One of them is among the most accomplished people in the history of Princeton Athletics. The other one is TigerBlog.
Hints: 1) She never lost during her Princeton playing career, 2) she was Princeton's first female individual national champion, 3) she went on to become a doctor.
The background of the photo is of the Si Qin Family Indoor Tennis Center at the Meadows Campus. If you haven't been there, put it high on your list of venues to check out.
In addition to the indoor tennis courts, the building is also the new home of Princeton men's and women's squash. The viewing areas for both sports are spectacular.
TigerBlog has spent a great deal of time in the building of late. He has added men's and women's tennis to the teams he covers.
How has the experience been so far? It's reminded him, yet again, of what the best part of working at Princeton all these years has been.
He doesn't really need to tell you, right? It's pretty straightforward. It's the opportunity to work with the Princeton athletes, who are some of the most impressive people you'll find anywhere. The opportunity to help them have a better experience has been his main motivation all this time.
TB has always been a tennis fan. He rooted for John McEnroe and Martina Navratilova way back when, and he had the great opportunity to cover the 1984 US Open back in his newspaper days. The major tournaments are still among his favorite events to watch each year.
He's seen bits and pieces of Princeton tennis through the years, just not to the extent that he has the last few weeks. College tennis matches, he's learning, are pretty fascinating.
For starters, the rules are different. There is no deuce, just a winner-take-all point (receiver's choice on which side that point begins) to decide games that get to 40-all. It speeds things up considerably, but it also changes the dynamic of a game that gets to 30-all.
There are three one-set doubles matches to start, and the team that wins two of them gets one team point. Then there are six best-of-three singles matches, all worth one team point each.
The direction of the team match can swing back and forth quickly, as the player who won the first set easily falls behind in the second. Just when it seems like one team has it wrapped up, the other team come right back.
TigerBlog has already seen some great matches. The doubles point between Princeton and St. John's women went to a tiebreaker in the deciding match before Tigers Eva Elbaz and Isabella Chhiv pulled it out, surviving three match points and falling behind 3-0 in the tiebreaker to win.
The men's team fell to Liberty 4-3 after the deciding match stretched for nearly three hours between Princeton's Aleksandar Mitric and Liberty's David Ekpenyong. This one also reached a deciding tiebreaker. Yes, Princeton lost, but still, the effort that both players put in was inspiring.
More than wins and losses, though, it's always very intriguing to see the team dynamics within individual sports and the close-knit support between the men's team and the women's team. As much as TB wants to feel that he has made an impact on the experience the athletes have, he also knows for a fact that they have made his experience so much better all these decades.
When he first met with the women's team, he gave them a copy of his book on the first 50 years of women's athletics at Princeton. He also told them how women's athletics here started with their sport, tennis.
And that leads him back to the woman in the picture. Her name is Wendy Zaharko, Class of 1974. She was a three-time national college squash champion who didn't compete in the national tournament as a sophomore. In her entire time at Princeton, she never lost so much as a game, let alone a match.
Here was a quote of hers from the history book:
“The women athletes were the ones who really brought the alums around to accept women at Princeton,” she says. “We were good ambassadors. I used to get letters from old alums, crazy letters. I got one from Michigan that was twenty-five typed pages. There’s no doubt that co-education changed and helped Princeton. When you add fifty percent of humanity to a great institution of higher learning, it can only make it an even better ‘best damn place of all.’ I was there to get an education, and there’s a lot of education to be gotten from sports.”
Wendy was at the racket center Sunday to watch women's squash and was then introduced to TigerBlog. Like many athletes at Princeton through the years, Wendy is one TB has written about extensively without ever having met.
Until Sunday.
It was great to actually say hi in person. She's a sort of celebrity to TigerBlog.
And it was great to meet her at the racket center.
If you've never been there, it's a great place to spend some time.










