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GAME INFORMATION
Game #9: Cornell at Minnesota
Tip off: Saturday, Dec. 6, at 1:00 p.m. CT
Site: Williams Arena (14,625), Minneapolis, Minn.
2008-09 Records: Cornell (4-4, 0-0 Ivy); Minnesota (7-0, 0-0 Big Ten)
Series Record: Minnesota leads 3-1 (includes forfeit win)
Last Meeting: Minnesota won 84-54 (later forfeited), Dec. 30, 1976 in Minneapolis, Minn.
Radio: 1160 ESPN Radio, WPIE (Barry Leonard)
TV: Big Ten Network/ESPN 360
Live Stats: available at www.GopherSports.com
Live Video: available at www.GopherSports.com
Tickets: available by calling (607) 254-BEAR
HEAD COACH STEVE DONAHUE
Cornell head coach Steve Donahue is in his ninth season at Cornell (100-127, .441) ... Donahue became the fourth Robert E. Gallagher '44 Coach of Men's Basketball at Cornell on Sept. 6, 2000.
ITHACA, N.Y. — After taking No. 16 Syracuse to the limit on Wednesday, the Big Red men's basketball team (4-4) will face yet another unbeaten opponent when it visits Minnesota (7-0) on Saturday, Dec. 6 at 1 p.m. CT at Williams Arena. The game will be broadcast on the Big Ten Network and on ESPN360. Barry Leonard will provide the call locally on 1160 ESPN Radio, while live audio will be available on the RedCast subscription service.
Cornell dropped an 88-78 contest at Syracuse on Wednesday night despite 33 points and a school-record tying nine 3-pointers from junior forward
Ryan Wittman. Cornell raced out to a 25-9 advantage in front of a shocked Carrier Dome crowd of nearly 19,000, but Syracuse used a 12-0 second half run to turn a tied game into a 69-57 lead and held off the Big Red charge late to improve to 8-0.
Wittman (22.5 ppg.) continues to lead three double figure scorers, with classmate
Geoff Reeves (14.1 ppg.) and senior
Jeff Foote (13.4 ppg., 7.6 rpg., 3.4 apg., 3.4 bpg.) also in double figures. Cornell's 4-4 start is especially impressive when considering it has been without the service of one of the top mid-major backcourts in the country in reigning Ivy League Player of the Year
Louis Dale and two-time All-Ivy selection
Adam Gore due to injuries. Junior forward
Alex Tyler (7.3 ppg., 4.9 rpg.) and freshman guard
Chris Wroblewski (6.3 ppg., 3.1 apg.) round out the team's starters over the first quarter of the season.
The Golden Gophers, under the direction of head coach Tubby Smith, will be hosting Cornell for the first time since 1976. Minnesota's 7-0 start is its best since the 1976-77 team opened the year with 11 consecutive victories. Ironically, the team's eighth win that season came against Cornell (84-54).
ABOUT MINNESOTA: Minnesota is off to a 7-0 start after a 66-56 win over Virginia on Tuesday evening. Among its early-season wins are a road triumph over Colorado State and Bowling Green, as well as the victory over the Cavaliers. Under the direction of second-year head coach Tubby Smith, the Golden Gophers have relied on defense for its undefeated start. Minnesota is allowing just 62.0 points per game, outrebounding its foes 36.7-33.0 and limiting foes to 39 percent shooting. Lawrence Westbrook is the lone double figure scorer at 14.7 points per game, while Blake Hoffarber (9.7 ppg.) and Colton Iverson (9.4 ppg.) are also among six players who are scoring at least eight points per game in a balanced offense. Cornell and Minnesota will be playing for the fifth time, with the Gophers leading the series 3-1 that includes a forfeit victory for the Big Red.
