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  1. #1

    Harvard gets first Ivy League top 100 player.

    Not sure if this had been posted. http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/201...wan/index.html

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    Excellent!

    Quote Originally Posted by gwlaw99 View Post
    First I've seen it. Sounds like an impressive young man. Best of luck to him (and his college coach).

  3. #3
    So Harvard has a basketball mill/prep school it sends non-ivy league qualifiers to... Only 3 more horse men to go.

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    No Big Deal

    In the 1960's, when Sport Magazine was the word on thes subjects in a pre-season issue, the Ivies were filled with many top 50 rated recruits, beginning, of course, with Bill Bradley. Princeton also had Geoff Petri, Gary Walters, the Hummer brothers, Columbia, Grant's old man (don't think he played basketball though) and Brian Dowling, Columia (Stanley something and Neil Farber, real strong backcourt, followed by Jim McMillian, another black dude who I think had a cup of coffee, and Shorty Newmark, Cornell, about a bunch--Greg Morris (first black All Ivy), Hank South 6'5' strong, fast, highly skilled inside and outside player who could put it on the floor and shoot off catch and standstill and, like Greg would have been star anywhere, Walt Esdale, 6'7" 265 lb Center from famed Hillhouse in Conn. with soft hands, great rebounder, defnder, lefty and righty hook, brought it up on the press and would have started anywhere, or nearly so; Steve Cram (brilliant Center, money lefty and righty hooks, put it on ground, Bob DeLuca (think Verga), and Bob Derube, core of Cornell's best recruiting class, Blaine Austin (a blurr who no one could stay in front of and killer outside shot), and Dave Bliss (infamous coach/ deciple of Knight's who coached K at Army and with K at Indiana). Cornell also had the Reynolds brothers, one class of 6'5" forward and the other a 6'4" guard who were rated very high and played up to their reps as freshman and went on to other (ahem forms of recreation, it was the 60's) or Cornell might well have won several Ivy league Championships in the mid-1960s) Penn went to the final four under a class recruited by Dailey consisting of center/forward (Littlepage) who I think is still the AD at Virginia, a 6'9' forward who was as tough as nails and seemed a sure pro (I seem to recall that his name was Calhoun), and a backcourt consisting of one guy who was AD at GWU and another (Ross, I think)who played in the NBA and has been an assistant on a number of NBA teams since. Harvard had a 5'8" guard, Glenn Fine, who got pro tryout, took Rhodes scholarship instead and became Inspector General for the Justice Department, and James Brown, a high school All American who has all those prominent NFL shows on the tube.

    So, Harvard's "accomplishment" is in reality unexceptionable.

    That's just

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    Quote Originally Posted by greybeard View Post
    So, Harvard's "accomplishment" is in reality unexceptionable.
    You might want to open the blinds. The world has changed in the past few decades.

  6. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by anon View Post
    You might want to open the blinds. The world has changed in the past few decades.
    Exactly, comparing what happened in college basketball 50 years ago with what is going on today is... well not really relevant is it. I think it says a lot about Tommy and what he is doing at Harvard. Keep it up old friend!

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    Quote Originally Posted by anon View Post
    You might want to open the blinds. The world has changed in the past few decades.
    Guess I'll have to:

    Princeton Bill Bradly drafted first, averaged 12.4 during his 10 seasons with Knicks, started on two Championsip terams,either of which I would have loved see play the Heat, especially the one with Pearl and Clyde in the backcourt and Jerry Lucas backing up Willis (there were two First team All American's on the bench behind Bradley who had outstanding careers with the Knicks); Geoff Petrie, Rookie of the Year avering 24.2, 2X AllStar until blew out knee; Brian Tayler, 8 year NBA career at 14 per game, 2 ABA championships with Nets and the good Doctor and McGuiness (I'd like to see that team play the Heat)

