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News and Notes: Tuesday Edition

Cornell Big Red Basketball is 115 years of tradition...Below, news and notes for Tuesday...



Above, "Cornell now has a Basket Ball Team."  This was a headline in the December 1, 1897 issue of the Cornell Daily Sun announcing the creation of the University's first team which commenced training during the 1897-1898 school year.

Above, a photograph and autograph of Edwin R. Sweetland (Cornell Class of 1899).  Sweetland was a member of Cornell's first basketball team and played for the team during its inaugural official varsity season during the 1898-1899 school year.  While at Cornell, Sweetland also played football for the Big Red under the legendary coach, Pop Warner and was named a Walter Camp All American.  Sweetand's incredible career beyond Cornell included serving as the head football coach of Syracuse and then in 1909 as the first paid head basketball coach at the University of Kentucky.  See some of our prior posts on the Origins of Cornell Basketball.
  • Ned Tomic is in action today in the championship game of the Cleveland AmPro.

News and Notes for Monday

Above and below, Dates in Cornell Basketball History... from 75 years ago, the cover of the January 23, 1938 issue of the Cornell Daily Sun recapping Cornell's win at Yale on January 22, 1938.  Also above, the game program from New Haven.  Below, an image from the Cornell Daily Sun from January 10, 1938 which profiles the Big Red's star players before the conference home opener of the '37-'38 season against Dartmouth.  

 Below, some news and notes for Monday...
  • On the Brooklyn Nets' final open roster spot, Nets Daily writes, "The Nets could just wait till training camp to decide on the 14th and 15th men. Al Thornton played well in Orlando. Jeff Foote showed some promise there, but he's still a work in progress. You'd assume both players will get camp invites. In the past, the Nets have brought in as many as 20 players. Still, if the Nets were really interested, you'd think they would have offered Thornton and Foote partial guarantees on vets minimum deals. They did that two years ago. Doesn't seem like they want to do that with them."
Ned Tomic-Cleveland AmPro
Shonn Miller-Cleveland AmPro
Galal Cancer-Capital District Basketball Association Summer League
Josh Figini-Howard Pulley Summer Pro League (St. Paul, MN)
Jake Mattthews-Pittsburgh Basketball Club Summer Pro League
  • The Cornell Basketball program is holding another session of its camp for youngsters.




        News and Notes: Friday Edition

        Below, some news and notes for Friday...

        • The Springfield Republican writes, "With the help of Nets director of minor-league operations Milton Lee, the Armor added center Jeff Foote and forward Dennis Horner [last season] to make a formidable starting five."

        News and Notes: Thursday Edition

        Above, a 1975 game program from Cornell's visit to Baton Rouge, Louisiana and LSU.  Below, some news and notes for Thursday...
        • The New York Post writes that the Nets will "add at least one more [player to the roster]– could be Shelden Williams, [Damion] James, free agent Al Thornton, D-League hopeful Jeff Foote...They’ve already committed to more than $335 million (that’s $75 million more than Mikhail Prokhorov paid for the team two years ago). That $335 million contains about $82 million for the upcoming season, plopping them about $12 million over the luxury tax threshold. It’s good to have a billionaire owner. Or an oligarch. Or both."
        • Foote's D-League coach, Bob MacKinnon received a contract extension. The Springfield Armor noted in their release, "The 2011-12 Armor had three players earn a total of four GATORADE NBA Call-Ups, including Dennis Horner (New Jersey Nets, twice), Jeff Foote (New Orleans Hornets) and Jerry Smith (New Jersey Nets)."
        • Wisconsin released its full nonconference schedule and notes of the Cornell game, " Nov. 18 vs. Cornell (Kohl Center) First and second-round games of the 2012 Las Vegas Invitational are being held at the host institutions ... in the only previous meeting, the Big Red knocked UW from the 2010 NCAA tournament with a second-round win in Jacksonville, Fla."
        • White and Blue Review writes of Creighton, " The Bluejays will have two games at home as a part of the Las Vegas Invitational before making the trip to Las Vegas. The rest of the field consists of Presbyterian, Cornell, Florida A&M and Longwood. Cornell has already released their non-conference schedule and will be playing Wisconsin and Arizona State leaving the other three teams as potential opponents for the Bluejays."
        Bill Courtney's third year as Cornell men's basketball coach promises to be a challenging 2012-13 season with 10 of his 12 leading scorers from a year ago back. The Big Red finished 12-16 overall and 7-7 in the Ivy League last season.

        A visit to famed Cameron Indoor Stadium and a six-day stint in “Sin City” highlight the Cornell University men’s basketball team’s 2012-13 schedule.
        The school released the Big Red’s 31-game schedule — the most scheduled games in program history — on Wednesday.
        Third-year coach Bill Courtney’s squad, which finished 12-16 and 7-7 in the Ivy League last season, will play 15 games against teams that participated in the postseason a year ago, including six against NCAA tournament teams.
        Cornell will play 14 home games, including three in six days starting Nov. 10 against Western Michigan, reigning Atlantic 10 tournament champion St. Bonaventure and Saint Peter’s (N.J.) at Newman Arena. Two days after facing the Peacocks, the team will head west for the Las Vegas Invitational, where it will take on Sweet 16 participant Wisconsin and Arizona State.
        Before heading home, the Big Red will play two more contests at Orleans Arena, off the Las Vegas strip, with potential opponents including Florida A&M, Longwood and Presbyerian.
        After Las Vegas, Cornell goes another road trip, highlighted by a date with Duke on Dec. 19. The Blue Devils finished second in the Atlantic Coast Conference last season before being shocked by No. 15 seed Lehigh of the Patriot League in the first round of the NCAA tournament.
        Two days before facing Duke, Cornell will visit defending Southeastern Conference tournament champion Vanderbilt.
        Other marquee nonconference games include home contests against defending America East regular-season champion Stony Brook on Nov. 28 and Patriot League regular-season champion Bucknell on Jan. 2.
        The Big Red’s Ivy League opener will be Jan. 19 at home against Columbia. Two-time defending league champion Harvard visits on Feb. 8, with Cornell visiting Cambridge, Mass., on March 9 in the regular-season finale.
        Among the top expected returnees for Cornell are 2011-12 Ivy League Rookie of the Year Shonn Miller; all-Ivy guard Johnathan Gray, a senior who spent part of the summer with the U.S. Virgin Islands’ national team; and forward Errick Peck, the Big Red’s second-leading scorer in 2010-11, who missed last season due to a knee injury.

