Tuesday, August 31, 2010

The Howie Ortner Big Red Teams

The 1933-1934 Cornell Big Red (above) would finish their season 11-5 and runner-ups in the EIBL (the predecessor conference to the Ivy League). It was the highest winning percentage by a Cornell team during the 1930s. Their coach, Howard Ortner (class of '19) would retire just two years later after the '35-'36 season. Ortner was the coach of Cornell's 1924 EIBL (Ivy League) championship team and was president of the NABC during 1935.

Ortner coached the Big Red for 17 seasons, commencing the 1919-1920 season, the first year after his graduation from Cornell. He was also an All-America basketball player at Cornell and team captain in 1916, 1917, and 1919. During the 1917-18 season he was in the military service.

Below, a photo of then college senior, Howard Ortner in the February 15, 1919 issue of the Cornell Daily Sun.


George Mason's CAA schedule so far for 2010-2011

CAA schools are starting to release their men's basketball schedules for the 2010-2011 season. As we await Mason's to be fully released let's fill in what we know:

December 4: UNCW
January 8: at ODU
January 12: at Northeastern
February 5: ODU
February 9: at UNCW
February 23: Northeastern

You find Mason's out of conference schedule here.

Thanks to CAA Full Court Press for their up keeping of a composite CAA schedule.

News and Notes: Tuesday Edition

Below, some news and notes for Tuesday. Above, some high school photos of Aaron Osgood. Now a senior, Osgood reportedly resurfaced on campus weighing in at a solid 235 pounds after a productive summer of hitting the weight room.

Above, Cornell's alumni currently playing professional basketball around the globe. They include (top row left to right, Jon Jaques '10, Louis Dale '10, Cody Toppert '05, Jeff Aubry '99, bottom row left to right, Ryan Wittman '10, Jef Foote '10, John McCord '97, Jason Hartford '08).

Above, Jeff Aubry ('99) plays professionally year round with both the Arecibo Capitanes of the Puerto Rico Basketball League and with the Halcones Rojos of Mexico's premier league, the LNBP. Below, Aubry in training with Halcones.

SIG Strasbourg of France's premier league announced the official signing of John McCord (Cornell '97) (above). After playing several seasons in France's Pro B with Limoges and Antibes, McCord returns to the premier league with Strasbourg, for who he played with between 2005 and 2008.
  • In previewing the Atlantic 10 for this season, the Dagger blog of YahooSports writes, "If every Atlantic 10 team besides Xavier is starved for NCAA tournament success, then Temple is the ideal symbol of that. Coach Fran Dunphy is 0-3 in first-round games with the Owls, a statistic made more painful by last season's one-sided opening round flameout against Cornell."
  • In analyzing Northwestern's chances for making its first ever trip to the NCAA Tournament, Rivals College Basketball notes that Cornell was fourth in the nation in three-pointers made per game last season with 9.6. The Big Red also led the nation in three-point shooting percentage.
  • Brian Delaney of the Ithaca Journal reports on the passing on one of Cornell's biggest Big Red Fans.
Sterling "Mac" MacAdam, center, greets then Cornell men's basketball coach Steve Donahue, left, as Fred Schweizer watches during halftime of Cornell's game against Ursinus in January of 2009 at Newman Arena. MacAdam died on Aug. 25 at the age of 101.

Cornell bids farewell to a steadfast fan
'Mac' MacAdam was Big Red to the core, even at 101

A service celebrating the life of 101-year old Sterling Tuckerman "Mac" MacAdam, a passionate fan and crisp critic of Cornell sports teams, was held Monday in Ithaca.

MacAdam, who died on Aug. 25, golfed until the age of 93 and sat courtside regularly for basketball games at Newman Arena, and diamond-side for Cornell softball games, as late as last season. Only weeks ago, former Cornell men's basketball coach Steve Donahue said, MacAdam was busy with one of his favorite hobbies -- trading stocks and bonds.

Donahue chuckled at MacAdam offering him investment advice at the time.

"The thing I loved about Mac, and that I love about a lot of people in Ithaca, is when I first got there he hitched himself right on to our wagon and was with us through all those lean years," Donahue said. "He was a really, really good guy to be around."

At MacAdam's 100th birthday party, he showed Donahue his bedroom, which was decorated wall-to-wall with Cornell memorabilia collected over the years.

"The whole thing was Cornell," Donahue said. "Everything on the wall; the blanket on his bed, his pillow, clothes. He would never wear it; he would just dress up his room. He was so darn proud of Cornell and our athletic teams. It wasn't just basketball."

MacAdam was born in 1908 in Haddonfield, N.J., and was employed by N.J. Bell Telephone Co. for 45 years. He retired in 1972, and moved to Ithaca. He and his late wife, Gladys Lewis, married in 1936 and had two daughters.

Cornell women's lacrosse coach Jenni Graap remembered MacAdam in a posting on his obituary on this newspaper's website.

"The Cornell women's lacrosse team was blessed to have Mac as a fan for so many years. We will miss having Mac at our games and tailgates. He was such a kind and wonderful soul, and we loved him dearly. The antique lacrosse sticks Mac gave me years ago still hang proudly in my office and will serve as the fondest of memories of such a generous man."

Foote Preparing for Upcoming Season with Maccabi Tel Aviv

Above, Jeff Foote (Cornell '10) reports for his physical and entry requirements with Maccabi Tel Aviv Electra.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Al-Farouq Aminu Wallpapers


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The Difficult '01-'02 Season

During 2001-2002, Steve Donahue's second season as head coach of Cornell, the Big Red struggled to a 5-22 overall record and 2-12, 8th place finish in the Ivy League.

