AROUND THE IVIES:

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Much of the credit for the Harvard men?s basketball team?s league-seizing weekend sweep, and in particular for Jan. 31?s win over Princeton, has to go to standout junior guard Wesley Saunders. Against the Tigers, Saunders excelled on both ends of the court, leading the Crimson in points, rebounds, assists, and steals.

At this week?s media conference, Saunders? numbers prompted an interesting comparison to the last Harvard player to record such a stat line: that sacred object of Crimson reverence, Jeremy Lin ?10. ESPN?s Jack McCluskey summed up the debate in an article on Tuesday, noting that Saunders, like Lin during his senior season, is currently in the Ivy League?s top 10 in nine different statistical categories. But unlike Lin, Saunders is given the assignment of guarding the opposition?s best perimeter offensive player in virtually every game Harvard plays, using his speed and length to block driving lanes and disrupt shots.

So, advantage Saunders? Not so fast. Let?s not forget that, before Lin?s arrival in Cambridge, the Crimson, for lack of a better word, sucked. The program had not had a winning season since 2001-2002, when it finished barely over .500 at 14-12. Lin?s supporting cast included freshmen versions of Brandyn Curry and Kyle Casey and a guy named Doug. Among Saunders? teammates are seniors Casey and co-captain, a first team All-Ivy point guard in sophomore Siyani Chambers, and two All-Ivy honorable mentions in co-captain Laurent Rivard and junior Steve Moundou-Missi. The Crimson is an Ivy juggernaut, as opposed to the inexperienced group Lin threw on his back for a third-place Ivy finish in 2009-2010. Teams have much more to worry about now than just one player, which creates more openings for Saunders to exploit than Lin had.

This is not to say that Saunders can?t eventually match Lin?s achievements. He is still a junior and has been one of the best two players in the conference the last two seasons. Like Lin, he is a total outlier athletically in the Ivy League. He has worked every year to fill the holes in his game, especially his jump shot, which has morphed into a reliable weapon. And unlike Lin, he can play a lick of defense. Saunders certainly has the best shot of anyone on Harvard?s team to record meaningful professional minutes?though Saunsanity doesn?t quite have the same ring to it.

DARTMOUTH V. YALE

Well, Dartmouth certainly had some spunk last weekend. The Forest Guardians protected their Hanover stronghold admirably in sweeping Penn and Princeton in a development foreseen by roughly no one. I?m still not sold they can keep it up without injured star Gabas Maldunas, though they do appear to have some better strategies on the court now than the ?cower-and-die? approach they adopted in their 30-point loss to Harvard. I?ll give this one to the Big Green, but not with any trace of conviction.

Pick: Dartmouth

HARVARD V. BROWN

Somehow, a share of first place will be on the line for the Bears when they travel to Lavietes Pavilion on Friday night. Too often the Ivy League punching bag, Brown has made some big strides over the last couple of years, and, as mentioned above, it wasn?t so long ago that Harvard was a perennial also-ran in the conference, as well. The result will likely be a comfortable win for the Crimson, but not before everyone takes a moment to appreciate the a-changin? times. You know all sorts of huffy Penn and Princeton alums are outraged by the impropriety of it all. ?Howard, I?ll tell you what I?ve heard,? they tell each other breathlessly. ?I think these other schools have started recruiting.? And then they pine for the good old days, when you got ahead in this world through hard work and functioning alcoholism.

Pick: Harvard

PRINCETON V. COLUMBIA

It turns out we may know less about these teams than we thought. Both Columbia and Princeton flopped pretty heavily on their first weekend road trips of the season, getting swept like so much dust under the rug. This is a tough weekend for Columbia to embark on another challenging road trip; they could very easilycome out of it near the bottom of the league with four conference losses?and right when we thought they might actually be good, too. Maybe Columbia was divinely preordained to never experience any sporting joy. Columbia is the Cleveland of the Ivy League.

Pick: PRINCETON

PENN V. CORNELL

The reports of Cornell?s death may have been greatly exaggerated. After I trumpeted their ineptness from the mountaintop last week, the Ithaca boys proved me wrong by?losing two more games. But they were kind of close! The Big Red took a lead into halftime on the road against Brown, then fell by four the next night at Yale. Leading scorer Nolan Cressler got a little support from his teammates, particularly Devin Cherry, who combined with Cressler to score 48 points against the Bulldogs. And, would you look at that, Cornell moved three whole spots up Ken Pomeroy?s national rankings?all the way to 342nd. I call that progress.

Pick: PENN

DARTMOUTH V. BROWN

Here?s how Brown?s website introduces the bio of second-year head coach and former Bears basketball player Mike Martin: ?When Thomas Wolfe wrote, ?you can never come home again,? he didn?t have Mike Martin in mind.?

