Friday, February 28, 2020

What Did They Have Against February?

Did you ever wonder why February has only 28 days in most years when every other month has 30 or 31?

Why not give February 30 and take a day away from two of the 31-day months?

TigerBlog did some research on this yesterday, and he learned some interesting stuff. Back about six centuries BC or so, the Roman calendar consisted of 10 months and 304 days, with a period in winter that was unnamed. Eventually, the Roman king Numa Pompilius added January and February to the mix.

There's a legend that said February originally had 29 days and August had 30 but that Augustus Caesar moved a day from February to August because it was named for him.

Can you imagine if you had been born during the time that had no months or days? "When is your birthday?" "Well, it's between December and March, but I'm not exactly sure when, and even if I knew exactly when, it has no date assigned to it anyway." "Okay, well, we'll just get you a cake at some random time when it's cold out."

Tomorrow, of course, is Feb. 29, which comes along once every four years (except in years divisible by 100, 200 or 300 but not 400, which explains why there was a Feb. 29, 2000, but won't be a Feb., 29, 2100).

TigerBlog already knew that part. He wrote about it four years ago on Feb. 29, when he said this:

As everyone knows, there's only one of these every four years. The reason? It takes the Earth 365 days, 5 hours, 49 minutes, and 16 seconds to make one complete revolution around the sun.
Did you know that there is no Feb. 29 in years that are divisible by 100, unless they're also divisible by 400? That's why there was a Feb. 29 in 2000, though there won't be one in 2100. 

Do you know anyone who was born on Feb. 29? TigerBlog doesn't.

He assumes that everyone who was born on Feb. 29 makes the same "today is my 10th birthday" if they're 40 joke. That's okay. If you only get to have one of every four birthdays on your actual birthday, you get to make that joke.

To Frederic, from the "Pirates of Penzance," it was no joke. He was to be an apprentice until his 21st birthday, and when he thinks he's reached it and is free, he finds out he was actually born on Feb. 29, which meant that he had 63 more years to go. Don't worry, it worked out just fine for Frederic and Mabel. That's how it works in Gilbert and Sullivan operettas.

TigerBlog has always wondered why they decided to make February have a 29th. Now that he thinks about it, why does February have only 28 days in the first place.

Who decided that? What did they have against February. 

Anyway, there's something mildly interesting about Feb. 29. It's something different. 


Today usually marks the end of the poorly treated month of February, and tomorrow is a day unlike any other day. Whatever month it is, it features some huge events, with championships and postseason on the line.

As TB said yesterday (and if you didn't see the video about the Alaries, then you need to stop reading and go check it out), the women's basketball team can clinch an eighth Ivy League title in 11 years with a win either tonight against Brown or tomorrow against Yale (or next week against either Columbia or Cornell). Nothing is ever to be taken for granted until it actually happens, but use the preferred words of former Ford Family Director of Athletics Gary Walters, TigerBlog is "cautiously optimistic" about Princeton's chances.

The Tigers are 10-0, with a three-game lead on Penn with four games to play.

As for the men's basketball team, the Tigers are at Brown tonight and Yale tomorrow night. Princeton, with the same four games to play, could do anything from win an outright Ivy League title to not make the Ivy League tournament.

Princeton is 7-3, tied with Harvard and a game back of 8-2 Yale. Brown is 6-4, followed by 5-5 Penn.

Elsewhere, this weekend is Heps indoor track and field championship weekend, as the men's and women's events will be held at Cornell. Princeton's men are going for a sixth-straight indoor title, and it will not be easy, as Penn and Harvard appear ready to make a serious challenge.

Speaking of the men's track and field team, Sam Ellis recently broke the school record for the indoor mile, running 3:57.66 at a meet at Boston University. Ellis broke the record of 3:58.70, set 29 years ago by Bill Burke; TigerBlog interviewed Burke at halftime of the men's basketball game the next night on WHWH radio.

The men's swimming and diving team is at Harvard for the Ivy League championships. The men's squash team is also at Harvard for the team national championships. 

The women's hockey team is home in the quarterfinals of the ECAC playoffs against Quinnipiac in a best-of-three series. Gametime today, tomorrow and if necessary Sunday is at 3.

Princeton is the No. 2 seed in the ECAC playoffs, behind top-seeded Cornell. Of the top 12 teams in the Pairwise rankings, six of them are in the ECAC, so this event is fairly loaded. And Princeton, like the others, is playing for a chance to get back to the NCAA tournament for the second straight year. 

Also, it's been 28 years since Feb. 29 fell on a Saturday, and that makes tomorrow the first time that the men's lacrosse team will play a game on a Feb. 29, since the season didn't start until March 1 until about 10 years ago. Princeton hosts Johns Hopkins at 1, after the Tigers moved from unranked to the top 10 by virtue of a 16-12 win over defending NCAA champ Virginia last weekend.

The women played a game on Feb. 29, 2012, which was a Wednesday. Princeton, who lost that one 11-10 to Rutgers, is at Columbia tomorrow at noon in its Ivy League opener.

There are also a million other events, including baseball's opener, more softball, the men's hockey regular season finales (at home, so there could be as many as five hockey games at Baker Rink this weekend), home men's volleyball, women's water polo and early season tennis.

The complete composite schedule is HERE.

And enjoy Feb. 29. It's not something you get to do very often.

Thursday, February 27, 2020

Meet The Alaries

Where to start today?

How about with a great video about Bella Alarie?


As you probably know, Alarie is already a two-time Ivy League women's basketball Player of the Year, and she's led Princeton to two NCAA tournaments in her first three years.

As you also probably know, she is the daughter of Mark Alarie, the former Duke star who played five years in the NBA. The video tells the story of how Bella came to play at Princeton, and it includes great interviews with father and daughter, including advice that Mark Alarie threw out there for all fathers of daughters (and something that TigerBlog can attest to first hand).

There are also great family pictures of her and her family, including her grandfather Norman, a member of the Princeton Class of 1957 who also got a Masters' degree at Princeton and later taught here.

If you've been an Alarie fan for the last four years, it's a must-see video.

TigerBlog remembers Bella's first game at Princeton, when she started on Day 1 as a freshman and put up 24 points and seven rebounds in her debut game against Rider. As hard as it is to believe, this weekend is her final Jadwin Gym appearance, as the Tigers will host Brown tomorrow (6) and then Yale Saturday (5, Senior Night).

Alarie comes into this weekend with 1,643 career points, which leaves her third all-time at Princeton in women's basketball and fourth all-time among male or female basketball players. The list goes like this:

1. Bill Bradley 2,503
2. Sandi Bittler 1,683
3. Meagan Cower 1,671
4. Bella Alarie 1,643

With four regular season games left and then, presumably, two postseason games at a minimum, Alarie's chances of catching Bittler are pretty good. Bittler had a great run with the record, which has lasted 30 years.

Alarie had a 21-point night against Penn Tuesday in what was one of the most dominant performances the Tigers have had in Alarie's four years. Princeton won that game 80-44, using a 20-0 first-half run to sprint away from the Quakers.

Keep in mind, Penn came into the game 17-5 and one of the top defensive teams in the country, not to mention still in the hunt for a league title and a national top 50 team.

If you think Princeton is just Alarie, then the game Tuesday showed you otherwise. In fact, Alarie wasn't even named the Player of the Game, which instead went to Ellie Mitchell, a freshman who had 13 points and eight rebounds.

Oh, and she also had six steals. She played incredibly hard the entire night, and she essentially imposed her will on the game.

Abby Meyers came off the bench for 11 points in 19 minutes, and on any given night, it could be anyone who reaches double figures.

What makes Princeton head coach Carla Berube smile the most, though, is what happens at the other end of the court.

In the game Tuesday night, Princeton held the Quakers to 1 for 10 shooting in the second quarter, and for the night the Tigers allowed one assist while forcing 19 turnovers. Everything Penn did was hounded, as you would expect from the team that ranks first in Division I in scoring defense at 48 points per game, making Princeton the only team in the country allowing fewer than 50 per game.

Princeton is 22-1, with 18 straight wins now. They are on the verge of an Ivy League championship, something that the Tigers would clinch at least a share of with a win tomorrow night and would win outright with two wins this weekend.

