Checking in on… the Ivy League
Posted by nvr1983 on March 12th, 2010Dave Zeitlin is the RTC correspondent for the Ivy League.
This season saw an unprecedented three teams reach the 20-win plateau in the Ivy League — a dominant Cornell team headed to the NCAA Tournament (expected); a young, but extremely talented Harvard team (disappointing); and a resurgent Princeton team (surprising). Hopefully the latter two have earned an invite to one of the myriad of lesser post-season tournaments. Here’s a look at the final standings:
- Cornell (13-1, 27-4): The final go-around for 10 seniors proved to be the best. Now the goal for Louis Dale, Jeff Foote, Ryan Wittman et al is to win a game or two in the tournament. A preview of their chances can be found below.
- Princeton (11-3, 20-8): Two tough losses to Cornell sealed their fate, but they earned runner-up honors with a couple of victories over Harvard. A bright future with their top five scorers returning.
- Harvard (10-4, 21-7): Beat everyone except the top two. Jeremy Lin’s loss via graduation will be felt, but in freshmen Brandyn Curry and Christian Webster, the Crimson boast a backcourt that can compete with the best nationally. Next year’s preseason choice.
- Yale (6-8, 12-19): An up and down Ivy season for the Elis. The lone bright spot was All-Ivy senior guard Alex Zampier. He leaves New Haven as the school’s all-time assist leader while scoring over 1000 points.
- Columbia (5-9, 11-17): The Lions earn the fifth spot over co 5-9ers Brown and Penn by virtue of their head-to-head sweep of both teams. Next year’s team will be built around sophomore Noruwa Agho, their only double digit scorer.
- Brown (5-9, 11-20): Little to separate the Bears from the Quakers other than a slightly better overall record, so they get the nod here. Stat machine Matt Mullery (team leader in points, rebounds, and assists) leaves after a fine career.
- Penn (5-9, 6-22): The record was something that Palestra fans (those that showed up) were not used to. Nor were early-season injuries and a mid-season coaching change. Sophomore point guard and Player of the Year candidate Zack Rosen is already a star.
- Dartmouth (1-13, 5-23): Not much to cheer about in Hanover. Hopefully Mark Graupe can breathe some enthusiasm into a program that has pretty much been the league doormat for a while. Most of the top players return.
Postseason Awards
Without fanfare we present you with the best of the 2009-2010 Ivy League basketball season:
All-Conference Team
- Ryan Wittman 6-7 Sr F—Cornell
- Matt Mullery 6-8 Sr. F–Brown
- Jeff Foote 7-0 Sr. C–Cornell
- Jeremy Lin 6-3 Sr. G–Harvard
- Zack Rosen 6-1 So. G–Penn
- Alex Zampier 6-3 Sr, G—Yale
- Louis Dale 5-11 Sr. G—Cornell
All-Freshman Team
- Kyle Casey 6-7 F–Harvard
- Tucker Halpern 6-8 F–Brown
- Andrew McCarthy 6-8 F–Brown
- Ian Hummer 6-7 F–Princeton
- Brandyn Curry 6-1 G–Harvard
- Christian Webster 6-5 G—Harvard
Statistical Leaders
- Points per game: Zack Rosen (Penn)–17.7
- FG %: Jeff Foote (Cornell)—62.3%
- FT %: Zack Rosen (Penn)—86.2%
- 3-point FG %: Jon Jaques (Cornell)—48.8%
- Rebounds per game: Jeff Foote (Cornell)—8.2
- Assists per game: Louis Dale (Cornell)—4.8
- Steals per game: Jeremy Lin (Harvard)—2.5
- Blocks per game: Greg Mangano (Yale)—2.0