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Monday, December 21, 2009

News and Notes: Afternoon Edition

Some additional news and notes...
  • From Andy Katz's ESPN Weekly Watch: Ryan Wittman, Cornell: Wittman continued to be one of the top scorers that gets little pub. He led Cornell with 29 points and hit a 30-foot shot at the end of overtime to beat Davidson in the semifinals of the Holiday Festival at Madison Square Garden.
  • From ESPN's Fran Frashilla on Twitter, "Heartbreak Hotel for Davidson as Ryan Wittman, one of the country's best shooters last 4 years hits a 35-footer at buzzer. Cornell 91-88."
  • From the "Weekend's Best" by ESPN's Jay Bilas, "Best "Unknown" Player: Ryan Wittman, Cornell
    Wittman scored 29 points and hit seven 3s, including a 30-foot game-winner at the buzzer, in an overtime win against Davidson in the ECAC Holiday Festival at Madison Square Garden. Wittman and Harvard's Jeremy Lin will be the two front-runners for Ivy League Player of the Year."
  • From SlamOnline, "or those of you in the Big Apple area, congratulations, you get my undercard game of the night when Cornell meets up with St. John’s in the “championship game” of the MSG Holiday Festival. The Big Red have won six in a row after yesterday’s OT win against Davidson and forward Ryan Wittman can score against any team in the country. I give the edge to the Johnnies in this one, who at 9-1 are looking like they can be relevant again in the Big East."
  • From Basketball Times Online, "Cornell at St. John's, 9:00 p.m. ... A dangerous, dangerous game for a St. John's team boasting a 9-1 record. "

Midseason Report Card for Cornell's Rookie Class

Midseason Report Card for Cornell's Rookie Class

By Michael R. James
December 21, 2009

The Preseason Story: Despite being one of the weaker entering classes coming into the season, the Big Red’s Errick Peck still garnered enough attention for the entire class, even earning mention among the league’s Rookie of the Year candidates. For Cornell, the perceived weakness in the freshman class didn’t matter all that much as the Big Red had two big pieces joining the squad via transfer and when combined with an already strong returning group, there wasn’t much room for immediate playing time anyway.

The Reality: Thus far, Peck is the only freshman to get any real minutes on the floor (18 percent of total minutes played) and has proven to be a dominant force, especially on the offensive glass - his 22 percent offensive rebounding rate leads all freshmen. While he may not see many minutes, Peck is not shy about using possessions while he’s on the floor, leading all freshmen in percentage of possessions used (35.3 percent) and shots taken (38.4 percent). His 42 percent floor percentage and 93 offensive rating won’t get it done on a team with the 24th best offense in the nation.

Grade: Incomplete

Cornell at St. John's Preview from Johnny Jungle

Ambiance: Dizzee Rascal, Holiday (club swagger music from Britain, Not quite SFW; pops up in new window)

Ambiance: The Office’s Andy Bernard. He went to Cornell, you may have heard of it. (pops up in new window)


Monday evening is the Holiday Festival, championship game, where St. John’s will try to hoist the trophy for the first time in years. Cornell stands in the way.

The championship game of the 2009 Holiday Festival pits the two favorites, St. John’s Red Storm and the Cornell Big Red. It was almost not to be; both games required strong late-game efforts for the teams to advance. St. John’s fought off a determined and scrappy Hofstra team – one that had not been to the NCAA Tournament for much of the decade but nonetheless has won many games against lower-level competition (see what I did there? Responded to Hofstra’s athletic department smack talk) – with relentless and tenacious late-game defense.

Meanwhile, Cornell coasted for a while, went cold, and the crafty Davidson Wildcats slinked in with clutch shooting and excellent ball movement. Missed free throws allowed Cornell to take the game into overtime. Davidson still couldn’t be shaken until a 30 foot jump shot from Ryan Wittman at the buzzer brought the Cornell players onto the court and made the Cornell fans’ hearts start beating in the proper rhythms once more. A fantastic finish to a fantastic game.

