Saturday, April 3, 2010

Cornell Receives Verbal Commitment

The Cornell Basketball Blog learned from a source close to the situation that Cornell received a verbal commitment from Nnamdi Okoye, a 6'8" 220 lb. power forward from Concord, California's De La Salle High School program.

Okoye is a developing player with limited basketball experience, but brings big time physical abilities to Cornell. His De La Salle program has recently produced several Ivy League players and recruiting prospects.

Two additional commitments are expected to follow Okoye sometime next week.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Wittman Takes Second Place

In front of a live ESPN audience and among eight of the nation's top three point shooters, Cornell's Ryan Wittman took home the 2nd place/runner-up honors in the State Farm Three Point Championship tonight at the Final Four in Indianapolis.

Wittman will join his Cornell teammate, Jeff Foote, in the Reese's College Basketball All Star Game tomorrow night from the Final Four.

News and Notes: Early Evening Edition

(Photo, Cornell Daily Sun)
Below, some early evening news and notes...
  • Cornell Athletics is celebrating its strong winter sports season this Tuesday at Newman Arena. The Athletics Department announced the following:
ITHACA, N.Y. - Come celebrate the success of Cornell athletic teams from the winter season, including the women's ice hockey and wrestling team's national runner-up finishes, the men's basketball Sweet 16 run and men's ice hockey's NCAA appearance and ECAC title with a celebration on Tuesday, April 6 beginning at 4 p.m. at Newman Arena. Featured guest speakers will include University President David J. Skorton, Vice President Susan Murphy and Director of Athletics Andy Noel. Doors open at 4 p.m., with the program beginning at 4:30 p.m., followed by an autograph session with the teams.

Come celebrate with the teams and their coaches, along with the Big Red cheerleaders and Pep Band. Cornell merchandise will be on sale as well. The celebration is free and open to the public.
  • The odds have just improved for Steve Donahue in receiving an offer from Boston College. The Boston Globe reports that B.C. does not plan on interviewing a fifth candidate after meeting with Donahue and Ed Cooley (Fairfield University) yesterday, Chris Mooney (Richmond) earlier today, and a scheduled interview on Monday with Bill Coen (Northeastern).

Dale National Mid Major Most Valuable Player

CollegeInsider.com has named Cornell's Louis Dale the National Mid Major Most Valuable Player. The site writes:
Mid-Major Most Valuable Player
Louis Dale, Cornell

In the history of the storied Ivy League, there have been few basketball seasons like the one Cornell just completed. The Big Red won 29 games and advanced all the way to the Sweet Sixteen, the first time an Ancient Eight team had done that since Penn in 1979. Leading the charge was senior point guard Louis Dale, who is College Insider's choice for Mid-Major Most Valuable Player.

He was magnificent in the NCAA Tournament, averaging 21.3 points on 51% shooting while only turning it over eight times in three contests. On the season, his 4.7 assists per game led the Ivy League as did his 2.1 assist to turnover ratio. His proficiency in running the Cornell offense was a huge reason why the team led the country in 3-point field goal percentage (43%) and ranked 14th nationally in overall field goal percentage (48.2%).

Wittman Shooting Tonight on ESPN

Catch a glimpse tonight of Ryan Wittman in the State Farm Three Point Shooting Championship live from the Final Four in Indianapolis. The event will be broadcast at 9 pm on ESPN.

On Friday, Wittman and Cornell's Jeff Foote will appear in the Reese's College All Star Game at 4:30 on CBS College Sports, also a part of the Final Four festivities.

Recruiting News: Columbia Secures Services of Guard

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

Kenny Johnson (Abington Friends School) Abington, PA 6-3 is hearing from Penn, Brown, Elon, Columbia, Lafayette, Bucknell, Yale, Wagner and Bryant per ScoutHoops.com.

MassLive wonders if Tommy Amaker can build a Boston College-Northfield Mount Hermon School (Northfield, MA) pipeline should Amaker leave his Harvard post in Cambridge for Chestnut Hill.

