Princeton University Athletics
Players Mentioned

Ivy Title at Stake for Men's Hoops at Penn Tuesday; Game on ESPN3.com
March 07, 2011 | Men's Basketball
Princeton (23-6, 11-2 Ivy) at Penn (13-14, 7-6 Ivy)
Tuesday, March 8 at 7 p.m. at The Palestra
Princeton head coach: Sydney Johnson (Princeton '97, fourth season, 64-52 overall/at Princeton)
TV: ESPN3.com (Scott Graham, Play-by-Play; Tim O'Toole, Color)
Radio: WPRB 103.3 FM, SIRIUS 130, GoPrincetonTigers.com (John Sadak, Play-by-Play; Noah Savage '08, Color)
Live Stats | Live Audio
All-Time Series: Penn leads 122-101 overall, 66-41 in Philadelphia and 50-32 at The Palestra
Streak: Princeton 4 overall, 2 at Penn
Last weekend's games: Princeton 77, at Dartmouth 55 | at Harvard 79, Princeton 67
Last time vs. Penn: at Princeton 62, Penn 59 (OT) (2/8/11)
Princeton stats: 2010-11 Stats
Individual 2010-11 game-by-game: 2 Maddox | 3 Sherburne | 5 Bray | 11 Foley | 12 Hazel | 14 Clement | 15 Comfort | 20 Davis | 22 Saunders | 24 Barrett | 25 Noonan | 32 Darrow | 33 Mavraides | 34 Hummer | 41 Edwards | 44 Connolly
Individual career stats can be found on each player's roster page.
Penn links: Penn men's basketball page | Penn game notes
Probable starters:
20 • Douglas Davis • G • Jr. • 5-11 • Philadelphia, Pa.
Stands 20th on school's career scoring list with 1,073 points ... fourth on Princeton's career 3-pointers list (188) ... second-team All-Ivy 2010, honorable mention 2009.
33 • Dan Mavraides (mav-RAID-eez) • G • Sr. • 6-4 • San Mateo, Calif.
Passed career 1,000 point mark last time out at Harvard, now 27th on school's list with 1,019 ... scored a game-high 25 points at Harvard ... five 3-pointers at Harvard were most since hitting six in season opener vs. Rutgers ... 2010 second-team All-Ivy.
22 • Patrick Saunders • F • Jr. • 6-8 • Gilford, N.H.
Has seven double-digit scoring games this season, most recently with 11 at Dartmouth last Friday ... has an assist-to-turnover ratio of 8 to 2 over the last six games.
34 • Ian Hummer • F • So. • 6-7 • Vienna, Va.
Has reached double-digit points in 23 of 29 games this season ... would tie season's longest streak (six games) of double-digit scoring with another such game vs. Penn ... team's leading scorer (13.9 ppg).
44 • Brendan Connolly • C • So. • 6-11 • Brentwood, Tenn.
First season as a starter ... has two 10-point games this season, at Wagner on Dec. 17 and vs. Marist on Jan. 5.
Princeton will be looking for a win at Penn that would give the Tigers a share of their 26th Ivy League title and would set up a one-game playoff with Harvard to be played Saturday at 4 p.m. at Yale. Princeton has been a part of all seven previous Ivy League playoffs, most recently in 2002. An Ivy title would be Princeton's first since 2004 and would end what is tied for the program's longest drought between Ivy titles - six seasons - since the first Ivy title was awarded in 1956. The Tigers went without a league crown from 1970-75, also a six-season span.
Last Time Out
Some hot shooting by Harvard Saturday put the Tigers in a position to have to defeat Penn to force an Ivy playoff. For just the fifth time in the past 14 seasons, an opponent shot 60% against Princeton, as the Crimson hit just that number while making 24 of 40 attempts. It was the first time in Sydney Johnson's four seasons that an opponent has shot 60% and first overall since Jan. 12, 2007 at Columbia.
Four Crimson players scored double-figure points and none more than Kyle Casey, who made 9 of 13 from the field and 6 of 7 from the free-throw line to score a team-best 24. Ten of Oliver McNally's 15 points came from the stripe, while Keith Wright was 5 for 6 from the field and 3 of 4 from the line for 13 points and Brandyn Curry added 10 assists to his 10 points.
Allowing 60% shooting from the field against the Crimson counterbalanced other statistical aspects that favored Princeton. The Tigers outrebounded Harvard 30-23 and kept the turnovers almost even with Harvard committing one fewer at 12-11.
Though Dan Mavraides was 9 for 20 from the field on the way to a game-high 25 points, which was one off his career best, the Tigers got little point production from other players outside the paint. Interior players Ian Hummer and Kareem Maddox scored 12 and 14 points respectively, but no other shooter aside from Mavraides had more than five points. Such has been the theme in both of Princeton's Ivy League losses, as Maddox and Hummer were the only players in double figures at Brown on Feb. 19.
Mavraides' 20 field goal attempts were the most for any Tiger since Douglas Davis hoisted 20 in his collegiate debut, also on the way to 25 points. Mavraides is Princeton's leader in assists this season with 83.
