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2009–10 Ivy League men's basketball season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2009–10 Ivy League men's basketball season
LeagueNCAA Division I
SportBasketball
DurationJanuary 9, 2010
through March 9, 2010
Number of teams8
Regular Season
League championsCornell
Season MVPRyan Wittman, Cornell
Basketball seasons
2009–10 Ivy League men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Cornell 13 1   .929 29 5   .853
Princeton 11 3   .786 22 9   .710
Harvard 10 4   .714 21 9   .700
Yale 6 8   .429 12 19   .387
Columbia 5 9   .357 11 17   .393
Brown 5 9   .357 11 20   .355
Penn 5 9   .357 6 22   .214
Dartmouth 1 13   .071 5 23   .179
As of March 21, 2010
Rankings from AP Poll


The 2009–10 Ivy League men's basketball season was the 56th season of Ivy League basketball. The Cornell University Big Red won their third consecutive Ivy League Championship and were the league's representative at the 2010 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. Seeded 12th in the East Region the Big Red won their first two games over number five seed Temple University 78-65 and number four seed University of Wisconsin 87-69 before falling to number one seed University of Kentucky 62-45 in the Sweet Sixteen.[1][2][3] They were the first Ivy League team to reach the Sweet Sixteen since the 1978–79 Penn Quakers and set an Ivy League record with 29 wins.[4]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Cornell Men's Basketball 2009 Ivy League Champions Part 1
  • Cornell Basketball vs Princeton (3/7/09) Video Highlights, Interviews, and Analysis
  • Cornell Basketball @ Princeton (2/6/09)
  • SlopeTV Presents: Official 2010 Cornell Basketball Highlight Video
  • (2/27/10) - Cornell Tops Penn 68-48 to Clinch a Share of Ivy Title

Transcription

Preseason

The Ivy League held its pre-season media day on October 28, 2009 in Princeton, New Jersey. The league's media unanimously voted Cornell the preseason #1 for the second straight season. Cornell returned all five starters, three all-conference performers, and the Ivy League rookie and defensive players of the year from the 2009 Ivy League championship team.[5]

Two Ivy League seniors were named preseason candidates for the Lowe's Senior CLASS Award. Columbia's Patrick Foley and Brown's Matthew Mullery were named to the 30-man preseason list.[6]

Ivy League Media Poll

Rank Team Votes
1 Cornell (16) 128
2 Princeton 96
3 Penn 92
4 Harvard 86
5 Yale 59
6 Columbia 55
7 Brown 41
8 Dartmouth 19

Regular season

Non-conference

Preseason #1 Cornell lived up to its billing by scoring the first Ivy League win over one of the six major conferences as the Big Red beat the SEC's Alabama Crimson Tide 71–67 in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, behind Ryan Wittman's 23 points. It was Cornell's first win over a current SEC member school since the Big Red defeated Arkansas (then a part of the Southwest Conference) during the 1972–73 season.[7]

Harvard also got off to a fast start. After winning their opener against Holy Cross, the Crimson won a triple-overtime contest over the College of William & Mary, 87–85 on a half-court shot by senior guard Jeremy Lin.[8] Lin also made headlines in early December as he scored 30 points in a close loss (79–73) at #14 Connecticut, then came back to score 25 in the Crimson's very next game – a 74–67 upset of Boston College. Lin started the New Year by being named to the Mid-season Wooden Award 30-man watch list[9] and the Bob Cousy Award.

The Ivy made news for some not-so positive reasons as the conference saw two coaches fired during the pre-conference slate. Penn fired coach Glen Miller after an 0–7 start, while Dartmouth's Terry Dunn resigned after a 3–10 start.

But the biggest press of the non-conference season for the Ivy League came on January 6, as league favorite Cornell led #1 and undefeated Kansas with under a minute remaining at Allen Fieldhouse. Ultimately, the Big Red lost to KU 71–66, but the Ivy stalwarts proved that they could compete with the top teams[10]

Conference season

Cornell and Harvard were expected to compete for the league title, but the Big Red swept the Crimson. However, Penn stopped Cornell's bid for a perfect Ivy League season by beating the then 22nd ranked Big Red 79–64 at the Palestra in Philadelphia. The win snapped an eight-game win streak by Cornell.[11]

Conference awards & honors

All-Conference teams

At the conclusion of the season, the Ivy League all-conference teams were selected. Cornell placed a trio of seniors – Ryan Wittman, Jeff Foote and Louis Dale – on the All-Ivy first team. The Big Red threesome were joined on the first team by Harvard's Jeremy Lin and Penn's Zack Rosen. Wittman and Foote were the Ivy League player and defensive players of the year, respectively.[12]

  • Player of the Year: Ryan Wittman, Cornell (unanimous)
  • Rookie of the Year: Kyle Casey, Harvard
  • Defensive Player of the Year: Jeff Foote, Cornell

All-Ivy League first team

All-Ivy League second team

  • Matt Mullery, Brown
  • Noruwa Agho, Columbia
  • Jack Eggleston, Penn
  • Douglas Davis, Princeton
  • Dan Mavraides, Princeton
  • Alex Zampier, Yale

All-Ivy League honorable mention

Weekly awards

Ivy League Players of the Week
Throughout the conference season, the Ivy League offices name a player and rookie of the week.