    Columbia: Jim McMillian 13 year career, starter, scoring 18 per game for 1972 Laker Championship with Wilt and West (I definitely would like to see that team play the Heat); Shorty Newmark 3 years in NBA, Heyward Dotson, scored 1000 points in being named best in the NYC, 1000 points in college (3 years), drated by NBA and ABA, took a Rhodes instead;

    Penn: from team that twice went deep into the tournament, losing in the semi finals to Magic's Mich St the first time, and making the final 8 the next, Corky Calhoun, a total and complete beast, drafted no 4, 9 years in NBA; Dave Wohl 7 years in NBA, head coach of Nets, 2 years, lengthy career as NBA assistant; Steve Bilsky, runner up for Naismith, terrific career as college AD; Craig Littlepage, terrific career as college coach and executive (definitely would like to see them play any number of teaams in the NBA, but not the Heat;

    Dartmouth: Rudy Tomjanovich;

    Harvard Linn

    Yale Chris Dudley 15 years

    Cornell 1963-67: beat Ohio State in Columbus, Kentucky, the year after the Texas Western game, in Lexington by 35, Cornell's first team All Ivy guard, 6 foot Greg Morris' (the highest vertical you've ever seen) dropping 37 on Pat Riley's head with Cornell winning by 35.

    During my three years at Cornell, the following players, in my opinion, could have started or played significant minutes on any number of ACC teams since shortly before the K era began: Greg Morris, Walt Esdale, and Hank South (all would have started for many ACC teams nearly every year during that era, some for Duke a few of the last 10 seasons); Bob DeLuka, Dave Bliss, Steve Crama Blain Aston would have played significant minutes on most ACC teams, occasionally starting for one team or another in some years.

    The blinds are opened, no?
    Last edited by greybeard; 07-09-2012 at 11:09 PM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by greybeard View Post
    Guess I'll have to:

    Princeton Bill Bradly drafted first, averaged 12.4 during his 10 seasons with Knicks, started on two Championsip terams,either of which I would have loved see play the Heat, especially the one with Pearl and Clyde in the backcourt and Jerry Lucas backing up Willis (there were two First team All American's on the bench behind Bradley who had outstanding careers with the Knicks); Geoff Petrie, Rookie of the Year avering 24.2, 2X AllStar until blew out knee; Brian Tayler, 8 year NBA career at 14 per game, 2 ABA championships with Nets and the good Doctor and McGuiness (I'd like to see that team play the Heat)

    Columbia: Jim McMillian 13 year career, starter, scoring 18 per game for 1972 Laker Championship with Wilt and West (I definitely would like to see that team play the Heat); Shorty Newmark 3 years in NBA, Heyward Dotson, scored 1000 points in being named best in the NYC, 1000 points in college (3 years), drated by NBA and ABA, took a Rhodes instead;

    Penn: from team that twice went deep into the tournament, losing in the semi finals to Magic's Mich St the first time, and making the final 8 the next, Corky Calhoun, a total and complete beast, drafted no 4, 9 years in NBA; Dave Wohl 7 years in NBA, head coach of Nets, 2 years, lengthy career as NBA assistant; Steve Bilsky, runner up for Naismith, terrific career as college AD; Craig Littlepage, terrific career as college coach and executive (definitely would like to see them play any number of teaams in the NBA, but not the Heat;

    Dartmouth: Rudy Tomjanovich;

    Harvard Linn

    Yale Chris Dudley 15 years

    Cornell 1963-67: beat Ohio State in Columbus, Kentucky, the year after the Texas Western game, in Lexington by 35, Cornell's first team All Ivy guard, 6 foot Greg Morris' (the highest vertical you've ever seen) dropping 37 on Pat Riley's head with Cornell winning by 35.

    During my three years at Cornell, the following players, in my opinion, could have started or played significant minutes on any number of ACC teams since shortly before the K era began: Greg Morris, Walt Esdale, and Hank South (all would have started for many ACC teams nearly every year during that era, some for Duke a few of the last 10 seasons); Bob DeLuka, Dave Bliss, Steve Crama Blain Aston would have played significant minutes on most ACC teams, occasionally starting for one team or another in some years.

