"Princeton offense" tries to find its identity after loss of star point guard
Eddie OwensPrinceton men’s basketball’s 2013-14 campaign will be remembered for what it could have been.
Princeton men’s basketball’s 2013-14 campaign will be remembered for what it could have been.
The women’s ice hockey team is off to a great start this year with a record of 6-1-1 a month into its season.
Ivy League champions, Women’s field hockey,(8-10 overall, 6-1 Ivy) earned their 10th straight invitation to the NCAA tournament with a win over Penn.
After losing only two seniors to graduation last year, the women’s basketball team will be looking to continue the program’s recent successes with a talented squad this season, that should once again be a strong contender for the Ivy League title.
The end of the regular season has come for the men’s soccer team, which takes on the Ivy’s weakest side on Saturday, as the Tigers (10-3-3 overall, 4-1-1 Ivy) travel to New Haven to take on a Yale side (1-12-3, 0-5-1) that has won just one game this season.
Ivy League women’s soccer has concluded its schedule of conference play. With the Crimson firmly situated at the top of the table, here are our final power rankings for the year.Harvard (10-4-2 overall, 5-1-1 Ivy League): Owners of the best scoring differential in the Ancient Eight, as well as its best record, the Crimson will advance to host Central Connecticut State University in the first round of the NCAA tournament.
With the NBA season underway, it might be of some interest to look at one of the most compelling storylines in recent sports history: the return of LeBron James to his home state of Ohio.
Senior Cameron Porter and junior Thomas Sanner are forwards on the men’s soccer team. Porter was just named the Ivy League Player of the Week for the second time in the last three weeks.
Playing its final two home games this past weekend, women’s volleyball (13-9 overall, 8-4 Ivy League) continued its push for the Ivy League championship.
It wasn’t always pretty, but the Tigers (5-3 overall, 4-1 Ivy) got it done when it counted and came out of Saturday’s matchup against Penn with a 22-17 win to keep their hopes of an Ivy title alive.
This weekend, the women’s hockey team fought hard to close out the weekend with one win and one draw against RIT.
Men’s hockey returned to Baker Rink this weekend as the Tigers (1-2-1 overall, 1-1-0 Eastern College Athletic Conference) hosted two ECAC foes to initiate conference play, besting Cornell (0-3-1, 0-2-0) but falling to No.
The women’s soccer team closed its season with a disappointing 3-2 loss to Penn. The game was the career finale for nine seniors on the team and for head coach Julie Shackford, who is leaving after 20 seasons with the program.
Clutch play continued this weekend for the men’s soccer team, as the Tigers (10-3-3 overall, 4-1-1 Ivy League) took down Penn (6-8-2, 2-2-2) by a 3-2 margin at home on Saturday evening.
In 1994, Princeton field hockey began a run of dominance against its Ancient Eight opponents. During these past twenty years, only Dartmouth has topped the Tigers in more than one contest.
With thermometers dropping and daylight fading, winter is in the air and with it the return of men’s hockey to Baker Rink.
This weekend will mark the end of field hockey’s regular season, the first campaign since 2004 during which the Orange and Black has amassed a losing record.
This Friday and Saturday, women's ice hockey (3-1 overall, 2-0 ECAC)) will face Rochester Institute of Technology (5-3-2, 0-1-1 College Hockey America) in a double header.
The women’s soccer team’s final game of the season this Saturday promises to be an exciting one, filled with numerous opportunities and milestones: the potential to finish in a tie for first place in the Ivy League; the final game for a legendary and record-setting head coach; the chance for a sophomore to break the single-season record for goals scored and for Tiger players to lock down the Ivy League titles for most points, goals and assists; and the team’s honoring of nine seniors.
After taking down American University (10-4-3 overall, 4-2-2 Patriot League) 2-0 on the road on Wednesday afternoon in its final non-conference game of the regular season, the men’s soccer team (9-3-3 overall, 3-1-1 Ivy) moves into its penultimate match of the regular season on Saturday evening, and the stakes cannot be higher. With just two Ivy League matches remaining for each team in the conference, the Tigers stand atop the conference standings, tied with Dartmouth with a total of 10 points.