TigerBlog was at the field hockey team banquet Sunday night at the Springdale golf club.
As you have probably surmised, TB loves working with the team. The coaches are great. The players are all very welcoming. It's definitely a family vibe to be around the program — and that certainly came through with every heartfelt word from each speaker.
As with most team banquets, the focus was the seniors. In this case, one junior came up to say a few words about one senior, and then another. The words and the emotions behind them were clear in every case.
At one point, junior Ella Hampson was talking about senior Aimee Jungfer when she said something that TB wrote down, so as not to forget it. Here is what she said:
"If I call you up crying, I know I will hang up laughing."
How perfect is that?
The field hockey team won the Ivy League championship this past fall. It was the 28th for the team, which ties the Harvard women's squash team for the most by any women's team in league history. The Tigers also reached the NCAA quarterfinals, marking the 18th time the team has gotten at least that far.
Banquets, though, are not about that. That's why what Hampson said had nothing to do with winning or losing or individual honors or stats or anything else.
It was about the bond that grows out of being college teammates, spending all those years together in almost every kind of situation. It's something that, if TB may be preachy a bit, can only evolve over time, a lot of time — and with the constantly changing landscape of college sports, it's something that is going to be destroyed for a lot of those athletes.
At Princeton, though, it is still the best part of the experience. TB sees it with field hockey and men's lacrosse. He saw it through his daughter's experience with women's lacrosse. Others see it with every other team.
And that's the end of today's lecture. Make sure you do the reading for next week.
Also, it's enough with the silly April Fools Day stuff. Thankfully that's a full year away.
You know what's only a few hours away? That would be the first home night game in the history of Princeton softball.
It'll be the Tigers and Lehigh, squaring off at Cynthia Paul Field tonight. First pitch is at 6.
TB was able to see a few innings of one of the games at the new stadium the other day before he left for Dartmouth. It is an impressive place, as is the entire new Meadows Campus complex, including the racquet center. He's guessing the softball field will look great under the lights.
Princeton has the reigning Ivy Pitcher of the Week with Brielle Wright, who pitched 13 innings last weekend and allowed no runs while striking out 13. Wright is the Ivy League record holder for saves in a season and career, but she has made more starts this year than she had in her first two years combined.
Princeton is currently 6-0 in the Ivy League with sweeps of Harvard and Yale, leaving the Tigers two games up on Dartmouth and Columbia.
From the goprincetontigers.com preview story: Princeton is 6-0 in the Ivy for the first time since 2008, when the
team started 14-0 in the league on the way to an 18-2 start that set an
Ivy record for league wins that has since been equaled but not
surpassed.
The Tigers head to Dartmouth for three games this weekend, hopefully to encounter better weather than TB did last weekend. You can't play softball in that weather, obviously.
It'll be the same long bus ride up for the team, though. It is on such bus rides that the relationships that last forever are solidified.
You get no wins or losses for those rides. What you do get is what Ella Hampson said at the banquet Sunday night.
You'll remember that long after you forget the details of any game.