        Shonn Miller at Work in Summer League


        Above, Cornell's Shonn Miller last night in the Cleveland AmPro League.

        News and Notes: Wednesday Edition

        Above, a look at Cornell's groovy uniform from the 1972-1973 season.  John O'Neil ('75) chases down a loose ball on January 20, 1973 at Manley Fieldhouse in Syracuse, NY.  Below, some news and notes for Wednesday...
        Las Vegas Invite, Trips To Duke, Vanderbilt Highlight 2012-13 Cornell Men's Basketball Schedule 
        Cornell Athletics   
        ITHACA, N.Y. -- Head coach Bill Courtney and his staff continue to take on all comers, as the 2012-13 Cornell men's basketball schedule proves. The Big Red will play 15 games against teams that participated in the postseason a year ago, including six contests against squads that competed in the NCAA tournament.

        Cornell will play 31 games total, the second most in school history, including participating in the Las Vegas Invitational, where it will play games at 2012 NCAA Sweet 16 participant Wisconsin and Arizona State, as well as two additional contests at Orleans Arena just off the Las Vegas strip. The Big Red will also play two teams out of the pool of Florida A&M, Longwood and Presbyterian. Joining the Badgers and Sun Devils in the other round will be Arkansas and Creighton.

        Also highlighting the schedule will be the second trip in seven seasons to famed Cameron Indoor Arena for a non-conference tilt with Duke when the two teams meet on Wednesday, Dec. 19. The Blue Devils, one of 15 teams on Cornell's schedule that won 19 or more games a year ago, finished second in the Atlantic Coast Conference a year ago. Two days prior to the Duke game, the Big Red will visit defending Southeastern Conference tournament champion Vanderbilt.

        Other highlighted non-conference games include the season and home opener against Western Michigan on Saturday, Nov. 10, and home games against reigning Atlantic 10 tournament champ St. Bonaventure on Wednesday, Nov. 14, defending America East regular season champion Stony Brook on Wednesday, Nov. 28, and 2012 Patriot League regular season champ Bucknell on Wednesday, Jan. 2. Rounding out the non-conference games against postseason tournament teams will be a matchup at 20-win American, a CIT participant a year ago, on Sunday, Jan. 6.
        Four out of Cornell's seven Ivy League foes (Harvard - NCAA, Princeton and Penn - CBI, and Yale - CIT) won at least 19 games a year ago and made the postseason. They will all pose major challenges, as will improved squads from Columbia, Brown and Dartmouth, when the Big Red attempts to claim its fourth Ivy title in the last six years. The conference portion of the schedule opens at home against Columbia on Saturday, Jan. 19 at Newman Arena.
        Cornell improved its win total overall and in Ivy League play in 2011-12, finishing 12-16 overall and 7-7 in conference action. The Big Red is scheduled to return 10 of its 12 leading scorers, including 2011-12 Ivy League Rookie of the Year Shonn Miller and All-Ivy guard Johnathan Gray, who spent part of the summer competing on the U.S. Virgin Islands' national team. Also expected to return is starting forward Errick Peck, the team's second-leading scorer in 2010-11 who missed last season due to injury.

        Date Opponent Location Time/Result
        11/10/2012 Western Michigan University Ithaca, N.Y. - Newman Arena 12:00 p.m.
        11/14/2012 St. Bonaventure University Ithaca, N.Y. - Newman Arena 7:00 p.m.
        11/16/2012 Saint Peter's College Ithaca, N.Y. - Newman Arena 7:00 p.m.
        Las Vegas Invitational
        11/18/2012 University of Wisconsin Madison, Wis. TBA
        11/20/2012 Arizona State University Tempe, Ariz. TBA
        11/23/2012 TBA Las Vegas, Nev. TBA
        11/24/2012 TBA Las Vegas, Nev. TBA
        11/28/2012 Stony Brook University Ithaca, N.Y. - Newman Arena 7:00 p.m.
        12/1/2012 Colgate University Ithaca, N.Y. - Newman Arena TBA
        12/17/2012 Vanderbilt University Nashville, Tenn. TBA
        12/19/2012 Duke University Durham, N.C. TBA
        12/22/2012 Boston University Boston, Mass. TBA
        12/28/2012 St. Francis University (Pa.) Loretto, Pa. TBA
        12/30/2012 Binghamton University Vestal, N.Y. 2:00 p.m.
        1/2/2013 Bucknell University Ithaca, N.Y. - Newman Arena 7:00 p.m.
        1/6/2013 American University Washington, D.C. TBA
        1/12/2013 The College at Old Westbury Ithaca, N.Y. - Newman Arena TBA
        1/19/2013 * Columbia University Ithaca, N.Y. - Newman Arena TBA
        1/26/2013 * Columbia University New York, N.Y. TBA
        2/1/2013 * Princeton University Princeton, N.J. TBA
        2/2/2013 * University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. TBA
        2/8/2013 * Harvard University Ithaca, N.Y. - Newman Arena 7:00 p.m.
        2/9/2013 * Dartmouth College Ithaca, N.Y. - Newman Arena 7:00 p.m.
        2/15/2013 * Yale University New Haven, Conn. TBA
        2/16/2013 * Brown University Providence, R.I. TBA
        2/22/2013 * University of Pennsylvania Ithaca, N.Y. - Newman Arena 7:00 p.m.
        2/23/2013 * Princeton University Ithaca, N.Y. - Newman Arena 7:00 p.m.
        3/1/2013 * Brown University Ithaca, N.Y. - Newman Arena 7:00 p.m.
        3/2/2013 * Yale University Ithaca, N.Y. - Newman Arena 7:00 p.m.
        3/8/2013 * Dartmouth College Hanover, N.H. TBA
        3/9/2013 * Harvard University Cambridge, Mass. TBA

        News and Notes: Tuesday Edition

        Below, some news and notes for Tuesday...


