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Sports

The Daily Princetonian

Women's tennis drops tough match to Harvard

As a sports reader, it is often easy to get caught up in records and final scores. This is in part the fault of sportswriters, who forego analysis for the sake of numbers, and yet it is sad to think that something very important is lost among all the statistics ? the struggles for victory, outstanding plays, and heartbreaking failures.Last Friday, the women's tennis team (9-8 overall, 2-4 Ivy League) was a shining example of how scoreboards can be misleading, as it took on Ivy League powerhouse Harvard."The game was so much closer than the score showed," junior captain Alex Kobishyn said.The Crimson (17-3, 7-0), ranked No.

SPORTS | 04/21/2003

The Daily Princetonian

Third time's a charm as m. volleyball downs Juniata

The first step has been taken. The men's volleyball team looked Lady Destiny square in the eye last weekend, and she found the squad deserving.On Saturday night Princeton journeyed to Jun-iata College (16-9 overall, 7-8 Eastern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association) for its first match of the single-elimination EIVA playoffs.The Tigers (17-8, 8-7) had twice fallen by a score of 3-1 to the Eagles in the regular season, but the team's continuing improvement over the course of the year left the probable outcome of this match in serious dispute.Princeton drove that point home to the Juniata faithful by battling through an electrifying five-game contest to emerge with a 3-2 victory and a ticket to the second round.In a match this close, "there really was no turning point," as junior setter Jason Liljestrom put it.

SPORTS | 04/21/2003

The Daily Princetonian

Vengeful w. lacrosse decimates Harvard despite ankle injuries

The women's lacrosse team's hammer was withdrawn when it lost to Yale, 7-6, a week ago. But on Saturday the Tigers (8-4 overall, 3-1 Ivy League) brought it crashing down on Harvard to give the Crimson (2-9 overall, 0-4 Ivy League) a 12-2 pounding.It was more than clear on Saturday that the Tigers were not about to be the first Princeton team since the 1988 season to lose two Ivy contests in a row.Most striking about the pounding was that the Tigers did it without the full help of their two top scorers ? junior attack Theresa Sherry and senior attack Whitney Miller ? who played limited minutes due to ankle injuries.

SPORTS | 04/20/2003

The Daily Princetonian

Three triumphs over Penn puts baseball in control

It feels good to be in the driver's seat.Locked in a first-place tie with Penn in the Lou Gehrig Division of the Ivy League, the baseball team (18-16 overall, 10-2 Ivy League) traveled to Philadelphia to play a four-game series on the Quakers' home turf.Despite dropping a heartbreaking 8-7 decision in the first game, the Tigers took the next three games by the scores of 6-2, 3-0, and 4-2, respectively, to come out on top in the series and take the lead in the Ivy League race."It was a big weekend for us," senior pitcher Mark Siano said.

SPORTS | 04/20/2003

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The Daily Princetonian

Softball outslugs Cornell, widens Ivy lead

It was the highest scoring of days; it was the lowest scoring of days. For softball, the weekend was indeed a tale of two cities.First, in Ithaca, N.Y., on Friday, Princeton (18-12-1 overall, 8-1 Ivy League) outslugged Cornell (24-6, 7-3), sweeping the League's best hitting squad, 8-3 and 8-7.The next day, in New York City, the Tigers could manage only one run over 23 innings of play, splitting a pair of extra-inning 1-0 thrillers with Columbia (15-17, 5-5).So how to explain the bipolarity?"It was a pretty unique weekend," sophomore pitcher Melissa Finley said.

SPORTS | 04/20/2003

The Daily Princetonian

Northbound softball to brawl with Big Red, Lions

Right now, roughly midway through the Ivy League season, softball sits alone atop the standings. But the pinnacle position is up for grabs this weekend in New York.In all likelihood, this weekend's road trip to Cornell (22-4 overall, 5-1 Ivy League) and Columbia (13-5, 3-3) will determine whether Princeton (15-11-2, 5-0-1) will remain at the league's zenith at season's end.Friday's doubleheader in Ithaca will feature the Ivies' two hottest teams and four of its hottest players.

SPORTS | 04/17/2003

The Daily Princetonian

Softball splits doubleheader with Lehigh

In Wednesday's doubleheader versus Lehigh the softball team brought its 'A' game for the first contest but did not have it for game two.The second game was a thriller as the Tigers (15-11-1 overall, 5-0 Ivy League) fell, 5-4, to the Mountain Hawks (26-7, 11-1 Patriot League) in extra innings.After crushing Lehigh 8-0 in the opening game, Princeton was in a position to sweep the series until the Mountain Hawks rallied back for the win.Game two went back and forth for five frames and the score was 3-2 in favor of the Tigers at the end of five innings of play.

SPORTS | 04/16/2003

The Daily Princetonian

Men's, w. crew look to continue winning ways

After a nearly flawless start to their 2003 spring season, all four Princeton crew teams ? men's heavyweight and lightweight, women's open weight and lightweight ? take to the water this weekend to race a handful of challenging opponents.This weekend, men's heavyweight crew races on Lake Carnegie against crews from Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.The heavyweights have gotten off to a good start, sweeping all four races in their seizure of the Child's Cup from Columbia and Penn in last weekend's race.

SPORTS | 04/16/2003

The Daily Princetonian

Reich's RBI single leads baseball past Pirates

Yesterday afternoon, the baseball team took advantage of the balmy 75-degree weather to spend a couple of leisurely hours at the ballpark ?and to sink Seton Hall (12-16 overall, 5-7 Big East) before the Pirates could swashbuckle a victory away from the Tigers (15-15, 7-1 Ivy League).With the bases loaded in the bottom of the seventh inning, no outs, and the game tied at three apiece, junior designated hitter Ryan Reich came up to bat.

SPORTS | 04/15/2003

The Daily Princetonian

The Sports Department

There are a number of strange rules in sports. For instance, there was the unique interpretation of the fumble rule which allowed Tom Brady to be awarded an incomplete pass in the 2001 AFC Championship game as well as the much-reviled designated hitter.

SPORTS | 04/15/2003