During the difficult '01-'02 campaign, Cornell was led by senior Wallace Prather ('02) (11.4 points, 3.4 rebounds per game) and sophomore Ka'ron Barnes ('04) (8.6 points, 3.1 rebounds per game). Struggling offensively, Cornell's scoring differential vs. opponents was -8.9 points with the team shooting just 38% from the floor on the season. Cornell lost 7 of its 14 Ivy League games by double figures.

The freshmen, however, on the '01-'02 team would become the seniors on Steve Donahue's first team with a winning record in league play, the 2004-2005 team (Donahue's 5th year in Ithaca). These "foundation pieces" for the future were Cody Toppert ('05), Eric Taylor ('05) and Chris Vandenberg ('05).

Dale Highlights From Second Exhibition

Below, highlights from Louis Dale's second exhibition game with Gottingen in Germany's Bundesliga. Dale finished with 10 points, including a three pointer show in the highlights.

Remembering the 1924 Champions

Above, the March 17, 1924 issue of the Cornell Daily Sun reports on the Big Red's 30-20 victory over Princeton on March 15, 1924. The victory sealed the Big Red's third EIBL (Ivy League) championship. Charles H. Capron (class of '24) was a captain for the Big Red and one of three members of the team named all-conference.

Recruiting News: Columbia Picks Up Commit

Below, some recruiting news from around the Ivy League....

For a list of committed players to attend Ivy League schools, including profiles of incoming Cornell recruits, and a listing of Cornell's prospective recruiting targets, click here. For a list of general Ivy League prospective recruiting targets, click here. Please note that we update these lists daily.

Columbia received a commitment from Skylar Scrivano (Peddie School) Hightstown, NJ, 6-9, F. Princeton, Brown, Rider and Monmouth are among those schools which expressed varying levels of interest. The commitment was reported by Northstar Basketball.

Stephen Zack (Red Land HS) Red Land, PA, 6-10, F committed to La Salle this week after he was unable to overcome admissions and financial aid hurdles with Cornell, which he previously visited. Several sources, including NJHoops.com made it well known that Cornell was Zack's leader. The skilled post player had sixteen reported offers on the table, including pursuit from Penn, Princeton, Penn State, George Mason, American, Bucknell, Holy Cross, Lehigh, Robert Morris and Mount St. Mary's among others.

Per the Atlanta Journal Constitution, Jordan Loyd (Milton HS) Alpharetta, GA, 6-2, G, committed to Furman after considering reported offers from Rice, Dartmouth, Cornell and Army, while also earning consideration from Wichita State, Winthrop and Minnesota.

ArizonaHoops.com reports that Deion Giddens (Will Canyon HS) Surprise, AZ, 6-9, F, has offers from Cornell, Princeton, Bucknell and Houston Baptist with interest from Utah, Pepperdine, Boise State, Lamar, UTSA, Northern Arizona, and San Francisco. He told ArizonaPreps.com with regard to his recruitment, "I would like to get it over in the fall. Then I can focus on school and the high school season."

Three Northfield Mount Hermon School players made college visits in the last week. J'vonte Brooks, 6-6, F visited Harvard, Evan Cummins, 6-8, F (class of 2012), visited Northeastern and Boston University, while Armani Cotton (class of 2011) visited Princeton. Cotton has an offer to Holy Cross while, Cummins already has offers from Providence, UMass, Boston University, St. Joseph's, William & Mary and Florida Atlantic. ACC, PAC 10, Atlantic 10 and Ivy League schools are showing interest. Cotton previously attended Harvard's Elite Camp.

Certainly not an exhaustive or complete list, but below appears to be the top targets from Penn and Harvard in the current recruiting cycle for the class of '11:

HARVARD
-Spencer Dinwiddie (Taft HS) Los Angeles, CA 6-2, G
-Andre Hollins (White Station HS) Memphis, TN 6-3, G
-Lonnie Jackson (Valencia HS) Valencia, CA, 6-3, G
-Shane Larkin (Dr. Phillips HS) Orlando, FL 5-11 , G
-Patrick Lewis-Perry (Flint Powers Catholic HS) Flint, MI, G
-Shelby Moats (Waconia HS) Waconia, MN 6-8, F
-Joshua Richardson (Santa Fe HS) Edmond, OK, 6-5, G
-Kenyatta Smith (Flintridge Prep) La Canada, CA 6-7, G
-J'vonte Brooks (Northfield Mount Hermon School) Northfield, MA 6-6

PENN
-Kenyatta Smith (Flintridge Prep) La Canada, CA 6-7, C
-Wesley Saunders (Windward School) Los Angeles, CA, 6-6, F
-Henry Brooks (Miller Grove HS) Lithonia, GA 6-8
-Ryan Anderson (Poly HS) Long Beach, CA, 6-7, F

News and Notes: Monday Edition

Above, a media guide for Ivy League basketball for the 1968-1969 season. Below, some news and notes...


  • Louis Dale's (Cornell '10) Gottingen basketball club has posted the results of Dale's first two exhibition performances (English version).
  • Brian Delaney of the Ithaca Journal interviewed Bill Courtney on the impact of Cornell's new players:
Between now and the official start of college basketball season on or around Oct. 15, I'll post some of Bill Courtney's thoughts on the 2010-11 roster he'll be coaching in his first year as head coach. We sat down and talked at length about the upcoming year last week, and pretty much talked about every player on the roster. I've briefly touched on Courtney's new players, four incoming freshmen and junior college transfer Andrew Ferry in a story that ran last week.