CORNELL VS. THE BIG TEN: The Big Red holds a 12-30 all-time record against current members of the Big Ten Conference, including a 1-3 mark against Minnesota. The Big Red has also faced Illinois (1-3), Indiana (0-1), Iowa (0-3), Michigan (0-3), Michigan State (1-5), Northwestern (1-2), Ohio State (3-5), Penn State (5-4) and Purdue (0-1), while never meeting Wisconsin. Cornell snapped a 39-year stretch without a Big Ten victory when it defeated Northwestern 64-61 on Nov. 10, 2006. The Big Red's only other scheduled game against a Big Ten opponent came last Sunday at Indiana, a game the Hoosiers won 72-57.
A WIN OVER MINNESOTA WOULD ...
• send the Big Red into final exams break with a 5-4 record.
• snap a two-game road losing skid.
• make Cornell 1-1 against Big Ten foes this season.
• be the 1,129th in school history.
NEW LINE NOT BOTHERING CORNELL MUCH: Cornell hasn't been affected much by the new 3-point line. 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 eight games, head coach Steve Donahue's team has hit 60-of-154 3-point shots, good for a .390 shooting percentage. Leading the way has been junior
Geoff Reeves at 47 percent (23-of-49), while classmate
Ryan Wittman has connected on 28-of-73 (38 percent). That effort comes despite missing the second and third-leading 3-point shooters by percentage in Cornell history on
Louis Dale and
Adam Gore (both tied for second behind Wittman at .420). The duo has missed the first eight games due to injury. Cornell hit 13 3-pointers in its last outing, an 88-78 loss to No. 16 Syracuse.
TREY BIEN: The Big Red has hit at least one 3-pointer in 541 straight games entering the Minnesota 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 592 of 596 games, connecting on 3,439 treys, an average of 5.77 per game. The Big Red has hit a 3-pointer in all 227 games coached by Steve Donahue.
NIT SUCCESS: Cornell posted a 3-1 record in the NIT Preseason Tip-Off, earning consecutive victories over Loyola (MD) (82-72), Loyola-Chicago (78-53) and Eastern Michigan (67-54) after opening the tournament with a loss to St. John's (87-75). Of the 16 teams in the tournament, Cornell joined a who's who of college basketball programs that includes Arizona, Davidson, Georgia, Oklahoma, Purdue and St. John's, as well as the winner of Boston College and UAB, all of whom earned at least three wins in the tournament.
CENTURY MARKED: Head coach Steve Donahue picked up his 100th career coaching victory with a 67-54 triumph over Eastern Michigan in the final contest of the 2008 NIT Preseason Tip-Off on Nov. 25. The 2007-08 USBWA and NABC District Coach of the Year has a 100-127 overall record in nine seasons at Cornell, but is 42-22 (.656) in his last three seasons, including last year's Ivy League title. His teams have matched or surpassed its win totals overall and in league play each of the last six seasons (only school in the country) and has finished in the top three of the Ancient Eight standings for four straight years.
UNLUCKY 13: Cornell's 13 3-pointers as a team against Syracuse is tied for the fourth-highest total in school history and ranks behind only the 15 it hit against the Orange on Dec. 20, 2004 and the 14 it made against Ithaca College on Dec. 3, 2001 and Alvernia on Jan. 10, 2008. It was the fifth time the Big Red hit 13 in a game with the last coming against Hartford on Nov. 26, 2005.
THREE SPREE: Junior forward
Ryan Wittman enters the Minnesota game with 199 career 3-pointers and needs one to become the third Big Red player to record 200 treys.
ANOTHER THREE SPREE: Junior forward
Ryan Wittman hit nine 3-pointers against Syracuse, matching the single-game school record by Alex Compton at Yale on Feb. 24, 1996. The 19 attempts from beyond the arc set a school record, surpassing the 16 attempts by Cody Toppert against Duquesne on Feb. 6, 2004. The nine makes were one shy of a single-game Ivy League and Carrier Dome record.
RARE 30: Junior
Ryan Wittman's 33 points against Syracuse was the most by a Big Red player since Ray Mercedes notched 37 in a 93-84 loss to Harvard on March 3, 2001. It was the first 30-point effort by any Cornell player since Lenny Collins had 30 in a 72-67 loss at Marist on Nov. 19, 2004.
