Tuesday, January 21, 2025

POTUS Championships

Spoiler - There are no politics here. Not to worry. 

There is, however, an issue that TigerBlog has with counting.

Okay, here goes. How is Donald Trump the 45th and 47th President of the United States? Obviously, his terms have not been consecutive, which is also true of one other President, Grover Cleveland. 

In case you don't know this, Cleveland is buried in Princeton, New Jersey. He was the 22nd and 24th President, elected in 1884 and 1892. Who was elected in between? That would be Benjamin Harrison. 

So here's TB's question: If you're counting each term separately, then why don't the Presidents who served consecutively count as two as well? By that logic, shouldn't George Washington have been the first and second President?

If you did the math, you'd find out that Mr. Trump was the 68th and now 70th President. Perhaps there's money to be made off of such merchandise? 

It would have been funnier if George Carlin had done this. And TigerBlog will admit that the strangest things bother him. 

Seriously? Why wouldn't every term count separately. TB was never was a big fan of the whole Grover Cleveland controversy of whether he should have been 22 and 24. 

He remembers a day in fifth grade social studies, back at old Milford Brook School, when he got into a heated discussion with his teacher — Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler —over how Cleveland could be two Presidents when he was one person. He ended up in the principal's office over that one.

Okay, nothing in the previous paragraph ever actually happened. Who was Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler? If you're in TigerBlog's age range, you already know.

With that, TB would like to update something he wrote eight years ago after the Presidential inauguration, when he asked this question: Which President can claim the most Princeton Ivy League championships during his administration?

Dwight Eisenhower, as President, was in office for Princeton's first 13 Ivy League championships. The lowest number belongs to Kennedy, whose term in office was cut short in one of the great tragedies in this country's history. Kennedy, before his assassination, was in office for 10 Princeton championships.

LBJ served more than four years, and used that time to set the record to that point, with 17 titles. 

Nixon was the President from January 1969 through August of 1974. Ford, who took office when Nixon resigned, served from then until January of 1977, or less then half the time of Nixon, but Princeton won the same number - 13 - under each.

The first women's Ivy championship was won in 1973-74, by Radcliffe in women's rowing. Princeton's first came the next year, in women's basketball, won by the Tigers as Watergate was just about to end the Nixon administration.

Carter won 33 championships, or at least Princeton did in his four years in office. That was actually more than any two of his predecessors combined.

Reagan, as the first President to serve two full terms after women started to compete for Ivy titles, shattered the record, with 64. George H.W. Bush, who would not win re-election, won 31.

Ah, but then came the Bill Clinton years. Princeton would win 92 Ivy League championships in his eight years as President, the most under any administration.

As for George W. Bush, he's second with 85. Mr. Obama had 83 on his resume. Princeton won 39 in Trump's first term, though that number would have been higher had it not been for the pandemic. The same is true of Mr. Biden's term, which ended with 41, though it would have clearly been way higher without the pandemic. He probably would have gotten well into the 50s. 

If you're a pure partisan, that's 276 for Democrats and 258 for Republicans.

So congratulations to Bill Clinton on still holding the record. Will it stand for four more years? Mr. Trump needs 53 to tie. That's asking a lot. 

On the other hand, isn't that something that can unite all Princetonians, if not Americans?

And there you go. See? Nothing political.

Monday, January 20, 2025

Are You Kidding, Xaivian?

Today's title is also today's first focus. 

Are you kidding, Xaivian Lee? And to show you how amazing a player Lee is, TigerBlog isn't even referring to his game-winning three-pointer in Princeton's 81-80 win at Dartmouth Saturday. 

No, TB is talking about a play that occurred with a little more than four minutes to go, with the Tigers up by nine at the time. Lee was beaten — seemingly — on a nice Dartmouth curl to the basket. Seemingly, of course, because what looked all the world like an uncontested layup instead became a blocked shot for Lee. 

He timed it perfectly. He didn't come close to committing a foul. He just recovered, closed the ground and tapped it away off the backboard, starting the Tigers the other way. It was his sixth block of the year, if you're counting.

Also if you're counting, he finished with 33 points, tying his career high. The last three came with six seconds to go, on a long three-pointer that turned what (briefly) was a Dartmouth two-point lead into a Princeton win. 

It also came after Lee had back-to-back turnovers from slipping on the court. And on a possession where he almost lost the ball again. 

So what happened? A complete unfazed Lee dropped in his game-winner. As TB watched on ESPN+, he had no doubt that shot was heading in. 

In addition to his 33 points, Lee also had eight rebounds and three assists. He is a marvel to watch on the court, with the quickness to free himself in any situation, leaving him with, as Pete Carril used to say, "every shot in the deck."

The win improved Princeton to 2-0 in the Ivy League while Dartmouth is now 1-1. Do not for a minute think that the Big Green, who won two Ivy games all of last year, will not be in the hunt for an Ivy tournament spot until the very end and have a great chance to make their first ILT.

Today, of course, is Martin Luther King Jr. Day. It is a day that has become associated in many ways with the sport of basketball, and all 16 Ivy men's and women's teams will be playing. For Princeton, that means a men's game at home against Columbia at 2 and a women's game at Columbia (a matchup of the last remaining Ivy unbeatens) in New York City at 7.