Here's a bit more from Courtney on his recent arrivals. Consider this Part I of a series of blog posts going forward:

On 6-5 Canadian forward Manny Sahota: "He's a guy with tremendous potential. A really good athlete. Can play both forward spots, had a really good senior year and followed it up with some all-star games where he played pretty well. He's a guy going forward, in the future, I think can be a really good player. He's got to learn a little bit more about the game, stuff like that."

On 6-3 Dominick Scelfo and 6-2 Jake Matthews: "They're a little different. Dom's more of a true point guard. He can run the team, be a team leader type guy, and Jake's more of a combo guard, good at scoring with some athleticism. He's just a little thin right now; he needs to put on some weight."

In terms of Scelfo and Matthews challenging for playing time: "They're both right there because we don't have enough backcourt depth."

On 6-6 Dwight Tarwater: "Dwight is similar to Manny in he can play both forward spots. He's probably a little more skilled. He can shoot the ball; he's very strong. He's probably the most college ready of the freshmen because of his size. He's got to learn the college game and the intensity and I think he'll be fine."

In the story I linked to above, I used Courtney's quote on Andrew Ferry. Ferry's healing up from a wrist injury suffered recently, but when he gets healthy, the new coaching staff believes he'll be an integral part of the 2010-11 team. I'm looking forward to seeing him in practice come October.
  • Below, an article from Insider Higher Ed on Cornell's new financial aid policy and its relationship to athletics competitiveness:
New Tactic in Aid Arms Race

In an unusual way, some of the ideals of the Overlap Group may be returning -- but in a significantly different form from the meetings of elite private colleges that ended after the Justice Department started an antitrust investigation into its practices in 1989. At least part of the momentum for this approach is coming from concerns about athletic competitiveness in the Ivy League.

The ideal behind the Overlap Group was that students fortunate enough to be admitted to more than one Ivy League institution (or more than one elite liberal arts college) should be able to make their college choice based on non-financial criteria. This was accomplished by having aid officials of the various colleges meet each year, and review the aid offers they were preparing for commonly admitted students and to agree on a common analysis of financial need. The Justice Department viewed this as taking away students' right to have competing aid awards to consider -- and that perspective carried the day as several settlements in the early 1990s formally ended the practice.

In the years since then, especially in the 2007-8 academic year, students did start to see the competition that the Justice Department wanted to bring about. Aid policies and packages became much more generous -- across elite higher education but especially at institutions with mega-endowments: Harvard, Yale, Princeton and Stanford Universities. Loan requirements disappeared and families who in years earlier would never have been considered needy suddenly found themselves eligible for aid. At Harvard University, for instance, those from families with incomes under $60,000 pay nothing (and borrow nothing) and those with incomes up to $180,000 have to pay no more than 10 percent of family income -- again without any borrowing.

Among colleges that also want top students, but that award aid based only on need and so can't resort to merit scholarships, it has appeared that there was no way to match Harvard. Most of these institutions simply could not afford to be as generous as those at the top of the endowment pyramid.

But quietly -- without the big announcements that accompanied the aid shifts of 2007-8 -- there may be the beginnings of an effort to return to the Overlap Group approach.

Cornell University has an across-the-board aid policy that doesn't come close to Harvard's (just as its endowment doesn't come close). Loans aren't eliminated for everyone -- just those with family incomes up to $75,000. For other students, there are loans (although there are caps of $3,000 a year for those with family income up to $120,000). But for those admitted to enroll in the fall of 2011 who are also admitted to Harvard, Cornell will match the parental contribution and loan levels of Harvard. And it will do the same for all other Ivies (a few of which are similar to Harvard and a few of which have policies somewhere in between those of Cornell and Harvard). Cornell also says it will "strive" to do the same for those also admitted to Duke and Stanford Universities and to Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

'The Best Fit'

Cornell is not alone in adopting this philosophy. Dartmouth has done so too. And so once again for some students admitted to multiple Ivies, price may not have to be a key consideration in decision-making.

"What [this policy of] matching is trying to do is take the financial competitiveness out of the equation and have students make the decision about the best fit for themselves educationally and personally, and that was the underlying principle behind Overlap," said Susan H. Murphy, vice president for student and academic services at Cornell.

At the same time, she noted "absolutely fundamental differences" between what Cornell has started and Overlap. Cornell will change its aid awards only at an applicant's request, since the other Ivies no longer tell Cornell how much they are offering commonly admitted students. Further, the match can only benefit the applicant. Under Overlap, once those institutions that had common admitted applicants reviewed files, the aid offers could well have ended up in the middle of two calculations -- with a student never knowing, for example, that Yale University was going to offer more money than Harvard, but knocked a few thousand off the package so that it would match Harvard's.

Cornell "is so much bigger and poorer" than Harvard (both in terms of family income and endowment) that there is no way it could afford to match Harvard across the board, Murphy said. But the matching pledge -- less expensive, even though she said she couldn't predict its cost as she doesn't know how many students' choices it will influence -- restores aid equity for commonly admitted applicants in the Ivies.

While Murphy said she doesn't like the term "aid arms race," she acknowledged that the decisions of the wealthiest Ivies have changed the equation for defining need-based aid. "I think what they've done in the main is motivated by the right reasons," Murphy said. "They have resources they can spend. They think the middle income and upper income are getting squeezed and they are opening their doors as widely as they can financially, and I applaud them for using their wealth to do that."

At the same time, she said that "there's no question that the needs analysis that Harvard and Yale have brought to the table is fundamentally different from anything I knew" before those announcements. She said that limiting family contributions to 10 percent of income for someone in the high hundred thousands of family income was "fairly generous" and that she thought there was nothing wrong with reasonably sized loans for students -- as a means to stretch aid dollars further.

