Princeton, N.J. is far from Dillon, Texas, and tigers are not quite panthers, but Princeton women’s volleyball (9-8, 4-3 Ivy) will nonetheless host Ivy League rival Penn (6-12, 3-4) under the Friday night Dillon lights on Oct.
It was a big weekend for the Princeton women’s volleyball team (8-5 overall, 3-0 Ivy League) as they battled to ultimately comfortable wins against Cornell (3-10, 0-3) and Columbia (6-6, 2-1), continuing their unbeaten start to Ivy League play.
Men’s soccer juniors Andrew Doar and Jack Hilger comprise an athletic, artistic and dynamic duo.
Coming off a 6-8 Ivy League record and a 10-14 record overall, a young but experienced women’s volleyball team that has already played three tournaments this season looks forward to opening Ivy League play at Penn on Friday.
There’s a certain sacred relationship between a crew and its coxswain. To get some insight into this dynamic, we sat down with heavyweight sophomores Martin Barakso and Jill Barton.
Having regularly packed the stands in Dillon Gymnasium, the men's volleyball team has concluded one of the most successful seasons in its program's history.Volleyball is a sport that runs deep in the lifeblood of California culture, and this has been no exception for junior libero Tony Ensbury, a native of Manhattan Beach.
Sophomore rowers on Princeton's heavyweight crew, George Bradbury and Fred Vystavel raced and attended school across the pond before coming to New Jersey.
Coming off a heartbreaking 8-7 defeat at the hands of then-No.
On a windy Saturday, women's lacrosse (7-3 overall, 3-1 Ivy League) thrashed Yale (7-4, 1-3 ) 15-8 in a comprehensive victory where they did not once trail.