Here is what TB has written about the intersection of the holiday and the sport before: 

Today is Martin Luther King Jr. Day, which makes the Civil Rights leader the only person ever born in the United States to have a federal holiday named for him or her.

TigerBlog spent a great deal of time in college studying the Civil Rights movement and Dr. King's role in it (he'd also be fortunate enough to meet John Doar, the Princeton basketball alum who was also a huge factor in the movement). 

In addition, TB has also been to the national park that bears Dr. King's name in Atlanta, back before it was a national park. The Civil Rights museum there is a must.

The occasion of his birthday first became a Monday federal holiday in 1983. Within three years, the NBA began to play games on the holiday, a tradition that will continue today with 11 games. Memphis (where Dr. King was killed in 1968) and Atlanta (his home) are at home each year.

The basketball tradition on the holiday was actually born a few months after the assassination itself. A year ago, TB wrote this on the holiday:

The National Basketball Association first started playing matinee games on Martin Luther King Day in 1986.

The first game to feature NBA players in honor of Dr. King came much earlier, back in 1968, the year in which he was assassinated. In fact, on the day after the assassination, which happened on April 4 of that year, Oscar Robertson began to organize a special exhibition game that would be played outdoors in New York City on Aug. 15.

According to an AP story, that game included players like Wilt Chamberlain, Lenny Wilkens, Dave Bing, Dave DeBusschere, Willis Reed and Walt Bellamy. That game raised $90,000 in support of Dr. King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference.

Friday, January 17, 2025

Statistical Anomaly Alert

Did you see the video of the new men's basketball uniforms? 

It's pretty cool stuff.

As TigerBlog said, that's pretty cool stuff. 

Meanwhile, if Harvard men's basketball player Robert Hinton had scored two more points at any point of his team's first 14 games, or if Brown men's basketball player Landon Lewis had scored one point fewer in any of his team's first 13 games, then a fascinating statistical anomaly would have occurred. 

Or at least, TigerBlog thinks it's an anomaly. 

If either of those things had happened, then the top eight scorers in Ivy League men's basketball would represent the eight schools. 

Has that ever happened for a full season? TigerBlog went back on the league website as far as stats are listed and didn't see a time that this had occurred. 

The same is true on the women's side. It definitely won't happen this year either. 

What does the fact that, for the men, each team could have one player in the top eight in points per game? TB isn't sure it means anything. He's just a fan of statistical anomalies.

Of greater importance would the standings, which are super early in the Ivy League but which will move along quickly now. The two Ivy tournaments will be held at Brown the weekend of March 14-16, which isn't around the corner but soon will be. 

This weekend, or at least extended weekend, will see all eight men's teams and all eight women's teams play twice, once Saturday and once on Martin Luther King Jr. Day Monday. 

For Princeton, this means a women's game at Jadwin tomorrow at 2 against Dartmouth and a game at Columbia Monday at 7, while the men are at Dartmouth tomorrow at 2 and then home against Columbia Monday at 2.

Both Princeton teams are unbeaten in the league, with the women at 2-0 with wins over Cornell and Harvard and the men 1-0 with a win over Harvard. 

There is one other Ivy League school whose basketball teams are a combined 3-0 in the early going. You know who that is? 

That would be Dartmouth. 

The Big Green are 3-0 between the two teams today. What were those two teams combined a year ago? 

That would be 3-25. 

Princeton is heading to Hanover to take on a Dartmouth team that has followed a four-game losing streak with a three-game winning streak, with its most recent win over Penn 73-70 last weekend. The Big Green are 7-7 overall (including a win at Boston College) after going 6-21 last season.

The basketball games are one of the highlights of the weekend in Princeton Athletics, though not the only one. 

The men's hockey team is home for games against Cornell (tonight at 7) and Colgate (tomorrow at 7). By the way, Sacred Heart swept Cornell last weekend. TB is always happy to pump up his son's alma mater.

Only one ECAC Hockey team — Quinnipiac — is currently in the top 22. This weekend's opponents at Hobey Baker Rink are tied at No. 28.

Princeton and Cornell are in a three-way tie for eighth place in the current ECAC standings, along with Yale. Like basketball, the hockey races have a long way to go until playoff time, but eighth place does bring with it home ice for the first round playoff game. 

No game between Cornell and Princeton will ever be routine, especially now that Ben Syer is the Tiger head coach. Syer spent the last 13 years at Cornell, which means that he recruited every current Big Red player. 

TigerBlog remembered that he wrote about this six months ago, exactly six months ago, for that matter, how special a day it would be for Syer to have his old team come to play at his new team. And what did TB start out with back on July 17?

The high temperature in Princeton yesterday was 99 degrees.

TB couldn't help but laugh out loud at that, what with snow flurries and a windchill of 16 degrees. The forecast, by the way, is for the coldest weather so far in Princeton this winter for next week. 

Oh well. Are there really people who like winter more than summer? TB would take the 99 degrees any day.

In the meantime, HERE is the rest of the weekend schedule.

Have a great weekend everyone.

Thursday, January 16, 2025

The Tiger Bech Story

It doesn't take long to figure out that Michelle Bech is a wonderful person.

TigerBlog found that out Monday morning, when he met her in Philadelphia. She is warm, friendly, welcoming and pretty much any other positive quality you would assign to a person.

And TB can't help but think that he would much rather have never met her at all. 