Murphy is under no illusion that Cornell is about to split the enrollments of those who are admitted to Cornell and also to Harvard, Yale or Princeton. Most "are going to go to Harvard anyway," so they won't even ask Cornell to match the aid offer. But she noted that even if Harvard, Yale and Princeton win the lion's share of that pool, the share Cornell gets "is not zero," and could go up if the aid differential disappears. She noted that the university's specialized academic programs and location (while not desirable for everyone) have long been factors to attract some students who are also admitted to what U.S. News & World Report and conventional wisdom would consider more prestigious institutions.

The numbers of common admits with Dartmouth College and Columbia University are relatively small, she said, because both of their institutions' classes are much smaller than Cornell's. But she said that there are always healthy numbers of common admits as well with Brown University and the University of Pennsylvania, where the policy would also apply.

The Athletic Factor

There is another group of commonly admitted applicants to Cornell and other Ivies that could well be swayed by price equality -- athletes.

In 2008, Cornell adopted a similar policy of enhanced aid packages, but it was only for selected groups of applicants, including athletes. The Ivy League said that the policy effectively amounted to athletic scholarships, banned by the league. Cornell disputed that view because the larger awards went only to those with financial need, but nonetheless had to abandon the policy because of the league's analysis.

Robin Harris, executive director of the Ivy League, said that Cornell's new policy "is fine" because it is "for everyone" and athletes and non-athletes benefit equally.

Murphy said that "there's no question that had we not been told by the Ivies" that Cornell couldn't keep the policy adopted in 2008, "we may not have gone in this direction as quickly." She stressed that the motivation for the policy shift was "to be able to get our fair share" of the best students -- athletes and non-athletes alike.

Still, she said that athletics is a key issue here. Because the Ivy League bars athletic scholarships or merit scholarships, recruited athletes are theoretically not factoring finances into their choices, but there has been a huge impact on the gaps among the Ivies since some members have so increased their aid packages. Murphy noted that, without Cornell's shift in policy, some students could be looking at a $100,000 gap over four years in the relative costs of Cornell and a competitor. Cornell "may be in an odd position" to raise the issue now, given its recent athletic successes (Sweet 16 for men's basketball, and No. 2 spot nationally in men's wrestling and women's ice hockey), but she said the issue is very real. "We have had a grave concern about competitive equity within the league," she said.

Experts on academically talented athletes say that Cornell's new aid policy may well have a greater impact on the decisions of athletes than of non-athletes -- even if all will benefit. Matt Baker is a private counselor in Illinois who specializes in helping students who are recruited by Ivy League institutions and top liberal arts colleges and who have the potential to play intercollegiate athletics at those colleges.

While he said that the prestige factor still favors Harvard, and that many athletes most motivated by scholarship dollars may bypass the Ivies altogether so they can win athletic scholarships, he said there is a significant other group of athletes. Once they have decided to go the Ivy route, they want to go where they particularly like the coaches or are excited about their particular likely fit on a given team. In this competition, he said, "I have students who look at Harvard and want to go to Cornell, because of the coaches." And the same is true, he said, for various other Ivies, where the theoretically more prestigious institution doesn't sway an athlete -- as long as price isn't a factor.

While some Ivy-bound athletes aren't price sensitive, Baker said, for those who are, Cornell's shift "absolutely" will change its ability to attract talent.

Quiet Competition and Some Criticism

Some normally talkative admissions and aid experts don't want to talk on the record about this particular competition. Privately, some are critical of Cornell, saying that its primary motivation is about athletics, or that Cornell is moving toward unofficial merit aid since those at the top of its applicant pool (those getting into other Ivies) can get better aid packages than those for whom Cornell was a stretch and who didn't get in to other Ivies.

Others, however, credit Cornell with finding a way to compete with Harvard and for providing more aid money to more students. Aid officials elsewhere -- including some who don't actually support Cornell's move -- credit the university for being forthright about it. The university has briefed its competitors and, while not shouting about its new policy the way colleges did with big financial aid announcements a few years ago, it is clearly visible on the university's financial aid website.

"We've tried to be transparent about what we are doing," Murphy said.

Many aid experts believe others are also matching. For many colleges that have no qualms about merit aid, they just offer more merit aid to those who are also admitted and receive generous aid packages from selected Ivies. But the issue is delicate for those that want to match without awarding merit aid.

One of those institutions is Dartmouth -- and athletics may again be a driver. Last year, the acting athletics director sent a letter to football supporters (a group generally not thrilled with the team's recent performance) outlining various ways the college was trying to be more competitive. The letter stated that "in any instance where a recruit receives a more favorable projection from an Ivy competitor, our financial aid colleagues have responded swiftly and competitively to eliminate the differential."

Harris, the Ivy League executive director, said she was familiar with the letter. Asked whether Dartmouth had faced scrutiny over publicly stating that football players' aid packages were always being adjusted to match those offered by other Ivies, Harris said that Dartmouth officials had assured the league that football players weren't getting special treatment and that the college was treating all accepted applicants the same. She said Dartmouth's policy was actually "very similar to what Cornell is doing now," even if the public knowledge of it may relate to a letter about football recruits.

A spokeswoman for Dartmouth confirmed that the college "does match need-based financial aid offers for all students we accept who also receive offers at other Ivy League schools."

Murphy, the Cornell vice president, said she believed a number of colleges were engaged in matching. She declined to name names, but said "I am sure there is some matching going on across my peers," even if she said she wasn't sure "whether they are being as direct about it."

