Track & Field: Men look to continue impressive season with win at indoor Heps
Though the NCAA championships are not until June, this weekend’s Heptagonal Championships in Hanover, N.H., are still a major occasion during the track and field season.
Though the NCAA championships are not until June, this weekend’s Heptagonal Championships in Hanover, N.H., are still a major occasion during the track and field season.
After its second conference loss last weekend, the men's basketball team (16-7 overall, 7-2 Ivy League) sits second in the Ivy League behind Cornell (23-4, 9-1). The Tigers will travel to play the Big Red today and will face Columbia (9-15, 3-7) on Saturday.
The women’s squash team looks to win its fourth consecutive national championship in the Howe Cup this weekend. In its last match, No. 4 Princeton (7-4 overall, 4-2 Ivy League) suffered a tough 5-4 loss to No. 2 Trinity (15-1) at Jadwin Gymnasium.
This is it — or might be it. Depending on the outcome of this weekend’s games, the Class of 2010 — the winningest class in the history of the men’s hockey program — may be playing its final games at Baker Rink.
The women's basketball team (21-2 overall, 9-0 Ivy League) returns to Jadwin Gymnasium after a successful weekend in which it beat both Yale and Brown by more than 20 points.
To a certain degree, Jack McBride and Chris McBride are known commodities. You know they’re cousins. You know they attended lacrosse powerhouse Delbarton School in Morristown, N.J. You know they’re more than capable of putting points on the scoreboard, as their first two years at Princeton have shown. But what remains unknown, and what will be revealed this season, is how the pair of junior attackmen will adopt a veteran leadership role when joined together on the Tigers’ first offensive line.
Last season, the men’s lacrosse team fell to Cornell 6-4 in the quarterfinals of the NCAA tournament. When the schedule came out for this upcoming season, No. 8 Princeton immediately looked to see when it could earn revenge against the Big Red. The Tigers will play Cornell in a home showdown on Saturday, May 1, the last day of their regular season.
We often think of leaders as being loud and brash. It may come as a surprise to some, then, that the only junior captain of the women’s lacrosse team is quiet, calm and composed — and can deliver when it counts.
When the men’s lacrosse team takes the field at Class of 1952 Stadium against Hofstra on Saturday, a new era in Princeton lacrosse will begin under the leadership of head coach Chris Bates. Bates, the Tigers’ 10th head coach, comes to Princeton after spending 10 years leading the Drexel lacrosse program. Bates built the team to become Top 20 regulars, most recently winning two Colonial Athletic Association championships in the last three years.
The women’s lacrosse team generally plays one of the toughest schedules in the country, and this season will be no different. No. 9 Princeton faces three of the nation’s top-five teams based on the preseason rankings. Boasting their youngest squad in years, the Tigers will have some on-the-job learning to do in games against traditional powerhouses like No. 2 Maryland, No. 3 Penn and No. 5 Duke.
With nine significant players gone from last year, the women’s lacrosse team will begin its season against Johns Hopkins on Saturday with a much younger group of players than in years past.
The pressure is building this weekend for the women’s swimming and diving team to continue their season-long winning streak.
The women’s basketball team is enjoying its best season in program history, as the Tigers are off to a 21-2 start and have won all nine of their Ivy League contests by double digits. Since the conference season is past its halfway point, each team has played each other at least once. This provides an excellent opportunity to compare how each team has performed to this point and to find out how exactly Princeton has been dominating its opponents.
Senior utility and co-captain Helen Meigs of the women’s water polo team keeps breaking her own records. Meigs set Princeton’s single-season record for assists as a freshman, smashed that as a sophomore and then broke it again during her junior year.
Anyone who claims that hockey is boring did not watch Sunday’s Olympic game between the United States and Canada. This matchup exemplified the great qualities of hockey, as the back-and-forth contest was both hard-hitting and full of finesse. Featuring several amazing goals and one hugely impressive performance by American goalie Ryan Miller, the game stayed exciting until the end, with the American team upsetting the Canadians 5-3.
While most track and field athletes competing at the indoor Heptagonal Championships this weekend will approach their respective events with apprehension or quiet optimism as they face the best competition in the Ivy League, senior Justin Frick is taking a different outlook.
The women’s tennis team bounced back from two disappointing losses at the ECAC Championships with two strong victories, including a 4-3 battle against No. 20 Vanderbilt. The No. 63 Tigers (6-3) also beat Syracuse in a decisive 6-1 match on Sunday. On the men’s side, the Tigers knocked off St. John’s.
Men’s volleyball head coach Sam Shweisky got the kind of birthday present that every coach dreams of when Princeton defeated Rutgers-Newark 3-1 on Friday night in Dillon Gymnasium. The win is Shweisky’s fourth as a Tiger and moves the team to the .500 mark for the first time this season.
The men’s and women’s fencing teams began their two-weekend-long Ivy League tournament in the best way possible, with both teams remaining undefeated.
After the first round of matches in Saturday’s national semifinal hosted by Yale, the men’s squash team held a 2-1 lead over No. 1 Trinity. If only the No. 4 Tigers (12-4 overall, 5-1 Ivy League) could split the remaining six matches, they would break Trinity’s 222-game win streak and prevent the Bantams (22-0) from winning their 12th consecutive national title.