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1963-64 Ivy Men's Basketball

Ivy League
Overall

W

L

Pct

W

L

Pct

Coach

1

Princeton

12

2

.857

20

9

.690

Butch van Breda Kolff

2

Yale

11

3

.786

16

8

.667

Joe Vancisin

3

Pennsylvania

10

4

.714

14

10

.583

Jack McCloskey

4

Cornell

9

5

.643

15

10

.600

Sam MacNeil

5

Columbia

6

8

.429

11

12

.478

Jack Rohan

5

Harvard

6

8

.429

12

10

.545

Floyd Wilson

7

Brown

2

12

.143

6

19

.240

Stan Ward

8

Dartmouth

0

14

.000

2

23

.080

Doggie Julian



First-Team
Bill Bradley (Princeton)
Rick Kaminsky (Yale)
Merle McClung (Harvard)
Jeff Neuman (Pennsylvania)
Stan Pawlak (Pennsylvania)

Second-Team
Neil Farber (Columbia)
Denny Lynch (Yale)
Steve Cram (Cornell)
Dave Tarr (Brown)
Dave Schumacher (Yale)

Honorable Mention
Ray Carazo (Pennsylvania), Chris Kinum (Dartmouth), Ken Benoit (Columbia), Bob Berube (Cornell), Fran Driscoll (Brown), Ray Ratkowski (Cornell), Bob Haarlow (Princeton), John Hellings (Pennsylvania)

Olympic Medalist
Bill Bradley (Princeton) won gold for the United States in Tokyo Games

Ivy Top Scorers
33.1, Bill Bradley (Princeton)
25.5, Rick Kaminsky (Yale)
19.9, Merle McClung (Harvard)
16.9, Neil Farber (Columbia)
16.4, Stan Pawlak (Pennsylvania)

Pro Draft Picks
Yale's Ricky Kaminsky by the Philadelphia 76ers in the 6th Round (47th)
Yale's Dennis Lynch by the New York Knicks in the 11th Round (85th)

NCAA Tournament
3/9/64 in Philadelphia, Pa.: Princeton 86, VMI 60
3/13/64 in Raleigh, N.C.: Connecticut 52, Princeton 50
3/14/64 in Raleigh, N.C.: Villanova 74, Princeton 62

Bradley was the finest player in the history of the Ivy League. A three-time All-American as well as the captain of the gold-medal-winning 1964 Olympic team, he won the Sullivan Award as the nation’s outstanding athlete and a Rhodes Scholarship as an outstanding student. Bradley averaged 30 points a game in his Tiger career and topped 40 points 11 times. An eventual World Champion with the New York Knicks, he was a three-term U.S. Senator from New Jersey and ran for President in 2000.

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