The reason he was in Philadelphia was to interview Michelle, and former Princeton football player Ryan Quigley, about another former Princeton football player, Tiger Bech. Tragically, horrifically, Bech was one of the 14 people who were murdered in New Orleans in the attack in the early morning hours of New Year's Day. 

Quigley, who was Tiger's best friend, was one of the nearly 60 who were injured. 

The result of the interview of the two of them was a story that TB posted on goprincetontigers.com yesterday. It's title was a quote from Michelle about her son: "He was the energy of love in the universe."

You can read the story HERE.

This is how it starts: 

How do you write the unwritable? How do you sit across the table for an hour from the two of them — the mother who lost her son two weeks earlier and the best friend who lost half of himself, with the half that’s left battered, both mind and body? 

How do you convey their emotions? How do you sit and watch two people who use every ounce of effort to support each other, seemingly melting together, an invisible and yet obvious halo of grief that binds them?

Maybe that’s the whole story. Maybe all that should be written is an apology, a plea for forgiveness for interfering at a time like this.

Look across the table, though. Look closely. Listen to what they say. See their faces as they say it. Suddenly it becomes obvious that the two people sitting there need this, want this. They want this story told, the story of Tiger Bech, who he was in life — “the best person I’ve ever met, with the biggest heart I’ve ever seen,” his best friend said  — and who he is in death — “the energy of love in the universe,” his mother says.

To say that it was difficult to speak with Michelle and Quigley is an understatement. This was two weeks to the day when Tiger was killed, and now TB was asking them questions about him and about what had happened. 

It was the single most emotional interview that TB has ever done. How could it not be, right? 

TigerBlog's hope is that the story he wrote brings some comfort to those who knew Tiger well. 

TB is not one of the people who knew Tiger Bech well, or at all. He saw him play football many times, but he never spoke to him, at least not that he remembers. 

For TB, it was also a chance to get to know the man who was taken away so soon, at the age of 27. The picture that was painted for him of Bech was an extraordinary one. 

Bech came into focus through the words of his mother and best friend, and also through the pictures and the videos that they shared. Clearly, this was someone who lived life to the absolute fullest. 

There were quotes about his zeal for life, and for how much he loved the people close to him. He was a person who made friends easily and was loyal to them forever. He was someone who brought people together, especially those who found themselves on the outside, or were by themselves, or weren't the social force that he was. 

There were pictures of him in football uniform, and in tuxedos — lots of tuxedos. There he was, at events with his family and hanging out with his friends. 

His smile was the constant in all of these pictures. You could almost expect him to leap off the screen at you with how much life he projected in all of the photos.

The most touching one was a video of him as he was duck hunting in Mississippi, just hours before his death. Michelle was wary of sharing it at first, because there was a curse or two in it. 

More than that, way more than that, there was also the Tiger Bech that she wants to remember. He is happy. He is laughing. He is in his element, and not the duck blind. 

His element was anywhere there were other people. His element was anywhere that a good time could be had, a new experience could be shared, an adventure could be undertaken. 

As TB wrote in the story, you couldn't help but be drawn to the man in the video — only that man is now gone. 

There are no words to change that. 

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Wide Variety Wednesday

TigerBlog is offering a wide variety for your Wednesday:

*

So if you could be with any Princeton team right now, it would have to be the men's volleyball team, right? 

In case you haven't seen the schedule, Princeton is in Honolulu right now. The Tigers will play the first of two matches against the University of Hawaii tonight — well, actually tomorrow morning Eastern time, since it starts at 7 Hawaii time — with the second match Friday. 

Hawaii is ranked No. 4 nationally, while Princeton is No. 19. The Tigers were picked fourth in the EIVA preseason poll.

Speaking of the EIVA, Hawaii is 34-10 all-time against the league — 17-10 against Penn State and 17-0 against everyone else. The Rainbow Warriors are 2-0 against the EIVA this season already, after having swept Harvard, at home of course.

If you're in Honolulu, well, good for you. TigerBlog was there once, back in December 1998, when the men's basketball team won the Rainbow Classic. That was a fun trip. 

One of his most vivid memories is the first morning after he arrived, which had been after midnight. It wasn't until he went downstairs in the daylight that he realized the hotel had an open-air lobby, one that looked out over Waikiki Beach. Yes. It was very nice. 

*

The men's and women's squash teams had themselves a big weekend, sweeping Yale and Trinity. All six teams involved were ranked in the top four. 

The Ivy League and national championship races are going to be extraordinary, as Princeton chases Penn (No. 1 on the men's side) and Harvard (No. 1 on the women's side). 

The real winner so far, though, is the brand-new racquet center in Princeton's Meadows Neighborhood. If you haven't seen it yet, you definitely want to make sure you get there for a match. Your next chance will be this weekend, as both teams host Cornell Friday and Columbia Saturday. 

*

Do you play Wordle? TigerBlog does, religiously. 

TB was a long-time squash player, and in one way, Wordle is like squash. How so? In squash, you can start out a point looking good and then have one bad shot ruin everything. The same is true of Wordle. You can have a great start and then make one bad guess and then, well, the rest of the day is ruined.

*

Mitchell Schott swam two individual races last weekend against Navy and Kenyon and set program records in both, with the 1,000 freestyle Friday and the 500 freestyle Saturday. 

