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Monday, March 2, 2009

Cornell Daily Sun Weekend Recap

Losing with Louis: Junior guard Louis Dale (12) dribbles towards a Harvard defender during the Red’s 71-70 loss Saturday.

M. Basketball Loses Harvard Heartbreaker

By Harrison D. Sanford
Cornell Daily Sun
March 2, 2009


In last year’s dramatic game, junior Alex Tyler scored a layup to give the team a comeback win after being down by 5 with 30 seconds on the clock. This year with the game on the line, junior Louis Dale penetrated to the lane but wasn’t able to connect.

“I came off a double screen,” Wittman said. “After that, Louis was the second option. He got the ball and made a play. And it didn’t go our way.”

With a win, the Red could have clinched at least a share of the Ivy League title. In a good twist, the loss sets up an exciting weekend for Newman Nation. The Red can win the league title outright next weekend with a win over Penn and a Princeton loss, or two wins.

“We just got to work hard this last week in practice,” Dale said. “Make sure we win these last two games coming up and win the Ivy League championship.”

The game was different from the first affair between the two squads at Newman Arena weeks earlier. Harvard standout Jeremy Lin redeemed himself from his eight-turnover performance by scoring 20 points and helping to shut down Wittman after he went on a scoring spree in the second half.

“He played well tonight,” Wittman said. “You don’t expect him to have eight turnovers like he did the last game. We knew he was going to come out and be ready to play.”

At one point in the second half, Wittman looked unstoppable. The Ivy League Player of the Year candidate scored 13 points in a four-minute stretch but was held quiet after the Crimson adjusted to him. The strategy worked well for the Crimson as the rest of the team struggled to score, with only senior center Jeff Foote reaching double digits with 14.

“The overplayed me a little bit more,” Wittman said. “Overplayed me on the screens more, I hit a couple shots, so I knew they were going to do that.”


By Keenan Weatherford
Cornell Daily Sun
March 2, 2009

When Cornell traveled to take on Dartmouth, a surprise contender for the Ivy title, on Friday night, some might have expected a repeat of the Red’s 79-76 double overtime thriller win on Feb. 14. But junior Ryan Wittman’s hot shooting night helped to douse the upstart Green’s title hopes and lift Cornell over Dartmouth, 75-57. The loss dropped Dartmouth into a fourth-place tie in the Ancient Eight, but the Green rebounded with a 67-53 win over Columbia on Saturday to pull into a three-way tie for third. Cornell is in first place and has a two-game lead with two left to play in the Ivy League schedule.

“We knew it was going to be a serious game,” said senior center Jeff Foote. “It was the biggest game in 50 years for them, and we knew they were going to be hyped up. We just wanted to play our game, so we came out and executed our game plan.”

Wittman shot 7-of-11 from the field and 4-of-5 from long range to lead the Red (19-9, 9-3 Ivy League) with 20 points. Dartmouth’s (9-17, 7-5) centerpiece player, senior forward Alex Barnett, scored 19 and grabbed nine boards for the Green, but was overshadowed by Wittman, a potential rival for Ivy League Player of the Year honors.

“We rotated different guys on [Barnett], gave him different looks,” said freshman guard Chris Wroblewski. “We played five-man defense, made sure we knew where he was on the floor. Foote was on him during the game, Wittman, Battle came in and gave us great minutes on defense. We were just trying to keep fresh legs with him.”

Three other Red players finished in double figures. Junior guard Louis Dale, the reigning Ivy League Player of the Year, put up 14 points and five boards, Foote scored 11 and grabbed six boards and freshman guard Chris Wroblewski scored 11 and added two rebounds, two assists and two steals. Cornell used a steady onslaught of 3-pointers to increase its lead, making 11-of-19 on the night. As a team, the Red shot 50 percent from the field — much better than Dartmouth’s 35 percent.

“We focused a lot on our defense all week in practice, and we knew what they were going to try to do on offense,” Foote said.

Sophomore guard Ronnie Dixon scored 12 for the Green — the only player besides Barnett in double figures. Dartmouth’s 6-9 sophomore forward Clive Weeden snagged a game-high eight rebounds.

Barnett helped Dartmouth off to a hot start, scoring his team’s first six points to push the Green to an 8-2 lead. Cornell stormed back after a time-out and eventually pulled away thanks to its defense. The Red held the Green scoreless for a 6:54 stretch late in the first half, and went into the intermission with a 33-25 lead.

Two second-half 3-pointers from senior guard Adam Gore disrupted Dartmouth’s momentum, built up during a 9-4 run, and pushed Cornell’s lead to 12. Two more treys by Wittman and another 3-pointer by Wroblewski quieted the crowd and finished off a 5:10 stretch in which Cornell hit six consecutive 3’s.

“Those 3’s were huge,” Foote said.


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