Cornell (6-9, 0-2 Ivy) at Columbia (3-12, 0-2 Ivy)
January 20, 2018 • 7:00 pm
SNY/Ivy League Network (Lance Medow)
New York, N.Y. • Levien Gymnasium (2,700)
QUICK HITS
• After suffering two losses on the dreaded Penn-Princeton road trip, the Cornell men's basketball team will attempt to right the ship when it visits travel partner Columbia on Saturday, Jan. 20 at 7 p.m. at Levien Gymnasium.
• The game will be televised on SNY and simulcast on ILN.
• Cornell suits up two of the Ivy League's top seven scorers in juniors
Matt Morgan and
Stone Gettings.
• Morgan, the sixth-leading scorer in the country (23.5 ppg.), has now reached double figures in scoring in a school-record 38 consecutive games.
• Morgan has been on a tear over his past 14 games, averaging 24.1 points, 4.7 rebounds and 3.1 assists, including twice claiming Ivy League Player of the Week honors.
• Gettings is averaging 20.3 points, 9.0 rebounds and 3.2 assists in the team's last six contests while shooting .560 (47-of-84) from the floor and .526 (12-of-25) from 3-point range.
• Included was a career-high 39 points at Delaware - the third-most points ever by a Cornell player and the sixth-most by any Division I player in a game this year - and 17 rebounds at Penn, the most by a Cornell player since 2009-10.
• Gettings had just the 10th game with at least 20 points and 15 rebounds by a Cornellian since 1976 with his 20 points and 17 boards against the first-place Quakers.
• Cornell brought a 6-7 non-conference record into the 62nd season of Ivy play after starting off the 2018 calendar year on the right note by snapping a three-game losing skid with a 93-69 win over Central Penn on Friday, Jan. 5.
• The six non-league wins were a two-game improvement over last season (4-11) for second-year head coach
Brian Earl.
• The Big Red also features Steven Julian, who ranks second in the Ancient Eight in rebounding (6.5 rpg.) and blocked shots (1.7 bpg.) and ranks sixth in steals (1.1 spg.).
• Junior guard
Jack Gordon, a career 43 percent 3-point shooter who celebrates his 21st birthday on Friday, is 7-of-14 from 3-point range over his last four games and is averaging a career-high 7.3 points per game.
• Freshman Terrance McBride has been solid since joining the starting lineup, averaging 6.6 points, 2.2 rebounds and 2.2 assists while compiling a 11:3 assist:turnover ratio for the Big Red (3-2).
• Cornell continues to play without starting guard
Wil Bathurst (7.1 ppg., 3.6 rpg., 3.1 apg. in seven starts this season) and forward
Troy Whiteside (6.6 ppg., 3.1 rpg., 1.4 apg. in 2016-17) and is dressing just 11 healthy players this weekend.
• Coaches from both teams will be wearing suits and sneakers to support the NABC's Coaches vs. Cancer Suits And Sneakers Week — a nationwide event when basketball coaches across the country unite for a common cause – saving lives from cancer.
• Coaches and their staff across the nation wear sneakers with their suits during games to raise awareness and help save lives from cancer by raising funds and encouraging people to educate themselves about cancer prevention, screening, and early detection.
HEAD COACH BRIAN EARL
•
Brian Earl is in his second season as the Robert E. Gallagher '44 Head Coach of Cornell Men's Basketball (14-30, .318; 4-12Ivy, .250).
• He became Cornell's 22nd head coach in April of 2016.
• Earl helped his alma mater, Princeton, return to national prominence during nine seasons as an assistant and associate head coach.
• The Tigers had posted a 143-69 overall record and a 72-26 record in Ancient Eight games since 2009-10, never finishing lower than third place and winning 20 or more games five times.
• His Ivy League peers voted him as the league's top assistant coach in a November 2010 FoxSports.com poll, earning the recognition prior to a 2011 season in which Princeton won the Ivy League title and returned to the NCAA Tournament.
CORNELL-COLUMBIA SERIES
Overall: Columbia leads 128-100
In New York, N.Y.: Columbia leads 77-36
Current Streak: Cornell, 1 game
Last Meeting: Cornell won 67-62, 1/21/17 in New York, N.Y.
