Princeton football falls to Yale 36–28 in double overtime
On a beautiful fall Saturday, the Princeton (4–5 overall, 3–3 Ivy League) and Yale (6–3, 4–2) football teams met for the 145th time at Powers Field for another rivalry matchup.
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On a beautiful fall Saturday, the Princeton (4–5 overall, 3–3 Ivy League) and Yale (6–3, 4–2) football teams met for the 145th time at Powers Field for another rivalry matchup.
A bonfire, a blood feud, and an Ivy League title on the line: Princeton’s football team (4–4 overall, 3–2 Ivy League), could not have more to lose this Saturday as they take on the Yale Bulldogs (5–3 overall, 3–2 Ivy League) in what is the nation’s oldest football rivalry, dating back to 1873.
No. 17 men's lacrosse (6-5 overall, 4-1 Ivy League) will travel to play No. 6 Cornell Big Red (10-2, 4-1) for their final regular season game of the year this Saturday, April 29.
This past weekend, the Princeton men’s golf squad trekked to The Stanwich Club in Greenwich, Conn, with one goal in mind: returning to Princeton with the William J. Miller trophy. Even after a shaky first day of play, the Tigers did just that, securing the program’s 31st Ivy League title on the green.
A week after a disappointing showing against powerhouse No. 4 Maryland (3–2 overall, 0–0 Big Ten), No. 5 Princeton men’s lacrosse (2–2, 0–0 Ivy League), yet again, failed to demonstrate their case as a top-five team and National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) championship contender against Georgetown (1–3, 0–0 Big East).
On a frigid and gloomy Tuesday night on Sherrerd Field at the Class of 1952 Stadium, No. 3 men’s lacrosse (2–0 overall, 0–0 Ivy League) clashed with the Manhattan Jaspers (2–1, 0–0 Metro Atlantic Athletic) in what was a tougher-than-expected game for the heavily favored Tigers. After a 22–9 stomping of Monmouth (1–1, 0–0 Colonial Athletic), Princeton’s endurance, resilience, and poise were tested, but the Tigers emerged with a 14–9 win.