WITTMAN'S SCORING GRAND: Junior forward
Ryan Wittman became the 23rd player in school history to score 1,000 career points when he posted a career-high 28 against Indiana on Nov. 30. He entered the contest with 979 points in his first 62 games and delivered his 1,000th point on a jumper with 9:10 left in regulation. He has since moved to 18th on the all-time list with 1,040 points.
BIGGER, STRONGER WITTMAN: Junior
Ryan Wittman has come back for his junior season with a vengeance, opening the year with five 20-point efforts in the team's first eight games and is averaging a team-high 22.5 points in Cornell's 4-4 start. In the 2008-09 season-opening win over South Dakota, Wittman poured in 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 coming off consecutive career-high efforts in his last two games. Wittman scored 28 points against Indiana in before answering that with a career-best 33 against Syracuse. Wittman gained 15 pounds of muscle in the offseason.
LINE 'EM UP, KNOCK 'EM DOWN: Junior
Ryan Wittman has made 28-of-31 shots from the free-throw line so far this season, good for a .903 percentage through eight contests. That ups his already school-record pace to .882 (135-of-153).
MORE THAN JUST THE SCORING: While his 22.5 points per game is spectacular, so are junior
Ryan Wittman's other contributions through eight games. The 6-6 forward is averaging 3.9 rebounds, 3.1 assists, 1.4 steals and has posted a 1.7:1 assist-turnover ratio while playing 37.0 minutes per game. All of those numbers are career highs except for his rebounding average, which was at 4.2 rpg. a season ago.
ADDING ANOTHER FOOTE: Senior center
Jeff Foote has turned into a dominating force in the paint this season, ranking third on the team in scoring (13.4 ppg.) and pacing the squad in rebounding (7.6 rpg.), blocked shots (3.4 bpg.) and assists (3.4 apg.) in eight contests. He is also shooting 57 percent from the floor, also a team-best.
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. In his four games in the preseason NIT, Foote averaged 16.0 points, 7.8 rebounds, 4.5 blocked shots and 2.8 assists while shooting 61 percent from the floor in Cornell's 3-1 tournament run.
BLOCK TO BLOCK: Senior center
Jeff Foote has blocked 27 shots in just eight games after posting 30 blocks a season ago in 22 contests. After just 30 varsity contests, he already ranks sixth on the career list with 57 blocked shots.
AND THOUGH HE'S A SENIOR: Senior center
Jeff Foote will be eligible to compete again in the 2009-10 season after sitting out a full season after transferring to Cornell from St. Bonaventure in the winter of 2006. A former walk-on for the Bonnies, he never played a varsity contest in his year-and-a-half with the program.
MOST IMPROVED?: Few players in the country have seen a bigger scoring jump that junior
Geoff Reeves this season. The 6-4 guard is averaging 14.1 points in the team's first eight games a year after posting an average of 3.5 points per game. A 46 percent shooter thus far, Reeves has connected on 23-of-49 shots from beyond the arc (47 percent) and is also among the team leaders in assists (22) while averaging 35.2 minutes per game.
20-20: Junior
Geoff Reeves has already posted a pair of 20-point games this season, including a career-best 26 points in a win over Loyola-Chicago. He made 10-of-14 shots overall, including 5-of-6 from beyond the arc in the contest. The 26 points were the most by an active Cornell player and the most since Lenny Collins netted 27 points against Long Beach State on Dec. 30, 2005. Reeves also scored 21 points on 8-of-17 shooting and 5-of-8 from beyond the 3-point arc.
SMART BOMBER: While classmate
Ryan Wittman entered the season with much of the publicity of being one of the nation's top shooters, junior
Geoff Reeves is out to prove he is fully capable of joining Wittman atop that list. Reeves has made 23-of-49 3-pointers this season (2.9 per game, 47 percent) and is now hitting 47 percent from beyond the arc for his career (51-of-111), tops on the school's career list.
TYLER MORE: Junior
Alex Tyler has been his strong, steady self in the first six games of 2008-09, as the two-year starter at power forward is averaging 7.3 points, 4.9 rebounds and 0.6 blocks while playing 22.8 minutes per game. Tyler has reached double figures in scoring twice and posted a season-high 10 rebounds in the season opener against South Dakota. He had 10 points, five rebounds, two blocks and two steals in 25 minutes vs. Eastern Michigan, hitting on 5-of-9 shots from the floor.
