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1964-65 Ivy Men's Basketball |
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Ivy
League
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Overall
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W
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L
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Pct
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W
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L
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Pct
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Coach
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1
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Princeton
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13
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1
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.929
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23
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6
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.793
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Butch van Breda Kolff
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2
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Cornell
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11
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3
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.786
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19
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5
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.792
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Sam McNeil
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3
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Pennsylvania
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10
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4
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.714
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15
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10
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.600
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Jack McCloskey
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4
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Yale
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7
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7
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.500
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10
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12
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.455
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Joe Vancisin
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5
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Harvard
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6
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8
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.429
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11
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12
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.478
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Floyd Wilson
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6
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Columbia
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5
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9
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.357
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7
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15
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.318
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Jack Rohan
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7
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Brown
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3
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11
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.214
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7
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17
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.292
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Stan Ward
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8
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Dartmouth
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1
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13
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.071
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4
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21
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.160
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Doggie Julian
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First-Team
Bill Bradley (Princeton)
Steve Cram (Cornell)
Bob DeLuca (Cornell)
Jeff Neuman (Pennsylvania)
Stan Pawlak (Pennsylvania)
Second-Team
Keith Sedlacek (Harvard)
Stan Felsinger (Columbia)
Neil Farber (Columbia)
Bob Trupin (Yale)
Merle McClung (Harvard)
Dave Bliss (Cornell)
Honorable Mention
Dave Blaine (Dartmouth), Gunnar Malm (Dartmouth), Don Rodenbach (Princeton), Gary Walters (Princeton), Ed Hummer (Princeton)
Ivy Top Scorers
28.8, Bill Bradley (Princeton)
23.7, Stan Pawlak (Penn)
23.7, Keith Sedlacek (Harvard)
21.1, Stan Felsinger (Columbia)
19.6, Neil Farber (Columbia)
Pro Draft Picks
Princeton's Bill Bradley by the New York Knicks before the 1st Round (Territorial Pick)
Yale's Steve Trupin by the New York Knicks in the 13th Round (90th)
NCAA Tournament
3/8/65 in Philadelphia, Pa.: Princeton 60, Penn State 58
3/12/65 in College Park, Md.: Princeton 66, N.C. State 48
3/13/65 in College Park, Md.: Princeton 109, Providence 69
FINAL FOUR
3/19/65 in Portland, Ore.: Michigan 93, Princeton 76
3/20/65 in Portland, Ore.: Princeton 118, Wichita State 82
Princeton reached the 1965 Final Four, riding on the back of the finest player in Ivy League history — Bill Bradley. In the East Region Final, Bradley broke his own Ivy NCAA record of 40 points, by netting 41 against the Providence Friars to send his Tigers to Portland, Ore., for the national title. After Princeton fell to Cazzie Russell and his Michigan Wolverines, the Tigers faced Wichita State in the national consolation game, the finale of Bradley’s collegiate career. The most memorable consolation ever saw Bradley net a remarkable 58 points (on 22 of 29 field goals), still second all-time in an NCAA Tourney game (behind Austin Carr’s 61 for Notre Dame). Bradley reached two career milestones with that game -- scoring his 2,500th career point and moving his career scoring average just over 30 points a game.
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