Sports

Despite Tough ‘D’, Red Loses by Double-Digits

Women shoot 21.4 percent with 11 turnovers

February 17, 2009 - 12:00am
By Holden Steinhauer

Although its defense was formidable, Cornell produced its worse offensive performance of the season in a loss to Dartmouth in Hanover, N.H., Saturday night, 55-36.

Shooting only 21 percent from the field, the Red (7-13, 3-5 Ivy) was unable to get into any offensive rhythm in the face of the Green’s (12-9, 7-0 Ivy) defensive pressure, and was unable to reach 20 points in either period. The loss is Cornell’s fourth-straight against an Ivy opponent, following the team’s 3-1 start in conference play.On the run: Freshman forward Allison Abt (34) dribbles away from a Princeton defender Feb. 6. Abt scored 11 points against Dartmouth, with six rebounds.On the run: Freshman forward Allison Abt (34) dribbles away from a Princeton defender Feb. 6. Abt scored 11 points against Dartmouth, with six rebounds.

“When you miss a lot of 3’s and don’t get offensive boards, it’s going to be a long night,” said head coach Dayna Smith.

The Red saw a return of inconsistent and streaky shooting, draining less than 18 percent of its attempts from long-range. Typical of many of its losses this season, Cornell was also overmatched on the glass, losing the rebounding battle 40-19 on the defensive end, and 12-7 on the offensive end.

“[Dartmouth] did a good job collapsing on the forwards and playing tough post-defense,” Smith said. “And we didn’t have any easy baskets.”

Freshman forward Allison Abt got a turn in the starting lineup, and made the most of it, leading the Red with 11 points, 6 rebounds, and 32 minutes of playing time. Junior guard Virginia McMunigal added 7 points, and fellow junior guard Allie Fedorowicz notched 4 assists.

The team did, however, put-up a solid defensive performance — an aspect of its game the Red committed a lot of time to in practice after suffering a couple of tough losses over the past few weeks.

“We worked hard on defense, and we had a good week of practice,” Smith said. “I was happy with the defense, for the most part. I thought we did a better job of driving some of the forwards out of the lane.”

Asked if the team is starting to feel any pressure to string-together wins against Ivy opponents, Smith sent a strong signal to her team:

“We have good players on this team and they need to step-up to the challenge, and each person needs to believe in their abilities,” she said. “They’ve got to get back to playing confident basketball … and not put too much pressure on themselves.”


Related Topics: Women's basketball

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Poor teamwork

The ladies are not on the same page and each of them seem more concerned with their personal stats then with winning games. The shooting percentage reflects a selfishness and that has to stop. The coach needs to play the women who are "TEAM PLAYERS" or find some players on our large campus who want to play as a team. My guess is that the women on the team do not like each other but they have to put the personal stuff aside and do what is best for the team. They showed that this is possible a few weeks back and they need to do it again or they will continue to get swept away by their Ivy opponents!

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