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Cornell University Athletics

Stone Gettings at Lafayette, 2016-17

Men's Basketball

Cornell Looks To Start Win Streak When It Visits Monmouth

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QUICK HITS
• With its first win of the season under its belt, the Cornell men's basketball team will look to make it two in a row when the Big Red visits Monmouth on Tuesday, Nov. 22 at 7 p.m.
• The game will be available live on ESPN3, with Barry Leonard on the call locally on 96.3 FM The Buzzer.
• The Big Red is coming off an 82-75 win at Lafayette, its first-ever win in Easton, Pa. after seven unsuccessful tries.
• Cornell hit 14-of-25 3-pointers, led by as many as 20 and never let the game into single digits until the final minute.
• The visitors had 19 assists and just 10 turnovers while placing five players in double figures in the victory.
• Sophomore Matt Morgan leads the Big Red in scoring (17.9 ppg.) and rebounding (6.5 rpg.) and is second in steals (1.3 spg.) through four games.
• Morgan was the nation's fifth-leading freshman scorer in the country a year ago (54th overall) and broke the conference's rookie scoring record after a 2015-16 campaign that saw his average 18.9 ppg.
• Senior guard Robert Hatter, the league's third-leading scorer a season ago, is posting 11.8 points, 5.5 rebounds, 2.0 assists and 1.5 steals and is 48 points shy of becoming the school's 26th 1,000-point scorer.
• Sophomore Stone Gettings has shown to be one of the most improved players in the Ancient Eight, averaging 14.0 points, 6.5 rebounds and 3.8 assists in four games, significantly up from last season's 2.1 points, 1.8 rebounds and 0.3 assists per night.
• Sophomore Donovan Wright exploded in a return to his hometown with a career high 26 points on 8-of-10 shooting from 3-point range after opening his career with 11 points and 0-of-2 shooting from beyond the arc in his first three contests.
• Freshman Josh Warren is among the team's leaders in scoring (5.3 ppg.) and rebounding (5.3 rpg.) while pacing the squad in field goal percentage (.529) despite playing just 16.5 minutes per game.
• Senior JoJo Fallas, who had a career-high 17 points in last season's loss to Monmouth, has started three straight games and is averaging 5.3 points while shooting 39 percent from 3-point range.
• First-year head coach Brian Earl, one of the greatest players in Princeton basketball history, served as assistant and associate head coach at his alma mater and helped his program to a 143-69 overall mark, a 72-26 league mark and five postseason appearances since the 2009-10 season.
• Earl, the 1999 Ivy League Player of the year and a three-time Ivy champion, graduated with an Ivy League-record 281 3-pointers, a mark that stood until Cornell's Ryan Wittman '10 surpassed him in 2010, and closed his career ranked fifth all-time at Princeton with 1,428 points.
• In all, the Big Red returns better than 97 percent of its minutes, points, rebounds and assists from last season.
• Cornell enjoyed a 10-day foreign trip to Spain in August, going 3-0 and getting a chance to bond with its new coaching staff.
• A pair of sophomores played big roles during the team's trip to Spain, with Gettings (9.3 ppg., 4.3 rpg., 3.3 apg. in Spain) and Whiteside (7.0 ppg., 5.3 rpg.) showing that they likely will play more significant roles in the lineup in 2016-17.
• Cornell played outstanding defense throughout its three-game foreign tour, holding opponents to 61.3 ppg., while shooting 30 percent from the floor and 25 percent from the 3-point arc.
• Monmouth, one of the biggest stories in college basketball a year ago, is off to a 1-2 start that includes a victory over Drexel, an overtime, buzzer-beating loss at South Carolina and a defeat at the hands of No. 18 Syracuse.
• All-America candidate Justin Robinson leads a balanced Monmouth offense, with the 5-8 senior guard averaging 12.3 points, 4.3 assists, 2.7 rebounds and 1.3 steals per game for sixth-year head coach King Rice.
 