        • Fans of college basketball history and of Cornell Basketball history, should consider purchasing the new book, The Classic, the story of the legendary Dixie Classic Tournament held between 1949 through 1960 on Tobacco Road. Prior to the creation of March Madness, the Dixie Classic was one of college’s premier hoops events. The Dixie Classic's demise occurred in 1961 due to a point-shaving scandal organized by New York area mobsters. Annually tipping off just after Christmas in Reynolds Coliseum on the NC State Campus, the tournament was played over three days for more than a decade. The holiday event opened with each of the Big Four—NC State, UNC, Duke and Wake Forest—playing non-conference opponents selected from some of the most competitive programs in the country including, Cornell. The Cornell Big Red were the runner-ups of the 1951 Dixie Classic, falling by 2 points to N.C. State in the championship game and returned to the event as invitees in 1954 as the defending Ivy League champions. Below, Cornell's results from the Dixie Classic in 1951 and 1954.  Above, pages from the 1954 Dixie Classic program and below an excerpt from the March 23, 1954 issue of the Cornell Daily Sun announcing Cornell's invitation to the 1954 Dixie Classic.  Cornell returns to Dixie and "Tobacco Road" this season with a visit to Duke.
        12/27/1951 vs Wake Forest W 58-51 - Raleigh, N.C.
        12/28/1951 vs Columbia W 66-64 - Raleigh, N.C.
        12/29/1951 at North Carolina State L 49-51 - Raleigh, N.C. (Championship Game) 
        12/27/1954 at North Carolina State L 61-95 - Raleigh, N.C.12/28/1954 vs Southern Carlifornia L 58-77 - Raleigh, N.C.12/29/1954 vs West Virginia L 71-79 - Raleigh, N.C.

        Below, legenday sportswriter, Dick Schaap, recapped Cornell's runner-up finish in the 1951 Dixie Classic for the Cornell Daily Sun.


        • Incoming Cornell recruit, David Onuorah (Marist HS) Atlanta, GA, 6-8, 230, F, participated in the prestigious AAU event, the Nike Peach Jam between July 16-22 in Georgia.  Playing with his team, the Memphis-based Bluff City Legends, Onuorah started all five games, averaging 21.8 minutes, 4.2 points, 5.2 rebounds, 1.6 blocks while shooting 8/20 (40%) from the floor and 5/11 at the FT line.  Bluff City struggled to an 0-5 record in the tournament.  Onuorah's height has been listed between 6'8" and 6'9" on most recruiting websites and was listed at 6'9" at the Peach Jam.

        News and Notes: Monday Edition

        Below some news and notes for Monday...


        Donald Schaffer (Cornell '62)
        • Former Cornell basketball captain, Donald Schaffer (Cornell '62) (pictured above on the cover of  a 1961 issue of the Cornell Daily Sun) passed away on July 7.  Shaffer's 1961-1962 Cornell team finished 18-7 bolstered by Shaffer's 8.7 points and 8.5 rebounds per game.  Also a graduate of the Wharton Business School graduate program and a U.S. Army veteran, Schaffer spent more than 30 years in the textile industry.
        • The Plano Star of Texas looks back on the District 8-5A season and recalls a 20 point performance by incoming Cornell freshman, Holt Harmon.
        • Scout.com recruiting analyst, Brian Snow, tweeted over the weekend about Bill Courtney hard at work on the recruiting trail.
        • Former Virginia Tech basketball coach, Seth Greenberg, was at Newman Arena over the weekend and tweeted about watching his daughter participate in a Cornell basketball camp.

        News and Notes: Friday Edition

        Below, some news and notes for Friday...

        • The Greece (NY) News reports that former Cornell head coach, Al Walker, has made the jump to the women's game. Greece News writes:
        First-year head coach Felisha Legette-Jack has started to assemble her coaching staff by adding veteran head coach Al Walker as her top assistant.

        Walker spent the last five seasons as the advanced tactical scout for Stan Van Gundy and the Orlando Magic. Prior to that, he spent 19 years as a head coach on the men’s side, including seven years at Binghamton where he helped guide the Bearcats in their transition from Division II to Division I. 

        He has a 234-279 record all-time as a head coach, having also spent time at Colorado College, Cornell and Chaminade. In 2005-06, he led Binghamton to a 16-13 record and a 12-4 mark in the America East, finishing second. Prior to being a head coach, Walker was an assistant at Cornell and East Carolina, as well as an assistant for the junior varsity team at North Carolina under head coach Roy Williams.

        Walker graduated magna cum laude from SUNY Brockport in 1981, and earned his master’s degree from the University of North Carolina in 1984. At Brockport, he ranks fifth all-time in rebounds (706) and 20th in scoring (856) despite playing just three seasons.

        News and Notes: Thursday Edition

        Below, some news and notes for Thursday...


