Staff Picks: Men’s Lacrosse vs. Yale
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.
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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.
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.
March is here, and your Tigers are dancing.
The Tigers are back in March Madness — and nobody’s underestimating them now. Fresh off back-to-back appearances in the round of 32, Princeton women’s basketball (25–4 overall, 13–1 Ivy League) is ready to make noise once again.
Coming off back-to-back appearances in the NCAA tournament, this year’s Tigers’ women’s basketball squad will hope to make their postseason success a trilogy with this weekend’s Ivy Madness conference tournament. On Friday, March 15, Princeton women’s basketball (23–4 overall, 13–1 Ivy League) will head to Levien Gymnasium at Columbia University to take on Penn (15–12, 7–7) in the semifinal round of the tournament and, if they win, face the winner between Columbia (22–5, 13–1) and Harvard (16–11, 9–5) the next day. Despite having the same conference record as Columbia, the Tigers have the top seed because they outrank Columbia in the NET ranking.
Inside and outside of the Orange Bubble, all eyes are on this year’s edition of the Princeton Tigers. Fresh off a Cinderella run to the Sweet 16 fueled by wins over powerhouses Arizona and Missouri, the men’s basketball team (24–3 overall, 12–2 Ivy League) hopes to secure back-to-back NCAA tournament appearances for the first time since 1998. With only three losses, a neutral site win against Rutgers, and a NET ranking of 48, Princeton has built an impressive resume — and the Ivy League has taken notice.
The men’s basketball team (21–3 overall, 9–2 Ivy League) was 15–1 heading into their Jan. 27 matchup with the Cornell Big Red (20–5, 9–2), having yet to drop an Ivy League game.
It was a week of national attention and high praise for the No. 25 women’s basketball team (20–3 overall, 10–0 Ivy League), who are coming off of a 45-point thrashing of the Yale Bulldogs (6–17, 3–7) and their 15th consecutive win.
“To win in March, you have to lose in February,” wrote associate Sports editor Hayk Yengibaryan in our last edition of Staff Picks, before correctly predicting that the men’s basketball team would fall to the Yale Bulldogs on Feb. 2.
The Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers will face off at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada this Sunday, Feb. 11 at 6:30 p.m. Eastern Time. Ahead of the most anticipated game of the NFL season, six members of The Daily Princetonian Sports staff offered their picks for who will emerge victorious in this rematch of Super Bowl LIV, which saw the Chiefs erase a 10 point deficit in the fourth quarter to overcome the 49ers 31–20.
Coming off a tough 83–68 loss to the Cornell Big Red (15–3 overall, 4–0 Ivy League), the Princeton men’s basketball team (15–2, 3–1) currently sits in third place in the Ivy League standings. In front of the Tigers, the Big Red and the Yale Bulldogs (13–6, 4–0) are the only two undefeated teams remaining.
At the USC Uytengsu Aquatics Center on this coming Friday, Dec. 1, the No. 4 seeded men’s water polo team (27–5 overall, 9–1 Northeast Water Polo Conference) will have a chance to make history. Since the NCAA expanded the postseason tournament in 2015, the Tigers have never made the Final Four.
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.
The men’s football team (4–3 overall, 3–1 Ivy League) will take on Dartmouth (3–4 overall, 2–2 Ivy League) on Friday evening in their fifth Ivy League matchup of the season. The Tigers will take on the Big Green at 7 p.m. in Hanover, N.H., with streaming available via ESPNU.
The Fall Classic is finally here, and the Texas Rangers and Arizona Diamondbacks will face off in a best-of-seven series that will start on Friday evening live from Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas. Notably this year, both the Rangers and Diamondbacks are managed by Tiger alumni.
The men’s football team (3–3 overall, 2–1 Ivy League) will face off against the Cornell Big Red (3–3 overall, 2–1 Ivy League) on Saturday afternoon as they continue Ivy League play. The game will be at 1 p.m., live from Schoellkopf Field with streaming available via ESPN+. This will mark the 105th matchup between the two Ivy League programs. Princeton has an all-time 65–37–2 record against Cornell.
The men’s football team (2–1 overall, 1–0 Ivy League) will face off against the Lafayette Leopards (4–1 overall, 1–0 Patriot League) on Saturday afternoon in their final non-conference matchup of the season. The game will be at 1 p.m., live from Powers Field with streaming available via ESPN+.
With their thrilling triumph in the Ivy League Tournament, unseeded men’s lacrosse (8–6 overall, 4–2 Ivy League) will travel to Panzer Stadium to play fifth-seeded Penn State (9–4, 4–1 Big Ten) in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
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.
Jeremiah “J.T.” Tyler ’22, a former Princeton linebacker and backbone of Princeton’s football defense during his time as a Tiger, signed as a free agent to play with the United States Football League (USFL) Houston Gamblers on Wednesday, March 29.