71 South Dakota 65
Box Score - Recap

Saturday, January 9
*Dartmouth 47 Harvard 76 Box Score - Recap
NJIT 48 Yale 79 Box Score - Recap

Monday, January 11
Brown 75 Quinnipiac 88 Box Score - Recap
St. Francis (N.Y.) 59 Columbia 53 Box Score - Recap
Clarkson 37 Cornell 82 Box Score - Recap

Wednesday, January 13
Temple 60 Penn 45 Box Score - Recap

Friday, January 15
*Brown 75 Yale 66 Box Score - Recap

Saturday, January 16
*Columbia 53 Cornell 74 (Time Warner Sports) Box Score - Recap

Monday, January 18
St. Francis (N.Y.) 64 Dartmouth 65 Box Score - Recap

Wednesday, January 20
La Salle 76 Penn 57 Box Score - Recap

Friday, January 22
*Yale 71 Brown 63 Box Score - Recap

Saturday, January 23
*Cornell 77 Columbia 51 Box Score - Recap
*Harvard 62 Dartmouth 58 Box Score - Recap

Sunday, January 24
Goucher 35 Princeton 88 Box Score - Recap

Monday, January 25
St. Joseph's 85 Penn 64[Comcast Network] Box Score - Recap

Friday, January 29
*Penn 48 Yale 61 Box Score - Recap
*Princeton 63 Brown 46 Box Score - Recap
*Dartmouth 37 Cornell 71 Box Score - Recap
*Harvard 74 Columbia 45 Box Score - Recap

Saturday, January 30
*Penn 55 Brown 54 Box Score - Recap
*Princeton 58 Yale 45 Box Score - Recap
*Dartmouth 51 Columbia 63 Box Score - Recap
*Harvard 50 Cornell 86 Box Score - Recap

Friday, February 5
*Penn at Dartmouth, 7 pm
*Princeton at Harvard, 7 pm
*Brown at Columbia, 7 pm
*Yale at Cornell, 7 pm
Saturday, February 6
*Penn at Harvard, 7 pm
*Princeton at Dartmouth, 7 pm
*Brown at Cornell, 7 pm
*Yale at Columbia, 7 pm

Friday, February 12
*Columbia at Princeton, 7 pm
*Dartmouth at Brown, 7 pm
*Harvard at Yale, 7 pm
*Cornell at Penn, 7 pm [Comcast Network]

Saturday, February 13 *Cornell at Princeton, 6 pm [Verizon FiOS]
*Columbia at Penn, 7 pm [Comcast Network]
*Harvard at Brown, 7 pm
*Dartmouth at Yale, 7 pm

Tuesday, February 16
*Princeton at Penn, 7 pm

Friday, February 19
*Brown at Penn, 7 pm [Comcast Network]
*Columbia at Dartmouth, 7 pm
*Yale at Princeton, 7 pm [ESPNU]
*Cornell at Harvard, 7 pm
Saturday, February 20
*Brown at Princeton, 7 pm
*Yale at Penn, 7 pm [Comcast Network]
*Cornell at Dartmouth, 7 pm
*Columbia at Harvard, 7 pm

Friday, February 26
*Penn at Columbia, 7 pm
*Princeton at Cornell, 7 pm
*Yale at Dartmouth, 7 pm
*Brown at Harvard, 7 pm

Saturday, February 27
*Penn at Cornell, 7 pm
*Princeton at Columbia, 7 pm
*Brown at Dartmouth, 7 pm
*Yale at Harvard, 7 pm
Friday, March 5
*Harvard at Penn, 7 pm
*Dartmouth at Princeton, 7 pm
*Cornell at Brown, 7 pm
*Columbia at Yale, 7 pm

Saturday, March 6
*Dartmouth at Penn, 7 pm
*Harvard at Princeton, 7 pm
*Cornell at Yale, 7 pm
*Columbia at Brown, 7 pm

Tuesday, March 9
*Penn at Princeton, 7 pm

Thursday, March 11
Ivy League Playoff (if necessary)

Saturday, March 13
Ivy League Playoff (if necessary)

Harvard Schooled in Basketball by Cornell, 86-50

Below, recaps of Cornell's win over Harvard on Saturday.


