Guy Ragland Jr. of the Cornell men's basketball team moves past three Brown defenders during the Big Red's 80-73 win on Jan. 28, 2023 at Newman Arena in Ithaca, N.Y.
Patrick Shanahan/Cornell Athletics

Road Swing Ends With Big Ivy Tilt For Men's Hoops at Brown on Saturday

Chris Manon drives on a Penn player during a men's basketball game on Jan. 4, 2023 at the Palestra in Philadelphia, Pa.
The Big Red will attempt to complete a season sweep of Brown when the two teams meet on Saturday.

 

Cornell Big Red (15-7, 5-4 Ivy) at

Brown Bears (12-10, 5-4 Ivy) 


 

February 11, 2023 • 2:00 p.m.
Providence, R.I. • Pizzitola Sports Center (2,800)
Cornell leads the all-time series 83-55


Game Links 
Watch LiveLive StatsTickets • Cornell Game Notes
Cornell Roster • Cornell Schedule & Results • Cornell Stats
Brown Roster • Brown Schedule & Results • Brown Stats

STREAKS, STORYLINES & SIDEBARS 
• The Cornell men's basketball team will close out a three-game road swing looking to remain in the driver's seat for a spot at the Ivy League Tournament when it meets Brown on Saturday, Feb. 11 at 2 p.m. at the Pizzitola Sports Center.
• The game will be broadcast live on ESPN+ with Scott Cordischi and Russ Tyler on the call.
• At 5-4 in Ivy play after a weekend road sweep at the hands of Princeton and Penn, the Big Red finds itself tied with the Quakers and Brown in the Ancient Eight standings — a game behind Yale (6-3) for second and two games shy of Princeton (7-2) in first.
• With seven teams within two games of a playoff spot at the Ivy Tournament and five to play, a Big Red season sweep of the Bears would go a long way toward helping Cornell toward a second straight appearance in the postseason.
• The Big Red's four conference losses have all come by single digits and Cornell has held second half leads in each contest.
• A high-scoring Cornell offense ranks among the top three nationally in 3-pointers made (first,11.4) and attempted (first, 31.0), fastbreak points (second, 17.4) and assists per game (third, 18.8) entering the weekend.
• Cornell head coach Brian Earl's team  is in this position despite a roster that lost four of five starters from last season's 15-11 squad that made the Ivy tournament.

Brian Earl 

The Robert E. Gallagher '44 Head Coach of Men's Basketball

• Brian Earl is in his seventh season as the Robert E. Gallagher ‘44 Head Coach of Cornell Men’s Basketball. 
• 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.

Brian Earl
Head coach Brian Earl

THE SERIES 
Overall: Cornell leads 83-55
In Providence, R.I.: Series tied 34-34
Current Streak: Cornell, 1 game
Last Meeting: Cornell won 80-73, 1/28/23 in Ithaca, N.Y.
Earl vs. Brown: 7-4
Series Notes: Cornell holds an 83-55 lead in a series that dates back to the 1949-50 campaign • Cornell has had the best of the series recently, having won 25 of the last 35 meetings • the Bears ended Cornell’s 13-game win streak in the series in March 2013 •  the teams split last season's two-game series with each team winning on a buzzer-beater on the other's home court.

A WIN OVER BROWN WOULD ... 
• improve Cornell's record to 16-7.
• push the Big Red to 6-4 in Ivy play.
• complete the Big Red's first season sweep of the Bears since the 2017-18 season.
• give Cornell a 9-4 record in its past 13 contests.
• make Cornell 12-9 in its past 20 Ivy games.
• up its all-time Ivy League record to 395-524.
• be the 1,308th in program history (1,307-1,478-2 in 121 seasons, .469).

CORNELL, IVY LEAGUE BASKETBALL FEATURED ON ESPN+ 
ESPN+ is ESPN’s new direct-to-consumer offering.
• Similar to Netflix and Hulu, fans are able to buy a subscription to ESPN+, which will be completely separate from their cable/satellite bill.
• ESPN+ is available on all of ESPN’s existing platforms: Website, mobile app, OTT (Apple TV/Roku) app.

