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Bests
in Basketball
Men are Ivy champs again; women post best
record ever.
By Noel Hynd
Call it graduating with honors. Last year,
Penns stellar backcourt of juniors Michael Jordan and Matt Langel helped
propel the mens basketball team to their first Ivy League basketball
title in three years. As memorable as that experience was, Jordan and
Langel had an even higher goal in mind for their senior yearand achieved
it.
After a somewhat rocky start that had some fainthearted
fans questioning their ability to repeat as champions, the team dominated
its Ivy League opponents, posting a perfect record in League play. As
the hoop gods would have it, in the final game of the season, the Quakers
faced our old friends from that well known Ivy League school in New Jersey.
The championship was no longer in doubtPenn had already clinched it with
a 69-52 victory over Yalebut more than that was at stake. Going into
the game, the Quakers had won 13 straight, but the striped cats
had their own winning streak (nine victories) and their pride to motivate
them.
But can you say 14 in a row?
While memories of last seasons nightmarish comeback
by the Tigers at the Palestra provided some mental drama for those in
the stands, on the court the games outcome was never seriously in doubt.
Penn was 30-for-53 (57 percent) from the field, had four starters in double
figures and outscored Princeton 20-0 in the paint in the first half, opening
a double-digit lead they would not relinquish.
Freshman Ugonna Onyekwe had 20 points, including some
spectacular dunks; senior Geoff Owens had 14; and Langel had 11, all in
the second half, as the Quakers put away the Tigers, 73-52an unusually
wide margin for a Penn-Princeton game.
[The undefeated season is] something we talked about,
said guard Jordan, who had 25 points on 10-of-14 shooting in his final
game at the Palestra. In this league, without a tournament, you need
to get as many wins as you can.
The Ivy League coaches voted Jordan the Ivy League
Player of the Year and Onyekwe Rookie of the Year. Jordan and Langel also
were named to the All-Ivy First Team, while Onyekwe and Owens received
second-team honors.
The Ivy League championship also meant a trip to the
NCAA Tournament for the Quakersthough, unfortunately, their taste of
March Madness was all too brief. In 1999, Penn lost in the first round
to Florida, which this year made it to the finals before being defeated
by Michigan State. Penns opponent this time was the University of Illinois,
and while the Quakers played gamely, they were overmatched and outgunned.
Illinois Frank Williams scored a season-high 21 points
in a 68-58 victory over the Quakers on March 17 in Winston-Salem, N.C.
The Illini forced 13 turnovers, converted them into 18 points and harassed
the Ivy League champions into 37-percent shooting. Illinois also capitalized
on first-half foul trouble by Jordan, who was held to eight points. Jordans
absence in the opening half helped the Illini build a lead they never
relinquished. Penn, ending the season at a highly commendable 21-8, got
17 points from Ugonna Onyekwe and 11 from Matt Langel in the loss.
While it was disappointing for the Quakers to leave
the tournament so early, toward seasons end Coach Fran Dunphy spoke a
few words that perhaps put Penns basketball program in perfect perspective.
We have a philosophy that we coach memories and experiences
as much as we coach the games, Dunphy said. When our guys are out of
school 10, 20 or 30 years from now, they are going to look back and say,
We went to Phog Allen Arena and Rupp Arena. They went to Auburn, who
was pre-season number one. They have been all over the country, all over
the world. They cant have had greater experiences. I think that is part
of our job. They can look back when they are little bit older, a little
bit more mature and say, I had a hell of a career.
While the Penns womens basketball squad did not
win an Ivy title, falling short of pre-season hopes, they nevertheless
scored several firsts. The team ended the 1999-2000 season with a school-record
18 wins and a school-record .643 winning percentage. They also set a new
record for points in a season, with 2,122, and a new mark for team scoring
average with 75.8 points per game.
Junior Diana Caramanico was named the 1999-2000 Ivy
League Player of the Year and also awarded District I Kodak/WBCA All-America
honors, as announced in March by the Womens Basketball Coaches Association.
This was Caramanicos second consecutive Ivy League Player of the Year
honor, and her third major Ivy honor of her careershe was Rookie of the
Year in 1997-98.
Caramanico finished her junior season with 1,808 career
points. Her average of 24.9 points per game places her second in the nation
(Division I) and first in the Ivy League in scoring average. She is the
all-time leading scorer in Penn womens basketball history, having surpassed
the previous mark of 1,656 points set by Kirsten Brendel C91 against
Cornell on Feb. 18, 2000.
In addition to being selected for the District I All-America
team, Caramanico is one of 48 overall finalists for the 10-person national
team that will be selected by the member coaches from each of the eight
WBCA geographical districts.
In other winter sports,
two-time senior All-American Brett Matter
became Pennsylvanias first NCAA Champion in wrestling since Richard DiBatista
Ed43 GEd46 (1941 and 1942) by defeating Larry Quisel of Boise State
University 4-2 in the championship final of the 2000 NCAA Wrestling Championships
in St. Louis.
The all-time winningest wrestler in Penn history with
a career record of 128-14, Matter has another distinction as well. He
belongs to one of just four sets of father-son NCAA champions in wrestling.
His father, Andrew Matter, was a two-time NCAA champion for Penn State
University in 1971-72. In addition to becoming a national champion, Matter
is a four-time NCAA qualifier, four-time EIWA champion and a four-time
All-Ivy League selection.
In the team race, Penn finished ninth with 44.0 team
points. The 2000 NCAA Championship title was awarded to the University
of Iowa with 116.0 team points. The top-10 finish for the Quakers is the
first since 1942, when Penn finished eighth.