And there's still next weekend's trip to Columbia and Cornell.

After that is the Ivy League tournament, in which Princeton has already clinched its spot. This is the exciting time of year for the Tigers.

When it finally ends, wherever that is, Alarie will move into her place among the greatest athletes ever to compete at Princeton.

This weekend, though, is the last home weekend for her and her roommate Taylor Baur.

What would be tremendous would be to see Alarie get the scoring record at Jadwin. She'd have to go way above what she did against this weekend's opponents the first time around, as she had a 25-point weekend, including a nine-point night against Yale in New Haven that marks the only Ivy game in the last two years that Alarie has not reached double figures.

And before any of that, check out the video above.

If you're a Princeton fan, you're guaranteed to love it.

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Happy Anniversary

TigerBlog went yesterday to get his picture taken with some other people who will be celebrating their 25th anniversaries of working at Princeton at a luncheon next month.

TB is actually closing in on 26 years of working at Princeton and, with his five years at the newspaper, this is his 31st season of covering Princeton Athletics.

Because his start date back in 1994 came after the cut-off for last year's recognition, he had to wait until this year to be a part of it. Along with an invitation to the luncheon, when you reach 25 years (and each subsequent five-year anniversary after that), you get to choose a gift.

For his 25th gift, TB chose the rocking chair. He's excited about it.

Yesterday was photo day for those who have been here for 25 and the subsequent five-year groups. It was nice, to be around people from around the University who have been here for as long as TB has, in departments all over the campus.

There was even someone there who has been here for, if TB heard correctly, 50 years. Is that possible?

For TigerBlog, he has had seven different titles since he started here all those years ago. It's been quite a run from 1994 to now, with almost nothing about working for Princeton Athletics the same as it was back then except for the pride of being a part of it.

Hey, the current generation of athletes weren't even born yet when TB began working here.

Neither were his own children.

If you've been reading TB since the beginning, you read a bit about the two of them, starting back when they were just children, way back to when his son played the national anthem at a men's basketball game on his saxophone when he was 11.

The blog didn't start until then, though, so you missed a lot of their earliest years.

Maybe if you work for 25 years in the corporate world, then that side of your life stays a bit more separated from the rest of it. If you work in college athletics for that long, especially here, then the line between personal life and professional life hardly exists.

TigerBlog has always loved that, and he loves the fact that his children grew up essentially on this campus. They both went to nursery school here, and they both spent five years attending the summer camp at Dillon before they both worked there once they got too old.

They went to sports camps here, and they stayed in the dorms here before they were teenagers. They were both ballkids at Princeton basketball.

TB can't count the number of events that they both attended here before they were 12 or so. Miss TigerBlog, of course, became Miss TigerBlog ’22, and she is currently a member of the women's lacrosse team.

TigerBlog Jr. went a different route, and he became a four-year member of the men's lacrosse team at Sacred Heart University. He now works in Washington, D.C., and so it was that last weekend that TB got to spend some time with his son on the way to the men's lacrosse game at Virginia.

The highlight of the weekend was when father and son did the radio broadcast for the game. It was not when the bartender, the manager and the karaoke guy all knew his name when he and his friends walked into the happy hour they always attend, and it wasn't even when TB sang "The Summer Wind" in his karaoke debut.

It was definitely when the two of them were on the radio together.


TB remembers back to when Tom McCarthy used to do his radio show from the Jadwin courtside before men's basketball games, and TBJ - around age 5 or so - would sit next to him, with a headset on, so he could listen.

He also remembers a time that TBJ - maybe around 8 or 9 - went to the men's lacrosse game at Syracuse, only to have the radio station at the time go off the air as it changed ownership, meaning there would be no broadcast. TBJ put on a headset and spoke into it for the entire game at the Carrier Dome, possibly unaware that nobody could hear him.

This time, they were doing the game together, with an actual audience. On the ride from D.C. to Charlottesville TB gave TBJ some pointers, and hey, as it turned out, TBJ was really good.

Or maybe TigerBlog is just biased.

In 25 years, there have been a lot of highlights for TigerBlog, a lot of championships, a lot of travel, a lot of amazing experiences, the chance to meet a lot of awesome people.

Beyond all of that, though, there have been so many great times when Princeton Athletics brought TB closer to one or both of his children. Doing the radio with TBJ was yet another one of those.

How many people get to say that about their job?

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Sowers And Brown

Being the men's lacrosse contact when Michael Sowers plays has to be sort of like what it was to be the men's basketball contact when Bill Bradley played.

It's a pretty good comparison, minus, of course, the blog, the social media, the website and all that.

Bradley did to the men's basketball record book 55 years ago what Sowers is doing to the men's lacrosse record book now. Like Bradley, Sowers broke the existing school scoring record as a junior, which means that every point of their senior years made their records that much harder to break.

Bradley scored 2,503 points (keep in mind, he did this in three years with no three-point shot), and the next best total in program history is 1,625, scored by Ian Hummer. That means that Bradley scored 1.54 times as many points as anyone who has ever played at Princeton.

The old record at Princeton in men's lacrosse was 247 points, set by Hall-of-Famer Kevin Lowe. Sowers would have to get to 380 points to reach the same ratio as Bradley, and it's unlikely he'll get quite that far.

On the other hand, if he keeps up at his current pace, he will. Sowers is leading Division I averaging 11 points per game (that would rank 19th in the Ivy League in points per game in men's basketball, by the way). If he keeps going at that rate, he'd get past 380.

That, of course, is asking a lot. No matter what, though, it's hard to imagine someone coming along to ever break Sowers' records at Princeton. Who knows? Maybe it can be done. Maybe it will be done. Maybe some day someone will beat Bradley's records, for that matter.

It's just that in 55 years nobody has. And in 25 years, nobody came with 15 points of Lowe with the men's lacrosse team.

For now, here are a few Sowers notes:
* his 6.4 points per game are the second-most in Division I history, trailing only Siena's Tony Astertino's 6.47 (1978-81)
* he is currently 18th all-time in Division I history in total points
* he is currently 11th all-time in Division history in total assists
* he currently has 116 goals and 172 assists; only five other players in Division I history have ever finished their careers with that many of each
* with 12 more points he would become the 16th player in Division I history to reach 300 points; he has currently played 45 career games, while the average number of games played by the 15 in the 300-point club is 66.5

Those are all extraordinary.

Sowers has been amazing since Day 1 at Princeton. He's definitely upped his game this year.

Princeton, led by Sowers, has gone from unranked to the top 10, anywhere from fifth to tenth, depending on which poll you like. The Tigers, best of all, showed with Saturday's 16-12 win over Virginia that they are more than just a one-man show, with speed and depth on all sides of the field.

And for as great as Sowers has been, TigerBlog wants to make sure to mention Chris Brown, the junior who reached the 100-point mark for his career with four goals and an assist against UVa.

Brown has played 30 games in his Princeton career, and he has at least one goal in all 30. It's more than twice as long as any similar streak to start a career at Princeton, and he is the only junior or senior in the country who has at least one goal in every game.

Brown is now the second Princeton player to have a streak of at least 30 straight games with at least one goal. The record is 46, held by the great Chris Massey.

It's easy to be overshadowed by what Sowers is doing, but that wouldn't be fair to Brown, who is having an incredible career in his own right. 

The next challenge for Princeton is handling the success. Next up is Johns Hopkins, a team that can  beat any other team in the country. It should be a great one on Sherrerd Field Saturday at 1.

Princeton's goal is to get back to the postseason, both the Ivy and NCAA tournament varieties. The Tigers have clearly taken a huge step in that direction with the win over Virginia, but there is a very, very long way to go still.

The ride is going to be fun to watch.

Monday, February 24, 2020

On The Bus

TigerBlog's first experience with a happy bus ride home from a Princeton athletic event was the ride back from Dartmouth in 1991, after the men's basketball team finished off a perfect 14-0 Ivy record.

That ride seemed like it took about a half hour or so, even though it actually took the usual five-plus. Because it was a night game, the Tigers didn't leave Hanover until 10 or so that night, so the bus didn't roll back into the Jadwin parking lot until after 3 am.

