What can Brown do to stop CU?

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That collective groan heard last Saturday might have come from the six Ivy League men's basketball coaches who weren't present for Cornell's 11-point win over Columbia.


The Lions picked their poison defensively, saw some success ? and still lost handily.

Despite limiting Big Red leading scorer Ryan Wittman to season lows in field goals (2), field goal attempts (8) against opponents not named Ursinus and points (10), Cornell had little trouble wrapping up the league-opening sweep of its travel partner in an 83-72 victory.

Now, the task falls to Brown (6-10, 0-2 Ivy) to figure out a way to slow the Big Red, winners of seven straight overall, 17 in the league and 15 at Newman Arena.

Taking away Wittman's scoring is simply not enough.

"If people are going to key on me like that, it is only going to give (Jeff) Foote and (Louis) Dale all the more room," said Wittman, who enters tonight tops in the league at 19.6 points per game. "If you give them too much room and let them go one-on-one, they're pretty tough to stop. We still scored quite a bit offensively last week and got the win, so I'm not complaining."

Since returning from a hamstring injury last month, Dale's game has raised the Big Red up a level or three. In the team's current seven-game streak, the 5-foot-11 junior point guard is averaging 16 points, 4.1 assists and 3.7 rebounds while shooting 59 percent from the floor and 52 percent from beyond the arc.

But even when Cornell (12-6, 2-0) played the bulk of Saturday's first half without Dale, who picked up two early fouls, Columbia lost ground on the scoreboard.

Foote and junior power forward Alex Tyler worked a neat two-man game on several possessions, leading in part to Tyler's 15 first-half points and team-high 19. Junior Geoff Reeves, who's hitting at a remarkable 62 percent clip from deep during this seven-game stretch, chipped in 14 to match Dale's eventual output.

That's not to say Cornell's satisfied with allowing opponents to take Wittman away. But if forced to go elsewhere, it will.

"It's hard to worry about your scoring when you score 83, and I think Ryan had open looks that usually fall for him," Cornell coach Steve Donahue said. "That being said, I feel we're always a better team when we're going through him a little more, give him a chance to get touches in different spots."

Two and a half weeks ago, Brown coach Jesse Agel spoke of the need to enter tonight's game with some momentum.

"You don't want to go to Cornell down 0-2," he said.

But that's what has transpired, as Yale swept the Bears by wins of 70-62 and 57-55, the latter coming last Friday in New Haven, Conn.

Agel relies heavily upon his starting lineup for production, which includes a new-look backcourt after the graduation of all-Ivy guards Mark McAndrew and Damon Huffman. Sophomores Adrian Williams and Peter Sullivan are rising stars, and 6-8 junior center Matt Mullery is one of the league's most improved players.

"It all starts and begins with Matt Mullery in the post," Agel said. "His improvement has been tremendous. When he gets it going, our team seems to get it going."

Donahue said defending Williams will be a priority. Earlier this season, Williams scored 29 points on 7-of-8 shooting from beyond the arc in a blowout of Quinnipiac. On the year, he's shooting 45 percent from 3.

"Williams has done a terrific job, expanding his role," Donahue said. "He was a terrific shooter last year and he's doing it again. Terrific catch and shooter, great range, great confidence, quick release. You've got to know where he's at."

Agel could very well say that about Cornell's starting five. The Bears will have to do more than take away one player.

"We have to play really fast with quick decisions, making the ball move because when we do that we're hard to guard," Donahue said. "All five guys can pass, dribble and shoot."
 

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Gore will dress tonight



It's been a long, frustrating road for Adam Gore, but Cornell's resilient senior guard is just hours away from making an unlikely return to Division I basketball.


Four and a half months after his torn left anterior cruciate ligament was surgically repaired, Gore will put on his No. 23 uniform again and return to the Big Red roster tonight against Brown. Game time is 7 p.m. at Newman Arena.

"I'll be in uniform," he said Wednesday night. "If I'm on the court ? that will be up to coach. But maybe I'll get in for some small spurts, nothing too serious this weekend."

