Cornell knows it'll be walking into a hornets' nest at Yale's John J. Lee Amphitheatre tonight.
The Bulldogs have been anticipating a rematch with the Big Red ever since Yale senior Casey Hughes missed two free throws with 2 seconds left in a thrilling 60-59 Cornell victory two weekends ago at Newman Arena.
On top of the redemption factor, a win is pivotal if second-place Yale (12-11, 8-2 Ivy League) plans to keep pace with league-leading Penn (17-8, 8-1). Cornell (14-10, 7-3) hasn't won in New Haven, Conn., in six years, where the Bulldogs maintain a legitimately tough home-court advantage.
?Every time you go and beat a team earlier in the season ? like we did with Columbia ? and they're coming back from a rematch, it's always a difficult situation,? Cornell coach Steve Donahue said. ?Our seniors haven't won there, and there's a lot of motivation for us to win at that place.?
Yale was disappointed in its performance at Newman Arena, when Cornell jumped out to a big first-half lead.
Junior guard Eric Flato, averaging 17.3 points in league games, said it was probably the Bulldogs' worst half of basketball all season.
?All I'm focused on right now is winning the Cornell game,? Flato said. ?It was kind of a devastating loss for us, because it was so close. Just on a revenge agenda, we want to win that game.?
Yale handed Penn its lone league loss on Feb. 3 at John J. Lee, 77-68. ?It's been good, especially for Ivy League games,? Flato said. ?It's been a lot of students coming out.?
Cornell is coming off Saturday's difficult loss to Penn at a packed Palestra, where the Quakers pulled away late for an 83-71 decision.
Senior Andrew Naeve posted his fourth straight double-double, scoring 20 points and grabbing 10 rebounds, while Ryan Wittman broke Cornell's freshman scoring record with 15 points.
Sophomore Adam Gore, who is sitting out the year with a knee injury, set the Big Red record a year ago on his way to winning Ivy League Rookie of the Year.
The Big Red still has an outside shot at the league title, but will need Penn to lose at least two games. Cornell wraps up its final road weekend on Saturday in Providence against Brown (9-16, 4-6) before completing the regular season with home games against Harvard on March 2 and Dartmouth on March 3.
?This team has bounced back from everything we've done, and I think we all realize there's a ton of basketball left for us and this is a huge game coming up for us,? Donahue said.
Notes: If Cornell wins out, 18 wins would mark the highest victory total since the 1967-68 season. ... When the Big Red started the season 4-7, it allowed 70.8 points per game on 44 percent shooting and was outrebounded by a margin of 3.6. Since then, the team is 10-3, allowing just 56.9 points per game and 40 percent opponent shooting and is outrebounding opponents by a 4.3 margin.
The Bulldogs have been anticipating a rematch with the Big Red ever since Yale senior Casey Hughes missed two free throws with 2 seconds left in a thrilling 60-59 Cornell victory two weekends ago at Newman Arena.
On top of the redemption factor, a win is pivotal if second-place Yale (12-11, 8-2 Ivy League) plans to keep pace with league-leading Penn (17-8, 8-1). Cornell (14-10, 7-3) hasn't won in New Haven, Conn., in six years, where the Bulldogs maintain a legitimately tough home-court advantage.
?Every time you go and beat a team earlier in the season ? like we did with Columbia ? and they're coming back from a rematch, it's always a difficult situation,? Cornell coach Steve Donahue said. ?Our seniors haven't won there, and there's a lot of motivation for us to win at that place.?
Yale was disappointed in its performance at Newman Arena, when Cornell jumped out to a big first-half lead.
Junior guard Eric Flato, averaging 17.3 points in league games, said it was probably the Bulldogs' worst half of basketball all season.
?All I'm focused on right now is winning the Cornell game,? Flato said. ?It was kind of a devastating loss for us, because it was so close. Just on a revenge agenda, we want to win that game.?
Yale handed Penn its lone league loss on Feb. 3 at John J. Lee, 77-68. ?It's been good, especially for Ivy League games,? Flato said. ?It's been a lot of students coming out.?
Cornell is coming off Saturday's difficult loss to Penn at a packed Palestra, where the Quakers pulled away late for an 83-71 decision.
Senior Andrew Naeve posted his fourth straight double-double, scoring 20 points and grabbing 10 rebounds, while Ryan Wittman broke Cornell's freshman scoring record with 15 points.
Sophomore Adam Gore, who is sitting out the year with a knee injury, set the Big Red record a year ago on his way to winning Ivy League Rookie of the Year.
The Big Red still has an outside shot at the league title, but will need Penn to lose at least two games. Cornell wraps up its final road weekend on Saturday in Providence against Brown (9-16, 4-6) before completing the regular season with home games against Harvard on March 2 and Dartmouth on March 3.
?This team has bounced back from everything we've done, and I think we all realize there's a ton of basketball left for us and this is a huge game coming up for us,? Donahue said.
Notes: If Cornell wins out, 18 wins would mark the highest victory total since the 1967-68 season. ... When the Big Red started the season 4-7, it allowed 70.8 points per game on 44 percent shooting and was outrebounded by a margin of 3.6. Since then, the team is 10-3, allowing just 56.9 points per game and 40 percent opponent shooting and is outrebounding opponents by a 4.3 margin.
