Chris Sailer reflects on 36 years as women’s lacrosse head coach
Chris Sailer has a lot to show for her 36 years as head coach of the Princeton women’s lacrosse team.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Princetonian's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Chris Sailer has a lot to show for her 36 years as head coach of the Princeton women’s lacrosse team.
The men’s basketball team’s season isn’t over quite yet.
Women’s basketball at Ivy Madness
Despite entering the season unranked in the preseason top-20 poll, the Princeton Tigers (4–1 overall, 0–0 Ivy League) have come out scorching, beating programs ranked in the top-three in consecutive games.
While the women’s basketball team found great success in Cambridge, the varsity baseball team took a trip through the south and found much tougher sledding.
The men’s basketball team came up just one basket short of punching a ticket to March Madness.
Women’s basketball is going dancing.
The Tigers are just one win away from the NCAA Tournament.
Corey Andonovski, a senior forward for the men’s hockey team, has signed an entry-level contract (ELC) with the Pittsburgh Penguins from the National Hockey League (NHL). While the exact terms of the deal have not been released at the time of publication, the contract will kick in for the 2022–2023 season.
It was no cakewalk, but the No. 24 Princeton women’s basketball team (23–4, 14–0 Ivy) has advanced to the Ivy League Tournament Final.
After dominating the competition during the Ivy League regular season, the Princeton women’s basketball team (22–4, 14–0 Ivy) claimed a plethora of Ivy League honors, including three of the four major awards.
Though the Tigers won 14 games this season with double-digit margins, the ongoing effects of COVID-19 made this a far from easy season for Princeton. Game delays created less-than-desirable scenarios where the team was forced to play back-to-back games, yet the Tigers’ perseverance showed in their consistent and dominant play.
Going undefeated for an entire conference season in any sport is nearly impossible. But in Ivy League women's basketball, doing so in back-to-back seasons is entirely unprecedented.
Women’s basketball’s senior leader is one step closer to winning a major national honor.
The accolades continue to roll in for the men’s basketball team.
After having started just 1–8, the men’s volleyball team’s recent four-game win streak had the team (5–10, 4–5 Eastern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association) hoping for a complete turnaround of their fortunes. But these hopes took a slight hit this past weekend, as the team dropped two matches against EIVA rival Harvard (6–6, 4–2).
Even after securing sole possession of the Ivy League regular season title, Princeton men’s basketball is still hungry for more.
Just one day after the women’s hockey team (13–15–5, 9–10–3 Eastern College Athletic Conference) was knocked out of the playoffs, the men’s team (8–21–2, 7–14–1 ECAC) also dropped out of the postseason.
With a national audience watching on ESPN, a conference regular-season title on the line, and the final home game for the team's senior players, the Princeton women’s basketball team was unstoppable.
Princeton basketball is having a year to remember.