Friday, April 24, 2026

Senior Saturday

Remember that Wednesday night women's lacrosse game between Princeton and Penn a few weeks ago on Sherrerd Field? 

Penn won it 10-9 in two overtimes. It was a great game to watch, even if the home team lost. 

And guess what? There will be a rematch. Will it be as good as the original? 

This is the final weekend of the Ivy League regular season for the women and the men. For Princeton, that means a doubleheader at home against Dartmouth, with the women at noon and the men at 4.  

Of the eight teams that will compete in the two Ivy tournaments, six of them are already known — Yale, Penn and Princeton on the women's side and Princeton, Cornell and Harvard on the men's. Those six will be joined by either Brown or Cornell on the women's side and either Yale or Penn on the men's. 

The women know they will be gathering at Yale, who is locked into the top seed. Penn will be the No. 2, and Princeton will be the No. 3 — hence the rematch. 

For the men, the tournament will be either in Princeton or Ithaca, and the outcome of Princeton's last game does not impact that. If Cornell beats Harvard tomorrow, then the Big Red will host. If Harvard wins, then the tournament comes to Sherrerd Field. 

That's not to say there's nothing on the line for Princeton's men tomorrow. A win assures Princeton of no worse than a share of the Ivy League championship. A Princeton win and Cornell loss means an outright title for the Tigers; the reverse is true for the Big Red. 

There are still scenarios for a three-way or four-way tie for the men. All of those need Princeton and Cornell to both lose. 

The Ivy tournaments will be next weekend, with games Friday and Sunday. The NCAA tournament selections will be announced a week from Sunday. 

TigerBlog says this all the time, but man did this lacrosse season fly by. Has it really been 2.5 months since it started? 

Then again, he also points out that the whole four-year experience flies by. And that brings him to today's real topic. 

Senior Day. 

TigerBlog received the following text messages this week, one from the father of a player on the men's team and one from a father of a player on the women's team. Here's what they said: 

Woman dad: How is it possible that this is the last regular game for her?
Man dad: How did it go so fast? I just dropped him off for orientation.

Yup. That's how it goes.  

Here's what TB wrote about his own experience as a Princeton dad, at the Senior Day of his own daughter, back in 2022. That's another thing that's hard to believe — it's been four years already? 

Senior Day for TigerBlog has always been a combination of a pain (in writing the script) and anxiety (getting everyone in the right place at the right time, trying to get the timing right and more than anything else not leaving anyone out). He long ago lost track of how many of these Senior Days he's done from the perspective of someone from athletic communications.

This time, though, it was completely different. This time, he was on the field, along with his daughter, He'd describe it as surreal, to see his own daughter be a part of one of these moments, only there were so many other emotions that were dominant at the time.

As they walked out past a lineup of teammates on either side, TB tried to take as much of it in as possible. As special as this felt to him, this wasn't his moment. This was his daughter's moment.

As such, he found it hard to focus on anything other than her, and as they walked, he saw something that he'll never forget. It was the widest smile his daughter has ever had.

She knew how hard it was for her to get to that moment. And she knew that her Senior Day was something to cherish. 

TB smiled widely as well, all as he brushed away a tear or two.

TigerBlog hasn't looked at a Senior Day the same way since. 

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Stayin' Alive

Does the guy in this picture look like one of the greatest disco dancers of all time? 

The photo was a mere 40 or so years before he dominated the Brooklyn disco scene. Oh wait. Was that a different Tony Manero?  

The one pictured here is the Tony Manero (born April 4, 1905) who won the 1936 U.S. Open at the famed Baltusrol Country Club in Springfield, about an hour north of Princeton. The one in this video (born Feb. 18, 1954) is a different Tony Manero: 

Maybe they're related? Or maybe one is fictional.  

Stayin' Alive. Stayin' Alive. 

Still the greatest intro to any movie ever. 

*

Speaking of Baltusrol, it will host the Ivy League men's and women's golf tournaments this weekend, beginning tomorrow and running through Sunday. 

Do you know what year Princeton won its men's golf first league championship? Hint — it was before Tony Manero won at Baltusrol. In fact, it goes back to 1928, when the Tigers won the Eastern Intercollegiate Championship. 

Do you know when Princeton won its most recent league championship? That was last year, when the Tigers won the title and Richard Fantinelli was the medalist, for the second time. 

Will this year break the recent pattern of the last six seasons? The Ivy champ has been Yale, Princeton, Yale, Princeton, Yale and Princeton. 

The official Ivy League championship for men was first awarded in 1975. Since then, Princeton has won 23, well ahead of second-place Yale's 12. 

As for the women, Princeton also won last year. The Tigers enter this year's tournament tied with Harvard for the most Ivy championships, with eight apiece, one ahead of Yale.  

