First Monday Penn-Princeton matchup in 16 years

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It?s a primetime game no matter which date it falls on, but for the first time since 1995, Penn and Princeton will tip off in regular season play on a day other than Tuesday.

Toughening league competition and Princeton?s quirky academic calendar are the two main factors that brought about this year?s Monday night special at the Palestra.

Typically, the two Ivy foes square off for the first time on a Tuesday in mid-February, which has been the case in every season since 1996-97. And since 1994-95, the second regular season matchup has been played on the Tuesday after the final weekend of Ivy League competition.

However, an effort was made this year to reschedule the first game so that it would not fall between two weekends of back-to-back conference play. In an increasingly competitive Ivy League that has recently seen Cornell reach the Sweet 16 and Harvard garner its current No. 23 ranking, five games in eight days was not a favorable setup for either team.

This year, the Ivy League accommodated both sides, though perhaps not in ideal fashion. When the season?s schedule was released, the game was initially set for Jan. 14, a Saturday, at the Palestra ? a much more fitting night to host what senior Zack Rosen has called ?the greatest rivalry in college basketball.?

That game would have been played as scheduled were it not for Princeton?s unusual academic calendar. Because Princeton begins its final exams for the fall semester after winter break, a Jan. 14 game would have overlapped with Princeton?s reading days. Therefore, the game was rescheduled to Monday, just two days after Princeton concluded its final exam period and a full nine days since Penn last played.

?I?ll tell you after the game,? Rosen quipped when asked how it will feel to play the Tigers on a Monday night. ?Bottom line is it?s a big game for us, it?s a big game for them ? [regardless of when it is] it?s the game.?

The circumstances may be unusual, but this rivalry game may be even more intense than in recent years.

In two of the past three seasons, the matchup at the Palestra has been played during Penn?s spring break, when most students have left campus. This year, student attendance will be predicated not on who?s still here, but how many people decide to show up.

But if there could have been any game over the last four years to help create buzz and excitement in anticipation for tonight?s tilt, last week?s 84-80 win over St. Joe?s in front of a sold-out crowd may have been the best one.

?I swear on my life [the Palestra last Saturday] was the loudest arena I?ve played in,? Rosen said, who has also played at North Carolina?s Dean Smith Center, Duke?s Cameron Indoor Stadium and Kentucky?s Rupp Arena. ?That place is ?The Cathedral? for a reason.?
 

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Sorry we?re not sorry


We get it, Princeton. You beat us last year, you beat Harvard in the playoff for the Ivy Championship, you played well against Kentucky before collapsing in the final minutes (Penn did it too, alright?).

Congrats, want a cookie?

It?s a new year, but this time, Princeton?s the team in flux. If you recall, last year The Daily Princetonian sports editors suggested Penn was following a similar fate as the Tigers: ?By now, the trend should be clear ? Penn is following Princeton?s exact pattern, two years later,? they wrote.

We think you?re a bit off in that assessment, guys. Now Princeton is the team with the new coach ? former head man Sydney Johnson left town for the Fairfield Stags in April, a move that, according to ESPN, doubled his salary.

Does this mean Jerome Allen will be leaving the City of Brotherly Love anytime soon? Hell, no.

It means, rather, that this year, the Tigers are going down. Penn is poised to widen the 122-102 all-time lead, and it starts tonight at the Palestra.

Let?s acknowledge the Cathedral?s lack of student support recently (except last weekend, when the Palestra was nearly sold out) and tally Penn?s home record against Princeton before the students stopped showing up after the 2007 season: 66-38. Even with four straight home losses (we?ll blame it on the pesky fans), the Quake Show is 66-42. Not bad.

And while Princeton was busy changing the entire Ivy League schedule at the last minute and seriously cramping everyone?s ? even the women?s teams? ? styles, did you forget to add your annual post-finals D-III tune-up game?

We know you think we?re bad, but this year the Tigers are the team to lose to lowly Cornell. Tables. Turned.

But really, it?s nice that one of your ?easiest wins of the season? came against D-III TCNJ. It?s also nice that the Tigers gave up 35 points in the first half of that game. Talk about bad defense ?

Anyway, Penn?s also got some offensive tricks up its sleeve, not that people haven?t noticed a guy named Zack Rosen recently. Or that guy Tyler Bernardini, or Rob Belcore, or Henry Brooks, for that matter. Okay, okay, should we stop?

In all of the statistical categories that matter ? scoring offense, field goal percentage, three-point field goal percentage, assists, steals, turnover margin (the list goes on, but we?re getting bored) ? Penn tops Princeton.

What matters more than statistics, though, is momentum. One more time for dramatic effect: Momentum.

The Quakers have it. Three-game winning streak, a Big 5 victory, 2-0 in the Ivy League.

And like we said, the Palestra crowd at its best plays a bit of a factor in Penn?s success. We?ll have our rollouts, our punny Puck Frinceton t-shirts, and #BeatPrinceton stickers (yo, Prince editors: You kind of misunderstood the promotion. Try again!).

Tonight, the Quake Show?s gettin? down and dirty. There?s no way Zack Rosen lets the Tigers get away with four straight wins in the Palestra.
 
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