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Sports

The Daily Princetonian

Men's water polo wins Southern Championship

"There is do or do not, there is no try," said Yoda of the epic Star Wars series. This Fall Break the Princeton men's water polo team chose to do, winning all six of its games and taking the Collegiate Water Polo Association Southern Championships title in typically dramatic fashion.The score was tied at eight with just a minute and a half left in the finals of the Southern Championships.

SPORTS | 10/31/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Four years of winless football have not dampened Bakke's college experience

There are many ways to define victory, not all of them straightforward.For most Princeton students, the achievements of the sprint football team over the past five years wouldn't fall under any definition of that particular v-word, but for senior quarterback Dennis Bakke, his involvement with the team has won him something more important than any single game ever could.Bakke, a captain in his fourth year on the team, is a Wilson School major who plans on writing his thesis on the riveting topic of foreign policy of the U.S.

SPORTS | 10/21/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Men's water polo faces two tough tests in league

During this past week of enormous caffeine consumption, lack of sleep and grueling cram sessions, most Princeton students maintained their sanity by knowing that Fall Break would bring a restful vacation of laying out at the beach or lounging beside the pool.It is quite another story for the men's water polo team.The Tigers are coming off of a four-win weekend, decisively defeating Salem International, Bucknell, Johns Hopkins and George Washington to improve their record to 16-4 (8-0 Collegiate Water Polo Association Southern Division). Princeton, led by sharpshooting junior driver John Stover, will not spend Fall Break resting or lounging.The upcoming vacation is a crucial time for the Tigers.

SPORTS | 10/21/2004

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The Daily Princetonian

W. soccer hosts Ivy nemesis Harvard

Work, work, work.Whether from parents at home, an English professor or Chuck Norris on those late-night infomercials trying to sell the new and improved Organoflexilizer, many a student at Princeton has probably heard these words at one time or another.For the players on the women's soccer team these words hold special significance heading into this weekend.

SPORTS | 10/21/2004

The Daily Princetonian

W. volleyball vies for first on N.Y. road trip

To be the best, you have to beat the best, and women's volleyball has satisfied that requirement so far this season.Already with wins over last season's champion, Penn, and this season's leader Harvard, Princeton (13-4 overall, 4-1 Ivy League) is a half-game back of the first-place Crimson (10-6, 5-1) in the Ivy race after a thrilling 3-2 (30-25, 30-19, 26-30, 25-30, 15-8) victory Saturday at Dillon Gym.

SPORTS | 10/20/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Spicer leads m. soccer against Harvard

Men's soccer finds itself in a position that has been quite unfamiliar in recent years ? sitting atop the Ivy League standings, tied with Penn with a 2-0-1 league record.The next week will determine whether Princeton (6-3-3 overall) is a true contender for the title, as it hosts Harvard (7-5-0 overall, 2-1 Ivy League) on Saturday before traveling to Ithaca a week later to take on the Big Red (1-9-0, 0-3-0).In between the games next Wednesday, the Tigers will host St.

SPORTS | 10/20/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Flyers coach Hitchcock to assist m. hockey

With the National Hockey League in a lockout this season, it's not just the players who have extra free time.Philadelphia Flyers head coach Ken Hitchcock has the joined the coaching staff for Princeton men's hockey as an interim assistant, according to an announcement Monday from the athletic department.New Tiger head coach Guy Gadowsky phoned Hitchcock this fall to talk hockey when the Flyers coach offered to help out.No other details of the arrangement were released.Gadowsky and Hitchcock bring fresh faces to a program sorely in need of a new beginning.

SPORTS | 10/20/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Accolades a small subtext to magical 1950 season

This is the sixth in a series of articles on the history of Princeton football in honor of its 135th anniversary.In the fall of 1950 the American economy was booming, A&W Root Beer Co. was founded, the Soviets had become a nuclear power, Disney's Cinderella had just opened, the Korean War had begun and, for the first time in decades, Princeton football looked to have a very promising season.Under the charismatic leadership of newly hired head coach Charlie Caldwell '25, the Tigers entered the 1950 season coming off two winning seasons and the first three Big Three wins since 1939.

SPORTS | 10/19/2004