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Men's Basketball Hosts Columbia, Cornell This Weekend |
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PHILADELPHIA - Redemption is likely on the mind of the Penn men's basketball coaches and players this weekend. After all, it was just two short weeks ago that the Quakers ventured into the Empire State and left with a pair of discouraging losses. With the Ivy League season rapidly reaching its conclusion, those losses have increasingly dampened what was a promising start to conference play -- one that had Penn fans dreaming of being a player in the Ivy title chase.
Instead, the third-place Quakers enter this weekend with a 5-4 league record, and they are chasing frontrunners Harvard (9-1) and Princeton (8-1). Penn can gain one of those games back from both of them down the road, of course -- the Quakers face the Crimson next Saturday in Cambridge, and finish with the Tigers at The Palestra on March 8. Beyond that, though, the best Penn can do is take care of its own business and hope for outside help. GAME 24 - PENN (11-12, 5-4 Ivy) vs. COLUMBIA (14-10, 5-5) GAME 25 - PENN (11-12, 5-4) vs. CORNELL (7-17, 3-7) Around the League The Columbia/Cornell Weekend Penn vs. Columbia *That said, Columbia has held the upper hand in recent years -- the Lions have won three straight from the Quakers, four of the last five, and five of the last seven. Of Penn's two wins during that stretch, one of them came when Kevin Egee hit a desperation three-point shot at the buzzer. *Two weeks ago, Columbia overpowered Penn in the second half, breaking a 35-35 halftime tie to win going away, 75-62, at Levien Gym in New York City. Noruwa Agho led the Lions with 21 points, while Asenso Ampim had 15 and Brian Barbour added 14. Jack Eggleston had 16 points to lead the Quakers, while Cameron Gunter and Zack Rosen tallied 12 apiece. (For Gunter, they were the first 12 points of his collegiate career.) Rosen also had seven assists. *Last year, Columbia swept Penn for the first time since 1968, winning 66-62 here at The Palestra and then gaining a 56-55 win when Brian Grimes -- a transfer from La Salle -- hit a shot at the buzzer in New York. Penn vs. Cornell *Much like Columbia, however, Cornell has dominated the series of late, winning six of the last seven matchups including two of the last three here at The Palestra. Prior to this Big Red run, the Quakers had won 18 straight in the series from 1999-2007. *Two weeks ago, Penn could not hold onto a nine-point lead in the second half and ultimately fell to Cornell, 82-71, in overtime at Newman Arena in Ithaca. Chris Wroblewski had 21 points to lead the Big Red, while Max Groebe went 6-of-8 on three-point shots en route to 20 points. For Penn, Eggleston scored 21 and had nine rebounds and five assists, while Rosen scored 15 points -- including his 1,000th at Penn -- and added six assists. *The rivalry has ramped up in recent years, as Cornell's current three-year run as Ivy League champion overtook Penn's three-year run before that. Last year, of course, Penn pinned Cornell with its only Ivy League loss, a 79-64 decision here at The Palestra. Three's a Crowd? Weekly Awards Over(time) and Over(time) and Over(time) Again... *Four of Penn's seven Ivy League games have gone to extra time, with the Quakers going 1-3 in those contests. That includes a double-overtime affair with Harvard on February 5. Add it all up, and Penn has played an extra 25 minutes of Ivy League action this season-more than half a game. *Penn had a three-game stretch of overtime games from Feb. 5 to Feb. 11, one shy of the NCAA record of four held by three separate teams (most recently Dayton in 1988). The Quakers also played three straight OT games in 1983-84. That year, Penn went 2-1. This year, the Quakers lost all three. In an informal survey of the SIDs at the NCAA Division I level, it appears Penn holds the dubious distinction of being the only team to play three straight OT games and lose all three. Assist, Rosen *Rosen enters this weekend with 390 career assists, putting him fifth all-time at Penn. Of the current group that makes up the top five, only one has a better per-game average than Rosen's 4.94 -- Chambers, barely, at 4.95. Quaker Notemeal From The Brown/Yale Trip *After having just two of its final 12 non-Ivy League games finish with a single-digit margin, Penn has had six such games in Ivy play. *Taking it a step further, Penn did not play a non-conference game that ended with a margin of less than five, but has had four such games so far in Ivy play. *It was Penn's first sweep of an Ivy League road weekend since Feb. 13-14, 2009; that year, the Quakers beat Brown on a Friday and Yale on a Saturday. *In the last four games, the Quakers have shot 97 of 194 (50.0 percent) from the field. *In the win at Yale, Penn won a game when it made fewer free throws than its opponent for the first time this season; prior to that, the Quakers were 0-11 in such games. *Senior Tyler Bernardini had 26 points at Brown, shooting 6-of-8 on three-pointers which was the most treys by a Penn player since junior Zack Rosen hit six on Jan. 3, 2010 at Lafayette *Junior Mike Howlett made his first start this season at Yale; he entered the weekend with seven points for the season, but had 21 combined at Brown and Yale. *Senior Jack Eggleston finished with 10 rebounds at Yale, his ninth double-figure rebounding game in 2010-11 and 16th at Penn. *Freshman Miles Cartwright finished with 10 points at Yale, his fifth double-figure scoring game in Ivy play. *Rosen shot 8-of-8 from the foul line at Brown Friday night, tied for the best free-throw performance by a Penn player in the Allen coaching era. |