Harvard has shot better from the field in each of the last four seasons at Lavietes Pavilion against Princeton than at Jadwin Gym. The increases were within a percentage point in 2008 and 2010 but were major improvements in 2009 and 2011, up 41.5% to 58.5% in '09 and 43.8% to 60.0% this season.
23-6, 11-2 Ivy
This year's Tigers are tied with the 1965 Final Four team for the fifth-highest win total in team history with 23 wins, and another win would tie this team for third alongside Sydney Johnson's senior-year team in 1997 as well as the 1991 team with 24 wins. Next up would be the 25-win team from 1967, followed by the record-holding 27-2 team from 1998 that earned a No. 5 seed in the NCAA Tournament and advanced to the second round. That 1998 Tiger team was the last Ivy squad to win an NCAA Tournament game until last season.
Princeton's 11-2 record is its best in Ivy League play since 2004, when it was able to finish Ivy play at 13-1 as the league champion. The only Ivy loss that year was a 15-point home defeat to Penn. Princeton won at The Palestra in overtime, 76-70, to end the regular season.
If Princeton is able to capture the Ivy League title, it would be the Tigers' 26th, untying Princeton with Penn, which now shares the lead with 25 Ivy crowns. An NCAA bid would be Princeton's 24th, all since 1952. That would also untie Princeton with Penn, which has made it to the Big Dance 23 times.
Princeton's 23-6 record is its best through 29 games since the 1997-98 team capped its season at 27-2 in the second round of the NCAA Tournament with a loss to Michigan State after receiving a No. 5 seed.
Princeton's back-to-back 20-win seasons (22-9 in 2009-10) are its first since the 1998 and 1999 seasons.
Following a
2-4 start to the 2009-10 season, Princeton has won 43 of its last 54
games. Following a 2-3 start to this season, Princeton has won 21 of its last 24
games. Two of Princeton's three early losses this season, to James Madison (one) and Presbyterian (two) came by a combined three points.
Against Penn
Princeton's back-to-back wins at The Palestra in 2009 and 2010 were its first since 1998 and 1999. Another win would give Princeton its first string of three victories at The Palestra since 1997-99.
Princeton has won four straight overall against the Quakers for the longest winning streak against its rival since a six-game string from March 9, 1996 in the Ivy playoff to Feb. 9, 1999. The 1999 game is notable for being the largest comeback in a victory in Ivy League history, as the Tigers were down 29-3 late in the first half, 33-9 at the break and 40-13 in the second half before winning 50-49.
In each of the previous three seasons, Princeton has had a higher shooting percentage at The Palestra than at Jadwin Gym against Penn. Last season, Princeton shot 50.0% in Philadelphia and 41.9% in Princeton. In 2009, it was 42.6% away and 36.7% home. In 2008, it was 50.0% away and 41.5% home.
Princeton has a winning record all-time against every other Ivy League team except Penn. The Tigers have a .453 winning percentage against the Quakers since the series began in 1903, and the next-closest winning percentage is .627 against Columbia since 1901.
Princeton coach Sydney Johnson and Penn coach Jerome Allen have had a two-stage history of competition in the NCAA realm, first when their playing careers overlapped in 1994 and 1995, and now since Allen became Penn's coach during last season. Allen was 4-0 against Johnson's teams as a player, and Johnson is 3-0 against Allen as a coach.
Princeton's and Penn's coaching staffs combine for four Ivy League Player of the Year awards, two on each side. Penn head coach Jerome Allen (1993, 1994) has both on his staff, while Princeton head coach Sydney Johnson (1997) and assistant coach Brian Earl (1999) won one each.
In the season's first meeting, a 62-59 Princeton win in OT on Feb. 8 at Jadwin Gym, the Tigers led by as much as 13 in the second half before Penn stormed back, forcing overtime on a Tyler Bernardini 3-pointer with three seconds to go. Penn scored the first three points of the overtime and no more, as Princeton scored the next six to seal it. The final minute saw Jack Eggleston call a timeout Penn didn't have, sending Douglas Davis to the free-throw line to split a pair with 38 seconds left, followed by Ian Hummer stealing the inbounds pass to necessitate a foul and put Princeton ahead by two by sinking both at the line to make it 61-59 with 13 seconds left. After a missed layup by Fran Dougherty at the other end, Dan Mavraides secured the rebound, split a pair at the line and Princeton escaped with the win.
Penn used just seven players in the first meeting with three of them playing at least 43 of the 45 minutes. Miles Cartwright and Zack Rosen played 43, while Jack Eggleston never subbed out in playing the full 45. Tyler Bernardini scored his game-high 19 points in 37 minutes of action.
Princeton also used a consistent five for most of the first meeting, with Mack Darrow (33), Kareem Maddox (38), Dan Mavraides (37), Douglas Davis (39) and Ian Hummer (39) combining to play 82.7% of the minutes.