On the season, Cornell has brought their excellent offensive attack to Alabama, U Mass, and Syracuse; they have played a home game against Seton Hall as well. The Big Red have combined great and consistent offense with a permissiveness on defense that allows teams like, say, the 3-8 Davidson back into the game. The Big Red can beat St. John’s, if the Red Storm allow them to score freely and put up offensively offensive performances like today’s against Hofstra. But the Red Storm’s swarming defensive ability and shot blocking can really help erase many of the other inefficiencies.

Heckle the Cornell fans at the fantastic Cornell Basketball Blog. And you may know that Cornell forward Jon Jaques wrote blog posts for the New York Times’ sports blog, the Quad.

Tip Off: 9:00 PM (or 30 minutes after Consolation game ends), Monday, December 21
Location: Madison Square Garden
TV: MSG
Radio: Bloomberg 1130/ WSJU


Team Review

Cornell (8-2)

(starters and other information to come)

Cornell is led by 6′6″ small forward Ryan Wittman and 7′ center Jeff Foote. Wittman is a great shooter; they often run him off of screens for shots at the top of the key. His stat lines over the 4 years at Cornell have been almost disturbing in their similarity. He takes a good deal of shots, and gets most of his points from beyond the three-point arc (but is a very good jump shooter inside the arc). He takes the occasional free throw, gets the occasional rebound, and doesn’t foul much (perhaps because his defense is not physical). I think he is talented enough the get a look from the NBA, but that might be just my opinion. Errick Peck plays on the wing as well; he has some athleticism and talent, and I would expect him to get some time against St. John’s.

Up front, Jeff Foote sees a lot of action. He is tall and went off for 20 points in St. John’s win over Cornell in last year’s preseason NIT. Foote also continues to score at a solid clip. His rebounding work and shot blocking are commensurate with his size, but he could stand to turn the ball over less. His stats don’t show it but he’s not a bad passer. He’s not fleet of foot. Mark Coury gets some time up front, he can rebound and score efficiently. Also playing in the post is Alex Tyler, whose job seems to be to foul and hit people; he’s hit 4 of 21 field goal attempts. The aforementioned Jon Jaques is a willing shooter but doesn’t play many minutes.

The backcourt starts with Louis Dale, one of the few players who will be new to St. Johns this year. Dale was injured last year when the Big Red and Red Storm met last year. He can create space and is a gifted passer, though he seemed a non-factor for much of the game against Davidson. Shooting guard Chris Wroblewski is a solid shooter and scorer, and if Wittman is bottled up, he can hit a number of shots. Geoff Reeves plays a 3-point shooter role when he’s on the court, and he can hit well from distance.


Keys to the Game:

Bother the Shooters. Ryan Wittman, in particular, needs to have a”bodyguard” with him at all times, bumping, bothering, and dislodging him from the places ob the court where he wants to get comfortable shooting.

Counter the Droughts. Letting a team with excellent offensive players and three-point shooters hang around is a recipe for disaster. The Red Storm have to counter the droughts with defense, traps, turnovers, and get running the other way to draw fouls.

Ball Protection. The sloppy ballhandling allows crappy teams to hang close in too many ballgames.

Like a Window Washer. Clean the glass. Sean Evans and Dele Coker, among others, have to maintain position and own the glass on both ends. That kind of ugly play can really make this game the kind of mudwrestling match St. John’s can win.

Holiday Parade. A healthy does of getting to the free throw line – which requires good ball movement and aggressive drives – will go a long way to making this win. Conversely, not hitting one’s shots and/ or putting Cornell on the free throw line will go a long way into crafting a disappointing loss.

