CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by Tom Tone
CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Tom Tone (---.twcny.res.rr.com)
Date: November 19, 2005 02:13PM
Cornell 10- Penn 7 with less than 1 to go in the 3rd.
The precious Trustee's Cup at stake.
The precious Trustee's Cup at stake.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Al DeFlorio (---.hsd1.ma.comcast.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 02:16PM
Now 16-7 after a bad snap on the extra point
___________________________
Al DeFlorio '65
Al DeFlorio '65
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 11/19/2005 02:17PM by Al DeFlorio.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: RichH (---.chvlva.adelphia.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 02:17PM
PAT had a bad snap. 16-7.
"The Game" is televised on WGN, with Yale holding a 14-3 lead at halftime.
"The Game" is televised on WGN, with Yale holding a 14-3 lead at halftime.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 11/19/2005 02:18PM by RichH.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Chris '03 (---.37.9.99.adsl.snet.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 02:17PM
Kuhn 5 yd rushing score 16-7 (bad snap on PAT) with under 12 to play.
They talked about the game briefly on PTI, Tony asking who Mike had in the game. Wilbon asked if he was talking about lacrosse.
They talked about the game briefly on PTI, Tony asking who Mike had in the game. Wilbon asked if he was talking about lacrosse.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: RichH (---.chvlva.adelphia.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 02:22PM
Scoreboard:
Brown on their way to an outright championship.
Cornell 16 Penn 7 4th Brown 45 Columbia 14 3rd Harvard 3 Yale 14 Half Princeton 13 Dartmouth 0 3rd
Brown on their way to an outright championship.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 11/19/2005 02:23PM by RichH.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Al DeFlorio (---.hsd1.ma.comcast.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 02:23PM
[Q]Tom Tone Wrote:
The precious Trustee's Cup at stake. [/q]
While the Trustee's Cup may not be a big deal, having the seniors go out with a win over Penn would be really nice--especially after the fiasco two years ago.
The precious Trustee's Cup at stake. [/q]
While the Trustee's Cup may not be a big deal, having the seniors go out with a win over Penn would be really nice--especially after the fiasco two years ago.
___________________________
Al DeFlorio '65
Al DeFlorio '65
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Jordan 04 (---.nyc.res.rr.com)
Date: November 19, 2005 02:28PM
Also televised on HDNet.
[Q]RichH Wrote:
PAT had a bad snap. 16-7.
"The Game" is televised on WGN, with Yale holding a 14-3 lead at halftime.
Edited 1 times. Last edit at 11/19/05 02:18PM by RichH.[/q]
[Q]RichH Wrote:
PAT had a bad snap. 16-7.
"The Game" is televised on WGN, with Yale holding a 14-3 lead at halftime.
Edited 1 times. Last edit at 11/19/05 02:18PM by RichH.[/q]
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Chris '03 (---.37.9.99.adsl.snet.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 02:33PM
[Q]
RichH Wrote:
"The Game" is televised on WGN, with Yale holding a 14-3 lead at halftime.
[/Q]
In a matchup of Yankee broadcasters of yesterday and today, it's John Sterling calling Brown/Columbia on YES and Charley Steiner calling Yale/Harvard.
RichH Wrote:
"The Game" is televised on WGN, with Yale holding a 14-3 lead at halftime.
[/Q]
In a matchup of Yankee broadcasters of yesterday and today, it's John Sterling calling Brown/Columbia on YES and Charley Steiner calling Yale/Harvard.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Al DeFlorio (---.hsd1.ma.comcast.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 02:38PM
[Q]Jordan 04 Wrote:
Also televised on HDNet.
Also televised on HDNet.
RichH Wrote:
"The Game" is televised on WGN, with Yale holding a 14-3 lead at halftime.
[/Q]
[/q]
And in high def on Boston's channel 56.
