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2011–12 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team
American college basketball season
American college basketball season
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| mode | Basketball |
| year | 2011–12 |
| team | Harvard Crimson |
| logo | Harvard Crimson logo.svg |
| logo_size | 200 |
| conference | Ivy League |
| short_conf | Ivy League |
| record | 26–5 |
| conf_record | 12–2 |
| head_coach | Tommy Amaker |
| asst_coach1 | Brian Adams |
| asst_coach2 | Brian DeStefano |
| asst_coach3 | Yanni Hufnagel |
| captain | Oliver McNally |
| captain2 | Keith Wright |
| stadium | Lavietes Pavilion |
| champion | Ivy League Champion |
| 2011 Battle 4 Atlantis Champion | |
| bowl | [NCAA tournament](2012-ncaa-division-i-men-s-basketball-tournament) |
| bowl_result | Round of 64 |
2011 Battle 4 Atlantis Champion
The 2011–12 Harvard Crimson men's basketball team represented Harvard University in the Ivy League athletic conference during the 2011–12 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team played its home games in Boston, Massachusetts at the Lavietes Pavilion, located across the Charles River from the university's main campus in Cambridge with a capacity of 2,195. The team was led by fifth-year head coach Tommy Amaker and senior co-captains Keith Wright and Oliver McNally.
Harvard began the season 8–0, the best start by an Ivy League team since won its first ten games to begin the 1969-70 season. On December 5, 2011, Harvard made its first-ever appearances in the AP Poll and the Coaches' Poll, ranking 25th and 24th, respectively. The season included two wins against teams in the powerhouse Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC).
Harvard set a school record with 26 wins during the season and tied a school record for conference wins with 12. Its 14 non-conference wins also tied an Ivy League record previously held by the 2009-10 Cornell Big Red. The season culminated in an invitation to the 2012 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament, where Harvard lost in the second round. It was Harvard's first NCAA tournament appearance since 1946 and third consecutive appearance in a postseason tournament. Junior Kyle Casey was a first-team All-Ivy selection, while junior Brandyn Curry and senior Keith Wright earned second-team recognition.
Preseason
Harvard came into the 2011–12 season off of its first Ivy League championship and two school record-setting years in terms of total wins. The 2010–11 team that won the league championship during the 2010–11 Ivy League men's basketball season had no seniors. Ivy League Men's Basketball Player of the Year Keith Wright returned to the team as a senior, as did All-Ivy League juniors Kyle Casey, Brandyn Curry and Christian Webster. Harvard entered the season with a 17-game home winning streak, the 10th-longest in the country. Senior co-captain Oliver McNally entered the season with a 32-shot free throw streak, having finished second in the nation in free throw percentage the previous year.
The upperclassmen on the team came from the first top-25 recruiting class in Ivy League history. Harvard and Wright won numerous preseason honors. Wright was a preseason John R. Wooden Award Top 50 Watchlist honoree as well as a Lou Henson Preseason All-America team selection. Harvard was selected as the conference preseason favorite for the first time in school history. In addition, Harvard received preseason votes in the AP Poll, marking the fourth straight season it received votes at some point in the year.
The team's schedule included power conference opponents Boston College (ACC), Utah (Pac-12) and Connecticut (Big East) as well as a possible second-round Battle 4 Atlantis match against Florida State (ACC). Expectations were high for Harvard, and a December 8 contest against Connecticut was the only Ivy League game scheduled for broadcast on ESPN2 during the season.
Schedule
|- !colspan=9 style="background:#991111; color:#FFFFFF;"| Regular season |- !colspan=9 style="background:#991111; color:#FFFFFF;"| 2012 NCAA Tournament
Rankings
Main article: 2011–12 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings
On December 5, 2011, Harvard made its first-ever appearance in either the AP (25th) or Coaches' Poll (24th). That left Brown as the only Ivy League school never to have been ranked in the AP Poll and left only seven Division I schools active since the poll began that have never been ranked in it. Harvard was the first Ivy League team ranked in the Coaches' Poll since the 2009–10 Cornell Big Red and the first Ivy League team ranked in the AP Poll since the 1997–98 Princeton Tigers. By January 2, the team achieved rankings of 22nd in the AP Poll and 21st in the Coaches' Poll. On February 6, the team again attained the ranking of 21st in the Coaches' Poll.
