Evading the dog house

The Quakers hope to earn their first win tonight against the Great Danes at the Palestra

Sophomore point guard Zack Rosen (right) has averaged over 18 points per game in the Quakers’ last three matches. Penn will be looking for him to lead the team to a victory tonight against Albany.

Sophomore point guard Zack Rosen (right) has averaged over 18 points per game in the Quakers’ last three matches. Penn will be looking for him to lead the team to a victory tonight against Albany. (Michael Chien/DP Senior Photographer)

The men’s basketball team is in danger of ending the fall semester without a victory for the first time since 2000.

Friday’s 73-67 loss to Navy leaves the 0-5 Quakers with only two remaining opportunities to pick up their initial victory before they take a two-week break at the conclusion of the semester. Tonight’s showdown with Albany will be Penn’s only chance to do it at home.

Though the team has lost its first five games, coach Glen Miller insists that his players are confident in their ability to put the rough start behind them.

“As hard as it may be, you have to stay positive and stay together,” Miller said. “We have a lot of basketball left to be played. I think we’ll start to win, it’s just a difficult start.”

The Great Danes (3-6) are certainly a beatable opponent. Their three wins have come against teams with only four victories between them, and they enter tonight’s matchup having lost their last three contests, including an 83-54 trouncing at the hands of Siena on Saturday.

Albany has struggled to put points on the scoreboard, averaging only 60.7 points per game. Senior Will Harris and junior guard Tim Ambrose lead the way, each averaging over 15 points per game. Harris, a transfer from Virginia, has played a critical role in the team’s three victories, including a 22-point outburst against reigning Northeast Conference Champion Robert Morris.

The rest of the team, however, has yet to contribute much offensively. Starting center Brett Gifford, for example, has scored just nine points in as many games.

The culprit is not bad shooting — Albany shoots a respectable 41.2 percent from the field — but rather turnovers, which have plagued the team all season. Its 18.3 turnovers per game are the 24th worst in the nation.

The Quakers, for their part, aren’t scoring prolifically either, averaging only 66 points per game. In addition, five players — including starters Tyler Bernardini and Andreas Schreiber — missed Friday’s game with injuries.

Miller also pointed to the team’s 9-17 free throw shooting as a major factor in the loss.

Last year, it was Penn’s shooting performance that was the difference maker in a 73-63 loss at Albany last year. The Quakers made just one-third of their second-half shots and only six of their 26 attempts from three point range.

Fortunately for the Quakers, however, the game’s leading scorer — Albany point guard Anthony Raffa — transferred to Central Carolina after the season’s end.

But despite last year’s loss and this year’s tough start, the Red and Blue remain confident that they’re on the brink of picking up their first win.

“We really believe that [a win is] coming versus hoping that it’s coming,” sophomore point guard Zack Rosen said. “Guys genuinely believe that we do enough out here — that it’s coming around.”

But without a win tonight or in Saturday’s game against Monmouth, the Quakers will have to wait at least two long weeks to get rid of the goose egg in the win column.

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Comments

QUAKER1979
Tue, 12/08/2009 - 10:26pm

Sorry State of Quaker Basketball

I have been a huge Penn Quaker basketball fan since the mid 1970's. I have seen almost every Quaker Team since then. This Quaker Team reminds me of some of the mediocre teams when Craig Littlepage was the coach (pre- Fran Dunphy Era).

Penn has dominated the Ivy League over the years because the Quakers consistently year after year have had the best players.

1975 - Ron Haigler, John Engles, Mark Lonetto, Larry Lewis, Bob Bigelo
1978 - Keven McDonald, Tony Price, Tim Smith, Boonie Salters, Bobby Willis
1979*- Tony Price, Tim Smith, Boonie Salters, Bobby Willis, Matt White

Ivy league MVP Perry Bromwell, Paul Little (80's.90's)

Impact players during Fran Dunphy years:
1) Jerome Allen, Matt Maloney, Barry Pierce
2) Michael Jordan, Matt Langel, Paul Romancyk
3) Ugonna Onekywe, Koko Archibong, Andy Toole, Jeff Shiffner, Tim Begley
4) Ibby Jaaber, Mark Zoller

This Quaker team does not have an Ivy League player of the year in the bunch. Tyler Bernadini, Zack Rosen, and Jack Eggleston are good solid "complementary" players. If you take these guys as a supporting cast and add an player of the year type player, the Quakers would be a very good team.

Cornell is dominating the Ivy League because they have the best players (Ryan Wittman, Louis Dale, and some nice surrounding pieces).

At best, Harrison Gaines was another "complementary" player. You can talk about the Quakers abysmal 3 point shooting, questionable shot selection, etc. However, until Glen Miller recruits some real horses, Penn will continue to languish in mediocrity.


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