* Game Notes vs. Siena
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GAME INFORMATION
Game #4: Cornell at Siena
Tip off: Saturday, Nov. 22, at 7:00 p.m.
Site: Times Union Center (8,065), Albany, N.Y.
2008-09 Records: Cornell (2-1, 0-0 Ivy); Siena (1-0, 0-0 MAAC)
Series Records: Series tied 1-1, First Meeting with Loyola (MD)
Last Meeting: Cornell won 83-77, Nov. 25, 2007 in Ithaca, N.Y.
Radio: 1160 ESPN Radio, WPIE (Barry Leonard)
TV: None
Live Stats: Available at www.SienaSaints.com
Live Video: Available at www.SienaSaints.com
Tickets: Available by calling (607) 254-BEAR
HEAD COACH STEVE DONAHUE
Cornell head coach Steve Donahue is in his ninth season at Cornell (98-124, .441) ... Donahue became the fourth Robert E. Gallagher '44 Coach of Men's Basketball at Cornell on Sept. 6, 2000.
ITHACA, N.Y. — Two defending league champions picked as favorites to repeat will square off when Cornell (2-1) visits Siena (1-0) on Saturday, Nov. 22 at 7:00 p.m. at the Times Union Center in Albany, N.Y. Barry Leonard will provide the call on 1160 ESPN Radio, while live audio of the game will be available on the RedCast subscription service.
Cornell opened the week with a split at the NIT Preseason Tip-Off East Regional at Boston College, struggling defensively in an 86-75 loss to St. John's of the Big East before topping Loyola (MD) out of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference by an 82-72 score on Tuesday. Senior center
Jeff Foote was dominant in the contests, averaging 19.5 points, 7.5 rebounds and 6.0 blocks per game, while
Ryan Wittman averaged 24.5 points, 4.0 rebounds, 3.5 assists and 2.5 steals.
The Big Red have played the first three games without its All-Ivy backcourt of
Louis Dale and
Adam Gore, but hardly seemed out of step offensively, averaging 78.7 points and connecting on 40 percent of its 3-pointers. Wittman leads the way in the scoring (24.7 ppg.) and assists (4.0 apg.) column, while Foote paces the team in rebounding (6.7 rpg.) and blocked shots (5.3 bpg.). Head coach Steve Donahue's teams have now won 18 of their last 20 games dating back to last year.
Siena will be out to avenge last year's 83-77 Big Red victory at Newman Arena behind five returning seniors under head coach Fran McCaffery. The Saints are coming off a 23-11 season that saw them capture a share of the MAAC regular season championship, win the league tournament, and advance to the second round of the NCAA tourney after topping Vanderbilt. Siena opened the season with a convincing 82-52 triumph over Boise State on Monday.
ABOUT SIENA: Coming off a 23-11 season that included a first round NCAA tournament win over Vanderbilt, Siena has earned a tremendous amount of preseason respect by college basketball experts, and it's easy to see why. The preseason Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference favorite returns all five starters, including All-MAAC selections Kenny Hasbrouck, Alex Franklin, Edwin Ubiles and Ronald Moore. Head coach Fran McCaffery, like Cornell head coach Steve Donahue, has ties to the University of Pennsylvania, where McCaffery starred as a player. He has a 59-36 record in four seasons at Siena and a 198-162 mark in 13 years as a head coach. The series is tied 1-1 after the Big Red's 83-77 win a season ago at Newman Arena behind 20 points, nine rebounds and six assists from
Louis Dale and 14 points and 11 rebounds from
Ryan Wittman.
CORNELL VS. THE MAAC: The Big Red holds a 60-46 all-time record against current members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, including 1-1 against Siena. The Big Red has faced Canisius (25-17), Fairfield (0-2), Iona (0-2), Loyola (MD (1-0), Manhattan (1-1), Marist (2-3), Niagara (27-20)and Rider (3-0), but has never played St. Peter's. This is the last scheduled game this season for Cornell against a team from the MAAC.
A WIN OVER SIENA WOULD ...
• improve Cornell's record to 3-1.