Yao Ming Photo

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Yao Ming Dunk
Yao Ming Houston Rockets basketball center Yao Ming attended a press conference in Beijing, China to announce a partnership deal with the Brisbane company Monster Cable Products Inc. Yao and Monster has developed a broad range of co-branded "Yao Monster" consumer electronics and lifestyle products for distribution in China. Yao Monster products include headphones, bags, 3D glasses and home theater connectivity and power products. Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but a portion of the proceeds will go to the Yao Ming Foundation, which builds schools for disadvantaged children in China.
Yao Ming Photo

Tony Parker best player NBA basketball

Tony Parker best player NBA basketball
Tony Parker Dunk Picture

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Dale Scores 10 Points in 2nd Exhibition Win

Louis Dale (Cornell '10) scored 10 points on Sunday in Gottingen's (2-0) second exhibition, a 94-55 thumping of Hanover, a German Pro A team.

News and Notes for Sunday

Below, some news and notes for Sunday...
  • Fulgor Libertas Forli, Ryan Wittman's new Italian basketball club in Italy's second division has posted on its website, Wittman's career highlights video package as produced by Slope Media.
  • Below, the New York Post's story on Cornell women's basketball new assistant coach, Ryan Patrick Woerner and his connection with the men's program.
Cornell tabs Xavier alum as women's basketball assistant
Woerner, son of former Bishop Kearney coach Cathy Crockett, one of the youngest coaches in the country at 21

It wasn’t much, but it was home for Ryan Patrick Woerner. The Breezy Point native spent nearly a week of his life during March sleeping on the couch in the Cornell men’s basketball office and enjoying its great DVD collection.

“It allowed me to really work from sunup to sundown during a critical time in season,” said the 21-year-old Woerner, who was a coaching intern at the time. “Most of my classmates were boarding planes for the Caribbean. I was sleeping in the locker room.”

He was a senior at nearby Ithaca, but the two schools were on different spring breaks, so Woerner’s dorm room wasn’t ready. It forced him to stay on Cornell’s campus, something that came in handy when he was called on at all hours to help the team in any way he could during its run to the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA tournament.

“He wanted to stay on and show how committed he was,” said Xavier boys basketball coach Joe McGrane, Woerner’s mentor. “He was learning too much that he didn’t want to miss anything.”

It was that type of dedication, along with the other skills he showed throughout his stay with the Big Red and former coach Steve Donahue, that is the major reason he will continue to call Cornell home. Woerner was recently added to the school's women’s basketball staff as an assistant coach, making him one of the youngest in the country. He joins a team that was 7-20 last year under head coach Dayna Smith, who will be entering her ninth season.

“I look at it as a tremendous opportunity,” Woerner said. “I was excited. My initial aspiration was to get involved with the men’s game because that is who I’ve done most of my work with in the early parts of my career. Getting involved with the women’s game is something I am ready to do.”

Smith said he helped out at her team’s practices here and there during this internship and came highly recommended by Donahue, who is now at Boston College. Woerner’s basketball upbringing, overall knowledge of the game and the potential for increased New York City recruiting ties made him an exciting candidate.

“He just seems like a very bright individual,” Smith said. “I think he learned a lot around our men’s program last year, being around the type of student athlete that we have at Cornell. The Xs and O’s, I think this is a basketball junkie. He is going to be able to come in and talk shop, write up some offenses and toy with some defense. I think that part he is going to do fantastic with.”

Woerner has been around basketball his entire life. His mother is former Bishop Kearney coach Cathy Crockett, who calling it quits after 23 years at the Brooklyn school last season. He remembers taking the train all over the city from Xavier, his alma mater, to attend his mom’s games. Woerner said he didn’t become a coach to follow in his mother’s footstep, but because of his interest in helping others. Being around basketball from day one just pushed him in that direction to do so.

“He was there every day,” Crockett said. “He was in his infant seat. … He was born Nov. 10. So he was probably in the gym Nov. 12.”

Woerner feels he brings a diverse skill set to the Cornell bench because of the people and programs he has been around. He has been a sponge of coaching information since he was 16 and especially over the last two seasons, filling numerous marble notebooks with information. Following a short stint two years ago, Woerner was a staple around the Xavier boys basketball team from late November until early January. He put together scouting reports and worked with the team’s guards. The Knights, for whom he played just freshman ball, made a Cinderella run to the CHSAA Intersectional Class A final.

“I was pretty impressed with the scouting reports, the details for someone his age. In the three or four pages you could tell he took pride in it,” McGrane said.

While McGrane is the coach Woerner is the closest with, he also spent last fall doing a sports marketing internship at American University, which allowed him to observe men’s coach Jeff Jones’ practices. At Cornell he often got to work out the team’s players who did not travel on the road. Woerner spends most of his summer working St. Anthony’s coach Bobby Hurley’s camp, Five Star and Hoop Group Elite to name a few. Woerner will take all of that experience and try to bolster the Cornell program.

“I think the Ivy League is the most unique conference in the country,” he said. “To have the opportunity to recruit in the Ivy League and overcome some obstacles that it presents is a great challenge for a young coach.”

Tim Duncan Wallpaper


Tim Duncan Photo
Tim Duncan Poster

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Tim Duncan Image

Steve Nash Photo

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Steve Nash In Action
Steve Nash Steve Nash #13 of the Phoenix Suns passes the ball against the Los Angeles Lakers in the first quarter of Game Five of the Western Conference Finals during the 2010 NBA Playoffs at Staples Center on May 27, 2010 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.
Steve Nash Picture
Steve Nash Steve Nash #13 of the Phoenix Suns reacts after Jason Richardson #23 tied the game in the final seconds of Game Five of the Western Conference Finals against the Los Angeles Lakers during the 2010 NBA Playoffs at Staples Center on May 27, 2010 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.
Steve Nash Photo

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Dale Makes Pro Debut

Louis Dale (Cornell '10) scored 15 points and dished six assists in his pro debut with Gottingen (Bundesliga, German premier league) in the team's season opening exhibition, a 77-59 win over Würzburg, a second division team. Gottingen returns to action on Sunday.