In the time in between, the Tigers - and their coaches, including Pete Carril - sang and laughed and basically loved the moment for the entire ride back. When the bus did arrive, the team even serenaded its driver with a "Steve Is The Man" chant.

TigerBlog has spent much more time driving to games on his own than he has on the bus. He has usually preferred to be on his own schedule rather than the team's, and it's usually been more convenient to simply drive.

Lately, though, he's enjoyed going on the men's lacrosse bus. It's a great way to see what the players are like away from the just the games or their stats, and it's an equally great way to get a good feel for the pulse of the coaches.

As bus rides go, the one Saturday back from Virginia was a pretty good one for the men's lacrosse team. The Tigers had just knocked off the defending NCAA champion and second-ranked Virginia Cavaliers 16-12, making a huge early statement about the 2020 Tigers.

Princeton presumably will be moving into the national rankings when they're announced today, and possibly even vaulting all the way into the top 10. There's a long way to go in a season in which the Ivy League looks like the best league in men's college lacrosse, and every test will be huge, beginning Saturday when Big Ten-foe Johns Hopkins comes to Sherrerd Field.

As you might have been able to guess, TB will have a bit more on lacrosse as the week goes on.

For today, he's more focused on the ride back, a trip that usually can take a little more than five hours and instead took nearly seven after the major traffic caused by two accidents, first on I-66 in Virginia and then I-495 in that area of Rockville, Chevy Chase, Silver Springs where the highway was probably built with traffic already on it.

The team was a pretty happy group when it got on the bus, and when it got off. In between there were two movies, some food, a quick jump off at a rest stop in Maryland, some music, a lot of laughs and even some sleeping.

For TigerBlog, that run from almost four until almost 11 gave him the chance to follow the evening in Princeton Athletics on his phone. It was a pretty good evening at that.

First up, there was the women's basketball game, which tipped at 6 (and not 5, which TB thought). The first piece of information he saw on the game was that Bella Alarie had left the game, which of course made for about the worst possible scenario.

TB texted his colleague Warren Croxton at the game to find out how Bella was, but by the time he did, she'd already come back into the game. That was the best possible scenario. Then she tore up Dartmouth, which was an even better scenario.

The game was 16-16 at the end of first and 34-32 at the half. Dartmouth had put up almost as many points in the first half as most teams have all game against the Tigers.

Then came the 31-11 third quarter. By the time the game ended, it was 87-55 Tigers, and Princeton had its 17th straight win, improving to 21-1 on the year and staying unbeaten in the Ivy League.

Alarie finished with 28 points and 12 rebounds, and she now has 1,622 career points, which leaves her 61 away from Sandi Bittler Leland's 30-year-old school record of 1,683. Princeton has five regular season games and then whatever the postseason has in store.

The next game is tomorrow night, when Penn comes to Jadwin, followed by home games against Brown and Yale this weekend. Princeton is 9-0 in the league, followed by 7-2 Penn, so obviously the game tomorrow is huge.

By the time the women's game ended, the men were pretty far along in their game at Dartmouth. TB was also following along the Ivy League women's swimming and diving championships, as it began to look like that was going to be a big Princeton win.

As it turned out, it was. Princeton put up 1,569 points, topping Harvard by 107 en route to the 23rd title in program history and the first for head coach Bret Lundgaard. How did recruiting go this year?

There were three swimmers in the meet who won the maximum 96 points, and two of them were Tigers - Nikki Venema and Ellie Marquardt, both freshmen.

And oh, that made for 501 Ivy League championships all-time for Princeton.

As the swim meet was winding down, the basketball game was coming down the stretch. TB was watching it on his phone and checking Twitter for lacrosse information, and while on Twitter he saw the women's squash team had reached the national final, where the Tigers would fall to Harvard yesterday.

The men's basketball game, meanwhile, was high drama, and Dartmouth, who had beaten Penn Friday, was going for the sweep while the Tigers, after a loss at Harvard Friday, were looking for the bounce back.

Dartmouth had a chance for the win the final seconds, but the potential winning shot rolled out, allowing the Tigers to have their own good bus ride back after a 65-62 win.

That win left the league standings at Yale at 8-2, Princeton and Harvard at 7-3, Brown at 6-4 and Penn at 5-5. Nobody has clinched an Ivy tournament spot yet, but Princeton looks to be in great shape with two wins over Penn and one already over Brown.

The Tigers will be at Brown and Yale this weekend as they play to get into the tournament and for a possible league title.

Anyway, that's an effective use of time for a long bus ride, no? While riding back from a huge win with one group of Tigers, TB was able to follow all the other Tigers who were competing in their own events.

Friday, February 21, 2020

Another Weekend, Another 31 Events

If you like the sound of TigerBlog's voice, this was a good week for you.

He did four podcasts - women's basketball, men's and women's lacrosse and even football - and tomorrow he'll be doing radio for men's lacrosse at Virginia.

He started out the women's lacrosse podcast with a story about one of the current Tiger captains, Katie Reilly, whom TB saw in the Jadwin Gym lobby the other afternoon. She waved at TB, who was talking to an older man, who instinctively waved back, even though he didn't know who it was who was waving at him.

It's human nature. Someone waves in your direction. You wave back. Someone says hi in your direction. You say hi back.

Even if they're waving or saying hi to the person behind you. It's okay. Don't feel bad next time it happens to you.

Anyway, TB then went up to Reilly to ask her if she knew who the other guy was, and she said no. Then TB explained who it was.

Pete Carril.

She said his name was familiar. This got TB to thinking, and then on the podcast talking to Chris Sailer (herself a Hall-of-Fame coach, like Carril) about how the current generation of athletes don't necessarily know who the people who came before them are.

And that's normal, TB supposes. It was just pretty fascinating in the moment.

Reilly and her teammates have an important early season game tomorrow against Virginia in a match-up of top 10 teams - Princeton at No. 9 and UVa at No. 8. Beyond that, it's also the lone home game for the women's lacrosse team from the start of the season last week and March 24, as seven of the first eight are away.

The women's game is part of just another typical weekend here in crossover season, one that will see Princeton teams compete in 31 different events between today and Sunday.

The Ivy League women's swimming and diving championships are among the marquee events, as Princeton is in second place, two points back of Harvard, after two days. Here's a good sign for the future of Princeton women's swimming - the four swimmers (Ellie Marquardt, Nicole Venema, Amelia Liu and Addison Smith) who set the school record in the 800 free relay are all freshmen.

This is also the final weekend of the regular season in women's hockey. The Tigers are home tonight at 6 (Brown) and tomorrow at 3 (Yale), and they know they'll be home next weekend in the first round of the ECAC playoffs.

They also know if they win that round, they'll be at Cornell for the league semifinals, unless Cornell loses a first round series.

What Princeton doesn't know is its seed, which would be two with two wins and could still be two without two wins but could be as low as four if things don't go well.

Princeton is looking to get back to the NCAA tournament for the second straight year. 

The court that is named for Pete Carril in Jadwin Gym will also be busy, this weekend and in fact for the next eight days, during which time five games will be played there by the women's basketball team..

The Tigers, back in the national rankings, host Harvard tonight and Dartmouth tomorrow (both at 6), and then Penn Tuesday (7), Brown next Friday (6) and Yale a week from tomorrow (5).

Should the Tigers win those five games, they'd be the Ivy League champion. Right now Princeton is two games up on Penn and three up on Yale and Harvard, while Columbia is one game back of Yale and Harvard for the fourth Ivy tournament spot.

On the men's side, it's a five-team race for both first place and for the four Ivy tournament spots. Right now, Princeton and Yale are both 6-2, and Brown, Penn and Harvard are all 5-3.

Princeton spends its weekend at Harvard and Dartmouth. Every game is huge.

If you're looking for sunny and near 60 for your February weekend, you can go to Charlottesville tomorrow to see Princeton-UVa men's lacrosse. The teams played an OT game on Sherrerd Field a year ago before Virginia won - and then went on to win the NCAA title.

Sorry to have to be brief here, but there's just too many events to go in depth on all of them. The full schedule is HERE.

Oh, one more - your Ivy League champion wrestling team is back in Jadwin Sunday at 6 against Rutgers in what is always a great match.