• give the Big Red 21 wins in its last 24 games.
• improve its true road game win streak to nine.
• be the third straight against a team from the MAAC.
• give Cornell a 2-1 series lead against the Saints and snap Siena's five-game home win streak.
• be the 1,127th in school history.
ALL ABOUT THE 2007-08 BIG RED:
• The 2007-08 Ivy League champion (automatic NCAA bid).
• Posted 13th undefeated season in conference history (14-0).
• First title in 20 years, and first non-Penn or Princeton Ivy representative at the NCAA tournament since Cornell in 1987-88.
• School record 22 wins (22-6).
• Posted a school-record 16-game win streak.
• Made third NCAA tournament appearance in school history.
• Head coach Steve Donahue was the USBWA and NABC district Coach of the Year and a finalist for collegeinsider.com's Hugh Durham Coaching Award as Mid-Major National Coach of the Year.
• Guard
Louis Dale was named Ivy League Player of the Year and joined forward
Ryan Wittman (forward) as unanimous first-team All-Ivy selections.
•
Jeff Foote (center) and
Adam Gore (guard) were second-team All-Ivy picks.
• Cornell was the only school in the country that matched or improved its win total overall and in conference in six straight seasons.
• The Big Red is the only school in the country to rank in the top 10 nationally in field goal, 3-point and free-throw percentages.
• Cornell led the Ivy League in 14 of 22 team statistical categories.
• The Big Red joined Davidson (Southern Conference, 20-0) and Memphis (Conference USA, 16-0) as the only schools to finish league play with an unbeaten record.
• Cornell was ranked as high as No. 18 in the collegeinsider.com Mid-Major poll and received Associated Press top 25 votes during the last four weeks of the season.
FOR OPENERS: The Big Red has posted a 71-41 all-time record in season openers after beginning this year with a 79-69 win over South Dakota at Newman Arena. Cornell has won four consecutive season openers.
SPURTABILITY: Through three games, Cornell is averaging 78.7 points per game, up from last year's season average of 76.3. That is especially impressive when you factor in that the Big Red has two of its three leading scorers from a season ago sitting out those games with injuries (Ivy League Player of the Year
Louis Dale, second-team All-Ivy
Adam Gore). Dale and Gore averaged a combined 23.9 points and 6.4 assists a season ago. Cornell hasn't scored less than 75 points in any of its three games this year.
BLOCKS UP, TURNOVERS DOWN: While three games is a small sample, Cornell has posted 20 total blocked shots (6.7 per game) a season after blocking 88 total in 28 games. At the same pace over the 30-game schedule, the Big Red would block a school record 201 shots. At the same time, Cornell's turnovers are down significantly, averaging 12.7 per game. Cornell turned it over 13.6 times per game a season ago. Its assist-turnover ratio is also up at 1.26 after sitting last season at 1.10.
NEW LINE NOT BOTHERING CORNELL: After finishing fourth nationally in 3-point field goal percentage a season ago, Cornell proved it could bury shots behind the arc at 19-9. This year the line moved back a foot to 20-9 and the Big Red has barely noticed. Cornell hit on 8-of-18 from 3-point range for 44 percent in the season-opening win over South Dakota, including a 5-of-8 performance by junior
Geoff Reeves. Through three games, head coach Steve Donahue' steam has hit 19-of-47 3-point shots, good for a .404 shooting percentage. Leading the way has been junior
Geoff Reeves at 45 percent (9-of-20), while classmate
Ryan Wittman has connected on 8-of-22 (36 percent).
BIGGER, STRONGER WITTMAN: Junior
Ryan Wittman has come back for his junior season with a vengeance, opening the year with three consecutive 20-point efforts in Cornell's 2-1 start. In the 2008-09 season-opening win over South Dakota, Wittman poured in a career-best 25 points, the most by a Cornell in a season opener since Eric Taylor notched 30 points on 14-of-16 shooting in a 78-72 victory at Buffalo to open the 2002-03 campaign. He responded by again matching that high of 25 in the loss to St. John's and putting up 24 more in the win over Loyola (MD). He is averaging a team-best 24.7 points per game, a mark that if maintained would top Chuck Rolles' 52-year-old scoring record of 23.0 ppg. set in the 1955-56 season.