___________________________
Al DeFlorio '65
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Tom Tone (---.twcny.res.rr.com)
Date: November 19, 2005 02:41PM
Cornell with the ball. Less than 3 to go.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Tom Tone (---.twcny.res.rr.com)
Date: November 19, 2005 02:50PM
Final 16-7
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Chris '03 (---.37.9.99.adsl.snet.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 02:51PM
Penn punts and Cornell will win it. First win over Penn since '99 and a winning Ivy record. Cornell will tie the H/Y loser for 4th in the league.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Tom Tone (---.twcny.res.rr.com)
Date: November 19, 2005 02:52PM
Apparently it is also the 600th win for the program.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: RichH (---.chvlva.adelphia.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 02:53PM
Cornell 16 Penn 7 FINAL! Brown 52 Columbia 21 4th Harvard 10 Yale 21 3rd Princeton 27 Dartmouth 0 4th
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: RichH (---.chvlva.adelphia.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 03:05PM
Should the scores hold (still a lot of time in the H-Y Game), the standings will look like this:
Should Harvard come back and beat Yale, those two will simply trade places. Cornell was two winnable games from an outright championship, I say. And heck...had we just beaten Brown in Ithaca, that's a 4-way tie for the championship.
Ivy League Conf All 1 Brown 6-1 9-1 2 Princeton 5-2 7-3 Yale 5-2 5-5 4 Cornell 4-3 6-4 Harvard 4-3 6-4 6 Pennsylvania 3-4 5-5 7 Dartmouth 1-6 2-8 8 Columbia 0-7 2-8
Should Harvard come back and beat Yale, those two will simply trade places. Cornell was two winnable games from an outright championship, I say. And heck...had we just beaten Brown in Ithaca, that's a 4-way tie for the championship.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 11/19/2005 03:09PM by RichH.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: gatitita '05 (---.twcny.res.rr.com)
Date: November 19, 2005 03:07PM
i love that there is one person posting on this thread who isnt a band alum.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: cornelldavy (---.vnnyca.adelphia.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 03:24PM
When was the last time Penn football had a losing conference record? I can't recall it, and I used to go to Penn football games even before I went to Cornell.
Edit: It was '96, when they also went 3-4 (although in '97, they went 0-7 after forfeiting 5 games for an ineligible player)
Edit: It was '96, when they also went 3-4 (although in '97, they went 0-7 after forfeiting 5 games for an ineligible player)
___________________________
Alex F. '03 * [www.uclahockey.org]
Alex F. '03 * [www.uclahockey.org]
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 11/19/2005 03:30PM by cornelldavy.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Chris '03 (---.37.9.99.adsl.snet.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 03:29PM
[Q]cornelldavy Wrote:
When was the last time Penn football had a losing conference record? I can't recall it, and I used to go to Penn football games even before I went to Cornell.[/q]
'97 they were 4-3 but had to forfeit the wins. '96 they were 3-4. Otherwise 4-3 in '99 is the only time they've lost more than one in recent history before this year.
When was the last time Penn football had a losing conference record? I can't recall it, and I used to go to Penn football games even before I went to Cornell.[/q]
'97 they were 4-3 but had to forfeit the wins. '96 they were 3-4. Otherwise 4-3 in '99 is the only time they've lost more than one in recent history before this year.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: cornelldavy (---.vnnyca.adelphia.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 03:31PM
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: RichH (---.chvlva.adelphia.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 05:35PM
FWIW:
Harvard did come back and they won "The Game" in the longest football game in Ivy history, going to 3OTs. With the light fading (and no lights at the Yale Bowl), the teams combined for 4 turnovers and 1 missed FG in overtime before Harvard ground it in for a TD.
Final Ivy Standings:
Harvard did come back and they won "The Game" in the longest football game in Ivy history, going to 3OTs. With the light fading (and no lights at the Yale Bowl), the teams combined for 4 turnovers and 1 missed FG in overtime before Harvard ground it in for a TD.
Final Ivy Standings:
Ivy League Conf All 1 Brown 6-1 9-1 2 Princeton 5-2 7-3 Harvard 5-2 7-3 4 Cornell 4-3 6-4 Yale 4-3 4-6 6 Pennsylvania 3-4 5-5 7 Dartmouth 1-6 2-8 8 Columbia 0-7 2-8
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 11/19/2005 06:46PM by RichH.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Brian Deerr '04 (---.dyn.optonline.net)
Date: November 19, 2005 07:33PM
Just posting to add to the band alum ratio.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Will (---.cable.mindspring.com)
Date: November 19, 2005 09:51PM
[Q]Brian Deerr Wrote:
Just posting to add to the band alum ratio.[/q]
And I'll post to reduce it again ever so slightly.
Just posting to add to the band alum ratio.[/q]
And I'll post to reduce it again ever so slightly.
___________________________
Is next year here yet?
Is next year here yet?