Princeton and Penn each made 22 of 54 (40.7%) from the field in the first game. The Tigers won the rebounding battle 39-31 but had more turnovers, 15-12. The teams were similar from beyond the arc, Princeton making 9 of 17 (.529) and Penn 9 of 19 (.474), though the Quakers hit just 6 of 13 (.462), from the free-throw line, making Princeton's 9 of 14 (.643) look better.
Four Tigers were in double figures in the opener, all with 11 points, including Patrick Saunders, Douglas Davis, Dan Mavraides and Mack Darrow. Saunders scored his 11 points in just 19 minutes. Ian Hummer and Kareem Maddox were helpful on the glass, each nearing a double-double with Hummer's eight points and 11 rebounds and Maddox's eight points and nine boards.
Jadwin Gym Success
Princeton wrapped up a 12-0 home schedule, tying these Tigers with the 1990 and 1998 teams for the most games won in Jadwin without a loss in a single season. The 2010-11 Tigers are the sixth team in the 42 full seasons of Jadwin Gym to complete the slate without a loss, following the 1975 (10-0), 1977 (11-0), 1990 (12-0), 1991 (9-0) and 1998 (12-0) teams.
It has been more than a full calendar year without a home loss for Princeton, which last lost in Jadwin on Feb. 20, 2010 to Brown. Through Sunday's games, Princeton's 16-game Jadwin winning streak is tied for the 13th-longest active home winning streak in Division I. Duke holds the longest streak at 36 games, followed by Kentucky at 34 and Utah State at 31.
The 16-game
home winning streak is Princeton's longest since the Tigers won 22 in a
row from Jan. 6, 1997 to Dec. 9, 1998. It is tied for the fourth-longest winning
streak in Jadwin Gym history, alongside a 16-gamer from 1973-75, and behind an
18-gamer from 1976-78, the 22-gamer from 1997-98 and a 28-gamer from
1989-91.
Historical Notes
After getting his fifth double-double with 18 points and 12 rebounds at Brown on Feb. 19, Ian Hummer is the first Princeton player since Bob Roma '79 in 1979 to have five double-doubles in one season. Andy Rimol '74, with seven in 1974, was the last Princeton player with more than five.
As far as fellow sophomores getting five double-doubles, Ian Hummer has the most since Andy Rimol had five in 1972, while Chris Thomforde '69 is next on the list chronologically with 11 in 1967.
Ian Hummer still has a way to go to reach his family record for double-doubles in a season, as uncle John Hummer '70 had nine as a senior, while father Ed Hummer '67 had a high of six in 1966 as a junior.
Sydney Johnson '97 is now the fifth Princeton coach in history to have at least two 20-win seasons. Albert Wittmer (1923-32) also had two, while Bill Carmody (1996-00) and Butch van Breda Kolff '45 (1962-67) had three apiece and Pete Carril (1967-96) had 10.
Playing its first five Ivy League games at home and then 7 of 9 on the road may be unusual for Princeton, but it's not unprecedented. The Tigers had the same setup in 1985, 1994 and 1996. In none of those three years, however, did Princeton win all five of the early home games, as it did this year. In '85, the Tigers started 2-3 at home, then 4-1 each in '94 and '96. Princeton went 5-4 the rest of the Ivy season in '85, then 7-2 in '94 and 8-1 in '96. So far in 2011, Princeton is 6-2 since the five-game home start to the Ivy season.
Individual Milestones
While Douglas Davis reached 1,000 points in the first meeting against Penn, Dan Mavraides crossed the mark with his 25-point game at Harvard Saturday. Mavraides is the 28th member of the Princeton 1,000-point club and is now in 27th place at 1,019, while Davis is in 20th place at 1,073. Next up for Mavraides is Ian Hummer's uncle John Hummer '70 at 1,031, while Davis has Bob Roma '79 (1,076) and Barnes Hauptfuhrer '76 (1,079) ahead of him.
Who is the next likeliest member of Princeton's 1,000-point club? Though senior Kareem Maddox is closest by the numbers at 777, sophomore Ian Hummer is the next on pace, now with 617.Kareem Maddox's block numbers have increased each season, from nine as a freshman to 16 as a sophomore, then 27 as a junior and already 51 this season for a career total of 103. Maddox is the third Tiger since the block stat began being recorded regularly in 1975-76 to record 100 career blocks, alongside Chris Young '02 (145) and Rick Hielscher '95 (159).
Maddox's 51 blocks this season have him behind only Chris Young '02, who had 55 blocks as a rookie in 1998-99 and 90 as a sophomore in 1999-00 before signing a baseball contract with the Pittsburgh Pirates, ending his eligibility. Young is now a New York Met.
Douglas Davis stands fourth on the career 3-point list at 188 with still a way to go to pass Gabe Lewullis '99 (212). Sean Jackson '92 (235) and current assistant coach Brian Earl '99 (281) are the only two beyond 212. Dan Mavraides is sixth on the list at 160 with head coach Sydney Johnson '97 (162) just ahead of him.