Ivy League champion wrestling team. That sounds pretty good.

Thursday, February 20, 2020

Guest TigerBlog: Jess Deutsch ’91

As you know, TigerBlog has a standing offer to anyone who has something they want to say (in an appropriate way). 

Very few actually take him up on this offer, but it is out there.


To the list of contributors that through the years has included Howard Levy, Jim Barlow, David Rosenfeld and Tad La Fountain, you can add Jess Deutsch, Class of 1991, who earned a varsity letter for women’s tennis and is now associate director for student-athlete services here at Princeton.

Jess, the floor is yours:

As Associate Director, Student-Athlete Services, part of the Team Around The Team for Princeton Athletics, I am grateful to have a behind the scenes, front row seat for what it takes to be A TIGER as a Princeton student-athlete. When I say “be A TIGER” I am referring to the values that we emphasize in the department:  being Accountable, Team-oriented, having Integrity, and a Growth-mindset, being Engaged, and Respectful. On a daily basis, I see the commitment and passion that coaches and student-athletes invest in the student-athlete experience here. They are attempting to integrate performance at the highest level on every front—in the classroom, on the playing field, in promising life stories yet to unfold. It’s impressive. It is inspiring. It is not always lights-out jumbotron kinds of exciting—but sometimes I think it is in the anonymous Monday to Thursday, out-of-season moments that Tigers are really made.

Last night was a great example of what happens when hardly anyone is looking. Namely, Director of Athletic Medicine Margot Putukian, Director of Performance, Jason Gallucci, Associate Athletic Director, Kelly Widener and I joined over sixty varsity student-athletes, our Student-Athlete Wellness Leaders (SAWLs) to be trained by Director of Counseling and Psychological Services, Calvin Chin, on Princeton Distress Awareness Response (PDAR). The session was organized by the SAWL Executive Leadership Team of Grace Baylis ’20, Ramzi Haddad ’20, Ben Bograd ’21, Lauren McGrath ’21 and Keller Maloney ’22.

PDAR is an interactive session on the signs and symptoms to watch out for in students and others who may be in distress, and to arm participants with the tools needed to effectively respond. It was created to connect students in mental health distress to support and resources; to train community members how to recognize the signs of distress and how to intervene, and to create a campus community that is visibly and actively engaged in talking about mental health and stopping suicide.

Dr. Chin provided context about mental health statistics at Princeton (a majority of Princeton students have felt very lonely in the last year; almost half have experienced depression but only a small fraction of those sought services; more than two thirds have experienced “extreme overwhelm.”) He walked the group through the continuum of stress to distress, the indicators (behavioral, academic, social, and athletic—and how these can be intertwined) that someone might be struggling, how to ask open-ended questions that are more likely to result in engagement, the listening skills that build trust, and how to directly ask what might be the most difficult question—if someone is struggling so much they are thinking of suicide. He reiterated what the research tells us—that asking the question isn’t going to place the idea in someone’s mind, but it is going to tell them that you care and are concerned. Dr. Chin reviewed the options available to you as a concerned teammate or friend—and those that we all need to know. CPS supports the psychological well-being of the Princeton University community, available at no cost to currently enrolled Princeton students and their eligible dependents. 
It was late after a long day that had included early lift, classes, practice, studying, and, probably more to follow. But the student-athletes that attended the training stayed with Dr. Chin. They participated actively (What does distress look like in a classroom setting? How about at practice?)  They asked serious questions, (How much do you push if someone says they don’t want to talk but you know they are going through something?) They simulated having conversations with each other as if one person was struggling and the other was trying to listen and provide support. The consensus was the hardest part is not giving advice when advice could come across as pressure, or judgement, or just not the kind of listening that would be most effective. “It takes practice,” Dr. Chin told them. This is a group that knows how to practice. How to fall down, but get back up. How to hit a bump in the road, and keep going. As an alum, and as an athletics administrator, It makes me hopeful to see their resilience, their empathy, and their care for each other. These qualities show up, because they are real, and they are what we need most in the world right now.

With PDAR training behind them, Princeton’s Student Athlete Wellness Leaders are a part of a campus-wide effort to be able to spot distress, have the tools, and be committed to responding proactively. So when you see them (and this is the only advice I’ll offer-- you should go watch them!) making layups, scoring goals, or breaking records-- because they do (did you know we just won our 500th Ivy League Championship???)  -- just know that winning (a lot!)  is only a part of what it means to be A TIGER.

Thanks to Dr. Chin, CPS, and the Student-Athlete Wellness leaders for making Princeton a better connected, more responsive campus, one sometimes maybe awkward, but definitely important conversation at a time.

GO TIGERS.

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

The Record-Setting Michael Sowers

TigerBlog thought it would be hard for Michael Sowers to top the assist he had to Phillip Robertson in the game against Monmouth Saturday.

Then he saw this play in Princeton's 20-11 win over Colgate last night:


Which of his assists is your favorite so far this season? You have a lot of choices.

Sowers has an extraordinary 18 assists in two games, to go along with seven goals for an even more extraordinary 25 points.

His game last night was one for the ages, without a doubt the single best individual game in Princeton men's lacrosse history. Sowers put up 14 points on three goals and 11 assists, and when the dust had settled, he had the Ivy League record for points in a game and the Princeton record for assists in a game.

In fact he could have gotten the NCAA assists record with one more, but he didn't play the final 9:23 of the game. He was also two away from the NCAA record for points in a game, and the way he was playing last night, there's little doubt he would have gotten both.

As it was, he settled for becoming the seventh player to have at least 14 points in a game and the second in the last 23 years, along with Albany's Miles Thompson in 2013.

He's also the fifth player in Division I history with at least 11 assists in a game, and the first to reach that number since 1992.

Sowers destroyed the Princeton record book in his first three seasons, with the three-highest single-season totals in program history, which added together made him the all-time leader in points in a career before his senior year even began.

This year, every point he scores puts more distance between him and everyone else who has ever played at Princeton. TB got a text yesterday asking if Sowers was the closest comparison to Bill Bradley in terms of dominating a team's record book, and the answer is a resounding "yes."

Bradley, 55 years after graduation, stands as the all-time leader in scoring in men's basketball by a wide margin. Come back in 2075 and see where Sowers stands in the record book; TB is pretty sure he'll still be No. 1 by a large margin.

So what's the most amazing thing about Sowers?

Is it his vision? The way he keeps his head up at all times? The way he makes everything so simple? Is it his explosive first step? Is it his change of direction?

It's all of those things.

He makes it so easy to be the official scorer at his games, since none of his assists is ever remotely debatable. He makes the pass, and his teammates finish the layup or catch and shoot the outside shot. Nobody ever has to do anything other than finish after catching the pass.

Against Colgate, Sowers had assists to seven different teammates. That's crazy.

Even crazier is what he did during the deciding 10-0 run in the third quarter into the fourth quarter. Princeton led 8-6 at the break, but Colgate scored off the second half face-off to make it a one-goal game.

Then Princeton scored the next 10. During that stretch, Sowers had a goal and seven assists.

Yes, that's crazier.

Sowers now has 280 career points, which ranks him 23rd all-time in NCAA history. He's 11th in NCAA history with 168 career assists.

His per game averages for his career in assists and points are better than any players in the last 38 years.

Next up for Princeton is defending NCAA champion Virginia in Charlottesville Saturday. It'll be a huge test for Sowers and the Tigers, who have played two very good games against UVa the last two years, including an OT loss a year ago.

TigerBlog wrote a feature story about Sowers in the fall in which he called him the best lacrosse player he's ever seen.

He stands by that. After what Sowers has done the first two games this year, why would he think any differently?

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Long Time No See

When TigerBlog first saw that Princeton was playing Colgate in men's lacrosse this season, he tried to remember back to the last time the teams had played.

At first he tried to remember if he'd ever been at a Princeton-Colgate game, and he was pretty sure he hadn't. As it turns out, he was right about that.

Princeton and Colgate meet tonight at 6 on Sherrerd Field, and it's not exactly a rivalry with a ton of history. And what history there is could be best described as "ancient."

