To all those who have taken the time to name their favorite snacks from long ago, TigerBlog says "thank you."
Here's a partial list of what you guys apparently ate when you were young:
* Devil Dogs (not bad)
* Swiss Rolls (A+)
* Ring Dings (eh)
* Snoballs (ick)
And, of course, many different kinds of Tastykake. The Juniors? Yes. The chocolate chip ones? Yes.
The lemon ones? Yuck.
A special thank-you to the Tastykake crowd, since you got TigerBlog singing "let's all take a tasty break and have a lot of fun. Tastykake is all the good things, all the good things wrapped up in one."
Oh, and this is from the Tastykake website:
"It would take 14,080 Tastykake pies laid end to end to make a mile, but it only takes one bite to make a smile."
And with that ...
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The Princeton softball team has blazed to a 9-0 Ivy League start as it seeks a fifth-straight league championship and, should that happen, the host role in the league tournament.
Up next for Princeton will be three games at home this weekend, with two games tomorrow (12:30 first pitch) and one more Sunday (also 12:30 first pitch).
There are currently four teams over .500 in the league, with Princeton at 9-0 and then Penn and Harvard at 6-3 and Columbia at 5-4.
This seems pretty good:
Heading into the week, Princeton led the Ivy League in doubles (54), doubles per game (1.86), fielding percentage (.978), fewest hit batters by the pitching staff (seven), hits (273), RBI per game (5.48), RBI (159), shutouts (three), WHIP (1.54) and winning percentage (.655).
That's from Andrew Borders' preview story on goprincetontigers.com, which you can read HERE.
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Back in the 1988 season, the Princeton men's basketball team lost three straight Ivy League midseason games by one point — 52-51 to Harvard, 61-60 to Yale, 68-67 to Brown. The last two came on buzzer-beating shots, both after the Tigers had a double-figure lead in the second half.
Those losses ended any hope Princeton had of winning the league, and the Tigers took an 8-5 record into the season finale at home against Cornell, who had already clinched the championship. Final score: Princeton 79, Cornell 58.
TigerBlog was at that game, and he remembers the feeling that Princeton had unfinished business when it was over. In fact, that turned out to be the case — Princeton won the next four Ivy League championships.
It was that three-game stretch that derailed the Tigers that TB thought of this past weekend, when the men's tennis team dropped back-to-back 4-3 matches at Harvard and Dartmouth, following an Ivy-opening 4-3 loss to Penn in the match before. As such, Princeton — a team hit by massively derailing injuries — takes an 0-3 record into this weekend's matches at home against Cornell today at 2 and at Columbia Sunday.
Remember, Princeton won the ECAC tournament, an event featuring all eight Ivy teams, in February.
Hopefully the future is the same for Billy Pate's team as it was for Pete Carril's back in 1988. Also, as far as the present, Princeton is still positioned well for an NCAA tournament at-large spot due to its strong non-league showing and the fact that Ivy League men's tennis is loaded.
Consider the most recent ITA rankings, the ones that have Princeton at No. 37 and a total of five Ivy teams between 33 and 39, including this weekend's Princeton opponents (Cornell is 33 and Columbia is 34).
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On the women's side, Princeton is at Cornell today and home against Columbia Sunday. The Tigers are 3-0 with wins over Penn, Harvard and Dartmouth and tied with Columbia in first place, one game up on Yale and Dartmouth.
Princeton finishes the regular season next weekend at Yale and Brown. Wait, what? Finishes? Already?
Like the men, the Princeton women are also hoping to play in the NCAA tournament, which begins the first weekend of May.
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The men's lacrosse team will be home tomorrow at noon against Penn. The Tigers finish the regular season with three Ivy League games each of the next three Saturdays, with a trip to Harvard next week and then a home game against Dartmouth after that.
Princeton, with its high RPI and two Top 5 wins (North Carolina, Syracuse), is almost certainly NCAA tournament bound. The Ivy League tournament will be the first weekend in May, and Princeton still could be the host — as could Cornell, Harvard, Yale or Penn. Much more will be sorted out this weekend.
Meanwhile, Princeton's Jake Vana has 11 goals and no assists this year. The record for most goals in a season at Princeton without an assist is 19, set in 1997 by Craig Katz. Even more amazingly, in the 2003 season, Princeton had two players who had 41 goals apiece and had seven assists between them (Jason Doneger had three of them; Sean Hartofilis had four of them). Who had all the assists that year? Ryan Boyle, who had 48.
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The University of Michigan ended a rather dull NCAA men's basketball tournament with a rather dull win over UConn Monday night. In fact, other than the three-pointer that UConn's Braylon Mullins hit to beat Duke in the regional final, there weren't really all that many "shining moments" in this one.
Speaking of Michigan, the Collegiate Water Polo Association women's tournament will be there beginning today. Princeton enters as the No. 2 seed and will face No. 7 Saint Francis in the tournament's first match, at 4:30.
The host Wolverines are the No. 2 seed, and the winner of the Princeton-Saint Francis match will play the winner of the Michigan-Mercyhurst match tomorrow at 3. The other semifinal will have No. 1 Harvard against the winner of No. 4 Brown and No. 5 Bucknell.
The championship match will be Sunday at 12:30, with an NCAA bid for the winner.
Princeton's Shanna Davidson was named the CWPA Player of the Year after scoring 64 goals and adding 45 assists.