<a href="http://video.msn.com/?mkt=en-us&brand=foxsports&from=sp&vid=45ebd07a-7645-4585-ac9d-110d0920753e" target="_new" title="The Goods: Ivy League contenders">Video: The Goods: Ivy League contenders</a>


For video highlights from WETM (NBC) Elmira, click here.

Men's Hoops Too Much For Harvard, 86-50
CornellBigRed.com

Box Score

ITHACA, N.Y. -- Cornell put all five players into double figures and led from wire-to-wire, remaining unbeaten in Ivy League play with an 86-50 victory over Harvard on Saturday evening at Newman Arena. The Big Red improved to 18-3 (4-0 Ivy), while the Crimson had its seven-game win streak snapped and fell to 14-4 (3-1 Ivy).

Senior Jeff Foote was dominant in the paint to lead Cornell on both ends of the floor, recording 16 points, nine rebounds, four assists and three blocked shots, while Jon Jaques netter 14 points, four rebounds, four assists and two steals. Chris Wroblewski and Louis Dale each chipped in with 13 points and Ryan Wittman scored 11 to round out the lineup. Cornell assisted on 22 of its 30 field goals and turned the ball over just eight times despite Harvard's consistent pressure. Defensively, the Big Red turned the young and talented Crimson group over 25 times and collected 14 steals, while limiting Harvard to .361 shooting from the floor. Cornell owned the rebounding edge, 37-28.

Harvard's star, Jeremy Lin, had 19 points on 6-of-9 shooting, but also turned the ball over eight times with just one assist. No other Harvard player had more than Dee Giger's eight points.

While the scorers got the acclaim, the box score hid the contributions of several other players. Geoff Reeves provided his usual stellar defense and scored three points with two rebounds and an assist, while Mark Coury and Alex Tyler were their usual steady selves, but the play of Adam Wire stood out. He had five points, two offensive rebounds, two assists and three key steals in 14 energy-filled minutes. Errick Peck added two points, a rebound and an assist without a turnover.

Cornell dominated the key stats of points in the paint (32-14) and points off of turnovers (29-6), while also posting a large 18-8 edge in second chance points.

While billed nationally as an early season determination on the Ivy race, Cornell's upperclassmen treated it like any other game ... an important one in the 14-game Ivy League tournament. With a raucous sell-out crowd behind them, Cornell scored eight seconds into the game when Foote found Wroblewski for a 3-pointer. The Crimson tied the game at 3-3, then again at 5-5, but a quick 8-0 run over 1:18 that included consecutive treys by Jaques, sent the home team up 13-5 three minutes into the game. Harvard briefly got within two at 19-17 at the 11-minute mark, but that was as good as it would get for the upstart Crimson.

The Big Red exploded on a 14-0 run that spanned 7:16 as the defense created offense for Cornell. Five turnovers by Harvard during that span did damage, as did Foote, who started the run with a vicious dunk, then hit a six-footer in the lane before finding Jaques underneath with a brilliant pass that earned his senior classmate two free throws. When Dale hit a 3-pointer from the left corner with 3:43 left in the first half, Cornell more than doubled up Harvard at 35-17.

The Crimson clawed back to 14 at the break, and with two early buckets by Lin, got within 10 just 1:17 into the second half. Jaques stemmed the tide with a free throw, but the second one was missed and grabbed by Foote. That led to three consecutive offensive boards by the Big Red, and the four-shot, 30-second possession ended with Wroblewski draining a jumper to push the lead back to 13 and give the home team the momentum. Up 46-36 with 12:56 remaining, Cornell took control and turned a game still very much in question to a decisive victory. A pair of Wroblewski free throws triggered a 17-0 run over a span of just 3:08, with a three-point play by Wire being trumped by long distance bombs by Dale, Jaques and Wittman. Suddenly, a 10-point game was a 63-36 contest with 9:48 left. Harvard never got back within 24 points and watched the lead swell to as many as 37 with both team's subs in the contest.

The Big Red will stay at home to face both Yale and Brown next weekend at Newman Arena.


By Brian Delaney
Ithaca Journal
January 30, 2010

ITHACA - Cornell didn't play like this was just another game. Not even close.

Feeding off a frenzied sold-out crowd, the two-time Ivy League champions routed Harvard 86-50 on Saturday night in a performance worthy of a top 25 team.

Which is where Cornell may find itself come Monday.