    The blinds are opened, no?
    So, I'm 31 years old. Only 2 of the people you mentioned above were recruits after I was born, and one of those guys committed to college when I was 2 (give or take). Much of what you're describing above is from ~50 years ago. No one is saying that the Ivy League doesn't have a rich basketball history. What people are saying (accurately) is that the Ivy League, as a general matter, hasn't been recruiting top 100 talent for as long as I've been alive - I'm not saying I'm old, but that's a long time. Your argument is akin to saying that a trip by Duke football to a BCS bowl game would be nothing remarkable since it was a Rose Bowl participant in the '40s.

    Also, not for nothing, but you're confusing your Penn teams. Penn's lone final four appearance was in 1979. Calhoun, Wohl, and Littlepage played in the early 70s (while Magic was in elementary school).
    Just be you. You is enough. - K, 4/5/10, 0:13.8 to play, 60-59 Duke.

    You're all jealous hypocrites. - Titus on Laettner

    You see those guys? Animals. They're animals. - SIU Coach Chris Lowery, on Duke

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    Quote Originally Posted by pfrduke View Post
    So, I'm 31 years old. Only 2 of the people you mentioned above were recruits after I was born, and one of those guys committed to college when I was 2 (give or take). Much of what you're describing above is from ~50 years ago. No one is saying that the Ivy League doesn't have a rich basketball history. What people are saying (accurately) is that the Ivy League, as a general matter, hasn't been recruiting top 100 talent for as long as I've been alive - I'm not saying I'm old, but that's a long time. Your argument is akin to saying that a trip by Duke football to a BCS bowl game would be nothing remarkable since it was a Rose Bowl participant in the '40s.

    Also, not for nothing, but you're confusing your Penn teams. Penn's lone final four appearance was in 1979. Calhoun, Wohl, and Littlepage played in the early 70s (while Magic was in elementary school).
    All the players mentioned would have played on big time programs in the NCAA, and many would have made the NBA, some would have been quite good today. If the game has changed so much, the Laker team that McMillian played for and scored 18 per game is one of the gratest in history. they were lead by Jerry West and Wilot, they won 33 in a row, 69 during a much shorter season, and would have killed the Heat. Bradley's championsip teams also. The first had starters, in addition to Bradley, Willis Reed (better by far than any big on the Heat, Debushure who would have defended LeBron better than anyone in the NBA today, shot the three ball terrifically and went to the basket from distance andran the break better thaan any big forward the Heat had, and most in the NBA today, Fraiser, who out played Jerry West (scored 40 in the Championship game, many off of steals from West, was a defender without peer in the NBA today and woud at least have been at least a wash against Wade, "Score" Barnet who would have killed the second guard for the Heat, Bradley who was so slick moving without the ball and scoring it, creating space by strategic moves without the ball, a killer three shooter in today's game, and a guy who would have scored between 16 and 18 points per game if the Knicks hadn't have the best passing game and so many great scorers (in addition to the starters, they had two small forwardsteams in Russell and Dave Stallworth who would have killed anybody coming off the bench for the Heat, Phil Jackson as a backup power forward, ditto to anyone the Heat could have played against the Heat, Dean Meminger backup guard (think the starting other Heat guard here, and a 7 fooot back up Center who was way better than anyone the Heat would have put up also. The next championship team, add Earl Monroe (read a bit). Petre would have started for just about every NBA tean today, if not all; McMillain, Bradley, and Rudy, or perhaps more would have started or been many major contribors in the NBA and stars in the NCCA, and all of the others would have either starred or been significant playersin the current NCAA. Ask the "old" guys on this board.

  10. #10

    the ivies

    I think the contention in this threat is somewhat due to the title: "Harvard Gets First Ivy League top 100 player."