Earl vs. Columbia: 1-1
Series Notes: Series dates back to the 1902-03 season • Cornell leads 17-13 over the last 15 seasons • narrowing that down, the Lions are 10-4 over the last 7 years • the Big Red is 10-5 at Levien Gymnasium dating back to 2003 • the last three times the teams split the season series (2013, 2015, 2017), Cornell won on the road • four of the last six meetings have been decided by five points or less
A WIN OVER COLUMBIA WOULD
• push Cornell's record to 7-9 on the season and give the Big Red its first Ivy win of the year (1-2).
• make it two in a row for the Big Red over the Lions at Levien Gymnasium and overall.
• cut the Lions' lead in the all-time series to 128-101, including 77-37 in New York City.
• be the 1,249th in program history (1,248-1,417 in 118 seasons, .468).
LAST TIME VS. COLUMBIA
• The Cornell men's basketball team had plenty to overcome to pick up its first Ivy League win under head coach
Brian Earl.
• Without four-year starter and 1,000-point scorer
Robert Hatter, despite 22 turnovers (15 in the first half) and a deficit on the road with under four minutes to go, the Big Red was resilient enough to hand Columbia a 67-62 loss on Jan. 21 at Levien Gymnasium.
• The Big Red defense held Columbia to just 1-of-12 and 2-of-17 shooting to start the game and held the Lions to 31 percent shooting from the floor, a season low by an opponent.
• Along with a balanced offense and clutch free-throw shooting in the final minutes, Cornell was able to avenge the previous weekend's shootout win by the Lions.
• Sophomore
Matt Morgan had 17 points, seven assists, six rebounds, two blocked shots and two steals to lead the Big Red offense, but it was
Wil Bathurst's 12 points and six rebounds that sparked Cornell late.
• Bathurst put Cornell into the lead for good with a runner with three minutes remaining, then knocked out two free throws with 14 seconds left after he rebounded a Columbia miss on a game-tying 3-point attempt.
•
Troy Whiteside and
Stone Gettings rounded out four double figure scorers with 13 points each.
• Mike Smith had a game-high 24 points for Columbia, though it came on 8-of-21 shooting.
LAST TIME OUT
• Princeton scored the game's first 19 points and never let up, topping Cornell 91-54 on Jan. 13 at Jadwin Gymnasium.
• Junior
Matt Morgan had 16 points and seven rebounds to lead the Big Red, while freshman Terrance McBride chipped in a career-high 11 points to go along with two rebounds and two assists.
•
Joel Davis scored eight points and
Stone Gettings scored six with five rebounds.
• Cornell shot 36 percent from the floor overall, 28 percent in the decisive first half, and connected on just 7-of-27 from beyond the 3-point arc.
• The Tigers got 20 points from Devin Canady to lead three double figure scorers.
• Jerome Desrosiers scored 14 off the bench, including hitting 4-of-5 3-pointers, and Myles Stephens had 11.
• Princeton had 38 made field goals, including 10 3-pointers, and held a decisive 45-27 edge on the glass.
• The home team shot 54 percent overall, including 61 percent in the first 20 minutes.
PLAYER NOTES TO KNOW
• After having teammates score 30 points in the same game just once in the first 119 years of Cornell basketball, juniors
Matt Morgan and
Stone Gettings reached that milestone in consecutive games against Niagara and Delaware.
• Prior to the Niagara contest, the only previous time two Cornellians scored more than 30 points in the same game was on March 2, 1956 at the famed Palestra in Philadelphia when Bo Roberson (32) and Chuck Rolles (30) did so against Penn.
• In between, Cornell played 1,611 games over those ensuing 61 seasons.
• Morgan, the nation's sixth-leading scorer, has been on a tear, averaging 24.1 points, 4.7 rebounds and 3.1 assists over his past 14 games, including twice claiming Ivy League Player of the Week honors.
• Morgan has reached double figures in 38 consecutive games, the fifth-longest active streak by a Division I player in the country entering the week.
• The 38 consecutive double figure scoring games surpassed John Sheehy's 34 straight (1953-55) for a school record that had held for 62 years.
• He is the only player in school history to put together two streaks of at least 20 consecutive games scoring in double figures (also a 21-game streak from 2015-16).
• Now averaging 23.5 points per game, Morgan's scoring average would be the highest ever by a Cornell player if maintained (Chuck Rolles '56 averaged 23.0 points in 1955-56).
• Morgan was the first Big Red player to post 12 consecutive 20-point games (previous Cornell record was six), a streak that ended with 13 at Penn.
• The junior has connected on at least one trey in 25 straight (fifth-longest streak at Cornell).