*

The Penn Relays began in 1895 as an offshoot of a relay race between teams from Princeton and Penn and they're still going strong today. If you're a track and field fan, or even just a sports fan in general, you need to go to Franklin Field one of these years. 

Or this year, since the relay carnival is underway and running through Saturday. There are no Ivy League titles at stake, though there are Championships of America to be won.

Beyond that, there is the spectacle itself that is the Penn Relays, where thousands of athletes converge on Franklin Field, which finds itself nearly full, as if the Eagles were playing there in the 1960s again.

It's a continuous schedule of race after race, with high school students at one moment and Olympians the next. As TigerBlog said, it's definitely worth the pilgrimage. 

Princeton's men and women will be well-represented in West Philadelphia.  

Need someone to root for today? How about the Northwestern women's tennis team. 

The Widcats take on Maryland today at 2 in the opening round of the Big Ten tournament. Why root for Northwestern? Is this a Carla Berube thing? No, but that's not a bad reason. 

Princeton and Maryland are among the teams sitting on the NCAA at-large bubble right now. A Maryland loss would definitely help Princeton's cause. 

The selections for the men (who appear to be comfortably above the bubble but you never know) and women will be Monday afternoon.  

Go Wildcats. 

*

The Princeton baseball team has three games this weekend at Dartmouth and then three more at home against Harvard next weekend as the Ivy League regular season comes to a close. The Tigers enter this weekend in a logjam of teams chasing Ivy tournament spots. 

Right now, Yale and Brown are sort of tied (Yale is 11-4; Brown is 10-4) for first, followed by 9-6 Penn. Going from there, the other five teams in the league enter the weekend separated by only two games. 

Princeton is very much in the mix at 6-9, tied with Dartmouth, a half-game back of Harvard and Columbia, a game ahead of Cornell. Clearly every game is huge. 

*

Speaking of Brown, TigerBlog was on the Bears' website yesterday and was greeted by a giant picture of an old friend. 

Mitch Dalton, who spent five seasons as an assistant with the Princeton men's swimming and diving team, has been named the head women's coach at Brown. Mitch heads to Providence after being the associate head coach at Texas for six years and five years at USA Swimming since leaving Princeton.

TB sends congrats and wishes him the best — except when competing against Princeton of course. 

 

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

The Marriott Seven

TigerBlog mentioned yesterday that he stayed in two Marriotts over the weekend.

The second one was in Providence, where he stayed Saturday night in advance of the women's tennis team's Ivy League clinching win at Brown Sunday. 

It was in the lobby of that hotel where TB encountered something new. There was the typical small lobby convenience area, where you could get drinks, snacks, ice cream, toiletries, etc. You've seen this hundreds of times. 

TB spotted A&W cream soda, which seemed fairly appealing. Then he saw something completely different. Instead of simply taking the bottle up to the front desk, this was now automated. He had to tap his credit card, and his selection would be processed when he opened the refrigerator door. 

And there was the holdup. No matter what he tried, he couldn't figure out how to open the door. And there was the soda, just staring at him. Eventually, he had to go over to the front desk and ask what he was doing wrong. 

Turns out, he had to push a button on the display after he tapped his card. The young man who helped him said that nobody gets it right on the first try and that the button should be clearer. 

Either way, the cream soda rocked. 

The night before he was in the Newton Marriott, where the Princeton men's lacrosse team stayed before its 15-14 win over Harvard. This is not to be confused with the hotel over the Mass Pike where Princeton teams have also stayed many times and which has changed names about 10 times. 

Were the Tigers the only team in the hotel that night? Yeah, no. 

In fact, those Tigers weren't the only Tigers there. The men's volleyball team was as well. 

In all, TB counted seven teams. In addition to the two Princeton teams, there was:  

* Lafayette men's lacrosse (at Boston University)
* Duke baseball (at Boston College)
* Washington U baseball (at Brandeis)
* Columbia women's tennis (at Harvard)
* Penn softball (at Harvard)  

Call them "The Marriott Seven."

The men's volleyball team swept Harvard, vaulting the Tigers over the Crimson and into the EIVA tournament, which begins today against with a quarterfinal against George Mason at Penn State. That match begins at 4:30, followed by a match between Sacred Heart and Charleston. 

Second-seed NJIT will play the Princeton-George Mason winner tomorrow at 4:30, followed by top seed Penn State against the SHU/Charleston winner. The final will be Friday at 7.  

Back at the hotel, how'd everyone else do? 

Lafayette lost big at BU, 13-2. Duke was swept by BC, who turns out to be a Top 25 team. Wash U. lost two of three against Brandeis. Columbia women's tennis lost to Harvard. 

And then there's Penn softball. 

