A little more than a year ago, TigerBlog asked the question of which Princeton athletes have had the best post-Princeton careers.
He came up with basketball player Bill Bradley on the men's side and rower Caroline Lind on the women's side.
He's pretty sure, by the way, that he could simply have copied and pasted what he said a year ago and left it that. And maybe he should, because he's in a bit of a hurry this morning.
He'll get back to that shortly.
First, there's the original thesis. Who is the most successful post-Princeton athlete?
Princeton has had professional athletes, Olympic medalists and world champions across many sports. To make a determination on who was the most successful after leaving Princeton requires treating the pinnacle of each sport as equal; each athlete is judged solely on the post-Princeton success in his or her sport, rather than weighting it for, say, the NBA or Major League Baseball or the Olympics.
That got TigerBlog to wondering if perhaps Ryan Boyle and not Bill Bradley might be the most successful male.
Boyle is the all-time leader in assists (by a lot - he has 271; Casey Powell is second with 222) and second-leading scorer in Major League Lacrosse history. Boyle has won three MLL championships and won two World Championships with team USA.
There's a case that can be made for him.
Then there's Caroline Lind. A year ago, Lind was already TB's choice - and that's before she added another world championship last weekend in Amsterdam. Lind is the only Princeton rower ever to win two Olympic gold medals, and the world championship she won this weekend was her sixth.
She is also currently ranked among the top 10 rowers in the world.
TigerBlog would get more into this, and get into the story about Kate Bertko, a 2006 Princeton grad like Lind, who went from emergency abdominal surgery in July to winning a bronze medal eight weeks later.
Check out the story about her on row2K, paying particular attention to the scar in the photo, to get a better sense of what she went through.
As TB said, though, he's in a bit of hurry this morning.
Why?
Well, tomorrow might be opening day for Princeton Athletics 2014-15, but today is sort of the kickoff.
Today is Princeton's first department-wide meeting of the academic year. It's something that TB has attended for a long time, and yet today will be radically different.
Today, for the first time, Mollie Marcoux will be the one leading the meeting. It's her first department-wide meeting since becoming Ford Family Director of Athletics.
It's a big occasion. Marcoux is starting down the path of putting her stamp on the athletic department, setting its agendas, establishing her priorities. It's not something that happens overnight, but the first staff meeting is a big milestone in terms of getting her message out.
The Department of Athletics isn't huge in numbers, but it is spread out across the campus, with offices in Jadwin, Dillon, Baker, the boat house, the tennis center - and others who aren't technically part of the athletic department who work closely with athletics. It's not often that they all get together, so the meetings always have a social component to them.
Today's goes a little beyond the usual "hey, how are you." After the meeting there will be the annual staff photo.
It's amazing to look back at the photos year-by-year to see the turnover, which is always a little more than TB thinks.
It's a cohesive group, though. The staff picture will feature all of the members of the department, in orange and black Nike gear. It's a group that works hard and covers for each other as necessary. It's one that roots hard for each other and takes pride in each other's successes. It's a group that has largely checked its ego at the door.
And today, it's a group that will gather to hear from its new leader. And then get its picture taken. And then have lunch together.
So you'll forgive TB for cutting it short today, but he's in a little hurry.
Gotta run. He'll be back tomorrow.
For opening day.
Showing posts with label women's open rowing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women's open rowing. Show all posts
Thursday, September 4, 2014
Monday, June 2, 2014
Reunions And Rowing
TigerBlog pulled up to the light at the intersection of Route 1 and Washington Road yesterday afternoon, or at least tried to pull up to the light.
Actually, it's not Washington Road on that side of Route 1, TB thinks. It's just Route 571.
Whatever it's called, TB was heading towards Route 1 from West Windsor on a Sunday afternoon, except the traffic was backed up like it was a Monday morning or something. That light can be menacing anyway, because it seems like it stays green for the traffic on Route 1 for far longer than it does for the traffic on Washington Road/571.
Years ago, there was a light at Alexander Road also, as well as by where the MarketFair mall is. When those lights were eliminated, it made the ride up Route 1 from 95 to Princeton much better. Of course, it all grinds to a halt as you head north of Princeton, and TB read for years story after story about how a bypass was going to be built from Trenton and New Brunswick to ease the traffic.
Anyway, there he was, yesterday afternoon, trying to get onto Route 1, only to find that there was a long line of others who had the same thought he had.
If you're driving from West Windsor to Princeton, you can make that right turn about a half-mile before reaching Route 1 and then make the left on Fisher Place, which will take you to a light at Route 1. Usually, that way helps you avoid the wait at the very intersection to which TB was headed.
On a Sunday, though, TB figured there was no need to do that. Only it was taking all day to get near the light.
He thought of making a U-turn, which some people did, but that's not a situation he wanted to be in, investing time in waiting in traffic and then making the bold U-turn way too late, so that it doesn't save any time anyway. He's had that happen before, and he doesn't like it.
So he toughed it out. And toughed it out and toughed it out. In all, it took about 15-20 minutes to go less than a mile.
Okay, so it wasn't the worst traffic of all time, though it did seem sort of random to him. Why on a Sunday afternoon would so many people be trying to get to Route 1?
Maybe it was some of the residual traffic from Reunions, he thought, though wouldn't it be leaving Princeton, rather than heading to Princeton?
Each year it seems, Reunions is plagued by hot and humid weather that leads to a massive thunderstorm, often in conjunction with the fireworks. This year? There was nothing close to that.
The first day of Reunions always corresponds to the night of the Princeton Varsity Club senior awards banquet. In most years, it is oppressively hot at the banquet, and that sets the tone for Reunions.
For all of the PVC banquets, TB thinks last year's was the hottest and most humid. He couldn't even think about putting on his suit jacket, and it was just a sweatbox under the tent.
This year it was on the fringes of being chilly during the banquet. There was no humidity, and it was crystal clear. And that carried over to a near-perfect weekend of weather at Reunions.
TB tries to explain Reunions to people who have no connection to Princeton, especially the people he went to Penn with, and they just cannot grasp the concept. To Princeton people, TB would give the message that what you have here is pretty unique.
Penn has loyal alums. TigerBlog had a great experience there as a student, as did basically everyone else he knows who went there. What Penn doesn't do is breed the kind of loyalty to the alma mater that Princeton does. TB suspects perhaps no other college does.
The show that is Reunions is unmatched on Penn's campus, and probably any other. It's just different at Princeton. Take it from TigerBlog, who has been on Princeton's campus more than he's been on Penn's in his lifetime but who can never be a Princetonian.
No, that's reserved for those who actually went to Princeton and graduated from Princeton. It's a distinction that they earned and early on learned to celebrate, annually in many cases, with goofy orange and black outfits, regimented traditions - and a camaraderie that TB wishes his own alma mater had.
Anyway, Reunions ended Saturday night and this was yesterday late afternoon, so he doubted the traffic was tied to any of that.
It dawned on him later that it was possible that some of the traffic was coming from Mercer Lake, where the IRA rowing national championships were held.
As TB is writing, he can't help but notice that the top four stories on goprincetontigers.com are all about rowing. This weekend was clearly a huge one for the sport, with the national championships for men (and women's lightweights) at Mercer Lake and the NCAA women's open championships in Indianapolis.
Princeton did well across the board.
Perhaps the highlight was the men's heavyweights, who finished fourth for the best finish by the program since 2006. The women's lightweights and men's lightweights both finished fifth, and the women's open finished sixth in the overall points standings at the NCAA event.
TigerBlog has been to one IRA national championship regatta, in 1998, when he was the rowing contact. It was an impressive show.
TB knows enough about rowing to know that it's a very complex sport, one that is demanding physically and mentally. The national championships can be very grueling, with multiple 2,000-meter races in a short weekend.
To have all four finish in the top six is pretty impressive. You know what other schools finished in the top six in all four? How about nobody.
With the end of rowing season, the 2013-14 Princeton athletic year comes down to the five track and field athletes who advanced to the NCAA championships in Oregon next week.
For now, though, Reunions have ended, and today is Class Day, followed by graduation tomorrow.
The weather looks perfect for both of those events as well. Traffic in Princeton should be bad, but it's for a good cause.
Actually, it's not Washington Road on that side of Route 1, TB thinks. It's just Route 571.
Whatever it's called, TB was heading towards Route 1 from West Windsor on a Sunday afternoon, except the traffic was backed up like it was a Monday morning or something. That light can be menacing anyway, because it seems like it stays green for the traffic on Route 1 for far longer than it does for the traffic on Washington Road/571.
Years ago, there was a light at Alexander Road also, as well as by where the MarketFair mall is. When those lights were eliminated, it made the ride up Route 1 from 95 to Princeton much better. Of course, it all grinds to a halt as you head north of Princeton, and TB read for years story after story about how a bypass was going to be built from Trenton and New Brunswick to ease the traffic.
Anyway, there he was, yesterday afternoon, trying to get onto Route 1, only to find that there was a long line of others who had the same thought he had.
If you're driving from West Windsor to Princeton, you can make that right turn about a half-mile before reaching Route 1 and then make the left on Fisher Place, which will take you to a light at Route 1. Usually, that way helps you avoid the wait at the very intersection to which TB was headed.
On a Sunday, though, TB figured there was no need to do that. Only it was taking all day to get near the light.
He thought of making a U-turn, which some people did, but that's not a situation he wanted to be in, investing time in waiting in traffic and then making the bold U-turn way too late, so that it doesn't save any time anyway. He's had that happen before, and he doesn't like it.
So he toughed it out. And toughed it out and toughed it out. In all, it took about 15-20 minutes to go less than a mile.
Okay, so it wasn't the worst traffic of all time, though it did seem sort of random to him. Why on a Sunday afternoon would so many people be trying to get to Route 1?
Maybe it was some of the residual traffic from Reunions, he thought, though wouldn't it be leaving Princeton, rather than heading to Princeton?
Each year it seems, Reunions is plagued by hot and humid weather that leads to a massive thunderstorm, often in conjunction with the fireworks. This year? There was nothing close to that.
The first day of Reunions always corresponds to the night of the Princeton Varsity Club senior awards banquet. In most years, it is oppressively hot at the banquet, and that sets the tone for Reunions.
For all of the PVC banquets, TB thinks last year's was the hottest and most humid. He couldn't even think about putting on his suit jacket, and it was just a sweatbox under the tent.
This year it was on the fringes of being chilly during the banquet. There was no humidity, and it was crystal clear. And that carried over to a near-perfect weekend of weather at Reunions.
TB tries to explain Reunions to people who have no connection to Princeton, especially the people he went to Penn with, and they just cannot grasp the concept. To Princeton people, TB would give the message that what you have here is pretty unique.
Penn has loyal alums. TigerBlog had a great experience there as a student, as did basically everyone else he knows who went there. What Penn doesn't do is breed the kind of loyalty to the alma mater that Princeton does. TB suspects perhaps no other college does.
The show that is Reunions is unmatched on Penn's campus, and probably any other. It's just different at Princeton. Take it from TigerBlog, who has been on Princeton's campus more than he's been on Penn's in his lifetime but who can never be a Princetonian.
No, that's reserved for those who actually went to Princeton and graduated from Princeton. It's a distinction that they earned and early on learned to celebrate, annually in many cases, with goofy orange and black outfits, regimented traditions - and a camaraderie that TB wishes his own alma mater had.
Anyway, Reunions ended Saturday night and this was yesterday late afternoon, so he doubted the traffic was tied to any of that.
It dawned on him later that it was possible that some of the traffic was coming from Mercer Lake, where the IRA rowing national championships were held.
As TB is writing, he can't help but notice that the top four stories on goprincetontigers.com are all about rowing. This weekend was clearly a huge one for the sport, with the national championships for men (and women's lightweights) at Mercer Lake and the NCAA women's open championships in Indianapolis.
Princeton did well across the board.
Perhaps the highlight was the men's heavyweights, who finished fourth for the best finish by the program since 2006. The women's lightweights and men's lightweights both finished fifth, and the women's open finished sixth in the overall points standings at the NCAA event.
TigerBlog has been to one IRA national championship regatta, in 1998, when he was the rowing contact. It was an impressive show.
TB knows enough about rowing to know that it's a very complex sport, one that is demanding physically and mentally. The national championships can be very grueling, with multiple 2,000-meter races in a short weekend.
To have all four finish in the top six is pretty impressive. You know what other schools finished in the top six in all four? How about nobody.
With the end of rowing season, the 2013-14 Princeton athletic year comes down to the five track and field athletes who advanced to the NCAA championships in Oregon next week.
For now, though, Reunions have ended, and today is Class Day, followed by graduation tomorrow.
The weather looks perfect for both of those events as well. Traffic in Princeton should be bad, but it's for a good cause.
Monday, May 19, 2014
An Amazing Race
The season finale of "The Amazing Race" was on last night.
It's not a show TigerBlog watches a lot. He just happened to stumble on the show last night.
If he were to watch any reality show, though, he'd probably settle on that one. From what little he's seen of it through the years, it comes across as something fun, as opposed to dripping with the phoniness and narcissism of most reality shows.
"The Amazing Race" offers a pretty interesting concept.
The two-person teams go through a series of challenges and adventures, all while risking being eliminated for getting to that week's end destination last. Apparently the most recent season covered 23,000 miles, 22 cities and nine countries before ending in Las Vegas.
The winning team was a father and son combination who appeared to be nice enough, or at least worth rooting for along the way. TigerBlog was okay with having them win as opposed to the annoying team that came in third.
It was a man and woman, as opposed to the two women who finished second, and TB isn't sure what it was about the man and woman team that he didn't like. Maybe it was the sequins. He just knows he didn't like them.
The last scene was pretty good.
The season ended with a skydive from a helicopter to the Las Vegas Speedway, and it was filmed from above, with a great view of the lights of the city below. It made for a great piece of video.
There was the requisite commercial break before the viewers could see which team was ahead, and it turned out to be the father of the father/son team. After he landed in the infield, he had to make the short run over to the finish line, where he was informed that he and his son had won the big prize.
Then it was time for the season finale of "The Good Wife." TigerBlog had no interest in that. Alicia is so pretentious and condescending.
Anyway, the team that won "The Amazing Race" won a prize of $1 million. TigerBlog wondered what the runner-up team got, and he learned that they got nothing.
That's a pretty big drop-off from winning to coming in second. Think about it. The distance between first and second over those 23,000 miles was a few seconds, and yet one team got the $1 million and everyone else got nothing.
TigerBlog assumes that if he won the $1 million, he'd do something for the teams that didn't win. Get them a gift card or something. Maybe, oh, go as high as $100 each.
The gap between the winning team on "The Amazing Race" and the runner-up was only slightly greater than the gap between first and second on another amazing race Sunday.
This one was the Ivy League women's rowing championship.
Brown was the No. 1-ranked team in the country prior to the event. The story on goprincetontigers.com started out this way:
Preparing for the top-ranked team in the country, the Princeton open rowing team believed it had gained enough speed to make for a dramatic 2000-meter showdown in the Ivy League championships. The Tigers were wrong. They gained so much speed that all of the drama was behind them.
TigerBlog liked that. He didn't write it. Craig Sachson did. That's pretty good stuff, no?
