Tigers take west coast trip, win 3 of 5 games
Chris GrubbsThe Princeton men’s water polo team traveled to the west coast this past weekend for a game against Santa Clara University and the Kap 7 NorCal Invitational at Stanford.
The Princeton men’s water polo team traveled to the west coast this past weekend for a game against Santa Clara University and the Kap 7 NorCal Invitational at Stanford.
Both the men and women’s soccer team came away from the weekend with convincing wins from great games with a lot of impact on the outlook of their seasons.
Going 1-2 in their showing at the Hofstra Tournament last weekend, the women’s volleyball team had a dominant performance at the Rutgers Tournamentthis FridayandSaturday.
2006. The last year the Princeton football team opened its season with a victory. It seems, however, the Tigers had had enough of this ignominious streak. What was for a bit a neck-and-neck game soon turned into a rout, as the Tigers demolished the Lafayette College Leopards 40-7.
With the baseball postseason approaching, the Daily Princetonian thought it might be interesting to look at one of Princeton’s own who is currently influencing the big leagues.
A road trip to nearby Chestnut Hill College ended in disappointment for the men of sprint football, as the Tigers fell to the Griffins by a score of 48-13.
As the Princeton football team prepares for its season opener against Lafayette, one of its players is preparing to be the first of a different sort.
Fans of Princeton soccer will get the weekend they’ve been waiting for. The men’s and women’s soccer teams will be hosting opponents on their home field this weekend — the men on Saturday against Boston University, and the women on Sunday against William & Mary. In their home debut, the men’s team (1-2-0) looks to right the ship after a tough trip through Florida, in which they went 0-2.
This Saturday, Princeton football will travel to Lafayette’s Fisher Stadium to finally begin its 2015 season.
After a great season where the Princeton men’s tennis team qualified for the NCAA Tournament for the first time in 17 years before losing out to Minnesota in the Round of 64, the Tigers will look to repeat such success this season. The Tigers opened their season in Philadelphia as they played in a three-day Penn Invitational against players from many different schools, including St.
The Princeton field hockey team has had a difficult schedule so far this year. The Tigers dropped their season opener to No.
Women’s Soccer The first skid of the season came to a halt for the women’s soccer team.
On Friday, Sept. 11, the men’s and women’s cross country teams traveled to Boston to participate in the second annual Harvard-Yale-Princeton meet.
Men’s Water Polo Diving into a fresh season while riding last ones’s monumental success, the men’s water polo team (3-0) traveled to Annapolis, Md., for the annual Navy Invitational. Opponents facing the No.
The Princeton women’s soccer team started out their 2015 campaign incredibly strong, as they swept this weekend in games against Howard University and Fordham University. The Tigers (2-0 overall), looking to make their first postseason bid since 2012, made a thunderous statement on Friday evening, as they hammered the Howard Bisons (1-2 overall) 6-0.
In an unprecedented move, the University and IMG announced a new multi-year rights representation agreement on Aug.
Earlier this month, the New York Knicks selected Princeton basketball alum TJ Bray ’14 for the Las Vegas NBA Summer League.The NBA Summer League offers an opportunity for newly signed rookies, undrafted prospects and a few international players to demonstrate their skills in front of NBA front offices and coaches.
A trophy wife. It’s a notion both archaic and shockingly sexist. It reduces a woman from human being to a possession, a glittery object a man can tote around for all to see.
Soerens and Pons cap careers at NCAA Championships After serving as the hero in a thrilling Ivy League Heptagonal Championships meet, senior Stephen Soerens was able to showcase his skills on the national stage.
Sara Hendershot ’10, a standout rower at Princeton, came in fourth place at the 2012 Olympics by an incredibly slim margin and is now getting ready to compete one more time at that level in Rio de Janeiro next year.