Women’s basketball snaps record 42-game Ivy win-streak with loss at Harvard
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — For the last three years, the women’s basketball team put up what had been the longest active conference winning streak in Ivy League basketball.
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CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — For the last three years, the women’s basketball team put up what had been the longest active conference winning streak in Ivy League basketball.
When Madison St. Rose stepped up to the right side block on Wednesday, all she knew was she probably wasn't going to finish the play on her feet.
As campus quieted down amid reading period, women's basketball was working double-time.
STORRS, Conn. — On a cold, windy evening in the middle of December, Princeton women’s basketball team stepped into Gampel Pavilion, home of the Connecticut Huskies. Despite nearly upsetting the top-ranked Huskies, the Tigers came up short of a win, losing 69–64.
It’s all systems go for Princeton women’s basketball.
On Sunday, Nov. 27, Princeton women’s basketball (3–2 overall, 0–0 Ivy League) endured a tough 40 minutes of action against No. 22 Texas (3–3 , 0–0 Big 12). The Tigers ultimately came up short, with a final score of 74–50.
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.
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 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.
Princeton women's basketball kicked off the 2022–23 season with a bang, coming away with a 67–49 win over Temple on Monday night at Jadwin Gym.
It’s safe to say the Tigers have found their groove.
Former Princeton women’s lacrosse defender Marge Donovan ’22 isn’t done just yet.
On May 2, The Daily Princetonian launched a new text-to-speech feature powered by Ad Auris.
For Ivy League women's basketball teams, advancing past the first round of NCAA tournament play has meant defying the odds.
The Tigers are ready for the “Big Dance.”
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.
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.
In this episode of The Highlights, we’re joined by Yeon Soon Shin, who completed her doctoral degree in neuroscience at Princeton in 2020 and Rolando Masís-Obando, a 5th-year graduate student in neuroscience. We discuss their paths to graduate work in psychology, their research on how environmental context affects memory, and the virtual reality environments they created to test their ideas.