    Like Greybeard, I did a double-take at that claim and prepared to respond with several of the examples he cited.

    But to be fair, the linked story only says that Harvard landed the first "Scout top 100" since Scout starting ranking recruits. Not sure how long that's been -- but the RSCI goes back to 1998 and doesn't include any Ivy top 100 players.

    In that context, Harvard's recent commitment is significant ... although as Jason points out, Harvard signed a top 100 plaer in 2011, according to Rivals. No matter -- we can agree that Tommy has done a tremendous job at Harvard. The recruiting is nice, but the back to back Ivy ttles (the 2011 one shared) are even more impressive.

    PS Greybeard ... just one small correction. Rudy Tomjanovich played for Michigan, not Dartmouth. I was lucky enough to make the try to Ann Arbor on Dec. 10, 1970 when Randy Denton (27 pts, 12 rebounds) overpoerwed Tomjanovich (20 points 10 rebounds) and led Duke to a victoru over the Wolverines.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Olympic Fan View Post

    PS Greybeard ... just one small correction. Rudy Tomjanovich played for Michigan, not Dartmouth. I was lucky enough to make the try to Ann Arbor on Dec. 10, 1970 when Randy Denton (27 pts, 12 rebounds) overpoerwed Tomjanovich (20 points 10 rebounds) and led Duke to a victoru over the Wolverines.
    Rudy LaRusso played at Dartmouth a decade or so before Rudy Tomjanovich played for Michigan.

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    Quote Originally Posted by jimsumner View Post
    Rudy LaRusso played at Dartmouth a decade or so before Rudy Tomjanovich played for Michigan.
    That sometimes happens to oloder guys. By the way, and while duke professor might well have a point to make, others who have posted clearly were going the way that I addressed--that the game in the 60s somehow that they don't mention was inferior to the game as it is played today. As a general proposition, throughout college basketball in both eras, the proposition is indefensible by any measure. Three of the Ivy league players I mentioned played on teams that would have won NBA Championships in this era, and many other NCAA and pro teams of the 60's, 70's, 80s of that era would have rocked the best of the best on both levels. In addition to the Wilt-West Championship team--it is difficult to see any "modern" team matching them--and the Knicks, I forgot to say that Bilsky played on two Net ABA Championship teams, that last lead by a tamdom of forwards, a Carl Malone equivolent in George McKinnis and some guy that was simply referred to as Doc.

    You need to remember that the era I'm talking about produced great teams lead by those two UCLA guys, Kareem and Bill Walton, a State team lead by a guy named Thompson, Duke teams lead by guys named Heyman and Mullins, and scores of other names and teams that would have rocked the current college basketball world. Bradley's Princeton went to the final four, as did the great Penn team in the 60s, and, as I pointed out, only because I am intimately familiar with it, Cornell beat the best of the best in two out of the four years I was there, including Bradley's great Princeton team that in addition to Bradley contained the Hummer brothers who was easily the equivolent as college players as the Plumlee brothers.

    The Cornell team that I spoke of, by the way, produced at least one player who has and probably will continue to play in the pros, Foote, and who was probably the best passer and smartness in terms of what everyone likes to call "basketball smarts" in the college game. He was the guy that Cornell went to when the clock was closing down.

    A few other points, the Ivy League only permits the League's Champion to go to the Dance; many of the best Ivy League teams, lead by many great players, never make the dance. Who can say how those teams would have faired in the Dance had they been allowed to compete for sports. Also, the Ivies play back-to-back on weekends, travel by bus, and suffer the disadvantages of being thinner beond the starting five because of no-scholorship rules. That is often where they fall short of other non Ivies (recall the Cornell Duke game that was of course played at Cameron).

    This ratings of recruits I think is of little consequence. Sports magazine had the same type ratings system. The best of the best, top 20 so, everyone could agree were likely to succeed at a high level in College. Beyond that, especially today, the lesser "athletic" players and those with terrific "basketball smarts" and those from the tiny obscure Hamlets are, I would bet, are often overlooked by this rating organization. They often are the guys that the Ivies grab up, particularly if they are interested in a high level education (there are few such players who can get to play for teams like Duke and I would suspect many who do not want to.