BeaverBlitz.com reports that Kyle Caudill (Brea Olinda HS) Brea, CA 6-11 260 has scholarship offers from Oregon State, USC and Arizona State. He is also hearing from Stanford, Harvard, Wake Forest, St. Mary's, Penn and Notre Dame and he hopes to take official visits out East at some point this year, but has not indentified which schools he plans on visiting.

Tennessee Prep Hoops reports that Columbia received a verbal commitment from Meiko Lyles (University School) Nashville, TN 6-3. Lyles reportedly held scholarship offers to Austin Peay and Middle Tennessee State and drew serious interest from Princeton. Lyles reportedly finished second to Cornell's Dwight Tarwater in Tennessee's Mr. Basketball award voting for Division II-A.

News and Notes: The Joke is on Us Edition


Below, some news and notes...Above, the April Fool's Edition of the Cornell Daily Sun.

  • Dick Vitale writes in USA Today, "Wow! What a magnificent tournament this has been... Then there was Cornell, beating quality teams in Temple and Wisconsin. The Big Red, who provide players financial support based on need, won behind a coach, Steve Donahue, who had a great game plan. The veteran team simply put on a clinic."
  • Donahue was quoted in the New York Times in stating that in his first 10 years in the Ivy League, he could recall only two coaches being fired, yet this season, two Ivy coaches, Penn's Glen Miller and Dartmouth's Terry Dunn were both terminated midseason.

While the Cornell community was celebrating the Big Red’s NCAA Tournament run earlier this month, folks in Princeton, N.J., were doing the same.

No, the Princeton students weren’t the ones jumping for joy. Instead, it was executive director Robin Harris, at the Ivy League office located just over a mile from the Princeton campus, who had a smile on her face.

“We were the media darlings for a week,” Harris said.

As the first-year director discussed yesterday, it is not just Cornell, but the league as a whole that will benefit from the Big Red’s success.

“It was a very exciting time for the Ivy League,” Harris said. “[Cornell] actually exceeded even my expectations.”

Tournament expectations are often low because the Ancient Eight remains the only collegiate athletic conference in which schools cannot offer scholarships to recruits. As a result, quality of play has suffered in recent years.

But as the boys from Ithaca, N.Y., were crushing Temple and Wisconsin — of the Atlantic 10 and Big 10, respectively — they were also changing perceptions of the league in which they play.

The fact that a Sweet Sixteen team didn’t just “sweep through the [Ivy] League,” but played several close conference games and suffered 15-point loss to Penn “raises the perceived level of play in the Ivy League,” Harris said.

“Cornell really [showed] college basketball fans and sports fans in general that it is possible to play very good basketball and do it with very good student-athletes,” she added.

Yet Cornell’s success in picking up the Ivy League’s first NCAA tournament wins since 1998 has tangible benefits for the other Ivies as well.

All eight schools now have a recent example to show recruits the level of success that can be attained in the league, which could boost the quality of incoming players.

“The way the Cornell players presented themselves as intelligent, well-spoken individuals,” Harris said, “placed the Ivy League in such a positive light.”

With the league office still in the process of negotiating a television deal, the events of the past month also helped the conference “look more attractive” to producers and potential viewers.

And then there are the monetary gains. “Units” are awarded to a conference for each game its representative programs play — the Ivies earned three. This season, a unit is projected to be worth $226,206, according to the NCAA’s latest Revenues and Expenses report. That would mean the League has over $600,000 coming its way.

Harris said that the Ivy presidents will determine how that income will be distributed and used but added that the decision-making process is only in its opening stages.

So it remains to be seen just how much and for how long Cornell’s run will help the Ivy League. But for now, Harris is simply happy it’s getting noticed.

“[Cornell] played great basketball, which brought more attention on the athletics aspect of the Ivy League,” the executive director said. “I think the academics go without saying, and sometimes we could use more attention on the athletic successes that we have.”

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