Men’s basketball beats Northeastern to win London Classic
Senior forward Tosan Evbuomwan has done it again for Princeton men’s basketball — this time, on his home turf in the United Kingdom.
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Senior forward Tosan Evbuomwan has done it again for Princeton men’s basketball — this time, on his home turf in the United Kingdom.
Princeton’s women’s swimming and diving team lost this past weekend against Cornell 121–179 and Penn 145–154.
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When the final buzzer sounded on Sunday afternoon, the No. 8 Princeton men’s water polo team (26–5 overall, 10–0 NWPC) jumped in the pool with the entire coaching staff, celebrating a 13–8 win against No. 18 St. Francis-Brooklyn (21–10, 6–4).
This past weekend, the men’s hockey team (2–5–0 overall, 2–5–0 ECAC) fell in a set of weekend games against No. 5 Quinnipiac (9–1–2, 6–0–0 ECAC).
The Princeton University men’s basketball team (2–2 overall, 0–0 Ivy League) picked up their second win of the year on Saturday evening against the Marist Red Foxes (1–3, 0–0 Metro Atlantic Athletic), winning 62–55.
On Saturday afternoon, Princeton football (8–2 overall, 5–2 Ivy League) fell to the Penn Quakers (8–2, 5–2), 20–19. With this loss, the Tigers finished this season tied for second place in the Ivy League with Penn. Yale (8–2, 6–1), who had handed the Tigers their first loss of the season this past weekend in New Haven, won the Ivy League Championship title outright thanks to their victory over Harvard (6–4, 4–3).
The Princeton women’s hockey team (4–4–0 overall, 2–4–0 Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference) went one and one this weekend after playing St. Lawrence (7–9–0, 2–3–0 ECAC) and Clarkson (13–4–1, 3–3–0). Both games were held at home, in Hobey Baker Rink.
Princeton’s men’s water polo (26–5 overall, 10–0 Northeast Water Polo Conference) entered the NWPC Tournament as the No. 1 seed with hopes to earn another conference title. This afternoon, the Tigers became one step closer to their goal with a 12–7 semi-final win over Brown (16–16, 4–6).
On Wednesday evening, Princeton women’s basketball (3–1 overall, 0–0 Ivy League) eked out a close win, this time on their home court against Fordham (2–2, 0–0 Atlantic 10). After just sneaking past Seton Hall on Monday, the Tigers defeated the Fordham Rams 70–67 in another wire-to-wire nail-biter.
From growing up together in Los Angeles to playing together for the Tigers, the Maloney brothers have a lifetime’s experience of supporting each other in and outside of the pool.
As the final buzzer rang out, the small contingency of Princeton fans that had gathered for Monday night’s contest against Seton Hall let out a visible sigh of relief.
On Friday, Nov. 11, both the men’s and women’s cross country teams competed in their respective NCAA Mid-Atlantic regional competitions at Penn State University, and finished with strong performances all around.
Princeton men’s basketball is back on track with their first win of the season.
No. 15 Women’s hockey (3–3–0 overall, 1–3–0 ECAC) picked up two wins over the weekend, topping Syracuse (15–11–6, 11–4–1 CHA) 4–2 on Friday night before shutting them out 1–0 on Saturday. Junior forward Sarah Fillier led the Tigers with four points (one goal, three assists) across the two games, while first-year goalie Taylor Hyland and sophomore goalie Jennifer Olnowich each got a win in net.
Hopes of closing out the regular season with a home win and shaking up the Ivy League standings fell short as the Princeton men’s soccer team (6–6–4 overall, 1–3–3 Ivy League) lost to Penn (12–2–2, 6–1) on Saturday, Nov. 12, 3–0.
After consecutive losses in the first three games of their season, the men’s hockey team (2–3–0 overall, 2–3–0 Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference) skated to two victories this weekend against rivals Yale (1–5–0, 1–5–0 ECAC) and Brown (1–4–1, 1–4–1 ECAC).
On Friday night, Princeton women’s basketball (1–1 overall, 0–0 Ivy League) dropped a 69–59 loss to Villanova (2–0, 0–0 Big East) in front of the home crowd at Jadwin Gymnasium. The Tigers had a narrow one-point lead by the end of the first quarter but were out-scored 21–9 in the second, making for quite the uphill battle.
On Friday evening, the men’s basketball team (0–2 overall, 0–0 Ivy League) failed to pick up their first win of the season after a controversial no-call on the final shot of their Veterans Classic matchup with the Navy Midshipmen (2–0, 0–0 Patriot League).
On Saturday afternoon, Princeton football (8–1 overall, 5–1 Ivy League) fell to Yale (7–2, 5–1) in a 24–20 battle in New Haven. This was the Tigers’ first loss in their otherwise undefeated season and it cost Princeton their first-place ranking in the Ivy League. Yale and Princeton are now tied on top of the Ivy League standings with a 5–1 conference record each.