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• Cornell head coach Brian Earl is in his first season at Cornell (1-3, .250; 0-0 Ivy, .000).
• Earl became the sixth Robert E. Gallagher '44 Coach of Men's Basketball at Cornell on April 18, 2016.

ABOUT MONMOUTH
• Monmouth brings a 1-2 record into the contest after consecutive losses to South Carolina (70-69 in OT) and No. 18 Syracuse (71-50).
• The Hawks opened the year with a 78-65 victory over Drexel.
• Diminutive guard Justin Robinson (12.3 ppg., 4.3 apg., 2.7 rpg., 1.3 spg.), a preseason All-America candidate, leads four double figure scorers for Monmouth.
• Micah Seaborn (11.7 ppg., 2.3 rpg., 3.0 apg., 2.7 spg.), Chris Brady (11.7 ppg., 7.0 rpg., 1.3 bpg.) and Je'lon Hornbeak (10.3 ppg., 6.3 rpg., 1.7 spg.) are all in double figures .
• Monmouth is allowing opponents to shoot just .358 from the floor and .316 from 3-point range and are being outrebounded by 5.3 per game.
• The Hawks have struggled offensively, shooting just 35 percent from the field and 23 percent from beyond the arc, but gets plenty of offense in transition (9.0 steals per game) and on the offensive glass (15.7 per game).
• Head coach King Rice, who played in a Final Four at North Carolina and graduated among the school's career assist leaders, is in his sixth season guiding the Hawks' program and sports an 80-87 career record.
• The Hawks became a darling of fans and media a year ago after collecting early season wins over schools from the Pac-12 (UCLA and USC), ACC (Notre Dame), Big Ten (Rutgers) and Big East (Georgetown), winning the MAAC regular season title and earning a trip to the NIT to cap a 28-8 record.

THE SERIES
• Cornell and Monmouth will meet for just the second time and for the first time in New Jersey.
• The Hawks won last season's first-ever meeting 78-69 behind 26 points from Justin Robinson.
 
LAST TIME THEY MET
• Mid-major darling Monmouth ended Cornell's four-game home win streak to open the season with a 78-69 win over the Big Red at Newman Arena.
• Despite missing two of the team's top seven scorers (Matt Morgan and Wil Bathurst), the Big Red used some impressive defense and hot shooting early to jump out to a 13-point lead midway through the first half, but Monmouth methodically chipped away to take a three-point lead at the half and never trailed after the break.
• Big Red junior guard Robert Hatter scored a game-high 27 points and added four rebounds and three steals.
• Classmate JoJo Fallas, making his first career start, chipped in 17 points and six boards and hit 5-of-7 shots from 3-point range.
• Justin Robinson had 26 points, five assists and four rebounds to lead the Hawks, while Deon Jones added 11 points and 11 rebounds for a double-double.
• Three other players scored at least eight points.
• Monmouth held a 50-35 edge on the backboards and had 19 offensive rebounds.


 
CORNELL VS. THE METRO ATLANTIC ATHLETIC CONFERENCE
• Cornell is 65-56 all-time against current members of the MAAC, including 0-1 against Monmouth.
• The Big Red has also played Canisius (26-18), Fairfield (0-2), Iona (0-2), Manhattan (1-1), Marist (2-3), Niagara (27-20), Quinnipiac (2-2), Rider (3-0), Saint Peter's (1-3) and Siena (3-4).
• This is the second of two games Cornell will play against MAAC opponents this season, as the Big Red dropped an 89-78 contest to Siena in Albany, N.Y. on Nov. 13.

A WIN OVER MONMOUTH WOULD ...
• make Cornell 2-3 on the season and 2-2 on the road.
• even the all-time series between the teams at 1-1.
• give the Big Red a 2-0 start to its three-game road swing.
• make the Big Red 66-56 all-time against current members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, including 1-1 this season.
• be the 1,236th in program history (1,235-1,390 in 117 seasons, .470).

