Word: jaabering
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Quakers, coming off three straight Ivy League championships, are poised for a big drop-off this season, having lost last year’s star seniors in two-time Ivy League Player of the Year Ibrahim Jaaber and All-Ivy forward Mark Zoller...
...interrupted the 20-year string of Tigers and Quakers titles.But with Princeton still stuck in a rut created during the disastrous Joe Scott tenure and Penn having graduated its three best players from a year ago—including two-time Player of the Year Ibrahim Jaaber and big-time forward Mark Zoller—the Ancient Eight’s long-suffering underlings are all gunning for the top spot.Cornell, the favorite in the preseason media poll; Yale, a dominant home team; and a very deep and experienced Columbia squad all have legitimate title aspirations. Brown and Dartmouth hope...
...talking about.”Housman and his teammates have good reason for optimism. While in the past three years, Penn clearly was the best team in the league, the Quakers lose the two best players in the league over that time, guard Ibrahim Jaaber and forward Mark Zoller. With those two stars gone, Penn’s grip on the league title looks tenuous at best.With Jaaber and Zoller moving on to pro ball around the world, no one on their talent level remains in the league, much less two players on the same team. The lack...
...last two Ivy Rookies of the Year, Adam Gore and Ryan Wittman from Cornell, received any stars. And while two players from Penn’s four-player 2003 class were three-star recruits, the other two, who combined for zero stars, were Mark Zoller and Ibrahim Jaaber, the two best players in the league last season. But for Harvard fans who have seen their team come up short against the better teams in the league on too many occasions, the influx of such talent surely indicates Amaker has the program on the right path: towards the team?...
...against two-time Ivy League Player of the Year Ibrahim Jaaber the next night, he matched the league’s best stride for stride, holding Jaaber to nine points while he scored the same. But like much of Harvard’s season, this effort again ended in a loss. The weekend showed how great Housman can be, but it also showed how far the team still has to go to achieve Ivy League success...