Andrei Iosivas: Breaking records beyond the Orange Bubble
In just one weekend, Andrei Iosivas ’23 broke Princeton records in the Heptathlon and earned the highest mark in the nation for this season.
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In just one weekend, Andrei Iosivas ’23 broke Princeton records in the Heptathlon and earned the highest mark in the nation for this season.
Men’s Track at Wesley Brown Invitational
MBB vs. Brown, Penn
WBB vs. Harvard, Cornell
On the morning of Saturday, Nov. 20, the men’s cross country team competed in the NCAA XC championships in Tallahassee, Fla. The team came in 23rd out of the 31 competing teams with senior Ed Trippas leading the Tigers in 67th place, with a time of 29:51.1 in the 10K. The women’s team did not qualify as a team, but sophomore Fiona Max competed after receiving an individual bid. She placed 84th out of 250 runners with a time of 20:25.1 in the women’s 6K.
Both the men’s and the women’s cross country teams competed in the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Regional meet this past Friday at Lehigh University.
For the second time in all of program history, the men’s soccer team has gone undefeated in the Ivy League. Despite the wet bleachers and cold temperatures of the Tigers’ home finale, Sherrerd Field was packed with Princeton students and families as they watched the team secure a 1–0 overtime victory over the Yale Bulldogs.
Women’s ice hockey vs. RPI, Union
Princeton field hockey dominated on Bedford Field against the Columbia Lions this past Saturday, winning 5–1 to close out their season.
The Princeton Tigers (10–5 overall, 5–0 Ivy) earned a hard-fought 2–1 victory against No. 20 Cornell (10–3–1, 3–2) on the afternoon of Saturday, Oct. 30 on Sherrerd Field. Coming into the match, Princeton sat atop the Ivy League standings with Cornell only a game behind. The intensity of the match mirrored its importance, as the teams combined for five yellow cards and a red.
In their season opener against Yale on Friday, the women’s ice hockey team secured a 2–0 shutout. Senior goalie Rachel McQuigge made 31 saves and earned her sixth career shutout. The Tigers scored with about three minutes left in the period as the offense intercepted an attempted clearance from Yale’s defense. Junior forward Maggie Connors scored both goals with assists from junior defender Solveig Neunzert, first-year forward Mia Coene, first-year forward Sarah Paul, and sophomore defender Stef Wallace.
This past Friday, the women’s volleyball team (13–3 overall, 7–1 Ivy League) competed and won against Penn (5–12 overall, 2–6 Ivy League) for the second time this season. In a 5 set game, the Tigers secured a 3–2 win over the Quakers (25–13, 25–14, 21–25, 30–32, 16–14). Junior setter Lindsey Kelly led the team with 2 aces, 60 assists, and 22 digs. Determined not to let Princeton walk away with a 3–0 win a second time, the Quakers tied the game in sets 3 and 4. In the last set, two kills from junior Elena Montgomery gave the Tigers an advantage, leading them to victory. They will be competing in another league game at Harvard on Friday, Oct. 29.
Volleyball vs. Cornell
Football vs. Columbia
In their first Ivy League game of the season, the Princeton Tigers outlasted the Columbia Lions in a physical and attritional contest on Powers Field, winning by a score of 24–7.
No. 17 Princeton field hockey (5–5, 2–0) came away with two wins this weekend, defeating the visiting Yale Bulldogs on Bedford Field Saturday evening and beating the 16th-ranked UConn Huskies on Sunday.
Princeton crushed Stetson 63–0 in their first home game since 2019. Check out staff writer Wilson Conn’s article on Saturday’s results. Senior quarterback Cole Smith had two rushing touchdowns, 225 passing yards, and four touchdown passes.
Women’s volleyball sweeps tournament:
No. 13 Princeton field hockey (0–2 overall) fell 4–1 on Friday to No.1 University of North Carolina (2–2 overall) at the Tigers’ season opener. The last time the two teams competed against each other in 2019, the Tar Heels took home the NCAA trophy, defending their position as national champions.
On Sunday, six days after Princeton Athletics entered Phase IV of the Ivy League’s four-phase plan, the track and field team held a meet at Weaver Track Stadium against The College of New Jersey and Temple University.