TigerBlog starts out today by congratulating the seniors in the Princeton Athletics Class of 2026.
Those seniors were honored at the Gary Walters ’67 PVC Senior Awards Banquet last night in Jadwin Gym. The biggest award winners were Beth Yeager of the field hockey team, who won the von Kienbusch Award as the top female athlete, and Mitchell Schott of the men's swimming and diving team, who won the Roper Trophy as the top male athlete.
TigerBlog? He wasn't there for any of it, which means he missed out on a chance to see former Ford Family Director of Athletics Mollie Marcoux Samaan, as well as the senior athletes, and even some parents, that he'd gotten to know.
He did get a chance to go through about 250 photos that Shelley Szwast took from the event, and it made him feel like he was there. And it's also given him another chance to use a photo of the MacDonald family, because why not?
So if he wasn't there last night, where was he? Charlottesville, Va.
How long did it take him to get there? A little more than seven hours.
Somewhere along the line, TB started thinking of Waze as gospel, as if its traffic-avoidance and best routes came directly from the burning bush itself. That thinking has eroded through the years, and it probably reached its nadir yesterday on I-81.
For some reason, Waze took TB west first and then south, as opposed to the other way around. At first, TB thought two things: 1) cool, he'll avoid I-95 and 2) he's never gone that way before, so it might be a nice change.
Then two things happened. First, it rained for every second of his drive. And two, it turns out that the trucks that go on I-81 like to drive side-by-side, almost like they were holding hands, at a speed that does not quite equal the limit, or, for that matter, even come close to it.
Going the way he did added another two hours to his drive.
The best part was going past the James Madison football stadium. TB has never been to JMU. The second best part was it gave TB a chance to catch up on singing his show tunes.
Everything else was the worst part. Even the fact that he had cookies with him didn't help all that much.
The only thing worse than that ride would have been not having to make it yesterday in the first place. He's here for the NCAA men's lacrosse Championship Weekend, which for him is nothing new — this is his 32nd in the last 35 years.
What makes this one especially exciting — and the reason he had to be here yesterday — is that Princeton is here as well and is the No. 1 seed. The Tigers will take on Duke tomorrow at noon on ESPN2 in the first semifinal, followed by No. 2 Notre Dame and No. 6 Syracuse in the other. The winners meet for the NCAA championship Monday at 1 on ESPN.
That's 21 NCAA championships between the four teams.
Unlike many years, there is no clear-cut can't-miss team among the last four. It wouldn't be shocking if any of them had the honor of the dog-pile Monday.
Princeton and Duke, for their part, rank third and fourth in Division I in scoring offense, averaging better than 14 goals per game each. The two did not play this year, but they did the two years before that.
What was the score last year? Princeton 15, Duke 14.
Will it be another shootout? Both teams are also really strong defensively. There's this, for instance:
After allowing six goals in the first 18:39 of the Ivy League tournament against Yale (which averages out to 19.3 goals per 60 minutes), Princeton has allowed only 32 more in the last 221:21 (which averages to 8.67 per 60 minutes. Princeton allowed 186 goals a year ago in 17 games; through 17 games this year Princeton has allowed 168.
That's from TB's pregame story on goprincetontigers.com, which you can see HERE. It has all kinds of information about the game, the teams and everything else.
And when the game starts? All of those numbers go straight out the window. What's at stake is a spot in the national title game Monday. It won't be decided by the numbers. It'll be decided by the little plays here and there that go one way or another. And it'll be decided by how each team reacts when those little plays go against them.
The forecast is rainy, just like it was on the drive down. This is no time for excuses though. When the first whistle blows tomorrow, there will only be four teams left in Division I. By the end of the day, only two will be left.
These are opportunities to be cherished. And for leaving nothing on the field.