The Quakers were swept by Harvard Saturday and then won the third game Sunday. That makes the non-Princeton teams in the Marriott 8 2-9. 

Princeton's perfect run through the Ivy League ended Sunday with a loss to Yale. It happens in baseball and softball. Remember a week ago when there were three Division I teams unbeaten in their conference? 

Now there are none — Princeton lost once, Washington lost three times and even Southeastern Louisiana lost twice. Incredibly, there is one Division I baseball team who is unbeaten in its league. Any guesses? 

Princeton is still 14-1 in Ivy softball, which leaves a four-game edge over Harvard with six games to go. For Princeton and Harvard, those next three games are against each other, this coming Saturday and Sunday in Cambridge. 

Obviously Princeton is in the driver's seat. Even one win in the series would clinch no worse than a tie for the league championship for the Tigers. 

Beyond this weekend, you have Princeton at Dartmouth for three and Harvard at Columbia for three. Columbia is currently in third place at 9-6, followed by Penn at 7-8 and Brown at 6-8. That win Penn picked up Sunday at Harvard was a huge one. 

The top four teams will reach the Ivy League tournament, which will determine who wins the league's automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. Princeton is the only team that has hosted the tournament since its inauguration two years ago.  

Oh, and the undefeated-in-conference baseball team? That would be UCLA in the Big Ten.  

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

A(lpaca) To Z(zzzzzz)

TigerBlog's weekend with Princeton Athletics went from A(lpaca) to Z(zzzzzz).

In between? A lot of miles. Two huge wins. One celebration of an all-time season. One Ivy League championship celebration. 

Yeah. It was a very good weekend. 

It actually started back in February, when winter weather forced the postponement of the field hockey banquet, which was rescheduled for Friday, April 17. The problem with that for TigerBlog was that the men's lacrosse team was at Harvard Saturday, April 18. 

Could he do both? The banquet started Friday night at 6. It's a long way from Princeton to Cambridge. 

His plan became to rent a car, go to the banquet, drive up to Massachusetts, leave the car there and take the men's lacrosse bus back. Sure it would be a lot of time in the car but hey, he's done it a million times. 

Then, he realized that the women's tennis team would be finishing its regular season at Brown Sunday, April 19. Harvard to Brown? Not far. Maybe TB could get a ride, go to the match and ride back on the women's tennis bus. 

And that's what happened. 

TB met the alpaca at the farm that hosted the field hockey banquet Friday night. They were certainly friendly. They'd come right up to you. 

As for the banquet, this past field hockey season was an incredible one. The Tigers won the Ivy League tournament and then three NCAA tournament games, reaching the NCAA championship game before falling 2-1 to Northwestern in the second overtime. 

There was a lot there to celebrate. Head coach Carla Tagliente, as she always does, spoke from the heart about the season, about coming so close to achieving the biggest prize, how the team got there, how they grew together, how much she'll cherish what they all accomplished together. 

There were two videos and speeches from juniors about the six graduating seniors. There were awards and gifts and thank yous and food. And alpaca. 

TB left around 8:15. He rolled into the Newton Marriott at 1:11 am, after losing about 40 minutes in traffic due to an accident on the Merritt Parkway. 

Princeton, as TB wrote yesterday, won its game at Harvard 15-14 on a Colin Burns goal with 17 seconds left. Burns was named Ivy League Offensive Player of the Week yesterday, by the way. 

To get from Harvard to Brown, TB enlisted the services of Bernie Buonanno, the father of current Tiger sophomore Peter Buonanno and former women's lacrosse player Kari Buonanno, who had been a teammate of Miss TigerBlog's.

Bernie, himself a member of the Brown Hall of Fame after his own lacrosse career, dropped TB off at the Providence Marriott about an hour before the women's tennis team arrived. The Tigers were coming from Yale, where they had lost Saturday afternoon. 

Yale and Princeton both entered the final day of the season at 5-1 in the league. The Bulldogs were home against Penn and were heavy favorites; they would win 4-2.

Whether the Tigers realized it or not (and TB can tell you they didn't), they needed to beat Brown to get a share of the championship for themselves. It was a rainy day in Providence, and the rain bounced off the room on the fourth floor of the Pizzatola Center, which is the home of Brown basketball and, unknown to TB until Sunday despite all the times he'd been in the building, the indoor home of Brown tennis. 

There are four courts on the fourth floor. Princeton won the doubles point, and then Alice Ferlito and Bella Chhiv won at No. 1 and No. 2 singles. Brown got a point back, leaving one match in the third set and two others that were just starting. Princeton needed one of those three. 

That point came from Madeleine Jessup at No. 4, who dropped the first set of her match 6-4 and then won the next two 6-4, 6-3. The other two matches were abandoned. Princeton had won 4-1. 

