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The Daily Princetonian

Princeton seventh at W&M

After an up and down performance over the past two days, the men's golf team finished in the middle of the pack at the Jon Agee Invitational yesterday, but topped Ivy rival Columbia by over 20 strokes for a welcome confidence boost.

SPORTS | 10/03/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Flurry of goals in two wins

When sophomore defender Holly McGarvie's shot found the back of the net with just over 15 minutes left to play on Saturday at Cornell, the women's field hockey team finally broke the 0-0 stalemate that it had battled throughout the game.

SPORTS | 10/02/2006

The Daily Princetonian

No summer vacation for training harriers

When the temperature starts heating up in the middle of the summer, most people use it as an excuse to go inside, ramp up the air-conditioning, and make themselves a sundae.Princeton's cross country runners, on the other hand, spend their days outside on the pavement, doing their best to ignore the heat index and their cool, comfortable living rooms.Distance running requires a particular dedication to training in the off-season since the success in the sport depends almost entirely on conditioning.

SPORTS | 10/02/2006

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The Daily Princetonian

Welander tops all at Yale

On a day that saw Tiger Woods win his sixth tournament in a row, the increasingly dominant women's golf team continued a winning streak of its own.This weekend Princeton was in action at Yale's golf course for the Yale Invitational in New Haven, Conn.

SPORTS | 10/02/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Football downs Lions

In sports, two points don't get you very far, except maybe in soccer or hockey. But two points could take you a long way toward understanding the football team's win this weekend.Thanks to high-quality defensive play that buttressed a sometimes shaky but effective enough offense, Princeton defeated Columbia, 19-6.Ironically, though the Tigers held a 14-6 halftime lead after finding the end zone twice in the second quarter, only the stalwart Tiger defense was able to find those last ten yards in the second half.Senior punter Colin McDonough helped set the Tigers up for one of the most exciting plays in football with a good punt that another player on special teams downed at Columbia's own three-yard line with about four minutes left in the third.Thanks to a false start that pushed the line back to the one, Princeton couldn't have had the Lions in better position by the time Columbia had a chance to attempt a drive.

SPORTS | 10/01/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Pwang's Picks

For all the newbies out there who might not know how sports handicapping works, I'll give a quick rundown of the basic facts.

SPORTS | 09/28/2006