In fact, it's pretty unlikely that anyone at tonight's game was at the last meeting, since it was 91 years ago.

The game tonight is just the second between the two. The other two meetings were in 1922 and 1929. So yeah, there's not much there.

Princeton first started playing men's lacrosse in 1881, but the sport was dropped in 1894 because of, and TB quotes a book on 19th century Princeton athletics directly: "due to lack of sufficient interest and the deterioration of the quality of the team."

What in the world must 19th century lacrosse have looked like, by the way?

Anyway, Princeton brought its team back in 1921 with three games against club teams and then a college schedule in 1922. Colgate first started playing the sport in 1921, and the teams met in Princeton in 1922, a game the Tigers won 11-3 (or 10-3 according to Colgate's record book).

Interestingly, both teams played a touring team from Oxford-Cambridge that year as well. 

The next meeting was in 1929. Princeton won that one 7-3.

Why didn't the teams ever play again? Who knows.

Colgate has been in the Patriot League for a long time. Princeton, though it has played a lot of Patriot League football and men's and women's basketball games, has not done in men's lacrosse. In fact, other than a handful of games against Lehigh and one last year against Navy, Princeton hasn't done much scheduling in the Patriot League.

Anyway, don't expect Princeton to have much momentum tonight off of its other two wins in the series. Or to have Colgate burning for revenge.

Both teams are in the very early stages of seasons that they hope will take them into the conference tournaments and then hopefully beyond. Colgate is 0-2 after opening with losses at North Carolina and Syracuse, a pair of teams in the top 10.

Princeton is 1-0 on the year after a 20-9 win over Monmouth Saturday in its opener. It was a win that didn't move Princeton into the Top 20 nationally, but TB doesn't care at all about that right now. Princeton will have every opportunity this year to show whether or not it belongs.

Princeton's schedule still includes three games against teams in this week's top eight and five against teams in the top 15. Of those five games, four will be in the five Princeton plays immediately after the one against Colgate, beginning Saturday at defending NCAA champion Virginia.

After that, it's a run of games at home against Johns Hopkins (No. 15), Rutgers (was ranked until it lost to Army West Point this week) and Penn (No. 8) and then at Yale (No. 3). It doesn't get much easier after that either, by the way, with the rest of the stacked Ivy League, including a regular-season ending game against No. 11 Cornell.

As TB said, if Princeton deserves to be ranked, it has every chance to show it.

Also having said that, TB is pretty sure there are not 20 teams in the country better than Princeton. The team is a good spot, though, with the spotlight way off of it.

For tonight, it's Colgate. The Raiders come to Princeton not having played in 10 days, so the they have had a chance to sort out some early-season issues. Expect this game to be very competitive.

And there. TB just gave you a whole Princeton men's lacrosse piece without every mentioning Michael Sowers.

Oh wait. He just did.

Well, as long as he brought him up, check out this video from the Monmouth game. The recipient of the pass is Phillip Robertson, who now has 60 career goals, 28 of them assisted by Sowers.

 

The job Robertson does in getting open, catching the ball and finishing is incredible enough, let alone the move from Sowers to get free, the vision to find Robertson and the courage to make the pass.

It looks really simple, but it isn't.

Anyway, Princeton-Colgate tonight.

Show your ticket stub from the last meeting between the teams and get in free.

Monday, February 17, 2020

The Weekend In Hoops

TigerBlog saw a story the other day that said that 181 million people had bought Valentine's Day gifts for their sweethearts.

Women, by the way, were twice as likely to make a Valentine's Day gift than men were. Add up all the spending, and it comes to $19 billion on gifts, and that's nothing compared to the $31 billion spent on going out for the holiday.

The most interesting part of the story that TB read was that even with all of that, nine percent of women adamantly do NOT want a Valentine's Day gift and would prefer to have their partner give them the same gift on a different day.

That number seemed a bit high.

Just short of 8,000 people spent their Valentine's Day evening watching Ivy League basketball Friday night. Does anything say "romantic" more than that?

There were 551 in New Haven to see the Princeton women take on Yale in a game that had a huge impact on the Ivy standings.

Princeton came into the game unbeaten in the league. Yale came into the game with just a single league loss.

This was one of those "the math is obvious" games.

There was more math too. Yale came in as the top-ranked scoring offense team in the league, at nearly 75 points per game. Princeton came in leading Division I scoring defense, at fewer than 48 per game.

So what happened?

Well, if your Valentine's Day dinner kept you from getting there for tip-off and you didn't arrive until seven minutes or so had elapsed, then you saw 1) a score of 12-0 Yale and 2) a home team that was dripping with confidence at that point.

TB was watching the game on ESPN+, and he wasn't particularly concerned that this was about to become a blowout. Even someone as confident as TB, though, couldn't have guessed the exact path the game would take.

Why didn't TB think this was going to be one of those nights for Princeton? Because when you defend like Princeton can, you'll never be out of a game.

And if TB had any doubts at all, they were erased on the possession when Yale held an 18-13 lead. Princeton swarmed the Bulldogs everywhere, and Yale was forced to take a difficult shot as the shot clock was about to expire.

Princeton took its first lead at 20-19 with a little more than two minutes left in the half. It was 29-21 Tigers at the break, and the final would be 55-39 Princeton.

The win was big against a good team, and it gave Princeton a two-game lead in the loss column.

Princeton followed that up by taking down Brown 85-48 Saturday night in Providence. The sweep left Princeton at 19-1 overall and 7-0 in the Ivy League, followed by Penn at 5-2 and then every other team with at least three losses after the Quakers won at Yale Saturday as well.

Next weekend starts a run of five games in eight days for the women, all at home, against Harvard and Dartmouth Friday and Saturday, against Penn the following Tuesday and then another weekend against Brown and Yale.

As for the men, Friday night didn't go so well, as Yale defeated the Tigers 88-64 at Jadwin in a matchup of teams who were tied for first place in the league.

What did Princeton do 24 hours later? It did what good teams have to do - put that loss aside and bounce back in a big way.

Princeton defeated Brown 73-54 behind a career-high 21 from Ethan Wright, who was 8 for 9 on the night, 3 for 4 from three-point range.

The Tigers came out sizzling and built a 13-point lead, never letting Brown get into the game. This was a Brown team, by the way, that would have been tied for first place in the league with a win, a Brown team that defeated Penn Friday night.

So where do the Ivy standings sit right now?

Princeton and Yale are tied for first at 6-2. Brown, Penn and Harvard are all 5-3. This is a great race for the championship and for the Ivy League tournament spots, which go to the top four teams.

And that was the weekend in hoops for Princeton.

As former men's head coach John Thompson used to say, the goal at the end of the weekend is to be in first place. Both the men and the women have achieved that goal for another weekend. 


Friday, February 14, 2020

What Do You Want To Be When You Grow Up?

TigerBlog starts your Friday with something cute from Twitter yesterday:

 
Cute, right? TB wasn't kidding about that.

Did you read the letter? That's good stuff from Kennedi.

If you didn't read the letter, Kennedi is a third-grader in Kentucky who loves to play basketball. TigerBlog can't remember what he wanted to be when he was in third grade. In fact, if he had to guess, he probably didn't have any specific career in mind at that age.

Or, for that matter, any age, that he can remember. He always liked sports, and he very clearly remembers his mother's go-to line of "you can't make a living in sports."

At one point he considered being a lawyer, and he went to Penn thinking he'd end up going that route. Then he got detoured as a junior when he started covering high school football, and, well, you know the rest.

What percentage of people know what they want to do at a very, very young age and go on to do that? 
 
TB has no way of knowing. He's trying to think of people he knows and if they knew exactly what they wanted to do when they were Kennedi's age who actually went on to do so? He does remember when a cousin of TigerBlog Jr. and Miss TigerBlog's used to say when she was 10 or so that she wanted to grow up, attend the Naval Academy, learn to fly and be a pilot. She has since gone on to attend the Naval Academy, learn to fly and become a pilot.

For the most part though, TB isn't sure how people end up doing the things they do. In his case, it was a combination of randomness (meeting someone in college whose brother was a local sportswriter) and aptitude (he's sort of wired for this he guesses). Maybe that's how it works for a lot of people?

