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Schedule & Results I
StatisticsGAME INFORMATIONGame #14: Cornell at Buffalo
Tip off: Saturday, Jan. 3, at 3:00 p.m.
Site: Alumni Arena (6,100), Buffalo, N.Y.
2014-15 Records: Cornell (6-7, 0-0 Ivy); Buffalo (8-3, 0-0 MAC)
Series Record: Cornell leads 27-15
Last Meeting: Buffalo won 68-59, Nov. 16, 2011 in Buffalo, N.Y.
Radio: 98.7 FM The Buzzer (Barry Leonard, Eric Taylor '05)
TV:
ESPN3 (Paul Peck, Kevin Sylvester)
HEAD COACH BILL COURTNEYCornell head coach
Bill Courtney is in his fifth season at Cornell (43-85, .336; 19-37 Ivy, .339) ... Courtney became the fifth Robert E. Gallagher '44 Coach of Men's Basketball at Cornell on April 23, 2010.
STORY LINES: With a new year comes preparations for the Ivy League's 14-game tournament, and the Cornell men's basketball team will open the 2015 calendar year at Buffalo on Saturday, Jan. 3 at 3 p.m. at Alumni Arena. The game will be televised on ESPN3 with Paul Peck and Kevin Sylvester on the call, while Barry Leonard and Eric Taylor '05 will provide coverage on 98.7 FM The Buzzer and the Ivy League Digital Network.
Head coach
Bill Courtney's team is already one of the most improved in the country, already tripling its win total from a year ago (2-26) en route to its 6-6 start. It has sextupled its win total from a year ago against Division I teams and has the looks of a team on the rebound, playing suffocating defense (.380 field goal percentage defense, .317 3-point percentage defense, 62.7 ppg. allowed, 4.5 blocked shots per game) in its 13 contests. The Big Red has limited foes to under 40 percent shooting in nine of its 13 games. Four of its seven losses have come by five points or less or in overtime.
The biggest difference from last year is the return of first-team All-Ivy selection
Shonn Miller, who missed the 2013-14 season with a shoulder injury. The 6-7 forward returned with a bang, recording 21 points and 13 rebounds in the upset of George Mason and has been especially dominant over his last four games, averaging 22.5 points and 10.0 rebounds with a career scoring high of 28 points at Radford and a best of 15 rebounds at Siena. The two-time Ivy League Player of the Week has season averages of 16.5 ppg., 8.2 rpg., 1.8 bpg. and 1.2 spg. to make him an early contender for top Ivy League honors.
Other big differences in Cornell's quick turnaround include the return of senior
Galal Cancer (9.5 ppg., 3.6 rpg., 3.4 apg., 1.2 spg.) after a year away from basketball, the move of senior
Devin Cherry to point guard (9.1 ppg., 4.9 rpg., 3.4 apg., 1.0 spg.) and the maturation of sophomores
Robert Hatter (12.2 ppg., 2.7 rpg., 1.2 spg.) and
David Onuorah (2.5 ppg., 4.2 rpg., 1.3 bpg.). A number of other players have added key minutes as reserves over the first 13 contests. Among them are sophomore guards
JoJo Fallas, who has become one of the conference's most dangerous shooters off the bench (seventh in Ivy League in 3-point percentage, .400 - 4.1 ppg.), and
Darryl Smith (3.4 pg., 1.8 rpg.). Together with the starting trio, the five make for one of the most talented and deepest backcourts in the Ancient Eight. The senior big man trio of
Deion Giddens,
Dave LaMore and Ned Tomic are combining to average 4.5 ppg. and 4.9 rpg. and have provided leadership on and off the court.
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A WIN OVER BUFFALO WOULD:
• give the Big Red a 7-7 record.
• snap a two-game losing skid.
• make Cornell 4-3 in true road games a season after going 0-15.
• improve Cornell's lead in the all-time series to 28-15.
• be the 1,218th in program history (1,217-1,359 in 116 seasons, .472).
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ABOUT BUFFALO:
• Buffalo is off to an 8-3 start and is a perfect 3-0 on the year at home with wins over South Dakota State, Drexel and Niagara.
• Two of the losses have come to top five teams, at Kentucky (71-52) and at Wisconsin (68-56). Buffalo actually led the top ranked and unbeaten Wildcats at the half, 38-33.
• Justin Moss paces the Bulls with 16.9 points and 9.9 rebounds per game while shooting 50 percent from the floor. He gets to the line better than six times per game.