It's a far cry from the legendary release of years and years ago that began with "the boats were even at at the start." TigerBlog doesn't remember who wrote that one, or even what school wrote that.
TigerBlog won't pretend that he knows much about rowing, other than you have to be in sick shape to be good at it. And he liked the all-access video from the webpage on the heavyweight men's rowing team.
He does know that the Princeton women's open rowing team put on quite a show yesterday. The Tigers clearly weren't the favorites, but they led wire-to-wire, building a formidable lead after 500 meters and rolling from there.
By the time the race was over, Princeton had set a Cooper River course record of 6:15.412, for a 4.3-second win over Brown. In rowing terms, that's an astonishing winning margin.
For Princeton that's two straight championships and three in four years.
For head coach Lori Dauphiny, it was her sixth Ivy League championship.
Up next will be the NCAA championships in Indianapolis May 30 through June 1. Princeton gets the Ivy League's automatic bid, and Brown figures to get in as well.
In fact, since the NCAA championships originated in 1997, Princeton, Brown and Washington are the only three schools that have qualified each year.
Once in Indiana, Princeton again won't be the favorite.
Of course, after Sunday's amazing race, don't count the Tigers out.
It's not a show TigerBlog watches a lot. He just happened to stumble on the show last night.
If he were to watch any reality show, though, he'd probably settle on that one. From what little he's seen of it through the years, it comes across as something fun, as opposed to dripping with the phoniness and narcissism of most reality shows.
"The Amazing Race" offers a pretty interesting concept.
The two-person teams go through a series of challenges and adventures, all while risking being eliminated for getting to that week's end destination last. Apparently the most recent season covered 23,000 miles, 22 cities and nine countries before ending in Las Vegas.
The winning team was a father and son combination who appeared to be nice enough, or at least worth rooting for along the way. TigerBlog was okay with having them win as opposed to the annoying team that came in third.
It was a man and woman, as opposed to the two women who finished second, and TB isn't sure what it was about the man and woman team that he didn't like. Maybe it was the sequins. He just knows he didn't like them.
The last scene was pretty good.
The season ended with a skydive from a helicopter to the Las Vegas Speedway, and it was filmed from above, with a great view of the lights of the city below. It made for a great piece of video.
There was the requisite commercial break before the viewers could see which team was ahead, and it turned out to be the father of the father/son team. After he landed in the infield, he had to make the short run over to the finish line, where he was informed that he and his son had won the big prize.
Then it was time for the season finale of "The Good Wife." TigerBlog had no interest in that. Alicia is so pretentious and condescending.
Anyway, the team that won "The Amazing Race" won a prize of $1 million. TigerBlog wondered what the runner-up team got, and he learned that they got nothing.
That's a pretty big drop-off from winning to coming in second. Think about it. The distance between first and second over those 23,000 miles was a few seconds, and yet one team got the $1 million and everyone else got nothing.
TigerBlog assumes that if he won the $1 million, he'd do something for the teams that didn't win. Get them a gift card or something. Maybe, oh, go as high as $100 each.
The gap between the winning team on "The Amazing Race" and the runner-up was only slightly greater than the gap between first and second on another amazing race Sunday.
This one was the Ivy League women's rowing championship.
Brown was the No. 1-ranked team in the country prior to the event. The story on goprincetontigers.com started out this way:
Preparing for the top-ranked team in the country, the Princeton open rowing team believed it had gained enough speed to make for a dramatic 2000-meter showdown in the Ivy League championships. The Tigers were wrong. They gained so much speed that all of the drama was behind them.
TigerBlog liked that. He didn't write it. Craig Sachson did. That's pretty good stuff, no?
It's a far cry from the legendary release of years and years ago that began with "the boats were even at at the start." TigerBlog doesn't remember who wrote that one, or even what school wrote that.
TigerBlog won't pretend that he knows much about rowing, other than you have to be in sick shape to be good at it. And he liked the all-access video from the webpage on the heavyweight men's rowing team.
He does know that the Princeton women's open rowing team put on quite a show yesterday. The Tigers clearly weren't the favorites, but they led wire-to-wire, building a formidable lead after 500 meters and rolling from there.
By the time the race was over, Princeton had set a Cooper River course record of 6:15.412, for a 4.3-second win over Brown. In rowing terms, that's an astonishing winning margin.
For Princeton that's two straight championships and three in four years.
For head coach Lori Dauphiny, it was her sixth Ivy League championship.
Up next will be the NCAA championships in Indianapolis May 30 through June 1. Princeton gets the Ivy League's automatic bid, and Brown figures to get in as well.
In fact, since the NCAA championships originated in 1997, Princeton, Brown and Washington are the only three schools that have qualified each year.
Once in Indiana, Princeton again won't be the favorite.
Of course, after Sunday's amazing race, don't count the Tigers out.
Thursday, May 15, 2014
Have A Slice
When TigerBlog was in high school, he could ride his bike (or eventually drive) about a mile to the nearest pizza place. He's pretty sure a plain slice was 80 cents.
During his time in the newspaper business, he'd often get two slices and a medium cherry coke for lunch at a pizza place in West Windsor. He's pretty sure the total bill was $2.40.
TigerBlog has always liked the thicker crust pizza, as opposed to the thin crust, though he always has liked the pizza at Conte's, which is definitely thin crust. He can't figure that out in the same way he's never been able to figure out why he doesn't like peanut butter but likes Reese's peanut butter cups.
When TigerBlog used to take the bus with the Princeton men's basketball team during his newspaper days, the team would often get pizza for the long rides after games. TigerBlog used to get his with mushrooms, and he'd split a pie with the only other person on the bus who wanted mushrooms on his pizza, Sean Jackson, the 1992 Ivy League Player of the Year.
Back then, pizza was cheese, bread, sauce and maybe a topping if you wanted. If you've ever had a pizza, you're familiar with the normal toppings - sausage, pepperoni, onions, peppers. Those are the normal ones.
If you're looking for maybe the greatest movie moment involving pizza, it's hard to beat the opening credits of "Saturday Night Fever," when John Travolta stops off for a slice on his way back to the hardware store in Brooklyn.
TB isn't sure exactly when he first noticed that pizza toppings had gone from simple to ultra-complex.
TB stopped off for a slice yesterday around lunchtime at a pizza place he'd ever been to before, and he was amazed at all the different combinations. He can't even begin to remember them all.
There was buffalo chicken. Caesar salad. One that looked like a salad with artichokes on it. Chicken parmigiana. Cheesesteak. Meat and more meat.
In all, there had to be nearly 20 different kinds of pizza sitting there.
Off in the corner, there was also a plain pie. It made TigerBlog wonder if anyone can ever look at all of those different choices and ask for plain.
Of any place that TB has ever gone that has pizza but isn't a pizza place, the one with the best pizza is Frist Campus Center, by the way.
TB was out of the office yesterday, though he has plenty he needs to get done.
He has to send a bunch of stuff to the Tewaaraton Trophy people for Tom Schreiber, one of the five finalists. He has a ton of stuff to do for the Princeton Varsity Club senior athlete banquet, which is two weeks from today.
That little fact, by the way, guarantees that two weeks from today will be 90 degrees with a chance of thunderstorms.
Because the banquet is so close, it means that the academic year is winding down. The banquet always corresponds with the first day of Reunions, which is followed by graduation, and another year will have come and gone.
There are still athletic events to be contested, of course.
Princeton has a maximum of 19 more competitions, depending on how many teams and individuals qualify for national championships.
This a huge weekend for rowing, with the Ivy League championships for women in Cherry Hill and the Eastern Sprints - which determine the Ivy champ for men's heavyweight and lightweight - in Worcester, Mass.
TigerBlog has never been to Eastern Sprints or to the Ivy women's championships, but he has been to the national championships, which are quite a show. This year's IRA national championships will be May 30-June 1 in West Windsor.
In addition to rowing, there is IC4A and ECAC track and field at Weaver Stadium this weekend.
In fact, other than one NCAA women's tennis singles participant (freshman Alanna Wolf), all of the rest of Princeton's athletic schedule for this year is rowing and track and field.
It ends June 11-14 with the NCAA track and field championships in Eugene, Ore., where Julia Ratcliffe will probably be among the contenders in the women's hammer throw.
And then it'll be summer.
Speaking of which, you know where they have great pizza?
On the boardwalk.
During his time in the newspaper business, he'd often get two slices and a medium cherry coke for lunch at a pizza place in West Windsor. He's pretty sure the total bill was $2.40.
TigerBlog has always liked the thicker crust pizza, as opposed to the thin crust, though he always has liked the pizza at Conte's, which is definitely thin crust. He can't figure that out in the same way he's never been able to figure out why he doesn't like peanut butter but likes Reese's peanut butter cups.
When TigerBlog used to take the bus with the Princeton men's basketball team during his newspaper days, the team would often get pizza for the long rides after games. TigerBlog used to get his with mushrooms, and he'd split a pie with the only other person on the bus who wanted mushrooms on his pizza, Sean Jackson, the 1992 Ivy League Player of the Year.
Back then, pizza was cheese, bread, sauce and maybe a topping if you wanted. If you've ever had a pizza, you're familiar with the normal toppings - sausage, pepperoni, onions, peppers. Those are the normal ones.
If you're looking for maybe the greatest movie moment involving pizza, it's hard to beat the opening credits of "Saturday Night Fever," when John Travolta stops off for a slice on his way back to the hardware store in Brooklyn.
TB isn't sure exactly when he first noticed that pizza toppings had gone from simple to ultra-complex.
TB stopped off for a slice yesterday around lunchtime at a pizza place he'd ever been to before, and he was amazed at all the different combinations. He can't even begin to remember them all.
There was buffalo chicken. Caesar salad. One that looked like a salad with artichokes on it. Chicken parmigiana. Cheesesteak. Meat and more meat.
In all, there had to be nearly 20 different kinds of pizza sitting there.
Off in the corner, there was also a plain pie. It made TigerBlog wonder if anyone can ever look at all of those different choices and ask for plain.
Of any place that TB has ever gone that has pizza but isn't a pizza place, the one with the best pizza is Frist Campus Center, by the way.
TB was out of the office yesterday, though he has plenty he needs to get done.
He has to send a bunch of stuff to the Tewaaraton Trophy people for Tom Schreiber, one of the five finalists. He has a ton of stuff to do for the Princeton Varsity Club senior athlete banquet, which is two weeks from today.
That little fact, by the way, guarantees that two weeks from today will be 90 degrees with a chance of thunderstorms.
Because the banquet is so close, it means that the academic year is winding down. The banquet always corresponds with the first day of Reunions, which is followed by graduation, and another year will have come and gone.
There are still athletic events to be contested, of course.
Princeton has a maximum of 19 more competitions, depending on how many teams and individuals qualify for national championships.
This a huge weekend for rowing, with the Ivy League championships for women in Cherry Hill and the Eastern Sprints - which determine the Ivy champ for men's heavyweight and lightweight - in Worcester, Mass.
TigerBlog has never been to Eastern Sprints or to the Ivy women's championships, but he has been to the national championships, which are quite a show. This year's IRA national championships will be May 30-June 1 in West Windsor.
In addition to rowing, there is IC4A and ECAC track and field at Weaver Stadium this weekend.
In fact, other than one NCAA women's tennis singles participant (freshman Alanna Wolf), all of the rest of Princeton's athletic schedule for this year is rowing and track and field.
It ends June 11-14 with the NCAA track and field championships in Eugene, Ore., where Julia Ratcliffe will probably be among the contenders in the women's hammer throw.
And then it'll be summer.
Speaking of which, you know where they have great pizza?
On the boardwalk.
Friday, July 19, 2013
Bradley And Lind
Who is the best male athlete in Princeton history?
TigerBlog thinks a better question is who is the fourth-best male athlete in Princeton history?
The top three spots appear to be locked in among Hobey Baker, Bill Bradley and Dick Kazmier. TB would say that Baker and Bradley are the top two, followed by Kazmaier.
So who would be fourth?
There are so many possibilities. TB can think of about 20 off the top of his head, and there are probably twice that many that you could make a case for if you really wanted. That's what happens when your athletic program is 149 years old.
Actually, TB isn't sure who would get his endorsement for the No. 4 spot. He'll have to think about it.
The same logic behind the No. 4 male athlete in Princeton history basically applies to the question of who is the greatest female athlete in Princeton history.
Women's athletics at Princeton are not nearly as old as men's athletics, as they date back just over 40 years. Still, in that time, Princeton has built a model women's athletic program, one that has achieved across-the-board success that the pioneers in the early 1970s probably never dreamed possible.
Again, TB can come up with 20 names right off the top of his head.
Actually, this is one of the big problems that TB has always imagined for a Princeton Athletics Hall of Fame. Beyond the top three iconic male athletes, there would be 60-80 or even more equally deserving candidates.
And while we're on the subject, who are the most successful Princeton alums in non-Princeton athletic endeavors?
Again, TB would go with Bradley on the men's side.
Two NBA championships with the Knicks, for whom he was a starter. An Olympic gold medal in 1964. A Sullivan Award.
And on the women's side?
How about rower Caroline Lind? The 2006 graduate, who was the stroke for the Tigers' NCAA championship first varsity 8 boat her senior year, has put together quite the post-Princeton resume.
Lind is a two-time Olympic gold medalist, winning in 2008 in Beijing and 2012 in London. She has also won four gold medals at the world championships.
Most recently, at the World Cup in Switzerland, Lind was part of the winning U.S. women's 8 that not only won but also set a world record, covering the 2,000-meter course in 5:54.16. Lind was joined in the boat by Heidi Robbins, who graduated last month and who like Lind was a von Kienbusch Award winner.
You can make a case for several others, TB is sure.
Lynn Jennings, for instance, was an Olympic bronze medalist in the 10,000 meters and a three-time world cross country champion. Diana Matheson has made more than 150 appearances for the Canadian women's national soccer team, with an Olympic bronze medal (on her goal) and multiple World Cups included.
TB is always afraid to start naming people, for fear of leaving out the obvious.
Still, Lind's post-Princeton career has been extraordinary.
As for who is No. 4 on the men's side or No. 1 among Princeton women all-time?
He's still thinking about it.
TigerBlog thinks a better question is who is the fourth-best male athlete in Princeton history?
The top three spots appear to be locked in among Hobey Baker, Bill Bradley and Dick Kazmier. TB would say that Baker and Bradley are the top two, followed by Kazmaier.
So who would be fourth?
There are so many possibilities. TB can think of about 20 off the top of his head, and there are probably twice that many that you could make a case for if you really wanted. That's what happens when your athletic program is 149 years old.
Actually, TB isn't sure who would get his endorsement for the No. 4 spot. He'll have to think about it.
The same logic behind the No. 4 male athlete in Princeton history basically applies to the question of who is the greatest female athlete in Princeton history.
Women's athletics at Princeton are not nearly as old as men's athletics, as they date back just over 40 years. Still, in that time, Princeton has built a model women's athletic program, one that has achieved across-the-board success that the pioneers in the early 1970s probably never dreamed possible.
Again, TB can come up with 20 names right off the top of his head.