LAST TIME OUT: Penn 92, Cornell 86
GAME STORY I BOX SCORE I HIGHLIGHTS
Senior Greg Dolan scored a career-high 29 points, but Penn's dominance on the glass, especially on the offensive end, allowed the Quakers to hold off Cornell for a 92-86 win at the Palestra.
• Dolan hit 12-of-18 field goals and added five rebounds and four assists to lead four Big Red double figure scorers. 
• The Big Red connected on 13-of-42 3-pointers with Dolan, Max Watson and Guy Ragland Jr. hitting three apiece. 
• Watson and Chris Manon each netted 13 points and Ragland Jr. had 11. 
• Cornell assisted on 18 baskets and turned it over just six times while collecting 10 steals, outscoring the home team 19-7 off turnovers.
• Jordan Dingle, the nation's second-leading scorer, had 27 points with seven rebounds, but it was Lucas Monroe that allowed the Quakers to sweep its Ivy weekend. 
• Monroe had 12 points, 13 rebounds (six offensive boards) and five assists without a turnover for a Penn squad that coughed it up 14 times. 
• Max Martz and Clark Slajchert scored 13 each and Nick Spinoso was the fifth starter in double figures with 10 along with six assists and five rebounds. 
• Penn shot 52 percent from the floor, including hitting 11-of-23 from beyond the arc, and assisted on 21 of its 31 baskets.

PLAYER NOTES TO KNOW:
• Through nine conference games, the Big Red has four players averaging double figures (Manon 14.1, Williams 13.5, Dolan 13.3, Ragland 11.1 ppg.) and a fifth at 9.9 (Isaiah Gray) and 10 players averaging at least 11.6 minutes per contest.
• Senior Greg Dolan paces the Ancient Eight and sits 23rd nationally in assist:turnover ratio (2.84), and his career 2.56 is the best mark in school history.
• Dolan, who entered the season with six double figure scoring games, has already more than doubled that mark with 16 in the team's first 22 contests.
• Over his past 15 contests, Dolan has 59 assists and just 19 turnovers in 451 minutes of action and it's 76 assists and 24 turnovers over the past 19 contests.
• Nazir Williams has reached double figures in 16 of 19 games this season.
• He has 25 assists against just five turnovers in his six league games played this season.
• Junior Chris Manon has 96 steals in 48 career games, or 2.00 steals per game, ahead of Wallace Prather's school record average of 1.89. Manon is challenging the record despite averaging just 18.6 minutes per game for his career. 
• Manon has 49 steals this season, five off the two-decades old single-season school record 54 set by DeShawn Standard (1997-98) and matched by Wallace Prather (2001-02).
• Manon collected seven steals in the win over Binghamton, tied for the second-most in a single-game in school history and the most since Lenny Collins posted a record eight at Bucknell on Jan. 20, 2004.
• The Big Red's two-headed center of Sean Hansen and Guy Ragland Jr. is combining to average 18.5 points, 8.7 rebounds, 4.5 assists, 1.3 steals and 1.0 blocks while playing 40.7 minutes per game.
• Junior Sean Hansen set a school record by hitting all eight field goals in the win over Saint Francis (Pa.), doubling his previous scoring high with 26 points and becoming the first player in school history with a game of at least 25 points, five rebounds, five assists and three steals.
• With his double-double in the win over Ithaca, Ragland became just the sixth player in school history with multiple double-double efforts off the bench (Stan Brown, Mike Millane, Bernard Jackson, Brian Kopf and Jeff Foote) in a career.
• Junior Keller Boothby has turned the ball over just four times in 465 minutes on the court (21 assists) this season and has just 15 career miscues (one every 71.1 minutes). Dating back to its game on Feb. 5, 2022 against Penn, he has just four turnovers in 653 minutes of action (26 assists and 59 3-pointers made over that span).
• Boothby is shooting .581 (18-of-31) from 3-point range in Ivy play.