Now, I know the Brown faithful are all a-flutter over the job Martin has done in Providence, but I think they may have overdone it in the gravitas department here. You mean to tell me that Wolfe?s inspiration was something other than the life experiences of a middling college athlete 70 years in the future? I don?t buy it.

And now for an inexhaustive list of things Thomas Wolfe did not have in mind when authoring You Can?t Go Home Again: Superman, LeBron James, Edward Snowden, The Shah, Princess Leia.

Pick: DARTMOUTH

CORNELL AT PRINCETON

The last two non-Harvard Ivy League champions could be battling it out for last place this weekend. Unfortunately for Cornell, this one will be decided by a basketball contest and not a game of Candy Crush, the activity that has been occupying most of the Big Red?s practice time this season. Princeton wins in a rout.

Pick: PRINCETON



Some Columbia students filmed what is being termed as a ?feminist porno? in a campus library last week. [ALL JOKES REDACTED; EVERY POSSIBLE GROUP IS OFFENDED]

So, yeah, expect Columbia in a wild, physical affair.

Pick: COLUMBIA

HARVARD V. YALE

There?s nothing the Crimson would love more than to give the Bulldogs the ?dryer treatment? in Lavietes Pavilion on Saturday night. And while the Crimson should take care of business, Yale is no pushover; Harvard coach Tommy Amaker has maintained all season that the Bulldogs are ?as talented as anyone in our league,? his own team included. The rangy trio of Javier Duren, Justin Sears, and Armani Cotton could give the Crimson some problems?but Harvard is simply too good, and its home-court advantage too unassailable (19 straight home wins), to drop a game here.

Pick: HARVARD





--The Harvard Crimson
 

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Inside Cornell



FRIDAY: Cornell (1-17 overall, 0-4 Ivy League) at Pennsylvania (4-13, 1-2)


LEADERS: For Cornell, so. G Nolan Cressler (16.3 ppg., 4.6 rpg.), jr. G Devin Cherry (11.6 ppg., 3.1 apg.), sr. F Dwight Tarwater (6.0 ppg., 5.9 rpg.). For Penn, so. G Tony Hicks (14.8 ppg.), sr. G Miles Jackson-Cartwright (11.8 ppg.), sr. F Fran Dougherty (11.7 ppg., 7.0 rpg.).

FAST FACTS: Cornell has won eight of the past 12 meetings with the Quakers after losing 18 in a row in the rivalry. ... Cornell is looking to snap a pair of long losing streaks ? 10 consecutive road defeats in the league, and 13 consecutive road defeats overall. ... Cornell?s Cherry and Cressler both made the weekly Ivy League honor roll; Cressler averaged 22.5 points and Cherry averaged 16 in losses at Brown and Yale.
 

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Penn basketball has a sense of desperation as it takes on Cornell and Columbia



Things couldn?t be any clearer for Penn basketball this weekend.

In its first conference game of 2013-14 on Jan. 11, Penn knocked off archrival Princeton. Finally, after an abysmal nonconference run that included zero wins over Big 5 opponents and a seven-game losing streak, the Quakers everyone had been waiting for were ready to make a leap forward.

Now, almost a month later, all good vibes stemming from that Princeton win are gone. Penn is a desperate, beaten team. It?s the 12th round, and one more punch is going to knock the Red and Blue out for good.

Maybe that?s exactly what the Quakers need.

Following back-to-back losses in its first Ivy doubleheader of the season, Penn (4-13, 1-2 Ivy) returns to the Palestra to host its New York rivals over the weekend.

On Friday, the Red and Blue will match up with a sputtering Cornell team before taking on Columbia the following evening.

After last weekend?s sloppy loss to Dartmouth and embarrassing blowout against Harvard, Penn has no more room for error. This weekend ? and the rest of the season ? the message is simple: win . . . or that?s it.

?Last weekend obviously wasn?t a great weekend for us, not even looking at it in terms of wins and losses, but in terms of how we competed,? coach Jerome Allen said. ?I?m disappointed, but the challenge now is to get these guys motivated and ready to use last weekend as a learning tool.?

While Harvard is by far the best team in the Ivy League, many expected the Quakers to at least split last weekend?s games. But facing a Dartmouth squad missing its leading scorer and rebounder, Penn committed 18 turnovers and blew a seven-point halftime lead.

Now, the team?s desperation is palpable.

?It?s really been just two years of the same stuff,? senior captain Miles Jackson-Cartwright said. ?We know what the problem is, we just are really having a tough time finding a solution to those problems.

?This is definitely a time where we need a sense of urgency from all of us.?