    Hey, this was quite an enjoyable go round for me. I trust it was for the rest of you guys. I'm done in a nice way.

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    Can't really buy the "things have changed" argument too much either.

    By some scouting services (there weren't many back then) James Brown of DeMatha (now the sportscaster) was the top rated recruit in the entire country, and he went to Harvard (circa 1970).

    As Grey mentioned, Brian Taylor went to Princeton (Hubie Brown tried to recruit him for Duke) but his SAT scores were too low for ACC admittance.

    Sure, lots of things have changed (like black players dominating the sport) but both Brown and Taylor are black...

    The point is that Scout should have said "Harvard gets first Ivy League top 100 player since we began our rankings", a qualifier which would be considerably more accurate.

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    In regards to comparing generations of college basketball teams, the systematic exclusion of black players is at least somewhat mitigated by the loss of almost every NBA-ready player after 1 or 2 years of college ball. The hyperspecialization of teen athletes and the development of all-star high school teams like Oak Hill probably ratchets up the skillset of top 100 players, but the best college teams may be less able to load up since the presence of ESPN allows mid-level teams to advertise that their players will still be on tv and that they'll get more air time as a star at a mid major than as the 8th man at Duke or Kentucky.

    I'd still tend to say that this year's Olympic team would crush any individual all star team from the 50's or 60's--the earlier team would never have seen players as athletically dominating as Durant, Griffin, Bryant, and James though this year's team might not fare well against an all-time, at-their-best team cherry picked from 1955-1985.

    Having said that, I looked up the players from a random All Star game (I happened to pick 1960). The roster includes such marginal talents as Wilt Chamberlain, Bill Russell, Bob Cousy, and Elgin Baylor, and a total of a dozen guys who made the Hall of Fame. I stand corrected.

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    This really IS The Last

    Great Post John B. That said, I think that you will find that the All Star teams from 66 through 73 would likely, and in some instances, certainly, have beaten the current All Stars that you refer to who now lead the pack.

    There are a number of guys during those years whose games you are almost surely unfamiliar: To name just a few, Connie Hawkins, who had been kept out of the league since the mid 60' based upon some nonsense, Bob Pettitt, Spensor Heyward, to name a few (there are many more, like Rick Barry (there was a scoring machine to be reckoned with), Elvin Hays, Unseld, Thurmon, Sam Jones--he played behind several white guys Sharman and Ramsy whom he was much better than or he would have been a perenial All Star). The list goes on.

    Be, aware, the league during this era was stocked with great centers (almost all of whom would have killed the Griffins and Howards of today, and also was stocked with great shooters who followed the logical paradigm of the closer the better. I'd have to think many would have been great three ball shooters (some actually were great shooters from considerable distance), and there were probably many players in the league who were not all stars but would have killed the three ball and might have been.

    In the end, who knows how often even the supreme finishers of todays game would have been able to pull off their dazzling moves and high-wire finishes against the many great centers of yesterday. But then again, who knows how great many of the great defensive centers would have faired the way the game is called today and the extraordinarily gifted finishers lead by MJ, Kobe, and LeBron. Who knows.

    But, I do know that the game and players of today surpass and eclipse the game and players of "back then" is just that, a myth.

    Of all the innovations, the three point shoot has changed the game, for the worse I believe, simply to sell it. First, it was explained on the need to unclog the middle and take all the pushing and shoving among the bigs out of the game. I see much more pushing and shoving, climbing on guys' backs in inside play than existed or would have been tolerated back then. Back then they called that kind of play, fouls. Then they said that the three ball made the game more exciting by permitting more comebacks. I do not believe that that is so. It simply permits a team that has justly been beat to defeat that reality. What the three does, however, is wow people, and take the passing game, that went through true PIVOT players to get the best percentage shots possible away. That paridigm, however, informs every other sport that I know of.