        Above, Cornell's Shonn Miller in action in the Cleveland Summer Pro League ("the AmPro").  Miller plays for the team, Iggy Boys.
        • The Ithaca Times updated its previously published story on Jeff Foote's (Cornell '10) participation in the NBA Summer League.  The Times writes:
          Jeff Foote’s weeklong foray into the NBA Summer League has come to an end, but it seems like it’s been an overall success. Foote had two lackluster starts for the Brooklyn Nets summer squad following a solid start on Monday, July 8.
          However, he bounced back Thursday night with nine points and a game-high seven rebounds and had his best game on Friday, playing 28 minutes and shooting 5-6 from the floor for a summer league high of 11 points with another summer league high of 11 rebounds and a steal. That kind of performance will get him a long look somewhere.
          However, the dissolution of Dwight Howard trade talks hurts Foote’s chances with the Nets as they have signed Brooke Lopez and may want a more experienced center to back him up. Lopez is coming back from a major injury, so they may want to hedge their bets with a vet. Of course they may just add Foote on a 1-year deal and sign Howard as a free agent after next season, time can only tell. The good part is that a scout from each of the 30 NBA teams was at every one of the games. So every team should know what Foote is capable of. It’s just a matter of who thinks he can be a useful NBA player.
          Jets camp is a little more than a week away and at least this Jets fan is excited. From what I hear, they’re expecting record attendance. That’s because there will be more exposure from the lack of a camp last year, the two years of experience prior to that, and of course, Tim Tebow.
          Like him or hate him, Tebow will be coming to Cortland and people will be pushing to get a glimpse of him. I imagine all the local restaurants will be running Tebow-themed specials, and random people around Cortland will be caught “Tebowing.”
          But there’ll be much more to do during the camp and the addition of Tebow kind of hides some of the key additions and losses from the team. Are the defensive woes from last year simply a lax attitude and focus on offense, or is it a key personnel issue?
          And more importantly, is Darrelle Revis going to hold out again? I mean, I guess he doesn’t like Cortland, because he held out the last time they were, too. Restructuring a rookie contract is one thing, but restructuring the restructured contract you just agreed to two years ago is a little silly. The man deserves to be paid and this year he does seem more likely to show up for camp even with the disputed contract. I’ve always argued that he deserves to be paid the same as a top wide receiver because he essentially nullifies one from the opposing team.
          There are deterrents in his current contract that could force him to attend camp from day 1. The first is a million dollar reporting bonus that he’d forfeit and the other is an automatic extension that kicks in if he holds out. In that case he’d be under contract past the 2014 year where the current contract ends, and instead be under contract up to and including the 2016 season. Talk is that the Jets are trying to make it through this season before rewarding him with a big contract next season, but we’ll see where the two teams end up at the end of July.
          In the meantime, keep an ear out for locals who are taking part in area tournaments. Almost every sport has a summer program and if your team did well, I want to hear about so I note your achievements here in the column.

          News and Notes: Wednesday Edition

          Below, some news and notes for Wednesday...

          • The Ithaca Times recaps Jeff Foote's NBA Summer League performance with the Brooklyn Nets last week in Orlando.  The Times writes:
          Update: Foote had two lackluster starts for the Brooklyn Nets summer squad following Monday's game. However, he bounced back Thursday night with nine points and a game-high seven rebounds and had his best game on Friday, playing 28 minutes and shooting 5-6 from the floor for a summer league high of 11 points with another summer league high of 11 rebounds and a steal. That kind of performance will get him a long look somewhere.
          However, the dissolution of Dwight Howard trade talks hurts Foote's chances with the Nets as they have signed Brooke Lopez and may want a more experienced center to back him up. Lopez is coming back from a major injury, so they may want to hedge their bets with a vet. Of course they may just add Foote on a 1-year deal and sign Howard as a free agent after next season, time can only tell.
          Jeff Foote made his most convincing audition for an NBA team so far with his play during the first NBA Summer League game of the season. The seven-foot-tall Cornell and Spencer-Van Etten grad is down in Orlando, FL, playing for the Brooklyn Nets’ summer team and trying to show to the NBA that he does belong.
          On Monday, in a loss to the summer version of the Orlando Magic, Foote scored 10 points on five for eight shots. He also pulled down 10 rebounds and blocked two shots.
          It was a very solid performance from the only true center on the summer squad, and it’s the big league version of the team that they were facing, the Orlando Magic, that makes that performance more interesting.
          As it stands now, the team that is most interested in how Jeff Foote does is the Brooklyn Nets. The Nets are looking to bring in a big name at center and pay him a lot of money. That name is not Jeff Foote, but rather Dwight Howard, the star center for the Magic. The Nets and Magic have been working on permutations of trades that would send Howard to the Nets.
          In most of these trades, the Nets would send out their starting center, Brooke Lopez, and from what I’ve seen would not get another center. And if they get Howard in a trade they would sign him to a big contract. With big contracts already in Joe Johnson and Deron Williams, that would mean they need cheap guys who can play to round out the bench.
          And that is where Jeff Foote would fit in. Foote has an impressive work ethic but never got the college pedigree that is demanded of NBA athletes. His work last season in the basketball minor leagues, the NBA D-League, however, was very good. It was so good that the New Orleans Hornets decided that he would be a good fill in for 10 days as their roster healed from injury.
          It’s up to Foote to prove this summer that he is more than a stopgap to be called up here and there. It’s up to him to prove that he is someone who can play with NBA talent on a day-in-day out basis. Unless injury thrusts him into such a role, Foote will only really be considered as a backup, but strong play this week in a starting role for the Nets’ summer team could easily translate into quality play off the bench at 10 minutes per game.
          The Nets will have the sharpest eyes on Foote, but that doesn’t mean that other teams aren’t looking at him. For instance, Foote played the previous preseason with the Portland Trailblazers. The Trailblazers just sent one of their centers, Marcus Camby, to the New York Knicks, and may want to fill that hole with someone cheaper, but just as tall. And no one had New Orleans pegged as a possible destination for Foote over the course of the season, but they took a shot at him.
          Likely the next step will not be a contract with a team unless he does something really special this next week. The most likely outcome will be that he gets a few preseason invites and has to choose which one he thinks will be his best shot at an NBA roster spot. If all else fails, he’s made a name for himself in the D-League and will have a roster spot on one of those teams as he waits for another call up.