A year ago, Schott was part of the runner-up in the 400 and 800 free relays while also finishing fourth in the 100 free, fifth in the 200 free and sixth in the 200 IM at the Ivy championship meet. This year's Ivy meet is more than a month away and will be held at Brown Feb. 26-March 1.

*

Speaking of what's coming up, you know what's a month from today? That would be opening day for the men's and women's lacrosse seasons. 

The men will open their season at Penn State on Feb. 15 as they begin the run for a fourth-straight NCAA tournament appearance. The women, who returned to the NCAA tournament last year after a one-year absence, will be home that day to take on Virginia to start their season.

The first pitch of the softball season is the day before, as Princeton will be at North Carolina Feb. 14-16, with five games on the schedule. The three opponents will be Drexel, George Mason and the host Tar Heels. 

Princeton won the Ivy League and Ivy League tournament championships a year ago and then got a win over Ole Miss in the NCAA tournament regional. 

The baseball season starts one week later, with a four-game series at Miami.

*

There was an athletic department staff retreat last week that ended with pickleball. TigerBlog has played a handful of times, and each time he comes away thinking that he should be playing more and more. 

The athletic department IT man extraordinaire, Bryan Fitzwater, had never played pickleball until last Thursday. It's quite possible that if you're looking for him and can't find him that he's devoted himself full time to the sport.

 

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Net Results

TigerBlog was watching the Washington-Tampa Bay playoff game Sunday night when he remembered that the Brooklyn Nets also had a game at the same time.

Why not check out the score to see how Tosan Evbuomwan was doing? 

Actually, it turned to be an opportune time. The game between the Nets and the Utah Jazz was 1) in overtime and 2) being shown live on NBA TV. 

When TigerBlog checked out the live stats, he saw that Evbuomwan was having a huge night. As he watched the remainder of the game, it was clear that Evbuomwan's impact was everywhere. 

The Princeton alum is new to the Nets. He's also made a huge contribution quickly to a team that is struggling with injuries.

The Nets would lose to the Jazz 112-111, yes. Had they won, it would have been because of Evbuomwan, who had a career-high 22 points on 7 for 8 shooting from the field. He also hit a pair of foul shots with five seconds remaining in OT to put the Nets ahead 111-110, only to see Utah get the game-winner three seconds later. 

Evbuomwan had 11 points in his first two games with Brooklyn, an average of 5.5. Since then, he has had 13, 10 and 22 points, an average of 15 per game. 

Here is what Brooklyn head coach Jordi Fernandez had to say about Evbuomwan after the game in Utah: 

"Amazing. He's 7/8 from the field, 22 points. He's always under control and looks like a guy who has been there before. He's 23... I'm very happy to see him [play], keep working with him, keep developing him. He's doing his job."

Evbuomwan was the leader of the 2023 Princeton Sweet 16 team. He got his feet wet last year with the Pistons and Grizzlies, got off to a blistering start in the G League this season and now has a great opportunity in Brooklyn. In all he's averaging 11.2 points and 4.2 rebounds while shooting 57.1 percent from the field and 36 percent from three in 24 minutes per night.

Meanwhile, his alma mater won its first Ivy League game this past Saturday, defeating Harvard 68-64 in Cambridge. The win was the seventh straight for the Tigers over the Crimson.

Xaivian Lee, who will get his own chance to the one that Evbuomwan has seized, led Princeton with 22 points. What a year Lee is having, right? He's now had five games of at least 20 points, and that doesn't even count the one where he had the first recorded triple-double by a Princeton men's player (18 points, 13 rebounds, 10 assists against St. Joseph's).

Another great sign was the effort that Caden Pierce had, with nine points and eight rebounds against Harvard after he had been injured two games earlier, against Akron. 

Next up for Princeton, like it usually has been all of these years, is a trip to Dartmouth (tip is Saturday at 2) after a trip to Harvard. Unlike those decades, this time those trips are separated by a week, as the Ivy League schedule has been spread out more the last few years. 

Dartmouth is one of the other three teams who won its league opener, along with Cornell and Yale. The Big Red surprised, if that's the right word, Columbia, who had a great pre-league record of 11-2, by a 94-82 score. Yale took down Brown 79-58. 

As for the Big Green, they defeated Penn 73-70, running their winning streak to three after a four-game losing streak before that. Included in the current run is a 30-point win over Vermont, and Dartmouth also has a win over Boston College on its resume. 

There will be a quick turnaround for all 16 Ivy teams between the games Saturday and then the Monday games on Martin Luther King Jr. Day. For Princeton's men, that would mean the home Ivy opener, when Columbia will be in Jadwin Gym at 2.

You can also follow the Nets between now and the weekend, since the team is now on a five-game Western trip that continues tonight in Portland.

Monday, January 13, 2025

Chea For The Win

Okay, you want to know one way to measure a great player? 

Consider this: 

Player A: 2 for 6 from the field, 1 for 4 from three-point range, seven points.
Player B: 1 for 1 from the field, two points.

Player A was Ashley Chea Saturday afternoon against Harvard for the first 39:59. Player B was Ashley Chea in the final second of the same game. 

Chea may not have had the best game of her career. She did have one of the clutchest (is that a word?) shots of her career. The result? Princeton 52, Harvard 50. 

