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Princeton football comes roaring back to defeat Columbia 17–10 in Ivy League opener

Three Princeton players in black and orange uniforms walk on field.
Princeton defeated Columbia in their Ivy League opener 17-10, generating highlight plays on both sides of the ball.
Photo courtesy of @PrincetonFTBL / X.

Under the Friday night lights at Powers Field, Princeton football (2–1 overall, 1–0 Ivy League) overcame a slow start to beat Columbia (1–2 overall, 0–1 Ivy). Strengthened by the vociferous home support, the Tigers surmounted a double digit deficit to topple the defending Ivy League champions.

For the first 20 minutes of play, Princeton’s often potent pass game looked moribund against the Columbia defense. The Tigers’ defense also fell flat, failing to stop a field goal, and then a touchdown on the Lions’ first two drives as Columbia quarterback Chase Goodwin threw pass after pass.

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“They’re so frustrating to play against,” Princeton Head Coach Bob Surace ’90 said to The Daily Princetonian postgame. “In the windows, you have to make the right read. You can’t force it, and we were forcing the ball a little too much, and that greed caught up to us a little bit.”

In Princeton’s second possession of the second quarter, senior quarterback Kai Colón threw a pass that was snatched away by Columbia’s Jack Smiechowski, a second consecutive turnover for the Tigers. Down 10–0, things for Princeton looked grimmer than ever. 

However, on Columbia’s subsequent drive, the Lions decided to go for the first down on fourth and six instead of attempting a field goal. Senior linebacker Marco Scarano made them pay, leaping over a Columbia receiver from behind to grab an absurd interception that made it on the SportsCenter Top 10.

On Princeton’s next drive, despite a 51-yard Kai Colón bomb to sophomore wide receiver Paul Kuhner that put the Tigers on the Columbia five-yard line, Colón and company ultimately couldn’t convert, turning it over on downs. 

Early in Columbia’s next possession, sophomore linebacker AJ Pigford leapt up to intercept a pass with one hand, but the ball escaped his grasp and began falling to the ground. Pigford dove and caught the ball barely outside of the end zone, a highlight reel moment that sent fans into a frenzy.

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“After the catch, not gonna lie, I feel like I blacked out a little bit,” Pigford told the ‘Prince’ after the game. “It just felt surreal, honestly.”

The gravity of the moment could be felt in the chill air that filled the stadium. “I 100 percent did [feel a shift],” Pigford recounted. “The sideline felt different. The crowd felt different … I knew that we hit a different motor there.” 

This time, the Tigers capitalized on their interception. Sophomore quarterback Asher Weiner evaded a defender to rush one yard for a touchdown, causing the crowd to erupt. That put the score at 10–7 with the Tigers down three, yet the mood in the stadium felt nothing like Princeton was losing.

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“When we all went into halftime, there was a really good feeling,” Surace explained. “Because when you have a season like last year, sometimes you doubt yourself. There was like zero doubt.”

The second half was all Princeton. The defense, which had struggled earlier, was clinical, only allowing Columbia to set foot in Princeton territory once in the entire half. 

“We’re getting into our groove,” Pigford said of the defense. “We’re starting to find our identity.”

The Tiger offense began to show some of the explosiveness that has characterized it in 2025 thus far, as senior quarterback Blaine Hipa hit first-year wide receiver Josh Robinson for several pivotal passes.

“Josh is a dog, man,” Hipa said postgame. “That kid is unbelievable … You put the ball in the air, he’s gonna go get it, and that’s what he did.”

Surace was similarly glowing, saying, “He’s such a mature freshman. He’s got physical skills, but most freshmen, this is a huge adjustment… and most of them just don’t quite get there. You’ve got to be so talented and so mature.”

With Hipa leading, the Tigers got the drive they needed at the beginning of the fourth quarter, which included two key receptions by Robinson, one for 30 yards. When junior running back Ethan Clark ran it in for a touchdown, the Tigers were firmly in the driver’s seat, up 14–10.

Colón led the next drive which saw him hurl a line drive missile to junior wide receiver Roman Laurio who scampered up the field for 49 yards. A 38-yard field goal by junior kicker Esteban Nunez Perez brought the score to 17–10. 

One more solid defensive possession from Princeton sealed the deal. The clock expired and the crowd rejoiced as the Tigers emerged triumphant from their 2025 Ivy League opener with their first home win.

It was also Princeton’s second consecutive victory. 

“That’s huge for us,” said Hipa. “Momentum is big in this game. It’s bringing us more confidence, but it’s something I think we already have.”

Columbia are the defending Ivy League champions, but Surace was hesitant to make too much of that fact. “It’s a new year,” he said. “We have new guys. They have new guys.” 

The Tigers previous two showings were high-scoring games dominated by offense, but in this win, they demonstrated their poise in a defensive struggle. 

On Saturday, Princeton will host the Mercer Bears (4–1 overall, 4–0 Southern Conference) and will look to keep the grit and resilience that propelled them to Friday’s comeback victory.

Julian Danoff is a Sports contributor for the ‘Prince.’

Please send any corrections to corrections[at]dailyprincetonian.com.