• Both Shannon Evans (14.5 ppg., 4.2 rpg., 5.4 apg., 1.6 spg.) and Jarryn Skeete (10.9 ppg., 3.9 rpg.) also are in double figures, with Lamonte Bearden not far behind (8.9 ppg.).
• Buffalo is limiting opponents to below 40 percent shooting overall (.395) and 30 percent from the free-throw line (.288).
• The Bulls are outrebounding opponents by 2.7 per game (39.4-36.7).
• Second year head coach Bobby Hurley has an impressive 27-13 record since taking over the UB program. The former Duke All-American competed in three Final Fours as a player and holds the NCAA assist record (1,076).
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THE CORNELL-BUFFALO SERIES:
• Cornell leads 27-15 in a series that dates back to the 1918-19 season.
• Buffalo is 4-2 in the last six meetings.
• The Bulls won the last meeting 68-59 on Nov. 16, 2011 at Alumni Arena.
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CORNELL VS. MID-AMERICAN CONFERENCE:
• Cornell is 32-33 all-time against current members of the Mid-American Conference, including 27-15 against Buffalo.
• The Big Red has also played Ball State (0-1), Bowling Green (0-3), Eastern Michigan (1-2), Kent State (0-1), Miami (OH) (1-0), Northern Illinois (0-2), Ohio (1-3), Toledo (1-5) and Western Michigan (1-1).
• Cornell has never played Akron or Central Michigan.
• This is the only scheduled meeting between the Big Red and a member of the MAC in 2014-15.
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LAST TIME VS. BUFFALO:
• After trailing by double figures in the second half, Cornell rallied to tie Buffalo on the road, but the Bulls were able to pull away late and capture a 68-59 victory over the Big Red on Nov. 16, 2011 at Alumni Arena.
• Eitan Chemerinski posted a career scoring high for the second straight contest with 14 points as the lone double figure scorer for Cornell.
• Drew Ferry hit three 3-pointers to give him nine points, while
Shonn Miller added eight and Josh Figini and Chris Wroblewski each had seven points.
• Wroblewski added six rebounds and four assists.
• Cornell shot just 38 percent from the field overall and was just 7-of-27 from beyond the arc for 26 percent.
• The Big Red had 14 steals as a team, a total that ranks 14th in a game in Big Red history.
• Javon McCrea had 19 points and 10 rebounds and Mitchell Watt scored 19 points and added nine rebounds to lead the Bulls.
• Zach Filzen added 11 points to round out the three double figure scorers, while Jarod Oldham registered eight points, nine assists and seven rebounds in the victory.
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LAST TIME OUT:
• Cornell's defense limited Syracuse to 16 points in the game's first 16 minutes, but the Orange couldn't solve the vaunted zone in a 61-44 loss on Dec. 31, 2014 at the Carrier Dome.
• The Big Red shot just 20 percent from the floor in the first half and never recovered, scoring just two points in the game's first 14 minutes.
• Senior
Shonn Miller had 12 points, five rebounds, three assists, two blocks and two steals and sophomore
JoJo Fallas tied a career high with 11 points and chipped in four rebounds, three steals and two assists in the loss.
• Cornell shot 47 percent from the floor after halftime and prevented Syracuse from running away with the game, but it was too little, too late to pull the upset.
• Senior
Deion Giddens hd six points and three rebounds in seven energetic minutes, while classmate
Galal Cancer notched three points, six assists and two rebounds.
• Cornell held a 34-33 edge on the glass, including 12-8 on the offensive end that led to a 12-4 advantage in second chance points.
• Syracuse's Rakeem Christmas had 19 points and nine rebounds, while Trevor Cooney noted 14 points, four rebounds, four assists and three steals.
• Syracuse shot 48 percent from the floor, including 60 percent after the break.
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DEFENSIVE TURNAROUND:
• Cornell's defense has spearheaded the Big Red's turnaround, as its points per game allowed, field goal percentage defense overall and from 3-point range are significantly down, while its steals and blocked shots are way up over last season.
• The Big Red is limiting opponents to .380 shooting over its first 13 games. In all, Cornell recorded a .495 field goal percentage defense mark in 2013-14
• Cornell has allowed opponents to shoot 50 percent or better 15 times in 28 games a season ago, while this year it has held nine of its first 13 opponents under 40 percent shooting and no opponent has hit 50 percent of its shots.