In town, Dale and his Goettingen teammates prepare for their team photo shoot.



Dale is introduced to the city before the team's exhibition on Saturday.




Dale and teammates meet the fans after the exhibition.

Cody Toppert ('05) (No. 33, above and below), played for Gottingen in 9 games during the 2009-2010 season. Toppert will play this season for the Plymouth Raiders in the British Basketball League.


Coach Courtney and Cornell Meet Again

Long before he became Cornell's Robert E. Gallagher '44 Head Coach of Men's Basketball, the Big Red were trying to figure out a way how to defend Bill Courtney. During 1991 and 1992, Courtney was a two-time First Team All-Patriot League selection with Bucknell University. He graduated with 1,499 caeer points, a mark that still ranks among the top 10 all-time at the school. And he has some experience "torching" Cornell too.

On January 4, 1992 in Lewsiberg, Pa., in a game against Cornell, Courtney scored 31 points and dished six assists and grabbed five rebounds, helping Bucknell to a 98-96 victory over the Big Red. A year earlier, on December 29, 1990, Courtney, then a junior, scored a game-high 21 points with four rebounds and four assists in a 93-85 Big Red victory in Ithaca.

Below, an archived article from the March 27, 2006 issue of USA Today, covering George Mason's run to the 2006 Final Four and Courtney's role in building GMU's run.
Former Mason assistant enjoying ride vicariously

Bill Courtney believes George Mason would not have reached the Final Four had he remained on Jim Larranaga's staff. It is not a claim your average assistant coach would put on his résumé, but Courtney deals in the currency of truth.

"I would've convinced Jim along the way to do one little thing differently that wouldn't have worked," Courtney said. "The stars had to be perfectly aligned for this to happen, and part of that destiny was me leaving."

He left last June for Providence, Larranaga's alma mater. Funny how it works out. Courtney grew up 15 minutes from George Mason, as under-recruited as the kids he would later sign for the ride of their lives. Courtney desperately wanted to play in Mason's Patriot games.

Rick Barnes, then the Mason coach, called to express interest, then immediately bolted for — where else? — Providence. "My dream was shattered," Courtney said.

He became a star at Bucknell, good enough to play in the USBL, in Hong Kong and on a Milwaukee Bucks summer team. He coached some high school and college ball before Larranaga interviewed him at Bowling Green 10 years back.

"My interview consisted of staying at Jim's house, in his son's bed," Courtney said. "Woke up, played two-on-two with his sons, had a cookout and went to the movies to see De Niro and Wesley Snipes in The Fan."

They loathed the movie and loved each other. A year later, when George Mason called for Larranaga, Courtney entered his boss' office armed with heavy local knowledge. "Is George Mason really a better job than this one?" Larranaga asked his aide.

Courtney talked up the campus and the leftover talent in the Washington, D.C., area. "We can do special things there," he said.

They spent so many days on the road together, Courtney figured Larranaga logged more hours recruiting than any head coach. They spent one endless car ride through Florida listening to Pat Conroy's The Lords of Discipline. Courtney did all the driving. Sometimes he did all the talking, too.

Like the night Will Thomas' mother asked him to say a pre-dinner prayer. Courtney was a Baptist with a Catholic wife, recruiting a Catholic high school prospect he thought might be Baptist. He asked the Lord seven or eight ways to bless their food, then hoped for the best. He landed far more than he lost.

"Jai Lewis," he said. "First day of the recruiting period, 7 a.m., I was in his mother's house in Columbus, Georgia, before she went to church."

Lewis' mother thanked Courtney for that visit Sunday amid the delirium after George Mason swiped Connecticut's spot in the Final Four. A George Mason official had given the Providence assistant a floor pass so he could party with his grown-up recruits. The Colonial Athletic Association was letting the Big East behind the VIP ropes. "When I recruited these kids," Courtney said, "I told them, 'Our goal is to win the whole thing.' "

Not the conference tournament. Not the first round of the NCAA Tournament. "The national championship," Courtney said.

George Mason is two games from that title, and friends are busy calling Courtney to rub it in. "You're a moron," they joke. Courtney is sporting enough to laugh along. He knew the Patriots would be good this year, maybe not this good.

But he also knew he wanted to be a head coach and that Big East assistants get better, faster looks. "When I first told Jim I was leaving," Courtney said, "he wasn't happy. But a day later he gave me his blessing and told me he loved me just the same. The hardest thing was telling the players."

The players who scored the George Mason scholarship Courtney never got. They understood he needed to advance his career, just like they understood when Courtney's fellow aide, Eric Konkol, left last year to support his wife's pursuit of a doctorate degree at the University of Minnesota.

Courtney and Konkol often speak about what they shared and what they're witnessing. "We both agree, if we had to leave for George Mason to go to the Final Four, we'd do it over and over again," said Konkol, who just helped Hopkins High School win the Minnesota state title.

He'll join Courtney in Indianapolis for an emotional reunion, but not before Courtney fields a dozen phone calls from Larranaga, who wants to know all about the Friars' December loss to Florida and its own Providence alum, Billy Donovan.

"Jim's calling me so much now," Courtney said, "I had to tell him, 'Coach, I'm not on your payroll anymore.' "

Larranaga wants to keep him in the huddle. It's his way of showing that George Mason never would have made this ride without Bill Courtney on board.