Douglas Davis is one of five Princeton players in the 25 years the rule has been in place to hit 50 3-pointers in each of three seasons, along with Sean Jackson '92, Gabe Lewullis '99, Brian Earl '99 and Kyle Koncz '08. Next year, he could join Earl as the only Tiger to hit 50 in all four seasons. Dan Mavraides, with two such seasons, is the seventh Tiger with multiple 50 3-pointer seasons.
Davis and Mavraides are fourth and eighth respectively on the school's career list of 3-pointers attempted. Davis (472) is behind Sean Jackson '92 (501), while next up for Mavraides (418) is former teammate Kyle Koncz '08 (438). Current assistant coach Brian Earl '99 is the leader at 675.
Princeton in the Ivy and NCAA Rankings
Princeton has no individual leaders in any Ivy all-season rankings but leads the league as a team in scoring defense (63.4 ppg), in field goal percentage defense (.419), in 3-point field goal percentage defense (.328) and in rebounding margin (+3.8).
Among conference-only games, Princeton has the best scoring defense in the Ivy League to this point at 60.3 ppg, the lowest field goal percentage allowed both overall (.412) and from 3-point range (.303), the highest average in rebounding offense (35.5 rpg), the biggest per-game rebounding margin (+5.8) and the highest offensive (.326) and defensive rebound percentages (.753).
In the NCAA rankings released prior to Friday's games, Princeton's top national ranking other than winning percentage (14th, .815) was in field goal percentage (46th, .465). Ian Hummer held Princeton's top individual ranking, in field goal percentage (31st, .560).
Tiger Trends
Princeton is 14-0 when it shoots better than 46.0% from the field this season.
Princeton is 7-0 when it shoots 42% or better from beyond the arc.
Princeton is 13-0 this season when opponents shoot 40% or lower from the field.
Princeton is 18-0 when opponents shoot 36% or lower from distance.
Princeton is 11-0 this season when holding opponents to fewer than 10 assists.
The magic number on the scoreboard for Princeton this season has been 68. The Tigers are 14-0 this season when they score 68 points. Princeton is also 17-0 when opponents score 64 or fewer points.
Princeton is 13-0 this season when an opponent has not reached 28 points by halftime.
The Tigers are 18-2 when leading at the half, 4-4 when trailing and 1-0 when tied. The comebacks include: Siena (down four, won by nine in OT), Tulsa (down one, won by four in double OT), home vs. Harvard (down one, won by four), and home vs. Columbia (down one, won by five). The givebacks include James Madison (up by 13, lost by one) and UCF (up by eight, lost by six).
Rebounding has not had a perfect correlation to victory for the Tigers this season, who are 8-2 when they get outrebounded and 16-3 when they win the battle of the boards.
Princeton has four players averaging double-figure points, with Ian Hummer at 13.9, Kareem Maddox at 13.7, Dan Mavraides at 12.8, and Douglas Davis at 11.9. Princeton has not had four players finish a season in double figures since 2003, when four starters, including current San Diego Padres outfielder Will Venable '05, did so.Excluding senior night, Princeton has used
two starting lineups this season. Dan Mavraides and Brendan Connolly have started all 28 games, while Ian Hummer and Douglas Davis started all 27 except for senior night, and Patrick Saunders has started the last 25 after Kareem Maddox held that spot for the first three contests. The senior night lineup included Mavraides, Maddox, Connolly, Saunders and Bobby Foley.
If It Happens...
The Tigers set a program record with four OT victories in one season when they beat Penn 62-59 on Feb. 8. This team is the fifth Tiger program to play in at least four OT games, alongside 1978-79, 1994-95 and 1998-99. The record for OT games in one season belongs to the 1980-81 Tigers, who played in five.
If Kareem Maddox scores 30 points again this season, he would join Bill Bradley '65, Geoff Petrie '70 and Brian Taylor '84 as the only Tigers in program history with three 30-point games in a season. Presently, he is the only Ivy League with two 30-point games this season (31 at Tulsa, 30 vs. Siena), and he is the first Tiger with two 30-point games in a season since Kevin Mullin '84.
Princeton has had five players scoring in double-figures in four games this season, against Marist, Towson, Monmouth and Saint Joseph's. It is the first time Princeton has had five players reach double figures in as many as four games since the 1973-74 season. The 1971-72 season was the last time Princeton had five such games. The 1967-68 team holds the record with nine such games.
Princeton has had as many as six players reach double figures in a game three times, in 1956, 1967 and 2000. The 2000 game, coming Mar. 4 against Brown, is the only time in program history Princeton had seven players in double figures.
Princeton's last game in which two players each had a double-double came on March 2, 1974 at Columbia. Barnes Hauptfuhrer (14 pts., 12 reb.) and Andy Rimol (21 pts., 11 reb.) performed the feat that day, and Ian Hummer and Kareem Maddox have come close this season.
