Cornell Sun's Glossary of Cornell Sports Terms

Started by David Harding, August 12, 2017, 11:41:29 PM

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David Harding


Ken711

QuoteArcher: David '05. A student athlete himself back in the day and a man who has bled Red for years now, Archer is entering his fifth year as the head football coach of his alma mater. When Archer was hired in 2013, he became the youngest Division I head coach in the nation. Be on the lookout for that breakthrough season for the Red sometime in the near future.

Define near future.

Johnny 5

Cure for cancer? Soon. Cure for stupid? Never. ~ Prof. B. Honeydew

CU2007

I.C.: Ithaca College, the school on the other hill. Division III kingpin in just about every sport. Nicknamed the Bombers, possibly because of an affinity for cheap Ithaca bars.

Is that really true? Honest question.




Noel: Andy. Current Cornell Athletic Director. Daily Sun favorite. Who doesn't love Andy?

Guess they don't read this forum...

Weder

Quote from: CU2007I.C.: Ithaca College, the school on the other hill. Division III kingpin in just about every sport. Nicknamed the Bombers, possibly because of an affinity for cheap Ithaca bars.

Is that really true? Honest question.




Noel: Andy. Current Cornell Athletic Director. Daily Sun favorite. Who doesn't love Andy?

Guess they don't read this forum...

IC isn't as strong in football and baseball as it used to be, but it finished 10th in the Division III Directors' Cup standings last year.

(Aside: Anyone know if they've ever expressed any interest in adding hockey? With so many DIII teams in New York, I've always wondered why they don't have it.)
3/8/96

David Harding

Quote from: Weder
Quote from: CU2007I.C.: Ithaca College, the school on the other hill. Division III kingpin in just about every sport. Nicknamed the Bombers, possibly because of an affinity for cheap Ithaca bars.

Is that really true? Honest question.

IC isn't as strong in football and baseball as it used to be, but it finished 10th in the Division III Directors' Cup standings last year.

(Aside: Anyone know if they've ever expressed any interest in adding hockey? With so many DIII teams in New York, I've always wondered why they don't have it.)
They already have 25 varsity sports for a student body of ~6,600.  You can only spread your resources so far.  There is a club ice hockey team that competes in the Upstate New York Club Hockey League.
The IC website devotes an inconclusive page to the origin of the name.

Swampy

Quote from: David HardingThe Cornell Sun's Glossary of Cornell Sports Terms is not too bad, but completely dominated by names of coaches.

Am I missing something? No Harkness?

Johnny 5

Quote from: Swampy
Quote from: David HardingThe Cornell Sun's Glossary of Cornell Sports Terms is not too bad, but completely dominated by names of coaches.

Am I missing something? No Harkness?

I think deities fall under their own category.

:-D
Cure for cancer? Soon. Cure for stupid? Never. ~ Prof. B. Honeydew

Swampy

Quote from: Johnny 5
Quote from: Swampy
Quote from: David HardingThe Cornell Sun's Glossary of Cornell Sports Terms is not too bad, but completely dominated by names of coaches.

Am I missing something? No Harkness?

I think deities fall under their own category.

:-D

Ah, that also explains why no Pop Warner. But how do we explain George Seifert? Surely his record at Cornell makes him mortal, even though some in the San Francisco Bay Area think he at least qualifies as a demigod. Also, what about obvious mortals like Ben Deluca? Has he been the victim of some Stalinesque purge of history enacted by Andy Noel? And what about Petro, Tamboroni, and don't forget Dick Bertrand.

To change the subject slightly, wouldn't you like to be a fly on the wall at the interview for the next football coach when they ask, "George Seifert's teams won two Superbowls and finished first in the NFC West 6 out of 8 times. But he couldn't win here, so what makes you think you can?"

billhoward

The Sun's glossary might be the start of a larger glossary added to over time. The Sun editors in the Class of 2018 were born 3 years after Seifert won his second/last Super Bowl, in 1996. Their parents may have attended Cornell after Seifert coached on the Hill. When I was on campus in the seventies, I thought Cornell's football exploits of the early 1950s (like beating Michigan) were ancient history and not of interest (then).

rss77

Ithaca College had a varsity ice hockey team back in the 1960s and 1970s and played at Lynah Rink.  They dropped the sport back sometime in mid-70s. I remember an acquaintance of mine at Cornell showing me the article in the Cornell Sun of IC's decision (He played on the ice hockey team at IC and transferred to Cornell for academic reasons as he did not play on CU's team).  Rumor had that at one time IC was considering building a rink of their own but decided not after the City announced they were building the rink at Cass Park.

jkahn

Quote from: rss77Ithaca College had a varsity ice hockey team back in the 1960s and 1970s and played at Lynah Rink.  They dropped the sport back sometime in mid-70s. I remember an acquaintance of mine at Cornell showing me the article in the Cornell Sun of IC's decision (He played on the ice hockey team at IC and transferred to Cornell for academic reasons as he did not play on CU's team).  Rumor had that at one time IC was considering building a rink of their own but decided not after the City announced they were building the rink at Cass Park.
The Cornell freshmen team used to play IC's varsity.  I recall a 21 or 22-0 score.
Jeff Kahn '70 '72

Swampy

Quote from: jkahn
Quote from: rss77Ithaca College had a varsity ice hockey team back in the 1960s and 1970s and played at Lynah Rink.  They dropped the sport back sometime in mid-70s. I remember an acquaintance of mine at Cornell showing me the article in the Cornell Sun of IC's decision (He played on the ice hockey team at IC and transferred to Cornell for academic reasons as he did not play on CU's team).  Rumor had that at one time IC was considering building a rink of their own but decided not after the City announced they were building the rink at Cass Park.
The Cornell freshmen team used to play IC's varsity.  I recall a 21 or 22-0 score.

Who won?

Trotsky

Quote from: Swampy
Quote from: jkahn
Quote from: rss77Ithaca College had a varsity ice hockey team back in the 1960s and 1970s and played at Lynah Rink.  They dropped the sport back sometime in mid-70s. I remember an acquaintance of mine at Cornell showing me the article in the Cornell Sun of IC's decision (He played on the ice hockey team at IC and transferred to Cornell for academic reasons as he did not play on CU's team).  Rumor had that at one time IC was considering building a rink of their own but decided not after the City announced they were building the rink at Cass Park.
The Cornell freshmen team used to play IC's varsity.  I recall a 21 or 22-0 score.

Who won?
In 66 probably the freshmen.

jkahn

Quote from: Trotsky
Quote from: Swampy
Quote from: jkahn
Quote from: rss77Ithaca College had a varsity ice hockey team back in the 1960s and 1970s and played at Lynah Rink.  They dropped the sport back sometime in mid-70s. I remember an acquaintance of mine at Cornell showing me the article in the Cornell Sun of IC's decision (He played on the ice hockey team at IC and transferred to Cornell for academic reasons as he did not play on CU's team).  Rumor had that at one time IC was considering building a rink of their own but decided not after the City announced they were building the rink at Cass Park.
The Cornell freshmen team used to play IC's varsity.  I recall a 21 or 22-0 score.

Who won?
In 66 probably the freshmen.
I think Swampy's question was rhetorical, but yes, Cornell won.  It was hard for the frosh to get competitive teams to play.  There'd be mostly Jr. B teams from Canada on the schedule, such as the Dixie Beehives.  In '69-'70 I saw Carlo Ugolini score 4 goals in 51 seconds, perhaps against Dixie.  Two of them were unassisted where he won the faceoffs and proceeded to skate through the opponent and score.
Jeff Kahn '70 '72