Every time TigerBlog drove, or for that matter walked, over the bridge on Washington Road between December and about two weeks ago, he wondered where the Princeton rowing teams were going to be able to compete this season.
The lake? It was frozen, presumably solid.
Every time he looked at the far side of Sherrerd Field, he wondered if Princeton would have a home lacrosse game this season without remnants of the snow bank, the one that at one point stood 14 feet high. During one early season game, TB was asked by a media member why the facility no longer had the men's and women's championship banners along the fence, to which TB pointed out that they were still there, only blocked by the white fortress.
Then, all of the sudden, the ice was gone from the lake and the snow was (almost completely) gone from the far side. Amazing what rain and a few days near 80 degrees can do.
The oddest part is that TB didn't even notice until it was pointed out to him. "Hey, the snow is gone." And "Hey, the water is back."
And why not?
It is, after all, officially springtime, or, as Pete Carril would have called it, "the spring of the year."
The Ivy League baseball and softball seasons opened this past weekend.
For Princeton, that meant six games against Cornell between the two teams, with five Tiger wins. The softball team won all three of its games, and the baseball team went two for three.
The Ivy League season opens for both tennis teams this weekend, with the women home against Penn. There is rowing and golf and outdoor track and field and rugby and lacrosse this weekend, all of which are outdoor events.
HERE is the whole Princeton Athletics schedule.
Ah, but the winter isn't quite over. Maybe the calendar says it is, but there's still enough chill in the air to suggest otherwise.
And, there's also still one more winter sports event, at least for Princeton. That would be the NCAA men's swimming and diving championships, which begin today in Atlanta.
Princeton will be represented there by 10 athletes, three of whom are divers and seven of whom are swimmers. Senior Mitchell Schott and sophomore Patrick Dinu will both be a part of six events, swimming together in the 200, 400 and 800 free relays, against each other in the 200 free and then individually in the 500 free and 200 butterfly (Schott) and 50 and 100 free (Dinu).
Aidan Wang, for his part, will compete in the 1M, 3M and platform diving events.
The women's event was held in the same pool a week ago. Princeton junior Eleanor Sun finished 14th in the 200 individual medley to earn second-team All-American honors one year after doing so in the 400 IM.
Last weekend also saw Princeton compete at the NCAA fencing championships, where other Tigers became All-Americans as well.
This year, for the first time, the NCAA fencing national team championship was divided into a men's winner and a women's winner, both of whom happened to be Notre Dame. Before this year, there was one combined, co-ed team champion.
The individual championships didn't change, with qualifying bouts that earned team points and then sent the top four to the semifinals for each of the three weapons. Tiger junior Hadley Husisian was the runner-up in the epee, giving her three All-American honors in three years of competing (she took off a year while qualifying for the U.S. team at the 2024 Olympics).
Princeton also had three other women become All-Americans: senior Honor Johnson (saber) junior Alexandra Lee (saber, where she reached the semifinals) and freshman Angel Xiao (epee). Princeton finished third in the team standings.
On the men's side, both senior Brandon Lee (foil) and junior Alec Brooke (epee) were All-Americans, Lee for the third time and Brooke of the second.
Princeton's men finished ninth overall.
By the way, a special shout out goes to TB's longtime friend and colleague Andrew Borders, who alerted TB that Princeton's women under the new format would have won the NCAA title in 2011, 2013, 2014 and 2023. The 2013 Tigers did win the combined NCAA championship.