          CBS Sports: School's in for summer: Why everyone (except the Ivies) loves the new practice rule

          School's in for summer: Why everyone (except the Ivies) loves the new practice rule

          By Matt Norlander
          CBS Sports

          It seems such an absurd notion. No, not this: college basketball coaches and players sharing a campus over the summer, going in and out of the same building or two day after day, all with a mind on a stress-free few months and the goal of working to get better as a team.

          Yet the two groups were mandated to be separated? That's the absurd part. It's the way college basketball was for years -- until this one. Last fall, the NCAA finally voted in legislation that states college coaches can spend two hours per week training and practicing with their players so long as the players are enrolled in summer school. It's a sweet deal, and it's about time.

          And to this point, the new rule has been received like s'mores at a campfire. An informal poll of the coaches brought back an, oh, 100-percent approval rate. Of course it did. Anything to further the team bond and increase chances of winning. Coaches always want more access to their players because, by and large, they think they can do more good the more they are around their guys.

          "In my opinion, the huge benefit comes with the incoming freshmen," Creighton coach Greg McDermott said. "They're leaving home. They graduate on one day and head to summer school the next day. So for us to have interaction with them on a weekly basis, it's a huge positive."

          The freshman factor is huge, considering some of the schools going on foreign trips later this year get a head start on including and indoctrinating the newbies into their programs. No longer does the foreign trip have to be the time where the team first gets to know each other. Because of these weekly practices, players are now coming into the gym at the same time instead of swooping in and out at their leisure and according to their whimsy.

          "Before this, guys wanted to work out and get better, but they didn't have the right person during the summer," new Mississippi State coach Rick Ray said. "You were having runners and agents get their hands on kids in college, and one way to do that was to have access and have guys work them out over the summer."

          This has been, and remains, a huge concern. When coaches weren't able to work out with their players, who were these guys going to? Sometimes it's the shady, fringe characters coaches couldn't call out by name but pick out by a face. During summer months college players roamed about, unchecked and detached, and tampered with the professional side of the sport. Basically, players would go off and work out in a place -- Vegas, for example -- and quietly break the rules, endangering a program while doing so.

          Ray will benefit as much as anyone this year, as he is in his first months not only as the new coach of the Bulldogs, but it's also his first head-coaching job.

          "The NCAA without question got this one right," Ray said. "In my case, where you're a new coach coming in and you've got seven incoming players, I would've been so far behind as far as trying to implement my system come the fall. "On the court you get a chance to connect with your kids. We don't do any group sessions or team sessions. I think kids really appreciate the fact you're taking the time to work on their individual game. That is valuable as far as building a relationship, person-to-person."

          Mississippi State has two summer sessions, but Ray didn't require his players to be there for both. In fact, he encourages his players to be home for the first session. But the second started July 5, where Ray runs three 40-minute workouts per week. Ray opts for the three sessions, whereas McDermott holds two one-hour practices. Basically, the mileage may vary but everyone's enjoying the new road to building a program.

          Well, almost everyone.

          ****
          “It's an awesome rule and I think everybody's so excited about it, and it'll be interesting to see, as we get into the later parts of the year. Everybody thinking it's the greatest rule in a very, very long time.”

          Those are the words of Cornell's Bill Courtney. He's the coach of the Big Red. But you know what Courtney doesn't have? The luxury of summer practice with his players. He's a big, big fan of the rule -- maybe more than most others, specifically because he doesn't have the liberty to employ it. Almost all other Division I teams -- and all other leagues -- have been practicing with each other since June's summer classes began. One conference is still stuck a level or seven behind. Yep. Ivy League.

          The Ivy League doesn't permit its players to work out with its coaches during the summer because the Ivy League's a bit like diehard Radiohead fans. Intentionally and overweeningly elite, all too happy to fence itself off. You just don't get it. (By the way, The Bends was the best one.)

          The primary reason the Ivy doesn't -- or can't, really -- benefit from the new rule: Harvard and Princeton don't have summer school. Without every Ivy school having a chance to get its players into the gym during the summer, no one will. That's just a fact. Another fact is, Harvard and Princeton run the Ivy League, and I'm not just talking about the basketball. The trickle-down effect -- the reason why the Ivy is like this -- stems from powers-that-be at the aforementioned two elephantine institutions of American collegiate education, and the interests of said powers most certainly do not lie in winning basketball games. If a list was made, Harvard succeeding in hoops might not make the first volume let alone the first page.

          If you'd like to know more of what the culture inside the Ivy is, consider this: multiple coaches from the conference were interviewed for this piece. All talked freely about what they don't like about their prohibition from summer hoops, but none would go on the record except Courtney. Some specifically requested not to be even quoted anonymously. And I really wish they hadn't pressed for that, because two of them had some good, strong, need-to-be-heard words about how the Ivy is restricted here.

          As for any hope of this rule changing in the next five years ...

          “It's a non-conversation,” one said. "Even if all the teams had summer school, it's something that wouldn't be legislated right now."

          Because, while summer school is offered at most Ivy League schools, it's not covered by financial aid package. The Ivy does not hand out scholarships for players, so, whereas a scholarship school can pay for summer classes, in the Ivy, if you're in summer school you're paying out of your own pocket. That's three, four or five thousands dollars each summer instead of interning somewhere and setting one's self up for a career after college hoops.

          The priorities are different in the Ivy, and that's fine, but most within the league believe there should be wiggle room to meet closer to the middle.

          “We all want the opportunity to work with our guys," Courtney said. "It doesn't have to be for eight weeks, but any opportunity, from a coaching perspective, is something that we'd all try."

          At Harvard, seven players are working out on campus with strength and conditioning coaches and people of their choice. None are coaches. This is blocking teams' chances not necessarily to definitively win, but to grow as a program and to bring in better players long-term. It's another handcuff in recruiting, to be certain. The Ivy League wants guys to do an internship at Goldman Sachs instead of working on their 15-foot jumper in the middle of June. There are benefits to both, believe it or not. Just as improving one's game isn't for everyone, the same can be said for aligning with a hedge fund. After college Billy Donovan briefly worked on Wall Street before realizing he wanted to be involved with basketball for the rest of his life.