And that's what great players do. 

To be more specific, Princeton and Harvard were tied at 50-50 in the final seconds, Crimson with the ball. Parker Hill, though, blocked a potential game-winning shot by Harvard, leading to a held ball and possession to Princeton with 3.7 seconds to play. 

Because the ball can be advanced off a timeout in women's college basketball, Princeton then took over near midcourt. Chea took the inbounds pass, took one long dribble that brought her just inside the three-point line and swished it as the clock reached zeroes. 

One little note about that: 1) It was only the second Princeton women's buzzer-beater in 22 years, after Grace Stone did so in 2022.

Also, think about what Chea did. 

First of all, she was not having a great shooting day. Second, the shot she took was not one that you spend a great deal of time practicing. It wasn't an open look for a three. It wasn't a step-back three. It wasn't a drive or floater. 

It was something of a frantic shot, off a dribble that took the ball a bit further away from her than she might have wanted. And yet? 

Swish. Game over. 

What was it that TigerBlog said before? That's what great players do.

Speaking of "great," the game itself was a great game. The only thing missing was the month of March.

Harvard came into the game winner of 10 straight and 12-1 overall. Princeton is the standard-bearer for Ivy League women's basketball greatness.

It was only Game 2 of the Ivy schedule for all of the league's women's teams. Princeton and Harvard won their first game (the Tigers over Cornell; Harvard over Yale) by a combined 133-82. 

While both teams put up big numbers offensively last week, this time it was a wire-to-wire defensive battle. Such games tend to favor the Tigers. 

In fact, since Carla Berube became head coach, you want to know what her team's record is in games in which neither team has made it out of the 50s? The game against Harvard was the 11th such game. 

Her record? 

How about 11-0? Is that good? 

The Ivy League has already established itself as a multiple NCAA bid league, something that has now happened twice in its history. The NCAA tournament isn't exactly around the corner, but this year could be the third time. 

As TB pointed out last week, there are three league teams highly ranked in the NET rankings. Right now, Harvard is still the highest at No. 38, followed by Princeton at No. 44 and Columbia at No. 52. 

Yes, there are four teams at 190 or above, but that only makes the head-to-head matchups of the top three even more important. Right now, those top three are a combined 34-10 overall (Columbia and Princeton, along with Dartmouth, are all 2-0 in the league).

Of course, you can't look at a basketball season only in terms of what it might mean for the Madness at the end. No, you also have to enjoy the moments along the way.

Saturday's game was one of those moments that will stand out for 2024-25. It was a great game, a tense matchup the entire 40 minutes. 

And it took all 40 minutes for there to be a winner. In the end, on this day in Jadwin Gym, that would be Princeton, because Ashley Chea drained the game-winner as time expired on a day when her shots weren't falling like they usually do. 

Hey, it's what great players do.

Friday, January 10, 2025

Tip-Off Saturday

It appears that the following two items are definitely true: 1) people love top 25 rankings and 2) a lot of people have an opinion on why the one they just read had to be written by an idiot.

Well, maybe the second one isn't exactly true. On the other hand, TigerBlog did get some feedback yesterday on his list of the 25 greatest coaches in Princeton history that suggested that perhaps others could have done better. 

And that's fine. That's how it should be. 

Also, TB didn't include any honorable mentions. He can tell you that he struggled to have to leave out people like Gail Ramsay, Bob Surace, Sean Driscoll, Luis Nicolao, Bill Carmody, Jimmy Reed, Al Nies and others. 

If those last two names aren't familiar, Reed was a longtime head coach for men's soccer and wrestling, beginning in the 1930s, around the time Nies was ending his career as the head coach of soccer and lacrosse. 

This was an easier project than the top 25 athletes, partly because there were far fewer coaches than athletes and partly because it wasn't a group project. 

And it seems like it was well-received and started a few conversations, which is also good. 

So thank you to Mark Schwartz, the men's lacrosse alum who suggested it in the first place. 

If TB were to come back in a few years and update this, then head men's basketball coach Mitch Henderson would certainly be in the conversation. Carla Berube, the head women's coach, is already on the list. 

They both have big games tomorrow, one in Jadwin Gym and the other in Cambridge, Mass. Both games tip-off at 2.

For the men, it's the Ivy League opener for all eight teams. Your schedule is Princeton at Harvard, Brown at Yale, Cornell at Columbia and Penn at Dartmouth. 

Princeton brings an 11-4 overall record into the league schedule. Only Columbia, at 11-2, has a better record. Harvard is 5-8 in its non-league schedule, with a 71-65 win over Bowdoin in its most recent game.

Dalen Davis, the sophomore guard, is the reigning Ivy League Player of the Week, after his game-winning three-pointer in the 76-75 win over Akron in a game in which he had 18 points, six rebounds, five assists and four steals.

As for the women, this is the second game of the league season, though the schedule is the inverse of the men's. Princeton, Columbia, Harvard and Dartmouth are all 1-0. The first three of those teams are all in the top 52 of the Division I NET rankings.

Columbia is at No. 52. Princeton is at No. 44. Harvard is No. 37. That's a great non-league performance for the league, which twice has gotten an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament (Princeton in 2016, Columbia last season). 

Harvard is 12-1 on the season. Without looking, do you know which team beat the Crimson? Hint - that team also has a win over Princeton this season.