For the women's tennis team it was the fifth Ivy title in six seasons and 19th overall. They'll wait a week now to see if they get an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament. 

Sunday, though, was about celebrating. TB can't imagine how photos and videos they took as they took in their accomplishment, but it's a very high number. Then it was the bus ride back to Princeton. At one point, an impromptu chorus of "We Are The Champions" broke out, though those were the only four words they all seemed to know. 

Hey, they were champions. The lyrics wouldn't matter. 

The bus got back to campus around 10. It was a little more than an hour later that TB was home and in bed. 

The alpaca were at 6 Friday. It was around 11 Sunday — 53 hours later — that TB was able to get zzzzzzzzs at home. 

One celebration. One huge win. One championship win. Lots of happy Tigers. 

That was a good weekend.  

Monday, April 20, 2026

Follow The Leader

Colin Burns scored the first goal of Saturday's Ivy League men's lacrosse game between Princeton and Harvard in Cambridge. 

Then he scored three more, including one where he hockey-sticked a shot into the goal to just beat the shot clock. 

In between all of these goals, the junior Princeton men's lacrosse captain spent his time while the ball was on the other side of the field yelling to his teammates on the sideline to keep the energy going through the times where it seemed to be getting away from the Tigers — and there were plenty of times when that seemed to be the case. 

All of that was in the past, though. Now the game was tied, late in the fourth quarter, the ball in Burns' stick with the shot clock and game clock his enemy. 

Before TigerBlog says what happened next (plus you probably already know anyway), here are a few things you need to know about Colin Burns. 

First, TigerBlog remembers the first time he met him. Burns was an incoming freshman. It was at at fall practice. 

It took about 10 seconds to realize which former Princeton men's lacrosse player immediately came to mind. That would be Jon Hess, one of the trio of what might be (or, according to TB is) the greatest attack unit of all time, along with his 1998 classmates Jesse Hubbard and Chris Massey. They were the cornerstones of three straight NCAA championships, a feat that has not been matched since. 

Of course, by that time, TB had never seen Burns play. It wasn't his on-field style that reminded TB of Hess. It was his obvious leadership quality. 

You talk to him for five minutes and you can't miss it. There's a reason he's a junior captain. 

Meanwhile, back at Saturday's game, there was a lot at stake in this one, things like "putting yourself in position to win an Ivy championship" and "stay in the hunt to host the Ivy League tournament" and "add another Top 10 win to your resume."

Wait. Wait. Here's something else to know about Burns. 

He has started every game of his career to date. If he stays healthy, he's headed for around 15th or so all-time at Princeton in points.  

And yet he's fairly underrated. Mostly he's been known for his years playing with his high school and club teammate Nate Kabiri, who has also started every game of his Princeton career. 

Burns played his first two seasons with Coulter Mackesy, a Tewaaraton Award finalist last year and Princeton's career leader in goals scored. This year, he's joined on attack by Kabiri (as he has from Day 1 as a Tiger) and Chad Palumbo. Those other two were just named as Tewaaraton Top 25 nominees for this season. 

Kabiri is the team's leading scorer. Palumbo is second. Both will be All-Americans. 

Burns? He's not the most athletic. He's not the most physically imposing. All he does is lead, make big plays and win. Since he and Kabiri moved onto the attack unit together, Princeton is 34-11. Since the start of last year? Make that 23-6. This year? It's 10-2 and heading to another NCAA tournament. 

He's the team's third leading scorer, with 21 goals and 14 assists. Underrated perhaps, but in the situation at game's end Saturday, you're perfectly fine with the ball in his stick. 

And there it was Saturday, in his stick — briefly, since in a flash it was in the back of the net. Maybe a little more than a flash, but, with overtime looming, Burns came from behind the cage and bounced it home. 

See for yourself:  

There were 17 seconds left in the game and three seconds left on the shot clock. 

Final score: Princeton 15, Harvard 14. His fifth goal of the day, which is a career high. 

Princeton hosts Dartmouth Saturday in its regular season finale. A Tiger win means at least a share of the Ivy championship. A Tiger win and Harvard win at Cornell means an outright title and brings the Ivy tournament to Princeton. 

No matter what, Princeton is headed to the NCAA tournament. It'll be the team's fifth straight appearance. 

As for Burns, he'll keep doing what he does. He brings 76 goals and 40 assists for his career into the game against Dartmouth, but stats will never be what defines him. 

He's defined by innate leadership. TigerBlog saw it the first time he talked to him. 

Everyone could see it Saturday. He led with his words and with his play. 

Princeton came away with a huge win because of him.  