          "Many people thing it's another way for the Ivy League to slow down the expansion and explosion of success in men's basketball," one coach said.

          Another near-consensus opinion: The internships factor in the summertime is what makes the Ivy peerless, but when the coaches are trying to compete at the highest possible level, the challenge is so beyond what most other schools are doing.

          "It's a little bit of a disadvantage since we have to compete against those teams that get to work out, but at the same time, with the length of the season, from that perspective, you don't want to work your guys so much because you don't want them to get tired of your voice during the season,” Courtney said. And it's an interesting point. A certain level of acceptance-meets-denial, or in a lot of cases is too much coaching a bad thing?

          “I talked with some guys about that [while recruiting this month], and some are concerned," Courtney added. "Maybe come February you might hear of a spot where they've heard your voice too much and there's a lull in what you're trying to do. And for us, since we can't [train during the summer], that's great because there's no [Ivy] tournament, so there's no time to recover.”

          If there's a benefit for the Ivy, it's there. No coaching overkill. A lessened chance of huddles becoming batches of white noise by season's end. For coaches -- and for many players in the Ivy, too, by the way -- that doesn't outweigh the positives being blockaded by eliminating the possibility of summer workouts.

          Imagine the Ivies moving up to a plane of true competitive balance in college basketball. The schools and coaches and athletes getting the same benefits as everyone else. It'd be great. The smartest institutions with an enhanced presence in the sport and legitimate fair shake at running down recruits and victories that would transcend their cute and cozy niche.

          News and Notes: Tuesday Edition

          Below, news and notes for Tuesday...

          • Stefan Bondy of the New York Daily News reports that the Brooklyn Nets could sign Nzar Mohammed to fill the team's final roster spot in the low post. Bondy tweeted, "I haven't seen enough of Summer League to know if Jeff Foote or any other big man is good enough to be an NBA backup center."


          • Well before Cornell took down Wisconsin on March 21, 2010 in the NCAA Tournament's second round, advancing the Big Red to the Sweet Sixteen against Kentucky, many national sportswriters were already suggesting that Cornell could be the "Cinderella" of the upcoming tournament.  Below, a look back at one such article from February 2010.
          Could Cornell be this year's Cinderella?
          By Jeff Goodman
          Fox Sports

          February 21, 2010
          This isn't the same Cornell team that lost to Missouri in the first round of the NCAA tournament a year ago.
          "We're light years ahead of last year," Big Red coach Steve Donahue said.
          That was clear after watching Cornell hit shot after shot to knock off Harvard, 79-70, in front of a sold-out crowd of 2,195 crammed into Lavietes Pavillion.
          Seven-footer Jeff Foote has changed his body and is now able to score in the post.
          Point guard Louis Dale is healthy and pushing all the right buttons after battling injuries though much of last season.
          Ryan Wittman has improved his all-around game and isn't nearly as one-dimensional of a scorer.
          The emergence of Chris Wroblewski has allowed Donahue to move Geoff Reeves into a valuable reserve role, and Jon Jacques has developed into the best power forward he's had in his 10 years at the helm in Ithaca.
          No one is going to want to play Cornell come March.
          Just ask Kansas coach Bill Self or Sherron Collins.
          "He told us about how dangerous Cornell was, but I didn't expect that," Collins said after a five-point win over the Big Red on Jan. 6 in Lawrence.
          Just about everyone on the team is capable of making shots. In fact, five players make more than 40 percent of their threes.
          Against Harvard, the Big Red made 12-of-23 from beyond the arc. Randy Wittman's kid, Ryan, was 6-for-12 from long distance, and Dale, not exactly known as one of the team's top perimeter marksmen, was 4-for-6 from deep and made three consecutive 3-pointers midway through the second half that basically sealed the outcome.
          "They don't miss," added Harvard's talented freshman Kyle Casey.
          If you decide to get out and focus on the perimeter shooters, Foote, who is averaging 12.6 points per game and making 61 percent of his shots from the field, will hurt you in the paint.
          "He makes us a different team," Wittman said of his 7-foot teammate. "I've never seen a 7-footer be able to pass like him. He's also so different from last year because he takes his time and doesn't rush."
          There were questions whether there was a chink in the armor after Penn, a team with just three victories all year, pulled a shocking upset against Cornell a few weeks back.
          Maybe Harvard, which sat just a game back from Cornell entering Friday night's matchup, could get revenge for the 86-50 Big Red rout in Ithaca on Jan. 30 and turn the Ivy League title into a virtual toss-up.
          "This game was huge for us. No doubt," admitted Donahue. "With no conference tournament, it was without question the most important game I've had in my 10 years here. We couldn't afford to lose."
          And they didn't.
          Now, Cornell has taken back command of the Ivy League despite the fact the Big Red are just 1/2-game in front of Princeton. Cornell has already beaten Princeton on the road and will play the Tigers again on Jan. 26 on its home floor.
          "They don't have any holes," Harvard coach Tommy Amaker said of Cornell after the game.
          Dale seemingly makes all the correct decisions, he and his teammates move and share the ball and the Big Red boasts four senior starters with plenty of experience.
          The issue in the loss to Penn was a lackluster defensive effort, but that wasn't the case against a Harvard team that featured one of the nation's top guards in Jeremy Lin and also one of the league's rising stars in Casey.
          "The key for us is defense," Dale said. "We've got to be able to defend because I think we have a lot of weapons offensively."
          Despite Lin finishing with 24 points, the Big Red did a nice job swarming him when he got into the lane and making life difficult for him in the half-court.
          Cornell improved to 22-4 with the win and two of the four setbacks came to a pair of potential No. 1 seeds: Kansas and Syracuse. There was also a home loss to Seton Hall and the stunner against Penn.
          "I think the loss to Penn kind of woke us up," Dale said.
          Dale and his teammates were certainly up to the task on Friday night, and it would be a shock if the Big Red doesn't win the Ivy.
          It also wouldn't be much of a surprise if Donahue's team pulls a first-round upset the first weekend of the Big Dance.
          "We've got senior leadership and a lot more confidence," Wittman said. "But we've got to make the tournament first."
          "They are capable of making a Davidson-like run," Amaker said while referring to Stephen Curry and Davidson nearly knocking off Kansas two years ago in the Elite Eight. "We're not ready to beat those guys, but not many are."

