There are times when TigerBlog wishes he could go back to his high school self and tell that guy where technology would be in the future.
This past Saturday at 7 was one of those times.
This is how the conversation would have gone:
Current TB: "So there was an NCAA men's lacrosse tournament Zoom, overtime of the Cornell-Hopkins game on ESPNU on YouTube.TV and the Ivy League softball tournament streaming on ESPN+. Had the meeting and the softball game on the laptop and Cornell-Hop on the smart TV. Was also getting texts on the smartphone. Had to pay attention to the meeting for the game while Cornell-Hop went into OT. Wanted to blog about softball for Monday, so wanted to focus on that too."
HS TB: "What in the world are you talking about?"
That pretty much sums it all up.
You'll be happy to know that TB was able to follow all three. Meeting went smoothly. Hopkins won in overtime.
And softball? It was a dominant performance by the Tigers all weekend, finishing it off Saturday night with an 8-0 win over Columbia to take the championship. Princeton went 3-0 at Cynthia Paul Field in the event.
Had any team other than Princeton come out of the softball tournament with the win and gotten the league's automatic NCAA tournament bid, then that would have been a big shame, after the way Princeton dominated the 21-game regular season. The Tigers tied the Ivy record for league softball wins with 18 and won the league by six games.
In fact, TB didn't even notice this until he went back to see the standings, but there was a bigger gap between Princeton and second place than there was between second place and last place. He wishes he could go back — easily — and look up how many times that's ever happened in the league in any sport.
Princeton started the tournament by falling behind 4-0 to Brown after two innings of the first game. From that point forward, Princeton outscored its opponents by a combined 21-2.
The Tigers came back to take down Brown 7-5 and followed that with a 6-0 win over Columbia. Brown eliminated Harvard, who lost to Columbia in the first round, and then was itself eliminated by Columbia.
That set up the final day of the tournament. Princeton needed one win. Columbia needed a win to force a deciding game.
It was scoreless into the fourth before Princeton put up five and then closed it out with three more in the fifth. It ended once the eighth run crossed the plate.
Of course, Cassidy Shaw didn't need eight runs to win the game. The Tiger pitcher went five innings in all three days, striking out 17 and walking only one. Is that good? Seems it. Unsurprisingly, Shaw was the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.
The win set up quite the Tiger celebration. Shelley Szwast came away with some great shots, including:
Those are happy Tigers.
And why not? This has been one of the greatest seasons in program history, and now the five-time defending Ivy champs head to the NCAA tournament for the 13th time.
All that was left after the celebration was the selection, which was announced last night at 7. Princeton will be heading to Stillwater and the campus of Oklahoma State, where the Tigers will open the regional with a game against Stanford Friday at 2 Eastern. The host Oklahoma State team will then play Eastern Illinois on the first day of the three-day, double elimination event.
OK State is 15th in the Division I RPI, one spot ahead of Stanford. Eastern Illinois is 124. Princeton is 83rd.
Not that any of that matters. Princeton has had a huge season and a just had a huge weekend.
The plane ride to Oklahoma is the reward — and an opportunity to keep it rolling.











