The Greater Rochester Player of the Year in basketball is a straight A student and is getting attention from Ivy schools. Cornell better be able to get this kid. He is from our backyard.
http://www.democratandchronicle.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070330/SPORTS08/703300367/1007/SPORTS
[quote CornellFan] Cornell better be able to get this kid. He is from our backyard.
[/quote]
Perhaps he doesn't want to go to Cornell. Perhaps after living in upstate New York, he wants to go someplace warmer. It's not necessarily a case of Cornell being able to get this kid. A lot depends on whether he wants to spend four more years in upstate New York.
Location is a factor for these kids-- but so are the financial aid package, the academic quality of the school, the prospect's compatibility with the coaching staff and the existing players on the team, the opportunity for advancing to the NCAAs and winning an Ivy title, the opportunity for playing time (long-term and near-term), the opportunity to get television appearances, the opportunity to play elite teams on the schedule and the potential to get a pro contract after graduation.
All of these factors play a role in choosing a school in Ivy basketball.
I don't think Cornell has ever lost a kid to another Ivy program simply because of the "location" of Cornell and the lack of desire in staying in upstate New York. Usually-- these decisions come down to the success of the program and the chemistry between the prospective player and the coaches as they form a bond during the recruiting process.
Last kid that we lost from upstate New York to a rival in the Ivy was Ryan Petinilla (who committed to Penn over Cornell). He has since transferred and now plays in the ACC for Virginia.
As one who migrated from Rochester to Ithaca, one of about 90 my year, a lot of us weren't thinking about Duke or Stanford having better weather. Maybe we should have. It's more along the lines of: We made it through 18 years of winter weather, cold and snow was the norm, and Cornell would continue the norm for four more years.
Also, if the first time you see Cornell is in the fall on a warm early-October day, Cornell is the most beautiful campus possible, and you think of the six months of crappy weather that follows each year as the anomaly. Gad, we were so stupid then.
[quote billhoward]Also, if the first time you see Cornell is in the fall on a warm early-October day, Cornell is the most beautiful campus possible, and you think of the six months of crappy weather that follows each year as the anomaly. Gad, we were so stupid then.[/quote]
I first saw Cornell on a nasty, cold, rainy October and I still thought it was the most beautiful campus possible. Actually I don't remember what I thought about the campus beauty that day, but I did think the place was great.
The campus is beautiful in October for the two weeks when the foliage is ablaze, but it's also beatuful in January when it's covered in snow. The hardest part to get through is the dark rainy November night.
[quote jtwcornell91]The campus is beautiful in October for the two weeks when the foliage is ablaze, but it's also beatuful in January when it's covered in snow. The hardest part to get through is the dark rainy November night.[/quote]
No way - the hardest part to get through is the dark rainy APRIL night. You think it should be Spring already, but it isn't, and there's no hockey. ::cry::
[quote Robb][quote jtwcornell91]The campus is beautiful in October for the two weeks when the foliage is ablaze, but it's also beatuful in January when it's covered in snow. The hardest part to get through is the dark rainy November night.[/quote]
No way - the hardest part to get through is the dark rainy APRIL night. You think it should be Spring already, but it isn't, and there's no hockey. ::cry::[/quote]
If it's raining, it's kind of spring. Dark, SNOWY April nights make you want to cry. Winter will never ever end in Ithaca, and you know that it'll be gray slush by morning, just slippery enough to possibly make you fall on your way up or down the Slope/Williams Street.
Having grown up in New York State, I used to dance around the Arts Quad when the April snow finally came. Since I knew spring could not truly begin until that was out of the way.
[quote jtwcornell91]Having grown up in New York State, I used to dance around the Arts Quad when the April snow finally came. Since I knew spring could not truly begin until that was out of the way.[/quote]
Does a 54 degree temperature drop (with windchill factor) and snow flurries count as "Winter's Last Blast"? It is a good thing that I'm used to this (growing up in CT and living in Ithaca) thus my hat, scarf and gloves were not yet stowed away despite the nice 70 degree weather Indiana had been enjoying and all the buds on the trees.
BRRRRRR from IN.
[quote Liz '05]Winter will never ever end in Ithaca...[/quote]
Trust me, winter in ithaca is nothing... winter in Potsdam is a completely different world...
but the skiing is alot better...
[quote KeithK][quote billhoward]Also, if the first time you see Cornell is in the fall on a warm early-October day, Cornell is the most beautiful campus possible, and you think of the six months of crappy weather that follows each year as the anomaly. Gad, we were so stupid then.[/quote]
I first saw Cornell on a nasty, cold, rainy October and I still thought it was the most beautiful campus possible. Actually I don't remember what I thought about the campus beauty that day, but I did think the place was great.[/quote]
Maybe the campus beauty that day was taking Psych 101 and thinking what a cool guy the professor seemed to be.
[quote jtwcornell91]Having grown up in New York State, I used to dance around the Arts Quad when the April snow finally came. Since I knew spring could not truly begin until that was out of the way.[/quote]
Needless to say, I was a little surprised to see the April snow in Times Square this morning.