          News and Notes: Monday Edition

          Below some news and notes for Monday...

          • On Shonn Miller's ranking by The Big Lead among the nation's Top 50 players, Penn alumnus, Jonathan Tannenwald writes for his blog on Philly.com, "of note is the fact that Cornell's Shonn Miller is the only Ivy League player on the list at No. 50. I'm just a mainstream media writer, but I'm surprised that Miller got in ahead of Harvard's Kyle Casey."

          • On the NBA Summer League, Hoops World writes, "Brooklyn has also been grooming former Cornell center Jeff Foote. He’s on the Nets’ Summer League roster and was a member of their D-League team, the Springfield Armor. Foote has averaged 6.2 points, 5.8 rebounds and 0.8 blocks in 20.4 minutes per game. Most recently, Foote played 28 minutes against the Pacers Summer League team, grabbing 11 rebounds and scoring 11 points." See USA Today: Nets' coach, Avery Johnson mentioned that Jeff Foote could be in the mix for a final roster spot.
          • Below, from our regular series, A Date in Cornell Basketball History, an image of the official box score from a November 11, 2005 exhibition game when Jeff Foote played for St. Bonaventure against Bloomsburg University.  Foote never appeared in official game for the Bonnies, opting for a red-shirt during the 2005-2006 season.  Foote ultimately transferred to Cornell, sitting out the 2006-2007 season and the fall semester of the 2007-2008 season.  He played just 2.5 years of college basketball before embarking on his pro career.

          News and Notes: Saturday Edition

          Below some news and notes for Saturday...

          • Cornell's Shonn Miller was named by the Big Lead Sports as one of the country's Top 50 players. He was the only Ivy League player on the list and was ranked #50. Big Lead notes of Miller, "The Ivy League’s rookie of the year (8.9 ppg, 6.1 rpg, 1.7 blocks per game)." 
          • See Jeff Foote's box score from Friday action with the Brooklyn Nets in the NBA Summer League.  Foote finished with a double-double posting a stat line of 11 points (5/6 FGs), 11 rebounds, 1 assist and 1 steal. SBNation.com wrote of the game, "First-round Draft pick Miles Plumlee looked fatigued and played ineffectively against Brooklyn. The back-to-basket center missed nine of his 12 shot attempts and hauled in only six rebounds in 30 minutes. D-Leaguer Jeff Foote soundly outplayed him, which does not bode well for Plumlee's NBA prospects." Recapping Foote's action on Friday, the Ithaca Journal writes:
          ORLANDO -- Cornell University graduate Jeff Foote saved perhaps his best performance of the NBA's summer league for last, recording a double-double against Indiana on Friday as the Brooklyn Nets avoided a winless campaign by beating the Pacers, 90-77, in the finale of the Orlando Pro Summer League 2012.
          The 7-foot Foote, a three-time All-Ivy center at Cornell, started his fifth game in a row and finished with 11 points and a game-high 10 rebounds in nearly 28 minutes, his longest outing in Orlando. The Spencer-Van Etten graduate made 5-of-6 shots from the field and was 1-of-3 from the free-throw line. Foote also added one assist, one steal and committed one turnover and one foul.
          The Nets finished with a 1-4 record. Marshon Brooks, a shooting guard for the Nets during the 2011-12 season, led all scorers with 34 points, tying a summer league record. The Pacers were 2-3 in the league.
          After scoring 10 points and collecting six rebounds in his first game Monday, Foote combined for jst one point in his next two outings before bouncing back with nine points and seven rebounds on Thursday.
          Foote, who played professionally in Israel, Morocco and Poland after graduating in 2010, attended the Nets' free agent camp May 21-23. In March, Foote was called up by the New Orleans Hornets on a 10-day NBA contract while playing for the Springfield Armor of the NBA Development League. He averaged 15.1 points and 8.9 rebounds in 39 games with the Nets' affiliate.
          Foote might get invited to the Nets' preseason camp ahead of the 2012-13 regular season. Following last year's NBA lockout, he accepted an invitation to the Portland Trail Blazers' preseason camp but did not make the team.

          News and Notes: Friday Edition

          Above, Jeff Foote (Cornell '10) in action in the NBA Summer League with the Brooklyn Nets.  Below, some news and notes for Friday...


          • Below, WENY (ABC News, Elmira, NY) covers Jeff Foote's (Cornell '10) performance yesterday for the Brooklyn Nets against the Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Summer League.


          ORLANDO -- After off games in his two previous outings, Cornell University graduate Jeff Foote bounced back to post his most complete game of the week on Thursday as part of the Brooklyn Nets in the Orlando Pro Summer League 2012.
          Foote, a three-time All-Ivy League center at Cornell (2008-10), started his fourth consecutive game and played 19 minutes, finishing with nine points, a game-high seven rebounds, two assists and one blocked shot. Foote made 4 of 9 shots from the field and went 1-for-2 from the foul line. He did not play in the second quarter. The Nets fell to 0-4 in the Summer League, falling to the Oklahoma City Thunder, 87-86.
          After scoring 10 points and collecting six rebounds in his first outing of the Summer League on Monday, Foote struggled in the next two games, scoring one point combined.
          Foote, a 7-footer from Spencer-Van Etten, was the Nets' third-leading scorer Thursday. Point-guard Tyshawn Taylor, a 2012 first-round draft pick by the Nets from Kansas, finished with a game-high 23 points on 9-for-18 shooting and a team-high five assists.
          Foote, who attended the Nets' free agent camp May 21-23, was called up by the New Orleans Hornets on a 10-day NBA contract in March. He played with the Springfield Armor of the NBA Development League and averaged 15.1 points and 8.9 rebounds in 39 games with the Nets' affiliate.
          The Nets will play their last game in the Summer League against the Indiana Pacers at 2 p.m. Friday.
          • The New York Post reflects on yesterday's game and Nets guard, Tyshawn Taylor and writes, "He did make a few wild passes, including one attempted alley-oop to Jeff Foote where he flung the ball somewhere in Foote’s general direction after leaping into the air and turning his back to his 7-foot center. But he also made a nice floater shortly after that, and then immediately came down and hit Foote for a dunk on the next possession."
          • CeliticsLife.com writes of the Celtics-Nets game on Wednesday and Celtics post, Jared Sullinger, "[Sullinger] struggled against former Cornell Center Jeff Foote, a “legitimate 7-Footer” who gave the shorter Sullinger trouble in the post and held him to 3 of 12 from the field.