LAST TIME OUT
• Sophomore Donovan Wright did a pretty good impersonation of his head coach, hitting eight 3-pointers in a return to his hometown to allow make sure Brian Earl left Lafayette's Kirby Sports Center with his first collegiate win.
• Cornell won its first-ever game in Easton after seven tries with an 82-75 victory over the Leopards on Sunday afternoon.
• Wright, who lived in Easton throughout middle school and high school, went 8-of-10 from 3-point range for a career-high 26 points, more than doubling his career total of 11 points entering the game.
• The sophomore, who missed his rookie season with a shoulder injury, ended the night with the third-most 3-point field goals made in a game in school history.
 • Wright was one of five Cornell players who scored in double figures in a high-energy performance on both ends of the floor.
• The Big Red had 19 assists and just 10 turnovers, made 14 3-pointers and was disruptive in the passing lanes.
• Fellow sophomore Stone Gettings had 12 points, eight rebounds, a career-high eight assists and two steals and classmate Matt Morgan had 13 points, four rebounds and four assists.
• Seniors Robert Hatter (12 points, three rebounds, three assists) and JoJo Fallas (11 points) each ended the night in double figures as well.
• Cornell shot 52 percent overall and didn't trail after an early 5-3 deficit 70 seconds into the game.
• Lafayette shot 48 percent overall and 56 percent (9-of-16) from beyond the arc with Matt Klinewski (23 points) and Nick Lindner (19 points) combining for 42 of the Leopards' 75 points.


MILESTONE WATCH
• Senior Robert Hatter is 48 points from becoming the school's 26th 1,000-point scorer.
• When he hits that milestone, he would be just the 16th player to score 1,000 points, grab 200 rebounds and dish off 150 assists.
• Senior Darryl Smith needs 30 points to reach 500 for his career and is 34 rebounds from 250.
• Sophomore Matt Morgan needs 22 3-pointers to hit 100 for his career.
• He also is seven steals shy of 50.

PLAYER NOTES TO KNOW
• Sophomore • Sophomore Matt Morgan, a four-time Ivy League Rookie of the Week, averaged 22.6 points, 2.9 rebounds, 2.1 assists, 1.1 steals and 0.3 blocks while shooting 43/34/81 in Ivy League play last season.
• Morgan has a string of 21 consecutive games scoring in double figures.
• The trio of sophomores Stone Gettings and Matt Morgan and senior Robert Hatter have been in double figures in each of the team's first four games.
• In four games so far this season, sophomore Stone Gettings has already piled up five times as many assists in 113 minutes of action (15) as he did last year (three) in 267 minutes.
• He also has four double figure scoring efforts after hitting that mark just once as a freshman.
• Getting's eight assists at Lafayette are the most by a non-guard since Adam Wire had eight at Albany in the 2010-11 season at Albany.
• His 12 points, eight rebounds and eight assists made Gettings just the fourth player to have at least 10 points, eight rebounds and eight assists in the same game (Zeke Marshall vs. Cortland in 1993, 12-10-8; Louis Dale vs. Toledo in 2009, 14-9-9; Chris Wroblewski vs. Yale in 2012, 18-8-10).
• In four games off the bench, freshman Josh Warren has an impressive 21 points and 21 rebounds in 66 total minutes.
• Sophomore Donovan Wright entered the game at Lafayette with 11 career points and was 0-for-2 from 3-point range before scoring 26 points on 8-of-10 from beyond the arc in the win over the Leopards.
• Wright's eight 3-point field goals is tied for third-most in a game in Cornell history and is tied for 10th in the Ivy League record books.
• Senior David Onuorah became the sixth player in school history to reach 100 career blocks and now has 119.
• Onuorah was one of two Ivy League student-athletes (Harvard skiier Maile Sapp was the other) chosen to represent the conference at the NCAA Student-Athlete Leadership Forum in Phoenix, Arizona this past April.
• Senior JoJo Fallas competed for Team USA at the 14th European Maccabi Games in Berlin, Germany from July 27-August 5, 2015. Fallas was one of the leaders on a team that won a silver medal, going 4-0 before dropping the gold medal game to Russia 98-87 despite his game-high 28 points. The event was the largest gathering of Jewish people in Berlin since World War II, as more than 2,000 Jewish athletes from 36 countries attended.
• Fifth-year senior center Braxston Bunce was a two-year member of Team Canada's Under-18 national team, including competing at the 2012 FIBA Americas Championship in Brazil. Canada went 4-1, with Bunce averaging 1.5 points, 2.0 rebounds and 1.5 assists in two contests.
• The Big Red returns better than 97 percent of its minutes, points, rebounds and assists from last season.
 