Season
Harvard's season began with a Crimson Madness event on October 15 where the team raised a 2010–11 Ivy League Championship banner and held an intrasquad scrimmage. The team opened the season with a victory over on November 11 that extended Harvard's win streak against MIT to nine games.
Following the victory over MIT, Harvard took part in the 2011 Battle 4 Atlantis Tournament. The team beat Utah 75–47 in the first game of the tournament, its first-ever win against a Pac-12 Conference opponent. Harvard then matched up against UCF in the tournament final, winning 59–49. Wright earned Ivy League player of the week for his performance in the Battle 4 Atlantis tournament. McNally extended his free-throw streak to 51 in the Florida State victory, but his run ended in the final minutes of the UCF game.
The 2008–09 team had previously defeated then-ranked Boston College (17th in the AP Poll and 24th in the Coaches' Poll) for the first win over a ranked team in the program's history, but lost to all ranked opponents in the 2009–10 and 2010–11 seasons. The win against Boston College was the 1000th in school history. The Florida State victory was the school's second over a ranked team in its history and the highest-ranked opponent in the Coaches' Poll that Harvard has ever defeated. Florida State went on to win the 2012 ACC men's basketball tournament.
Harvard began the season 8–0, the best start by an Ivy League team since won its first ten games to begin the 1969-70 season. Connecticut won the teams' previous meeting at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion in 2009 by a score of 79–73 as the 2009-10 Huskies (then ranked 14th in the AP Poll and 13th in the Coaches' Poll) survived a 30-point, 9-rebound effort by Jeremy Lin. Harvard lost the 2011 meeting 67–53.
Harvard won its next four games, including victories over and Boston College for a season sweep of city rivals after beating MIT in November. Harvard's victory over Boston College was its fourth in a row against the Atlantic Coast Conference team, After rising to 21st in the Coaches' Poll and 22nd in the AP Poll, Fordham upset Harvard 60–54 in January. A 65–35 win over Yale three weeks later was Harvard's widest margin of victory against its Ivy League rival in 183 meetings. Harvard lost its third Ivy League game of the season, falling to Princeton on February 11, but avenged the loss in a home win on February 24. That victory gave Harvard a new school record for single-season wins as well as single-season non-league wins and tied the record for conference game wins. A day after beating Princeton, however, Harvard lost to Penn, snapping a 28-game home winning streak dating to February 20, 2010. Nonetheless, Harvard finished the season with a 26–4 overall record. The team won Ivy League regular-season title and earned its first invitation to the NCAA tournament since 1946. Harvard entered the tournament with a 2–1 record against teams in the field and was seeded 12th in the East Region. Harvard lost in the second round of the tournament to fifth-seeded Vanderbilt on March 15 by a score of 79–70.
Harvard set a school record by selling out 10 of 12 home games at Lavietes Pavilion (the sellouts came in all seven Ivy League matchups, as well as versus MIT, Saint Joseph's, and George Washington). All five of Harvard's starters and 12 total players returned from the previous year's championship team, but freshmen accounted for over 22% of minutes played in the 2011–12 season. Harvard's 14 non-conference wins in the regular season tied an Ivy-League record.
Honors
In-season
Each week the Ivy League selected a player of the week and a rookie of the week.
| **Player of the Week** | **Rookie of the Week** | Name | Class | Position | Name | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| November 28, 2011 | Keith Wright | Sr. | F | |||
| December 5, 2011 | Jonah Travis | F | ||||
| December 12, 2011 | Kyle Casey | Jr. | F | |||
| January 16, 2012 | Keith Wright | Sr. | F | |||
| January 23, 2012 | Corbin Miller | G | ||||
| January 30, 2012 | Steve Moundou-Missi | F | ||||
| March 5, 2012 | Kyle Casey | Jr. | F |
Postseason honors
Kyle Casey and Keith Wright were selected by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association to its 10-man All-District I (ME, VT, NH, RI, MA, CT) team, while Tommy Amaker was named the All-District I Coach of the Year. The National Association of Basketball Coaches announced its Division I All-District 13 team on March 14, recognizing the nation's best men's collegiate basketball student-athletes. Keith Wright was a first-team selection, while Kyle Casey was a second-team selection. Wright was also selected to participate in the NABC 2012 Reese's Division I All-Star Game at the 2012 NCAA Tournament final four.