TEAM NOTES TO KNOW:
• Cornell ranks among the top three nationally in 3-pointers made (first,11.4) and attempted (first, 31.0), fastbreak points (second, 17.4) and assists per game (third, 18.8).
• Among 352 Division I teams, Cornell ranks in the top 10 percent nationally in the rankings of 12 of 28 categories despite having just two individuals in the top 100 of any category (Greg Dolan in assist:turnover ratio, 23rd at 2.84; Chris Manon in steals per game, 17th at 2.23).
• The Big Red leads the Ivy League in scoring offense (84.8), 3-pointers made (11.4) and attempted (31.0) per game, 3-point percentage (.367), assists (18.8), assist:turnover ratio (1.57), steals (9.7), turnovers forced (16.1), turnover margin (4.1), bench points (32.9), field goal percentage (.484), effective field goal percentage (.574) and fastbreak points (17.4).
• With 250 3-pointers, Cornell is one from going to No. 2 (251 in 2010-11 and 2021-22) all-time in a season for the Big Red.
• Since its return from COVID, Cornell men's basketball has posted a 30-18 record (.625), a  mark that is 30-12 when removing guarantee games (.714).
• Over the past two seasons, the Big Red is averaging 18.0 assists per game and hitting 10.4 3-pointers per game while averaging 81.8 points per game. 
• Since turning the ball over 19 times at Dartmouth, the Big Red has surrendered the basketball just 166 times in the past 16 games (10.4 per game).
• Cornell has double figure steals in seven of its last 10 games, including in six of nine Ivy contests.
• Despite playing at the fastest pace in the Ancient Eight, Cornell's 12.0 turnovers per game is the second-lowest average in the league.
• Since the season opener against Boston College, the Big Red has a 1.65 assist:turnover ratio (396:240), including 286:168 over its past 16 contests (1.70).
• The Big Red has at least 20 assists in 12 of its 22 games this season — breaking the school record of nine times in a season set last year, including in 10 of the past 16 games.
• Cornell has 20 assists in six different road contests this season, including five consecutive at one point — prior to that stretch, the Big Red never accomplished it more than three times in any season since 1978-79 (36 times total in 44 seasons).
• The Big Red has held opponents to 30 percent shooting or below from beyond the arc in 10 of its 22 games this season.
• At the same time, Cornell has made double figures in 3-pointers in 16 of 22 games.
• If maintained, Cornell's 84.8 scoring average would be the program's second-highest in school history, with the record coming during the 1965-66 season (85.2 ppg.).
• In the Big Red's 11-man rotation, five players are shooting 50 percent or better from the floor and 10 are averaging at least 10.8 minutes per contest.
• Of the 11 players in the rotation, 10 have a positive assist:turnover ratio and no one has a negative mark. 
• The Big Red's 94 points against Yale on Jan. 13 were the most vs. the Bulldogs in regulation since surrendering 96 at Niagara on Dec, 8, 2004.
• Cornell's consecutive wins at Monmouth and Delaware, both Colonial Athletic Conference opponents, were against foes who won at least 20 games a season ago.
• Cornell was 0-for-2 from the free throw line at Syracuse on Dec. 17, its first game without making a free throw since going 0-for-3 in a 73-70 loss to City College of New York on Dec. 27, 1977.
• Picked fifth in the Ivy League Preseason media poll, the Big Red is coming off a 15-11 season that included an appearance in the Ivy Tournament and a fourth-place finish among the Ancient Eight.
• Four starters have departed, with three of the seniors moving on to play as graduate transfers at other Division I institutions (Ivy League does not allow graduate student eligibility) — Dean Noll (Stony Brook), Kobe Dickson (Howard) and Sarju Patel (Albany).
• Over the past two seasons, seven grad transfers have gone on to play Division I basketball elsewhere — Jimmy Boeheim (Syracuse), Bryan Knapp (George Washington), Terrance McBride (Rice) and Riley Voss (Wright State).
• While the loss of four starters is usually crippling, the Big Red returns eight players who saw at least nine minutes of action per game for a squad that played at least 11 in each of its 26 contests.
• The Big Red's 22 3-pointers against SUNY-Delhi broke the school record of 20 at Brown on March 5, 2010, a game where the 2009-10 Big Red clinched the Ivy League title in Providence, R.I. That mark is the tied for the most by any Division I team this season (Chattanooga vs. Covenant, 11/29/2022)
• Cornell's 114 points against SUNY-Delhi were the third-most in a game in school history and marked the 26th time that the Big Red has surpassed the 100-point mark.
• Cornell's 31 assists against SUNY-Delhi tied for the second-most in a game in school history, with five of the top 10 marks coming in the past two seasons.
• The Big Red's 96 points against Lehigh were the most at home against a Division I opponent in regulation since 2011 — a 96-76 win over Dartmouth on Feb. 19, 2011.
• The 32-point margin of victory against Lehigh (96-64) was its largest against a Division I opponent since defeating Presbyterian by 34 (89-55) on Nov. 23, 2012 in the Las Vegas Invitational. It was the largest win over a D-I team since knocking off Harvard 86-50 on Jan. 30, 2010.
• Prior to Syracuse, Cornell trailed at the final media break in each of its previous three games, using a 20-2 ending run to top Delaware 74-67 on Dec. 1, outscoring Lafayette 11-0 to end the game to rally past the Leopards on Dec. 4, 73-68, then making a run at Miami with an 11-3 run before falling the Hurricanes, 107-105.
• The Big Red's 105 points at Miami (Fla.) were the most ever in a loss and the fourth-most against Power 5 school in school history — 110 vs. Pittsburgh on Feb. 1, 1967.
• Cornell's 63 points at Syracuse were the fewest since scoring 59 in a 71-59 defeat at the hands of Dartmouth on Feb. 18, 2022. 
• The Big Red's 16 steals against Binghamton on Dec. 29 were tied for third in a single game and are tied for the most against a Division I opponent in school history.