GETTING TO THE LINE: Junior
Ryan Wittman has proven to be more than just a perimeter jump shooter this season, as he has averaged 6.3 trips to the line per game while hitting 95 percent (18-of-19) in his first three games. Entering the year, Wittman was averaging just 2.2 attempts at the line per game while shooting a school record 88 percent at the charity stripe.
MORE THAN JUST THE SCORING: While his 24.7 points per game is spectacular, so are Wittman's other contributions through three games. The 6-6 forward is averaging 5.0 rebounds, 4.0 assists, 2.0 steals and has posted a 3:1 assist-turnover ratio while playing 38.7 minutes per game. All of those numbers are career highs.
ADDING ANOTHER FOOTE: Senior center
Jeff Foote has turned into a dominating force in the paint this season, ranking second on the team in scoring (15.0 ppg.) and pacing the squad in rebounding (6.7 rpg.) and blocked shots (5.3 bpg.) in three contests. He is also shooting 53 percent from the floor and averaging 2.7 assists per contest.
BRING IT ON, NIT: The NIT Preseason Tip-Off was the coming out party for senior center
Jeff Foote, who ripped through both St. John's and Loyola (MD). In those two games, Foote averaged 19.5 points, 7.5 rebounds, 6.0 blocks and 2.0 assists while getting to the line 18 times. He set a career-high with 20 points and five blocked shots to go along with seven rebounds and three assists against the Red Storm, then answered with 19 points, eight rebounds and seven blocks against the Greyhounds.
REEVES HITS BLACKJACK: Junior
Geoff Reeves proved a capable replacement for the injured
Adam Gore in the starting lineup in the opener against South Dakota, putting up a career-best 21 points on 8-of-17 shooting and 5-of-8 from beyond the 3-point arc. His previous best was 16 points against Harvard during his rookie campaign. The start was the first for Reeves after 44 career games as a reserve. Through three games, Reeves sits third on the team in scoring at 13.7 ppg.
TYLER A STEADYING INFLUENCE: Junior
Alex Tyler has been his strong, steady self in the first three games of 2008-09, as the two-year starter at power forward is averaging 7.7 points, 5.7 rebounds and 1.3 blocks per game.
ROBO-POINT GUARD: Freshman
Chris Wroblewski has been solid in his first three contests, including his first start in a win over Loyola (MD). Wroblewski is averaging 5.0 points, 4.0 assists and 1.7 rebounds per game while putting up a very solid 2.4:1 assist-turnover ratio. He had a career-high six assists to go along with four points and four rebounds in the win over Loyola (MD) and notched five points and four assists with just one turnover against St. John's.
BATTLE, KREEFER PLAYING KEY ROLES AS CAPTAINS: Old stalwarts
Jason Battle and
Brian Kreefer have played outstanding basketball in the first three games of the season while providing excellent leadership. Battle has started two contests and is averaging 4.3 points, 3.0 rebounds and 1.7 assists in 16.3 minutes per game, shooting 56 percent from the floor in the process. Kreefer has played 18.7 minutes per game off the bench and has picked up 7.7 points and 4.7 rebounds while making 59 percent of his shots from the field.
COMING IN WIRED: Sophomore
Adam Wire didn't play in the team's first two games of the year, but made quite an impact off the bench against Loyola (MD). The 6-6 forward corralled seven rebounds, including five on the offensive end, and added two points and two steals in 15 minutes of action. He entered the game midway through the first half and in his 3:05 of action he had four rebounds, including three offensive boards, and a steal. When he left, Cornell had an eight point lead that it would never surrender despite playing its second game in 19 hours.
WE ARE THE CHAMPIONS: The Big Red won its second Ivy League title in school history and its fifth conference title of any kind with an 86-53 win over Harvard on March 1, 2o08. Cornell was the first team other than Penn or Princeton to win the outright title since the Big Red captured the 1987-88 title.