Coach Sydney Johnson
Sydney Johnson (2007-) will tie Bill Carmody (1996-00) at the Penn game with 117 games coached at Princeton, good for a sixth-place tie on the school's list of games coached and the highest number since Pete Carril (1967-96) at 775. Carmody coached Johnson in his final season as a Tiger player after Carril coached his first three. The rest of the list includes Franklin "Cappy" Cappon (1938-43, 46-61) at 431, Albert Wittmer (1923-32) at 201, Frederick Leuhring (1912-20) at 143 and Butch van Breda Kolff '45 (1962-67) at 134.
Johnson has 64 victories as Princeton's head coach, good for eighth on the program's list. Up next is John Thompson III '88 at 68.
Johnson is the third-longest tenured coach in the Ivy League, one week short of Harvard's Tommy Amaker, with both men in their fourth seasons at their current schools. Yale's James Jones is the Ivy dean, in his 12th season.
Since the beginning of calendar year 2009, Johnson's record is 56-21.
Johnson is one of five Princeton alumni who are currently Division I head coaches, all disciples of Pete Carril. The other four are Chris Mooney '94 (Richmond), John Thompson III '88 (Georgetown), Joe Scott '87 (Denver) and Craig Robinson '83 (Oregon State). Princeton is tied with Indiana, and behind North Carolina (seven), for the second-most active Division I head coaches produced."MARV" and "CRUNCH"
Princeton's "MARV" patches are in honor of Marvin Bressler, the late professor who came to Princeton in 1963 and began serving in an informal advisor role with the team. He was an inspiration to create the Academic-Athletic Fellows program that serves all Princeton teams. Bressler was an Academic-Athletic Fellow for men's basketball through the 2009-10 season before he passed away on July 7, 2010 at age 87.
The "CRUNCH" patches on Princeton's warmups are in honor of Christian "Crunch" Regulski, an 11-year-old boy who passed away on Feb. 10, 2011. "Crunch" was connected with the Tigers through the Friends of Jaclyn organization that links children living with brain tumors to supportive local sports teams.
The Opponent
Individual Notes
2 • Kareem Maddox • F • 6-8 • Sr.
Won back-to-back Ivy League Player of the Week honors Dec. 13 and Dec. 20 and is the reigning Ivy Player of the Week for Feb. 28 ... included on ESPN's Most Respected Players list by Jay Bilas last month ... one of three Princeton players in last 35 years to record 100+ career blocks ... has hit 10+ free throws in three games this season ... is shooting .649 from the field over the last two Ivy weekends ... leads team's regulars in field goal percentage (.577) and is the team's leading rebounder (7.0 rpg) and shot blocker (51) ... second on the team in scoring (13.7 ppg) and assists (69) ... has had three double-doubles this season and four in his career ... came off the bench for 23 games prior to senior night after starting the season's first three games ... won the team's sixth-man award last season.
3 • Jimmy Sherburne • G • 6-3 • So.
Has played in 13 games this season with a high of seven minutes twice, most recently against Marist on Jan. 5 ... saw limited minutes (38 in six games) last season due to injury and illness.
5 • T.J. Bray • G • 6-6 • Fr.
Had a career-high nine points and career-high five rebounds at Dartmouth last Friday ... leads freshman class in minutes per game (10.6) ... Wisconsin Mr. Basketball 2010.
11 • Bobby Foley • G • 6-5 • Sr.
Has played in 14 games, including five straight ... had first career start on senior night last time out vs. Columbia ... played in eight
games as a reserve last season ... played in 28 career games over first
three seasons ... hit a 3-pointer each against Duke, TCNJ, in both Brown games and at Dartmouth ... one of three seniors on the roster.
12 • Ben Hazel (HAY-zul) • G/F • 6-5 • Fr.
Has played in 17 games this season ... played double-digit minutes in 7 of 8 games from Jan. 23-Feb. 12 but no more than five minutes in a game since ... first-team All-Washington Catholic Athletic
Conference as a senior ... played against current teammate Ian Hummer on
opposing league teams.
14 • Chris Clement (CLEM-ent) • G • 6-2 • Fr.
Played a season-high 10 minutes against TCNJ on Jan. 23 ... has played in eight games (Duke, James Madison, Lafayette, Saint Joseph's, Towson, TCNJ, Brown, Dartmouth) ... averaged 15 points per game as a senior,
leading to district MVP and all-region honors in Texas 5A.
15 • John Comfort • F • 6-8 • Jr.
Against TCNJ and Brown, played in back-to-back games for the first time this season ... scored four points against TCNJ on Jan. 23 ... played the final minute at Duke ... played in 28 games over first two seasons ... 11 of 36 career from three-point range.
20 • Douglas Davis • G • 5-11 • Jr.
Second-team
All-Ivy 2010, All-Ivy honorable mention 2009 ... leads team in 3-pointers (64) ... one of five players in program history, and first since Kyle Koncz '08, to have 50 3-pointers in each of at least three seasons ... has scored double digits 19 times this season with a high of 23 against Presbyterian on Nov. 24 ... has made multiple 3-pointers in 18 of 29 games this season ... stands fourth on school's career 3-point list at 188 (Gabe Lewullis '99, 3rd at 212) ... stands 20th on school's 1,000-point list at 1,073.