If the Red and Blue hope to get back into the thick of the Ivy League race, they?ll have no better opportunity than Friday night.

Against Cornell (1-17, 0-4), Penn will be facing a team that has zero wins against Division I opponents. The Big Red rank last in the Ivy League in points per game and field goal percentage, and second to last in rebounds per games.

But the Quakers refuse to take Cornell lightly.

?First and foremost, we need to respect the game and ignore the numbers,? Allen said. ?Those guys have Division I basketball players, [Cornell] coach [Bill] Courtney is doing all that he can in preparing his guys, and if they come out with the right mindset, we can easily be beat.?

The following night, Penn will do battle with one of the Ancient Eight?s upstart programs. Though Columbia (13-8, 2-2) dropped both Ivy contests last weekend, coach Kyle Smith has done wonders turning around a once-struggling program since taking over in 2010.

Thanks to a tough nonconference schedule and the play of junior forward Alex Rosenberg, the Lions are poised to finish the season near the top of the Ivy standings. Saturday?s contest certainly will not be an easy task for the struggling Quakers.

?Give coach Smith credit, his guys are playing well, they?re sharing the ball and doing things the right way, they play hard,? Allen said. ?We?re gonna have our work cut out for us.?

For Penn to have any realistic shot at winning the Ivy League, two wins this weekend are essential.

Maybe the Quakers will benefit from having their backs against the wall.

?Cornell is going to come in here, and even though they?re not playing well, they?re going to come in thinking they can beat us and so will Columbia,? Jackson-Cartwright said. ?And both of them can.

?If people don?t have a sense of urgency, a sense of desperation, then it needs to come pretty damn soon.?
 

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Columbia looks to rebound on the road



The men?s basketball team will finish its stretch of five straight road games this weekend against Penn and Princeton.

Though boasting a 9-1 record at home, the Lions (13-8, 2-2 Ivy) have had trouble winning away from Levien. The Light Blue, which holds a 2-6 road record this season, dropped its games at Yale and Brown last weekend. But Columbia is far from the only team in the Ivy League that?s struggled playing away, and head coach Kyle Smith said he is not concerned about the Lions? road record.

?There?s only two teams that have won a road game in the league, and we?re one of them,? Smith said.

After visiting teams went 0-8 this past weekend in the Ancient Eight, Columbia sits in the middle of the Ivy League pack, tied with Dartmouth and trailing Harvard, Brown, and Yale in the standings.

Columbia?s first opponent will be a Princeton team (12-5, 0-3 Ivy) that?s seeking its first Ivy win of the season. Despite the Tigers? Ivy record, they do not lack offensive weapons as guard T.J. Bray is averaging 17.8 points per game.

Princeton leads the Ancient Eight in points per game, averaging 75.1, but the Tiger offense will be up against a Columbia defense that has been highly effective this season, holding opponents to just 62.1 points per game on average.

Columbia suffered defeats in both its games against the Tigers last season, and historically Princeton?s Jadwin Gym has not been kind to the Lions. The Light Blue last won a game there in 1993.

But Smith said that he was happy with the way the team competed a year ago, and added that this year?s Tiger squad is very different.

?They?re not as big around the basket, but they?re a little more lethal, skill-wise,? Smith said. ?They?ve got a little more weapons.?

Columbia was slightly more successful against Penn last year, splitting its two games against the Quakers.

Like Columbia and Princeton, Penn (4-13, 1-3 Ivy) is also coming off two road losses.

In order to come away with a win at the Palestra, the Lions will need to check the Quakers? leading scorers?guards Tony Hicks and Miles Cartwright?as well as center Darien Nelson-Henry, who ranks as one of the Ivy League?s premier big men.

?Nelson-Henry is a key for them. We have to do a good job on him,? Smith said. It?s important, he added, that the Lions ?not let those guys on their home court feel good about themselves.?

The Lions will need junior center Cory Osetkowski to help them counter Nelson-Henry down low. Osetkowski recently had one of the best games of his career against Cornell, tallying 19 points and five blocks.

?Cory?s gonna have to stay in the game, gonna have to be a wall in there,? Smith said. ?It?s important that Cory gives us 25 to 27 minutes of good, solid post D.?

Columbia?s top scorers?junior forward Alex Rosenberg and sophomore guards Maodo Lo and Grant Mullins?will be crucial for the Lions. Rosenberg has been on a tear since being inserted into the starting lineup in late December, while Mullins and Lo have consistently been offensive weapons for the Lions.

Tipoff in Princeton, N.J. is set for 7 p.m. Friday. The Lions will then face Penn on Saturday at 7 p.m. in Philadelphia, Pa.
 
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