What are those two dots in the sky? The one on the left is Jupiter. The one on the right is Venus.
To give you a sense of the vastness of space, Jupiter is actually 14 times larger than Venus, though it appears smaller in the picture because of how far away it is. Venus is 25 million miles away from TigerBlog's front door. Jupiter is 460 million.
While the subject is interesting Venus/Jupiter facts, here is one: It takes Venus 243 days for one full rotation (in other words, a day), while it takes Jupiter less than 11 hours.
Okay, one more about Venus: It takes Venus 225 days to orbit the sun, which means that a year on Venus takes less time than a day.
That must really mess with the ability of teams on Venus to make their schedules. What? There are no teams on Venus?
That must be because of the fact that on the surface of Venus it is 700 degrees and rains sulfuric acid. Actually, even that weather wouldn't be as challenging as having to schedule games on a planet where a day is longer than a year.
Meanwhile, back on this planet, it's finally time for the final Princeton events of the 2025-26 athletic year. The NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships begin today in Eugene, Ore., and Princeton will be well-represented after its showing on the men's and women's sides at the regional in Kentucky.
TigerBlog has never been to Hayward Field, the site of the event, but he'd love to go one of these years. It is, according to anyone he's known who has attended, a can't-miss good time with great competition.
Hayward Field opened in 1919, five years after Princeton's Palmer Stadium opened, as was the home of Oregon track and field and football until 1966. It was perfect for track and field; it was awful for football, with a capacity of 9,000 that was the smallest in Division I at the time. Once Oregon football moved to Autzen Stadium, Hayward Field became track and field only and is now, according to its website, "magic."
Princeton has won two NCAA titles in the facility — Julia Ratcliffe in the 2014 hammer and Sondre Guttormsen in the 2022 pole vault.
The 2026 championships start today with a full schedule of men's events. The women will begin tomorrow. It all wraps up Saturday.
The Princeton men are represented in seven individual events and in the 4x400 relay. The women will have seven athletes in Oregon; all seven are competing in field events, which is the most of any school in Division I.
Added together that's 17 Princetonians in Oregon (Joey Gant will run the 400 and on the 4x400 relay).
Connor McCormick will be the first Tiger on the track when he runs in the 1,500 semifinals at 8:21 Eastern this evening. Within the next three hours, there will be five other Princeton athletes who will compete in individual events and four who will run the relay semifinal.
You can watch tonight on ESPN and ESPN2 and then on ESPN2 for the rest of the championships.
Here is the schedule for today (Eastern times):
Connor McCormick, 1500m (Semifinal, 8:21 PM)
Brian Boler/Jackson Shorten, 3000 meter steeplechase (Semifinal, 8:38 PM)
Greg Foster, Long Jump (Final 9:40 PM)
Joey Gant, 400 (Semifinal, 9:41 PM)
Jacob Nenow 10,000m (Final, 10:56 PM)
4x400 Relay of Gant, Xavier Donaldson, Kavon Miller, Jonathan York (Semifinal, 11:36 PM)
Miles Hogan will run Friday in the 5,000 final. Hopefully he won't be the only Princetonian to run in that session, after the qualifying events today.
As for the women, as TB said, there are seven of them, all in the field events. Here is their schedule:
Angela McAuslan-Kelly, Hammer (Final tomorrow 5:30 PM)
Tessa Mudd, Pole Vault (Final tomorrow 8:35 PM)
Shea Greene, Javelin (Final tomorrow 9:15 PM)
Alexandra Kelly/Georgina Scoot, Long Jump (Final tomorrow 9:40 PM)
Layla Giordano, Discus (Final Saturday 2:30 PM)
Alysa Carrigan, High Jump (Final Saturday 7:30 PM)
Scoot, Triple Jump (Final Saturday 8:10 PM)
HERE is the entire schedule for the NCAA outdoor track and field championships.














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