Matt Knowling vs. Brown Ivy Madness
David Schamis

Men's Basketball Tim Bennett

Bulldogs Set for First Round NCAA Game vs. Auburn

Yale making its seventh NCAA Appearance and fourth under head coach James Jones

Matt Knowling
No. 13 YALE vs. No. 4 AUBURN
Fri., Mar. 22 – 4:15 p.m. EDT
Spokane Arena
Spokane, Wash.
TV: TNT
MarchMadness Live Video | Live Stats | Game Notes
 
SPOKANE, Wash. – The Yale men's basketball team has had some time to savor Sunday's last-second victory over Brown in the championship game of the Ivy League Tournament. Now it's time for the Bulldogs to turn their attention to their first round NCAA Tournament matchup with Auburn. Yale, the No. 13 seed in the East Region, meets No. 4 Auburn on Friday at 4:15 p.m. EDT at Spokane Arena. The game will be televised nationally on TNT. The winner advances to Sunday's second round to meet the winner of the San Diego State-UAB game.
 
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:
 
• The Bulldogs (22-9, 11-3 Ivy) earned the Ivy League's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament by winning the Ivy Tournament in thrilling fashion. Matt Knowling's baseline floater off a feed from Bez Mbeng as time expired lifted second-seeded Yale to a 62-61 victory over No. 4 Brown last Sunday at Columbia's Levien Gym. The Bulldogs had trailed by six with 27 seconds remaining.
 
• Danny Wolf was named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament. He had nine points, 13 rebounds, two assists and four blocks in the championship game after tallying 19 points, 10 rebounds, three assists and two blocks in the semifinal win over No. 3 Cornell. Wolf, a unanimous first team All-Ivy selection, is the Ivy League's leading rebounder (9.8 rpg.) and led Yale in scoring (14.3 ppg.). Wolf has posted 14 double-doubles on the season.
 
• John Poulakidas, who scored a team-high 18 points, including a couple of big, late three-pointers against Brown, was named to the all-tournament team.
 
• Knowling, who hit the shot that put Yale in the tournament, leads the Ivy League in field goal percentage (.569). His career .596 percentage is the fourth best in school history.
 
• August Mahoney is averaging 15.7 points over his last three games while shooting 12-of-20 (60 percent) from three-point range. Mahoney hit a big three-pointer in the final minutes in the come-from-behind win over Brown in the Ivy championship game. He finished with 15 points after scoring 16 in the semifinal win over Cornell.
 
• Bez Mbeng is a two-time Ivy League Defensive Player of the Year honoree. His 57 steals are the third most in a season in school history and his 135 career assists are tied for the fifth most in Yale history. In addition, Mbeng, a second team All-Ivy selection, has an Ivy League leading 131 assists, including the one on Knowling's winning shot against Brown last Sunday.
 
• All five Yale starters average double figures in scoring.
 
• Yale head coach James Jones' three guiding principles are rebounding, defense and sharing the ball, and his team has excelled in all areas this season. The Bulldogs lead the Ivy League in field goal percentage defense (.415) and rebound margin (+4.8) and were third in assists (15.4 per game).
 
• Yale is 20-3 when it outrebounds its opponents and 1-6 when it is outrebounded. The Bulldogs are 19-4 when they lead at halftime.
 
• Yale is making its seventh NCAA Tournament appearance and fourth under the direction of Jones. The Bulldogs' only NCAA victory came in 2016 over Baylor in Providence. Yale's all-time tournament record is 1-7.
 
• The Bulldogs' 22 victories are one shy of the modern-day school record set by the 2019-20 team that finished 23-7. Yale won 30 games in 1906-07. The Bulldogs have now won 20 or more games in four of the last five seasons and seven times in Jones' tenure as head coach. Prior to Jones' arrival, Yale had won 20 or more games in only four of the previous 107 seasons.
 
• The Bulldogs are making their second trip to Spokane this season. Yale fell to Gonzaga 86-71 back on Nov. 10 in a game that was closer than the final score indicated. The Bulldogs raced out to a 16-6 early lead and the first half featured eight lead changes and eight ties.
 
• Yale also played a competitive game at Kansas in December before falling 75-60. The Bulldogs had an 11-point first-half lead and led 33-32 at halftime.
 
• Five of Yale's nine losses have come by five points or less and a sixth came in overtime – 75-65 to Weber State.
 
HISTORY LESSONS
 
The Bulldogs are playing Auburn for just the second time. The first meeting came in the 2021-22 season, an 86-64 Tiger victory. Seven current Bulldogs appeared in the game – August Mahoney (13 minutes, 2 points), Bez Mbeng (10 minutes, 2 points), Matt Knowling (8 minutes, 2 points), Jack Molloy (6 minutes, 2 points), Yassine Gharram (2 minutes, 1 point), Yussif Basa-Ama (4 minutes, 0 points) and John Poulakidas (3 minutes, 0 points).
 
In addition to the game with Auburn, Yale also has history with the SEC. The most memorable moment came against LSU in the championship game of the 1969 Rainbow Classic, a 97-94 Yale victory. Jim Morgan '71 scored 35 points to pace the Bulldogs, while Pete Maravich scored 34 points to lead the Tigers. That was Yale's last win over an SEC school. The Bulldogs also played LSU the 2019 NCAA Tournament, falling to the Tigers 79-74.
 
SCOUTING AUBURN
 
The Tigers, with a 27-7 overall record and a No. 5 national NET rating, are coming off an 86-67 win over Florida in the SEC Tournament championship game. Auburn, which is on a six-game winning streak, is making its 13th NCAA Tournament appearance and fifth in the last six tournaments. All-American Johni Broome is a semifinalist for the Naismith Defensive Player of the Year Award. In addition, he was an All-SEC first team selection. Broome leads the team in scoring (16.2 ppg.), rebounding (8.4 rpg.) and blocked shots (77). Jaylin Williams (12.4 ppg.) and Chad Baker-Mazara (10.3 ppg.) also average double figures in scoring. Bruce Pearl is in his 10th season as the head coach at Auburn and guided the Tigers to the NCAA Final Four in 2019. There also is a familiar face on the Auburn bench in Ira Bowman, who was the 1996 Ivy League Player of the Year at Penn.
 
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Players Mentioned

Yussif Basa-Ama

#23 Yussif Basa-Ama

F
6' 8"
Senior
Yassine Gharram

#24 Yassine Gharram

G
6' 3"
Junior
Matt  Knowling

#22 Matt Knowling

F
6' 6"
Senior
August Mahoney

#3 August Mahoney

G
6' 4"
Senior
Bez Mbeng

#2 Bez Mbeng

G
6' 4"
Junior
Jack Molloy

#33 Jack Molloy

F
6' 7"
Junior
John Poulakidas

#4 John Poulakidas

G
6' 6"
Junior
Danny Wolf

#1 Danny Wolf

F
7' 0"
Sophomore

Players Mentioned

Yussif Basa-Ama

#23 Yussif Basa-Ama

6' 8"
Senior
F
Yassine Gharram

#24 Yassine Gharram

6' 3"
Junior
G
Matt  Knowling

#22 Matt Knowling

6' 6"
Senior
F
August Mahoney

#3 August Mahoney

6' 4"
Senior
G
Bez Mbeng

#2 Bez Mbeng

6' 4"
Junior
G
Jack Molloy

#33 Jack Molloy

6' 7"
Junior
F
John Poulakidas

#4 John Poulakidas

6' 6"
Junior
G
Danny Wolf

#1 Danny Wolf

7' 0"
Sophomore
F