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          Scoring Def.   FG% Def.    3pt FG Def.   Steals      Blocks
2013-14Â Â Â 78.4 (331)Â Â Â Â Â .495 (341)Â Â .409 (345)Â Â Â Â 4.2 (338)Â Â Â 3.5 (267)
2014-15Â Â Â 62.7 (113)Â Â Â Â Â .380 (40)Â Â Â .317 (120)Â Â Â Â 6.1 (224)Â Â Â 4.4 (93)NOTES TO KNOW:
• Cornell has already won four more games than the entire 2013-14 campaign when it went 2-26. Only seven teams in the country have won more games this season than last year, topped by Cornell's +4. TCU, which is 13-0 after going 9-22 last season, is also at +4 on the year. The other teams are Lamar (+2), Maryland-Eastern Shore (+2), Southern Utah (+1), Sacred Heart (+1) and Temple (+1).
• Over the team's last five games, Cornell is shooting an outstanding .815 from the free-throw line (75-of-92).
• The Big Red has posted two of the top nine free-throw shooting percentage efforts in school history over the first 11 games. Cornell tied a school record with a 13-for-13 effort (one of eight perfect nights with at least 10 attempts) against UMass Lowell and had the best day with a miss in going 21-of-22 for .955 against Penn State. Ironically, Cornell has shot under 50 percent from the free-throw line in two other games this season.
• Cornell's 14-point margin of victory over Binghamton (68-54) was its largest in a road game under head coach
Bill Courtney and the most by any Cornell team since a 79-59 victory at Yale on March 6, 2010. That mark didn't last long, as the Big Red dropped Siena by 17 (75-58) in Albany 23 days later.
• Senior
Shonn Miller blocked a pair of shots against George Mason to surpass the 100 career block milestone. He became the fifth player in Cornell history to reach that plateau and now has 123 to his name.
• Miller had three steals at Radford, pushing his career total to 101. He became the first player in Cornell history to post 100 career steals and 100 career blocks.
• Miller is averaging 22.5 points and 10.0 rebounds in his last four contests.
• In his last six contests, senior
Galal Cancer is averaging 5.7 assists. He had just 10 total assists in his first seven games.
• The rally from a 17-point deficit against Colgate was the largest overcome by a Big Red team this century. It is the largest overcome by a
Bill Courtney-coached team, besting the 14-point first half deficit it rallied from in an 85-84 win over Yale on Feb. 10, 2012.
• When Cornell knocked off George Mason, the Big Red defeated its 35th program that has advanced to an NCAA Final Four. The Patriots reached the national semifinals in 2006.
• The Big Red hit 11 3-pointers in the win at Binghamton, the most in a game since hitting 16 in an 83-70 loss at Western Michigan on Nov. 29, 2013. Cornell then hit 10 in its next game against UMass Lowell.
• Second-year assistant coach
Jon Jaques was a starter and senior captain on the 2009-10 Cornell team that advanced to the NCAA Sweet 16.
• Cornell will play 10 games against teams coming off 20-win seasons and 11 against teams who competed in postseason last year (three vs. NCAA teams, five vs. CIT teams, four vs. CBI teams).
•
Dwight Tarwater '14 graduated from Cornell last spring with a degree in Applied Economics and Management and is playing an extra year at California-Berkeley. Through 13 games, Tarwater is averaging 3.2 points and 3.1 rebounds while playing 16.1 minutes per game as a reserve.
• It is the second straight year a Big Red men's basketball player has used his fifth and final year of eligibility at a BCS school, as Errick Peck '13 spent the 2013-14 campaign at Purdue. He served as a captain and part-time starter for the Boilermakers while averaging 4.6 points and 4.4 rebounds and shooting 48 percent from the floor in 32 contests (10 starts).
• Members of the Cornell basketball team represent 13 states and one Canadian province.
• Cornell has played in 45 different states, as well as in Cuba, Puerto Rico, Australia and France. The only states the Big Red has not played in are Alaska, North Dakota, Mississippi, Texas and Wyoming.
CORNELL BEYOND THE ARC — 700 AND COUNTING:
• Cornell hit four 3-pointers at Syracuse on Dec. 31, 2014 its 727th straight game with at least one made 3-point field goal.
• With six 3-pointers against Oberlin on Jan. 11, 2014, Cornell extended its streak of games with at least one 3-pointer to 700.
• The last time Cornell did not hit a 3-pointer was against Denison in the 1988-89 season opener (0-for-2).
• Since the 3-point shot came into effect in NCAA play during the 1986-87 season, Cornell has hit at least one shot behind the arc in 773 of 777 games, connecting on 4,892 treys, an average of 6.3 per game.
NEXT UP:
• Cornell begins its stretch of seven of its next eight games at Newman Arena when Howard visits Ithaca on Thursday, Jan. 8 at 7 p.m.
• It will be the first-ever meeting between the Big Red and the Bison.