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by Jordan Ruby • Mar 23, 2010 11:20 AM EDT
Cornell reserve big man Mark Coury has taken an interesting route to the Big Red bench; and depending on the order of your priorities, you might even think he's moving backwards.
Coury started his college career at Kentucky. Yes, I mean that Kentucky. Coury walked onto the Commonwealth's team as a freshman, and started 29 games for the Wildcats as a sophomore in 2008. Following that season Coury used his 4.0 GPA to transfer to Cornell, where as a senior he now averages just 2.5 points and 2.4 rebounds a game. As Pete Thamel of the New York Times points out, this wasn't exactly a "basketball move":
The difference between the programs could not be more vast. Cornell (29-4) has played in seven N.C.A.A. tournament games. Kentucky (34-2) has won seven national championships. Cornell spends less than $1 million on its men's basketball budget. Kentucky allocates $8.6 million.
Usually this story plays out the other way. A kid flies under the recruiting radar, plays his butt off at a lower level school, then transfers to the program he's always dreamed of playing for. Coury transferred to Cornell because he thought the business school was appealing. Seriously. I applaud him for focusing on his academics when it would have been so easy for him to stay at Kentucky and soak in everything being a basketball player at one of the nation's biggest programs provides.
And, as fate would have it, Coury's new team, David (the 12th seeded Cinderella from the Ivy League) will face his old team, Goliath (the heavily favored, top remaining team in the tournament) for a spot in the Elite-8. If Cornell manages to win, then Mark Coury's odd collegiate basketball career becomes the script for the greatest after school special of all time.
8 comments
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Comments
About Time....
It’s about time someone over there recognizes the greatest sports story of the year. Forget Tiger’s boring interview, forget Odem’s couples therapy. Let’s focus on the Cornell Big Red. Playing at Syracuse is essentially a home game, not to mention the city of Syracuse get’s an average IQ bump of at least 13 points that day. Get ready for a winning ride all the way to Collegetown!!
Big.Red.Bears
by Bleedbigred on Mar 23, 2010 11:34 AM EDT reply actions
You are so correct. This is a great article, so insightful and clever!!!
by annoymous on Mar 23, 2010 5:41 PM EDT up reply actions
For the record
Mark played at UK for BCG. He was Clydes “BOY” No one knew then or now why! He left UK because he was not going to play. I’m glad he found a place. Your remark about the IQ bump in Syracuse is the reason the rest of the country can’t stand your “Ivy League Mentality”
Happy Days are here again The sky is all ways BLUE again Happy days are here again !
by oldcat70 on Mar 23, 2010 1:25 PM EDT reply actions
And for one more record...
You’re probably right. He probably didn’t consider that for every Cornell fan attending the game, there might be three Kentucky fans, and maybe even an alumni. So the average IQ is more likely to fall, not rise.
by Portmanteur on Mar 23, 2010 5:59 PM EDT up reply actions
Only 13 points
You are giving the people of Syracuse way too much credit.
by andyp111 on Mar 23, 2010 1:26 PM EDT reply actions
OK, let's put it at 20
I’m definitely rooting for Cornell, even though that would mess up my bracket even more. Tell me one reason why not to root for them?
"Left hand, right hand, it doesn't matter. I'm amphibious." - Charles Shackleford
""He’s a stiff." - The Legendary Doug Moe
"We have a great bunch of outside shooters. Unfortunately, all our games are played indoors." - Weldon Drew
"I really didn't want it, but now that I've won it, it's nice. It's an honor. It's nice to know people don't think you're a total idiot. ... It must have been a poor year for coaches." - Doug Moe...talking about winning 1987-88 Coach of the Year award.
"We're just tough, man" - Chauncey Billups
by LACK on Mar 23, 2010 2:49 PM EDT up reply actions
on the contrary
This isn’t just a feel good decision. This was a perfectly logical and financially sound decision.
Unless of course he was looking to go in the 1st round of the draft.
by 214ever on Mar 23, 2010 10:34 PM EDT reply actions
great story
i have not seen this covered anywhere else.
lets go big red. cornell in the final four.
by 110mph on Mar 24, 2010 12:37 PM EDT reply actions
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