Remembering Adam Gore from 2005-2006

Perhaps no freshman in Cornell basketball history made as quick as an impact on the Big Red as Adam Gore (class of '09). During the 2005-2006 season, due to early injuries in the Cornell backcourt, Gore started the first game and would not relinquish a starting role the rest of the season on route to the 2006 Ivy League Rookie of the Year Award. In his first four games, he averaged 15.8 points per game, reaching double figures in each of them, including a 22 point outburst against Syracuse on November 9, 2005, a televised game on ESPNU in the Coaches vs. Cancer Classic.

"We needed a point guard at the time," said former Cornell assistant coach Izzi Metz to the Cornell Daily Sun. Metz was instrumental in recruiting Gore. "I saw a kid who could handle the ball well and make open shots and seemed pretty confident."

Even before Gore ever played a game for the Big Red, Donahue referred to him as a "tough" kid and it was Gore's toughness that the Donahue staff tried to replicate in recruiting this year's freshmen. Time will tell if there are any Adam Gores in the bunch.


News and Notes: Saturday Edition

Cornell's 2010-2011 online roster has been updated to include photos of each of the newcomers. Above, Cornell has had seven former players earn Ivy League Rookie of the Year, including four winners since 2003. Above, Cornell's four freshmen which are eligible for the 2011 Ivy League Rookie of the Year Award. Below, some news and notes for Saturday...
  • It is hard not to compare the similarities of the 2010-2011 Ivy League preseason with those of 2007-2008. Back in the fall of 2007, Penn had just completed a three year run of consecutive Ivy titles and graduated several All-Ivy players (including Ibrahim Jaaber, Mark Zoller, and Steve Danley). In a similar position this season, Cornell has graduated several seniors and is coming off its own third consecutive Ivy League title run. The Quakers would finish the 2007-2008 season, 8-6 in the Ivy (3rd place).
  • A panel of writers for Rivals.com weighed in on the best college coaching hires in the offseason and former Cornell coach, Steve Donahue is mentioned. David Fox writes, "The three best hires were Steve Donahue at Boston College, Fran McCaffery at Iowa and Brad Brownell at Clemson. McCaffery took three programs from one-bid leagues to the NCAA tournament. Brownell did the same with two programs. Meanwhile, Donahue had perhaps the toughest rebuilding job before taking Cornell to the tournament three times. I can't wait to see what these guys do when they have resources." Jason King added, "Boston College knocked one out of the park by hiring Steve Donahue away from Cornell, where he led his team to the Sweet 16 last spring. His work ethic will be refreshing for a program whose former coach (Al Skinner) had become lazy."

Ron Artest Picture

 
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Friday, August 27, 2010

Jon Jaques Previews the AmEast

Five teams from the America East Conference are on Cornell's 2010-2011 schedule, including Boston U., New Hampshire, Stony Brook, Binghamton and Albany. Cornell's Jon Jaques (class of '10) previews the America East for Slam Magazine Online.

Remembering the Big Shot from '65

Above, the January 18, 1965 issue of the Cornell Daily Sun recapping Cornell's thrilling 70-69 win over Princeton on January 16, 1965 in front of 9,000 fans in Cornell's Barton Hall. On the game's last Cornell possession, Blaine Aston received a pass near the foul line. Aston hit the 17 foot jumper with 3 seconds remaining for the Cornell win. (click here to see the Ithaca Journal report on the game). The Sun reports that more than 3,000 fans were turned away from attending the sold-out game. Princeton's Bill Bradley finished with 40 points.

CAA conference scheduling update: Mason to play UNCW Dec. 4 (home) & Feb. 9 (road)

UNCW was first to release their portion of the CAA conference schedule for 2010-2011.  They will travel to Fairfax December 4th and the Patriots will travel to the Trask Coliseum on February 9th of 2011.

D1scourse.com has a breakdown:

Nov. 13: Harvard
Nov. 18-19, 21: at Charleston Classic (with Charlotte, East Carolina, Georgetown, N.C. State, Wofford and two teams TBA)
Nov. 24: Radford
Nov. 27: Florida Atlantic

Dec. 1: George Washington
Dec. 4: UNC Wilmington
Dec. 8: Loyola
Dec. 11: at Liberty
Dec. 22: at Duquesne
Dec. 29: at Dayton

Feb. 9: at UNC Wilmington
Feb. 19: at Bracket Buster

TBA: Delaware
TBA: Drexel
TBA: Georgia State
TBA: Hofstra
TBA: James Madison
TBA: Northeastern
TBA: Old Dominion
TBA: Towson
TBA: at Delaware
TBA: at Georgia State
TBA: at Hofstra
TBA: at James Madison
TBA: at Northeastern
TBA: at Old Dominion
TBA: at Virginia Commonwealth
TBA: at William and Mary

News and Notes: Friday Edition

Below, some news and notes for Friday...
  • The HoopsReport.com ranks potential Cornell 2010-2011 opponent, VCU as the No. 46 team in the nation.
  • Brian Delaney of the Ithaca Journal reports below:

Steve Donahue has spent the past several months acclimating to his new high-profile, high-pressure job as Boston College men's basketball coach, but he still made it a point to assist four of his former players in their search for professional playing opportunities in the NBA and overseas.

When Ryan Wittman signed Wednesday with Forli of the Italian second division, Lega 2, it marked the final decision to be made by one of Donahue's former Cornell standouts. Louis Dale signed with BC Goettingen in Germany, while Jeff Foote (Maccabi Tel Aviv) and Jon Jaques (Ironi Ashkelon) inked deals with Israeli teams.

"In a lot of ways, all four made really good decisions," Donahue said by phone Thursday. "In terms of where they're at, the type of coaches they're playing for, the cities they're living in, the style of play. It fits every one of them. The guys did the right thing, took their time, had good representation, and in the long run it helps -- those three in particular: Louis and Jeff and Ryan -- to keep improving.