    That said, today's game is terrific to watch, and the great shooter, penetrator, finishers of today, lead by Kobe, LeBron, and of course MJ, what can you say about them. As great as anything the world of basketball has produced.The second tier, the Wades and Pippins, also are terrific in any era.

    Gosh this has been fun, the past and the present, are they different realities or of one piece. Like Bagger Vance told the seemingly washed up great golfer who had lost himself in booze upon returning from WWI, "You have to remember, it might seem like a thousand years ago, but it was really just a second, you have to remember you were on this very field fightinhg the fiercest battles imaginable, yadayadayada."

    Well, I don't go as far as the Bagger thing, but at times, for me, the worlds we are discussing are simply on different plans, they seem to be happening at once, and it is just that we are labeling them past and present. The writings of Joyce and Borges (credit my son here) have given voice and painted pictures of just such a reality, if only we would see it. Who knows, but one thing is for sure--we are today built in large part of who we have always been to which pieces are added but partake of the person for whom time, direction, movement (the building blocks of life) were without reality as we conceive it. How a reality with those qualities is formed, and then the further essential blocks that we insist comprise what is real develop stay with us always.

    Pretty far out. I better stop before they send the wagon.
    Last edited by greybeard; 07-11-2012 at 03:46 PM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by greybeard View Post
    A few other points, the Ivy League only permits the League's Champion to go to the Dance; many of the best Ivy League teams, lead by many great players, never make the dance. Who can say how those teams would have faired in the Dance had they been allowed to compete for sports.
    I'm pretty sure this is not true. The Ivy does not hold a conference tournament, but if an Ivy League team was ever good enough to be selected for an at large spot, the conference would let it go. In any event, it's been a moot point over the past 20+ years, because the Ivy League has not had a team good enough to be an at large selection.
    Just be you. You is enough. - K, 4/5/10, 0:13.8 to play, 60-59 Duke.

    You're all jealous hypocrites. - Titus on Laettner

    You see those guys? Animals. They're animals. - SIU Coach Chris Lowery, on Duke

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    Quote Originally Posted by greybeard View Post
    A few other points, the Ivy League only permits the League's Champion to go to the Dance; many of the best Ivy League teams, lead by many great players, never make the dance. Who can say how those teams would have faired in the Dance had they been allowed to compete for sports. Also, the Ivies play back-to-back on weekends, travel by bus, and suffer the disadvantages of being thinner beond the starting five because of no-scholorship rules. That is often where they fall short of other non Ivies (recall the Cornell Duke game that was of course played at Cameron).

    Quote Originally Posted by pfrduke View Post
    I'm pretty sure this is not true. The Ivy does not hold a conference tournament, but if an Ivy League team was ever good enough to be selected for an at large spot, the conference would let it go. In any event, it's been a moot point over the past 20+ years, because the Ivy League has not had a team good enough to be an at large selection.

    I'm more than pretty sure it's not true. Here's the facts about the Ivy League's NCAA tournament performance in the last 25 years:

    1. In the last 25 years, the Ivy League's representative has won a total of five games, those being in 1994, 1996, 1998, and then the two games that Cornell won in 2010. The league's overall record is therefore 5-25.

    2. The Ivy team has always been seeded anywhere from 11 through 16, with two exceptions. One was the very good Princeton team of 1998, which was seeded #5, beat #12 UNLV, and then lost in the second round. The other was in 1991, when Princeton received a #8 seed but lost a close one to Villanova in the first round.

    3. On five other occasions, the Ivy team got as high as an 11 seed, where the opportunity to actually win a game is reasonably thought to be higher than when you're say, a 14 or 15 going up against a 3 or a 2. Those five years were in 1992, 1994, 1999, 2002, and 2003. In four of those five years, the 11th seeded Ivy team (usually Penn) lost in the first round, while in 1994 Penn did beat Nebraska before losing in the second round.

