Ivy League Basketball News

An unofficial site aggregating Ivy League basketball news from around the web.
 Subscribe in a reader | Ivy Basketball Twitter Directory

Brown | Columbia | Cornell | Dartmouth | Harvard | Penn | Princeton | Yale |
Jeremy LIN | Ryan WITTMAN
Past Champions | Past NBA Draftees | Annual Results & All-Ivy, 2005-2010 | Ivy Rank by Year, 1990-2010 |

2010-2011 Schedules: Brown | Columbia | Cornell | Dartmouth | Harvard | Princeton | Yale


Archive for the ‘patrick foley’ tag

News — Thursday March 4, 2010

leave a comment

The Boston Globe and the Harvard Crimson both profile  Harvard’s Pat Magnarelli.

The Columbia Spectator profiles Columbia seniors Kevin Bulger, Patrick Foley, and Niko Scott.

Kevin Bulger, Patrick Foley, and Niko Scott have left an indelible mark on the Columbia program with their efforts both on and off the court. In the two years before they came to Morningside Heights, the Lions were a combined 7-21 in Ivy League play. Now they have a chance to be the first group of seniors since the class of 1979 to finish in the top four of the Ivy League standings all four years. Only their final two games in the Light Blue jersey stand in their way.

The Columbia Spectator’s Bart Lopez argues that Cornell may be a better team, but Columbia is not far behind in individual talent.  This is a follow-up to an earlier column in which he argued that Columbia athletes simply needed a little swagger.

While watching Cornell and Harvard trounce Columbia here at Levien, I couldn’t help but think that while these teams were good, they weren’t THAT good… However, those that posted the comments, primarily Cornell fans, disagreed. So I decided to find someone who is a better judge of talent than I am. Who could possibly have a better basketball eye than me? An NBA scout, of course…

“In the Ivy League, generally, there is not that big of a difference in talent level. Sure, there’s going to be some team that gets a couple of freshmen that comes in at a little higher level, and over the next three or four years, that team is going to do better. But after watching Ivy League basketball for several years, to say that there is a talent level distribution that’s obvious, I can’t make that comment,” The Scout said.

… “This particular Cornell team is very similar to some of the past Penn teams that won a championship for maybe two years in a row,” The Scout said. “It’s a combination of a couple of guys that as juniors and seniors are a little bit more talented than most of the guys in the Ivy League, but it goes beyond that. … There’s a confidence factor. They were successful last year and most of them were back, and absolutely they play the game at a high level, which you have to give a lot of credit to the coaches—they are very well coached.”

“Columbia is what we call ‘non-finishers,’” The Scout said. “They do good things—they work the offense, they get somebody a pretty good shot. … But when they go in to complete and finish the play, on a play that they look like they should finish, there are too many times in the game where they don’t score.”

I attributed this inability to finish to a lack of mental toughness, which I explained with swagger.

Cam Martin of ESPN’s Page 2 writes:

Princeton, which made a name for itself in college basketball with its patented offense of screens and backdoor cuts, lost to Cornell on Friday when the Big Red used its patented offense of scoring more points than the other team.

College Hoops Journal posts some tidbits from chat with ESPN bracketologist Joe Lunardi, including,

Cornell will be disappointed by its seed. “They’ve receded from the buzz they had after the near-miss from Kansas.” He thinks the Big Red will be an 11 or a 12. Would Cornell fans really be angry with an 11?

Kyle Whelliston of the Mid Majority writes,

But Cornell, easily the best team the Ivy League will send to the Big Dance in at least 30 years, will be the only team at the NCAA Tournament that hasn’t experienced the urgency of an elimination game — that motivating fear of failure that makes those last-minute free throws, that last time-out huddle, so charged with tension. Maybe the Big Red is so good, it doesn’t need all that, and it’s able to do something it hasn’t done before.

The Daily Pennsylvanian insists that despite having no shot at the title, the Quakers will not quit going into their final three games.

“These three games — we’re treating it like a championship,” sophomore point guard Zack Rosen said. “I love the game. You only get so many [games as a player].”

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Written by admin

March 4th, 2010 at 9:13 am

News — Tuesday March 2, 2010

leave a comment

The Ithaca Journal discusses Cornell’s Andre Wilkins Senior Night start.

The only senior who had never started at Cornell, the 6-foot-3 Wilkins was inserted into the opening lineup by coach Steve Donahue on Senior Night. The subsequent 4 minutes, 26 seconds were a virtual highlight reel of plays by the Toronto native.

It’s probably a tape the coaching staff should get to him before he graduates.

MyCentralJersey.com profiles Penn’s Zack Rosen.