Maybe Kennedi will be a teacher. And a college basketball player.

It's a big weekend for the Princeton version of her favorite sport, and for a lot of Princeton sports.

Starting with women's basketball, the Tigers are at Yale tonight at 6. The Tigers, ranked 25th in the national coaches' poll this week, are 5-0 in the league, followed by Yale at 5-1. The Bulldogs, who lost to Harvard last Friday, also own a win over North Carolina earlier this year.

The league reaches its halfway point this weekend, so there's obviously a long way to go. Still, there is a two-game drop from the top four to the next four in the league, which makes it seem like the four teams in the Ivy tournament are starting to become clear.

As far as the league race goes, the game tonight in New Haven is huge. Should Princeton win, it would have no losses and every other team would have at least two (Penn and Harvard have two now). Should Yale win, the Bulldogs would be 6-1, compared to Princeton's 5-1.

This game matches the highest scoring team in the league (Yale averages 73.6 points per game) and No. 1 scoring defense team in the league - and in all of Division I (Princeton allows 48.1 per game).

The men are home against Yale tonight and Brown tomorrow night, with tipoff tonight at 7 and tomorrow at 6.

Unlike the women, there are five men's teams fairly closely bunched, with Princeton and Yale at the top at 5-1, with Penn and Brown next at 4-2 and Harvard at 3-3.

By the way, Princeton's three leading scorers are Jaelin Llewellyn (14.3), Richmond Aririguzoh (13.4) and Ryan Schweiger (12.6). The last time Princeton had its third-leading scorer average at least 12.6 per game was in 2011, when the three leaders were Kareem Maddox (13.8), Ian Hummer (also 13.8) and Dan Mavraides (12.7). That team won the Ivy League title and lost by two to Kentucky in the NCAA tournament.

If TB is counting correctly, then 17 Princeton teams will compete in 29 events this weekend.

The wrestling team is home against Penn tomorrow at noon in a match that would either give Princeton the outright Ivy League title with a win or a co-championship with Cornell with a Penn win.

The women's tennis team, ranked ninth in the country (that's the Tigers' highest ranking ever), is home for matches tomorrow against Towson and FDU, and there is home men's hockey against St. Lawrence and Clarkson. The whole schedule is HERE.

Oh, and it's also opening weekend for lacrosse season. The men are home against Monmouth tomorrow at 1, and the women are at Temple at the same time.

Lacrosse season already. TB almost forgot all about that.

Well, no, not really.

Thursday, February 13, 2020

Guest TigerBlog - Craig Sachson On Chris Ayres

TigerBlog remembers a head coaches' meeting a long time ago when Chris Ayres talked about the day his team would be the one that ended Cornell's run as Ivy League wrestling champion.

He was either so sure that the day would come eventually or he was fooling himself into thinking it. Either way, it seemed so far in the future that day at that meeting.

The day finally arrived Sunday, when Ayres led his Tigers to a 19-13 win over Cornell at a rowdy Jadwin Gym. It was the Ivy title that resulted in the #Princeton500, and it was also the Ivy title that no coach ever deserved more.

The celebration was extraordinary. For TB, who observed it from the side, the highlight was the hug between Ayres and Craig Sachson, who was the Office of Athletics Communications wrestling contact for the first 13 of Ayres' Princeton seasons, before Craig left a year ago.

As TB said earlier this week, Craig would be offering his thoughts on his time with Ayres and what Sunday meant in that context. Today the floor belongs to Craig:



Early in Chris Ayres era, Princeton had a consistent presence in the lineup who had the versatility to wrestle at almost any weight (and sometimes at multiple weights in the same match!). Somehow he managed to extend his stay in Orange and Black beyond the traditional four years.

His name? Johnny Forfeit.

I worked with Chris for the first 13 years of his Princeton tenure, which likely aged like dog years for somebody whose entire collegiate wrestling experience happened at Lehigh, a perennial national power. When I would ask him for his weekend probables during those first few years, good ol’ Johnny almost always made an appearance.

For whatever reason, that line always made me smile. It even made Chris laugh now and then, even if those fleeting moments of humor likely came between soul-searching questions about the decision to take on the greatest challenge in collegiate wrestling. I can’t imagine he didn’t have moments of regret, but they seemed to pass quickly. Day after day, following loss after loss, Chris walked down to the bowels of Jadwin with the same positive spirit and tried to get one step closer to the impossible dream.

There have already been other goals — all of which also seemed laughable about a decade ago — that Ayres and this program have checked off the list. All-Americans? Several. EIWA champions? A bunch (even one at Jadwin, which Ayres fought to have host the championships twice). Midlands champions? Done. Top-3 EIWA finishes? Twice. Top-15 NCAA finishes? Last year? Top-10 or Top-5? Stay tuned.

But on this campus, winning an Ivy League championship matters. Princeton teams had won 499 of them before the Tigers took the mat against a Cornell team that had outscored them 248-3 in the first five dual matches of the Ayres era (Johnny Forfeit struggled to an 0-7 record in those matches). It’s been one of the burning goals for Ayres. He wanted wrestling to win the Princeton title party, and he wanted to be the team that ended Cornell’s long reign.

That reign may have ended Sunday in thrilling fashion, but it was every small step that Ayres (and the best coaching staff in the country, at least in my opinion) took from 2006 through the past weekend that made it all possible. It was his relentless spirit, his unwillingness to lower his standards, and his refusal to let the losing break him that steered (and then burned) the ship. I can remember two times in 13 years when I thought he looked or sounded close enough to broken that I shared some added encouragement, but both times he bounced back quickly and decisively.

And then he did what he’s always done. He took the next step. He took it with determination to turn this around, with pride in where the program had come, and with an absolute belief that a day like Sunday would, eventually, arrive.

He didn’t do it alone, and he’ll be the first to make that message clear. His guys won the match. His guys won matches before the match — some weeks before, some months before, some years before — that helped set the culture for an eventual championship program. His staff recruited relentlessly, worked tirelessly, and laughed endlessly in a coaching office with more chemistry than any I have experienced in college athletics.

Every bit of it mattered, but every bit of it started with Chris Ayres.

Johnny Forfeit couldn’t make it to Jadwin Sunday. His time, mercifully, has ended.

Johnny Championship? He arrived in Orange and Black glory, in the middle of a celebration that might still be ongoing for alumni, family and supporters of the program.

For Chris, that celebration was Sunday. He’s taken more steps since then.

His journey continues, and we are lucky to follow his lead.

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

Remembering Lorin, Again

The euphoria of Princeton's 500th all-time Ivy League championship seemed to touch everyone connected with the athletic department.

There were celebrations, pictures and social media posts as far as the eye could see around here the last few days. The milestone deserved to be celebrated, and it certainly has been.

It was a time for smiles from anyone and everyone Princeton.

Smiles.

When TigerBlog thinks about Lorin Maurer, still all these years later the first thing he thinks about is her smile.

Had Lorin, who worked as the coordinator of Princeton's Athletic Friends Groups, been in Jadwin the last few days, she most certainly would have been smiling. She always was, it seemed.

The last time TigerBlog ever saw her, it was in Jadwin Gym, 11 years ago today. And the last thing she ever did before she disappeared past TB's door for what neither of them could have fathomed was the last time was smile.

TB can still see it.

And he can still feel the shock, the numbness, the disbelief, the sadness - all combined into one horrific realization - that he felt when the woke up to the news that his colleague and friend had been killed in a plane crash on her way to Buffalo.

It seemed so impossible at the time. As he thinks back to it, he remembers every detail.

It started with a meeting in Jadwin on Feb. 12, 2009. TB remembers that Lorin was late and had to catch her plane, as she was headed to a wedding in Buffalo with her boyfriend. She was barely 30 years old, in love, happy and very, very, very full of life.

TB remembers being surprised to see her walk down the hall past his open door after the meeting, because he knew she was running late. TB glanced up at her from his computer and waved, and she poked her head in the door and didn't say a word. She just smile and kept going.

TB gave it no more thought. He went home, went to bed eventually and woke up the next morning to an email from then-Director of Athletics Gary Walters, who broke the news to the department.