Friday, April 17, 2026

Introducing The Head Coach

The Princeton men's lacrosse team is at Harvard tomorrow at 1 in a Top 10 matchup that will go a long way in helping determine the Ivy League championship and the site of the upcoming Ivy League tournament. 

As amazing as it might seem, there are only two weekends left in the regular season. Princeton will play at home against Dartmouth next Saturday, while Harvard will be at Cornell (who plays Dartmouth tomorrow). Right now, Princeton, Harvard and Cornell are in a three-way tie at 3-1 for first place in the league. 

The ILT is a mere 14 days away. The NCAA selections are only 16 days away. With its two Top 10 RPI wins and five Top 20 RPI wins, Princeton is pretty likely to hear its name called for the fifth straight year. 

Speaking of how time flies, Matt Madalon is now 10 years into his tenure as the head coach of the men's lacrosse team. Prior to that, Madalon had never been a head coach on any level, though he'd been an assistant and coordinator in Division III and at Princeton, as well as a very accomplished player in college and in the pros. 

The Princeton head coaching roster is loaded with names who have that sort of background. In fact, you could say most of Princeton's head coach were never a head coach prior to coming here. 

And now, to that list, you can add Lauren Gosselin. Maybe "list" isn't the right way to put it. Maybe "successful formula" works better. After all, those first-time head coaches have pretty much across the board been winners. 

A week after announcing that she had been hired as the 11th head coach in Tiger women's basketball history, Princeton formally introduced Gosselin in Jadwin Gym yesterday afternoon. 

It started with this video, which if you haven't seen yet, you definitely need to watch: 

You know what line was great? The part about going around the country and ending up back at Jadwin Gym. And the response of the players speaks a great deal about who Gosselin is.

When someone becomes a head coach for the first time, the No. 1 question isn't about sport knowledge or Xs and Os or really anything else that enables that person to get the job. That's all for interviewing and resumes and cover letters and such. 

Externally, at least, it's about how that person steps out of the shadow and into the spotlight. That's what it means to be the head coach. 

Will this person be able to be the lead singer? Not every former assistant can make that jump. 

If Gossselin's performance at yesterday's event is any indication, then she clearly can. She's been at Princeton for seven years on the staff of Carla Berube (who left to become the head coach at Northwestern), and in that time, she found herself, in her words, in "the nitty-gritty."

Now, as she said, she moves into "a CEO role." As such, she said that there will be a transition for her. 

TigerBlog was curious to see how she did, and like probably everyone who watched, he was wildly impressed. She spoke to her players about her commitment to their development — on the court and off — and to her own development. 

TB was really taken by that comment, since he's pretty sure he's never heard it before. Isn't that the kind of coach you'd want to play for, right? 

She thanked all of the people who have enabled her to get to this point, beginning with her husband Andrew and baby son Luke. She thanked Ford Family Director of Athletics John Mack and those on the search committee. She thanked her players, who clearly believe in her. She was congratulated by video by some of the program greats she coached, as well as Berube and her former colleague Lauren Dillon.  

In this day and age, the inevitable questions about the transfer portal had to be asked of her, and she handled them flawlessly. Why Princeton? She handled that perfectly too. She mentioned all of the first-time head coaches she has as colleagues and said she'd be knocking on the doors that she hasn't already. 

She still has to complete her staff, but she did announce that Jordan Edwards will be staying on at Princeton. 

And she mentioned the billboard, the one on Route 1 that announced her arrival. She did so in a way that was humble and humorous. It was another moment that she played just right. 

As in her first major appearance as the Princeton women's basketball lead singer, Lauren Gosselin served up a big hit. Her personality came through. Her competitiveness came through. 

And, as she also said, she's excited to get to work. Opening day is still nearly seven months away. 

For a spring day in Jadwin, the new head coach couldn't have had a better performance. 

 

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Logistically Speaking

TigerBlog walked in from the parking garage yesterday with Kimberly Keenan-Kirkpatrick, the Director of Operations for the men's and women's track and field programs. 

Keenan-Kirkpatrick has had quite the accomplished career, in both coaching and administration. She set several school records as a runner at Kent State before going to Seton Hall Law School, and she then spent 25 years working in administrative roles, lastly at Syracuse. 

She then jumped back into coaching, at Colgate, before coming to Princeton in her current role in 2023. 

If you think it's easy to be the Director of Operations for track and field, consider that this weekend alone Princeton has athletes who are competing at five different events in four different states: California, North Carolina, Virginia and New Jersey. That's a lot of logistics to sort out. 

To expand on TB wrote yesterday about his experience with the tennis teams, each sport has its own culture and own way of doing things. What is unheard of for one team is commonplace for another. Princeton would never send teams to multiple locations in most sports. In track and field, it happens all the time. 