Actually, this is one of the big problems that TB has always imagined for a Princeton Athletics Hall of Fame. Beyond the top three iconic male athletes, there would be 60-80 or even more equally deserving candidates.
And while we're on the subject, who are the most successful Princeton alums in non-Princeton athletic endeavors?
Again, TB would go with Bradley on the men's side.
Two NBA championships with the Knicks, for whom he was a starter. An Olympic gold medal in 1964. A Sullivan Award.
And on the women's side?
How about rower Caroline Lind? The 2006 graduate, who was the stroke for the Tigers' NCAA championship first varsity 8 boat her senior year, has put together quite the post-Princeton resume.
Lind is a two-time Olympic gold medalist, winning in 2008 in Beijing and 2012 in London. She has also won four gold medals at the world championships.
Most recently, at the World Cup in Switzerland, Lind was part of the winning U.S. women's 8 that not only won but also set a world record, covering the 2,000-meter course in 5:54.16. Lind was joined in the boat by Heidi Robbins, who graduated last month and who like Lind was a von Kienbusch Award winner.
You can make a case for several others, TB is sure.
Lynn Jennings, for instance, was an Olympic bronze medalist in the 10,000 meters and a three-time world cross country champion. Diana Matheson has made more than 150 appearances for the Canadian women's national soccer team, with an Olympic bronze medal (on her goal) and multiple World Cups included.
TB is always afraid to start naming people, for fear of leaving out the obvious.
Still, Lind's post-Princeton career has been extraordinary.
As for who is No. 4 on the men's side or No. 1 among Princeton women all-time?
He's still thinking about it.
Monday, May 20, 2013
27 Years
There used to a show called "Make Me Laugh" in which comedians would have 60 seconds to make the contestant laugh and the contestant would get one dollar for every second he/she could go without laughing.
There'd be three rounds with three different comedians. If a contestant could go all 180 seconds without laughing, then the prize was doubled to the maximum $360.
Had those rules applied to the 71-minute running time of the series finale of "The Office," then TigerBlog would have won $8,520, assuming that it was doubled for going the distance.
There wasn't anything in the show that made TB laugh. The only line that came close was near the end, when Michael, who made an uninspired return for the finale, said something like "I feel like my kids have grown up and married each other. It's every parent's dream come true."
There was a time when TB wouldn't have won more than $60 on "The Office," because there was a time when "The Office" was as funny as any show has ever been. Some of the early episodes are beyond clever and creative, with that rarest of a combination of near-perfect writing, a near-perfect ensemble cast and the absolute perfect leading man, Michael Scott, played by Steve Carell, who has to be in the Top 10 - and maybe closer to Top 3 - of all-time sitcom characters.
And all of this wrapped around a great setting - a dull, barely existing paper company in Scranton, Pa. - with a format that was fresh and unique at the time.
Never mind the question of why a documentary would be made about these people and this company. It was just a part of the equation that made the show that much more creative.
Eventually, sometime after Jim and Pam got together, "The Office" started to fade. Then, when Carell left, it became the TV equivalent of a Hall-of-Fame pitcher who bounces around team-to-team long after his prime.
It wasn't funny anymore. In fact, it was worse than that. It was just a soap opera, with characters who had become caricatures.
TB gave up on it long ago and actually was a bit surprised to see it was still on. In fact, he doesn't know too many people who stayed with it to the end.
In fact, the show got so bad and so unfunny that it made watching the reruns that much more difficult, because it was a reminder of just how great the show had once been.
"Seinfeld" is, in TB's opinion, one of the most overrated shows of all time. Interestingly, it too
At its best, "Seinfeld" was classic stuff, also as funny and clever as anything that had ever been on before, with its blend of a real-life Jerry and his fictionalized friends. What made it hilarious was the idea that people could watch it and say "that happens to me all the time." What made it stop being funny was its move into trying - way too hard - to drive pop culture and to have ridiculous fringe characters, and the result was a show in which the audience went from laughing at the absurdity of what real life situations can bring to an audience that laughed out of habit and tuned in each week hoping it would go back to what it once was.
Except it never did. It was too forced at the end. And its series finale was simply awful.
"The Office" series finale? It was cute. It did a good job of wrapping it all up. It just wasn't funny.
The lesson? It's hard to do something really well for that long a period of time.
In anything.
TV shows. Music.
Even intercollegiate athletics.
The 2013-14 Ivy League year is over, having ended this weekend with the rowing championships. Princeton won the women's open rowing title - by a lot.
In fact, it was a nearly seven-second win over second-place Yale. In rowing, that's a blowout.
For the women's open rowing team, it means an automatic bid to the NCAA championships.
For Princeton Athletics, it meant a 12th Ivy League championship for the year. It also put the finishing touch on the Ivy League's unofficial all-sports points championship.
Princeton won the championship, compiling 215 points for the year. Points, by the way, are awarded based on finish in Ivy standings (regular season or championship event, depending on how the league crowns a champ for that particular sport), with first worth eight points, second worth seven, etc.
If there is a tie, then the points are split, so that a tie for third means 5.5 points for both teams.
Princeton won last year's championship by a single point over Harvard, 191.5-190.5 .This year, the margin was comfortable, with Harvard second with 187.5 and then Cornell with 146.5.
Harvard was second in league championships won, with nine.
In addition to its 12 league champions, Princeton also had eight other teams finish in second place. Of its 33 teams that compete for Ivy titles, Princeton had 31 finish in the top half of the league.
And so for Princeton, that makes 27 straight years of having won the all-sports points championship.
And, as of today, everybody in the league goes back to zero and starts over again for next year.
Past performance, as they say, doesn't guarantee future performance.
There'd be three rounds with three different comedians. If a contestant could go all 180 seconds without laughing, then the prize was doubled to the maximum $360.
Had those rules applied to the 71-minute running time of the series finale of "The Office," then TigerBlog would have won $8,520, assuming that it was doubled for going the distance.
There wasn't anything in the show that made TB laugh. The only line that came close was near the end, when Michael, who made an uninspired return for the finale, said something like "I feel like my kids have grown up and married each other. It's every parent's dream come true."
There was a time when TB wouldn't have won more than $60 on "The Office," because there was a time when "The Office" was as funny as any show has ever been. Some of the early episodes are beyond clever and creative, with that rarest of a combination of near-perfect writing, a near-perfect ensemble cast and the absolute perfect leading man, Michael Scott, played by Steve Carell, who has to be in the Top 10 - and maybe closer to Top 3 - of all-time sitcom characters.
And all of this wrapped around a great setting - a dull, barely existing paper company in Scranton, Pa. - with a format that was fresh and unique at the time.
Never mind the question of why a documentary would be made about these people and this company. It was just a part of the equation that made the show that much more creative.
Eventually, sometime after Jim and Pam got together, "The Office" started to fade. Then, when Carell left, it became the TV equivalent of a Hall-of-Fame pitcher who bounces around team-to-team long after his prime.
It wasn't funny anymore. In fact, it was worse than that. It was just a soap opera, with characters who had become caricatures.
TB gave up on it long ago and actually was a bit surprised to see it was still on. In fact, he doesn't know too many people who stayed with it to the end.
In fact, the show got so bad and so unfunny that it made watching the reruns that much more difficult, because it was a reminder of just how great the show had once been.
"Seinfeld" is, in TB's opinion, one of the most overrated shows of all time. Interestingly, it too
At its best, "Seinfeld" was classic stuff, also as funny and clever as anything that had ever been on before, with its blend of a real-life Jerry and his fictionalized friends. What made it hilarious was the idea that people could watch it and say "that happens to me all the time." What made it stop being funny was its move into trying - way too hard - to drive pop culture and to have ridiculous fringe characters, and the result was a show in which the audience went from laughing at the absurdity of what real life situations can bring to an audience that laughed out of habit and tuned in each week hoping it would go back to what it once was.
Except it never did. It was too forced at the end. And its series finale was simply awful.
"The Office" series finale? It was cute. It did a good job of wrapping it all up. It just wasn't funny.
The lesson? It's hard to do something really well for that long a period of time.
In anything.
TV shows. Music.
Even intercollegiate athletics.
The 2013-14 Ivy League year is over, having ended this weekend with the rowing championships. Princeton won the women's open rowing title - by a lot.
In fact, it was a nearly seven-second win over second-place Yale. In rowing, that's a blowout.
For the women's open rowing team, it means an automatic bid to the NCAA championships.
For Princeton Athletics, it meant a 12th Ivy League championship for the year. It also put the finishing touch on the Ivy League's unofficial all-sports points championship.
Princeton won the championship, compiling 215 points for the year. Points, by the way, are awarded based on finish in Ivy standings (regular season or championship event, depending on how the league crowns a champ for that particular sport), with first worth eight points, second worth seven, etc.
If there is a tie, then the points are split, so that a tie for third means 5.5 points for both teams.
Princeton won last year's championship by a single point over Harvard, 191.5-190.5 .This year, the margin was comfortable, with Harvard second with 187.5 and then Cornell with 146.5.
Harvard was second in league championships won, with nine.
In addition to its 12 league champions, Princeton also had eight other teams finish in second place. Of its 33 teams that compete for Ivy titles, Princeton had 31 finish in the top half of the league.
And so for Princeton, that makes 27 straight years of having won the all-sports points championship.
And, as of today, everybody in the league goes back to zero and starts over again for next year.
Past performance, as they say, doesn't guarantee future performance.
Friday, May 17, 2013
Heavyweights, Lightweights And Opens
TigerBlog is looking pretty good these days.
Well, at least better than he looked two months ago.
TB has been dieting, and the result has been a loss of about 15 pounds. Mostly what he's done is eliminate red meat, pasta and bread from the daily routine, as well as anything that would be considered sweets.
Yup, that means not a single M&M for more than seven weeks. No ice cream. None of the mini Kit Kat bars that sat in a candy jar on the desk of a coworker.
TB has been at multiple events, including the Ivy League men's lacrosse tournament, where there have been plates of cookies, brownies and cakes. Before the diet, TB would have put up big numbers with such a spread.
And now? Nothing.
It wasn't easy.
So what has he been eating? Lots and lots and lots of fruit, vegetables and fish. Lots of salad. Lots of baked potatoes, which, though being a starch, still fits in with what his doctor told him: If it comes out of the ground, you can eat it.
Baked potatoes make a good lunch. In fact, TB has his fourth one of the week waiting in the fridge as he writes this. No butter though. Well, just a little. And either peas, green beans, mushrooms and/or broccoli mixed in.
Oh, and salads? No smothering it in ranch dressing anymore.
TigerBlog loves cantaloupe, but it's a real pain to cut it up and all. The same is true if you buy an actual pineapple. Grapes are good, the red ones over the green ones.
Mostly he's eaten apples and bananas.
Apples come in all different varieties. TB likes the crispy crunchy kind, so he goes with gala. Also, it's a must to have cold apples, as opposed to room temperature ones.
And then there are bananas, which have to be about the toughest food in the world to figure out. Do you buy the green ones? The yellow ones?
How many days do you need to wait to eat them when you buy them, because they're rarely ready to eat at first. And then there are the old ones. They turn brown on the outside and look like they've rotted long before they actually have. So when do you throw the old ones out?
Can TB keep this new way of eating going? He hopes so.
TigerBlog has a long way to go before he'd be in the lightweight boat, so for as much as his diet has been working, he'd still be a heavyweight rower.
It's a big weekend for Ivy League rowing, as the men will compete in Eastern Sprints on Lake Quinsigamond in Worcester, Mass., and the women will be at the Ivy League championships in South Jersey on the Cooper River.
The Ivy League crowns 33 team champions each year. If you've forgotten, the five Princeton teams that don't compete for an Ivy League title are men's and women's water polo, sprint football, men's volleyball and women's lightweight rowing, who finished second last weekend at Eastern Sprints.
So far in the 2012-13 academic year, the Ivy League champion has been determined in 30 of those 33 sports, and as always, the rowing titles awarded this weekend will be the final ones of the year.
Princeton has won 11 Ivy titles this academic year. Harvard and Cornell have won seven each, so no matter what happens this weekend, Princeton will have won the most. Also, Princeton has already clinched the Ivy League's unofficial all-sports points championship.
The Harvard men are the top seed for both the lightweight and heavyweight races. Princeton is the third seed among the lightweights and fourth seed among the heavies.
As an aside, as TB understands it, the lightweights are determined by the overall weight of everyone in the boat, rather than by a weight-limit for each individual.
The women switched from competing in the Eastern Sprints to having an Ivy League championship a year ago, largely because having an Ivy championship gets the league an automatic bid to the NCAA championships.
The NCAA champion is determined by the overall points totals awarded through races involving three boats, the first varsity 8, the second varsity 8 and the varsity 4.
The Ivy League champion is the first varsity 8 winner, but the automatic bid goes to the other two boats from that school as well.
Princeton, by the way, has twice had the first varsity 8 NCAA champion boat but not won the overall NCAA championship. Princeton is one of three schools to have competed at every NCAA championships since the event began back in 1997, along with Brown and Washington.
For this Ivy championship, the Princeton first varsity 8 is the number one seed, though it is hardly a lock that the Tigers will win. Princeton has defeated No. 2 Yale, who has defeated No. 3 Radcliffe, who has defeated the Tigers.
The weather should be perfect and the racing should be fast.
And if you'll excuse TigerBlog, he has a banana to go eat.
Well, at least better than he looked two months ago.
TB has been dieting, and the result has been a loss of about 15 pounds. Mostly what he's done is eliminate red meat, pasta and bread from the daily routine, as well as anything that would be considered sweets.
Yup, that means not a single M&M for more than seven weeks. No ice cream. None of the mini Kit Kat bars that sat in a candy jar on the desk of a coworker.
TB has been at multiple events, including the Ivy League men's lacrosse tournament, where there have been plates of cookies, brownies and cakes. Before the diet, TB would have put up big numbers with such a spread.
And now? Nothing.
It wasn't easy.
So what has he been eating? Lots and lots and lots of fruit, vegetables and fish. Lots of salad. Lots of baked potatoes, which, though being a starch, still fits in with what his doctor told him: If it comes out of the ground, you can eat it.
Baked potatoes make a good lunch. In fact, TB has his fourth one of the week waiting in the fridge as he writes this. No butter though. Well, just a little. And either peas, green beans, mushrooms and/or broccoli mixed in.
Oh, and salads? No smothering it in ranch dressing anymore.
TigerBlog loves cantaloupe, but it's a real pain to cut it up and all. The same is true if you buy an actual pineapple. Grapes are good, the red ones over the green ones.
Mostly he's eaten apples and bananas.
Apples come in all different varieties. TB likes the crispy crunchy kind, so he goes with gala. Also, it's a must to have cold apples, as opposed to room temperature ones.
And then there are bananas, which have to be about the toughest food in the world to figure out. Do you buy the green ones? The yellow ones?
How many days do you need to wait to eat them when you buy them, because they're rarely ready to eat at first. And then there are the old ones. They turn brown on the outside and look like they've rotted long before they actually have. So when do you throw the old ones out?
Can TB keep this new way of eating going? He hopes so.
TigerBlog has a long way to go before he'd be in the lightweight boat, so for as much as his diet has been working, he'd still be a heavyweight rower.