Five players scored in double figures, led by 7-foot center Jeff Foote's 16-point, 9-rebound, 4-assist, 3-block outing, and Cornell earned a lopsided victory in a showdown that garnered rare national build-up. Both teams entered unbeaten in Ivy play in three games.

"It was obviously just a tremendous performance by their ball club," said Harvard coach Tommy Amaker, whose team's seven-game win streak was snapped. "They are very, very good. We knew that coming in, but seeing them first-hand this season- depth, talent, experience and they play very hard."

Cornell used a 16-0 run in the first half to build a big lead, then buried the visitors with a methodical 17-0 spurt in the second half. Poor decision-making killed the Crimson, whose 25 turnovers were converted into 29 points.

Cornell hasn't trailed once over the last 221 minutes, 43 seconds-- a streak that spans 5 1/2 games. The Big Red's last deficit was 31-30 in the first half of a Jan. 8 game at South Dakota.

"Obviously I thought we did a lot of things very well tonight," Cornell coach Steve Donahue said.

Harvard (14-4, 3-1 Ivy) had no answer for Foote, whose rim-rattling dunk keyed Cornell's first-half run.

When Amaker ran an extra defender at Foote, he generally found the open man. When Amaker didn't, Foote usually converted. He scored 10 points in the first half, which ended with a 38-24 Cornell lead.

"I was able to get into my moves, and the lack of a double team really helped out," Foote said.

With 38 votes, Cornell (18-3, 4-0) entered the two-game weekend on the cusp of the ESPN / USA Today top 25 coaches poll. Saturday's win was its 16th in 17th games.

"The only thing I would say is I feel very comfortable playing any team in the country on a neutral court with this group," said Cornell coach Steve Donahue when asked about a possible top-25 ranking. "I feel that we would fare well."

Harvard trailed 46-36 with 12 minutes, 56 seconds remaining after two free throws from freshman Christian Webster. Cornell then scored 17 straight points, a run that began as a trickle but ended in a flood of 3-pointers from seniors Louis Dale, Jon Jaques and Ryan Wittman.

Harvard guard Jeremy Lin finished with 19 points, including 15 in the second half, but committed eight turnovers and was largely held in check. Harvard shot 36 percent from the field and was outrebounded, 37-28. Cornell had 18 offensive boards.


By Donna Ditota
The Syracuse Post-Standard
January 30, 2010

Ithaca – It was billed as a matchup between elite Ivy League teams seeking national respect and recognition.

But in the end, only Cornell fans were chanting “Top 25,” and only the Big Red made a case for a mention in the weekly college basketball poll.

Cornell dominated visiting Harvard 86-50 Saturday inside a full and rollicking Newman Arena. The Big Red led by 14 at halftime and after Harvard inched to within 46-36 after the break, Cornell authored a 17-0 run to essentially close out the Crimson.

Cornell has won six straight games and 16 of its last 17. The Big Red’s lone loss during that span was a five-point defeat at Kansas. Cornell, at 18-3 overall and 4-0 in the Ivy League, has lost to Seton Hall, Syracuse and Kansas and has beaten St. John’s and Alabama.

So is the Big Red Top 25 worthy?

“I feel very comfortable playing any team in the country on a neutral court with this group,” said Cornell coach Steve Donahue. “I feel that we’d fare well. I think that we have enough experience, size, skill, toughness to compete with anybody in college basketball right now.”

Tommy Amaker would not disagree.

The Harvard coach watched Saturday as his team committed 25 turnovers, eight of them by star point guard Jeremy Lin. The Big Red used a frenetic man-to-man defense, coupled at times with a ¾ court trap, to inflict serious defensive damage on the Crimson.

The 50 points were the fewest Harvard (14-4, 3-1) has recorded this season. The Crimson shot 36 percent and because of all the turnovers, took 30 fewer shots than Cornell.

Donahue and his players said Cornell made a commitment to defense after its loss at Kansas. Against Harvard, that commitment resulted in 29 points off turnovers and a scrappiness evidenced by Cornell hands deflecting basketballs and Cornell bodies diving to the hardwood in pursuit of loose basketballs.

“They were very aggressive,” Amaker said. “They took us out of anything we wanted to run, knocked the ball (away) from us. Obviously having 25 turnovers and only seven assists is not a very good formula for positive basketball.”

