What are the chances of that? Three titles, all spaced 10 years apart.
Is there any other team that has the same numerical trajectory?
And while TB is asking questions, could the current Tigers change that history? Well, they're two games away from doing so.
Those won't be two easy games. At least the 2025-26 team has a chance to try for the big prize.
Princeton earned that chance this past weekend, sweeping away Union in the ECAC quarterfinals at Hobey Baker Rink with back-to-back 5-2 wins. Of those 10 goals, six of them came from Kai Daniells and Jake Manfre, who had three apiece in the series. Half of those 10 goals came off assists from David Jacobs.
On the other end of the ice, Arthur Smith made 63 saves in the two games, including 34 Saturday night.
The series was the first postseason home appearance for Princeton since 2018 and the first home quarterfinal series since 2009. The two wins mean that Princeton finishes the season 14-2-1 at home — and Baker Rink has once again become a very electric venue.
The two games might have had the same score, but they got there two completely different ways.
Game 1 Friday night was all Tigers. It was 1-0 after the first period, 3-0 after the second and 4-0 early in the third.
Game 2 Saturday night? That was a bit different.
Princeton scored first but then fell behind 2-1 after two periods, the second Union goal a shorthanded one. Would there be a Game 3 in this series?
Uh, no. Not after the four-goal third period Princeton put up.
It took three minutes to tie it, on a Jaxson Ezman power play goal. It took four more to take the lead, when Daniells, who had all three of his in Saturday's clincher, finished off a cross-crease backhanded feed from Jacobs.
What a play!!
— Princeton Men's Ice Hockey (@princetonhockey) March 15, 2026
Jacobs to Daniells and the Tigs are up 3-2!! @ecachockey | @TeamECH | @NCAAIceHockey pic.twitter.com/k1w5lySyBH
It's hard to say which of the 10 goals was the prettiest, but this way up the list. Jacobs' pass laid out perfectly to Daniells' stick, even though there were three, or maybe even four, Union players who were in the vicinity, not counting the goalie.
Empty net goals don't usually turn up on the list of the prettiest goals, but the two Saturday night certainly did. The first came from Manfre, who outsprinted a Union defender to the loose puck to jam it into the goal. The second came from Daniells, whose shot from the Princeton blue line made its way under the Union goalie as he tried unsuccessfully to get back into the net.
What's amazing about the streak of one championship every 10 years is that the intervening years were not very kind. Princeton had eight losing seasons between the 1998 and 2008 titles. There were seven losing seasons between 2008 and 2018.
Since 2018, Princeton has had six losing seasons — out of six seasons played. That included last year, when the Tigers went 12-14-3 in the Ben Syer's first season as head coach.
How do you turn that around so quickly?
The wins this weekend improved Princeton to 17-12-3. They also vaulted Princeton into the ECAC semifinals, which will take place this coming weekend in Lake Placid.
Because the tournament is constantly reseeded, it wasn't until yesterday's deciding Game 3 between Cornell and Harvard that the matchups for Lake Placid could be set. Now they are.
It'll be Dartmouth vs. Clarkson in the first semifinal Friday at 4, followed by Princeton and Cornell Friday at 7. The championship game will be Saturday at 5:30.
The winner gets an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. Can it be Princeton? Why not the Tigers — even if it is two years early.
Either way, what Syer and his staff and players have done this season has been remarkable. This past weekend was the end of the games at Baker Rink for 2025-26. The atmosphere there for the two games was amazing.
And to still be playing this late into March, with a chance to keep it going?
Who could have asked for more from this team?










