Freshmen shoot Penn women’s basketball past La Salle, 74-63

Penn and La Salle were playing a perfectly good women’s basketball Friday afternoon when the Quakers’ Sarah Miller turned it into a sharpshooting match, leading to a Penn win, 74-63. 

The 5-foot-10 guard from Phoenix scored a bucket in the first quarter, but she really took off in the second with four straight threes, then added a fifth in the third quarter before her first miss of the day. All in all, she went 6-for-7 plus 4-for-4 on foul shots for a game-high 21 points. Fellow freshman Katie Collins also had a 6-for-7 day, though closer to the basket and in less spectacular fashion, finishing with 12 points and 11 rebounds. 

The win was coach Mike McLaughlin’s 250th at Penn.  

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Quakeaways from Penn men’s basketball’s 77-64 win over Maine

PHILADELPHIA — Brilliant performances from Penn’s two best upperclassmen helped the Quakers finally put an end to their four-game losing skid.

Junior wing Ethan Roberts dropped a 23-point, 10-rebound double-double, while senior big man Nick Spinoso seriously flirted with a triple double in a 77-64 win over Maine at the Cathedral Classic Invitational round robin on Saturday.

For the Quakers (3-4), the win over the Black Bears (4-4) was their first victory over a credible Division I opponent all season. Penn’s offense looked crisp for long stretches on Saturday, a welcome change from the early-season clunkiness that has been all too common.

Penn never trailed after the 14:14 mark of the first half but got pushed into a tie at multiple points in the second half. The Quakers drove in the dagger with a 10-0 run that pushed their lead from one point to 11 around the final media timeout of the game. An open Dylan Williams corner three off a swing pass from Roberts pushed Penn’s lead to 68-57 with 3:37 to go and effectively ended the contest.

For the first time in a few weeks, it’s all happy Quakeaways, such as how …

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Cornell men’s basketball pushing pace, finding continuity under Jon Jacques

Syracuse’s JMA Wireless Dome is pictured on Nov. 27, 2024. (Ray Curren | Ivy Hoops Online)

SYRACUSE, N.Y. – You don’t have to squint very hard to see that not much has changed at Cornell this season.

Brian Earl has moved on to William & Mary, and some of the key figures that helped the Big Red to their best record since the magical 2009-10 Sweet 16 campaign have moved on. But Cornell went with the if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it route in hiring Jon Jacques to replace Earl, and the early results have been somewhat encouraging.

The Big Red suffered a somewhat frustrating 82-72 loss at the JMA Wireless Dome (yes, it’s not the Carrier Dome anymore) that saw them jump out to a double-digit lead and battle back on several occasions, but go just 12-for-40 from behind the arc. Cornell has been losing at Syracuse since before the Dome was even built, of course. This was the Big Red’s 44th straight loss to the Orange, dating all the way back to 1968.

The 40 three-point attempts obviously stand out to the uninitiated, but that’s the way Cornell has rolled, having somewhat stumbled upon it during the COVID pandemic (as you probably know, there was no 2020-21 Ivy basketball season). Cornell went from 314th to 15th nationally in adjusted tempo, subbing and shooting transition threes at will. The Big Red have not missed a Ivy League Tournament since.

This season is a big test for Cornell’s tempo-fueled system. Jacques played four years at Cornell, and his senior season was 2009-10. While Jacques’ teams went 45-9 in the Ivy League, Steve Donahue’s style was not about pushing tempo, although those squads were perhaps the most efficient and best shooting Ivy offenses of all time. But Jacques worked closely with Earl the last few seasons, and so here we are.

The transition hasn’t been all sunshine and rainbows. Cornell did have a bad home loss to Robert Morris in which it gave up 1.18 points per possession and 15-for-25 shooting from two-point range. Pressing as much as the Big Red do is going to allow some easy baskets and they did under Earl, but how much is too much?

After missing 14 of its first 15 shots Wednesday night (and falling behind 14-2 and 20-11), Syracuse – not a good shooting team by most standards – continually got to the rim. Even with the dreadful start and average three-point shooting, the Orange still finished at 1.08 points per possession, largely due to the fact that Cornell was only able to force six turnovers. The counter to that, of course, is that there might not be an Ivy League team that can dominate inside at the moment anyway. Yale, maybe?

“I know they had a couple of guys struggling shooting coming in and they were bound to break out,” Jacques said. “They’re too good. They made some hard shots and slowed us down more than we want. We got a little stagnant, we want to push pace. We had a few possessions where we didn’t get the looks we wanted.”

Cornell leads the nation in getting shots up quickly, averaging just 13.8 seconds per possession. It has finished in the top five in that category in every season since COVID and has not finished outside the top 16 in three-pointers taken since then. So those are givens, baked into the formula. The questions are always about gives and takes.

“It’s certainly intentional to take that many threes if that’s what we’re given,” Jacques said. “We have confidence playing that way and we’ve had success. It’s been good to us. When the ball is going in, it looks great. Not quite enough tonight. In the first half, that stretch (an extended 28-8 run) when their lead grew, our offense struggled.”