This weekend is another example of that. For the record, you'll have Tigers at the Wake Forest Invitational, the Virginia Challenge (in Charlottesville), the Mt. Sac Relays (in Walnut, Calif), the Bryan Clay Invitational at Azusa Pacific, and the IC4A championships at Rutgers.  

That's a lot of logistics to have to coordinate. Flights. Ground transportation. Hotels. Meals. Training times. Athletic medicine. That's not easy. 

Oh, and the Bryan Clay Invitational? From its website, it advertises itself as: 

"the fastest and largest collegiate meet in the US! Set next to the stunning Azusa foothills in Southern California, we promise as electric atmosphere, fantastic weather and incredible competition."

What more can you ask for than that?  

The Penn Relays will be next weekend. 

*

It's Cup season — and not just the Stanley Cup, whose playoffs will be starting soon. 

No, this is Cup season for intercollegiate rowing. For someone who loves history the way TigerBlog does, the genesis of pretty much all of the Cup for which the various crews race is fascinating. 

In all there are 17 Cups between Princeton's lightweight and heavyweight men and lightweight and open women. Some date back to the 1800s. Others are more recent and bear the names of some of Princeton's greatest coaches. 

You can read more about Princeton's Cup history HERE.

This weekend will have the heavyweight men at Harvard for the Compton Cup, a race that dates to 1933. The lightweight men are home with Penn and Georgetown for the Wood-Hammond Cup, which goes back to 1941. 

As for the women, the open team is home against Yale, Virginia and Tennessee for the Eisenberg Cup, the oldest one the women race for, going back to 1975. The lightweight women are off this weekend. 

The baseball team is home for three this weekend against Penn, with two Saturday beginning at 11:30 and then a third game Sunday at noon. 

The top four teams in the league will reach the Ivy League tournament and play for the automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. With nine games to be played (or 10 for Harvard and Brown), the Tigers are two games back of fourth place. 

Penn will come to Clarke Field in third place at 8-4, one game out of first. After this weekend, Princeton will be at Dartmouth for three and home against Harvard for three. Harvard is in fourth. 

*

The women's lacrosse team is at Brown Saturday, with the opening draw at noon. With two regular season league games left for all eight teams, there are essentially five teams who are competing for four Ivy tournament spots — and Princeton and Brown are two of them. 

Yale is in first place at 5-0, followed by 4-1 Penn. Princeton, Brown and Cornell are all 3-2. 

Princeton and Brown have already beaten Cornell, which means that both teams would hold the tiebreaker over the Big Red. Making it tougher for Cornell is its schedule, which has Penn this weekend and Yale next weekend. 

Princeton will host Dartmouth next weekend, while Brown will be at Penn. 

Should Cornell lose twice, then Princeton and Brown would be in the Ivy tournament no matter what. Should Cornell win twice, it would be putting itself in position to host the tournament with some help (i.e, a Harvard win over Yale Saturday). That's how many different permutations there are. 

Here's a simple one: The Princeton-Brown winner clinches an ILT spot. 

*

The full weekend schedule is HERE

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

On The Bus

 

See this picture? 

If you're in TigerBlog's basic age range, you'll recognize it as example of what was known every Saturday on Wide World of Sports as "The Thrill of Victory." If you don't know the reference, click HERE.

Also if you're in TB's age range, then 1) that still gives you chills and 2) you don't need him to tell you that the ill-fated ski jumper was Vinko Bogataj. Somewhat famously, at the 20 anniversary dinner for Wide World of Sports, Muhammad Ali asked Vinko for his autograph. Oh, and Vinko is still alive, now 78 years old. 

Meanwhile, the woman in the picture is Princeton women's tennis sophomore Pearlie Zhang. Her thrill of victory captured here came when she scored the deciding point in Princeton's 4-3 win over Cornell this past Friday in Ithaca. 

Sort of.  

The actual thrill came about 30 minutes before that, except TigerBlog didn't get a good picture of it. So what did he do? He asked her to recreate it.  

And hey, that's exactly how she looked after she delivered the last winner. So who will ever know the difference, right? 

The win at Cornell was followed Sunday by Senior Day back in Princeton, as the team honored its lone senior, Eva Elbaz. If you haven't read TB's feature story on her yet, you can HERE.

The day was important for more than just that, though. This match, well, matched the last two Ivy League teams who hadn't lost — 4-0 Princeton vs. 4-0 Columbia. 

Princeton toughed that one out, winning 4-2 when Alice Ferlito won a tiebreaker to complete a straight-set win at No. 1 singles for the deciding team point. Paige Gandy, the newest member of the Princeton creative team, was there to get Sunday's Thrill of Victory moments:

 

TigerBlog is relatively new to being the Princeton tennis contact, but it hasn't taken him long to be all in  on the two teams. 