22 • Patrick Saunders • F • 6-8 • Jr.
Made season's first start vs.
Bucknell and has started the last 26 games ... reached double digits in points at Dartmouth (11) on Mar. 4 for first time since Feb. 8 ... has scored points in all 28 games after missing the season opener.
24 • Will Barrett • F • 6-10 • So.
Played a season-high 22 minutes against Cornell on Feb. 25 ... has scored points in four straight games for the first time all season.
25 • Tom Noonan • F • 6-9 • Fr.
Saw first collegiate action on Jan. 23 against TCNJ with five minutes ... also played four minutes vs. Brown, scoring his first collegiate points (two), and one minute each vs. Dartmouth and at Columbia ... team MVP as a senior at Penn Charter ... first-team all-league and honorable mention All-Philadelphia as a senior.
32 • Mack Darrow (like "arrow") • F • 6-9 • So.
Averaging 19.1 minutes per game after playing 17 minutes total last season ... most minutes per game for any player who has not started a game this season ... has scored 131 points so far this season after scoring six points all last season ... has had 26 assists in Ivy games with only two turnovers ... scored 10 points last Saturday vs. Columbia for most points since scoring 11 vs. Penn on Feb. 8.
33 • Dan Mavraides (mav-RAID-eez) • G • 6-4 • Sr.
Second-team
All-Ivy 2010 ... 24 double-digit scoring games this season ... scored a game-high 25 points at Harvard last time out ... leads the team in assists (83) ... reached 1,000 career points during Harvard game, now stands 27th on Princeton's career list.
34 • Ian Hummer • F • 6-7 • So.
Team's leading scorer at 13.9 ppg and second-leading rebounder at 6.7 rpg ... has had five double-doubles this season, most for any Tiger since 1979 ... second on the team in blocks (31), tied second in steals (29) and third in assists (59) ... both father Ed and uncle
John played at Princeton ... John played six seasons in the NBA from
1970-76 for Buffalo Braves, Chicago Bulls and Seattle SuperSonics.
41 • Daniel Edwards • F • 6-8 • Fr.
Scored first collegiate points against Brown (two) in third game played this season ... averaged a double-double (17 points, 10
rebounds) as a HS senior ... two-year team offensive MVP ... two-time
first-team all-district honoree.
44 • Brendan Connolly • C • 6-11 • So.
Has had two 10-point games this season, at Wagner on Dec. 17 and vs. Marist on Jan. 5 ... played 39 minutes in the Rutgers game but no more than 19 in any game since while making all 29 starts ... played 79 minutes in 15 games last season.
Tigers from the Line
Player 2010-11 Season/Career
2 Maddox 111-145 (.766)/228-293 (.778)
3 Sherburne 0-0 (.000)/1-2 (.500)
5 Bray 13-18 (.722)/13-18 (.722)
11 Foley 0-0 (.000)/0-1 (.000)
12 Hazel 7-11 (.636)/7-11 (.636)
14 Clement 4-5 (.800)/4-5 (.800)
15 Comfort 1-3 (.333)/6-11 (.545)
20 Davis 43-59 (.729)/129-163 (.791)
22 Saunders 9-14 (.643)/57-70 (.814)
24 Barrett 10-15 (.667)/16-23 (.696)
25 Noonan 0-0 (.000)/0-0 (.000)
32 Darrow 28-35 (.800)/28-35 (.800)
33 Mavraides 90-114 (.789)/225-284 (.792)
34 Hummer 73-112 (.652)/119-190 (.626)
41 Edwards 0-4 (.000)/0-4 (.000)
44 Connolly 17-25 (.680)/18-27 (.667)
Individual Season & Career Highs (highs set last game in bold)
Will Barrett
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 6 vs. Cornell (2/25/11)
Rebounds: 7 vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
Assists: 4 vs. Cornell (2/25/11)
Steals: 1, last vs. Columbia (2/26/11)
Blocks: 2, last vs. Columbia (2/26/11)
Field Goals: 2 vs. Cornell (2/25/11)
Three-Pointers: 1, last at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Free Throws: 2, last at Harvard (3/5/11)
Minutes: 22 vs. Cornell (2/25/11)
Career Highs
Points: 13 vs. Goucher (1/24/10)
Rebounds: 8 vs. Goucher (1/24/10)
Assists: 4 vs. Cornell (2/25/11)
Steals: 3, last at George Washington (11/24/09)
Blocks: 2, last vs. Columbia (2/26/11)
Field Goals: 5 vs. Goucher (1/24/10)
Three-Pointers: 3 vs. Goucher (1/24/10)
Free Throws: 5 at California (11/29/09)
Minutes: 26 vs. Army (11/21/09)
T.J. Bray
2010-11 Season/Career Highs
Points: 9 at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Rebounds: 5 at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Assists: 2, last vs. Northeastern (12/29/10)
Steals: 3 at Brown (2/19/11)
Blocks: 1 vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Field Goals: 4 at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Three-Pointers: 1, last at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Free Throws: 2, last vs. Cornell (2/25/11)
Minutes: 22 at Brown (2/19/11)
Chris Clement
2010-11 Season/Career Highs
Points: 3, last vs. Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
Rebounds: 1, last vs. Brown (1/28/11)
Assists: 1 vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