It's a big weekend for Ivy League rowing, as the men will compete in Eastern Sprints on Lake Quinsigamond in Worcester, Mass., and the women will be at the Ivy League championships in South Jersey on the Cooper River.
The Ivy League crowns 33 team champions each year. If you've forgotten, the five Princeton teams that don't compete for an Ivy League title are men's and women's water polo, sprint football, men's volleyball and women's lightweight rowing, who finished second last weekend at Eastern Sprints.
So far in the 2012-13 academic year, the Ivy League champion has been determined in 30 of those 33 sports, and as always, the rowing titles awarded this weekend will be the final ones of the year.
Princeton has won 11 Ivy titles this academic year. Harvard and Cornell have won seven each, so no matter what happens this weekend, Princeton will have won the most. Also, Princeton has already clinched the Ivy League's unofficial all-sports points championship.
The Harvard men are the top seed for both the lightweight and heavyweight races. Princeton is the third seed among the lightweights and fourth seed among the heavies.
As an aside, as TB understands it, the lightweights are determined by the overall weight of everyone in the boat, rather than by a weight-limit for each individual.
The women switched from competing in the Eastern Sprints to having an Ivy League championship a year ago, largely because having an Ivy championship gets the league an automatic bid to the NCAA championships.
The NCAA champion is determined by the overall points totals awarded through races involving three boats, the first varsity 8, the second varsity 8 and the varsity 4.
The Ivy League champion is the first varsity 8 winner, but the automatic bid goes to the other two boats from that school as well.
Princeton, by the way, has twice had the first varsity 8 NCAA champion boat but not won the overall NCAA championship. Princeton is one of three schools to have competed at every NCAA championships since the event began back in 1997, along with Brown and Washington.
For this Ivy championship, the Princeton first varsity 8 is the number one seed, though it is hardly a lock that the Tigers will win. Princeton has defeated No. 2 Yale, who has defeated No. 3 Radcliffe, who has defeated the Tigers.
The weather should be perfect and the racing should be fast.
And if you'll excuse TigerBlog, he has a banana to go eat.
Friday, May 10, 2013
Open Wide
TigerBlog went to the dentist yesterday.
His dentist, Dr. Brody, is a nice guy. A Penn grad, which doesn't make him a bad person.
The stereotype, of course, has the dentist carrying on a conversation while the patient tries to answer, despite having all kinds of instruments, suction devices, cotton balls and fingers jammed in his/her mouth.
Bill Cosby did a great spoof of this in his one-man show from the 1980s.
"So, you do much fishing?"
"mbdlaefjaosda."
"Oh, I've fished there many times myself."
TigerBlog isn't sure why people become dentists. If you're going to go through all that trouble to go to school that long and work that hard, why not become a doctor?
Why spend all day every day with your hands in people's mouths? TB doesn't even like putting his fingers in his own mouth.
On the other hand, somebody has to be a dentist, and Dr. Brody has the perfect temperament for it.
He's very calm, very pleasant. He doesn't overdo it on the hysteria about gums and stuff. He cleans your teeth, tells you to floss more, does an x-ray or two every few years and sends you on your way for another six months.
Oh, and he gives you a new toothbrush and floss when you leave. How great is that?
Dr. Brody has a flat screen in his office so patients can watch TV while sharp metal instruments are used to probe their teeth.
Yesterday, while TB was in the chair, the TV was on a news channel, and for the entire time he was watching, the only story covered was the Jodi Arias murder trial. TB gets it: attractive woman, tawdry details. What he doesn't get is why strangers outside a courthouse would cheer so happily and chant "USA, USA" when a verdict is read.
Or, for that matter, why a woman would thrust her middle finger into the face of Joakim Noam of the Chicago Bulls in Miami the other night, but hey, that's another story for another day.
Dr. Brody, in mid-clean, lamented what this said about contemporary America, how it's getting harder and harder to separate reality TV from reality.
TB agreed completely and said so. It came out this way: "mbdlaefjaosda."
When TB got back from the dentist, he saw the women's lacrosse team finishing its last practice before heading to Annapolis for the NCAA tournament. The Tigers take on Duke tonight at 7:15, and the winner gets the winner of Navy-Monmouth Sunday to advance to the quarterfinals in the 26-team field.
The athletic year at Princeton is quickly winding down, with very little left on the schedule.
The men's golf team is at Washington State next weekend for the NCAA regionals. The Ivy League rowing championships are next weekend as well, with the national championships to follow.
Track and field is still going strong, with the IC4A/ECAC championships here this weekend and then the NCAA events after that. Matija Pecotic of the men's tennis team competes next week in the NCAA tournament as well.
Kelly Shon of the women's golf team is trying to become one of two individuals to move out of her regional to the NCAA finals, other than the players on the eight teams that will qualify. Her 1-under yesterday in the first round has her in contention, with rounds today and tomorrow.
And then there's women's water polo, which plays this weekend in the NCAA championships as well. Princeton, the sixth-seed, plays No. 3 UCLA this afternoon at 3:30 in the quarterfinals and then is guaranteed two more games after that.
Though it seemed like it just began, the 2012-13 academic year will be completely finished soon.
The PVC senior awards banquet is coming up. So is Reunions. And graduation. And summer.
Time continues to fly. It must mean TB is in the right profession.
Beats shoving his fingers into strangers' mouths all day.
His dentist, Dr. Brody, is a nice guy. A Penn grad, which doesn't make him a bad person.
The stereotype, of course, has the dentist carrying on a conversation while the patient tries to answer, despite having all kinds of instruments, suction devices, cotton balls and fingers jammed in his/her mouth.
Bill Cosby did a great spoof of this in his one-man show from the 1980s.
"So, you do much fishing?"
"mbdlaefjaosda."
"Oh, I've fished there many times myself."
TigerBlog isn't sure why people become dentists. If you're going to go through all that trouble to go to school that long and work that hard, why not become a doctor?
Why spend all day every day with your hands in people's mouths? TB doesn't even like putting his fingers in his own mouth.
On the other hand, somebody has to be a dentist, and Dr. Brody has the perfect temperament for it.
He's very calm, very pleasant. He doesn't overdo it on the hysteria about gums and stuff. He cleans your teeth, tells you to floss more, does an x-ray or two every few years and sends you on your way for another six months.
Oh, and he gives you a new toothbrush and floss when you leave. How great is that?
Dr. Brody has a flat screen in his office so patients can watch TV while sharp metal instruments are used to probe their teeth.
Yesterday, while TB was in the chair, the TV was on a news channel, and for the entire time he was watching, the only story covered was the Jodi Arias murder trial. TB gets it: attractive woman, tawdry details. What he doesn't get is why strangers outside a courthouse would cheer so happily and chant "USA, USA" when a verdict is read.
Or, for that matter, why a woman would thrust her middle finger into the face of Joakim Noam of the Chicago Bulls in Miami the other night, but hey, that's another story for another day.
Dr. Brody, in mid-clean, lamented what this said about contemporary America, how it's getting harder and harder to separate reality TV from reality.
TB agreed completely and said so. It came out this way: "mbdlaefjaosda."
When TB got back from the dentist, he saw the women's lacrosse team finishing its last practice before heading to Annapolis for the NCAA tournament. The Tigers take on Duke tonight at 7:15, and the winner gets the winner of Navy-Monmouth Sunday to advance to the quarterfinals in the 26-team field.
The athletic year at Princeton is quickly winding down, with very little left on the schedule.
The men's golf team is at Washington State next weekend for the NCAA regionals. The Ivy League rowing championships are next weekend as well, with the national championships to follow.
Track and field is still going strong, with the IC4A/ECAC championships here this weekend and then the NCAA events after that. Matija Pecotic of the men's tennis team competes next week in the NCAA tournament as well.
Kelly Shon of the women's golf team is trying to become one of two individuals to move out of her regional to the NCAA finals, other than the players on the eight teams that will qualify. Her 1-under yesterday in the first round has her in contention, with rounds today and tomorrow.
And then there's women's water polo, which plays this weekend in the NCAA championships as well. Princeton, the sixth-seed, plays No. 3 UCLA this afternoon at 3:30 in the quarterfinals and then is guaranteed two more games after that.
Though it seemed like it just began, the 2012-13 academic year will be completely finished soon.
The PVC senior awards banquet is coming up. So is Reunions. And graduation. And summer.
Time continues to fly. It must mean TB is in the right profession.
Beats shoving his fingers into strangers' mouths all day.
Friday, March 29, 2013
Taking A Hammer To A Chocolate Bunny
You know those big chocolate Easter bunnies, the ones that are solid throughout the body but hollow in the ears?
The really big ones?
TigerBlog loves the littler ones. The big bunnies are far too problematic.
For starters, when he bites into the ears, they collapse all over the place. And when he bites into body, well, it goes nowhere. If he tries to break off a piece of the body, all he gets are really little pieces until ultimately he has to almost take a hammer to the bunny to get any sort of worthwhile reward.
When TB was a kid, his grandmother used to buy him and BrotherBlog the little bunnies, which came like 10 to a package. Now that was quality chocolate - even for a Jewish kid.
TB's connection to Easter isn't quite like that of some other members of his religion, like, say, Judah Ben-Hur, who witnessed the crucifixion of Jesus - after Judah had been through a lot, including a stint with the Roman Army's rowing team and some horseback riding.
This Sunday is Easter Sunday, which means the supermarket was flooded with holiday candy. TigerBlog went into this in depth a year ago.
A few years ago, TB also wrote about the dilemma that the Ivy League has in scheduling athletic events around religious holidays, especially Easter, which always falls on a spring Sunday, which would mean Ivy baseball and softball.
As TB said four years ago, there's nothing the league can do. It can't start deciding which religious holidays are worthy of having no events and which ones are okay.
As a result, the weekend that begins with Good Friday and lasts through Easter is stocked with huge athletic events.
Maybe the biggest is tonight, when Princeton hosts Penn State in men's volleyball.
TB doesn't know much about volleyball, including how to keep stats at a match.
What he doesn't know is that Penn State is always good and Princeton has spent most years looking up in the standings at the Nittany Lions.
One exception was 1998, when Princeton defeated Penn State and advanced to the NCAA tournament, which in men's volleyball consists of four teams. In 1998, it sent Princeton to Hawaii.
This year, Princeton is on a roll, having won five straight EIVA matches, including last night's win over St. Francis. The Tigers are now 8-2 in the league, while Penn State comes to Dillon at 9-1.
Princeton hasn't beaten Penn State since 1998, and the closest the Tigers have come was last year at Dillon, when the Nittany Lions fought off eight match balls to win the fifth game 37-35.
This year? A win and the teams are tied. A loss and Penn State is in control for the regular season title, but Princeton is already headed to the EIVA playoffs.
Tomorrow is a big rowing day at Princeton, with all four crews at home, something that will result in racing all morning.
There is a big men's lacrosse game on campus, as Princeton hosts Brown. The Tigers are 1-1 in the league, and both games have been one-goal games, while Brown is 1-0 with a win over Harvard. Brown is playing its third game in six days; Princeton hasn't played in eight days, since the 10-9 win over Yale last Friday.
A good side note - only twice in the last 30 years (1991, 2002) - have both Princeton and Brown reached double figures in a game against each other. This year, both average more than 12 goals per game.
The women's lacrosse team is at Cornell tomorrow in another big Ivy early-season game.
And the men's tennis Ivy opener against Penn.
And then there's baseball and softball, who have their home openers tomorrow and Sunday, with Yale and Brown here.
In other words, it's a fairly busy weekend.
All of those events, and all except for men's lacrosse completely free.
Happy Easter to all.
The really big ones?
TigerBlog loves the littler ones. The big bunnies are far too problematic.
For starters, when he bites into the ears, they collapse all over the place. And when he bites into body, well, it goes nowhere. If he tries to break off a piece of the body, all he gets are really little pieces until ultimately he has to almost take a hammer to the bunny to get any sort of worthwhile reward.
When TB was a kid, his grandmother used to buy him and BrotherBlog the little bunnies, which came like 10 to a package. Now that was quality chocolate - even for a Jewish kid.
TB's connection to Easter isn't quite like that of some other members of his religion, like, say, Judah Ben-Hur, who witnessed the crucifixion of Jesus - after Judah had been through a lot, including a stint with the Roman Army's rowing team and some horseback riding.
This Sunday is Easter Sunday, which means the supermarket was flooded with holiday candy. TigerBlog went into this in depth a year ago.
A few years ago, TB also wrote about the dilemma that the Ivy League has in scheduling athletic events around religious holidays, especially Easter, which always falls on a spring Sunday, which would mean Ivy baseball and softball.
As TB said four years ago, there's nothing the league can do. It can't start deciding which religious holidays are worthy of having no events and which ones are okay.
As a result, the weekend that begins with Good Friday and lasts through Easter is stocked with huge athletic events.
Maybe the biggest is tonight, when Princeton hosts Penn State in men's volleyball.
TB doesn't know much about volleyball, including how to keep stats at a match.
What he doesn't know is that Penn State is always good and Princeton has spent most years looking up in the standings at the Nittany Lions.
One exception was 1998, when Princeton defeated Penn State and advanced to the NCAA tournament, which in men's volleyball consists of four teams. In 1998, it sent Princeton to Hawaii.
This year, Princeton is on a roll, having won five straight EIVA matches, including last night's win over St. Francis. The Tigers are now 8-2 in the league, while Penn State comes to Dillon at 9-1.
Princeton hasn't beaten Penn State since 1998, and the closest the Tigers have come was last year at Dillon, when the Nittany Lions fought off eight match balls to win the fifth game 37-35.
This year? A win and the teams are tied. A loss and Penn State is in control for the regular season title, but Princeton is already headed to the EIVA playoffs.
Tomorrow is a big rowing day at Princeton, with all four crews at home, something that will result in racing all morning.
There is a big men's lacrosse game on campus, as Princeton hosts Brown. The Tigers are 1-1 in the league, and both games have been one-goal games, while Brown is 1-0 with a win over Harvard. Brown is playing its third game in six days; Princeton hasn't played in eight days, since the 10-9 win over Yale last Friday.
A good side note - only twice in the last 30 years (1991, 2002) - have both Princeton and Brown reached double figures in a game against each other. This year, both average more than 12 goals per game.
The women's lacrosse team is at Cornell tomorrow in another big Ivy early-season game.
And the men's tennis Ivy opener against Penn.
And then there's baseball and softball, who have their home openers tomorrow and Sunday, with Yale and Brown here.
In other words, it's a fairly busy weekend.
All of those events, and all except for men's lacrosse completely free.
Happy Easter to all.
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Snow Job
TigerBlog spent a week in Costa Rica and saw all kinds of great displays of nature, basically everywhere he looked.
There were mountains and rivers and flowers and wild looking bugs and birds and even some lizard-type fellow who strolled across the pool deck where Nick Bates and TigerBlog Jr. were swimming.
You know what TB didn't see in Costa Rica? Snow.
Okay, it was June. Still, TB has a feeling that even if he went back in December, he wouldn't exactly see the ground covered by a blizzard.
