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Friday, November 13, 2009

Daily Pennsylvanian Says Jeff Foote Will Not Make All-Ivy

The Daily Pennsylvanian compiled a massive Ivy League/Penn preview. Below are the full articles referencing Cornell. Click here to view the DP's other recent basketball articles. Notable in the preview, the DP Sports staff predicts that Cornell's Jeff Foote, a two-time All Ivy League selection, the reigning League Defensive Player of the Year and arguably the Ivy League's top pro prospect, will not bring home any individual honors in his senior year. Above, Cornell's Alex Tyler.

The Daily Pennsylvanian's sports editors weigh in on how this year's Ivy League men's basketball season will play out.

All-Ivy First Team

Tyler Bernardini, Penn junior guard/forward
Louis Dale, Cornell senior guard
Jeremy Lin, Harvard senior guard
Matt Mullery, Brown senior forward
Ryan Wittman, Cornell senior forward

All-Ivy Second Team

Douglas Davis, Princeton sophomore guard
Zack Rosen, Penn sophomore guard
Peter Sullivan, Brown junior forward
Chris Wroblewski, Cornell sophomore guard
Alex Zampier, Yale senior guard

Ivy League Player of the Year

Ryan Wittman, Sr., Cornell
If the Big Red win their third straight title then it's hard to see Wittman not winning this award. He's led the Ivy champs in scoring the past two years, but has yet to win the top individual award in the Ancient Eight.

Ivy League Rookie of the Year

Ian Hummer, Princeton
Though the Tigers return all five of their starters from last year, Hummer might challenge for a starting spot. The 6-foot-7 small forward comes to Princeton highly touted out of Gonzaga High School in Washington, D.C.

Ivy League Standings
1. Cornell
2. PENN
3. Princeton
4. Harvard
5. Columbia
6. Yale
7. Brown
8. Dartmouth

Last season: 21-10, 11-3 Ivy

Head Coach: Steve Donahue, ninth season, 117-133, 57-61 Ivy with Cornell

Last Ivy League Title: 2008-09

Projected Starters:
Sr. C Jeff Foote
Sr. F/C Alex Tyler
Sr. F Ryan Wittman
Sr. F/G Geoff Reeves
Sr. G Louis Dale

Non-league highlights:

Nov. 24 at Syracuse; Jan. 6 at No. 1 Kansas

Cornell will win if... It plays to its maximum capability. The defending champions clearly have the most returning talent.

Cornell will lose if... It assumes that it's going to win the Ivy League again just because it barely lost any players.

Last Year:
Feb. 7: After Columbia had beaten the Quakers the previous night, Cornell's 88-73 win handed Penn its first winless Ivy home weekend since 1968.
Mar. 6: The injury-ridden Quakers couldn't handle the Big Red in Ithaca, N.Y., as Cornell routed Penn, 83-59.


By Zach Klitzman
Daily Pennsylvanian
November 12, 2009

Ivy League men’s basketball has been topsy-turvy the last couple of seasons.

From 1956 to 2007, Penn and Princeton won at least a share of the title 25 times each. Sure, every team but Harvard has won at least one title. But there’s no doubting the Tigers’ and Quakers’ dominance.

That is, until Cornell decided to crash the party.

The Big Red (21-10, 11-3 Ivy in 2008-09) have now won two Ivy titles back-to-back, breaking the Penn-Princeton dominance.

And there’s a good chance the Big Red might join elite company by becoming three-time outright champions, something that’s only happened four times.

They return over 90 percent of their scoring from last year and were unanimously picked to three-peat in the Ivy League preseason media poll.

So what’s been the key for the Big Red over the last few years?

“Like every good program it’s all based on the people that you have,” Cornell coach Steve Donahue said. “We’ve been fortunate to recruit great kids.”

Specifically, Donahue got two gems in seniors Ryan Wittman and Louis Dale. Wittman has led the Big Red in scoring the last two years while Dale was the 2007-08 Player of the Year.

Add in fifth-year senior and St. Bonaventure transfer Jeff Foote, last year’s Ivy League Defensive Player of the Year, and the Big Red have the most accomplished senior class in the League.

All of this was just a dream of Donahue’s when he arrived before the 2000-01 season after 10 years as a Penn assistant coach.

The Big Red had just gone 45-60 (24-34 Ivy) in four years under Scott Thompson, including a last-place Ivy finish in 1999-2000. And their only Ivy title came in 1987-88 when they went 11-3.

Things weren’t exactly smooth right off the bat for Donahue as the team went 3-11 in Ivy play his first year.

“It wasn’t going to be a quick fix,” he said.

But after another tie for seventh place in 2001-02 at 2-12, Cornell’s stock has consistently risen in the Ivies, as the team improved from 4-10 to 6-8 to 8-6 (twice) to 9-5 and then finally to 14-0 and an Ivy title in 2007-08.

Before that year, Penn had won the last three titles and its loss in 2008 to Cornell was the team’s first since 1998.

The Quakers have a sense of respect for their New York counterparts, yet also have a twinge of jealous indifference after the dethroning.

“Good for them, they deserve [the praise]” Penn senior guard Darren Smith said. “But it’s a new year and we don’t really care about what they did last year or the year before that. Hopefully things will change.”

But just because the Big Red usurped the top spot in the conference, that doesn’t mean Penn views Cornell as enemy No. 1.

“I wouldn’t say with the emergence of Cornell there’s a heated rivalry,” Penn coach Glen Miller said. “Everyone wants to beat Cornell.”

Still, Smith — the only hoopster to play in Penn’s last win over the Big Red — thinks the Cornell contest “is a game the guys get up for.”

“They’ve come in and … taken the torch from us,” he said.

Come this winter, the Ancient Eight will find out whether or not that torch remains burning Big Red for the 2009-10 season and beyond.

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