Harvard's best win is over Indiana. It's most amazing win came in its most recent game, when the Crimson took down Boston University 86-26. 

What was the score of that game after one quarter? It was 20-15. That means that Harvard outscored BU 66-11 for the final three quarters. 

Oh, and the Harvard loss was to Quinnipiac, though the Crimson have won 10 straight since. 

What kind of game will it be? Well, both teams have similar offensive numbers, as Harvard averages 70.3 and Princeton 68.3. Defensively, Harvard leads the league at 52.5, while Princeton is at 59.5 — though the Tigers have built their Berube-dominant teams starting on the defensive end out.

It doesn't take a genius to figure out that the key cog for Harvard is Harmoni Turner, whose 20.7 points per game average is 2.3 better than any other player in the league. 

It's a good-looking Saturday of Princeton basketball, with one game home and one on the road. Keep in mind that there is a long way to go until the Ivy tournament tips off on March 14.

This is only Game 2 of 14 in the league for the women and Game 1 of 14 for the men.

Still, for early January? 

It's a great taste of what's to come.

Thursday, January 9, 2025

The Top 25 Princeton Coaches Of All-Time

Okay, as promised, it's TigerBlog's list of the 25 greatest coaches in Princeton Athletics history. 

First, though, a few parameters and thoughts. 

TB thought about adding a minimum number of years to have been a head coach, because longevity does have to factor into this. Then as he wondered how long this minimum would have to be, he decided against it. 

He'll call this "the Eve Kraft/Butch van Breda Kolff rule."

Second, and this is very, very important — great coaches cannot be measured simply by championships won. There is a great difference between the challenges faced by coaches in various sports and ceilings that they can reach. 

This is called "the Chris Ayres rule."

Third, only what the coach did as Princeton's head coach counts. This is "the Chris Sailer rule."

Lastly, some coaches have walked into situations that seemed to be hopeless while others walked into situations that were much more promising. While the coaches who orchestrated the biggest turnarounds stand out, it's not fair to punish anyone because of the success that was already there.

This is "the Carla Berube rule."

Feel free to disagree, but if you say "so-and-so should be on the list, you have to tell him who should be removed. Like the project with the Top 25 Princeton athletes of all time, this was no easy — and some legendary coaches did not make the cut.

And with that, here is TB's list:

No. 25 - Bill Clarke, baseball (1900-17, 1919-27, 1936-44) 
Bill Clarke won nearly two-thirds of the 892 games he coached at Princeton, bouncing back and forth between his time as a Major League Baseball player (he won a World Series in 1905 with the Giants) to have three separate head coaching appearances. His record was 564-322-10, and the field on which the Tigers now play is named in his honor.

No. 24 - Glen Nelson, women's volleyball (1982-2008)/men's volleyball (1979-2008)
Glenn Nelson won more games than anyone else who ever coached at Princeton, with a total of 1,109 between the men's and women's teams. He coached the women to 11 Ivy League championships, and he became the first coach ever to take a school's men's and women's team to the NCAA tournament when he did so in 1998. The possessor of as large a personality as anyone who ever has represented the Tigers, a newspaper headline upon his retirement read: "Wacky Princeton Volleyball Coach To Retire."

No. 23 - Rob Orr, men's swimming and diving (1979-2019)
Rob Orr led Princeton to 330 dual meet victories, the third-most in Division I history when he retired. His teams won 23 Ivy titles with 38 individual All-Americans and 24 All-American relays. He led Princeton to five Top 20 finishes at the NCAA Championships, and his swimmers won two NCAA relay titles. His team never failed to finish first or second in the league in every season in which he coached at the Ivy event. 

No. 22 - Eve Kraft, women's tennis (1971-73)
Eve Kraft was the first coach ever of any Princeton women's team, and she put together a perfect 26-0 record in her three seasons with the Tigers. Princeton also won the Eastern Championship each of her seasons. Because there was no budget to pay women's coaches at the time, Kraft was a volunteer during her time as head coach.

No. 21 - Peter Farrell, women's track and field and cross country (1977-2016)
Peter Farrell was the only head coach the women's track and field and cross country programs knew for the first 39 years of the program. He led Princeton to 27 Ivy League Heptagonal championships and two "triple crowns," winning all three Heps titles in the same academic year in 1980-81 and 2010-11.

No. 20 - Jim Barlow, men's soccer (1996-present)
Jim Barlow has won more games than any other soccer coach in Princeton history, with a career record of 222-182-70. He has led Princeton to six Ivy League championships and eight NCAA tournaments, and he is the only coach to led the Tigers to a perfect 7-0-0 record in Ivy games. His most recent team won the first Ivy League tournament in program history.

No. 19 - Cindy Cohen, softball (1983-2000)
Cindy Cohen became the head coach of softball in the program's second season. She then went 559-278-3 in her 18 seasons, winning 12 Ivy League championships, including each of her first six. She also took her team to the NCAA tournament for the first three times in program history, including back-to-back trips to the Women's College World Series in 1995 and 1996.

No. 18 - Bob Callahan, men's squash (1981-2013)
Bob Callahan won better than 80 percent of his matches as Tiger head coach, going 316-68 with 11 Ivy League championships and three national championships, including an epic win in the 2012 national final to end Trinity's 13-year title run. Callahan, a member of the College Squash and U.S. Squash Halls of Fame, is perhaps the greatest gentleman and sportsman who ever represented Princeton.