    4. In looking at the four years in which an Ivy won a game, in none of those years does it appear that the Ivy League runner-up was tournament-worthy, or even close, especially considering their schedules. In 1994, second place Princeton was 18-8 overall. In 1996, second place Penn was 17-10. In 1998, second place Penn was 17-12. And in 2010, second place Princeton was 22-9.

    5. In 1991, the year Princeton got an 8 seed, the Ivy League runner up was Yale at 17-9, not tournament-worthy either.

    So given the fact that the top Ivy teams have won tournament games so infrequently, added to the fact that the runners-up in the league have essentially never had the qualifications to make the tournament, if the question then is: who can say how additional Ivies would have fared had they been extended at-large bids to the tournament? I think the answer is pretty clear. Not well. Not well at all.

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    Look, the Cornell team that slaughtered the Kentucky team lead by Riley and Dampier came in third in the Ivy league. I repeat, case you didn't hear me, third. Princeton and Penn, whom Cornell always played at their courts during the last weekend of the season with the title up for grabs, always in my years at Cornell lost out, losing both (we won on our court, they did on theirs--they had better coaches). Here's a little tidbit I think you will find interesting and perhaps informative to the instant discussion..

    Cornell in '64 landed one of the top players in the nation, Greg Morris, because his parents, both school teachers, were tremendously impressed with the freshman coach. The next year Cornell grabbed another top ten recruit also Black, Walt Esdale, a huge guy with a terrific, off the charts basketball IQ who had great hands, quick feet, terrific dribbling skills and inside moves, and went 260 and 6'7". Esdale was joined the same year with yet another top 10 recruit, Hank South, 6'5", muscled, a great leaper with a great jump shot and moves to the basket. They were the fountainhead of the team that smashmouthed no. 1 ranked Kentucky. Morris was the first Black to make All Ivy first team, having scored 37 in Lexington.

    Cornell, which had great teams leading up to the 66-67 team, seemed to be rising, although all those teams went one, maybe two deep into the bench. Coumbia had two top ten recruits in Dotson and McMillian, and my senior year Penn landed Calhoun, drafted 4th, and Littlepage.

    It happened in the Fall of 1968. Two years before Cornell had become the hot bed of the antiwar movement and the antiwar and radical group, SDS. The next year was the first year that Cornell opened its doors to meaningful numbers of American black students. Until then, their number was so limited as to astound. Around 67, perhaps 68, Harry Edwards arrived at Cornell to study for a PHD in sociology (yes, that Harry Edwards, who was in the forefront of a near complete boycott by black athletes from the Olympics, you do recall the pictures of Smith and the other guy wearing black gloves on the victory stand, Edwards. This was about the time that the Black Power movement reached Amrican College campuses. What happened at Cornell, brought black issues with respect to higher education to the covers of Time and Newsweek in a way that no one could ignore. The campus woke up one morning to the news that members of the Black Student Union had taken over what was the centerpiece of student life on the Hill, Willard Straight Hall, and announced that they would sit in and keep everyone out until their demands were met by the colleges's administrators. Rumors spread that a bunch of hulking jock types were preparing to lead a charge that would take back the Straight, armed with bats that they were prepared to use if necessary. Were the rumors true. It didn't matter. The leaders of the occupiers were prepared. Pictures of them and a number of their brothers, with rifles held in the ready and amunition belts slung over their shoulders, all wearing olive army fatigue jackets, made headlines across the country, the covers of Time and Newsweek.

