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� • Princeton Varsity club news • D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 4
P R I N C E T O NP R I N C E T O N
VARSITY CLUBnewsnews
Two Teams Step To The (Final) Four-front In Fall of ’04
continued on page 3
In his nearly two years as president of the
NCAA, Myles Brand has seen member institutions
make progress on a range of issues, from gender
equity to recruiting practices. But the continued
success of college sports, he says, requires a more
significant shift of priorities.
“Against the background of higher education,
intercollegiate athletics is off center,” Brand told an
audience of Princeton students, coaches, faculty
and friends at McCosh Hall Nov. 1. “It is askew. It
is behaving in ways that show it drifting away from
the world of the university and toward the world
of sports entertainment.”
Brand, whose visit was part of the Princeton
Varsity Club’s new speaker series, sponsored by
Glenmede, has an intimate understanding of big-
time college athletics. Before taking on his post
with the NCAA, he was the president of the Uni-
versity of Oregon for five years and the president
of Indiana University for eight years. His dismissal
of basketball coach Bob Knight at Indiana drew na-
tional attention, and he also made headlines with
his outspoken support for reform in athletics, call-
ing for schools to put academics first. “We are not
sports franchises,” Brand said in a 2001 National
Press Club speech. “I do not want to turn off the
game. I just want to lower the volume.”
Since joining the NCAA, Brand has confronted
a series of challenges with what he calls “misbehav-
ing coaches and programs,” sparking the creation
of a task force that examined recruiting earlier this
year. But Brand’s outlook remains untarnished.
“We’re making progress,” he said. “It’s a very com-
plex set of circumstances. It took us a century to get
here, and we’re not going to solve it in a year.”
True to his message of restoring the priorities of
academics and athletics, Brand’s lecture at Princ-
eton addressed two instrumental areas in what he
calls the “re-centering” of college sports: academic
reform and fiscal responsibility.
The NCAA is in the process of revising its stan-
dards for academic achievement and graduation
rates, with plans to implement a series of sanc-
tions for underperforming institutions. Increased
accountability, Brand said, will help to ensure that
athletics enrich the college experience. “We are
changing the relationship of athletics to the aca-
demic mission of the university,” he said. “There
will be those that want to roll back the standards,
but we can’t let that happen.”
In fiscal matters, Brand acknowledged that col-
lege athletics, specifically football and basketball,
are “the original reality TV,” a cultural phenomenon
with compelling and entertaining elements. But
the benefits of television revenue reach far beyond
football and basketball. “We distribute our funds
from the television contracts directly to the schools
– 95 percent of the money goes directly to the
schools,” Brand explained in an interview before
the lecture. “Universities like Princeton use that
to support non-revenue sports, women’s sports,
and in some cases football and men’s basketball.
Without that distribution of funds, you’d probably
have one or two sports at each school and the rest
would be club sports.”
Too many universities, however, see sports
as a revenue stream, Brand said. Their athletics
departments are becoming ancillary, self-sufficient
units, attached to but not part of the university. That
model, he said, is neither sustainable nor desirable.
It pulls athletics away from the university’s mission.
When sports programs are pressured to generate
their own revenue, it increases the pressure to win,
and the pressure to spend money on high-priced
coaches and facilities, even when they do not fit
into the budget. Despite good intentions, the athlet-
Featuring ...Brand New Vision
Water Polo Marches Four-Ward
Women’s Soccer Has Dream Season
Where There’s A Will, There’s A Way
Football Looks Ahead
Winter Preview Boxes
Men’s, Women’s Basketball Previews
Men’s, Women’s Hockey Previews
Volleyball’s Amazing Journey
Letter to the Athletic Director
PVC Advisory Board
A ‘Brand’ New Vision Shown At PrincetonA ‘Brand’ New Vision Shown At Princeton
Dr. Myles Brand spoke at Princeton Nov. 1.
Women’s Soccer
Men’s Water PoloThink big. Ivy title? No, bigger. A win in the
NCAA tournament? How about two, or three, or
four? Think as big as you can. Be greedy. This is the
time for it. This is the team for it.