No. 17 - Charles Caldwell, football (1945-56)
Charles Caldwell went 70-30-3 as the head coach of the Tigers in the post-war era. He also coached the team to its longest winning streak ever (24 games, between 1949-52), a record that still stands, as well as the team's most recent national championship (1950) and its only Heisman Trophy winner. He is a member of the College Football Hall of Fame.

No. 16 - Susan Teeter, women's swimming and diving (1994-2017)
Susan Teeter spent 33 seasons as head coach of the women's swimming and diving team, and she won the Ivy League championship more than half of those times — 17, including 12 in her final 18 seasons. Princeton's all-time leader in wins, she won 229 dual meet victories with only 62 losses (.788), and she led Princeton to two different winning streaks of at least 40 straight. She also coached 22 All-Americans.

No. 15 - Curtis Jordan, women's rowing (1984-90/men's heavyweight rowing 1991-2009)
Curtis Jordan is the only Princeton head coach who ever won a national championship with a women's team and a men's team (excluding co-ed fencing). Jordan's women's team won the 1990 IRA national championship with the women, after also leading the team to two Eastern Sprints titles, and he then won the 1996 and 1998 IRA national titles with the men's heavyweights, with whom he won the program's first five Eastern Sprints championships.

No. 14 - Julie Shackford, women's soccer (1995-2014)
Julie Shackford went 203-115-29 in her 20 seasons with the Tigers. She also coached the team to six Ivy League championships and eight NCAA tournament appearances, and she is the only Ivy women's soccer coach — and any Ivy coach in a 64-team field — to bring her team to the NCAA Final Four.

No. 13 - Betty Constable, women's squash (1971-91)
Betty Constable was the first head coach of the women's squash program, and she quickly built it into the standard of the college women's game. Her teams went 117-16 in dual matches, and she won 12 national championships (the Howe Cup is named for her family) and the first two Ivy titles. She is a member of the U.S. Squash Hall of Fame.

No. 12 - Kristen Holmes, field hockey (2003-15)
Kristen Holmes went 164-80 as Princeton's head coach, with 12 Ivy League championships in 13 seasons, including her final 11. The biggest item on her resume, though, is the 2012 NCAA championship, the only one any Ivy League field hockey team has ever won.

No. 11 - Butch van Breda Kolff, men's basketball (1962-67)
Burch van Breda Kolff, one of the founders of the Princeton men's basketball coaching tradition, had a short, but wildly successful tenure with the Tigers. His record in his five seasons was 103-31, with four Ivy titles and four NCAA appearances, including a run to the Final Four in 1965.

No. 10 - Bill Roper, football (1906-08, 10-11, 19-30)
Bill Roper, Princeton's first full-time football coach, still holds the record for most wins at Princeton with 89, along with 28 losses and 16 ties. He coached Princeton to four national championships, the last of which was the 1922 "Team of Destiny." The top senior male athlete award at Princeton is named for him.

No. 9 - Carla Berube, women's basketball (2019-present)
Carla Berube has won four Ivy League titles in four seasons, with three Ivy League tournament championships in three appearances in the event. Her overall record is 110-21, with an Ivy record of 54-3 before Saturday's game against Harvard, and she has coached her team to a pair of NCAA tournament wins, over Kentucky in 2022 and North Carolina State in 2023.

No. 8 - Zoltan Dudas, men's and women's fencing (2006-present)
Zoltan Dudas has taken Princeton to a top 10 national finish in every one of his seasons with the Tigers, with the ultimate accomplishment of an NCAA championship in 2013, with runner-up finishes in 2012 and 2014. He has also coached seven fencers to an NCAA individual championship while also winning 15 Ivy League titles between the two programs, with whom he has a combined record of 722-191.

No. 7 - Chris Ayres, wrestling (2006-23)
Chris Ayres had perhaps the most thankless task of any Princeton coach ever, taking over a program that had won only one Ivy League match in the previous five years. By the time he left in 2023, Ayres had turned Princeton into a perennial entry into the national Top 20, won the program's first Ivy League title in 34 years in 2022 and produced 14 All-American selections — as well as Princeton's second NCAA individual champion.

No. 6 - Lori Dauphiny, women's rowing (1997-present)
Lori Dauphiny is the only women's rowing coach to lead her program to every NCAA regatta since the event began in 1997. She's also won 13 Ivy League championships and three NCAA championships, with the first varsity 8 in 2006 and 2011 and the varsity 4 in 2022. She's won 257 dual races, the most by any Princeton rowing coach, and has been a two-time national Coach of the Year, as well as an inductee into the CRCA Hall of Fame.

No. 5 - Courtney Banghart, women's basketball (2007-19)

Courtney Banghart took over a program that had never been to an NCAA tournament before her arrival and then went to eight of them in her last 10 seasons, including a win over Wisconsin-Green Bay in 2015 for the first NCAA win in program history (as part of a 31-1 season). Banghart began her career going 23-37 in her first two years and then 231-66 in her final 10.

No. 4 - Chris Sailer, women's lacrosse (1987-2022)
Chris Sailer went 433-168 in 36 seasons as Princeton's head coach, giving her the second-highest win total in Division I history and the most by any Division I coach ever at one school. She also led Princeton to three NCAA championships in 27 NCAA appearances, with 16 Ivy League championships as well. She is a member of the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame.