Week Player of the week Rookie of the week
November 16 Jeremy Lin, G, Harvard[13] Dee Giger, G, Harvard
Ryan Wittman, F, Cornell
November 23 Noruwa Agho, G, Columbia[14] Andrew McCarthy, F, Brown
Matt Mullery, C, Brown
November 30 Noruwa Agho, G, Columbia[15] Matt Sullivan, G, Brown
Ryan Wittman, F, Cornell
December 7 Jeremy Lin, G, Harvard[16] Errick Peck, F, Cornell
December 14 Noruwa Agho, G, Columbia[17] Ian Hummer, F, Princeton
Jeremy Lin, G, Harvard
December 21 Ryan Wittman, F, Cornell[18] Matt LaBove, C, Dartmouth
December 28 Jeff Foote, C, Cornell[19] Mark Cisco, C, Columbia
Alex Zampier, G, Yale
January 4 Ryan Wittman, F, Cornell[20] Kyle Casey, F, Harvard
January 11 Ryan Wittman, F, Cornell[21] Tucker Halpern, F, Brown
January 18 Jeff Foote, C, Cornell[22] Andrew McCarthy, F, Brown
January 25 Alex Zampier, G, Yale[23] Kyle Casey, F, Harvard
February 1 Douglas Davis, G, Princeton[24] Ian Hummer, F, Princeton
February 8 Jeff Foote, C, Cornell[25] Kyle Casey, F, Harvard
February 15 Kyle Casey, F, Harvard[26] Kyle Casey, F, Harvard
February 22 Ryan Wittman, F, Cornell[27] Tucker Halpern, F, Brown
March 1 Jeremy Lin, G, Harvard[28] Brandyn Curry, G, Harvard
March 8 Louis Dale, G, Cornell[29] Brandyn Curry, G, Harvard

External links

References

  1. ^ Glier, Ray (March 19, 2010). "Cornell Rolls to Upset Temple". The New York Times. Retrieved May 26, 2023.
  2. ^ "Cornell pulls off another upset, knocking out No. 4 Wisconsin". ESPN. Associated Press. March 22, 2010. Retrieved May 26, 2023.
  3. ^ Ju, Anne (March 26, 2010). "Kentucky ends Cornell's run in NCAA tournament". Cornell Chronicle. Retrieved May 26, 2023.
  4. ^ "Cornell Downs Fourth-Seeded Wisconsin to Advance to Sweet 16". The Cornell Daily Sun. June 9, 2010. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
  5. ^ Cornell Unanimously Picked by Media to Three-peat[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2009-10-31
  6. ^ Lowe's Senior CLASS Award Names 2009–10 Men's and Women's Basketball Candidates, Lowe's Senior CLASS Award, retrieved 2009-11-05
  7. ^ Cornell 71, Alabama 67 ESPN.com Retrieved on November 17, 2009.
  8. ^ Harvard 87, William & Mary 85 ESPN.com Retrieved on November 17, 2009.
  9. ^ Lin Named John R. Wooden Award Midseason Top 30 Candidate Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine gocrimson.com Retrieved on January 11, 2010.
  10. ^ Collins scores 33 as Jayhawks get by scrappy Big Red ESPN.com Retrieved on January 11, 2010.
  11. ^ Penn snaps No. 22 Cornell's 8-game win streak
  12. ^ All-Ivy Men's Basketball – 2009–10[permanent dead link]
  13. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 2 – 11/16[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2009-11-17
  14. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 3 – 11/23[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2009-11-23
  15. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 4 – 11/30[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2009-11-30
  16. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 5 – 12/07 Archived January 2, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Ivy League, retrieved 2009-12-07
  17. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 6 – 12/14 Archived January 2, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Ivy League, retrieved 2009-12-22
  18. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 7 – 12/21[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2009-12-22
  19. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 8 – 12/28 Archived 2010-01-02 at the Wayback Machine, Ivy League, retrieved 2009-12-28
  20. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 9 – 1/4[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2010-01-11
  21. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 10 – 1/11[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2010-01-11
  22. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 11 – 1/18[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2010-03-14
  23. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 12 – 1/25[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2010-03-14
  24. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 13 – 2/1[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2010-03-14
  25. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 14 – 2/8[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2010-03-14
  26. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 15 – 2/15[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2010-03-14
  27. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 16 – 2/22[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2010-03-14
  28. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 17 – 3/1[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2010-03-14
  29. ^ Ivy Weekly Men's Basketball Report 18 – 3/8[permanent dead link], Ivy League, retrieved 2010-03-14
This page was last edited on 21 August 2023, at 03:27
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