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: jtwcornell91 (---.hsd1.ma.comcast.net)
Date: November 20, 2005 01:32AM
Just posting to say to hell with Pennsylvania.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Josh '99 (---.nyc.res.rr.com)
Date: November 20, 2005 02:43AM
[Q]jtwcornell91 Wrote:
Just posting to say to hell with Pennsylvania.[/q]To hell with U of P, P U!
(And also props to Deerr. )
Just posting to say to hell with Pennsylvania.[/q]To hell with U of P, P U!
(And also props to Deerr. )
Re: CU Football vs. Penn (W16-7) postgame comments)
Posted by: billhoward (---.union01.nj.comcast.net)
Date: November 20, 2005 04:52PM
Post-game, post-season thoughts after Cornell's 16-7 win at Penn:
The hockey team would not be thrilled with an 18-12 record, but 6-4 seemed not bad for the football team. The guys on the bench were all psyched and urging the Cornell fans to their feet in the fourth quarter when the Cornell defense needed to (and did) hold. It seemed quite a contrast between the generally good nature of the Franklin Field fans on both sides, vs. the hostilities at Lynah between Cornell fans, Union/RPI fans, and the ushers.
The Cornell fans appeared to outnumber the Penn fans. Total attendance was reported as 6933, which is darn near empty in a 52,000 seat stadium. At least Franklin Field has been kept up (refurbished), which the other Ivy elephant, Yale Bowl, is about to get.
Penn dings you $12 to park, but you can buy $5 general admission tickets (vs. $15 reserved) and still sit anywhere; Princeton and Yale are much stuffier about where you sit based on what you pay.
The Big Red Marching Band certainly outnumbered, outdressed, and outclassed the Penn band. The Penn band also wasted half its halftime show thanking each senior on the band with inside jokes that were lost on just about everybody there. The BRMB seems to have an alumni tent at every game. I think I'm going to look into buying adjunct membership in the band and then eating for free; they certainly do it right.
Oh, right, the game:
Luke Siwula is an amazingly strong runner and/or he has a great line in front of him. He gets his yardage on third efforts.
Every time QB Ryan Kuhn puts his arm up to pass, a collective hush falls over the crowd, because passing is just not his strong suit, including one time when he appeared to fumble the ball up in the air without being hit. (He recovered.) Even if he did pass for one TD. One thing that helped Cornell's running offense was Penn's pretty fair coverage of the Cornell receivers, which led Kuhn to tuck the ball under his arm and run for 6 or 14 yards again and again.
While Cornell stuffed the Penn running game and held Penn to about 100 yards receiving, Cornell benefited mightily from stone hands on the part of Penn receivers. They dropped three or four easily catchable passes that might have turned the tide for Penn. Pass D is something Cornell needs to work on for next year.
Cornell's rushing defense was great.
Like the Woody Allen liine about the food being terrible and such small portions: Franklin Field food was nearly inedible and yet the lines were long. They should be embarrassed to call the cold sliced beef with congealed cheese slices "Philadelphia Cheese Steak." The pretzels were doughy. Etcetera. OK, the fries were crisp.
The field PA system was first rate, which is good, except that the announcer kept up a running rap about all the sponsors, kicking contests between periods, the sponsors again, a Score-O contest (maybe it was something else), a footrace between schoolkids and the Penn Quaker mascot, and, did I hear this right, some charity event where penn fans tossed slices of toast in baskets held by each of the four Penn classes. (The Wharton school declined participation.)
Nice end to the year, and the weather was reasonable given that it could be wet, rainy, snowy, and freezing.
... except that we could have with a couple better bounces against Brown and Princeton, been the Ivy League champ. In fact, given Princeton's loss the previous week, just beating Brown would have been enough to make us at 5-2 league a co-champ. Given that Cornell didn't have a complete offense and a somewhat suspect pass defense, it's amazing to think we came close to winning it all. For what was Cornell's second choice, Jim Knowles has done an amazing turnaround job as head coach.
The hockey team would not be thrilled with an 18-12 record, but 6-4 seemed not bad for the football team. The guys on the bench were all psyched and urging the Cornell fans to their feet in the fourth quarter when the Cornell defense needed to (and did) hold. It seemed quite a contrast between the generally good nature of the Franklin Field fans on both sides, vs. the hostilities at Lynah between Cornell fans, Union/RPI fans, and the ushers.