          News and Notes: Thursday Edition

          Above, Jeff Foote (Cornell '10) and Brook Lopez battle in the paint during the 2008 NCAA Tournament.  Lopez and Foote could end up as teammates this season for the Brooklyn Nets.  Below, some news and notes for Thursday...
          For the second straight game, Jeff Foote failed to make an impact with the Brooklyn Nets in the Orlando Pro Summer League 2012.
          Foote, a three-time All-Ivy League center at Cornell University, started and played 16 minutes but was held scoreless on one field goal attempt Wednesday. The 2010 graduate grabbed five rebounds, two of them offensive, had an assist and committed a foul.
          The Nets fell to 0-3 in the Summer League, losing to the Philadelphia 76ers, 79-71, at the Amway Center. The Sixers are 1-2.
          Foote, a 7-footer from Spencer-Van Etten High, scored a point Tuesday, after finishing with 10 points and six rebounds in his first outing of the Summer League on Monday.
          Marshon Brooks, who played for the Nets during the 2011-12 regular season, was the Nets' leading scorer with 18 points. Recent University of Pennsylvania graduate Zach Rosen came off the Philadelphia bench to score six points and hand out six assists in nearly 17 minutes on the floor.
          Foote, who attended the Nets' free agent camp May 21-23, was called up by the New Orleans Hornets on a 10-day NBA contract in March. He played with the Springfield Armor of the NBA Development League and averaged 15.1 points and 8.9 rebounds in 39 games with the Nets' affiliate.
          The Nets will play the Oklahoma City Thunder at 1 p.m. today.
          • The New York Post noted that Nets' coach, Avery Johnson was  pleased with how the entire starting five – Tyshawn Taylor, MarShon Brooks, Tornike Shengelia, Bryant Dunston and Jeff Foote – played during the first quarter on Wednesday, when the Nets jumped out to an early lead over the 76ers.  “I thought just our whole starting team [did well],” he said. “I thought Taylor did a nice job running the team, I thought MarShon did a nice job, Toko, Dunston and Foote. I thought that group did a good job."  Prior to Wednesday's game, the Post noted, "Jeff Foote had a rough game Tuesday [against the Celtics], finishing with one point and two rebounds in 19 minutes. After playing much of last season for the Springfield Armor, the Nets’ D-League affiliate, Foote has a chance to earn a roster spot with a strong week this week, given the Nets’ lack of size on their roster currently and lack of financial flexibility moving forward.  But it would do him well to have a performance closer to Monday’s 10 points and six rebounds against the Celtics than how he played Tuesday.  Can the unheralded big men continue to impress?" 
          • Below, WENY covered Foote's Wednesday performance against the 76ers:




          News and Notes: Wednesday Edition

          Above, Jeff Foote (Cornell '10) of the Brooklyn Nets defends Jared Sullinger of the Boston Celtics during the NBA Summer League on Tuesday.  Below, some news and notes for Wednesday...


          • Jeff Foote (Cornell '10) was limited to 19 minutes of action yesterday in the NBA Summer League playing for the Brooklyn Nets.  Foote finished 0/1 from the floor and 1/2 at the FT line for 1 point, 1 block and 1 assist.  The Elmira Star Gazette recaps the game and writes, "Jeff Foote was held to one point and zero rebounds in his second outing with the Brooklyn Nets in the Orlando Pro Summer League 2012.  Foote, a Cornell University graduate and three-time All-Ivy center, played 19 minutes, 21 seconds Tuesday.  The Nets (0-2) shot just 38.7 percent and lost, 82-73, to the Boston Celtics at Amway Center.  Foote was 0-for-1 from the field and 1-for-2 from the free-throw line. The Spencer-Van Etten graduate finished with one assist, one block and two personal fouls.  Foote scored 10 points and grabbed six rebounds in a 92-88 loss to the Orlando Magic on Monday." See the Ithaca Journal for a recap of Monday's game.  The Springfield Republican writes, "The [NBA D-League's Springfield Armor] are coming off the best season in their three-year history, posting a 29-21 record, winning the East Conference title and reaching the playoffs for the first time.  Foote was a big part of that success in his first year in the D-League. The Cornell graduate was one of its top centers, averaging 15.1 points and 8.9 rebounds. His 15 double-doubles were tops in the league at his position.  Foote, who earned a call-up to the New Orleans Hornets last season, is looking to land a roster spot in the NBA.  'For the most part, I’m just trying to show I can fill a hole in a spot and be a good fit for most teams,' Foote said. 'I’m looking to get more offensive rebounds and play good defense, so I guess that’s what I’m looking to show.'"  Foote and the Nets face the 76ers today at 3 pm.  A blogger from the Bleacher Report evaluates Foote as a Net.

          • Jeff Aubry (Cornell '99) has signed for another season with the Halcones Rojos of the Mexican LNBP.  The 6'11" center has played with the team since the 2009-2010 season.  See the Google translated article from Noventa Minutos.