Men's swimming unable to compete in NCAA Championships
After a fantastic performance at the Ivy League Championships, the Princeton men’s swimming team will be unable to compete at NCAA Championships, men's swimming head coach Rob Orr said.
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After a fantastic performance at the Ivy League Championships, the Princeton men’s swimming team will be unable to compete at NCAA Championships, men's swimming head coach Rob Orr said.
The women’s water polo team has kept up its successful season over the last two weekends, winning seven of their eight games over spring break. These are the last games before the Tigers play six straight intra-conference games, leading up to the Collegiate Water Polo Association Championships.
Senior forward Cameron Porter, former captain of the Princeton men’s soccer team, has torn his ACL in his fifth game in Major League Soccer. He will miss the remainder of the season, and will be out of action for a predicted 9-12 months.
The Tigers’ astonishing season came to a close on Monday night, as they fell to the No. 1 seeded Maryland Terrapins in College Park, Maryland. A close first half turned into a large second half lead for the Terps, and the Tigers would ultimately fall to the tune of 85-70.
Traveling to Columbus, Ohio to conclude their season, the Princeton fencing team would place fourthin the NCAA championships. Twenty-five teams were present at the event.
After a regular season filled with success, the most intense part of the season begins now.
Hannah Montana once told me that nobody’s perfect. She clearly never met this Princeton women’s basketball team. They capped off what has been a season for the ages, defeating the Penn Quakers in Philadelphia on Tuesday to obtain the coveted undefeated status in the regular season.
In a thrilling weekend, the Princeton men’s basketball team swept opponents Cornell and Columbia in its final homestand of the season. Previously, they had split their games in the four-game road trip.
Women’s Basketball
The Princeton baseball men’s team had its work cut out for it this weekend as it opened its season against the fourthranked Louisiana State Tigers down in Baton Rouge. While fighting hard, Princeton would be unable to obtain a win in this opening series, falling to LSU 0-3.
It was complete domination this weekend for the Princeton men’s swimming and diving team as they claimed their 30thIvy League championship. The Tigers came out of the gate hot in this one and never looked back, leading by over 100 points by just the end of the first day.
With this weekend’s games finished, the Princeton men’s basketball team finds itself mathematically eliminated from a chance at the Ivy League title. They currently stand in third place, likely to finish in the same position they did last year behind their perennial rivals, Yale and Harvard.
As the season enters the home stretch, the men’s basketball team will face the Bulldogs and the Bears in the second half of a four-game road trip.
The Tigers look to continue their still-perfect season as they take on the Yale Bulldogs and the Brown Bearsthis FridayandSaturdayat Jadwin Gymnasium. Princeton (25-0 overall , 9-0 Ivy League) currently holds the No. 14 ranking in the nation in both the AP Poll and USA Today Coaches Poll, the highest rankings simultaneously held by an Ivy League team.
It was a packed weekend for men’s and women’s fencing, as both teams traveled to Philadelphia to compete in the Temple Duals, only to turn around and prepare the next day for the National Squad Championships.
It seems women’s aquatic sports can do no wrong this year. Just as the women’s swimming and diving team claimed an Ivy League Championship, the women’s water polo team claimed victory in the first Ivy League Championship for the sport.
It was more of the same for the Princeton men’s basketball team this weekend, as they split another pair of games and continue to tread water in the Ivy League standings. Playing two games on the road, the Tigers managed to defeat Dartmouth, but fell to the Crimson, despite holding a first-half lead.
The Tigers certainly have their work cut out for them if they want to claw their way to the top of the Ivy League. With only seven games left in the regular season, the Tigers will hit the road this weekend to play the Dartmouth Big Green and the Harvard Crimson.
The baseball team looks to rebound after rough outings in the 2012-13 season and the 2013-14 season. After posting records of 14-28 and 14-26, respectively, the Tigers are ready to begin a new campaign and start competing again for a spot in the Ivy League championship series.
It was an up and down weekend for the Princeton men’s basketball team as it split a pair of games in this weekend’s homestand. After defeating the Brown Bears and falling to the Yale Bulldogs, the Tigers find themselves stuck at the same place in the standings they were a week ago.