Ivy Awards: Wittman Wins Third Ivy Player of the Week Award

Cornell's Ryan Wittman and Louis Dale were both honored by the Ivy League Office this week. Wittman is the Player of Week while Dale is named to the Honor Roll. The Ivy Office writes:
PLAYER OF THE WEEK
In one of the biggest stages in all of college basketball, Cornell senior Ryan Wittman (Eden Prairie, Minn.) hit a shot that will go down among the greatest in the “Mecca of College Basketball.” Wittman drained a 35-foot 3-pointer as time expired in overtime, lifting Cornell to a 91-88 victory over Davidson on Sunday afternoon at Madison Square Garden. That capped off a 29-point, three-rebound, two-assist day for Wittman and propelled Cornell into the finals of the MSG Holiday Festival. His seven 3-pointers in the game are the fifth-most in Cornell history and made him the first Cornellian and Ivy League player to surpass 300 career 3-pointers. He ended the day with 301. His 29 points moved him into the top 20 in the Ancient Eight in career scoring, moving all the way to 16th with 1,612 points. He leads the Ivy League in scoring (19.1 ppg) and 3-pointers.

THE HONOR ROLL
Louis Dale, Cornell — Scored nine points, seven in OT, to go along with seven assists in win over Davidson. Dale sent game into OT with layup with 0.7 seconds left in regulation.
2009-10 AWARD WINNERS PLAYERS OF THE WEEK
November 16 — Ryan Wittman, F, Cornell / Jeremy Lin, G, Harvard
November 23 — Matt Mullery, C, Brown / Noruwa Agho, G, Columbia
November 30 — Noruwa Agho, G, Columbia / Ryan Wittman, F, Cornell
December 7 — Jeremy Lin, G, Harvard
December 14 — Noruwa Agho, G, Columbia / Jeremy Lin, G, Harvard
December 21 — Ryan Wittman, F, Cornell
December 28 —
January 4 —
January 11 —
January 18 —
January 25 —
February 1 —
February 8 —
February 15 —
February 22 —
March 1 —
March 8 —

ROOKIES OF THE WEEK

November 16 — Dee Giger, G, Harvard
November 23 — Andrew McCarthy, F, Brown
November 30 — Matt Sullivan, G, Brown
December 7 — Errick Peck, F, Cornell
December 14 — Ian Hummer, F, Princeton
December 21 —
Matt LaBove, C, Dartmouth
December 28 —
January 4 —
January 11 —
January 18 —
January 25 —
February 1 —
February 8 —
February 15 —
February 22 —
March 1 —
March 8 —

News and Notes

Below, some news and notes...
  • From ESPN's Fran Fraschilla, Ryan Wittman is listed among the top NBA prospects in the country for teams looking for players who can "spot up the 3."
Cornell senior Louis Dale is one of 49 Division I point guards on the initial Bob Cousy Award Watch List, which recognizes men's college basketball's top point guard.

It is the third straight year he has been listed.

The list of candidates will be narrowed down to a final 20 by Jan. 1, a final 10 by Feb. 1 and top five by March 1.

A Hall of Fame appointed screening committee will choose the winner, who will receive the honor at the Hall of Fame's class announcement, Monday April 5, in Indianapolis as part of NCAA Final Four weekend.

Dale, a two-time All-Ivy first-team selection and the 2007-08 Ivy League Player of the Year, is one of two players in school history to accumulate 1,000 points, 300 rebounds, 300 assists and 100 steals. Ka'Ron Barnes was the first.

Dale will enter this weekend's action at the Madison Square Garden Holiday Festival needing nine assists to set the Big Red overall assist mark and is averaging 10.2 points, 5.0 assists, 3.1 rebounds and 2.1 steals so far this season.
  • From MSG.com, the network's preview of Sunday's Cornell-Davidson game (our game recap can be found by Clicking here):
CORNELL VS. DAVIDSON IN GAME 1 OF HOLIDAY FESTIVAL AT MSG (SUNDAY)

Davidson coach Bob McKillop is finding out how life is without Stephen Curry – not much fun. The Wildcats have struggled all season long and a date with Cornell should produce another rocky 40 minutes.