• Morgan became the first Cornell player to declare early for the NBA Draft during the spring of 2017, withdrawing before the early entry deadline to preserve his final two seasons of eligibility.
• After missing much of the preseason due to injury, junior
Stone Gettings is averaging 15.5 ppg., 6.5 rpg. and 2.5 apg. in just 23.2 minutes per contest.
• The only games by a Cornellian with more than Gettings' 39 points against Delaware were 47 scored by George Farley against Princeton in 1960 and 42 by Chuck Rolles at Syracuse in 1956.
• In his last 12 games, spanning 293 minutes, Gettings has scored 201 points, grabbed 83 rebounds, dished 36 assists and collected eight steals and five blocks — 27.4 ppg., 11.3 rpg., 4.9 apg. per 40 minutes.
• Over his last six contests, Gettings is averaged 20.3 points, 9.0 rebounds and 3.2 assists while shooting .560 (47-of-84) from the floor and .526 (12-of-25) from 3-point range.
• Junior forward Steven Julian is second in the Ancient Eight in rebounding (6.5 rpg.) and blocked shots (1.6 bpg.) and is sixth in steals (1.1 spg.).
• The junior college transfer has at least three blocked shots in five of his last eight games and seven of his last 11 starts.
•
Jack Gordon, a career 43 percent 3-point shooter, tied a single-game school record for 3-point percentage in a game, joining Ryan Wittman '10 (2010 vs. Bryant) as the lone Cornellians to hit five 3-pointers in a game without a miss when he did so against Central Penn.
• Gordon's career-best 10 rebounds against Niagara obliterated his previous career best of four.
• With Gordon and Gettings each registering double digit rebounds vs. Niagara, the juniors became the first Big Red teammates to accomplish that feat since Louis Dale '10 (11) and Jeff Foote '10 (10) did so against Dartmouth during the 2007-08 campaign.
• Members of the Cornell basketball team represent 10 states and the District of Columbia.
TEAM NOTES TO KNOW
• The Big Red's streak of scoring 75 or more points ended after six games with 61 points against Penn, its longest stretch since stringing together six consecutive contests spanning the final three contests of 2006-07 and the first three of the 2007-08 seasons. (Last time with seven straight, 1/19/66-2/18/66).
• After turning the ball over 23 times in a loss at Northeastern on Dec. 2, the Big Red has piled up 128 assists with just 102 turnovers in eight games since.
•
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.
• Fifth-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 has played in 47 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 and Mississippi after crossing Wyoming off the list last year.
• Cornell has hit a 3-pointer in 816 consecutive games (11th-longest streak in Division I) dating back to a contest 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, the Big Red has hit at least one shot behind the arc in 862 of 866 games (5,589 3-pointers over that span).
• The Big Red returns 72 percent of its scoring, 74 percent of its rebounding and 71 percent of its assists from last season — one of just 16 Division I teams nationwide to bring back 70 percent of its scoring, rebounding and assists from 2016-17.
• Dating back to the first overtime game against Penn way back in 1922, Cornell is 40-50 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 29-19 in home overtime games, 2-2 in neutral contests and 10-28 in road games.
• The Big Red ranks among the best according to the annual NCAA Division I Academic Progress Report (APR) for 2015-16 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. Cornell has been recognized nine times in the 12 years since the APR began, including seven consecutive.
• Are Cornell Student-Athletes on Scholarship? The easy answer is no. Cornell student-athletes are awarded need-based financial aid, just as any other student who applies to the school. That package can come in the form of student loans and grants. The basic intent of the original Ivy League agreement of 1954 was to improve and foster intercollegiate athletics while keeping the emphasis on such competition in harmony with the educational purpose of the institutions. The Ivy League is nationally recognized for its level of success — absent of athletic scholarships — while rigorously maintaining its self-imposed high academic standards. The Ivy League has demonstrated a rare willingness and ability, given the current national pressures on intercollegiate success, to abide by these rules and still compete successfully in Division I athletics.
#ROADTOIVYMADNESS RETURNS
• The Ivy League men's and women's basketball tournaments return to Philadelphia, where they will take place Saturday and Sunday, March 10-11, 2018.
• The top four teams will earn berths to the tournament, with the semifinals on Saturday and the championships on Sunday.
• All six games will be broadcast live on ESPN's networks.
• For tickets and more information please visit IvyMadness.com.
NEXT UP
• After opening the league season with three consecutive road games, the Cornell men's basketball team will host Columbia on Saturday, Jan. 27 at 4 p.m. at Newman Arena.
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