TYLER MAKING CAREER MOVES: Senior
Alex Tyler ranks among the school's career leaders in field goal percentage (10th, .517) and blocked shots (21st, 25). He needs one blocked shot to move into the top 20 and four to move all the way to 17th.
ROBO-POINT GUARD: When Ivy League Player of the Year
Louis Dale went down with an injury in the preseason, freshman
Chris Wroblewski was forced to take over running the offense from the point guard position and so far has been outstanding. His averages of 6.3 points, 3.1 assists and 2.8 rebounds per game don't adequately reflect his poise through eight games, including six starts. The freshman has posted a 1.7:1 assist-turnover ratio (25a, 15t), averaging just 2.6 turnovers per 40 minutes. He is second on the team lead in assists this season.
BIG MINUTES FOR THE FRESHMAN: Freshman
Chris Wroblewski has averaged 31.2 minutes per game in the last six contests since taking over the starting position at point guard and is averaging 6.5 points, 3.5 rebounds, 3.2 assists and 1.3 steals per game over that span. Wroblewski had a career-high six assists and posted a career-best 13 points to go along with five rebounds and three assists in the win over Loyola-Chicago. In comparison, Ivy League Player of the Year
Louis Dale averaged 28.7 minutes per game at point guard in his freshman season.
BATTLE, KREEFER PLAYING KEY ROLES AS CAPTAINS: Old stalwarts
Jason Battle and
Brian Kreefer have played outstanding basketball in the first seven games of the season while providing excellent leadership. Battle has started two contests and is averaging 2.0 points, 1.3 rebounds and 0.8 assists in 11.3 minutes per game, shooting 50 percent from the floor in the process. Battle had six points and three rebounds in a win over Loyola (MD). Kreefer has played 18.9 minutes per game off the bench and has picked up 4.1 points, 4.3 rebounds and 1.1 assists while making 47 percent of his shots from the field. Kreefer had a career-high six assists in the win over Loyola-Chicago
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. He was also tremendous off the bench against Indiana with five rebounds, three steals and two assists in 12 minutes. Wire has averaged 1.7 points and 3.7 rebounds while playing 12.2 minutes in six appearances. In all, 12 of his 22 rebounds on the season have been on the offensive end.
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).
227 AND COUNTING: Cornell head coach Steve Donahue was on the sidelines for his 219th career game during the NCAA first round a season ago, moving him into third on the school's all-time list. He has now coached in 227 contests. Donahue coached in his 200th career game when the Big Red defeated Stony Brook 66-50 on Dec. 29 and earned his 100th career win with a 67-54 win over Eastern Michigan on Nov. 25, 2008.
RED-WHITE GAME: Junior
Andre Wilkins drained a 3-pointer with two seconds to play to lift the Red over the White in the annual Cornell men's basketball Red-White game on Nov. 8 at Newman Arena. The victory gave the Red team four wins in the last five intrasquad matchups. Red was led by sophomore
Max Groebe's 21 points, including a 4-of-5 effort from beyond the arc, while
Jeff Foote had 18 points and seven rebounds and
Geoff Reeves chipped in with 16.
Pete Reynolds had seven points and tied Foote with his team-best seven boards. Junior
Ryan Wittman led the White team with 30 points and added four assists, three rebounds and three steals, while
Alex Tyler (17 points, five assists) and
Chris Wroblewski (12 points, 4-of-7 on 3-pointers) were also in double figures. Senior
Brian Kreefer chipped in with a game-high nine rebounds and six assists, as the team's starting frontcourt combination of Kreefer and Tyler combined for 11 assists and just one turnover.
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.
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 have a two-week break for final exams before returning home for the first time since Nov. 14 when it plays host to La Salle on Saturday, Dec. 20 at 2 p.m. at Newman Arena in Bartels Hall. The Explorers lead the all-time series 2-1.