Playing high school basketball at places like Colonia and St. Benedict’s prepared Zack Rosen for the rigors of the next level, with one glaring exception.

He wasn’t ready for the losing.

The Daily Pennsylvnian’s Ivy Hoops Notebook discusses the Princeton @ Cornell game and Academic-All Americans Patrick Foley (Columbia) and Matt Mullery (Brown).

The Philadelphia Inquirer thinks Penn has lost some momentum and surveys Penn’s week ahead, including Senior Night.

…This year’s Quakers gained some momentum from splitting each of their first four Ivy weekends this season. That streak came to an end Saturday as the Quakers were routed at Cornell after losing in the final seconds Friday at Columbia.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Written by admin

March 2nd, 2010 at 8:20 am

Columbia’s Foley, Brown’s Mullery named Academic All-Americans

leave a comment

Columbia’s Patrick Foley is on the first team while Brown’s Matt Mullery is on the third.

See the full list on ESPN’s College Basketball Nation blog.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Written by admin

February 23rd, 2010 at 8:44 am

Friday News

leave a comment

The Columbia Spectator previews this weekend’s matchups with Brown and Yale.

The Columbia Spectator profiles Yale’s Alex Zampier.  Zampier leads the league in scoring and has twice been named player of the week.

The Cornell Daily Sun previews this weekend’s matchups with Brown and Yale.


The Ithaca Journal previews Cornell’s Friday game against Yale, and notes that Yale’s coach Jones doesn’t plan on chasing Cornell’s shooters, as other teams have done, leaving Foote to wreak havoc inside.  Yale has two 6′10″ men who might “lay on (Foote) pretty hard,” says Cornell coach Donahue.

The Ithaca Journal scouts Yale and concludes:

Say this for Yale: a James Jones-coached team won’t allow itself to be physically manhandled like Harvard was Saturday night. The Bulldogs will push back, and they have the big-bodied personnel to do so.

Still, provided Cornell doesn’t let its new top-25 ranking negatively affect its play, it’s difficult to see Yale pulling off an upset in Ithaca. If Cornell continues to defend like it has in recent weeks, the Bulldogs will be unable to keep pace.

The Columbia Spectator asks what it would take for other Ivies to root for Cornell.

The Daily Princetonian previews Princeton’s Friday game against Harvard.

The Harvard Crimson reviews the conference games so far, delcaring Cornell as the league’s Qdoba,  Harvard and Princeton as the Chiplote’s,  Brown, Columbia, and Yale as the Felipe’s,  and Dartmouth and Penn as the 7-Eleven’s.  They also provide some weekend picks.

The Yale Daily News previews Yale’s weekend games @ Cornell and Columbia.

The Daily Pennsylvanian previews this weekends Penn @ Dartmouth game.  They notethe extensive similarities between the two teams:

The Big Green (4-14, 0-4 Ivy) have not won consecutive games this season either, and the similarities between Penn and Dartmouth don’t end there.

Both lost their head coaches midway through the season — Dartmouth’s Terry Dunn stepped down in early January — and are without last year’s leading scorers.

While forward Tyler Bernardini red-shirted this season due to injury, the Big Green lost forward Alex Barnett and his 15.7 points and 7.3 rebounds per game to graduation.

And not unlike the injury depleted Quakers’ bench, the Big Green played with just nine available bodies against Columbia last week

Four Ivy League athletes (Brown’s Matt Mullery, Columbia’s Patrick Foley, and Cornell’s Geoff Reeves and Chris Wroblewski) were named to ESPN the Magazine’s Academic All-District Team.  Read the releases at Brownbears.com, GoColumbiaLions.com, and CornellBigRed.com.

The Bleacher Report mentions Cornell among this weekend’s previews:

Cornell has two more home games against two of the worst Ivy League teams, Yale and Brown. Should the Big Red win (as they should convincingly), Steve Donahue’s team would move to 20-3 and 6-0 in the Ivy League. Cornell has moved up to 37th in Ken Pomeroy’s efficiency rankings. The Big Red’s recent improvement on the defensive end of the floor has spurred their jump from the mid 70s to the 30s.

ESPN’s Jay Bilas thinks Cornell could pull a George Mason (i.e., make it to the final four):

The Big Red have experience, really good guards in Louis Dale and Ryan Wittman, and a very good big man in Jeff Foote. People forget this, but the reason that George Mason reached the Final Four is because it could guard and score in the post with wide-body Jai Lewis and lefty Will Thomas. Most mid-majors get hurt because they are unable to guard in the post. Cornell can do that.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Better Tag Cloud