HISTORIC RUN TO THE TITLE: Cornell was the 13th team in Ivy League history to post a perfect 14-0 Ancient Eight season, joining Penn (7) and Princeton (5) with undefeated squads. Here are the Ivy League's unbeaten teams:
Cornell (1 — 2007-08)
Penn (7 — 1969-70, 1970-71, 1992-1993, 1993-94, 1994-95, 1999-2000, 2002-03)
Princeton (5 — 1968-69, 1975-76, 1990-91, 1996-97, 1997-98)
GENDER EQUITY: On the same day the Cornell men's basketball team found out it would be matching up with Stanford in the NCAA tournament first round last season, the Big Red women's team clinched the program's first-ever bid to the NCAA tournament. It was the first time in Ivy League history the NCAA tournament representatives for both the men's and women's teams were from the same school.
A WIN IS A WIN: Cornell's 22-6 record in 2007-08 was its second straight winning campaign (16-12 in 2006-07), giving the program consecutive winning seasons for the first time since 1986-87 (15-11) and 1987-88 (17-10).
HOME SWEET HOME: Cornell finished the 2007-08 season with a 12-1 record at home, including seven straight triumphs in front of the Newman Nation crowd. The Big Red fans came out in droves to support the team, averaging 3,992 fans for conference games and posting crowds of more than 4,000 in four of the final five home games, including sell-outs for wins over Penn (2/9) and Harvard (3/1). Cornell extended its home win streak to eight with the season-opening 79-69 win over South Dakota in front of 3,679 fans.
NON-LEAGUE SUCCESS: The Big Red guaranteed itself a second-consecutive non-conference season with at least a .500 record in its win over Alvernia and finished 8-6. The last time the Big Red at least broke even out of league play in consecutive seasons was in the 1983-84 (7-5) and 1984-85 (6-6) campaigns.
MORE NON-LEAGUE SUCCESS: Cornell won eight non-league contests last season, the most by a Big Red team in a single campaign since the 1996-97 squad also won eight games.
DONAHUE NAMED COURT COACH FOR U-18 NATIONAL TEAM TRYOUTS: This summer, Cornell head coach Steve Donahue spent a week in July as a court coach for the U.S. Under-18 national team tryouts in Washington, D.C. The team, under the direction of Davidson's head coach Bob McKillop, also featured VCU's Anthony Grant and Georgetown's John Thompson III as assistant coaches. The team won the silver medal at the 2008 FIBA U18 championship in Formosa, Argentina, falling to the host team 77-64 in the gold medal game.
WITTMAN NAMED ALL-DISTRICT BY USBWA AND NABC IN 2007-08: Sophomore
Ryan Wittman was named to the USBWA All-District 2 team and to the NABC All-District 2 second-team. Wittman is the 10th player in school history to be honored by the NABC and the first since Ka'Ron Barnes was also a second-team pick in 2004.
WITTMAN NAMED ONE OF NATION'S TOP 10 SHOOTERS BY ESPN.COM: Junior
Ryan Wittman was named one of the nation's top 10 shooters in a special article about the NCAA 3-point line being moved back from 19-9 to 20-9 this coming season according to ESPN.com college basketball analyst Fran Fraschilla. Fraschilla placed Wittman No. 10 on his list that also included Davidson's Stephen Curry, Notre Dame's Kyle McAlarney, Miami's Jack McClinton, Texas' A.J. Abrams, Drake's Josh Young, UAB's Robert Vaden, Cal State Fullerton's Josh Akogmon, American's Garrison Carr and Rhode Island's Jimmy Baron. In two seasons, Wittman has connected on 171 3-pointers at a 44 percent clip. His total of 93 as a freshman set a school record and the 6-6 sophomore has paced the Ancient Eight in 3-pointers made in each of his first two years. He already ranks fourth on the school's career 3-point list and is first in career percentage.
