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April 17, 2003
Uncategorized

Wiffle Ball, Tacos, and the Frozen Four

By wpengine | April 17, 2003
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“Hey Scott, how was your weekend in Buffalo? I mean, I’m sure it was disappointing but

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  • Tennis Takes on Yale, Brown

    By wpengine April 18, 2003

    The men’s and women’s tennis teams head into their second to last weekend of play beginning today. The men will host their first Ivy League match when they take to the courts against Yale, and then round out the weekend tomorrow against Brown. “Traditionally, the Cornell-Yale matches have been super close battles,” said men’s head coach Barry Schoonmaker. Brown, the men’s other opponent, will also provide a tough match. Besides being strong in both the singles and doubles matches, Brown is last year’s defending Ivy League champion. The men may have an added challenge this weekend as their No. 1 singles player, junior Zach Gallin, continues to be questionable for the matches. “He might play one match for us,” said head coach Barry Schoonmaker. “We’re sort of just taking it as it comes.” Gallin suffered a shoulder injury earlier in the season and has been struggling to get back to his usual form. Without Gallin, the Red will have to rely on freshman phenom Brett McKeon, and junior Scott Spencer. “The kid hasn’t lost yet this year in the singles,” said Schoonmaker of Spencer. “He’s also been one of our best doubles players.” The coach’s comments about McKeon were similar. “He’s done a great job this year,” Schoonmaker said. “We’re going to need him.” If the Red is to right the ship this weekend, it will need solid efforts from junior Julian Cheng at the No. 1 spot, as well as from fellow junior Michael Schlappig and McKeon, who each had straight-set victories in the match against Dartmouth. Cheng and Schlappig paired up to earn a victory at the No. 2 doubles spot against the Green as well. The men come in with 2-2 mark in the Ivy League, 15-6 overall, with a loss to Columbia by a score of 4-3, and a defeat to nationally-ranked Harvard, 5-2. Spencer said of the tough losses, “We have battled in some close matches this season and played hard. Sometimes we’ve come up a little short.” He also noted that the team is happy to be back on familiar turf. “It’s good to finally get to play back in Ithaca, and have the rest of the league come to us.” The woman’s team comes into this weekend at Yale and Brown, hoping to snap a seven-match losing streak, dating back to its spring break trip down to Florida. Last weekend, the Red faced a tough test in the 18th-ranked team nationally, Harvard. The women did not win a match in the entire contest against some of the best competition in the country. Against Dartmouth, the Red almost squeaked out a victory, getting straight set-victories at the No. 1 and 4 singles spots by sophomore Akane Kokubo and junior Nicole Chiu, respectively. The two teamed up to take the No. 1 doubles spot, and along with the team of sophomores Erika Takeuchi and Melissa Tu, earned the doubles point. The match came down to the last set, with Dartmouth’s Evelyn Stephens edging out Tu in a grueling three-set match at the No. 6 singles spot.Archived article by Chris Mascaro

  • Tracksters Look to Continue Strong Performances

    By wpengine April 18, 2003

    Cornell’s track teams will part ways this weekend as the women head to Lafayette College in Easton, Pa. to compete in the Leopard Invitational while the men head to the home of the Penn State Nittany Lions in University Park to face several teams in the Penn State Invitational. Coming into this weekend, the Red is riding a wave of success after performing exceptionally well in meets across the country. In California over spring break, both teams captured first place overall in the Irvine Invitational and the Long Beach Classic. Last weekend, the teams also competed in one of the toughest meets in the country — the Sea Ray Relays — at the University of Tennessee and came home with several top finishes and new school records. “Some good weather finally followed us to Tennessee,” said senior Katy Jay, who has been one of her team’s top performers this year. “We did really well at the meet, and the team still has some momentum going from that.” The unusually cold and snowy winter has diminished both teams’ opportunities to practice outside this spring, but nonetheless, each team feels confident that it is well prepared to run, jump, and throw their best this weekend. At Lafayette, a Division II school, the women do not expect to face the same high-caliber teams they saw at the Sea Ray Relays, but Ivy League rival Princeton will also compete in the meet and give the Red a run for its money. The women have an advantage over the Tigers, however, as they beat Princeton at Indoor Heps this past winter and have confidence that they can repeat the performance. “The competition won’t be too great because we’ll be facing mostly Division II schools, except for Princeton,” said Jay, “but going in, we have a good shot to win the meet because we’re just a really good team this year.” The men’s challenge at Penn State could be considerably more difficult. The Red’s primary competition at the meet will come from the home team, which has fielded 226 track All-Americans over the past 35 years. Most recently, senior sprinter Brian Derby and junior triple jumper Chavous Nichols earned All-American honors at this winter’s NCAA indoor track championships. But the men are fully loaded with their own nationally-recognized athletes and set to take on any challenge. Currently, senior Scott Benowicz holds the sixth-best mark in the country in the javelin, and senior Derek Kingrey beat out all of his competition to claim first place in the discus at the Sea Ray Relays. Additionally, junior Travis Offner has the best triple-jump in the Ivy League this season, and senior Geoff Van Fleet and sophomore Oliver Tassinari have the first and second best 1500m times in the Ivies so far this year. “Penn State has a good team,” said Benowicz, “but we should stack up really well against them and our other competition because we’re deeper.” The outlook for both teams going into this weekends’ meets is positive, but both also know that their true tests will come in the upcoming weeks when the Red will face nationally-ranked teams at the Penn Relays and then at Heps. Archived article by Everett Hullverson

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