Big Red coach Steve Donahue has a dandy tandem of Louis Dale and Ryan Wittman that should relish playing in the World's Most Famous Arena.

Prediction: Cornell 77, Davidson 59

Shot of the Weekend. Cornell 91, Davidson 88 (OT). Ryan Wittman’s 30-footer at the buzzer in overtime gave the Big Red its eighth win of the year and a shot at a Big East team (St. John’s) on Monday night at Madison Square Garden. Lost in the heroics and glee of Wittman’s shot was the fact that it wouldn’t have even been possible had Louis Dale not hit a driving layup with 0.7 seconds remaining in regulation. Cornell’s only two losses this year were against Big East teams (Seton Hall and Syracuse), so this will likely be the Ivy League favorite’s best chance to get a huge win this season (Kansas at Allen Fieldhouse is not realistic). We haven’t been able to locate a video of this shot yet, but if you see one, let us know.

Cornell 91 - Davidson 88 (OT)

A good season for an Ivy squad typically includes multiple beatings from non-conference foes before relief comes in the form of the league season. Cornell and Harvard are throwing that dynamic on its head this season. The Big Red especially have so many good wins on the road that I'd give them a serious look for at-large consideration right now. Jeff Whitman scored 29 in this game at MSG, and Center Jeff Foote added 16 points, 14 rebounds, and 4 assists to power Cornell to 8-2 on the young season. The defending Ivy champs still travel to St. Johns, La Salle, and Kansas before the league slate starts with back-to-back games against Columbia.

Ryan Wittman, who played high school basketball for Eden Prairie, had 29 points for Cornell on Sunday, beating Davidson at the buzzer with a three-pointer at Madison Square Garden. Wittman's father, Randy, is the former Wolves coach who is now Flip Saunders' assistant with the Wizards.

In the [MSG Holiday Festival] opener, Davidson (3-8) rallied from 17 points behind in the first half and had a 75-73 lead before Louis Dale drove for a layup to tie the score for Cornell (8-2) with seven-tenths of a second to go in regulation.

J. P. Kuhlman made a free throw for the Wildcats with 6.6 seconds left in overtime to tie the score at 88-88, but he missed the second.

Wittman dribbled across the midcourt line and let go a rainbow from about 30 feet straightaway. It swished, giving him seven 3-pointers and 29 points.

“To be quite honest, I thought I left it short,” Wittman said. “So I was surprised it went in, but I will take it.”

Men's Basketball Notebook 12-20-09

They’re Kind of a Big Deal

Not only did senior forward Ryan Wittman’s buzzer-beating 3-pointer in overtime save the day for Cornell, but it also gave him 301 for his career –– the only Ivy League player in history to earn this distinction. His 29 points on the day also moved him to 16th all-time in Ancient Eight scoring, with 1,623. Meanwhile, Wittman’s partner in crime on the day, senior guard Louis Dale, moved within two assists of Cornell’s record with his seven dishes.

Guess Who’s Back

Playing in his first game since late November due to a calf injury, senior forward Alex Tyler picked up five points, four rebounds and two blocks in his return to the court. The tri-captain gave no indication that he was still hurting, as he performed a very acrobatic maneuver into some empty courtside chairs in order to maintain Cornell’s possession of the basketball at 9:18 in the first half.


  • Continue reading this post by taking the link below.