TB could just picture Diego and Victor and the rest of the people who showed their home country to the Princeton men's lacrosse team last June, all being amazed that a World Cup Qualifier - a game of unreal importance - was being played in a snowstorm in Denver last week.
Oh, and Diego's father, Don Carlos? He probably took it the hardest.
TB isn't quite sure what to think about it, even after FIFA announced that the 1-0 victory by the U.S. would stand, despite protests by the Costa Ricans.
During the men's lacrosse trip, TB and about 15 other members of the group went to the WCQ between Los Ticos and El Salvador, in the first round. It was a ridiculous experience, a fervor that TB has never seen in an American sporting event.
And here was an even more important game, being played in driving snow, between a nation where snow is routine and another where it never falls. Oh, sure, most of the Costa Rican players play in cold weather in Europe.
But still, such an important game? Played in those conditions?
On the one hand, each WCQ game is so significant that TB figures they should be played in as optimal conditions as possible. On the other hand, how is playing in snow in Denver any different than having the U.S. go and play in 100 degree weather.
Anyway, he's still rooting for Costa Rica to make the World Cup, and he likes their chances.
As for snow, there wasn't that much of it around here this winter. There were flurries, and sometimes there was enough snow to cover the grass, though it rarely stuck to the roads. TB can't remember a time he was all that inconvenienced by a storm this winter, and certainly there was no major event with a foot or more.
What there was around here this winter was cold weather. Lots and lots of it. It never got bitterly ridiculously cold, like around zero and all, but even as late March rolls around, it's been weeks and weeks of temperatures in the 30s.
Princeton has played seven men's lacrosse games, six of which have been played in extremely cold weather and one of which was played in 65 degree sunshine in Chapel Hill. And that doesn't even mention the practices for spring teams, all of which have caused everyone to put on layers and break out hand warmers.
Until this week. Actually, this week began with a threat of 5-8 inches of snow, which turned out to be nothing but a few wet flakes and a lot of rain.
And now? It appears that the week, and March itself, will be going out like a lamb.
And it's just in time for that.
This weekend marks the home openers for baseball and softball, with Ivy League doubleheaders Saturday and Sunday against Yale and Brown.
The forecast is for temps to be in the mid-50s both days.
Because of mid-terms and spring break, Princeton has had almost no home events the last three weeks. That changes dramatically this weekend, with 16 home events on the schedule between tonight and Sunday.
The softball team is the only Ivy League team over .500 to this point, with a record of 14-8. Princeton is batting .321 as a team and has hit 18 home runs to just six for its opponents.
The games this weekend will be the first at home for first-year head coach Lisa Sweeney and assistant coach Jen Lapicki.
In Ivy League baseball, three teams are better than .600 overall while the other five are below .400. Dartmouth is 12-1. Still, in baseball and softball, all it takes is a few timely hits one way or another to radically change the races.
In addition to baseball and softball, there's also men's lacrosse, rowing, men's volleyball and men's tennis on campus this weekend.
In fact, all four crews are home this weekend, which is a real rarity.
And no snow.
It appears that spring is finally showing up around here.
It's about time.
There were mountains and rivers and flowers and wild looking bugs and birds and even some lizard-type fellow who strolled across the pool deck where Nick Bates and TigerBlog Jr. were swimming.
You know what TB didn't see in Costa Rica? Snow.
Okay, it was June. Still, TB has a feeling that even if he went back in December, he wouldn't exactly see the ground covered by a blizzard.
TB could just picture Diego and Victor and the rest of the people who showed their home country to the Princeton men's lacrosse team last June, all being amazed that a World Cup Qualifier - a game of unreal importance - was being played in a snowstorm in Denver last week.
Oh, and Diego's father, Don Carlos? He probably took it the hardest.
TB isn't quite sure what to think about it, even after FIFA announced that the 1-0 victory by the U.S. would stand, despite protests by the Costa Ricans.
During the men's lacrosse trip, TB and about 15 other members of the group went to the WCQ between Los Ticos and El Salvador, in the first round. It was a ridiculous experience, a fervor that TB has never seen in an American sporting event.
And here was an even more important game, being played in driving snow, between a nation where snow is routine and another where it never falls. Oh, sure, most of the Costa Rican players play in cold weather in Europe.
But still, such an important game? Played in those conditions?
On the one hand, each WCQ game is so significant that TB figures they should be played in as optimal conditions as possible. On the other hand, how is playing in snow in Denver any different than having the U.S. go and play in 100 degree weather.
Anyway, he's still rooting for Costa Rica to make the World Cup, and he likes their chances.
As for snow, there wasn't that much of it around here this winter. There were flurries, and sometimes there was enough snow to cover the grass, though it rarely stuck to the roads. TB can't remember a time he was all that inconvenienced by a storm this winter, and certainly there was no major event with a foot or more.
What there was around here this winter was cold weather. Lots and lots of it. It never got bitterly ridiculously cold, like around zero and all, but even as late March rolls around, it's been weeks and weeks of temperatures in the 30s.
Princeton has played seven men's lacrosse games, six of which have been played in extremely cold weather and one of which was played in 65 degree sunshine in Chapel Hill. And that doesn't even mention the practices for spring teams, all of which have caused everyone to put on layers and break out hand warmers.
Until this week. Actually, this week began with a threat of 5-8 inches of snow, which turned out to be nothing but a few wet flakes and a lot of rain.
And now? It appears that the week, and March itself, will be going out like a lamb.
And it's just in time for that.
This weekend marks the home openers for baseball and softball, with Ivy League doubleheaders Saturday and Sunday against Yale and Brown.
The forecast is for temps to be in the mid-50s both days.
Because of mid-terms and spring break, Princeton has had almost no home events the last three weeks. That changes dramatically this weekend, with 16 home events on the schedule between tonight and Sunday.
The softball team is the only Ivy League team over .500 to this point, with a record of 14-8. Princeton is batting .321 as a team and has hit 18 home runs to just six for its opponents.
The games this weekend will be the first at home for first-year head coach Lisa Sweeney and assistant coach Jen Lapicki.
In Ivy League baseball, three teams are better than .600 overall while the other five are below .400. Dartmouth is 12-1. Still, in baseball and softball, all it takes is a few timely hits one way or another to radically change the races.
In addition to baseball and softball, there's also men's lacrosse, rowing, men's volleyball and men's tennis on campus this weekend.
In fact, all four crews are home this weekend, which is a real rarity.
And no snow.
It appears that spring is finally showing up around here.
It's about time.
Friday, October 12, 2012
Sara And Manny
Sara Hendershot had just finished her participation in a two-hour discussion on the past, present and future of women's athletics, and now some of the audience members were coming up to ask questions and talk about how much they enjoyed having her there.
As one man in a suit extended his hand, he mentioned that this was the first time he'd ever shaken hands with an actual Olympian.
There is something extraordinary about having been an Olympian, something that drives people like Hendershot to recommit to getting back there again and that makes people like those in the audience yesterday marvel at that level of dedication and athletic greatness.
The occasion was the College Athletic Administrators of New Jersey's annual symposium and awards luncheon. In the interest of full disclosure, TigerBlog is now the president of the organization.
Hendershot was joined on the panel by Erin Buzuvis, a lawyer/blogger/professor at Western New England whose specialty is Title IX issues, and Linda Yost, Associate Director of Athletics at Stockton State in South Jersey. Back in the 1980s and 1990s, Yost had been an assistant basketball coach at Brooklyn College and had been involved in a very contentious Title IX suit.
The panel discussion began with Yost's story, about how Brooklyn College basically turned its women's program into a complete underclass in every way possible. The resulting lawsuit was a slamdunk win for the women - except that the school decided to drop all athletics as a response.
Brooklyn College was at that time in the East Coast Conference, a league that then included Rider. TB covered a few Rider-Brooklyn College games and never once suspected anything was up Title IX-wise, or, for that matter, would have thought to consider it.
Maybe it's because he saw some of it first-hand and definitely because it wasn't that long ago, but when TB listened to Yost, he couldn't help but be amazed at what was going on.
As TB has often said here, the idea that Princeton would in this day and age engage in an institutional decision to favor men's teams over women's teams in areas like practice times, scheduling, athletic communications, athletic medicine, strength and conditioning, facilities or any of it is unimaginable. It's just not even conceivable that someone in the administration here would suggest doing so in the first place.
It's easy for an audience like the one at the CAANJ event yesterday - which featured many young men and women who are just starting out in careers in college athletics - to forget that women like Yost as recently as 20 years ago had to put up with situations like the one at Brooklyn College.
Of course, for the ones who think that it's okay to go back to those days, there is Buzuvis, who spoke about current issues still related to Title IX compliance - such as double-counting of women athletes on multiple rosters, sports that don't fit the true definition of an NCAA competition and even sexual assault on campus.
And she does more than just talk about. She is actively involved nationally in the legal issues that continue to arise these days.
As for Hendershot, her story was one of a girl who grew up exposed to any number of athletic opportunities and eventually pursued rowing, in part because of the expanding number of college opportunities for women in the sport.
She spoke about her experiences at Princeton, how she made it up through the national team ladder all the way to two world championships in fours (one with the U23 team, one with the full national team) and ultimately to the London Olympics, where she finished fourth in pairs, 0.2 seconds away from a medal. She also pointed out that American women won more medals than American men and that, for the first time ever, there were 1) women competing in every sport that men competed in, with the addition of women's boxing, and 2) more American women Olympians than men.
She talked about rededicating herself in college when she thought she wasn't giving her best, and she talked about wanting to get back to the Olympics in 2016, how the Olympic experience was beyond her wildest dreams. She spoke about coming back from a broken rib that almost kept her from the Olympics, how she and her teammates struggle to make ends meet while committing full-time to training, how she's lived in the houses of strangers (through a program that U.S. Rowing created) because she had no money to be anywhere else.
It's hard to imagine someone making a better impression on a room full of people than Hendershot did. In fact, when the discussion was opened up to Q&A, the first one for her was if she'd ever considered motivational speaking as a career path.
After that, it was time for the awards luncheon.
Princeton again won the CAANJ Cup as the top Division I/II athletic program in New Jersey.
The ridiculously impressive Manny Sardinha was honored as the Division I/II student-athlete of the year, for his performance with the men's soccer team and his very long list of off-the-field academic and service accomplishments. He spoke about having been given the opportunity to pursue those accomplishments and not just being an athlete during his college career.
There were six student-athlete winners, a male and female from the junior college and Division III ranks, as well as the Division I/II. If you're keeping score, the junior college Cup went to Gloucester Community College, and the Division III one went to Stevens Institute of Technology.
In all there are 44 colleges in New Jersey, and five conference offices are also based in the state. Each year, TigerBlog marvels at the different stories the athletes tell about their experiences, the different backgrounds they come from - the men's junior college winner came to this country with his mother from Russia - and the different challenges that each of the schools face.
Ultimately, he leaves again remembering how lucky he is to work at Princeton, at a place that every day challenges those who come here to either work or study and demands excellence from them. It's a University that is very clear about about its values, and it doesn't compromise them for anyone.
At the same time, it's also a school with a huge endowment and with advantages that many of the schools at the CAANJ event could never imagine. As such, there is a responsibility among those like TB to appreciate what they have here and to never take it for granted.
For TB, though, it's always, always about the people here, and the last two days have been a reminder of that and also a reminder to never take that end of it for granted.
How can he, when he works at a place that includes people like Bob Callahan, whose Hall of Fame induction TB was at Wednesday night, and Sara Hendershot and Manny Sardinha, whom TB was left to marvel at yesterday.
As one man in a suit extended his hand, he mentioned that this was the first time he'd ever shaken hands with an actual Olympian.
There is something extraordinary about having been an Olympian, something that drives people like Hendershot to recommit to getting back there again and that makes people like those in the audience yesterday marvel at that level of dedication and athletic greatness.
The occasion was the College Athletic Administrators of New Jersey's annual symposium and awards luncheon. In the interest of full disclosure, TigerBlog is now the president of the organization.
Hendershot was joined on the panel by Erin Buzuvis, a lawyer/blogger/professor at Western New England whose specialty is Title IX issues, and Linda Yost, Associate Director of Athletics at Stockton State in South Jersey. Back in the 1980s and 1990s, Yost had been an assistant basketball coach at Brooklyn College and had been involved in a very contentious Title IX suit.
The panel discussion began with Yost's story, about how Brooklyn College basically turned its women's program into a complete underclass in every way possible. The resulting lawsuit was a slamdunk win for the women - except that the school decided to drop all athletics as a response.
Brooklyn College was at that time in the East Coast Conference, a league that then included Rider. TB covered a few Rider-Brooklyn College games and never once suspected anything was up Title IX-wise, or, for that matter, would have thought to consider it.
Maybe it's because he saw some of it first-hand and definitely because it wasn't that long ago, but when TB listened to Yost, he couldn't help but be amazed at what was going on.
As TB has often said here, the idea that Princeton would in this day and age engage in an institutional decision to favor men's teams over women's teams in areas like practice times, scheduling, athletic communications, athletic medicine, strength and conditioning, facilities or any of it is unimaginable. It's just not even conceivable that someone in the administration here would suggest doing so in the first place.
It's easy for an audience like the one at the CAANJ event yesterday - which featured many young men and women who are just starting out in careers in college athletics - to forget that women like Yost as recently as 20 years ago had to put up with situations like the one at Brooklyn College.
Of course, for the ones who think that it's okay to go back to those days, there is Buzuvis, who spoke about current issues still related to Title IX compliance - such as double-counting of women athletes on multiple rosters, sports that don't fit the true definition of an NCAA competition and even sexual assault on campus.
And she does more than just talk about. She is actively involved nationally in the legal issues that continue to arise these days.
As for Hendershot, her story was one of a girl who grew up exposed to any number of athletic opportunities and eventually pursued rowing, in part because of the expanding number of college opportunities for women in the sport.
She spoke about her experiences at Princeton, how she made it up through the national team ladder all the way to two world championships in fours (one with the U23 team, one with the full national team) and ultimately to the London Olympics, where she finished fourth in pairs, 0.2 seconds away from a medal. She also pointed out that American women won more medals than American men and that, for the first time ever, there were 1) women competing in every sport that men competed in, with the addition of women's boxing, and 2) more American women Olympians than men.
She talked about rededicating herself in college when she thought she wasn't giving her best, and she talked about wanting to get back to the Olympics in 2016, how the Olympic experience was beyond her wildest dreams. She spoke about coming back from a broken rib that almost kept her from the Olympics, how she and her teammates struggle to make ends meet while committing full-time to training, how she's lived in the houses of strangers (through a program that U.S. Rowing created) because she had no money to be anywhere else.
It's hard to imagine someone making a better impression on a room full of people than Hendershot did. In fact, when the discussion was opened up to Q&A, the first one for her was if she'd ever considered motivational speaking as a career path.
After that, it was time for the awards luncheon.
Princeton again won the CAANJ Cup as the top Division I/II athletic program in New Jersey.
The ridiculously impressive Manny Sardinha was honored as the Division I/II student-athlete of the year, for his performance with the men's soccer team and his very long list of off-the-field academic and service accomplishments. He spoke about having been given the opportunity to pursue those accomplishments and not just being an athlete during his college career.