“I do think we have the ability with our depth, our size, our experience, to be able to cause things like that on defense,” Donahue said. “We have guys that can guard on the perimeter, and you have a kid like Jeff just waiting there, so it’s difficult if you keep penetrating, to see that in there.”

“That,” is 7-feet and 265 pounds of Jeff Foote.

The Cornell center was a huge factor Saturday. He scored 16 points on 7-of-11 shooting, made four assists and blocked three shots. Big Red players searched for him down low and after Foote caught the ball, Cornell cleared out and allowed him space to work. Foote calmly backed down a rotation of Harvard post defenders, and either lofted a baby hook or powered for a lay-up or dunk.

Harvard tried to cover him with a single man and Foote theorized that his passing skills discourage a double-team. So does Cornell’s ability to knock down shots.

The Big Red shot 44 percent from 3-point range (12-of-27) and 46 percent overall. Five Cornell players reached double-figure scoring, led by Foote’s 16. Cornell prides itself on its selflessness and the 22 assists on 30 baskets attest to that.

Cornell’s 86 points were the most Harvard has surrendered this year.

“I think we had great poise,” Donahue said, “a great sense of what we needed to do on offense, at times pushing it, getting it down low to Jeff, sharing the ball when we had to.”

The Ivy League does not hold a post-season tournament to determine its representative to the NCAA Tournament. The regular-season champion earns that distinction. Cornell and Harvard, which sit atop most Ivy statistical categories, had been considered the league’s aristocracy. The Big Red dominated the first of two anticipated matchups, but Cornell must still visit Harvard on Feb. 19.

If the teams finish tied for the Ivy League title, a one-game playoff at a neutral site will determine which Ivy team earns the automatic NCAA bid.

On Saturday night in Ithaca, Cornell was clearly the class of the Ivies.

“Depth, talent, experience. And they play very hard,” Amaker said in assessing the Big Red. “There’s nothing else to really say. I think they’re an outstanding basketball team. One of the better teams in the country, from what I’ve been able to see.”

The students at Cornell, the ones that stood and cheered for much of Saturday’s game, want more. On Monday, when the national polls are released, they want to see Cornell included on those lists.

So do Cornell’s players.

“Coach says all the time that the ratings and all that don’t really matter to us. We have to focus on ourselves and get better every day,” Foote said. “But it would be kinda cool to be in the Top 25.”

Cornell Hammers Harvard To Remain Atop Ivy League Standings

By Matthew Manacher
Cornell Daily Sun
January 30, 2010

It was billed by many college basketball analysts as the early season Ivy League game that will ultimately decide the 2009-10 conference champion. It was the game that would decide which of the eight Ivies will be dancing in March. Although Cornell has 10 conference games remaining, the Red took a significant step forward in claiming its third-consecutive Ancient Eight championship tonight with an 86-50 drubbing of Harvard.

The Red (18-3, 4-0 Ivy) snapped the Crimson’s (14-4, 3-1 Ivy) seven-game win streak with a complete team effort. All five Cornell starters posted double figures while senior center Jeff Foote registered a team-high 16 points and nine rebounds. Foote proved to be a dominating inside presence on both ends of the court.

Harvard’s sloppy play was exploited by a stout Cornell defense, which has vastly improved in recent weeks. The Crimson turned the ball over 25 times, including 14 steals. Harvard senior guard Jeremy Lin, a leading candidate for Ivy League Player of the Year honors, dropped a game-high 19 points. However, Lin’s ballhandling was problematic as he withered under the Red’s pressure and committed eight turnovers.

“They were very aggressive,” said Harvard head coach Tommy Amaker. “They took us out of anything we wanted to run and knocked the ball off of us. You can see that with eight turnovers by Jeremy and five by [freshman forward] Kyle [Casey]. Obviously, having 25 turnovers and only seven assists is not a very good formula for positive basketball.”

There was certainly an elevated sense of importance attached to this game as the sold-out 4,473 raucous fans in attendance were well aware that early season Ivy League bragging rights were on the line. The Red remained dominant on its home floor in the Ancient Eight, extending an 18-game home conference winning streak with the victory.

“I would compare it to the first time we won the Ivy League title,” Foote said. “The crowd was rocking. They gave us tremendous energy and made it a great college basketball atmosphere. It really fires us up and we really like to play in front of a lot of people.”

