Visions of Tournament Dance in Penn's head

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Even as conference tournaments across the nation heat up, today's most intriguing storyline can be found in the cozy Palestra.

When Penn (19-8, 10-1 Ivy) hosts Yale (13-12, 9-3) tonight, it will be a de facto championship game - even if Penn has a one-and-a-half-game cushion. For the Elis - who were labeled a third wheel in the Ivy-title-chase preseason and are coming off of a blowout loss to Columbia - it's do or die.

Who says the Ivy League needs a conference playoff?

"At the stage we're at now, this is a huge game, obviously," Penn coach Glen Miller said. "It doesn't come any bigger than this right now."

While the Quakers can still make the NCAA Tournament with a loss if they beat Brown and Princeton in their final two games, for all intents and purposes, it comes down to this. The Quakers win and they're in.

And as Penn has seen, that might not be so easy.

Yale downed the Quakers 77-68 at home earlier this year, marking one of the rare occasions when the Red and Blue have been beaten by superior athleticism.

Leading the charge once again will be forward Casey Hughes, who poured in 15 points in addition to grabbing 13 boards last time out against Penn. Hughes, Yale's most athletic player, shredded the Quakers defense from all angles and found his way to the basket for six offensive rebounds. A menace on defense, the senior swingman also did his best Ibrahim Jaaber impression, swiping four steals.

And alongside lightning-quick point guard and floor leader Eric Flato, who went off for 21 points against Penn a month ago, Hughes and the Elis won't be easy prey for the Quakers' up-tempo offense.

"We're not a ball-control team, we try to get up and down," Yale coach James Jones said. "I think that's good for us, we're better when we're doing that."

While Penn will likely match the Elis fast break for fast break, last time around it was the effort that was Penn's downfall. Outplayed on either end of the floor, the Quakers went through the loss on autopilot.

But this week, they have barely been able to sit still.

"The practices have been real competitive," senior forward Mark Zoller said. "We've been getting after each other a little bit, kind of antsy for that Friday, Saturday to roll around."

Penn's preparation and readiness bodes well for a team that has been plagued by mediocre basketball of late. Last weekend, a two-point escape at Dartmouth may have been one of the low points of the conference season.

But it seems that Penn left its lethargic play back in New Hampshire - Miller has noticed some fire in his players' eyes this week.

"I don't have to prod them and motivate them for a game like this," Miller said. "There's very little I have to do to get them ready for this game."

For what has become the Ancient Eight's main event, the Quakers are going to come out swinging.

"I can't wait to play," Zoller said. "We want to get out there, we're treating it like it's a championship game, since that's what it is at this point."
 

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Penn hosts last chance dance fod



The men?s basketball team lost more than just a game to Columbia last weekend; it lost control of its own destiny.

Before this Saturday?s disappointing defeat at the hands of the visiting Lions, Yale was guaranteed the 2006-?07 Ivy League championship if it won its final three games of the season. Unfortunately for the Elis, the ball is no longer in their court. Yale will need impeccable execution and a considerable helping of luck if it hopes to capture its first league title since 2002.

When the Bulldogs hit the road this weekend, they will face off against two teams at opposite ends of the Ancient Eight spectrum ? league-leading Penn (19-8, 10-1 Ivy) and bottom-dwelling Princeton (11-14, 2-9).

In order for the Elis to keep their title hopes alive, they must sweep the Penn-Princeton weekend on the road, a feat that no team has accomplished since the Bulldogs themselves did so 20 years ago. Not only must Yale register a clean sweep, but either Princeton or Brown must also defeat the Quakers for the Elis to capture the most coveted prize in Ivy League sports. However unlikely, the Bulldogs still have an outside chance of capitalizing on their best start in five years and turning it into something special.

Yale played perhaps its best complete weekend of basketball this season when this week?s opponents visited Lee Amphitheater a month ago. Though Princeton leads the nation in scoring defense, it was the Bulldogs who held the Tigers to four field goals in the second half, en route to a 43-35 victory. The 35 points were the fewest Yale has allowed in any game since 1991, and the loss gave Princeton an 0-3 start in the league for the first time in history.

?We attacked them well last time,? head coach James Jones said. ?We want to make sure we do more of the same this time around.?

The Tigers haven?t had a great deal of success following that game, emerging victorious in only two of their last eight contests. Though Yale has not defeated Princeton in New Jersey since 1993, Saturday appears to be a golden opportunity given the Tigers? uncharacteristically weak squad.

The Bulldogs sent a message to Penn in one of their most rewarding wins at Lee Amphitheater this season when they downed the Quakers, 77-68, to pull into first place in the league standings last month. Once again, a solid defensive effort paved the way for an Eli victory and was greatly appreciated by the rambunctious, near sell-out crowd.

?We had great fan support,? guard Caleb Holmes ?08 recalled. ?The crowd has been great all season.?

Yale?s ability to keep this season?s league scoring leader, Mark Zoller, and last season?s Ivy League Player of Year Ibrahim Jaaber in check was crucial to containing the Quakers. Zoller never found an offensive rhythm and converted on only two of his 10 field goal attempts, while Jaaber was limited to six shots the entire game due to the outstanding defensive play of forward Casey Hughes ?07.

?Players tend to try less on you if they respect you as a defender,? Hughes said. ?I was able to stay in front of [Jaaber] and limit his opportunities.?

The Bulldogs will have to exhibit similar defensive prowess this weekend if they hope to be successful against Penn again. The explosive Quakers lead the conference in scoring offense and field goal percentage, and Yale has not swept the season series against Penn since 1967.

Although this weekend?s games may be the last of the season and have enormous implications for the Bulldogs? title aspirations, team members said they are going about business as usual.

?We?re not preparing like this is our last weekend,? Jones said. ?We?re preparing like we have to win two games just like any other weekend. It?s going to be difficult, but we gotta do what we gotta do.?
 
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