It was too hard to believe that it might be true. TB turned on his TV and just stared at the coverage of the plane crash, which took 51 lives - the 50 people on the plane and one on the ground.

He's not sure how long he stared at the TV, completely unable to process the news. It seemed like forever, though he eventually made it into Jadwin, where he found a building filled with people who were in the same emotional state that he was.

There was also a men's basketball game to be played here that night. TB remembers the news media that came to talk to people about Lorin, and he remembers how public address announcer Bill Bromberg broke down while reading the moment of silence in Lorin's memory.

Now it's 11 years later.

There is a dwindling group of people who still work here who knew Lorin, though a few who were very close to her still do, including Chris Brock, Jon Kurian, Kellie Staples and Kelly Widener, among others. They can tell you much more about their time with Lorin that TB can, but TB did know her well enough to know what kind of person she was.

Lorin Maurer was a kind person. She was helpful, and TB saw her repeatedly doing tasks, like setting up tables and cleaning up events, that weren't in her job description.

She was family oriented. She loved her friends. She had a strong sense of humor and laughed easily.

She was in a really good place in life, with her best times seemingly right in front of her.

And then she was gone, just like that.

Now it's 11 years later, and yet the images of her are still very vivid.

Lorin Maurer. And her smile.

TB has written about her each year since on the anniversary of her death. He does this because she deserves it. He does this because her spirit touched the people with whom she worked, and that spirit will never be forgotten by those who knew her.

For those who didn't know her, you missed out on someone special.







Tuesday, February 11, 2020

More #Princeton500

If you were in the Jadwin Gym lobby yesterday afternoon, you would have noticed the Tiger, the t-shirts, the athletes, the coaches and the general mood of festivity.

The occasion was the day-after celebration of the #Princeton500, the milestone of having reached 500 Ivy League championships in program history. There was a backdrop set up for pictures, and Princeton Athletics social media continued to be the place to be to see it all.

Of all the pictures that TB saw yesterday, the best was the one with sophomore wrestler Travis Stefanik, all smiles, with a t-shirt. And why wouldn't he be smiling? It was his win Sunday against Cornell that provided the deciding team points and gave Princeton that 500th win.

TB is pretty sure that's Stefanik.

TigerBlog wrote yesterday that Chris Ayres had built the Princeton wrestling program from the ground up.

His dear friend and former 10-time Heptagonal track champion John Mack gave him the line he should have used. Ayres, Mack said, built his team from the basement up.

That's much better. The basement to which Mack refers is the Jadwin Gym basement, the one that has the wrestling room, which shares a wall with the Office of Athletic Communications. It was in that room into which Ayres walked in before the 2006-07 season.

Back then, Cornell was in the early stages of what would grow to be a 17-year run as Ivy League champion. Also at the time, Princeton Wrestling was in need of a rebirth, and Ayres had the drive to make that happen.

There have been amazing rebuilding jobs at Princeton before. What Ayres has done is up there with anything anyone here has ever done.

After two years, he was 0-35. He lost his first 15 Ivy League matches, which ran the program's league run to 33 straight. Then things started to change.

And Sunday, he got his Tigers to the top, with a lot of help from his staff of Sean Gray, Joe Dubuque and Nate Jackson. It was Sunday at Jadwin where Princeton defeated Cornell 19-13, ending that long Cornell Ivy title run, as well as the Big Red's long Ivy winning streak (92 straight).

It was way up there with anything TB has ever seen at Princeton. It would have stood on its own merit, but it become even more dramatic when you factored in that it was the 500th title.

TB also got this from John Mack yesterday about the video of Stefanik's dramatic win in the final 10 seconds that gave Princeton those clinching points: "I have never wrestled a day in my life and I haven't worn a Princeton uniform in 20 years. But scenes like that still make me emotional."

There is so much that could be said about the wrestling team, and TB is going to let his former colleague and also dear friend Craig Sachson tell you about it later in the week. Craig has asked to share his thoughts about his time with Ayres and the wrestling program, and the floor will be his to do so.

In the meantime, TB offers another round of congratulations to the entire wrestling program.

The wrestling title and the 500th win weren't the only big stories this weekend.

There was also a matter of the women's tennis team, which improved to 5-1 by winning two of three matches at the ITA National Indoor Championships in Chicago this weekend. Princeton, ranked 17th in the country, lost to No. 7 North Carolina State before bouncing back to take out Arizona State and then sixth-ranked Pepperdine.

Princeton reached the final rounds in Chicago after beating two other Top 20 teams - Washington and USC - earlier.

The highlight of the weekend came at No. 1 singles in the match against Pepperdine, where Princeton's Brianna Shvets defeated Ashley Lahey, who happens to be the No. 1-ranked player in the country.

That's pretty impressive stuff as well.

There was more, including a sweep by the women's hockey team and another by the women's basketball team. That women's sweep included the 400th career win for head coach Carla Berube, who won 383 of those games in 17 years at Tufts.

Mostly, though, this weekend was about the 500th and the celebration that followed. As TB said, all of Princeton's social media was buzzing over it, as it should have been.

And now it's time to move ahead. There are other championships to chase, including for the wrestling team, which still needs to beat Penn this weekend to win an outright title, not to mention seven competitive Ivy rivals who are looking for their own celebrations.

No matter what, though, the wrestling story will always be a great one.

And Craig will be able to tell it best.

Monday, February 10, 2020

The Princeton 500

Something really, really special happened in Jadwin Gym yesterday afternoon.

You know. Up there with anything TigerBlog has seen in all the time he's worked at Princeton.

It was the wrestling match against Cornell. The background is pretty much all you need:

* Cornell had won the Ivy title 17 straight times and had won 92 straight Ivy matches
* If Cornell won, it would make that 18 straight
* If Princeton won, it would earn at least a share of the title
* Chris Ayres and his staff have built Princeton wrestling up from basically the ground floor
* Princeton had won 499 all-time Ivy League championships prior to yesterday

That's a lot, right?

Add in a huge Jadwin crowd that essentially filled the entire lower bowl, and you get the picture.

Trailing 10-4, Princeton then won five straight matches, clinching it when Travis Stefanik went from down 4-3 with a minute to go to up 6-4 with a takedown with 10 seconds left and then finally 10-4 at the end with back points.

It was Stefanik's dramatic match that sealed it for the Tigers, and it set off a huge roar in Jadwin when the dream became reality. The final was 19-15 Princeton, and the wrestling team had itself some history.

Actually, a lot of it.

TigerBlog will have more on the wrestling team tomorrow. Today, though, belongs to every athlete in Princeton history who ever has won an Ivy League championship.

And how many of them would there be? How about more than 8,000.

And how many Ivy League championship rings does it all add up to now? How about 14,000.

Those are extraordinary numbers.

Princeton becomes the first Ivy League school to reach 500 league titles. Harvard is in second place, with 428.

No other school is even more than halfway to 500.

Princeton's women alone have won 214 championships. Half the league hasn't won more than that between their men and women combined.

It's obviously something worthy of a major celebration.

The first Ivy League championship was won in the 1956-57 academic year, the first of official Ivy League competition. That first title belonged to the men's squash team.

If you want to see much more about the 500th, click HERE.

Here's some basic information:

The first year of official Ivy League competition was 1956-57, a year in which Yale won seven league titles to Princeton's four. After 10 years, Princeton had 32 Ivy titles, behind both Harvard (46) and Yale (35).
Princeton finally caught Yale in the 1970-71 academic year. As for Harvard, that would take longer.
In fact, at one point, Harvard had a 43-title lead on Princeton. It actually wasn't until the 1990s that Princeton actually took the lead.
In the last 27 years, Princeton has a 292-196 lead over the Crimson. That's how Princeton has built this huge lead.

Princeton has been in double figures in Ivy League championships 26 times, including 10 of the last 11. Only Harvard, who has done so 10 times, has also done it.

Each of the 33 Princeton teams who compete for Ivy titles has won at least two. There are 24 teams who have won at least 10 and nine who have won at least 20.

The overall leader is men's swimming and diving at 30. The field hockey team leads the women with 26.

TB has been here for more than half of those 500 championships. He's said the same thing every year - winning is not something you can ever take for granted, and nobody at Princeton ever does.

