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(4 hours ago)
On Saturday, the top-seeded Princeton softball team took first place at the 2024 Ivy League Softball Tournament, earning themselves an automatic bid to the 2024 NCAA Softball Championships.
(05/06/24 3:48am)
As the Princeton Tigers baseball team (17–24 overall, 12–9 Ivy League) departed campus on Friday for a road series against the Columbia Lions (26–15, 17–4), the stakes could not have been higher: a single win would clinch the Tigers’ spot in the Ivy League Tournament. For a team that hadn’t been swept all season and had just taken three straight against seventh-place Dartmouth, this may not have sounded like a difficult task. However, with wins in 20 of their last 23 games, Columbia was a different class of opponent than Princeton had faced all season. Just scraping by with one win against Columbia would not be easy, but the Tigers were up to the challenge.
(05/06/24 3:37am)
Princeton Lacrosse does not back down when there’s a title on the line.
(05/06/24 3:31am)
On Friday in New Haven, Connecticut, the Princeton women’s lacrosse team (10–6 overall, 6–1 Ivy League) took the field to face off against the University of Pennsylvania Quakers (13–3, 5–2) in the first round of the Ivy League tournament. The No. 2 seeded Tigers previously upset the No. 3 Quakers at home exactly one month ago, coming out of the neck and neck game on top of their rivals. But this time, the Quakers came back with a vengeance, and were able to take down the Tigers 18–14, knocking the Tigers out of the running for the Ivy League’s automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.
(05/03/24 6:01am)
After three years lighting up Jadwin Gym, senior guard and captain Kaitlyn Chen will be taking her talents to the Constitution State.
(05/01/24 3:54am)
On a sunny Saturday in Connecticut, No. 13 men’s lacrosse (9–4 overall, 4–2 Ivy League) toppled the No. 9 Yale Bulldogs (11–3 overall, 4–2 Ivy League) 15–8, sending themselves through to the Ivy League tournament.
(05/01/24 4:05am)
“Today, it is a tremendous day for Princeton University, Princeton athletics, and most especially Princeton hockey,” Princeton Director of Athletics John Mack ’00 said in a press conference Saturday. “We said from the beginning, we were looking for the right leader for our program.”
(05/01/24 3:59am)
With both the weather and the Ivy League regular baseball season heating up, the Princeton baseball team (16–21 overall, 11–7 Ivy League) took on the Dartmouth Big Green (11–23, 6–12 Ivy) in New Hampshire. Entering the series with an average conference record, the Tigers were in desperate need of some consistency as they sought to strengthen their hold on an Ivy League Tournament berth.
(05/01/24 5:05am)
On a trek to Cambridge, Mass, the No. 11 ranked Princeton women’s water polo team (23–6 overall, 10–0 Collegiate Water Polo Association) had one objective: two games, two wins.
(04/29/24 3:05am)
It’s often said that diamonds are born under immense pressure. This is no different for junior attacker McKenzie Blake, who scored the game-winning goal on Saturday that gave the No. 18 women’s lacrosse team (10–5 overall, 6–1 Ivy League) a crucial win over No. 25 Harvard (10–4, 4–3) in their final regular season game. Princeton’s thrilling 18–17 overtime victory clinched them the No. 2 seed in the Ivy League tournament next weekend.
(04/26/24 3:41am)
No. 13 men’s lacrosse (8–4 overall, 3–2 Ivy League) kept their season alive last week by taking down the then No. 13 ranked Penn Quakers 15–10 at Sherrerd Field.
(04/26/24 4:05am)
Each week, Sports and Data editors analyze recent athletic competitions to provide analysis and insight on the happenings of Princeton athletics and individual players across the 38 intercollegiate teams at Princeton. Whether they are record-breaking or day-to-day, statistics deliver information in concise ways and help inform fans who might have missed the action. Read past By the Numbers coverage here.
(04/25/24 3:03am)
After a packed month of Ivy League play, No. 39 Princeton women’s tennis (15–6 overall, 6–1 Ivy League) were crowned Ivy League champions for a fifth consecutive season this weekend. This win marked the 18th conference title in program history and punched the Tigers a ticket to the NCAA Tournament.
(04/26/24 6:07pm)
“I was first introduced to [fencing] through an episode of iCarly, with The Fencin’ Bensons,” épée fencer Hadley Husisian ’27 told The Daily Princetonian. “It’s pretty iconic among fencers just because it’s like that or The Parent Trap, or [how] Pirates of the Caribbean is pretty much the sole reason anyone had ever even heard of the sport.”
(04/24/24 3:02am)
This weekend, Princeton Softball (23–11 overall, 11–4 Ivy League) traveled to New Haven to face the Yale Bulldogs (18–23, 12–6). The teams battled it out over a three-game series across two days. The Tigers won all three games, catapulting them into first place in the Ivy League standings.
(04/23/24 2:33am)
In an exciting weekend of golf, the Princeton men’s team attempted to become repeat Ivy League Champions at the Watchung Valley Golf Club in Watching, New Jersey. Yet after a back-and-forth battle, the Tigers fell just short, settling for second place behind the Yale Bulldogs.
(04/22/24 2:35am)
In front of a packed house Saturday evening at Sherrerd Field, No. 21 Princeton men’s lacrosse (8–4 overall, 3–2 Ivy League) took down No. 12 Penn (8–5, 4–2) with a score of 15–10 on senior night.
(04/22/24 2:01am)
It was a first quarter to remember for the No. 17 ranked Princeton women’s lacrosse (9–5 overall, 5–1 Ivy League) in Saturday’s afternoon contest against the Dartmouth Big Green (7–6, 1–5).
(04/19/24 4:42am)
No. 17 men’s lacrosse (7–4 overall, 2–2 Ivy League) will face a moment of reckoning in their season when they face the No. 13 Penn Quakers (8–4, 4–1) this Saturday at 5 p.m. on Sherrerd Field. The Tigers, reeling after an upset loss to the Brown Bears (2–9 overall, 1–3 Ivy League) last Saturday, need to get back on track to secure a spot in the four-team Ivy League Tournament, set to kick off on May 3.
(04/19/24 6:58am)
Only eight players in NCAA history have averaged over 30 minutes and 12 points per game while shooting at least 50 percent from the field, 40 percent from beyond the arc, and 90 percent from the charity stripe.