It's been a struggle for the men since the league season began, as the team has been riddled with injuries. Before that, Princeton was the highest ranked Ivy League team and had won the eight-Ivy-team ECAC championship. 

Even with the injuries and the accompanying struggles in the league, where the Tigers have not yet won a match, Princeton is still very much in the hunt for an NCAA tournament spot heading into the final weekend, which will feature home matches against Yale Saturday and Brown Sunday. 

It'll also be Senior Day for the men Sunday, with three seniors: Top Nidunjianzan, Sebastian Sec and Ellis Short. 

The women will be at Yale Saturday and Brown Sunday. A win either day guarantees no worse than a share of the Ivy League championship. Two wins would mean an outright championship, no matter what else happens in the league. 

For TigerBlog, the experience with the tennis teams has been, in one word, fun. They're both fun groups — and where else can you see all of the men's and women's players in one group team photo:



TigerBlog jumped on the bus to Cornell to see what the difference would be between traveling with the teams he's used to (field hockey, men's lacrosse) and a different one (in this case, women's tennis). He's very glad he did. 

For starters, there are 11 players, as opposed to 24 field hockey players or 52 men's lacrosse players. That alone changes the whole dynamic. Here is one of his main observations: the volume level of the women's tennis bus is pretty much halfway between that of field hockey (loud) and men's lax (very not loud). 

Also, it was a much less regimented trip. By the nature of having so many more players, the other teams need to have might stricter itineraries. 

Mostly, though, it was a chance to get to know a group of coaches and players he didn't know at all a few months ago, to figure out the personalities behind their stats and their styles on the court. And to see them compete for their goal, of an Ivy championship. 

TB has been doing this for a very long time. He has always said that the best part is the opportunity to work with some of the greatest young people you'll find anywhere — and to hopefully do at least a little to help them have the best experience at Princeton they can. 

The trip to Cornell? It was definitely worth it. 

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

12-0

So TigerBlog got home way past midnight the other night after traveling with the women's tennis team to Cornell. 

He walked into his house and went to toss his empty Snapple bottle into the recycling bin — only to notice it wasn't there. That was quite the shock.

The TV was there. Every other item of value was there. The only thing missing was the recycling bin. 

Did someone break into his house and steal it and nothing else? It was quite the mystery.  

Hmmm. He did remember that before he left on the trip he had taken the recycling out. Also, his next-door neighbor is away on vacation, and she asked TB to pick up her mail. As he pieced it together, he surmised that he had left the bin outside after putting her mail into the box she left in her shed and that it had blown away.

He looked around for it and saw no trace. Maybe one of the many deer or wild turkeys who stroll by all day walked away with it? Is recycling big in the deer/turkey community? 

Then his neighbor's daughter showed up. She lives about a mile away, and she was coming by to get something from her mom's house. Maybe she knew something? 

And she did. She had seen it out and assumed it was her mother's, and so she put it into her house. Now TB has it back where it belongs. 

It's not the most fascinating of stories, TB supposes. Still, the feeling he had when he realized he had a missing recycling bin and nothing else? That was bizarre. 

Oh, and he'll have more on women's tennis tomorrow. 

For the rest of today, there's the matter of a team that is 12-0 in the Ivy League right now. TB speaks, of course, of Princeton's softball team. 

It's not easy to be perfect this long into a season for any sport. It might be hardest in baseball and softball. There are just those games where everything you hit finds a glove and everything they hit finds the grass. 

Princeton stayed unbeaten by sweeping Penn this weekend to reach that gaudy 12-0. By contrast, no Ivy League baseball team has fewer than three league losses after the same number of games. 

Like TB said, it's not easy.

In fact, it got TigerBlog wondering how many teams there are among the 31 Division I softball conferences who have a team that is currently unbeaten. The answer? Three. 

There's Princeton. There's also Washington, in the Big Ten. So that's TigerBlog's employer and BrotherBlog's employer. 

Unfortunately, there are only two of them If only there'd been a third sibling who worked at Southeastern Louisiana. Then they could have had all three covered. 

Once again, TB borrows from his friend and colleague Andrew Borders for more information on Tiger softball: 

It's the third 12-0 Ivy start in program history for Princeton, which also started, and finished, 12-0 in 1995, the first year the Ivy played 12 league games, as well as in 2008, when the team started 14-0 on the way to an 18-2 record, setting an Ivy wins record that Harvard (2011) and Dartmouth (2013) later matched. The Tigers' current run is the best start for any team since the league went to seven three-game series ahead of the 2018 season.  

That's impressive stuff. It gets more impressive when you dig deeper. 