The following players earned Ivy League postseason recognition: ;First Team All-Ivy
- Kyle Casey, (Jr., F, Medway, Mass.)
;Second Team All-Ivy
- Brandyn Curry, (Jr., G, Huntersville, N.C.)
- Keith Wright, (Sr., F, Suffolk, Va.)
Notes
References
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- (2011-10-11). "Men's Basketball Attends Media Day". [[Harvard University]].
- (2012-02-27). "2011–12 Ivy League Men's Basketball: Week 17 • February 27, 2012".
- (2011-12-05). "Duke, UNC don't cede much in Top 25". [[ESPN]].
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- "Harvard 2011-12 Men's Basketball Postseason Guide". [[Harvard University]].
- (2010-03-10). "Amaker Named Finalist For Jobe Award". Harvard University.
- (2011-02-25). "Princeton and Harvard Keep Pace". [[The New York Times]].
- Walsh, Timothy J.. (2010-11-11). "Finding Mister Wright". [[Harvard Crimson]].
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- "2010–11 Highlights".
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- Thamel, Pete. (2008-03-02). "In a New Era at Harvard, New Questions of Standards". [[The New York Times]].
- "Tommy Amaker". Harvard University.
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- "Oliver McNally Game-by-Game Stats (2011–12)". [[ESPN]].
- "Harvard 59 (6–0, 2–0 away); UCF 49 (4–2, 2–0 home); Complete Play-By-Play". [[ESPN]].
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- "Harvard Crimson Schedule – 2010–11". [[ESPN]].
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- TheACC.com. (2012-03-11). "Florida State Wins the #ACCTRNY 85–82 over North Carolina: This is Florida State's first ACC Championship". [[CBS Interactive]].
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- (2009-12-06). "Dyson's 24 points, 14 boards help UConn fend off Harvard". [[ESPN]].
- (2009-12-08). "No. 9 UConn spoils No. 24 Harvard's 1st game as a ranked team". [[ESPN]].
- (2011-12-10). "No. 24 Harvard returns from UConn loss with romp over Boston U". [[ESPN]].
- (2011-12-29). "No. 23 Harvard beats Boston College for fourth straight season". [[ESPN]].
- "Harvard Men's Basketball All-Time Results". GoCrimson.com.
- "Harvard Men's Basketball All-Time Series Records". GoCrimson.com.
- (2009-12-09). "Harvard 74, Boston College 67". [[ESPN]].
- (2011-01-05). "Harvard 78, Boston College 69". [[ESPN]].
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- (2012-02-25). "Penn tops Harvard to throw Ivy League race wide open". [[ESPN]].
- "Harvard Crimson Schedule – 2009–10". [[ESPN]].
- "Harvard Crimson Schedule – 2010–11". [[ESPN]].
- "Harvard Crimson Schedule – 2011–12". [[ESPN]].
- (2012-03-12). "Going Dancing: No. 12 Seed Harvard Readies for Fifth-Seeded Vanderbilt; Thursday's Game Shown Live on TNT". GoCrimson.com.
- (2012-03-15). "NCAA men's basketball tournament Notes: Game No. 2 – (5) Vanderbilt vs. (12) Harvard Thursday, March 15, 2012 • "The Pit" • Albuquerque, NM". GoCrimson.com.
- (2012-03-15). "Vanderbilt overcomes Harvard's late charge to advance". [[ESPN]].
- "Harvard 2011-12 Men's Basketball Postseason Guide". [[Harvard University]].
- "2011–12 Men's Basketball Weekly Releases".
- (2012-03-06). "USBWA Names 2011–12 Men's All-District Teams". [[United States Basketball Writers Association.
- (2012-03-14). "National Association of Basketball Coaches Announces 2012 Division I All-District Teams". [[National Association of Basketball Coaches]].
- (2012-03-26). "Harvard's Wright Selected to Play in the 2012 NABC Division I All-Star Game".
- (2012-03-07). "Men's Basketball All-Ivy – 2011–12".
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