There were six student-athlete winners, a male and female from the junior college and Division III ranks, as well as the Division I/II. If you're keeping score, the junior college Cup went to Gloucester Community College, and the Division III one went to Stevens Institute of Technology.
In all there are 44 colleges in New Jersey, and five conference offices are also based in the state. Each year, TigerBlog marvels at the different stories the athletes tell about their experiences, the different backgrounds they come from - the men's junior college winner came to this country with his mother from Russia - and the different challenges that each of the schools face.
Ultimately, he leaves again remembering how lucky he is to work at Princeton, at a place that every day challenges those who come here to either work or study and demands excellence from them. It's a University that is very clear about about its values, and it doesn't compromise them for anyone.
At the same time, it's also a school with a huge endowment and with advantages that many of the schools at the CAANJ event could never imagine. As such, there is a responsibility among those like TB to appreciate what they have here and to never take it for granted.
For TB, though, it's always, always about the people here, and the last two days have been a reminder of that and also a reminder to never take that end of it for granted.
How can he, when he works at a place that includes people like Bob Callahan, whose Hall of Fame induction TB was at Wednesday night, and Sara Hendershot and Manny Sardinha, whom TB was left to marvel at yesterday.
Thursday, August 2, 2012
Medal Count
TigerBlog wanted to watch the women's 8 rowing gold medal race this morning, except it was only online.
By the time he had his laptop set up ...
Okay, TB will get back to that in a few minutes. First, he has to interject with the fact that as he writes, he is watching equestrian, and he continues not to get it. The horse appears to be breakdancing. First he goes forward. Then backward. The he runs in place. Then he does a little cross-over step. Then across the field.
TB readily admits that the horses are way better dancers than he is. And some of them have such nice little hats that really accentuate their ears.
On some levels, it appears to be a contest to see who can get closer to the white fence without touching it. With some research, it seems something like a dog show, which isn't in the Olympics. TB doesn't get how this is.
Anyway, by the time he had his laptop set up, the race was over.
So what did he do? He put on SportsCenter, where he was saw the four words that immediately draw scorn and derision: "Live From Jets Camp."
Seriously, this has to be a joke, right?
TB watched for awhile and was enthralled to find out that Tim Tebow threw from the shotgun 82.7% of the time (vs. under center) and ran from the shotgun at around the same percentage. The Jets, of course, scored touchdowns on 80% of their goal-to-go situations last year to lead the NFL, so there was a spirited discussion about whether or not Tebow would help improve that and how.
During this whole time, there were dramatic shots in the background of the Jets doing calisthenics, followed by gripping footage of Tebow as he went through a drill in which he took a football and, TB is getting breathless here, handed it to a running back.
Again, this is a joke, right? TB cannot believe that ESPN can put this stuff on with a straight face. It's almost like a "Saturday Night Live" skit.
He would have preferred to see the rowing race.
As it turned out, the winners were the United States, Canada and Princeton.
The American boat won, as Princeton alum Caroline Lind earned her second goal medal.
The Canadians came in second, with silver medals for Princetonians Andreanne Morin and Lauren Wilkinson. Morin was competing in her third Olympic Games and won her first medal, while Wilkinson won a medal in her first Olympic appearance.
TB mentioned this before, but was he supposed to root for the Americans, even though the Canadians had twice as many Princeton alums in their boat?
The race gave Princeton its first three medals of these Olympic Games. In fact, of the 16 golds and silvers, three went to Princeton, for a percentage of .188.
If you're inclined to do such things, then that one race moved Princeton ahead of Mexico, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Spain, Greece and a bunch of other countries for total medals won.
Princeton has won more gold medals than, among many others, Canada.
Can Princeton win any more medals? Glenn Ochal has a shot, also in rowing. Diana Matheson could with the Canadian women's soccer team.
To date, 15 of Princeton's 16 Olympians have competed.
The last one? Hint: the steeplechase heats are tomorrow morning at 8.
By the time he had his laptop set up ...
Okay, TB will get back to that in a few minutes. First, he has to interject with the fact that as he writes, he is watching equestrian, and he continues not to get it. The horse appears to be breakdancing. First he goes forward. Then backward. The he runs in place. Then he does a little cross-over step. Then across the field.
TB readily admits that the horses are way better dancers than he is. And some of them have such nice little hats that really accentuate their ears.
On some levels, it appears to be a contest to see who can get closer to the white fence without touching it. With some research, it seems something like a dog show, which isn't in the Olympics. TB doesn't get how this is.
Anyway, by the time he had his laptop set up, the race was over.
So what did he do? He put on SportsCenter, where he was saw the four words that immediately draw scorn and derision: "Live From Jets Camp."
Seriously, this has to be a joke, right?
TB watched for awhile and was enthralled to find out that Tim Tebow threw from the shotgun 82.7% of the time (vs. under center) and ran from the shotgun at around the same percentage. The Jets, of course, scored touchdowns on 80% of their goal-to-go situations last year to lead the NFL, so there was a spirited discussion about whether or not Tebow would help improve that and how.
During this whole time, there were dramatic shots in the background of the Jets doing calisthenics, followed by gripping footage of Tebow as he went through a drill in which he took a football and, TB is getting breathless here, handed it to a running back.
Again, this is a joke, right? TB cannot believe that ESPN can put this stuff on with a straight face. It's almost like a "Saturday Night Live" skit.
He would have preferred to see the rowing race.
As it turned out, the winners were the United States, Canada and Princeton.
The American boat won, as Princeton alum Caroline Lind earned her second goal medal.
The Canadians came in second, with silver medals for Princetonians Andreanne Morin and Lauren Wilkinson. Morin was competing in her third Olympic Games and won her first medal, while Wilkinson won a medal in her first Olympic appearance.
TB mentioned this before, but was he supposed to root for the Americans, even though the Canadians had twice as many Princeton alums in their boat?
The race gave Princeton its first three medals of these Olympic Games. In fact, of the 16 golds and silvers, three went to Princeton, for a percentage of .188.
If you're inclined to do such things, then that one race moved Princeton ahead of Mexico, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Spain, Greece and a bunch of other countries for total medals won.
Princeton has won more gold medals than, among many others, Canada.
Can Princeton win any more medals? Glenn Ochal has a shot, also in rowing. Diana Matheson could with the Canadian women's soccer team.
To date, 15 of Princeton's 16 Olympians have competed.
The last one? Hint: the steeplechase heats are tomorrow morning at 8.
Friday, July 6, 2012
Cars And Boats
Anytime TigerBlog takes his car in to be serviced, he lives in fear for a few hours that the phone is going to ring and he's going to hear that there's a crack in the engine block or something and that he needs to get a new car.
TB is always nervous when he has a new car, and he much prefers his current situation of 108,000 miles on a car that still runs well. That way, he doesn't have to worry about a scratch here or getting some mud there.
Still, taking an older car in for an oil change isn't the same as taking in a newer one.
TB takes his car to a guy named Ron, who has sort of become the unofficial go-to car guy for the OAC.
Through the years, a total of six OAC people have taken their cars to his shop, even if it is a bit out of the way, which has led to years of conversations that begin "who can pick me up at Ron's tomorrow?"
The best part of taking TB's car to Ron is that he knows that Ron is not going to tell him he needs new spark plugs or new tires or something else if he doesn't really need them.
TB has to trust Ron, because he knows nothing about cars, other than to put gas in them and then press down on the pedal on the right to go and the one on the left to stop.
There has to be great satisfaction involved in figuring out what's wrong with a car and then fixing it, especially since TB assumes most car owners are automotive illiterates like he is and therefore have no way of knowing what's wrong when they bring it in.
TB took his car in this morning, which leaves him with the odd feeling of being stuck without a vehicle should he need one, or at least having to borrow someone else's if he needs one. Of course, he doesn't really have anywhere to go and his car will be done early this afternoon, so it's not all that tough a situation, though it will limit his lunch choices.
When TB got to his office, he was able to see Roger Federer close out Novak Djokovic in the Wimbledon semifinals. As Andy Murray prepared for his semifinal, TB learned that no English player has won the Wimbledon title since Fred Perry.
Considering that Perry lived to be 85 and died 17 years ago, yes, it's been awhile.
TigerBlog also saw an NBC commercial for the upcoming Olympic Games, which actually begin in less than three weeks. TB cannot remember if it is normal for the Olympic Trials to have been held so close to the start of the Games themselves.
The Olympic commercial featured a wide range of athletes who made very brief appearances and very brief comments about the Games, comments that TB couldn't hear because he had the sound turned way down.
He did see the people in the commercial, as their names were included under their pictures.
Among those who were included was Caroline Lind, a 2006 Princeton graduate who will be competing for the United States in rowing, specifically the women's 8.
Lind already has one gold medal, which she won four years ago in Beijing. She was also in the U.S. boat that recently set the world record, a sign that the Americans mean business in London.
Of Princeton's 16 Olympians, there are more in rowing than in any other sport. A total of seven Princeton alums will row in London.
It's so easy to take rowing at Princeton for granted. The boathouse is its own separate world, and it's a sport that most people never really try.
And yet there are more rowers than any other athletes at Princeton. They are among the most loyal to their program after they graduate, and most have enjoyed tremendous success on the water here.
The rowing program's excellence is directly attributable to the coaching staff, led by head coaches Lori Dauphiny, Greg Hughes, Marty Crotty and Paul Rassam. They are a remarkably close-knit group, and that only enhances the effectiveness of the program.
Much like fixing cars, TB knows little about rowing boats.
Also like the cars, he has great respect for those who can make the boats go fast, even without an engine.
TB is always nervous when he has a new car, and he much prefers his current situation of 108,000 miles on a car that still runs well. That way, he doesn't have to worry about a scratch here or getting some mud there.
Still, taking an older car in for an oil change isn't the same as taking in a newer one.
TB takes his car to a guy named Ron, who has sort of become the unofficial go-to car guy for the OAC.
Through the years, a total of six OAC people have taken their cars to his shop, even if it is a bit out of the way, which has led to years of conversations that begin "who can pick me up at Ron's tomorrow?"
The best part of taking TB's car to Ron is that he knows that Ron is not going to tell him he needs new spark plugs or new tires or something else if he doesn't really need them.
TB has to trust Ron, because he knows nothing about cars, other than to put gas in them and then press down on the pedal on the right to go and the one on the left to stop.
There has to be great satisfaction involved in figuring out what's wrong with a car and then fixing it, especially since TB assumes most car owners are automotive illiterates like he is and therefore have no way of knowing what's wrong when they bring it in.
TB took his car in this morning, which leaves him with the odd feeling of being stuck without a vehicle should he need one, or at least having to borrow someone else's if he needs one. Of course, he doesn't really have anywhere to go and his car will be done early this afternoon, so it's not all that tough a situation, though it will limit his lunch choices.
When TB got to his office, he was able to see Roger Federer close out Novak Djokovic in the Wimbledon semifinals. As Andy Murray prepared for his semifinal, TB learned that no English player has won the Wimbledon title since Fred Perry.
Considering that Perry lived to be 85 and died 17 years ago, yes, it's been awhile.
TigerBlog also saw an NBC commercial for the upcoming Olympic Games, which actually begin in less than three weeks. TB cannot remember if it is normal for the Olympic Trials to have been held so close to the start of the Games themselves.
The Olympic commercial featured a wide range of athletes who made very brief appearances and very brief comments about the Games, comments that TB couldn't hear because he had the sound turned way down.
He did see the people in the commercial, as their names were included under their pictures.
Among those who were included was Caroline Lind, a 2006 Princeton graduate who will be competing for the United States in rowing, specifically the women's 8.
Lind already has one gold medal, which she won four years ago in Beijing. She was also in the U.S. boat that recently set the world record, a sign that the Americans mean business in London.
Of Princeton's 16 Olympians, there are more in rowing than in any other sport. A total of seven Princeton alums will row in London.
It's so easy to take rowing at Princeton for granted. The boathouse is its own separate world, and it's a sport that most people never really try.
And yet there are more rowers than any other athletes at Princeton. They are among the most loyal to their program after they graduate, and most have enjoyed tremendous success on the water here.
The rowing program's excellence is directly attributable to the coaching staff, led by head coaches Lori Dauphiny, Greg Hughes, Marty Crotty and Paul Rassam. They are a remarkably close-knit group, and that only enhances the effectiveness of the program.
Much like fixing cars, TB knows little about rowing boats.
Also like the cars, he has great respect for those who can make the boats go fast, even without an engine.
Thursday, May 24, 2012
The Sports Parade
When TigerBlog goes through the TV lineup, he usually makes stops at channel 126 (Military Channel), 181 (A&E), and 230 (Turner Classic Movies) and 231 (AMC), as well as the usual ones along the way. The last few weeks, when he's watched way more of the hockey playoffs than he usually does, he's figured out that NBC Sports is channel 90.
These days, he's looking to catch up on "Big Bang Theory," a show he was late getting into and still isn't 100% sold on, though he did laugh heartily when Raj tells his blind date that it's okay for her to wash her hands all the time but not Sheldon because "you're a dentist, and he's just nuts."
As an aside, he's tried to get into "Mad Men," though with limited success to date.
Anyway, he saw that there was a movie called "The Sports Parade" on channel 230, so he went to the information button to see what it was about.
Turns out "The Sports Parade" is from 1932, and the description said it followed two former college football stars after their graduation as one goes in a successful direction and the other is constantly trying to get ahead.
The successful one, if TB may add, becomes a big shot in the newspaper business, specifically as the sports editor. The newspaper business as it was portrayed in 1932 bore little resemblance to the one that TB knew in the 1980s and 1990s.
What made the movie even more interesting was the fact that the two athlete/friends were Dartmouth guys. They played football, hockey and baseball actually.
There were a few scenes in the beginning that were supposed to be on Dartmouth's campus, and there was a large banner that read "DARTMOUTH" in the same block letters that TB has seen so many times when he's been in Hanover.
TB only saw the first 30 minutes of it or so, and he has no idea how it turns out. If the movie is from 1932, then the two guys played in the late 1920s or so.
TB, being somewhat along the same lines as Sheldon, immediately wondered how they did against Princeton, and the answer is - they didn't, not in football at least, as Princeton and Dartmouth did not face each other between 1916 and 1933.
At one point, the sports editor guy talks about how they'll be covering "Yale-Dartmouth at the Bowl," which is where every Yale-Dartmouth game was played back then. In fact, Yale and Dartmouth tied 0-0 in 1930 and 33-33 in 1931.
Princeton did play Dartmouth in baseball in those years, and the schools would play in hockey twice a year as well, once in Princeton and once in New York City.
Of course, Princeton and Dartmouth did not play in women's athletics back then, since Princeton would not admit women for nearly 40 more years.
Back in the present day, the NCAA women's rowing championships come to the area this weekend, as Mercer Lake is the venue. The hosts, by the way, are the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference and Rider (which doesn't have a rowing team, but that doesn't mean it can't be the host for the event).
Princeton is the defending first varsity 8 champion, but the overall champion is the team that wins the points championship, which puts it in direct contradiction with the way the Ivy League crowns its winner.