Steals: 1, last vs. Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
Blocks: 0
Field Goals: 1 vs. Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 3 at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Minutes: 10 vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
John Comfort
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 4 vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
Rebounds: 1, last at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Assists: 1, last vs. Brown (1/28/11)
Steals: 0
Blocks: 0
Field Goals: 2 vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 1 vs. Brown (1/28/11)
Minutes: 5 vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
Career Highs
Points: 6, last vs. Harvard (2/20/09)
Rebounds: 3 at Yale (2/13/09)
Assists: 1, last vs. Brown (1/28/11)
Steals: 1 vs. Goucher (1/24/10)
Blocks: 1 vs. Lehigh (1/7/09)
Field Goals: 2, last vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
Three-Pointers: 2 vs. Penn (2/17/09)
Free Throws: 2, last vs. Brown (2/27/09)
Minutes: 19 vs. Penn (2/17/09)
Brendan Connolly
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 10, last vs. Marist (1/5/11)
Rebounds: 11 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Assists: 5 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Steals: 2 at UCF (12/30/10)
Blocks: 2, last at Yale (2/18/11)
Field Goals: 5 vs. Marist (1/5/11)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 3 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Minutes: 39 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Career Highs
Points: 10, last vs. Marist (1/5/11)
Rebounds: 11 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Assists: 5, last vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Steals: 2, last at UCF (12/30/10)
Blocks: 2, last at Yale (2/18/11)
Field Goals: 5 vs. Marist (1/5/11)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 3 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Minutes: 39 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Mack Darrow
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 13 vs. Bucknell (11/23/10)
Rebounds: 8 at Yale (2/18/11)
Assists: 5, last vs. Dartmouth (2/5/11)
Steals: 3 at Yale (2/18/11)
Blocks: 3 at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Field Goals: 4 vs. Penn (2/8/11)
Three-Pointers: 3 vs. Penn (2/8/11)
Free Throws: 5, last vs. Columbia (2/26/11)
Minutes: 33, last vs. Penn (2/8/11)
Career Highs
Points: 13 vs. Bucknell (11/23/10)
Rebounds: 8 at Yale (2/18/11)
Assists: 5, last vs. Dartmouth (2/5/11)
Steals: 3 at Yale (2/18/11)
Blocks: 3 at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Field Goals: 4 vs. Penn (2/8/11)
Three-Pointers: 3 vs. Penn (2/8/11)
Free Throws: 5, last vs. Columbia (2/26/11)
Minutes: 33, last vs. Penn (2/8/11)
Douglas Davis
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 23 vs. Presbyterian (11/24/10)
Rebounds: 5 at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Assists: 4, last at Wagner (12/17/10)
Steals: 6 vs. Dartmouth (2/5/11)
Blocks: 1 at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Field Goals: 8 vs. Presbyterian (11/24/10)
Three-Pointers: 6, last at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Free Throws: 6, last at JMU (11/22/10)
Minutes: 44 vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Career Highs
Points: 27 at Manhattan (12/14/08)
Rebounds: 5, last at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Assists: 4, last at Wagner (12/17/10)
Steals: 6 vs. Dartmouth (2/5/11)
Blocks: 2 vs. UNCG (1/3/09)
Field Goals: 10, last vs. Manhattan (12/14/08)
Three-Pointers: 7 vs. Lafayette (12/6/09)
Free Throws: 6, last at JMU (11/22/10)
Minutes: 44 vs. Siena (11/28/08)
Daniel Edwards
2010-11 Season/Career Highs
Points: 2, last at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Rebounds: 2 at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Assists: 0
Steals: 2 at Duke (11/14/10)
Blocks: 0
Field Goals: 1 at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 0
Minutes: 4 vs. Brown (1/28/11)
Bobby Foley
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 3, last at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Rebounds: 1 vs. Brown (1/28/11)
Assists: 0
Steals: 0
Blocks: 0
Field Goals: 1, last at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Three-Pointers: 1, last at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Free Throws: 0
Minutes: 8 vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
Career Highs
Points: 6, last vs. Lafayette (1/9/08)
Rebounds: 4 at Lehigh (1/6/08)
Assists: 2 at Lehigh (1/6/08)
Steals: 1, last vs. Goucher (1/24/10)
Blocks: 0
Field Goals: 2, last at Yale (2/13/08)
Three-Pointers: 2, last vs. Lafayette (1/9/08)
Free Throws: None
Minutes: 22 at Lehigh (1/6/08)
Ben Hazel
2010-11 Season/Career Highs
Points: 7 vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