    While the Straight takeover undoubtedly lead to meaningful change for the better with respect to racial issues throughout higher educational institutions throughout the land. As far as I know, it also put an end to what portended to be a flow of high-end black student athletes to Ivies, Cornell certainly, for who knows how many years, even while the flow of black students to those universities grew, and the black experience and educational experiences bore lush fruit. Why did big-time black student athletes, and not stellar black students, shun these places, one can only speculate. My guess, the big time black student athletes were not only interested in receiving a great education but also being left to their pursuit of possible futures as professional athletes. For a wonderful discussion of those times, but not the Straight takeover because Greg had already graduated, Google, Greg Morris and Cornell Basketball, and pick the article honoring Greg in a Black History publication (there is also a wonderfully written piece on Cornell's trip to Lexington that makes wonderful reading.

    At any rate, whether the Straight takeover, and the pictures of guns and banderlaros, had anything to do with the slide of basketball in the Ivies I really cannot say. It is an interesting piece of history, and perhaps to the why of how that slide might have begun, and I thought it worth sharing it.

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    Quote Originally Posted by greybeard View Post
    All the players mentioned would have played on big time programs in the NCAA, and many would have made the NBA, some would have been quite good today. If the game has changed so much, the Laker team that McMillian played for and scored 18 per game is one of the gratest in history. they were lead by Jerry West and Wilot, they won 33 in a row, 69 during a much shorter season, and would have killed the Heat. Bradley's championsip teams also. The first had starters, in addition to Bradley, Willis Reed (better by far than any big on the Heat, Debushure who would have defended LeBron better than anyone in the NBA today, shot the three ball terrifically and went to the basket from distance andran the break better thaan any big forward the Heat had, and most in the NBA today, Fraiser, who out played Jerry West (scored 40 in the Championship game, many off of steals from West, was a defender without peer in the NBA today and woud at least have been at least a wash against Wade, "Score" Barnet who would have killed the second guard for the Heat, Bradley who was so slick moving without the ball and scoring it, creating space by strategic moves without the ball, a killer three shooter in today's game, and a guy who would have scored between 16 and 18 points per game if the Knicks hadn't have the best passing game and so many great scorers (in addition to the starters, they had two small forwardsteams in Russell and Dave Stallworth who would have killed anybody coming off the bench for the Heat, Phil Jackson as a backup power forward, ditto to anyone the Heat could have played against the Heat, Dean Meminger backup guard (think the starting other Heat guard here, and a 7 fooot back up Center who was way better than anyone the Heat would have put up also. The next championship team, add Earl Monroe (read a bit). Petre would have started for just about every NBA tean today, if not all; McMillain, Bradley, and Rudy, or perhaps more would have started or been many major contribors in the NBA and stars in the NCCA, and all of the others would have either starred or been significant playersin the current NCAA. Ask the "old" guys on this board.
    Interesting history. And all completely, 100% beside the point.
    Just be you. You is enough. - K, 4/5/10, 0:13.8 to play, 60-59 Duke.

    You're all jealous hypocrites. - Titus on Laettner

    You see those guys? Animals. They're animals. - SIU Coach Chris Lowery, on Duke

  20. #20
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Washington, D.C.
    Quote Originally Posted by pfrduke View Post
    Interesting history. And all completely, 100% beside the point.
    Beside the point? You apparently think that the game has changed for the better and no Ivy League player from the past would have starred in the NCAA. I'm here to tell you that you and the others who share your perspective are dead wrongare deed wrong. Just about all of the players I have named would have been stars on the great programs of the modern era and all would have been stars on great teams of lesser reputation. You name those whom you think wouldn't. By the way, somehow Cornell went deep into the NCAA's just a few years ago, real deep. Their coach was the equal of the elite in the college game. Too bad he left for the big dough.

    I don't know what is so special about a top 100 as rated by some rating organization. Duke in the last couple of years got smashed in the tournament by a bunch of no names.And, had the stars that I have mentioned did not have the benefit of all the athletic training of current players. You believe that I am wrong. I saw both eras, you haven't. Not much more to say, although I could. I could pick out some of the great stars of the modern era and explain why many I have named would be better than and why in detail. What would be the point.
    Last edited by greybeard; 07-10-2012 at 08:20 PM.

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