This year was the first time the Ivy League women's rowing championships were separate from the Eastern Sprints, and the Ivy champion for years had been recognized as the highest finished first varsity 8 boat at the Sprints. For continuity sake, the league carried that over this year.
Beginning next year, the winner of the Ivy League title gets an automatic bid to the NCAA event, but TB isn't quite sure what that means. Is it the first varsity 8 boat? The overall team winner?
Anyway, seven schools have won the NCAA women's rowing championship: Harvard, Yale, Brown, Cal, Washington, Stanford and Virginia. It's unlikely that Princeton breaks into that elite group this year, but the Tigers are coming off a fourth-place finish a year ago - and they are the highest ranked Ivy team in the final poll (sixth). The top five in the poll? Cal, Michigan, Virginia, Ohio State and Washington.
The racing begins tomorrow and runs all day, continuing all day Saturday and then wrapping up with the finals Sunday. The first varsity 8 grand final is 12:05.
Looking for something to do? Mercer Lake is in Mercer County Park, about 10 minutes from Princeton's campus.
These days, he's looking to catch up on "Big Bang Theory," a show he was late getting into and still isn't 100% sold on, though he did laugh heartily when Raj tells his blind date that it's okay for her to wash her hands all the time but not Sheldon because "you're a dentist, and he's just nuts."
As an aside, he's tried to get into "Mad Men," though with limited success to date.
Anyway, he saw that there was a movie called "The Sports Parade" on channel 230, so he went to the information button to see what it was about.
Turns out "The Sports Parade" is from 1932, and the description said it followed two former college football stars after their graduation as one goes in a successful direction and the other is constantly trying to get ahead.
The successful one, if TB may add, becomes a big shot in the newspaper business, specifically as the sports editor. The newspaper business as it was portrayed in 1932 bore little resemblance to the one that TB knew in the 1980s and 1990s.
What made the movie even more interesting was the fact that the two athlete/friends were Dartmouth guys. They played football, hockey and baseball actually.
There were a few scenes in the beginning that were supposed to be on Dartmouth's campus, and there was a large banner that read "DARTMOUTH" in the same block letters that TB has seen so many times when he's been in Hanover.
TB only saw the first 30 minutes of it or so, and he has no idea how it turns out. If the movie is from 1932, then the two guys played in the late 1920s or so.
TB, being somewhat along the same lines as Sheldon, immediately wondered how they did against Princeton, and the answer is - they didn't, not in football at least, as Princeton and Dartmouth did not face each other between 1916 and 1933.
At one point, the sports editor guy talks about how they'll be covering "Yale-Dartmouth at the Bowl," which is where every Yale-Dartmouth game was played back then. In fact, Yale and Dartmouth tied 0-0 in 1930 and 33-33 in 1931.
Princeton did play Dartmouth in baseball in those years, and the schools would play in hockey twice a year as well, once in Princeton and once in New York City.
Of course, Princeton and Dartmouth did not play in women's athletics back then, since Princeton would not admit women for nearly 40 more years.
Back in the present day, the NCAA women's rowing championships come to the area this weekend, as Mercer Lake is the venue. The hosts, by the way, are the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference and Rider (which doesn't have a rowing team, but that doesn't mean it can't be the host for the event).
Princeton is the defending first varsity 8 champion, but the overall champion is the team that wins the points championship, which puts it in direct contradiction with the way the Ivy League crowns its winner.
This year was the first time the Ivy League women's rowing championships were separate from the Eastern Sprints, and the Ivy champion for years had been recognized as the highest finished first varsity 8 boat at the Sprints. For continuity sake, the league carried that over this year.
Beginning next year, the winner of the Ivy League title gets an automatic bid to the NCAA event, but TB isn't quite sure what that means. Is it the first varsity 8 boat? The overall team winner?
Anyway, seven schools have won the NCAA women's rowing championship: Harvard, Yale, Brown, Cal, Washington, Stanford and Virginia. It's unlikely that Princeton breaks into that elite group this year, but the Tigers are coming off a fourth-place finish a year ago - and they are the highest ranked Ivy team in the final poll (sixth). The top five in the poll? Cal, Michigan, Virginia, Ohio State and Washington.
The racing begins tomorrow and runs all day, continuing all day Saturday and then wrapping up with the finals Sunday. The first varsity 8 grand final is 12:05.
Looking for something to do? Mercer Lake is in Mercer County Park, about 10 minutes from Princeton's campus.
Thursday, May 10, 2012
Today, Through Sunday
TigerBlog isn't quite into the whole celebrity thing.
One time, back when the men's basketball team was playing in Madison Square Garden, Michael Kay (who does the Yankees' games on TV and has an ESPN radio show) was broadcasting the games.
When he came up to TB to talk about the Tigers and get pronunciations and do all the things that announcers do, TB asked him what his name was. When he said "Michael Kay" with a look that said "you know who I am," TB said "Matt?"
Of course TB knew who he was. It's just a little way to keep everyone grounded, at least a little.
As a result of this basic anti-celebrity mindset, TB wasn't doing somersaults when he found out that "The Today Show" was going to be stopping by the boathouse.
TB has watched more of the "Jeopardy" teen tournament in the last two weeks than he has of "The Today Show" + "Good Morning America" + any other morning show in his entire life added together.
The four hosts of "The Today Show" - Matt Lauer, Ann Curry, Al Roker and Natalie Morales - were on campus last week to learn to row. TB assumes this is somehow related to the coming Olympic Games, which are televised by NBC.
The segment aired today between 8 and 9. TB didn't see it. He assumes at some point he will.
The crux, as he understands it, was that the four on-air personalities had a lesson in how to row and then had a race against some of the Princeton rowers.
TB further surmises that the rowing will be of greater intensity this weekend, when the final three Ivy League championships of the year are crowned, in the sports of men's lightweight rowing, men's heavyweight rowing and women's open rowing.
Women's lightweight rowing is not one of the 33 official Ivy League sports.
It used to be that the three Ivy League rowing champions would be the first varsity eight boats that finished the highest at Eastern Sprints, and that still holds for the men.
The women, however, are rowing in uncharted waters, as it were.
The men, racing on Lake Quinsigamond in Worcester, Mass., have the traditional Eastern Sprints format.
Neither the Princeton lightweights nor heavyweights are the favorites going in, but both have done well many times in the past under such circumstances.
The women aren't a prohibitive favorite but have as good a chance as anyone else of coming in first.
This time around, the women are racing at the Ivy League championships, minus the other schools that compete in Eastern Sprints, with the event to be held on the Cooper River in Cherry Hill. Why? Because beginning next year, the winner of the Ivy League championship earns an automatic berth in the NCAA championships.
Oh, and TB just paused for six minutes to see a replay of the segment from "The Today Show," and it's about as fluffy as you would expect. Or, as TB would say if he was more cynical, i's just another over-the-top attempt to make the hosts seem like they are even more special and important - all in the name of cross-promoting another network property.
Good thing TB isn't cynical.
One time, back when the men's basketball team was playing in Madison Square Garden, Michael Kay (who does the Yankees' games on TV and has an ESPN radio show) was broadcasting the games.
When he came up to TB to talk about the Tigers and get pronunciations and do all the things that announcers do, TB asked him what his name was. When he said "Michael Kay" with a look that said "you know who I am," TB said "Matt?"
Of course TB knew who he was. It's just a little way to keep everyone grounded, at least a little.
As a result of this basic anti-celebrity mindset, TB wasn't doing somersaults when he found out that "The Today Show" was going to be stopping by the boathouse.
TB has watched more of the "Jeopardy" teen tournament in the last two weeks than he has of "The Today Show" + "Good Morning America" + any other morning show in his entire life added together.
The four hosts of "The Today Show" - Matt Lauer, Ann Curry, Al Roker and Natalie Morales - were on campus last week to learn to row. TB assumes this is somehow related to the coming Olympic Games, which are televised by NBC.
The segment aired today between 8 and 9. TB didn't see it. He assumes at some point he will.
The crux, as he understands it, was that the four on-air personalities had a lesson in how to row and then had a race against some of the Princeton rowers.
TB further surmises that the rowing will be of greater intensity this weekend, when the final three Ivy League championships of the year are crowned, in the sports of men's lightweight rowing, men's heavyweight rowing and women's open rowing.
Women's lightweight rowing is not one of the 33 official Ivy League sports.
It used to be that the three Ivy League rowing champions would be the first varsity eight boats that finished the highest at Eastern Sprints, and that still holds for the men.
The women, however, are rowing in uncharted waters, as it were.
The men, racing on Lake Quinsigamond in Worcester, Mass., have the traditional Eastern Sprints format.
Neither the Princeton lightweights nor heavyweights are the favorites going in, but both have done well many times in the past under such circumstances.
The women aren't a prohibitive favorite but have as good a chance as anyone else of coming in first.
This time around, the women are racing at the Ivy League championships, minus the other schools that compete in Eastern Sprints, with the event to be held on the Cooper River in Cherry Hill. Why? Because beginning next year, the winner of the Ivy League championship earns an automatic berth in the NCAA championships.
Oh, and TB just paused for six minutes to see a replay of the segment from "The Today Show," and it's about as fluffy as you would expect. Or, as TB would say if he was more cynical, i's just another over-the-top attempt to make the hosts seem like they are even more special and important - all in the name of cross-promoting another network property.
Good thing TB isn't cynical.
Tuesday, September 6, 2011
Boardwalk And Cleanup
For the first time since TigerBlog can remember, he played a game of "Monopoly" the other day.
Board games were a big part of TB's life, at least to a certain point.
The early years saw children's games like "Chutes and Ladders" and "Candyland," which later evolved into "The Boss" or "Risk," which was a popular game in college.
If you never played "Risk," you're missing a good game. The basic premise is that the world is divided into different regions, and each player represents an army. The one who conquers the world wins.
One version of playing involves making non-aggression pacts, though they are not spelled out in the rules. One player will agree not to attack another for, say, five turns along a certain border, so each will only need to keep one army on that particular territory.
Back in college, TB was playing one time with a bunch of other people, including his friend Glazuh and another guy, one who was growing a goatee (TB is pretty sure it was Gary Hatke).
Anyway, those two agreed to a non-aggression pact, which fell apart when Hatke loaded up his armies on the border and attacked Glazuh, breaking the pact. When Glazuh protested, Hatke said that he could, because it wasn't in the rules, and he even sighted a precedent - the Nazis broke their non-aggression pact with the Soviet Union in World War II.
Glazuh, incensed (and soon-to-be eliminated from the game), finally realized he had no recourse, and so he said the only thing he could in the circumstances, turning to Hatke and saying "I don't like your beard."
"Monopoly," though, is the granddaddy of all board games.
TB and Little Miss TigerBlog played Sunday afternoon, and, as TB said before, he can't remember the last time he played.
This time, the game turned on a trade TigerBlog made, one that would have worked out great had it not allowed LMTB to get Boardwalk to go with Park Place and put up three houses on each, only to see TB land twice on Boardwalk and once on Park Place.
In exchange, TB got back three properties that completed monopolies, as well as a railroad. Had LMTB landed on New York Ave. on the turn before TB landed on Boardwalk for the first time, it might have all been different.
The game was one of the highlights of a low-key Labor Day weekend, one that TB can't believe has already come and gone. The month of August sailed by.
In another few weeks it'll be Halloween and then Thanksgiving and then Christmas, and it'll seem like no time has passed. In early December, it'll be time for the annual Princeton Athletics holiday party, probably in the boathouse, where it always is.
And on that night, TB will think back to Hurricane Irene, which completely flooded the Shea Rowing Center a week ago.
In fact, TB was amazed when he saw the video on youtube of the flood, considering how many times he's been in the boathouse and how pristine it is in there.
In fact, TB was there what seems like a few days ago, for the 2010-11 end-of-year department picnic. Oh wait, that was more than three months ago.
Anyway, there are two amazing things about the video.
And, as an aside, the music at the end is Maureen McGovern's song "A Morning After," from the movie "The Poseidon Adventure."
First is the sheer amount of water that made its way into the building, especially since for all of the nasty rainstorms that we've had here through the years, it's never happened like that before that TB remembers.
Second is the attitude of the people in the video, who happen to be the members of the Princeton crew coaching staff. They simply went out and cleaned up the mess.
Why?
Pride. In themselves. In each other. In their program. In the building.
It speaks volumes about who those people are.
Board games were a big part of TB's life, at least to a certain point.
The early years saw children's games like "Chutes and Ladders" and "Candyland," which later evolved into "The Boss" or "Risk," which was a popular game in college.
If you never played "Risk," you're missing a good game. The basic premise is that the world is divided into different regions, and each player represents an army. The one who conquers the world wins.
One version of playing involves making non-aggression pacts, though they are not spelled out in the rules. One player will agree not to attack another for, say, five turns along a certain border, so each will only need to keep one army on that particular territory.
Back in college, TB was playing one time with a bunch of other people, including his friend Glazuh and another guy, one who was growing a goatee (TB is pretty sure it was Gary Hatke).
Anyway, those two agreed to a non-aggression pact, which fell apart when Hatke loaded up his armies on the border and attacked Glazuh, breaking the pact. When Glazuh protested, Hatke said that he could, because it wasn't in the rules, and he even sighted a precedent - the Nazis broke their non-aggression pact with the Soviet Union in World War II.
Glazuh, incensed (and soon-to-be eliminated from the game), finally realized he had no recourse, and so he said the only thing he could in the circumstances, turning to Hatke and saying "I don't like your beard."
"Monopoly," though, is the granddaddy of all board games.
TB and Little Miss TigerBlog played Sunday afternoon, and, as TB said before, he can't remember the last time he played.
This time, the game turned on a trade TigerBlog made, one that would have worked out great had it not allowed LMTB to get Boardwalk to go with Park Place and put up three houses on each, only to see TB land twice on Boardwalk and once on Park Place.
In exchange, TB got back three properties that completed monopolies, as well as a railroad. Had LMTB landed on New York Ave. on the turn before TB landed on Boardwalk for the first time, it might have all been different.
The game was one of the highlights of a low-key Labor Day weekend, one that TB can't believe has already come and gone. The month of August sailed by.
In another few weeks it'll be Halloween and then Thanksgiving and then Christmas, and it'll seem like no time has passed. In early December, it'll be time for the annual Princeton Athletics holiday party, probably in the boathouse, where it always is.
And on that night, TB will think back to Hurricane Irene, which completely flooded the Shea Rowing Center a week ago.
In fact, TB was amazed when he saw the video on youtube of the flood, considering how many times he's been in the boathouse and how pristine it is in there.
In fact, TB was there what seems like a few days ago, for the 2010-11 end-of-year department picnic. Oh wait, that was more than three months ago.
Anyway, there are two amazing things about the video.
And, as an aside, the music at the end is Maureen McGovern's song "A Morning After," from the movie "The Poseidon Adventure."
First is the sheer amount of water that made its way into the building, especially since for all of the nasty rainstorms that we've had here through the years, it's never happened like that before that TB remembers.
Second is the attitude of the people in the video, who happen to be the members of the Princeton crew coaching staff. They simply went out and cleaned up the mess.
Why?