In those 12 Ivy games, Princeton has committed exactly six errors. The rest of the league averages 17 errors between them. Princeton leads the league in ERA by more than run per game. It leads the league in batting average as well. 

None of this is surprising, given that whole 12-0 thing. 

What's left on the schedule? There are three more Ivy weekends, which for Princeton means three at Yale, three at Harvard and three home against Dartmouth. There's also a home doubleheader tomorrow against Monmouth, starting at 4:30. 

Harvard is in second, at 8-4. Dartmouth and Yale both have four wins at this point. 

What does it all mean? The Tigers certainly look to be in great shape for a fifth-straight Ivy championship. The path to the NCAA tournament, of course, runs through the Ivy League tournament, which will be at the home of the league champion. 

Getting to 12-0 is great. There is still a long way to go. 

Monday, April 13, 2026

A Day For Brycie

TigerBlog can guarantee you that Bryce Chase will laugh when he reads this. 

He can also guarantee you that Bryce will give TB a hard time next time he sees him. 

Having opened with that, when TigerBlog first saw the news that an endowment had been established to create the "Bryce Chase ’63 Offensive Coordinator" position with Princeton men's lacrosse, he wondered why the offensive coordinator and not the defensive coordinator.

Then it dawned on him: Bryce is offensive. 

Just kidding. Just kidding. Sort of. 

Here's the first paragraph of TB's feature story on Bryce from nearly 20 years ago: 

The curse words that fly from Bryce Chase's mouth at a rate of two or three per paragraph are there merely as punctuation marks, rather than subjects, verbs or even the more extreme modifiers. You can forgive him for this for a bunch of reasons. First, he's not using them to be offensive. Next, he'll be 68 on his next birthday, so who's going to teach him new tricks anyway? Lastly, who would expect any different after learning that he spent eight years in the United States Marine Corps? 

Yes, Bryce is famous for his, um, salty language. As TB wrote, though, they're punctuation marks. 

The truth is that Bryce is actually one of the most sincere, most tenderhearted, most caring, most genuine people TB has ever met. Actually, that'll probably annoy him more than when he was called "offensive," probably because Brycie knows it's true. 

If you don't believe TigerBlog, you can ask any of the Princeton men's lacrosse alums who flocked to Sherrerd Field Saturday. They came to see Princeton play Penn — a game the Tigers won 20-8 — but they also came back for Brycie, on the occasion of the formal dedication of that endowment.

TigerBlog has written that Bryce Chase is the backbone of the Princeton men's lacrosse program. He also wrote this, that Bryce was "a mentor and a friend, at times a calming presence and at others the voice of accountability, and always a fixture on the sideline for literally hundreds of young men who have played lacrosse at Princeton."

When you get to where Bryce is now, or, to a large extent, where TB is now, what you remember most are the people, the relationships you made, as much as any game or championship. One year turns into the next. One decade turns into the next. What year did that guy graduate? Which year was that game? 

Those specifics fade (well, not for TB, of course). What you're left with is what you saw if you were there Saturday — just a whole lot of love for someone who has been such a huge part of something that's special to you as well.  

It was everywhere Saturday. 

It was on buttons. It was on the players' shooting shirts, which were old-school white tops with Bryce's No. 31 on them. It was in Jim Mitchell's pregame speech in the team room. That's the same Jim Mitchell who is the first person to hold the title that now bears Brycie's name. 

It was in the stands, where the alums had gathered. It was on the field at halftime, where Bryce was joined by his family, as well as those who had made this endowment possible. It was afterwards, when the celebration continued. 

While that halftime ceremony was going on, the scoreboard said Princeton 8, Penn 6. This was a big game in terms of the Ivy League race and Princeton's place near the top of the national rankings. 

It was also a big game because of the man who was being honored. TigerBlog has to think that no Princeton player wanted to have to look Bryce in the eye if that game had gotten away, and so the Tigers went out and scored the first 12 goals after intermission. 

Princeton, Cornell and Harvard have all clinched Ivy tournament spots. Any of those three can host the upcoming tournament, as can Yale, who hasn't clinched a spot yet. 

With its early non-league season wins over Maryland, Syracuse, North Carolina and Rutgers, all of whom are in the RPI top 16, and with league wins over two other Top 20 teams (Yale and now Penn), Princeton is almost surely headed to the NCAA tournament for the fifth straight year. 

Next up is Harvard in Cambridge Saturday, which will be a big part of determining who the Ivy champ is and where the tournament will be. That's all for the future. 

No matter what happens the rest of the way, though, what happened this past Saturday will definitely be one of the 2026 highlights. And that's because of the man who was honored. 

Offensive? He likes to think he is. 

What he really is, though, is the guy who brought out all that love you saw Saturday at Sherrerd Field. 

Sorry Brycie. That's the truth.