The ACL injury was Gore's second while on East Hill, the first coming in the final 30 seconds of Cornell's season-opening upset of Northwestern two years ago. After scoring 20 points in the win, the reigning Ivy League Rookie of the Year sat out the remainder of that season.

When he suffered the same injury to his other knee in mid-September, Gore thought his career was over.

He had already arranged his academic schedule to graduate on time in May, so playing a fifth year wasn't an option.

"I was probably more confident that I wouldn't be playing than I would be," he said. "I definitely wouldn't have thought I'd have been here right now, so I'll be happy in uniform watching on the bench. Playing in practice is a lot better than sitting on the bench."

Gore played a vital role in last year's Ivy championship run. He played more minutes after Collin Robinson's departure from the team, and completed league play scoring 12.1 points per game while shooting 45.9 percent from beyond the arc. He earned second-team all-Ivy honors.

After an accelerated rehabilitation, he started practicing full-bore last week. He sat out Saturday's win over Columbia, and practiced again this week without a setback. Team trainer Marc Chamberlain said Gore's rehab went about as well as it possibly could have.

"I don't feel like I hold back too much," Gore said. "If I'm unable to do something, it's more a lack of muscle strength than it is me thinking it's going to give out or anything. It's pretty stable."

His teammates are just happy to have one of their main leaders back.

"He's such a great leader for us, he kind of keeps us together," Ryan Wittman said. "Having another dead-eye shooter out there, that can never hurt. So we're looking forward to seeing him out there."

Gore, who will wear a brace for the mental support it provides, said he and Donahue had yet to discuss how they're going to approach this weekend's home series with Brown and Yale with regards to playing time.

Right now, that's not a big concern to Gore.

"If I only play 30 seconds, I'll be happy," he said.
 

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Scouting Brown



Last time out: Yale completed a home-and-home sweep of the Bears with a 57-55 victory last Friday in New Haven, Conn.

Last season vs. Cornell: L, 75-64; L, 74-65.

Probable starters: Scott Friske (6-7, 235, Sr., F), Chris Skrelja (6-6, 220, Sr., F), Matt Mullery (6-8, 235, Jr., C), Adrian Williams (6-1, 180, Soph., G), Peter Sullivan (6-5, 210, Soph., G).

Statistically: Mullery leads the team in scoring (16.3 ppg) and the league in field goal percentage (.614). As a sophomore, he averaged 4.5 points and 2.9 rebounds. ... Williams ranks first in the league in free throw percentage (.905), second in three-point shooting percentage (.449), and scores at a 13.3 ppg clip. ... Sullivan averages 13.8 ppg, but his shooting percentage from beyond the arc has dipped from 48 percent last year to 35 percent this year, a product off the additional attention he's getting from opposing defenses. ... Four of Brown's five starters, excluding Friske, rank in the league's top 10 in minutes played per game. Sullivan (35.7) and Skrelja (34.8) are 1-2. ... Brown is 1-8 on the road this year. ... Coach Jesse Agel is in his first season.

Of note: T.J. Sorrentine, a 2005 Vermont graduate who helped the Catamounts upset Syracuse in the opening round of the 2005 NCAA tournament, is an assistant to Agel.

Outlook: Brown arrives at Newman Arena losers of four of five and five of seven, including two consecutive Friday night defeats against Yale. Mullery has enjoyed a breakout season, and Williams and Sullivan give the Bears two dangerous perimeter scorers. But the Bears lack depth and size along the interior, and that should pose matchup problems against Steve Donahue's deep and sizable roster.

Skrelja is a unique, hard-nosed player. Built like a power forward, he can play the point position and set up the offense before sliding down to the block and posting up his defender. Under former coach Craig Robinson, the Bears were an immensely difficult team to face, because their main focus was simply to outwork their opponent. That ingrained quality appears to have carried over with Agel, something Cornell can't forget or underestimate on the defensive end.

"After watching film on them, they're a very good passing team," Cornell's Ryan Wittman said. "I think over the past years they've always been like that. They'll throw a lot of backdoor passes, a lot of passes you wouldn't necessarily expect. We've got to be ready for that."
 
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