Twice-defeated foe reappears for one more try
After topping Clarkson twice already this season, the women?s hockey team will travel to Potsdam, N.Y., for the opening round of the ECAC Hockey League playoffs tonight.
After topping Clarkson twice already this season, the women?s hockey team will travel to Potsdam, N.Y., for the opening round of the ECAC Hockey League playoffs tonight.
There?s something special about home court. When Jadwin is filled with orange T-shirts and yelling fans, it gives the Tigers just a little extra edge against their opponents.
After a season marked by tight losses to top competition and an early exit from the NCAA Tournament, the 2008 Princeton men?s lacrosse team is hungrier than ever.While the team did lose some key players to graduation, the Tigers kept their fair share of firepower and have reloaded with a solid batch of recruits.
Nine years ago on the lacrosse field of the Delbarton School on the outskirts of Morristown, N.J., Dan Cocoziello and Alex Hewit locked gaze.
Senior spring is a busy time for any Princeton student. Between wrapping up the all-consuming thesis and deciding on post-graduation plans, there isn?t much time for anything else.
Last season the baseball team came within one hit of a playoff for the Ivy League?s Lou Gehrig Division title.
The target at which the men?s lacrosse team will take aim tomorrow afternoon could not be any bigger, but it won?t be an easy one to hit.
With age comes maturity, knowledge and experience ? or at least that?s what the women?s lacrosse team is banking on.
The softball team will travel to Fairfax, Va., to kick off its 2008 season this weekend. The Tigers are starting their season with a newly promoted head coach, Trina Salciado, and two new assistant coaches, Cristina Cobb-Adams ?06 and Alexis Alcantara.
Despite the loss of star catcher Sal Iacono ?07 to graduation, one half of the baseball team?s battery will remain more or less intact this season, as three of Princeton?s four top starters return, along with the majority of the key relievers.
If the world had a universal language, it would be soccer. In most regions of the globe, soccer is a common denominator, almost a religion.
Let me start by saying that I?ve had a less-than-illustrious basketball career. I reached my peak in the sport at the ripe age of 7, when I was arguably the best player in a Jewish Community Center basketball camp.
One Sunday afternoon in October 2005, Caitlin Seery ?09 showed up at DeNunzio Pool for the first practice in the history of Princeton club swimming with no expectations.
The list of Princeton?s all-time greats just got a little bit longer.Junior Michael Maag broke the 17-year-old school record in the 3,000-meter run two weeks ago with a time of seven minutes, 56.40 seconds, surpassing some of the greatest runners in Princeton history in the process.
According to conventional wisdom, athletes need high-meat, protein-rich diets to fuel their active lifestyles and maintain muscle mass.Not so fast, sophomore vegetarian lightweight rower Stephanie Hill says.
In 2002, I witnessed an aging Michael Jordan score 37 points as his Wizards fell on a buzzer-beater to the Miami Heat.
Right underneath the Phat Lady and the Heart Stop on the menu at Hoagie Haven, there?s the Bloch.
Every week, the ?Prince? sits down with a different athlete to find out more about their life on and off the field.
Watching the men?s tennis team take on St. John?s and St. Joseph?s universities on Sunday, it was difficult to believe that this was its first pair of matches in nearly a month, as the men looked as strong as ever in defeating St.
Ending the season with more of a whimper than a bang, the women?s hockey team split its final two matches to provide a bittersweet ending to the year.The Tigers (13-10-6 overall, 11-8-3 ECAC Hockey) experienced a seeming disintegration of their game during Friday?s demolition at the hands of No.