DALE NAMED HONORABLE MENTION ALL-AMERICAN: Louis Dale capped off an outstanding sophomore season in 2007-08 by earning honorable mention All-America accolades by the Associated Press. Dale is the first Cornell player to earn All-America honors from the AP since Ken Bantum was also an honorable mention pick in 1985. Prior to Bantum, Cornell hadn't had an All-American since Robert Gale was named to the second team by Helms in 1948. Dale is the Big Red's seventh All-American, with Gil Halstead earning first team honors twice (1913 and 1914).\
DONAHUE NAMED NABC, USBWA DISTRICT COACH OF THE YEAR: Cornell men's basketball coach Steve Donahue was named the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) District II and the United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA) Coach of the Year in 2007-08. Donahue was chosen in a vote by his peers by the NABC and was one of 16 coaches who were finalists for the NABC National Coach of the Year. The USBWA also named him the top coach and was one of nine candidates for Coach of the Year. Additionally, Donahue was named the Ivy League Coach of the Year by CollegeInsider.com and was a finalist for the Hugh Durham Mid-Major Coach of the Year.
GETTING UP THERE: Cornell head coach Steve Donahue entered the 2008-09 campaign with the second-longest tenure at the helm of their current team in the Ivy League. Only James Jones at Yale (10th year) has been at his current school longer than Donahue has directed the Big Red (nine years).
TALL IVY: Over the last four seasons, Cornell's 39-17 record is second-best among Ivy League teams in conference action. Penn claimed the previous three Ancient Eight titles and has posted a 43-13 mark in conference over the same span.
TREY BIEN: The Big Red has hit at least one 3-pointer in 536 straight games entering the Siena contest. Cornell surpassed the 500-game plateau when the Big Red connected on six treys at Princeton on Feb. 16, 2007. 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 587 of 591 games, connecting on 3,398 treys, an average of 5.75 per game. The Big Red has hit a 3-pointer in all 222 games coached by Steve Donahue.
2008-09 CAPTAINS: Cornell's four-year senior class of
Jason Battle,
Adam Gore,
Brian Kreefer and
Conor Mullen will represent the Big Red as team captains for the 2008-09 season. It will be the second year as captain for both Battle and Gore and the first for Kreefer and Mullen.
BIG RED PICKED TO REPEAT IN PRESEASON POLL: After capturing its first Ivy League title in 20 years, the Ivy League media picked the Cornell men's basketball team to repeat as Ivy League champions by a unanimous vote in the 2008-09 preseason poll. The Big Red is the first team in the League's storied history not named Penn or Princeton to garner a unanimous first-place selection. Cornell returns four starters and seven of its top eight scorers from last season's 22-6 squad that ran through an undefeated league campaign (14-0) en route to its third NCAA tournament appearance in program history. Directly behind Cornell is traditional Ivy League power Penn, who received 110 votes as a near-unanimous second-place choice for the 16 voters. Each of the eight schools had two media representatives who cover Ivy League basketball eligible to vote. Yale (80 points) was picked third, followed by a resurgent Harvard squad (77 points) led by coach Tommy Amaker. Brown, last year's runner-up, was close behind the Crimson with 75 points for fifth place. Rounding out the poll was Columbia (45), Dartmouth (33) and Princeton (28).
BIG RED ON THE RADIO: For the second straight year, the Cornell University men's basketball games will be broadcast live on WPIE-1160 AM out of Elmira, N.Y., with Barry Leonard on the call. A half-hour pregame show and postgame analysis will enable Big Red fans to follow Coach Steve Donahue's team throughout the season.
LIVE VIDEO: The Big Red's home contests will all be broadcast live with streaming video as part of the RedCast subscription service. Visit www.CornellBigRed.com for all the latest information on Cornell broadcasts.
LIVE STATS: Cornell will use SIDEARM Live Stats for each of the Big Red's home games in 2008-09. Visit www.CornellBigRed.com for all of the official statistics.
NEXT UP: The Big Red will play in the NIT Preseason Tip-Off consolation round at St. John's against Loyola (IL) on Monday, Nov. 24 at 5:45 p.m., then meets Eastern Michigan the following day at 5:45 p.m. Both games will be played at Carnasecca Arena.