By Didier Morais
Boston Globe
January 30, 2010

ITHACA, N.Y. - Jeremy Lin and Ryan Wittman were supposed to steal the show. As the front-runners for Ivy League Player of the Year, the Harvard point guard and Cornell forward were expected to make their cases for the award.

But both stood - literally and figuratively - in Cornell center Jeff Foote’s shadow in last night’s showdown of the marquee teams in the league, as Foote finished with 16 points, 9 rebounds, 4 assists, and 3 blocks.

With Foote leading the way, Cornell (18-3, 4-0) ended Harvard’s seven-game winning streak, routing the Crimson, 86-50, to preserve its six-game winning streak and 18-game conference home winning streak.

“I’m not very happy with our performance, obviously,’’ said Harvard coach Tommy Amaker. “We didn’t play up to our capabilities. They played outstanding basketball. They are very, very good. We knew that coming in, but seeing them firsthand this season - depth, talent, experience, and they played very hard.’’

From the opening minute, the Big Red abandoned their typical perimeter-oriented game plan, opting instead to take advantage of the interior mismatch with Foote, who at 7 feet is 4 inches taller than Crimson starting center Keith Wright.

And Cornell’s senior wasted little time rewarding Big Red coach Steve Donahue for his confidence. Each time Foote received the ball on the block, he immediately posted up Wright and often scored or dished for an open 3-point attempt.

“I thought this was the game where we knew we needed to utilize Jeff,’’ Donahue said. “We talked about it because [Harvard] scrambled around so well. I told him to slow it down and take it in and he’s one of the best passing centers in the nation.’’

Foote became an instant nightmare for Amaker. Following a series of buckets, the Harvard coach tabbed 6-7 forward Doug Miller to guard the Big Red’s catalyst, but Foote countered with a flurry of hook shots.

With 9:11 remaining in the first half, guard Louis Dale threaded a pass into Foote, who soared over Miller for a thunderous dunk. And when Foote wasn’t jamming on defenders or dishing assists, he made himself valuable on the defensive end with his blocks.

“From scouting, I always thought [Foote] was the key of the team,’’ Amaker said. “He scores on the inside. He’s a great passer and he’s a very unselfish player. I’m very fond of his game and I admire how he plays. I mentioned to the kids that he’s the guy that makes them go.’’

Despite knowing that, Amaker still had no answer for Foote. After rotating between Miller and Wright, he eventually substituted Andrew Van Nest and Kyle Casey midway through the half to attempt to slow the Big Red’s behemoth. But like their starting teammates, the reserves suffered the same fate.

“I don’t think they exactly knew how to guard me,’’ Foote said. “I just knew that I had an advantage with size and strength. They do a much better job of defending. They do a terrific job all-around. I was able to get into my moves more and the lack of a double team really helped me out. I was able to get in my groove today.’’

When the Crimson (14-4, 3-1) crowded the paint and eventually denied Foote the ball, Cornell simply returned to its bread and butter - shooting the long ball. Led by senior Jon Jaques’s four 3-pointers, the Big Red finished 12 for 27 from beyond the arc.

Foote’s presence in the paint allowed Cornell’s guards to pressure Lin. As a result of the stingy defense, Harvard’s point guard was rendered relatively ineffective early on and finished the first half with a mere 4 points.

Even though Lin finished with a game-high 19 points, the suffocating defense forced him into eight turnovers. By the end of the night, Harvard had 25 turnovers.

“They were very aggressive,’’ Amaker said. “They basically took us out of anything we wanted to run.’


ITHACA, N.Y. – Turnovers plagued the Harvard men’s basketball team at Newman Arena on Saturday night as Cornell won the battle of first place by a score of 86-50. Cornell used a 16-0 first half run and a 17-0 second half run to secure the win.

Harvard (14-4, 3-1 Ivy) returns to action next weekend with a pair of pivotal games against Princeton (11-5, 2-0 Ivy) and Penn with both games being anticipated sellouts.

Cornell (18-3, 4-0 Ivy), winners of 16 of its last 17 overall and its last 18 Ivy games at home, will return to Newman next weekend against Yale and Brown.