Rebounds: 5 at Columbia (2/11/11)
Assists: 2 at Columbia (2/11/11)
Steals: 1 vs. Penn (2/8/11)
Blocks: 1 vs. Penn (2/8/11)
Field Goals: 2 vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
Three-Pointers: 1, last at Brown (2/19/11)
Free Throws: 3 vs. Brown (1/28/11)
Minutes: 20 at Cornell (2/12/11)
Ian Hummer
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 25 at Columbia (2/11/11)
Rebounds: 14 vs. Presbyterian (11/24/10)
Assists: 5, last vs. Marist (1/5/11)
Steals: 3, last vs. Penn (2/8/11)
Blocks: 3, last at Cornell (2/12/11)
Field Goals: 10, last at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 7 at Columbia (2/11/11)
Minutes: 46 at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Career Highs
Points: 25 at Columbia (2/11/11)
Rebounds: 14 vs. Presbyterian (11/24/10)
Assists: 5, last vs. Marist (1/5/11)
Steals: 3, last vs. Penn (2/8/11)
Blocks: 3, last at Cornell (2/12/11)
Field Goals: 10, last at Lafayette (11/30/10)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 9 at UNC Greensboro (12/13/09)
Minutes: 46 at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Kareem Maddox
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 31 at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Rebounds: 15 vs. Dartmouth (2/5/11)
Assists: 6, last at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Steals: 3, last vs. Brown (1/28/11)
Blocks: 5, last vs. Penn (2/8/11)
Field Goals: 10, last at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 11 at Brown (2/19/11)
Minutes: 43 vs. Siena (11/28/10)
Career Highs
Points: 31 at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Rebounds: 15 vs. Dartmouth (2/5/11)
Assists: 6, last at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Steals: 3, last vs. Brown (1/28/11)
Blocks: 5, last vs. Penn (2/8/11)
Field Goals: 10, last at Tulsa, (12/12/10)
Three-Pointers: 2, last at Brown (2/13/09)
Free Throws: 11 at Brown (2/19/11)
Minutes: 45 vs. Maine (11/19/08)
Dan Mavraides
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 26 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Rebounds: 10 at Yale (2/18/11)
Assists: 6, last vs. Cornell (2/25/11)
Steals: 3, last vs. Harvard (2/4/11)
Blocks: 2 at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Field Goals: 9 at Harvard (3/5/11)
Three-Pointers: 6 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Free Throws: 8, last vs. Marist (1/5/11)
Minutes: 49 at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Career Highs
Points: 26 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Rebounds: 10 at Yale (2/18/11)
Assists: 6, last vs. Cornell (2/25/11)
Steals: 4 vs. Monmouth (12/16/09)
Blocks: 2 at Monmouth (12/8/10)
Field Goals: 9 at Harvard (3/5/11)
Three-Pointers: 6 vs. Rutgers (11/12/10)
Free Throws: 10 at Penn (2/16/10)
Minutes: 49, last at Tulsa (12/12/10)
Tom Noonan
2010-11 Season/Career Highs
Points: 2 vs. Brown (1/28/11)
Rebounds: 1 vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
Assists: 1 vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
Steals: 0
Blocks: 1 vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
Field Goals: 1 vs. Brown (1/28/11)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 0
Minutes: 5 vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
Patrick Saunders
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 15 at Towson (12/22/10)
Rebounds: 8 at Towson (12/22/10)
Assists: 3, last at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Steals: 1, last at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Blocks: 1, last vs. Columbia (2/26/11)
Field Goals: 7 at Towson (12/22/10)
Three-Pointers: 4 vs. Saint Joseph's (12/5/10)
Free Throws: 2, last vs. Penn (2/8/11)
Minutes: 38 at Wagner (12/17/10)
Career Highs
Points: 21 at Marist (1/6/10)
Rebounds: 9 vs. Penn (2/17/09)
Assists: 3, last at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Steals: 2 vs. Yale (2/19/10)
Blocks: 6 vs. Penn (2/17/09)
Field Goals: 8 at Marist (1/6/10)
Three-Pointers: 5 at Marist (1/6/10)
Free Throws: 4, last vs. Dartmouth (3/5/10)
Minutes: 38 at Wagner (12/17/10)
Jimmy Sherburne
2010-11 Season Highs
Points: 0
Rebounds: 3, last at Columbia (2/11/11)
Assists: 2 at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Steals: 1, last at Dartmouth (3/4/11)
Blocks: 0
Field Goals: 1 vs. Cornell (2/25/11)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 0
Minutes: 7, last vs. Marist (1/5/11)
Career Highs
Points: 3 at Marist (1/6/10)
Rebounds: 3, last at Columbia (2/11/11)
Assists: 1, last vs. TCNJ (1/23/11)
Steals: 1 vs. Cornell (2/25/11)
Blocks: 1 at Saint Joseph's (1/2/10)
Field Goals: 1, last vs. Cornell (2/25/11)
Three-Pointers: 0
Free Throws: 1 at Marist (1/6/10)
Minutes: 11, last vs. Dartmouth (3/5/10)

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