The Cornell fans appeared to outnumber the Penn fans. Total attendance was reported as 6933, which is darn near empty in a 52,000 seat stadium. At least Franklin Field has been kept up (refurbished), which the other Ivy elephant, Yale Bowl, is about to get.
Penn dings you $12 to park, but you can buy $5 general admission tickets (vs. $15 reserved) and still sit anywhere; Princeton and Yale are much stuffier about where you sit based on what you pay.
The Big Red Marching Band certainly outnumbered, outdressed, and outclassed the Penn band. The Penn band also wasted half its halftime show thanking each senior on the band with inside jokes that were lost on just about everybody there. The BRMB seems to have an alumni tent at every game. I think I'm going to look into buying adjunct membership in the band and then eating for free; they certainly do it right.
Oh, right, the game:
Luke Siwula is an amazingly strong runner and/or he has a great line in front of him. He gets his yardage on third efforts.
Every time QB Ryan Kuhn puts his arm up to pass, a collective hush falls over the crowd, because passing is just not his strong suit, including one time when he appeared to fumble the ball up in the air without being hit. (He recovered.) Even if he did pass for one TD. One thing that helped Cornell's running offense was Penn's pretty fair coverage of the Cornell receivers, which led Kuhn to tuck the ball under his arm and run for 6 or 14 yards again and again.
While Cornell stuffed the Penn running game and held Penn to about 100 yards receiving, Cornell benefited mightily from stone hands on the part of Penn receivers. They dropped three or four easily catchable passes that might have turned the tide for Penn. Pass D is something Cornell needs to work on for next year.
Cornell's rushing defense was great.
Like the Woody Allen liine about the food being terrible and such small portions: Franklin Field food was nearly inedible and yet the lines were long. They should be embarrassed to call the cold sliced beef with congealed cheese slices "Philadelphia Cheese Steak." The pretzels were doughy. Etcetera. OK, the fries were crisp.
The field PA system was first rate, which is good, except that the announcer kept up a running rap about all the sponsors, kicking contests between periods, the sponsors again, a Score-O contest (maybe it was something else), a footrace between schoolkids and the Penn Quaker mascot, and, did I hear this right, some charity event where penn fans tossed slices of toast in baskets held by each of the four Penn classes. (The Wharton school declined participation.)
Nice end to the year, and the weather was reasonable given that it could be wet, rainy, snowy, and freezing.
... except that we could have with a couple better bounces against Brown and Princeton, been the Ivy League champ. In fact, given Princeton's loss the previous week, just beating Brown would have been enough to make us at 5-2 league a co-champ. Given that Cornell didn't have a complete offense and a somewhat suspect pass defense, it's amazing to think we came close to winning it all. For what was Cornell's second choice, Jim Knowles has done an amazing turnaround job as head coach.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn (W16-7) postgame comments)
Posted by: ugarte (---.cisco.com)
Date: November 20, 2005 05:35PM
[Q]billhoward Wrote:... 6-4 seemed not bad for the football team. [/q]I'm going to have to disagree. Maybe it seemed that way in the preseason, or after the Yale game, but this team could have done so much more. Yes, I know you also said
[q]... except that we could have with a couple better bounces against Brown and Princeton, been the Ivy League champ.[/q]But I think you understate just how close we came to both of these things. The loss to Princeton was stunning. One poorly timed intentional grounding call ended the game winning drive. I still can't believe that we didn't pull that game off.
The Brown game wasn't as close, but the loss can be credited almost entirely to poor kick coverage; Brown started almost every drive in Cornell territory. I know, special teams count, but if Cornell filled the lanes better, Brown would have had a very difficult time scoring. They couldn't stop Siwula or Kuhn on the ground either.
[q]For what was Cornell's second choice, Jim Knowles has done an amazing turnaround job as head coach. [/q]This, I agree with. As disappointed as I am that an Ivy championship got away, I think the team is going to be excellent next year if Kuhn's replacement is competent.
[q]... except that we could have with a couple better bounces against Brown and Princeton, been the Ivy League champ.[/q]But I think you understate just how close we came to both of these things. The loss to Princeton was stunning. One poorly timed intentional grounding call ended the game winning drive. I still can't believe that we didn't pull that game off.
The Brown game wasn't as close, but the loss can be credited almost entirely to poor kick coverage; Brown started almost every drive in Cornell territory. I know, special teams count, but if Cornell filled the lanes better, Brown would have had a very difficult time scoring. They couldn't stop Siwula or Kuhn on the ground either.