  • 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. Below is a look at Cornell's RPI rank (as of December 21) following a 8-2 start for the Big Red. All of Cornell's opponents are also listed (out of 347 total Division I teams). Cornell's results against these opponents are in parentheses.
4. St. John's
9. Syracuse (L)
21. Kansas
31. Cornell
34. Harvard
52. Hofstra
71. Seton Hall (L)
80. La Salle
95. Alabama (W)
104. St. Joseph's (W)
108. Princeton
129. UMass (W)
138. Vermont (W)
144. Drexel (W)
164. Davidson (W)
177. Columbia
179. Brown
192. South Dakota
287. Yale
293. Bucknell (W)
304. Toledo (W)
332. Dartmouth
341. Bryant
345. Penn
NR- Clarkson (D-III)
NR- PSU-Erie (D-III)

Neither the Ken Pomeroy or Jeff Sagarin rankings are used by the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee. Nevertheless, the KenPom.com site ranks Cornell No. 71 in the nation, while the Sagarin rankings have Cornell at No. 46. 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)
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 at Providence, 7 pm
Cornell vs. St. John's/Hofstra, 7/9 pm
[MSG Holiday Festival, Fox Sports Atlantic/MSG]

Tuesday, December 22
Colgate at Dartmouth, 7 pm

Wednesday, December 23
Harvard at Georgetown, noon [ESPN Full Court/ MyTV9/ SNY]
Columbia at Quinnipiac, 7 pm

Monday, December 28

MIT at Harvard, 4 pm
Kean at Brown, 7 pm
Penn at Davidson, 7 pm

Tuesday, December 29
Yale at Colorado, 9 pm [FSN Rocky Mountain]
Cornell at La Salle, 4 pm

Wednesday, December 30
Dartmouth at Quinnipiac, 2 pm [NESN]
Brown at Sacred Heart, 7 pm
George Washington at Harvard, 6 pm
Maine at Columbia, 7 pm
Wagner at Princeton, 7 pm

Thursday, December 31
Yale at Colorado State, 4 pm
Penn St. Erie-The Behrend College at Cornell, 2 pm
Penn at Duke, 6 pm [ESPN2]

Saturday, January 2
American at Brown, 1 pm
Bryant at Cornell, 2 pm
Harvard at Seattle, 5:10 pm
Princeton at St. Joseph's, 2 pm [The Comcast Network]

Sunday, January 3
Penn at Lafayette, 1 pm
Yale at Albany, 4 pm [Time Warner Cable (TW3)]

An Analysis of Cornell vs. Davidson from Sunday

Cornell’s Offensive Explosion Masks Potential Defensive Concerns

By Michael R. James
December 21, 2009

On an afternoon with too many heroes to name, Ryan Wittman ultimately gave Cornell the neutral floor matchup against St. John’s - and a potentially redeeming third shot at a Big East foe - that it so desperately wanted with a 30-footer at the buzzer to hand the Big Red a 91-88 overtime win over Davidson at Madison Square Garden.

But that victory did not come without many lingering questions.

How good is this Davidson team that boasts just one Division I win, but myriad quality losses and a top 10 strength of schedule?

Can Cornell get consistent stops on defense without forcing turnovers?

How did such an experienced and battle-tested Cornell team allow Davidson to flip the script on it in the second half, matching the Big Red’s 44-31 halftime margin after the intermission and forcing Big Red guard Louis Dale to hit a layup at the buzzer just to force overtime?

And speaking of Dale, where was he for the first 39 minutes and 59 seconds of that game?

The list could go on and on - unquestionably the downside of being the Ivy’s standard bearer during a season in which the league already expects more from its teams.

The first half of yesterday’s contest was vintage Cornell. Wittman and guard Chris Wroblewski hit four of their six shots from three, as the team went 6-for-10 from behind the arc. The Big Red scored 44 points on 34 possessions while posting an EFG of 69 percent. Defensively, Cornell shut down Davidson from behind the arc (the Wildcats shot just 3-for-12) and turned the Wildcats over eight times or on 24 percent of possessions.

The only negatives were the backdoor cuts for open layups and 40 percent offensive rebounding rate that Davidson managed, which allowed the Wildcats to within 13 of the Big Red at halftime.

After the intermission, Davidson would turn the ball over just once more in regulation while getting to the rim with relative ease and connecting on 5-of-8 shots from deep. Cornell’s defensive intensity and awareness sagged noticeably as the Big Red simultaneously slumped on the offensive end.