Finally, eight University of Pennsylvania fencers were
named to the 1999-2000 All-Ivy League Mens and Womens Fencing Teams.
Junior Mike Golia, Penns lone first-team honoree, was selected to the
saber squad for the third straight season. He recently won his second
consecutive IFA title and was third at the regional championship at Penn
State. Second-team honorees included sophomores Jeff Lee and Daniel Vincent
in the saber; the Cohen brothersDavid, a junior, and Yale, a freshmanin
the foil; sophomore James Benson in the epee; and freshmen Lauren Staudinger
(foil) and Kim Linton (epee).
Noel Hynd C70 writes on sports for the Gazette..
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SCOREBOARD
From Jan.26 to Apr.9
Mens
Basketball (21-8)
Penn 79,
Harvard 52
Penn 75, Dartmouth
61
Penn 55, Princeton
46
Penn 74, Cornell 65
Penn 81, Columbia 58
Penn 69, Dartmouth
55
Penn 62, Harvard 61
Penn 85, Brown
62
Penn 69, Yale 52
Penn 73, Princeton
52
Illinois 68, Penn 58
Womens
Basketball (18-10)
Penn 78, Harvard 76
Dartmouth 89, Penn
71
Penn 74, Cornell 65
Columbia 70, Penn 67
Dartmouth 74, Penn
71
Penn 79, Harvard 66
Brown 92, Penn 83
Yale 82, Penn 81
Penn 68, Princeton
54
Mens
Fencing (10-4)
Princeton 17, Penn
10
IFAs, 2nd Place
NCAAs, 8th Place
Womens
Fencing (8-8)
Princeton 17, Penn
10
IFAs, 5th Place
NCAAs, 8th Place
Gymnastics
(4-2)
Penn 191.250, Temple
184.825
Towson Invitational,
5th Place
Ivy Classic, 1st Place
Penn 189.125, Wilson
175.450
ECACs, 2nd Place
Mens
Squash (3-10)
Franklin & Marshall
5, Penn 4
Harvard 9, Penn 0
Dartmouth 9, Penn 0
Penn 9, Haverford 0
Oxford 6, Penn 1
Womens
Squash (11-0)
Penn 6, Harvard 3
Penn 9, Dartmouth 0
Howe Cup, 1st Place
Mens Swimming (7-5)
Harvard 227, Penn 54
EISLs, 9th Place
Womens
Swimming (6-6)
Ivy, 8th Place
Mens
Track & Field
Heptagonals, 6th Place
IC4As, 36th Place
Womens
Track & Field (0-1)
Heptagonals, 9th Place
Wrestling
(9-5)
Penn 30, Princeton
15
Penn 27, George Mason
16
Lehigh 19, Penn 15
NCAAs, 9th Place
Baseball
(8-7)
Florida Tech 10, Penn 8
Penn 17, Florida Tech 15
Penn 10, Northern Ill.
5
Northern Iowa 5, Penn
3
Penn 9, Cortland State
8
Tiffin 8, Penn 6
Penn 8, Northern Ill.
4
Rollins
13, Penn 8
Penn 9, Eckerd 8
Army 8, Penn 7
Penn 13, St. Josephs
2
Penn 8, Mount St. Marys
7
Mount St. Marys 6,
Penn 1
Mount St. Marys 7,
Penn 6
Penn 18, Mount St.
Marys 6
Mens
Golf
East Carolina Invitationals,
21st Place
Mens
Lacrosse (3-3)
Penn 10, Notre Dame
7
Penn 5, Bucknell
4
North Carolina 13,
Penn 6
Yale 11, Penn 10
Penn 20, Lafayette
5
Harvard 15, Penn 12
Womens
Lacrosse (2-2)
Penn 13, American 7
Yale
9, Penn 8
Penn 14, Villanova 7
Cornell 15, Penn 5
Softball
(8-12)
Penn 3, Providence 0
Fairfield 11, Penn 7
Penn 1, Quinnipiac
0
Wisc.-Green
Bay 7, Penn 1
Penn
4, Liberty 3
George Mason 5, Penn
4
Penn 6, Fairfield 0
Alabama-Birm.
8, Penn 0
West. Kentucky 4, Penn 0
Illinois-Chicago 10,
Penn 2
Florida
Int. 7, Penn 2
Tenn. Tech 6, Penn
2
Canisius 8, Penn 5
Tenn. Tech 5, Penn
0
Penn 8, Lafayette 0
Penn 4, Lafayette 1
Penn 5, La Salle 4
Penn 9, La Salle 3
Rider
2, Penn 1
Rider
2, Penn 0
Mens
Tennis (7-7)
Virginia
7, Penn 1
Penn 6, Colgate 1
Colorado
5, Penn 2
New
Mexico 7, Penn 0
Penn 5, American 2
North Carolina State
5, Penn 2
Penn 7, Haverford 0
Penn 7, Swarthmore
0
Penn 9, Hawaii-Hilo
0
Hawaii 4, Penn 3
Hawaii
Pacific 7, Penn 0
BYU-Hawaii 5, Penn
4
Penn 9, Chaminade 0
Penn 6, Temple 1
Womens
Tennis (7-8)
Penn 7, Temple 2
Virginia 6, Penn 3
Richmond
5, Penn 4
Penn 9, Drexel 0
Penn
State 5, Penn 4
Penn 9, Army 0
Georgia
Tech 9, Penn 0
Clemson 5, Penn 2
Penn
8, Seton Hall 1
Penn 5, UNLV 4
Penn 6, Ill. State
3
Okla. State 6, Penn
3
Fresno State 9, Penn
0
Stanford
9, Penn 0
Penn
7, Boston Coll. 2
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