[q]For what was Cornell's second choice, Jim Knowles has done an amazing turnaround job as head coach. [/q]This, I agree with. As disappointed as I am that an Ivy championship got away, I think the team is going to be excellent next year if Kuhn's replacement is competent.
___________________________
quality tweets | bluesky (twitter 2) | ALAB Series podcast | Other podcasts and writing
quality tweets | bluesky (twitter 2) | ALAB Series podcast | Other podcasts and writing
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 11/20/2005 05:38PM by ugarte.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn (W16-7) postgame comments)
Posted by: peterg (---.twcny.res.rr.com)
Date: November 20, 2005 08:43PM
Just a word of congratulations to the football seniors who can proudly say that they are leaving a football "program" on the rise. Those guys who stuck with it and worked so hard for four (and some for five) years have a lot to be proud of, even if some of the fans here think it should have been a better year. Coming from 1-9 just a couple of seasons ago, these men have done a GREAT job and, for all the young talent behind them, their contributions to turning the program around should not be understated.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Brian Deerr '04 (---.dyn.optonline.net)
Date: November 20, 2005 10:37PM
[Q]jmh30 Wrote:
jtwcornell91 Wrote:
Just posting to say to hell with Pennsylvania.[/Q]
To hell with U of P, P U!
(And also props to Deerr. )[/q]
::tips hat to Mr. Herman::
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Hillel Hoffmann (---.usb.temple.edu)
Date: November 21, 2005 11:50AM
It was sooooooooo enjoyable to watch Cornell's offensive line slowly pound Penn into the Sprinturf in the second half. How cool was it to see Kevin Boothe pull from his left tackle position (!) and lay waste to some LB or safety? After so many years of listening to Penn's D bark like dogs, wasn't it fun to see their D-line's body language crumble? Beating Penn that way -- in their house, totally dominating in the trenches, leaving them with a losing record -- was as satisfying as any regular-season CU sports experience I've had in ages (at least for a game with no title on the line).
Schadenfreudeville, baby. I'm not ashamed to admit it.
A big thanks to John Vitale '89 and Brian Ruhl '94 for putting together a very nice Cornell Clubs of Greater Philadelphia / Delaware tailgate -- and thanks to the band for coming to entertain us.
Schadenfreudeville, baby. I'm not ashamed to admit it.
A big thanks to John Vitale '89 and Brian Ruhl '94 for putting together a very nice Cornell Clubs of Greater Philadelphia / Delaware tailgate -- and thanks to the band for coming to entertain us.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Jacob 03 (---.dsl.psu.edu)
Date: November 21, 2005 12:05PM
[Q]Brian Deerr Wrote:
jmh30 Wrote:
(And also props to Deerr. )[/Q]
::tips hat to Mr. Herman::[/q]
You're both tools
[Q]Hillel Hoffmann Wrote:
Schadenfreudeville, baby. I'm not ashamed to admit it.
[/q]
Wouldn't it be Shadenfreudeburg?
Thanks for the highlights of "The Game," Rich. I hope Cornell never sees such an ugly OT affair.
Re: CU Football vs. Penn
Posted by: Hillel Hoffmann (---.usb.temple.edu)
Date: November 21, 2005 12:10PM
[Q]Jacob 03 Wrote: Wouldn't it be Shadenfreudeburg? [/q]
Schadenfreudestadt am Schuylkill
Schadenfreudestadt am Schuylkill
Re: CU Football vs. Penn (W16-7) postgame comments)
Posted by: Beeeej (---.cable.mindspring.com)
Date: November 25, 2005 06:46PM
[Q]billhoward Wrote:
The Penn band also wasted half its halftime show thanking each senior on the band with inside jokes that were lost on just about everybody there.[/q]
The Big Red Band does that at their last home game of every season, too. Or at least they used to.
Beeeej
The Penn band also wasted half its halftime show thanking each senior on the band with inside jokes that were lost on just about everybody there.[/q]
The Big Red Band does that at their last home game of every season, too. Or at least they used to.
Beeeej
___________________________
Beeeej, Esq.
"Cornell isn't an organization. It's a loose affiliation of independent fiefdoms united by a common hockey team."
- Steve Worona
Beeeej, Esq.
"Cornell isn't an organization. It's a loose affiliation of independent fiefdoms united by a common hockey team."
- Steve Worona
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