The Wildcats outscored Cornell 32-17 over the first 14 minutes of the second half to take a 63-61 lead, but Wroblewski scored his only five points of the half in succession to stabilize the Big Red, at least on the offensive end. From there, it was a track meet, as Wittman, who had struggled throughout the early part of the second half, finally came alive en route to 13 second-half points on a below-average 46 percent EFG shooting.

Despite the offensive outburst, Cornell disturbingly could still not manage any stops, and Davidson appeared to have the game wrapped up after a turnover off a rebounded free throw by senior center Jeff Foote sent the Wildcats’ Jake Cohen to the line with eight seconds left and Davidson already up 75-73. But Cohen missed both, setting the stage for Dale’s coast-to-coast, buzzer-beating layup to force overtime.

The Wildcats’ offense didn’t slow down a bit in overtime, turning the ball over just twice, while hitting 5-of-7 shots from the field. Wroblewski, Dale and Wittman all connected from deep as the Big Red hit seven of its eight shots in the extra session to take an 88-84 lead with 28 seconds to go. But Davidson’s outstanding freshman J.P. Kuhlman nailed a three, Dale missed both of his free throws on the other end, and Kuhlman hit 1-of-2 from the line to knot the game at 88. The rebound of Kuhlman’s back-end miss, however, found its way quickly up the floor to Wittman, who stole the show with a 30-footer at the buzzer for the 91-88 win.

The dueling buzzer beaters from Cornell to force overtime and seal the victory capped another amazing offensive performance from the Big Red. But they also served to conceal another disappointing defensive effort against a once-powerful, now woefully average mid-major opponent.

It was Cornell’s third highest EFG allowed (57.1 percent), second-lowest turnover rate forced, and fourth-lowest defensive rating in any contest all year. That the Big Red still managed the victory, though, highlighted Cornell’s likely Ivy-record setting offense as much as it did the Big Red’s highly suspect defense.

And while the questions surrounding the latter still linger, the only thing that really matters is that Cornell’s gutty, veteran squad will get its much anticipated title bout and resume building opportunity against St. John’s in Madison Square Garden tonight.

Cornell No. 22 in CHN Non-BCS Rankings

Below is CollegeHoopsNet.com's latest Non-BCS Top 25 ranking. Cornell retains its No. 22 ranking.

Non-BCS Top 25: December 20th (Week Five)

by Shawn Siegel: Collegehoops.net Editor


Team Record Last T50
1 New Mexico 12-0 3 17
2 Dayton 8-2 4 22
3 UNLV 10-1 5 23
4 Butler 8-3 6 27
5 Temple 9-2 14 28
6 Memphis 7-2* 1 31
7 BYU 10-1 7 32
8 Tulsa 9-1 8 33
9 Gonzaga 8-3* 2 34
10 Saint Mary's 9-1 10 42
11 William & Mary 7-2 11 47
12 Richmond 8-3* 12 49
13 Missouri St 10-0 18 50

T50 = Ranking in CHN Weekly Top 50

* = Losses in the last week

Not in CHN Top 50

14 Northern Iowa 8-1 13 *
15 Wichita St 10-1 17 *
16 Charlotte 9-1 15 *
17 UAB 10-1 25 *
18 Western Carolina 10-1 19 *
19 Rhode Island 9-1 20 *
20 VCU 7-2 16 *
21 Xavier 6-4* 9 *
22 Cornell 8-2 22 *
23 Old Dominion 7-4 NA *
24 Harvard 7-2 NA *
25 San Diego St 8-3* NA *

Next 5: Louisiana Tech (10-2), UTEP (6-2*), Duquesne (8-4*), Coastal Carolina (10-2), Nevada (6-4)

Further 5: Siena (6-4), Pacific (7-3*), Utah St (6-4*), Portland (6-4*), Long Beach St (6-4).