The good news for Harvard is that it did not have to win in Ithaca. The Crimson got its weekend split and will have a home date against the Big Red on Feb. 19.
In the first half, Harvard looked every bit the young team on its first lengthy Ivy road trip. The

Crimson turned the ball over 14 times in the first 20 minutes and Cornell took full advantage in using a 16-0 run for a comfortable 38-24 halftime lead.

Cornell hit on its first six from the floor (three 3’s) in grabbing a 15-8 lead at 15:55 and 19-10 less than seven minutes in. Harvard rattled off seven straight to trail by just two following a second chance triple from Dee Giger but more turnovers led to Cornell’s decisive run.

Harvard got within 10 points twice in the second half with plenty of time remaining but followed its spurts with more turnovers as Cornell kept the Crimson at an arm’s length. The last time Harvard got within 10 was at 46-36 with 12:55 left only to see Cornell scored 17 straight. From that point on, Cornell rode the good feelings as virtually everything that happened went in its favor.

All told, Harvard committed 25 turnovers and Cornell responded with 12 3-pointers.
Jeremy Lin led Harvard with 19 points (6-9 FG, 7-8 FT) while Jeff Foote led Cornell with 16 points and nine rebounds.


The WVBR Sports Blog: The Voice of the Big Red
January 30, 2010

In the most anticipated Ivy League game in decades, the Cornell Big Red defeated the Harvard Crimson 86-50.

A balanced effort propelled the Cornell offense. Center Jeff Foote led the team with 16, but forward Jon Jaques had 14, guards Louis Dale and Chris Wroblewski had 13 each, and forward Ryan Wittman had 11. Cornell's 86 points were the most it has scored in a non-overtime game this season.

Except for a couple early ties, Cornell led throughout. Harvard cut a 19-10 Cornell lead to 19-17 with ten and a half minutes remaining in the first half, but Cornell responded with a 16-0 run to push the lead up to 35-17, and led 38-24 at the half. The Crimson got to within ten with just under thirteen minutes remaining, but a 17-0 Cornell run, capped by a Wittman three, over the next three minutes put the game out of reach.

Harvard head coach Tommy Amaker noted that on defense, us Cornell “was very aggressive… [they] took out of whatever we wanted to run.” The Red “keyed on [star Harvard forward] Jeremy Lin, did a lot of things to limit his touches.” Amaker's counterpart, Cornell head coach Steve Donahue, echoed those sentiments, saying “we have the ability with our depth, our size” to play tremendous defense.

Although the individual scoring totals were fairly even for Cornell, the offense ran through Jeff Foote. Donahue noted that before the game, “what we wanted [Foote] to do, look to score.” Foote, at 7'0”, was able to score at will against the smaller Harvard defenders.

Foote noted that he “felt like I had a little bit of an advantage… the lack of double team really helped out.” He added, “I think they weren't sure how to guard me at first.” When given the ball, he was very efficient, making seven of his eleven shots from the field. Besides the scoring, though, Foote was able to take advantage of the attention Crimson players gave him in order to rack up four assists. Amaker reflected that “Foote's the key to their team…scores on the inside, is a great passer.”

Cornell shot 45% from the field for the game, compared to 36% for Harvard.

When asked afterward if he'd like to see Cornell, who was ranked 27th in last week's ESPN/USA Today Coaches' Poll, crack the Top 25, Foote replied, “the ratings and that kinda stuff doesn't matter to us…but it would be cool” to be in the Top 25. Cornell may have a good case. Despite shooting only 64% from the foul line, well below their season average, and seeing Ivy League Player of the Year Candidate Ryan Wittman play only 23 minutes due to foul trouble, the Red blew out a Harvard team that was supposed to be their stiffest competition in the Ivy League.

The game was being hyped as the biggest Ivy League game in years, one that featured two teams that could be deserving of at-large bids to the NCAA Tournament. The atmosphere at sold-out Newman Arena was electric, with constant chants of “Let's Go Red,” and “Overrated” when Harvard guard Jeremy Lin touched the ball. Amaker did not believe the atmosphere affected his young team, but noted that “the atmosphere was electric.”

Cornell and Harvard will meet again, on February 19, in Cambridge, and there is a ton of basketball for each team to play between now and then. But for one night, Cornell-Harvard looked less like a battle between heavyweights than a bully's beatdown on the schoolyard.

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