When it’s over, when it finally ends, let it be at
a day when you took it as far as you could have
ever thought.
Then make it happen. Take advantage of the
chance.
That’s basically how it was for the 2004 Princ-
eton women’s soccer team. Their season began with
promise and potential and ended on a sun-soaked
field in North Carolina on a Friday afternoon in
December on the biggest stage collegiate women’s
soccer offers.
Along the way, the 2004 Tigers …
… took an 11-day preseason trip to Germany,
playing four games against local teams and touring
the country
… defeated then-fifth-ranked Texas A&M in their
first game of the season, using a goal 4:43 into the
season to spark a 2-1 victory
… had head
coach Julie Shack-
ford win her 100th
game at Princeton
wi th a 1-0 win
over Villanova in
the second game;
Shackford became
the fifth coach in
league history – and
first woman – to 100
wins, and she was
the second-fastest
coach to get there
… tied Harvard
with 41 seconds remaining in regulation and then
scored in the second overtime for a 2-1 victory
over the Crimson, ending years of frustration at
home that had seen Princeton not defeat Harvard
in Princeton since 1992
… clinched the outright Ivy title with a 7-0
thumping of Cornell; Princeton outscored its league
foes 24-3, making the 2004 Tigers the highest scor-
ing team in league history
… earned a national ranking in the Top 10 and
a seventh seed in the NCAA tournament
… defeated Central Connecticut, Vil-
lanova, Boston College and Washington
The 2004 Princeton men’s water polo season
will go down in the Princeton record books as its
most successful. The Tigers set a program record
with 25 wins, won the Southern and Eastern
Championships and advanced to the NCAA Cham-
pionships for the first time since 1992 and only the
second time in program history.
The season began with high hopes as Princeton
returned third-team All-America goalkeeper Peter
Sabbatini, honorable mention All-America drive
John Stover and Southern Division Rookie of the
Year Reid Joseph. That trio, coupled with con-
tributors such as Jamal Motlagh, co-captain Mike
Murray, Dean Riskas, Nick Seaver,
and freshman Zach Beckmann, gave
Princeton one of the best teams the
Tigers have ever had on paper.
The season began with a bang for
the Tigers as Princeton opened with 10
straight wins. In that span, the Tigers
swept through UC Santa Cruz, Ford-
ham, Brown and St. Francis to claim
the title at the Princeton Invitational.
Princeton also picked up league wins in
that stretch and wins in the early rounds
of the ECAC Championship before fall-
ing to St. Francis in the title game.
Following the ECAC tournament, Princeton
headed to California and went 2-3 against some
of the West’s best competition. Princeton fell to
Stanford, UC Santa Barbara and Long Beach State,
but defeated Air Force and UC San Diego. The Tigers
returned from California 12-4 overall and reeled off
13 straight wins back East to earn the right to head
back west for the NCAA Championship.
To get there, Princeton first needed to secure
a top-four finish at the Southern Championship,
which the Tigers hosted at DeNunzio Pool. An un-
continued on page 7
continued on page 7
Emily Behncke (22) and Esmeralda Negron celebrate a goal in Princeton’s wild NCAA tournament run.
The 2004 Eastern champion Princeton water polo team poses with the trophy after its thrilling overtime win against St. Francis, which sent the Tigers to the Final Four.
D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 4 • Princeton Varsity club news • 2
_____ Princeton Varsity Club ... 76 (unrestricted)_____ Baseball/Softball 82_____ Basketball .........................43_____ Crew (PURA) ...................48_____ Fencing .............................57_____ Field Hockey ....................19
_____ Football (PFA) ..................41_____ Golf ..................................49_____ Ice Hockey .......................44_____ Lacrosse ............................53_____ Soccer ...............................77_____ Sprint Football ..................42_____ Squash ..............................71
_____ Swimming & Diving ........50_____ Tennis ...............................55_____ Track & Field/CC .............46_____ W Volleyball .....................95_____ W Water Polo ...................66_____ Wrestling ..........................54
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P R I n C e T o n V A R S I T y C L U B
Self-Funded Varsities_____ M Volleyball .....................96_____ M Water Polo ...................51
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Benefits of MembershipMembership in the varsity Club is open to all letterwin-
ners, alumni, parents and friends of Princeton Athletics.
