TigerBlog's invitation apparently was lost in the mail. He couldn't have gone anyway; he was busy watching a David Attenborough nature documentary. No. Seriously. He was. If you haven't watched any of them, they're great.
Back at the wedding, the bride is the second-most famous graduate of Wyomissing Area High School, near Reading, Pa. The most famous? That would be Ross Tucker, the former Princeton and longtime NFL offensive lineman and current big-time football broadcaster.
Tucker was among the 1,000 or so people who actually were invited and attended the wedding. Really. TB asked Tucker what it was like, and he responded with a single word: "Incredible." That's not hard to imagine, right?
The building that currently hosts the NBA champion Knicks (how does that sound?) and Rangers — and the occasional wedding — is actually the fourth to be known as Madison Square Garden. The first two were located on the actual Madison Square site, at 23rd between Fifth Ave and Broadway. The third was more uptown, on Eighth Ave between 49th and 50th.
The first MSG opened in 1879 and was replaced on the same spot 11 years later. That building closed in 1925, when the third came into existence and then lasted through 1968.
The first time Princeton competed in Madison Square Garden was in that first building, shortly before it closed. The occasion was sort of an indoor sports festival that included indoor football (Rutgers vs. Penn) and indoor lacrosse (Rutgers vs. Staten Island Football Club), on a makeshift dirt field laid out over the wooden floor.
The main event was track and field, and Princeton was well-represented there. One of the Tigers who ran there that night was Knowlton Ames, known as "Snake," who is also better known from his football days. Ames had career totals at Princeton of 62 touchdowns and 730 points, neither of which exactly equate to the way the modern game is played but are still school records.
The name "Snake Ames" is legendary in Princeton Athletic history. His story was not a happy one. He spent three years as the football coach at Northwestern and Purdue before going into finance and publishing. He was originally very successful in both, but huge money losses at the start of the Depression were too much for him to overcome. He'd commit suicide in 1931 by shooting himself in the head while in his car.
Princeton's history in the various Madison Square Gardens since that first event in 1889 is storied, to say the least. Bill Bonthron, one of the world's top middle distance runners, competed at the Garden numerous times, setting multiple team and national records individually or as part of relays, including a five-man distance medley relay.
There was this from the Daily Princeton on Feb. 27, 1933:
Princeton's relay team, aided greatly by Bill Bonthron's spectacular spurt in the 1500 meters leg, chopped 14 seconds off the unofficial indoor championship record for the 2900-meter medley relay before 16,000 fans at the A. A. U. track and field games at the Madison Square Garden Saturday night.The relay team, which only last Monday lowered the Princeton record for the two-mile relay to 7:51.8, established a new championship mark of 7:09, breaking the old unofficial record of 7:23 by 14 seconds.
A few decades later, Bill Burke became the first Princeton to run a sub-four minute mile when he finished in 3:58.7 at the 1991 Milrose Games there (TigerBlog interviewed him at halftime of the Princeton men's basketball game in Jadwin Gym the next night).
The men's basketball team has had some epic nights in the building as well. There was the 1997 Holiday Festival, won by the Tigers with victories of Niagara and Drexel, famously 1) getting 21 assists on 21 baskets and 2) hearing head coach Bill Carmody say "you're smart; you'll figure it out" during a timeout.
When you talk about Princeton in the Holiday Festival, you have to go back to the 1964 game between Bill Bradley's Tigers and Michigan, led by Cazzie Russell and ranked No. 1 nationally. Princeton led when Bradley fouled out after scoring 41 points, but the Wolverines would come back to win 80-78 — and then beat Princeton in March in Oregon at the Final Four.
Bradley and Russell would spend several years as teammates with the Knicks, playing in the old Garden and winning a championship in the new one in 1970. Neither was a starter in 1967-68, when the team played in its last game in the old Garden on Feb. 10 (defeating the 76ers) and the first game in the new one four day later (defeating the San Diego Rockets, who played in Southern California for their first four years before moving to Houston in 1971).
Madison Square Garden calls itself "The World's Most Famous Arena." This past weekend it hosted "The World's Most Famous Wedding."
It's good to know that Princeton was once again represented there, as has been the case throughout the building's history.