TEAM NOTES TO KNOW
• Brian Earl and his brother Dan (VMI) one of five active sets of brothers directing Division I programs, joining Scott (Baylor) and Bryce (Vanderbilt) Drew; Bobby (Arizona State) and Danny (Rhode Island) Hurley; Joe (Yale) and James (Boston University) Jones; and Sean (Arizona) and Archie (Dayton) Miller.
• Fourth-year assistant coach Jon Jaques was a starter and senior captain on the 2009-10 Cornell team that advanced to the NCAA Sweet 16.
• Members of the Cornell basketball team represent 10 states and one Canadian province.
• Cornell has played in 46 different states, as well as in Cuba, Puerto Rico, Australia, France and Spain. The only states the Big Red has not played in are Alaska, North Dakota, Mississippi and Wyoming - and the Big Red will cross Wyoming off the list for state 47 when it visits the Cowboys on Dec. 17 as part of the Las Vegas Invitational.
• This year's schedule features 17 games away from home and more than 12,700 miles of travel —more than halfway around the earth (circumference of 24,901 miles).
• Including the Big Red's August trip to Spain and Cornell basketball will log more than 21,000 miles of travel in just eight months.
• You could travel back and forth between New York City and Los Angeles three times and still have enough mileage left over to cycle to entire Tour de France course – twice.
• Cornell hit 233 3-pointers as a team last season, good for fourth in a single season — nine of the last 10 seasons rank in the top 10.
• The Big Red ranked in the top 10 in both steals (fifth, 217).

CORNELL SEVENTH IN IVY PRESEASON POLL
• The Cornell men's basketball team, under the direction of first-year coach Brian Earl, was picked seventh in the 2016-17 Ivy League media preseason poll.
• The media poll was made up up 17 voters - two from media covering each of the conference's eight schools and one from a national media member.
• Princeton was picked first with 12 first place votes and 130 points, while Harvard was a close second with five first place votes and 123 points.
• Defending champion Yale was slotted third (101) and Penn was picked fourth (72). Rounding out the field was Columbia (61), Dartmouth (48), the Big Red (42) and Brown (35).
• Cornell was picked to finish eighth two seasons in a row only to finish fifth and sixth, respectively.
• For a third straight season, the Big Red is expecting to upset the preseason rankings.
• Finishing fourth would give Cornell a spot in the first-ever Ivy League men's basketball tournament, and it has the weapons to challenge for a spot to compete for the automatic NCAA bid.
 
RED-WHITE GAME
• The Red team led wire-to-wire behind 20 points from sophomore Matt Morgan and 14 from classmate Donovan Wright for a 57-46 win over the White team at the annual Red-White Scrimmage on Saturday, Oct. 22 at Newman Arena.
• Morgan added three rebounds, three assists and two steals in the contest, while freshman Josh Warren had six points, six rebounds and four assists.
• Junior Wil Bathurst chipped in six points, four rebounds and three assists for the winning team, which had 13 assists to just four turnovers and made 7-of-16 3-pointers.
• Sophomore Stone Gettings (16 points, four rebounds) and senior Robert Hatter (15 points) led the White team.
• JoJo Fallas added nine points, five rebounds and two assists and senior David Onuorah had four points and a game-high nine rebounds.
• The intrasquad scrimmage was comprised of two 12-minute halves.