Still, to have that level of consistency speaks to a lot of things. It talks about having a clear vision, something that both Directors of Athletics TB has worked for - Gary Walters and now Mollie Marcoux Samaan - have articulated and then made sure that the entire department embraced.

Princeton has been represented all of these years by incredible coaches, and those coaches have gone out and recruited some of the most amazing people TB has ever met in the athletes who have competed here.

The result of their own experience is that they have gone on to become extraordinarily loyal alums who are invested in making sure the current generation of athletes has the best possible experience they can have as well. And the people who work in the Department of Athletics? They are a highly committed group who takes great pride in how their contributions make an impact.

And so this achievement belongs to everyone at Princeton.

And, again, it's never something to take for granted. Getting to 500 has been remarkable, but nobody is satisfied.

Still, it's definitely something to celebrate.




Friday, February 7, 2020

No Time For Small Talk

Hey, how are you today?

TigerBlog is fine. And that's it for the small talk today.

It's too big a weekend for any of that right now.

There will definitely be Ivy League championships awarded this weekend in men's and women's fencing, as the Ivy League round robins will be held at Harvard. This weekend will also have a huge impact on the Ivy League wrestling race, and there could be a championship won by Sunday night.

There are also big games in basketball and hockey for men and women, as well as swimming, tennis, squash and track and field. If you like there are also lacrosse scrimmages, for the men tomorrow and the women Sunday.

HERE is the complete weekend schedule.

TB will start with fencing.

There are five nationally ranked men's Ivy teams and five nationally ranked women's Ivy teams, and each team on both sides will fence against all of the other Ivy teams in two days at Harvard.

On the men's side, the No. 1 team in the country is Columbia, followed by No. 2 Harvard. Princeton comes into the event ranked sixth.

To borrow from the preview, Princeton's men have won four Ivy titles in the last 10 years, in 2010, 2012, 2016 and 2017. The women have won seven times in the last 10 years, including annually from 2010-14 as well as 2016 and 2017.

You can read the entire preview, which includes match times and all necessary links, HERE.

If you don't know anything else about the women's rankings, know that Princeton is ranked No. 1 in the country and Columbia is ranked No. 2 in the country and the two are separated in the most recent poll by one point.

And at the Ivy fencing championships, anything can happen. Often there are three-way ties for the championship, and in some years three-way ties on both sides.

Now about that wrestling weekend.

This is the background: Cornell has won the last 17 Ivy League wrestling champoinships.

These are current national rankings: Princeton is No. 16, Cornell is No. 17.

The two meet Sunday at Jadwin Gym at 1. This is after Princeton hosts Columbia at 4 in Dillon Gym in a match that can be seen on ESPNU. As for Cornell, the Big Red are at Penn Saturday.

The current Ivy League standings have Cornell at 3-0 and Princeton and Penn both at 2-0. There are six Ivy schools who have wrestling teams, so each school has five regular season league matches. That means that Cornell will be done by the end of the weekend.

A Big Red sweep, and that adds up to 18 straight.

On the other hand, two wins by Princeton and Penn (home against Columbia Sunday) would set up a winner-take-all showdown Saturday in Princeton for the league title.

There can also be co-championships and even a three-way championship, depending on the results this weekend. This is obviously a huge weekend, but when you throw in the chance for Princeton and/or Penn to end the long Big Red run, it's even bigger.

The men's hockey team is at Brown tonight and Yale tomorrow night. The women are home with RPI tonight and Union tomorrow night.

The women currently sit second in the ECAC standings with 25 points, four back of Cornell for first place and five up on Yale for fifth place. Why is fifth place a big deal?

Because the top four teams in the standings get home ice in the first round of the league tournament. There are only three weekends left in the regular season, by the way, on the women's side.

As for basketball, Princeton is unbeaten in both the men's and women's league standings as they prepare for Cornell tonight and Columbia tomorrow night. The women are home and the men are away, and if you listened to this week's "Conversations With Carla" podcast, then you know that this is the first time in 2020 the women are playing in Jadwin Gym.

In fact, the last home game prior to tonight was Dec. 29 against New Hampshire.

Princeton's women are 3-0 in the league, unbeaten along with 4-0 Yale. Cornell and Columbia are both 2-2.

For the men, Princeton and Yale are both 4-0, and Cornell and Columbia are both 1-3. Harvard, Penn and Brown are all 2-2.

Princeton plays Yale a week from today in both, with the men home and the women away.

The league races are going to start to sort themselves out in the next few weekends, but there are still five full weekends to go before the league tournament starts.

As you know, things are much more immediate in fencing and wrestling.


Thursday, February 6, 2020

Is It Fall Yet?

If you want to upload a schedule onto goprincetontigers.com, there's a form on the content management system that you need to follow.

As you enter each game, it appears on the schedule page on the website, unless you click a button on the back end that keeps the schedule hidden. TigerBlog prefers to enter a game and have it be live, and he's waiting for the time that someone emails him to say that they were on the webpage, clicked on the schedule and can't understand why Princeton is only playing three games the coming year.

TB entered the 2020 football schedule yesterday. If you went to the schedule on the website around 3 or so, you might have noticed that the schedule only listed one game, or two, or however many were there when you checked.

Not to worry. Princeton will be playing the full 10 games in 2020.

The football schedule was formally announced this week, and season tickets for the five home games are now on sale. You can see the first HERE and buy the second HERE.

It's a really intriguing and interesting schedule, with five home games and non-league road trips to different places than Princeton fans are used to heading.

The season starts on Sept. 19 at Virginia Military Institute, which is in Lexington, Va. The Keydets went 5-7 last year, including 4-4 in the very competitive Southern Conference.

Beyond that, there is the gameday experience at Foster Stadium, which the VMI website describes this way:
Very few football experiences in the country can rival that of a fall Saturday at Alumni Memorial Field at Foster Stadium, the home of Keydets. It is a day filled with the pageantry and tradition of the nation's oldest state military school. The VMI Corps of Cadets marches from barracks onto the field as The Regimental Band plays “Shenandoah”. The Corps welcomes the team onto the field, as "Little John," a ceremonial cannon, joins the cheers with a thundering boom. The Rats come out of the stands with every Keydet score, and do a pushup for every point on the VMI side of the scoreboard. The familiar strain of "The Spirit" plays to stir the hearts of the Keydet faithful. 
How much fun does that sound like?

And for Princeton, it's one of two trips to military institutions. The other is an Oct. 10 trip to Army West Point and venerable Michie Stadium.

TB has been to Army to see Princeton play basketball (and to cover Rider basketball there once a long time ago as well). He's never seen a football game there.

Don't know much about Michie Stadium? Well, check out the main photo HERE.

That's quite a picture, no?

And that's what Princeton will be walking into come October. Do you want to guess who the team who plays at Michie directly before Princeton is?

Army plays at Miami, the one in Ohio, the Saturday before Princeton is there. The week before that, on Sept. 26, who is at Michie?

Oklahoma. Yes, that Oklahoma.

For that matter, VMI will come into the game in September one week after playing at Virginia.

As for the other non-league game, it's a Week 2 home game (the week after VMI) against Bucknell.

There are four home Ivy games, against Brown, Cornell, Dartmouth and Penn. Remember - the game at Yankee Stadium last year was supposed to be a Dartmouth home game, so Princeton will be home with the Big Green this year.

The Ivy road trips are to Columbia, Harvard and Yale.

How good will Princeton be?

The Tigers have nine All-Ivy selections returning, including the Bushnell Cup finalist Jeremiah Tyler and fellow first-team pick Delan Stallworth on defense and leading rusher and Ivy rushing touchdown leader Collin Eaddy on offense, not to mention a ton of other experience basically everywhere on the field. 

There are of course losses to graduation, including first-team All-Ivy League center Alex Deters and pro-prospect quarterback Kevin Davidson.

Princeton is 18-2 in the last two years. Its 18 wins are the most by the program in two years since 1950-51, which says something about the level the Tigers have been playing at of late.

And that's a quick look ahead to the fall of 2020.

Tomorrow TB will get back to the winter and the weekend to come, which includes some huge events with Ivy titles on the line.