Preview shorts: Men's water polo; women's volleyball
Daily Princetonian StaffMidshipmen ship up to Princeton for reverse fixture Men’s water polo (10-1 overall, 6-1 Collegiate Water Polo Association Southern), currently ranked No.
Midshipmen ship up to Princeton for reverse fixture Men’s water polo (10-1 overall, 6-1 Collegiate Water Polo Association Southern), currently ranked No.
A 23-game conference win streak is within the sights of Princeton field hockey (3-5 overall, 2-0 Ivy League), which will travel to face Columbia (5-3, 1-1) this Friday and then host the comparatively mighty No.
“I’m still as pissed off as I was after the game, and we’re going to carry that over to next week.
Men’s soccer juniors Andrew Doar and Jack Hilger comprise an athletic, artistic and dynamic duo.
College athletics in America faces a crisis. This past August, former NCAA basketball star Ed O’Bannon won a suit against the NCAA over the latter’s use of his likeness for commercial purposes.
It was the second time that No. 12 Princeton facedNo. 20 George Washington University, as the men’s water polo team (10-1) dominated the competitionon Sundaymorning.
This weekend witnessed the men’s soccer team accomplish something that it was unable to do last year: come out of the month of September with a winning record.
While field hockey (3-5 overall, 2-0 Ivy League) maintained its perfect conference record with a convincing 4-1 win over Yale (1-7, 0-2), Princeton failed to top a strong No.
After a disappointing start to its 2014 campaign, the football team (1-1) entered Saturday evening’s home opener determined to right the ship.
Conference and non-conference action continues this weekend for Princeton field hockey (2-4 overall, 1-0 Ivy League). First on the slate is league rival Yale (1-5, 0-1), a team the Tigers have historically dominated — the all-time record stands at 38-2-3.
A No. 8 national ranking is nothing to be modest about, especially when it marks the highest ever ranking attained by an East Coast team.
Looking for its second road win of the season, the men’s soccer team (2-2-2) came out of Philadelphia with a 1-0 victory on Wednesday evening against Drexel University (2-4-2). Junior forward Thomas Sanner’s conversion of a 53rd-minute penalty kick proved to be the deciding factor in a match where the Tigers’ dominance was not justified by the final score. Until Wednesday night, the Tigers had struggled to find the consistency to play a full 90 minutes in a majority of their games.
Ivy League women’s volleyball action will kick off this upcoming Friday as Princeton travels to Penn and Yale to Brown.
During a championship effort in 2013, senior quarterback Quinn Epperly became the third Princeton quarterback to win the Bushnell Cup as Ivy League Player of the Year.
After edging out a win against Millersville on the opening day of the season, Princeton continued its winning ways with an impressive performance against Ivy League rival Columbia and secured a 38-29 victory.
Results were mixed for women’s volleyball this past weekend. In their final set of games before the opening of Ivy League play, the Tigers (5-6 overall) went 1-3 during the course of the nearby Rutgers Invitational. Friday’s 9:30 a.m.
Men aim to take back Ivy Championship, perform at nationals On Sept. 12 in New Haven, Conn., senior Sam Pons led the Princeton men’s cross country team to victory against Harvard and Yale and to an exciting start for their fall season. The Tigers hope to use this momentum to help take back the Ivy League title from Columbia, who won the Heptagonals Championships race last year. “This is the first year in four or five years where we are not defending the Ivy League title,” senior co-captain Connor Martin said.
There appears to be good reason for excitement and optimism for the Princeton sprint football team.
The football team’s 2014 campaign kicked off with a trip to San Diego, the longest journey the Tigers have made since head coach Bob Surace ’90 took over.