MISCELLANEOUS TEAM NOTES
• Cornell has hit a 3-pointer in 933 consecutive games 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 979 of 983 games (6,598 3-pointers over that span).
• The Big Red has won 20 consecutive non-conference games against opponents from conferences other than the ACC or Big Ten dating back to an 80-76 loss at Hartford on Dec. 22, 2019— a span of 1,106 days.
• The Big Red’s seven-game win streak earlier this season was its longest since walking off the floor victorious in nine consecutive contests late in 2009-10.
• Brian Earl and his brother Dan (Chattanooga) one of four active sets of brothers directing Division I programs, joining Bobby (Arizona State) and Danny (Connecticut) Hurley, Joe (Boston University) and James (Yale) Jones and Archie (Rhode Island) and Sean (Xavier) Miller.
• Tenth-year assistant coach Jon Jaques was a starter and senior captain on the 2009-10 Cornell team that advanced to the NCAA Sweet 16.
• After the Ivy League didn’t compete during the 2019-20 season, Cornell’s first game of the 2021-22 season against Binghamton, a 76-67 Big Red victory, was its first in 612 days.
• The Big Red’s home win over Colgate on Nov. 16, 2021 was its first contest at Newman Arena since a 67-58 defeat at the hand of Harvard on Feb. 29, 2020 - a span of 627 days.
• 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.
• The Big Red continues to be ranked among the best according to the annual NCAA Division I Academic Progress Report (APR). 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 10 times in since the APR began in 2005, including seven consecutive (2009-16).
• Dating back to the first overtime game against Penn way back in 1922, Cornell is 41-51 in games that go an extra period. Cornell is 7-10 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 30-19 in home overtime games, 2-2 in neutral contests and 10-29 in road games.
• 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.

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Photos by Dave Burbank, Madison Epperson, Eldon Lindsay, Hannah Rosenberg, Patrick Shanahan and Darl Zehr

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