"Eventually, their hope is they can compete and improve their game to get to their goal of playing in the NBA or at the highest of levels and make this a really successful career."

Wittman said Italy was one of his preferences when he and his agent, Cleveland-based Mark Termini, began exploring opportunities abroad. Wittman's father, Randy, now an assistant coach with the Washington Wizards who is well-connected throughout professional basketball, played an important role in the decision.

"I had different opportunities throughout the whole process. We were waiting for the best option and this was probably it," Wittman said.

One of Termini's clients, Earl Boykins, played in Bologna, which is about a 40-minute drive from Forli.

"I think at the beginning of the process, if we had a choice to go (abroad), Italy would be a top option from the standpoint of the culture of the country and it being westernized a little bit and just generally being a great place," Wittman said. "I felt pretty comfortable. Basketball's really prestigious over there."
  • It is not even September and injuries are already a mounting concern for the Big Red, especially in the backcourt. Andrew Ferry, the 6'4" shooting guard transfer out of Valparaiso and Palm Beach State College injured his wrist while playing for a travel club in China this summer. Ferry could be back on the court in weeks or out of preseason practices altogether, depending on the effectiveness of his rehab. Another new recruit, incoming freshman, 6'3" Jake Matthews injured his hand during scrimmaging at Cornell's Elite Camp back in June. He only recently started training again, but did miss some valuable offeason time this summer on the court. Finally, 6'0" incoming freshman point guard, 6'1" Dominick Scelfo, is still just beginning to come back to full form after suffering what could have been a career ending knee injury while on a recruiting visit to Saint Louis last October. Just as with Adam Gore ('09), the big concern for Scelfo is avoiding future, recurring knee injuries.
  • Echoing what was already reported by Delaney earlier this summer, the prior staff had early projections of a 2010-2011 starting line-up consisting of, "[Chris] Wroblewski, [Andrew] Ferry, [Max] Groebe, [Errick] Peck and [Mark] Coury, backed by a deep bench." Players repeatedly mentioned as "in the hunt" for starting roles or key reserve minutes included Aaron Osgood, Adam Wire, Anthony Gatlin, Josh Figini, Eitan Chemerinski, as well as three of the freshmen, Matthews, Scelfo and Dwight Tarwater. With respect to Ferry and Groebe, both players were said to interchangeable at the 2 and 3 positions, while Gatlin and Chemerinski were viewed as 4s in the Donahue system, with Figini playing some 4 and 5. Of course, with the coaching change, Delaney cautioned, "[k]eep in mind Bill Courtney's evaluations are sure to be different," so every player on the roster could have a chance to break through in the new regime. Nevertheless, it is noteworthy that the former staff truly believed they had a championship caliber roster and while expectations this season among fans of the team should be tempered and kept in check, there is definitely some young and unseen talent in Ithaca and the road to the Ivy League Championship still may have to go through Newman Arena.
  • Speaking of the new recruits, the prior staff reportedly deemed this class the best they ever recruited at Cornell. Of course, this is taking Jeff Foote out of the equation of the class' of '10, since he later transferred in from St. Bonaventure.
  • The new Cornell coach staff of head coach Bill Courtney, and his assistants, Marlon Sears, Jay Larranaga and Ricky Yahn have been very active on the recruiting scene and have been involved with both transfers as well as rising high school seniors in the class of 2011 (not to mention underclassmen in classes of 2012 and 2013).

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Vertrail Vaughns competing in dance off against the Italians (Video)

Apparently the 108-38 beat down Mason handed out to GMV Ghezzano was just a prelude to the real action that night:

Ivy League Roster and Schedule Updates

Catching up with schedules and rosters around the league, below is an update with links.

Cornell has released official announcements of its schedule, roster and recruiting class. Around the rest of the conference, Harvard, Brown, Columbia, Dartmouth, Princeton, and Yale, have released their respective schedules. In roster news, Brown, Columbia, Dartmouth, Harvard, Penn, and Yale, have posted their 2010-2011 online rosters. Columbia, Dartmouth, Penn, Princeton, and Yale have also formally announced their incoming recruiting classes. Only Penn has yet to release its schedule, while Princeton must still release its roster.

Brown's roster reflects that junior Marques Coleman has left the program for undisclosed reasons. He is the fifth Bear to leave the program in the last two years. The Brown roster also implies that Toledo transfer, Stephen Albrecht has gained eligibility for the 2010-2011 season. Albrecht sat out the spring semester at Toledo and reportedly committed to Cornell during January. A change in Cornell coaching staff caused Albrecht to pull his commitment and instead commit to Brown during April. Albrecht could be a vital piece to Brown's run at an upper division finish during 2010-2011 if eligible.

Harvard's 2010-2011 roster reflects that sophomore Spencer De Mars has left the the program for undisclosed reasons. De Mars is the twelfth member of the Crimson to leave the program during the last three seasons, and the fourth player to leave in the last two seasons. Several of these players were cut by the coaching staff during the fall of 2008. Harvard players which dropped off the Crimson roster for reasons other than graduation/exhaustion of eligibility include:

-Spencer de Mars (left during '10-'11)
-Hugh Martin (left during '09-'10)
-Peter Boehm (left during '09-'10)
-Peter Swiatek (left during '09-'10)
-Eric Groszyk (left during '08-'09)
-T.J. Carey (left during '08-'09)
-Kyle Fitzgerald (left during '08-'09)
-Adam Demuyakor (left during '08-'09)
-Ndu Okereke (left during '08-'09)
-Darryl Finkton (left during '08-'09)
-Cem Dinc (left during '08-'09)
-Alex Blankenau (left during '08-'09)

(edited 8.26.10)

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