Varsity Club membership benefits include the follow-
ing: • Varsity Club lapel pin • Subscription to the PVC
News • Option to receive pregame and postgame
notes via e-mail • Varsity Club membership decal •
Invitations to special events (including monthly coaches
luncheons, Senior Athlete Awards Banquet and game-
day receptions throughout the season)
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Graduates five years out (for this coming
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Class of ’00 and above) may join the
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PVC Endowment FundPlease consider a gift, in addition to
your annual membership, to this new
initiative of the Princeton Varsity Club.
This fund will be used to build a legacy
for the future of Princeton Athletics and
its student-athletes.
What is the Pr inceton Varsity Club?
The Princeton Varsity Club supports the dual mission of:i) Enhancing the experience of current Princeton stu-
dent- athletes andii) Building collegiality among current and former
Princetonians and other supporters of Princeton Athlet-ics
As part of this mission, the PVC organizes traditional events and initiatives such as The Princeton Varsity Club Senior Student-Athlete Awards Banquet and presentation of PVC sweaters to senior letterwinners.
Starting in 2004-2005, the PVC plans to expand its events calendar to include:
• A Fall orientation barbecue for student-athletes • A Career Night to assist student-athletes with career
planning and placement • A Speaker Series presented by Glenmede Trust that will
bring prominent figures in the sports world to campus toaddress student-athletes and the Princeton Community
The Princeton Varsity Club will also continue to fund the following areas:
• Publishing the quarterly PVC News• Hosting coaches’ receptions during which coaches
andstudent-athletes reflect on their Princeton experiences
andprovide an insider’s perspective on their teams• Assisting and strengthening the efforts of Princeton Athletics Friends Groups • Implementing community outreach programs whichinclude participation by Princeton student-athletes,coaches, and administrators• Enhancing recruiting efforts
609 • 258 • 6696for questions call
Where There’s A Will, There’s A WayJust in case 21,000 Syracuse fans didn’t think their
Orange was in for much of a game against Princeton in the Coaches vs. Cancer regional championship at the Car-
rier Dome, Nov. 12, Tiger senior guard Will Venable made them think differently in a hurry.
Start with a driving layup that put Princeton on the board early. Add a backdoor cut that gave the Tigers a 7-3 lead. Chalk up another powerful finish that put the Tigers ahead 9-5. Pencil in a three-pointer from the corner near the end of the shot clock that put Princeton ahead by five. The moral of the story? Nine points in 12 minutes on the way to
a perfect night from the field (5 for 5) and the line (6 for 6).
“He’s the guy that makes this team go,” says first-year Princeton head coach Joe Scott. “How he plays really dictates what we can expect from this team. When Will attacks for 40 minutes every time out, goes full-bore for each possession, he is better than a lot of players across the country, and I mean good players.”
How important is Venable to his team’s success? The San Rafael, Calif., native was
forced out of the Syracuse game for the final eight minutes of the first half after picking up his second foul, and the Orange outscored the Tigers 16-5 in those eight minutes of an eventual 56-45 Syracuse victory. On a team that featured a freshman and a sophomore starting in the early season, not to mention two freshmen and a sophomore as key bench players, Venable means much more to the Tigers than simply his stat line.
“I think it’s important for me to be a leader this year, to make sure that people are in the right places at the right times,” Venable says. “If we do everything this year as hard as we can and pay attention to detail, it’s going to pay off with results on the court.”
Venable, a co-captain for the Tigers along with Judson Wallace this year, was the Tigers’ co-MVP along with Wallace last year after a breakout junior season. He averaged 10.3 points and 4.9 rebounds, both second on the team, but was just as important on the defensive end of the court, holding a litany of top scorers from opposing teams to single digits. He was particularly good during the Ivy League season, shooting better than
60% from the field in those 14 games, and against Texas in the NCAA tour-nament, when he led the Tigers with 16 points and eight rebounds.