Pride. In themselves. In each other. In their program. In the building.
It speaks volumes about who those people are.
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
Relegation
TigerBlog didn't know the results of any of the English Premier League games from this past weekend when he sat down to watch the EPL review show.
And that turned out to be a good thing, since the show's producers did something extraordinarily clever to show how the final weekend played out, something that TB had never seen before.
There were three games that would have huge impacts on the final standings - and the futures of five league franchises.
And the EPL review show chronicled those games at the same time, going from highlights of one to another to the third. And each time any of the three games changed score, a graphic flashed up showing what the final league standings would be if the score of all three stayed as it was.
It was fascinating, because the teams on the outside looking in changed with every goal. And the drama continued to build, all the way until the end, when it came crashing down for Blackpool (TigerBlog was rooting for the Tangerines) and Birmingham City and when there was elation for Wigan, Wolves and Blackburn.
Ian Darke, TigerBlog's favorite broadcaster, wrote a column for ESPN.com on the recently completed season, and it included this:
I don't know about you, but I'm still breathless from a frantic final day in the English Premier League that might have been scripted in Hollywood. As I passed relegated Blackpool manager Ian Holloway on the stairs out of Old Trafford after Sunday's game, it was hard to find the right words of consolation. For once, the effervescent "Ollie" seemed stunned into silence as I offered sincere but worthless sympathies.
I was reminded of the old gag from legendary manager Tommy Docherty: "When one door closes, another slams you in the face."
But the Premier League will be a poorer place without Blackpool's devil-may-care brand of attacking football. The Seasiders scored more goals (55) than any other relegated team in the history of the Premier League and seemed to produce more thrillers than Alfred Hitchcock and John le Carré combined.
We will miss them.
What made the last weekend of the EPL so unique was that all of the drama was on the bottom of the table, not near the top, where Manchester United had already clinched the title.
No, the scramble to avoid relegation was unreal to watch as it unfolded on the review show.
The bottom three EPL teams move down a division, while the top three in the Championship League move up. The difference between the top and second levels is probably like the difference between the Major Leagues and Triple-A, and there are all kinds of pounds at stake for these teams.
To see the reactions of the fans - and managers, especially Wigan's Roberto Martinez, who like Darke was great on TV during the last World Cup - as their teams either lost or survived was amazing. Honestly, TB isn't sure there are American fans who are as passionate about any professional sport the way EPL fans are.
Maybe college sports, but not pro sports.
Why would that be, TB wonders (assuming TB is correct)? Is it a cultural thing? Is it that because the country is so much smaller, everyone must have some connection to someone on the team? Is it a feeling that the players are actually representing the local area and not just mercenaries in it for the money?
If Jim Barlow, Princeton's soccer coach, had his way, the NCAA championship game would be held this weekend, along with the Champions League final between Manchester United and Barcelona.
Barlow long ago told TB that he thinks soccer in college should follow a European-type schedule, with one game a week in the fall and spring with a break in the winter and the NCAA championships around this time.
Of course, that isn't how it's done, and it's unlikely to change anytime soon, despite the brilliance of Barlow's idea.
Nope, this is the spring, and as Memorial Day weekend approaches, there are still seven Princeton teams left competing - all four crews, both track and field teams and baseball.
The national rowing championships are this weekend, with the women's open team in Sacramento, while the women's lightweights, men's lightweights and men's heavyweights are on the Cooper River in either Pennsauken, Cherry Hill or Camden, depending on where you see it listed.
The track and field regionals are in Indianapolis, and Princeton's athletes there will be looking to qualify for the NCAA championships in Des Moines in early June.
As an aside, the baseball team will some day play in the NCAA tournament as well.
Todd Harrity already continued Princeton's streak of having at least one team or individual national champion when he won the national men's squash title last winter. That streak, by the way, is now at 40 years.
Is there another national champion on the horizon for Princeton?
With the way that the boats have been going and with how close two runners - Donn Cabral and Ashley Higginson, both the steeplechase - came a year ago, it's certainly possible.
As the end of the 2010-11 year winds down, it would certainly be a perfect finish to what has already been a record-setting year for Princeton.
And that turned out to be a good thing, since the show's producers did something extraordinarily clever to show how the final weekend played out, something that TB had never seen before.
There were three games that would have huge impacts on the final standings - and the futures of five league franchises.
And the EPL review show chronicled those games at the same time, going from highlights of one to another to the third. And each time any of the three games changed score, a graphic flashed up showing what the final league standings would be if the score of all three stayed as it was.
It was fascinating, because the teams on the outside looking in changed with every goal. And the drama continued to build, all the way until the end, when it came crashing down for Blackpool (TigerBlog was rooting for the Tangerines) and Birmingham City and when there was elation for Wigan, Wolves and Blackburn.
Ian Darke, TigerBlog's favorite broadcaster, wrote a column for ESPN.com on the recently completed season, and it included this:
I don't know about you, but I'm still breathless from a frantic final day in the English Premier League that might have been scripted in Hollywood. As I passed relegated Blackpool manager Ian Holloway on the stairs out of Old Trafford after Sunday's game, it was hard to find the right words of consolation. For once, the effervescent "Ollie" seemed stunned into silence as I offered sincere but worthless sympathies.
I was reminded of the old gag from legendary manager Tommy Docherty: "When one door closes, another slams you in the face."
But the Premier League will be a poorer place without Blackpool's devil-may-care brand of attacking football. The Seasiders scored more goals (55) than any other relegated team in the history of the Premier League and seemed to produce more thrillers than Alfred Hitchcock and John le Carré combined.
We will miss them.
What made the last weekend of the EPL so unique was that all of the drama was on the bottom of the table, not near the top, where Manchester United had already clinched the title.
No, the scramble to avoid relegation was unreal to watch as it unfolded on the review show.
The bottom three EPL teams move down a division, while the top three in the Championship League move up. The difference between the top and second levels is probably like the difference between the Major Leagues and Triple-A, and there are all kinds of pounds at stake for these teams.
To see the reactions of the fans - and managers, especially Wigan's Roberto Martinez, who like Darke was great on TV during the last World Cup - as their teams either lost or survived was amazing. Honestly, TB isn't sure there are American fans who are as passionate about any professional sport the way EPL fans are.
Maybe college sports, but not pro sports.
Why would that be, TB wonders (assuming TB is correct)? Is it a cultural thing? Is it that because the country is so much smaller, everyone must have some connection to someone on the team? Is it a feeling that the players are actually representing the local area and not just mercenaries in it for the money?
If Jim Barlow, Princeton's soccer coach, had his way, the NCAA championship game would be held this weekend, along with the Champions League final between Manchester United and Barcelona.
Barlow long ago told TB that he thinks soccer in college should follow a European-type schedule, with one game a week in the fall and spring with a break in the winter and the NCAA championships around this time.
Of course, that isn't how it's done, and it's unlikely to change anytime soon, despite the brilliance of Barlow's idea.
Nope, this is the spring, and as Memorial Day weekend approaches, there are still seven Princeton teams left competing - all four crews, both track and field teams and baseball.
The national rowing championships are this weekend, with the women's open team in Sacramento, while the women's lightweights, men's lightweights and men's heavyweights are on the Cooper River in either Pennsauken, Cherry Hill or Camden, depending on where you see it listed.
The track and field regionals are in Indianapolis, and Princeton's athletes there will be looking to qualify for the NCAA championships in Des Moines in early June.
As an aside, the baseball team will some day play in the NCAA tournament as well.
Todd Harrity already continued Princeton's streak of having at least one team or individual national champion when he won the national men's squash title last winter. That streak, by the way, is now at 40 years.
Is there another national champion on the horizon for Princeton?
With the way that the boats have been going and with how close two runners - Donn Cabral and Ashley Higginson, both the steeplechase - came a year ago, it's certainly possible.
As the end of the 2010-11 year winds down, it would certainly be a perfect finish to what has already been a record-setting year for Princeton.
Friday, May 13, 2011
Off To The Races
Note - Blogger returned while TigerBlog was playing squash. The status of Thursday's TB remains a mystery.
Note No. 2 - Thursday's post reappeared magically.
TigerBlog was greeted this morning with a question: How come there was no TigerBlog yesterday?
Not TigerBlog the person. No, TigerBlog the actual blog itself.
TB couldn’t help but wonder what the question was about, since there was a TigerBlog yesterday. It was about the women’s lacrosse game and how there is no other possible matchup in Division I between a school and another school whose namesake is an alum of the first school.
As in, Princeton at James Madison in the first round of the NCAA tournament.
So, before doing anything else, TB went to TigerBlog, and there it wasn’t. Yesterday’s entry, that is. The most recent one is Wednesdays, about the Ivy League meetings.
When TB attempted to log in to update the site, he was greeted by the words “Blogger Is Currently Unavailable.”
It’s possible that when the site comes back up, the Thursday post will reappear. At least, TB hopes that’s the case.
TB figured he’d wait a half hour or so to see if the site came back up, only that didn’t happen. Along the way, he read a bunch of stuff on the internet, including the story about the kid in Connecticut who can’t go to his prom because he posted a sign outside the school asking the young woman to go with him and therefore ended up banned from attending.
The story left TigerBlog wondering what rule he possibly broke? The one against being creative? The one against learning to put yourself out there?
The only question for Shelton High School is if it’s okay having administrators who can be this short-sighted, and not whether James Tate should be allowed in the prom.
Once TB was done with that, he went on to other things, like getting both of the words in the “guess the word” game that he wrote about earlier. And read the New York Post. And Inside Lacrosse.
And then TB went back to the site, and it’s still not up.
So he decided he would do the next best thing. Write today’s entry and put it on goprincetontigers.com in the interim.
It’s not about keeping alive his streak of posting every business day since Oct. 16, 2008, per se. It’s more like a newspaper attitude. The newspaper has to come out every day, regardless of the weather or mechanical breakdowns or anything.
That brings us to today’s entry, which was going to start out with the motorcyle in Lot 21 and eventually get to the Eastern Sprints in rowing that are going on this weeend.
TB will save the motorcycle for another day.
This weekend marks the awarding of the last three Ivy League championships of the year. So far, there have been Ivy titles awarded in 30 sports, and Princeton has won 14 to date.
The most any program has ever won in an academic year is 14, something Princeton has now done three times, including in 1999-2000 and 2000-01, and Harvard did in 2004-05.
In other words, one rowing title would mean a new record.
To get greedy, three rowing titles would mean Princeton would have won more than half of the league’s championships.
Of course, even should none win, Princeton will have at least a share of the record.
As for the races themselves, Princeton is undefeated this year in women’s open rowing, and it has lost in both men’s lightweight and men’s heavyweight.
And none of that will really matter when the boats get on the water.
Princeton is the top-ranked women’s first varsity open 8, which is the same position Princeton was in a year ago, when it lost to Yale by less than a second in the 2,000-meter race at Eastern Sprints.
This year, Princeton opened the season with a close win over Brown, who hasn’t lost since.
The women’s championships are on the Cooper River in Camden.
The men’s boats will race on Lake Quingsigamond in Worcester, Mass., where the lightweight men will look for a third straight title, something the program has never accomplished. The race for first could come down to a battle between Princeton and Harvard, who defeated the Tigers by one second during the regular season. Princeton lost to Harvard during last year’s regular season by 0.7 seconds and then won at Eastern Sprints by more than two seconds.
The men’s heavyweights also lost to Harvard during the season, and like in the lightweights, that figures to be a strong matchup at Sprints.
And there you have it.
By Sunday, the last Ivy titles will have been awarded for 2010-11. It’s already a record-tying year for Princeton.
Will it be a record-setting one?
Note No. 2 - Thursday's post reappeared magically.
TigerBlog was greeted this morning with a question: How come there was no TigerBlog yesterday?
Not TigerBlog the person. No, TigerBlog the actual blog itself.
TB couldn’t help but wonder what the question was about, since there was a TigerBlog yesterday. It was about the women’s lacrosse game and how there is no other possible matchup in Division I between a school and another school whose namesake is an alum of the first school.
As in, Princeton at James Madison in the first round of the NCAA tournament.
So, before doing anything else, TB went to TigerBlog, and there it wasn’t. Yesterday’s entry, that is. The most recent one is Wednesdays, about the Ivy League meetings.
When TB attempted to log in to update the site, he was greeted by the words “Blogger Is Currently Unavailable.”
It’s possible that when the site comes back up, the Thursday post will reappear. At least, TB hopes that’s the case.
TB figured he’d wait a half hour or so to see if the site came back up, only that didn’t happen. Along the way, he read a bunch of stuff on the internet, including the story about the kid in Connecticut who can’t go to his prom because he posted a sign outside the school asking the young woman to go with him and therefore ended up banned from attending.
The story left TigerBlog wondering what rule he possibly broke? The one against being creative? The one against learning to put yourself out there?
The only question for Shelton High School is if it’s okay having administrators who can be this short-sighted, and not whether James Tate should be allowed in the prom.
Once TB was done with that, he went on to other things, like getting both of the words in the “guess the word” game that he wrote about earlier. And read the New York Post. And Inside Lacrosse.
And then TB went back to the site, and it’s still not up.
So he decided he would do the next best thing. Write today’s entry and put it on goprincetontigers.com in the interim.
It’s not about keeping alive his streak of posting every business day since Oct. 16, 2008, per se. It’s more like a newspaper attitude. The newspaper has to come out every day, regardless of the weather or mechanical breakdowns or anything.
That brings us to today’s entry, which was going to start out with the motorcyle in Lot 21 and eventually get to the Eastern Sprints in rowing that are going on this weeend.
TB will save the motorcycle for another day.
This weekend marks the awarding of the last three Ivy League championships of the year. So far, there have been Ivy titles awarded in 30 sports, and Princeton has won 14 to date.
The most any program has ever won in an academic year is 14, something Princeton has now done three times, including in 1999-2000 and 2000-01, and Harvard did in 2004-05.
In other words, one rowing title would mean a new record.
To get greedy, three rowing titles would mean Princeton would have won more than half of the league’s championships.
Of course, even should none win, Princeton will have at least a share of the record.
As for the races themselves, Princeton is undefeated this year in women’s open rowing, and it has lost in both men’s lightweight and men’s heavyweight.
And none of that will really matter when the boats get on the water.
Princeton is the top-ranked women’s first varsity open 8, which is the same position Princeton was in a year ago, when it lost to Yale by less than a second in the 2,000-meter race at Eastern Sprints.
This year, Princeton opened the season with a close win over Brown, who hasn’t lost since.
The women’s championships are on the Cooper River in Camden.
The men’s boats will race on Lake Quingsigamond in Worcester, Mass., where the lightweight men will look for a third straight title, something the program has never accomplished. The race for first could come down to a battle between Princeton and Harvard, who defeated the Tigers by one second during the regular season. Princeton lost to Harvard during last year’s regular season by 0.7 seconds and then won at Eastern Sprints by more than two seconds.
The men’s heavyweights also lost to Harvard during the season, and like in the lightweights, that figures to be a strong matchup at Sprints.
And there you have it.
By Sunday, the last Ivy titles will have been awarded for 2010-11. It’s already a record-tying year for Princeton.
Will it be a record-setting one?
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