HOW TO FOLLOW CORNELL
• There are numerous ways to follow the Big Red through the 2016-17 basketball season.
• Men's basketball games will be broadcast on 96.3 FM The Buzzer for the 2015-16 season. Longtime voice of the Big Red Barry Leonard returns on the call with the play-by-play, while former All-Ivy center Eric Taylor '05 is on board to do color analysis.
• A half-hour pregame show and postgame analysis will enable Big Red fans to follow Coach Brian Earl's team throughout the season.
• The Big Red's home contests will all be broadcast live with streaming video as part of the IvyLeagueDigitalNetwork subscription service. Visit www.IvyLeagueDigitalNetwork.com for all the latest information on Cornell broadcasts.
• You can follow the team on YouTube, Facebook and Twitter. Highlights, interviews and features on all 37 of Cornell's varsity sports can be found at www.youtube.com/cornellathletics, www.facebook.com/cornellathletics or www.twitter.com/cornellsports.
 
CORNELL BASKETBALL HONORED BY NCAA ... AGAIN
• Cornell University ranks among the best according to the annual NCAA Division I Academic Progress Report (APR) for 2014-15 that was released this past May.
• The APR measures semester-by-semester records for every individual team in Division I with regard to each team members' continuing eligibility, retention and progress toward graduation.
• The NCAA "commends" teams that have APR scores in the top 10 percent within their sport, with the minimum necessary score ranging from 975 to a perfect mark of 1000 depending on the range of team scores within that sport.
• Men's basketball has been recognized eight times in the 11 years since the APR began, including six consecutive years.
 
CORNELL BEYOND THE ARC - 700 AND COUNTING
• Cornell hit 14 3-pointers at Lafayette on Nov. 20, 2016, its 776th 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.
• Matt Morgan hit the program's 5,000th 3-pointer when he hit a long 3-pointer at the halftime buzzer at Georgia Tech on Nov. 13, 2015.
• 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 822 of 826 games, connecting on 5,253 treys, an average of 6.4 per game.
 
CORNELL IN OVERTIME
• Dating back to the first overtime game against Penn way back in 1922, Cornell is 40-48 in games that go an extra period.
• Cornell is 6-9 in multiple overtime games, with the longest game for the Big Red being a five overtime contest against Princeton, won by the Tigers 66-61 on Feb. 24, 1979 at Barton Hall.
• Cornell is 29-18 in home overtime games, 2-2 in neutral contests and 10-27 in road games.
 
BIG RED HOOPS ENJOYS FOREIGN TRIP TO SPAIN
• Cornell University has one of the broadest reaches of any educational institution in the world, and that reach was evident when the men's basketball team made a goodwill tour of Spain in August.
• First year head coach Brian Earl and his staff had their first extended opportunity to work with the team when it took a 10-day trip overseas that included three contests.
• Starting with a five-day training camp in Ithaca prior to leaving, the team visited Madrid, Valencia and Barcelona prior to the new semester beginning.
• The Big Red enjoyed time in all three cities, visiting the Royal Palace of Madrid, attending a Barcelona soccer match, and touring the country's former capital of Toledo as well as the Valencia bullfighting museum.
• Seventeen players and eight staff members in total made the trip to Europe.
• The Big Red went 3-0 on the trip, defeating Eurocolegio Casvi 67-52 in Madrid, Valencia Select 69-63 and Sant Julia Select 72-69 in Barcelona.
• With minutes nearly evenly split among the 13 players who saw action on the trip, rising sophomore Matt Morgan led the team in scoring (14.0 ppg.), rebounding (7.0 rpg.) and steals (1.7 spg.), while senior Robert Hatter (13.3 ppg., 6.7 rpg., 3.7 apg.) also filled the stat sheet.
• Sophomores Stone Gettings (9.3 ppg., 4.3 rpg., 3.3 apg.) and Troy Whiteside (7.0 ppg., 5.3 rpg., 1.7 apg.) ranked third and fourth among the team's top scorers.
• Defensively, the Big Red allowed its three opponents to shoot just 30 percent from the floor, 25 percent from 3-point range and outrebounded opponents by 7.7 boards per game.
• Cornell has previously made foreign trips to play in places like Cuba and Australia, with the last escape coming in the spring of 2007 when the Big Red visited France.

