Athlete of the Week - Chisom Opara
The football team was in a familiar position: down in the fourth quarter, one score needed, one drive left.
The football team was in a familiar position: down in the fourth quarter, one score needed, one drive left.
DURHAM, N.C. ? The 'Cra-zies' collected at Cameron Indoor Stadium last night for the first time this season.
Despite having lost key starters to graduation, the men's and women's fencing teams will not settle for a rebuilding year on the heels of last season's undefeated Ivy League slates.Overall, solid showings at the Penn State Open this past weekend bode well for both squads as they brace to defend their league championships.
Three plays ? one resulting in a broken hand and two ending in fumbles ? not only cost the sprint football team any chance it had for a win against Penn, but were also indicative of the team's entire season.Senior captain and tight end Mike Piazza sustained a broken hand on the Tigers' first play from scrimmage.
John Thompson '88 is the head coach of the men's basketball team. He recently sat down with 'Prince' senior writer Andrew Funk.'Prince': With the graduation of so many players who played major roles last season, what kind of changes will you make to the offensive system?Thompson: We're going to run the same offense we've always run here ? I just think it's the way you should play basketball.
When the final whistle blew, it not only signified the end of the game, but the end of the season for the men's soccer team.The Tigers walked off the field with a feeling of disappointment, having just been handed a 3-1 loss to Yale (9-7-1 overall, 4-3 Ivy League) in New Haven, Conn.
On the court, junior Hillary Reser seems able to do it all. The guard has a threatening three-point shot and, though she notes that she is only 5-feet, 7-inches tall "on a good day," she is still known for her rebounding ability.The only thing she doesn't know how to do is not put everything she has into the game."I'm emotional on the court," Reser said.
When Princeton head coach Kevin Morris is asked who he figures to be the top competitors for the Ivy League title, his answer is swift and decisive ? Harvard and Dartmouth.
After a 1998-99 season in which the Tigers were co-champions of their conference, the women's basketball team finished 9-19 last year, 6-8 in the Ivy League.
Cameron Indoor Stadium. Just the name is intimidating enough. No. 2 Duke has amassed a 603-134 record there since the building opened in 1940, losing only 44 times under current head coach Mike Krzyzewski.
Coming off a disappointing seventh-place finish last week at the Heptagonal Championships, the women's cross country team headed into the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Regional Championships last weekend with hopes of avenging its recent loss and repeating the extraordinary performance it had at last year's meet.The Tigers placed fourth in 1999, narrowly missing an at-large bid to the national championships.
Princeton women's volleyball is now officially the best team in Ivy Tournament history. After winning the championship match in last weekend's Ivy Tournament in Cambridge, Mass., the Tigers ? who have claimed 12 titles in the tournamen's 24-year history, including five championships in the past seven years ? are going down in the books as the most victorious team to date.Going into the tournament with the No.
Most Princeton sports fans are familiar with the men's basketball story by now.The Tigers finished yet another strong season under Bill Carmody in second place in the Ivy League.
Kevin Morris did not know what to expect.The newly-hired assistant coach had spent the week working the Princeton girls basketball camp and wondering whether he would be fired, promoted, or simply stay in his current position.Head Coach Liz Feeley ? who had hired him as an assistant ? was leaving to head the women's basketball program at Smith College.
After finishing fifth at the Mid-Atlantic Regional race Saturday, the men's cross country team's chance for a bid to the NCAA Championships and its only opportunity to continue its season seems just out of reach.
NEW HAVEN, Conn. ? In two plays, the football team's season was saved.Down 14-13 with one minute, 12 seconds to play, 80 yards to cover, and no timeouts, Princeton rode the stunning efforts of senior fullback Marty Cheatham and sophomore wide receiver Chisom Opara to beat Yale, 19-14.Princeton completed its miraculous drive with a 32-yard scoring strike from senior quarterback Jon Blevins to Opara.
COLLEGE PARK, Md. ? Just 57 seconds into its NCAA national quarterfinal game against Maryland, the defending national champion, the field hockey team found itself down a goal.
Man-up and man-down situations are supposed to be important in hockey. But they're not supposed to be this important.In a wild opening weekend to its Eastern College Athletic Conference schedule, the men's hockey team tied both Clarkson (2-1-2 overall, 0-1-1 ECAC) and preseason favorite St.
Though the loud speaker blared the "Mission: Impossible" theme throughout the game, the women's hockey team found little difficulty overcoming Boston College as it glided to a 4-1 victory Sunday at Baker Rink.
There were times this season when Matt Behncke would listen to his older brother's phone messages and not want to call back."Sometimes you get a little tired of saying the same things," the junior men's soccer midfielder said.