This was the third straight week that a Tiger won the men's award. Last week it was Jackson Clarke, who had set an Ivy League record in the 200, while also running the second-best time in Division I this season. The week before was Greg Foster, after his Ivy record in the long jump, which also was second-best in Division I this season.
So what did Licata do?
Apparently, he was honored either for his personal best 64-0 in the shot put at the Penn Invite. Or, it's possible that he was honored for what he's doing in the photo.
That photo came from a video from Princeton superfan Pattie Friend, who finds time to work at an eating club checking in students on Sunday nights after attending essentially every event on campus she can. Pattie's husband Lloyd was a member of the Class of 1965.
By the way, if you want to see the greatest juggler of all time, go on YouTube and look up W.C. Fields. Hopefully you've heard of him, you little chickadees.
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There will be two Ivy League championships won in Jadwin Gym this weekend, in men's and women's fencing.
The Ivy League round-robin event will be held at Princeton Saturday and Sunday. The women will compete in the morning both days, and the men will go in the afternoon.
The complete Princeton schedule, and ticket information, can be found HERE.
Princeton's men have won 18 Ivy fencing titles all time, including the past two years. The women have won 13, including three of the last four.
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The Winter Olympics begin this weekend in Milan, Italy.
Princeton women's hockey will be once again represented by alums Sarah Fillier and Claire Thompson, who won a gold medal with Team Canada in the 2022 Games in Beijing. If history is any indicator, they'll add either a second gold or silver, as the overwhelming favorites to reach the final will be the Canadians and the Americans.
It would be shocking if the final wasn't those two. In fact, this is the eighth time that women's hockey has been held at the Winter Olympics, and only once in the first seven has the final been someone other than the USA and Canada. That was in the third tournament, in 2006, when Canada won gold, Sweden had silver and the USA won silver.
Former Princeton women's hockey player Kelly Cooke will again be an official at these Olympics.
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Continuing in the category of non-shocking hockey news, Princeton women's hockey's Uma Corniea was named the ECAC Goalie of the Week Award of the season.
Corniea made a career-high 43 saves in the 6-1 win at Clarkson Saturday in a showdown for first place in the league. This came one night after a 30-save performance in a 2-0 shutout win over St. Lawrence.
That's 73 saves and one goal allowed. That's a .986 save percentage and 0.50 goals-against average. You'll win a lot of games with those numbers.
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There will be home ice hockey this weekend for the Princeton men, against Yale tomorrow and Brown Saturday. Face-off both nights will be at 7.
As TigerBlog wrote the other day, the Princeton men are in fifth place in the ECAC standings as they head into this weekend.
Princeton has 30 points, five back of fourth-place Harvard. The top four teams in the league will get a first-round bye in the conference playoff and home ice for the quarterfinals. Teams 5-8 will host the first round; Princeton is eight points ahead of ninth-place Union at this point.
Yale currently is in eighth place, one point ahead of Union. Brown is tied for 10th.
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In all there will be 28 events, including the ECAC women's tennis tournament at the Si Qin Family Indoor Tennis Center. At the same time in the same building, you can see Princeton and Penn in men's and women's squash.
The complete schedule is HERE.