MILLER '15 SPENDS SUMMER WITH UTAH JAZZ
• Former Cornell All-Ivy forward Shonn Miller '15 signed an NBA summer league deal to play for the Utah Jazz's entry in the Salt Lake City Summer League.
• He averaged 2.8 points and 1.8 rebounds in five games for the Jazz, including an eight-point, five-rebound performance in a win over the Portland TrailBlazers.
•Miller ranked second in the Ivy League in scoring (16.8 ppg.), rebounding (8.5 rpg.) and free-throw percentage (.834) and among the top 10 in blocks (fourth, 1.8) and steals (eighth, 1.3) en route to earning unanimous first-team all-league and second-team NABC all-district honors as a senior in 2014-15.
• He was one of 26 finalists for the Lefty Driesell Award as the nation's Defensive Player of the Year.
• he became the first Cornellian and fifth Ivy player to record 1,000 points, 600 rebounds, 100 blocks and 100 steals in a career.
• He sits in the top 20 all-time in scoring (19th, 1,065), rebounding (14th, 608), steals (11th, 126), blocked shots (fourth, 154), free throws made (13th, 266) and free-throw percentage (18th, .785).
• Following his graduation, Miller played one season at the University of Connecticut as a graduate transfer, earning American Athletic Conference honorable mention accolades.
 • Miller was taken in the first round of the NBA D-League draft (13th overall) by the Greensboro Swarm, an affiliate of the Charlotte Hornets.

NEXT UP
• Cornell remains on the road to face Monmouth on Tuesday, Nov. 22 at 7 p.m. prior to the Thanksgiving holiday.
• Monmouth won the first-ever meeting last season, a 78-69 decision at Newman Arena.


 
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Players Mentioned

Wil Bathurst

#20 Wil Bathurst

G/F
6' 3"
Junior
Braxston Bunce

#15 Braxston Bunce

C
6' 11"
Senior
JoJo Fallas

#25 JoJo Fallas

G
5' 9"
Senior
Stone Gettings

#13 Stone Gettings

F
6' 8"
Sophomore
Robert Hatter

#5 Robert Hatter

G
6' 1"
Senior
Matt Morgan

#10 Matt Morgan

G
6' 2"
Sophomore
David Onuorah

#0 David Onuorah

F
6' 9"
Senior
Darryl Smith

#1 Darryl Smith

G
6' 2"
Senior
Troy Whiteside

#4 Troy Whiteside

G
6' 4"
Sophomore
Donovan Wright

#3 Donovan Wright

F
6' 5"
Sophomore
Josh Warren

#22 Josh Warren

F
6' 8"
Freshman

Players Mentioned

Wil Bathurst

#20 Wil Bathurst

6' 3"
Junior
G/F
Braxston Bunce

#15 Braxston Bunce

6' 11"
Senior
C
JoJo Fallas

#25 JoJo Fallas

5' 9"
Senior
G
Stone Gettings

#13 Stone Gettings

6' 8"
Sophomore
F
Robert Hatter

#5 Robert Hatter

6' 1"
Senior
G
Matt Morgan

#10 Matt Morgan

6' 2"
Sophomore
G
David Onuorah

#0 David Onuorah

6' 9"
Senior
F
Darryl Smith

#1 Darryl Smith

6' 2"
Senior
G
Troy Whiteside

#4 Troy Whiteside

6' 4"
Sophomore
G
Donovan Wright

#3 Donovan Wright

6' 5"
Sophomore
F
Josh Warren

#22 Josh Warren

6' 8"
Freshman
F