And the players, of course. Chris Manon (who seemed to do a little of everything), Isaiah Gray, Sean Hansen and Keller Boothby all graduated, but the beauty of Cornell’s system is with so many players getting in games, there is always experience returning.

Nazir Williams has the most experience, now a senior, he managed 16 points Wednesday despite going 1-for-7 from behind the arc. Williams shot 41.1% from three as a sophomore, but is at just 17% early this season. Cornell will need him to shoot better, even if there is a lot more attention on him these days.

A big key in the Cornell system is also having big men who can hoist. The Big Red have two in senior Guy Ragland Jr. and junior AK Okereke. Ragland hit five threes against Syracuse and led the Big Red with 17 points. Ragland has fared much better than Okereke in rebounding numbers this season.

Jake Fiegen and Cooper Noard are the other two starters. They can both shoot, but can they apply the defensive intensity of their predecessors is a question going forward. Cornell’s system is dependent on forcing some turnovers, right now the Big Red are 248th nationally, and if they aren’t getting defensive rebounds (somewhat a given with their style) and not getting turnovers, it makes things very difficult.

“We started playing a zone a little to try to slow them down, but then that slowed us down, too,” Jacques said. “They also picked it apart as well. We couldn’t get any rebounds. I’m proud of the guys for getting it within 4 late in the second half, we almost got it to 2. It’s hard to keep taking punches when you don’t get rebounds.”

Senior Ryan Kiachian, junior DJ Nix, and sophomore Jacob Neccles have gotten the most minutes off the bench, and as we’ve established, Cornell is going to need all of them to be successful.

Despite the coaching change and the departures, the cupboard is certainly not bare for Cornell, who seems to have a good chance to qualify for their fourth straight Ivy League Tournament if it can iron out some minor issues.

Variance hasn’t worked out for them in Ivy Madness the last few seasons, with a pair of semifinal losses to Yale and one to Princeton. But maybe this is the year.

“The league is really good and every team is competitive,” Jacques said. “We’re just trying to inch forward game by game and play a little better every night, Colgate is next. We’re excited for the challenge.”

Princeton women’s basketball routs Rutgers, 66-49

Princeton women’s basketball beat up Rutgers Sunday at Jersey Mike’s Arena, 66-49, before a crowd of 2,281.

The Tigers were tasked with having to take Rutgers senior guard Destiny Adams out of the game. Adams was averaging 21.7 points and 12 rebounds per game, the latter clip good for third in the country.

Princeton coach Carla Berube called Adams “a monster inside” to the Big Ten Plus announcers before the game.

The Tigers tamed the monster.

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Yale men’s basketball demolishes Fairfield, 91-66

Revenge is sweet.

Yale exacted some against Fairfield Saturday, 91-66, in the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame Tip-Off at the Mohegan Sun.

Last season, Fairfield stunned Yale, 75-71, at John J. Lee Amphitheater. The Bulldogs wouldn’t let that happen again en route to what became the 400th win of his coaching career.

“That was a really good Yale basketball win,” Jones said, adding that the 400-win achievement “[j]ust means I have been around a long time.”

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Harvard women’s basketball cruises to 75-50 victory over Northwestern

If there’s any more conference realignment on the horizon, the Harvard women may want to consider heading over to the Big Ten. For the second time this year, the Crimson traveled to the Midwest and came away with a victory.

While Harvard (6-1) needed overtime to defeat then-No. 25 Indiana, 72-68, on Nov. 7, it easily handled Northwestern (1-3), 70-65, on Saturday afternoon.

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Yale men’s basketball dominates in 86-64 win at Stony Brook

Yale came close to playing the perfect first stanza en route to a convincing 86-64 road win over Stony Brook Wednesday evening.

Yale (3-3) held a 48-28 lead at the half. The Bulldogs were 8-for-13 from three and held a 22-16 rebounding edge. They outscored Stony Brook (2-3) in the paint, 16-8.

Senior guard John Poulakidas, the game’s leading scorer, had 15 points at halftime and hit his first six shots.

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How are the Ivy non-grad transfers doing?

With the season two weeks old, here’s a first check on the 2023-24 Ivy stars who transferred prior to their graduation. This year, the student-athletes are all from the men’s side, but growing amounts of NIL money, more relaxed transfer rules and the lack of scholarships in the Ancient Eight should eventually (sadly) expand this list to the women’s division in the near future.

Over the opening few weeks, Kalu Anya, Malik Mack and Danny Wolf have continued their strong play from last year, while Chisom Okpara and Tyler Perkins are seeing reduced roles with their new teams.

We’ll take another look in a few weeks to see how everyone’s doing:

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Minnesota downs Yale’s men’s basketball, 59-56

A second-half Minnesota surge led the Golden Gophers to a 59-56 win over Yale at Williams Arena before 8,205 fans Saturday.

The Bulldogs had led by as many as 14 (25-11) in the first half and held a 29-19 halftime lead.

Minnesota came out far more aggressively in the second half and spread the floor effectively. The hosts also made a concerted effort to get the ball to preseason All-Big Ten senior forward Dawson Garcia. Garcia registered 19 second-half points after managing only five in the first half.

“We are bending but not breaking,” Minnesota coach Ben Johnson said.

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