No. 3 - Pete Carril, men's basketball (1967-96)
Pete Carril will forever be a part of the fabric of the entire University for his legendary career as a basketball coach, sociologist and educator. His Princeton resume included 13 Ivy League titles and 11 NCAA appearances, as well as the 1975 NIT championship. His 29-year record at Princeton was 514-261, with his final win the huge NCAA tournament victory of UCLA. Carril was elected to the Naismith Hall of Fame in 1998.

No. 2 - Fred Samara, men's track and field (1977-2023)
Fred Samara has won more Ivy League championships than any other coach in any sport at any school, a staggering total of 51 Heptagonal titles, including 10 "triple crowns." He also coached 502 individual Heps champions, had 10 of his athletes to NCAA championships and saw 101 of his athletes earn All-American honors. He was a 13-time Ivy League Coach of the Year and 18-time US Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association Regional Coach of the Year, as well as a 2017 inductee into the USTFCCCA Hall of Fame.

No. 1 - Bill Tierney, men's lacrosse (1988-2009)
Bill Tierney came to Princeton to take over a program that had not won an Ivy League championship in more than 20 years and had never been to the NCAA tournament. A newspaper story announcing his hiring questioned why he would even want the job in the first place. In his 22 seasons, he put together a record of 238-86 while winning six NCAA championships and advancing to 10 NCAA Final Fours. He also won 14 Ivy League championships. His 1996-98 teams remain the most recent to win three straight NCAA championships, and his 1997 team was a perfect 15-0. He is a member of the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame. 

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Love Me Tender

Happy 90th birthday Elvis Presley. 

He's actually been gone for longer than he was alive, having been born on this day in 1935 and then having passed away on Aug. 16, 1977, at the age of 42. 

There have been very few cultural phenomenons in this country who have been more impactful than Elvis. Back in 1956, his first movie — "Love Me Tender" — debuted, including in Princeton. On that day, the Daily Princetonian took a poll to see what Princetonians thought of the King of Rock and Roll.

There were four different groups who were asked for their thoughts: Princeton students, Princeton professors, Princeton residents and Princeton High School girls. According to the Prince, the percentage of those who said they liked Elvis broke down this way: 

Princeton students: 40 percent
Princeton townspeople: 40 percent
Princeton professors: five percent (hah, that's hilarious)
Princeton High School girls: 72 percent (that's lower than TigerBlog would have thought)

Princeton Athletics will honor Elvis by having no games today. It will also honor whoever might have a birthday tomorrow — Joan Baez? Dave Matthews? Jimmy Page? Crystal Gale? — without any games as well.

If your birthday is Jan. 10, though, you are going to be awarded no such respect. Princeton will be having a big weekend beginning Friday and running through Sunday, by which time there will have been 22 events having been contested. 

It's not exactly as busy as it was back on that weekend in November, but it's an avalanche of competition when you consider that there were only 19 Princeton events between Dec. 9 and Jan. 9. That's 32 days. 

So where to start? 

There are two big basketball games, one at Princeton (women) and one in Cambridge (men), as the Tigers take on Harvard. TB will have more on those games later this week. 

Besides, there's so much else on the schedule (which you can see HERE).

If you haven't been to the new squash center, you have a big-time chance this weekend, as the Princeton men and women host Yale Saturday and Trinity Sunday. All four matches begin at noon. 

On the men's side, the current rankings go like this: 1) Penn, 2) Yale, 3) Princeton, 4) Trinity. Princeton is 3-0 as the schedule starts to heat up, and the Tigers are 26-1 in individual matches in those three team events, 9-0 wins over Drexel and Navy and an 8-1 win over Williams.

For the women, those rankings go 1) Harvard, 2) Trinity, 3) Penn, 4) Princeton. Yale is currently seventh.

There's home men's and women's swimming and diving too, as Navy and Kenyon come to DeNunzio Pool Friday (5) and Saturday (11). 

Then there's the weekend in hockey. There are four games between the Princeton men and women, three of which are on the road. 

The women's team is at Quinnipiac Friday and then Yale Saturday. If you look at the ECAC standings, you'll see the Tigers in seventh place, 1.5 points behind Yale, while Quinnipiac is six points ahead, in fourth. 

The men's team has a home-and-home with Quinnipiac. Princeton is tied for sixth with Cornell, while Quinnipiac is seven points ahead of both, in first place. 

In other words, both league races have a long way to go. 

By the way, if you're a current Princeton student or Princeton High School girl, it's quite likely that your top Spotify list of 2024 does not include anything from Elvis. It's also possible that you can't name any of his songs. 

Sigh. 

It's not your fault that your generation's music is awful.  

Anyway, this weekend begins a long run of busy weekends, a run that will take Princeton all the way through the rest of the winter and through the spring. The last 32 days, which featured 22 days with no events at all, will vanish into the rearview mirror. 

Before all that, though, TB will be diving into his list of the top 25 Princeton coaches of all time. The amount of feedback he got on that subject yesterday was quite surprising. 

The list will be his alone, so let him know if you have any problems with what he comes up with. He started the project yesterday, and, hint — the first five to him are obvious.