As great of a season as that was, Venable was really just begin-ning his athletic contributions for the year in a Princ-eton uniform. Nine days after being named Princeton’s Chevrolet Player of the Game by Jim Nantz and Billy Packer, he grounded into a double play in his first at-bat of his Princeton baseball season.
That inauspicious beginning at Stony Brook, however, was cer-tainly not a harbinger of things to come for Venable, the son of former major leaguer Max Venable. The 6-3, 200-lb., designated hitter and outfielder hit .344 for the season in 96 at-bats, despite not practicing with or joining the team until late March, and finished second on the team with 14 stolen bases. The Tigers finished 28-20, won the Ivy League championship and defeated Virginia in a first-round NCAA tournament game.
“Will’s ability is outstanding, but what we’ve been more amazed with are his baseball instincts,” says Princeton baseball coach Scott Bradley, a former major leaguer himself. “I’m talking about things like baserunning and hitting off-speed pitches. He didn’t play much high school baseball, and he didn’t play college baseball until his sophomore year, but by the end of his junior year he was our best offensive player.”
Scouts who came to watch Princeton stars B.J. Szymanski and Ross Ohlendorf also began to pay attention to Venable thanks to that offensive surge, and that attention turned into reality when Venable was drafted by the Baltimore Orioles in the 15th round this past June. And though Venable had made it known he wasn’t giving up his final year of basketball, his breakout baseball season certainly gives him new avenues heading into his senior year.
“I have a chance to really make a progression this year in baseball, but obviously that’s something that I’ll think about when basketball season is over,” he says. “I know now that there is potential for that to be there again after being drafted this summer.”
So Venable isn’t thinking much about baseball right now, not with a basketball season filled with expectation in front of him. Princeton is favored to repeat as Ivy League champions and is con-sidered a potential Top 25 team by many experts, a prediction that can’t be dismissed after the Tigers’ near-miss against the nationally ranked Orange.
“It’s been exciting to be involved with a new approach and a new way of doing things with Coach Scott,” says Venable. “He expects you to play with a lot of intensity all the time, and I like that.”
There’s a lot to like about Will Venable, whether you’re a bas-ketball coach looking for a leader, a baseball coach looking for a gamer or a professional scout looking for the next big thing. Princeton fans will get to see all of those things, over the next five months, on basketball courts and baseball fields all over the country.
by David Rosenfeld
$
Where There’s A Will, There’s A Way
D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 4 • Princeton Varsity club news • 2 � • Princeton Varsity club news • D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 4
ics department expands at a faster rate than other areas of the university. In some cases, sports begin to overshadow academics. “We’re not in a crisis,”
Brand said, “but we can’t wait for one to start.”
Each school is unique, Brand acknowledged, and no magic algorithm can pave the road to fiscal responsibility. But he suggested a series of guide-
lines to help individual institutions make good decisions. The first necessity is presidential leadership. By understanding athletics in context, university
presidents can earn the support of trustees, faculty, boosters and fans. Step two is to treat athletics more like an academic unit, a practice he said has
succeeded for Princeton and its peers. The majority of college athletics departments are subsidized, and in the Ivy Group, Brand said, “subsidy is not
a dirty word.”
After finishing his address, Brand fielded questions from the audience and
explained some of the challenges of his job. He addressed hot-button issues,
including the disproportionately high salaries of a few top football and bas-
ketball coaches and the NCAA’s ruling on the eligibility of Jeremy Bloom, the
University of Colorado student who lost his chance to play college football
when he accepted endorsements to support his professional skiing career.
At the end of the night, Princeton Athletic Director Gary Walters presented
Brand with a sweater from the Princeton Varsity Club and told the audience
that the NCAA is in good hands with Brand as its leader. By putting academics
first, Walters said, institutions “ensure that the hyphen between student and
athlete has meaning.”
by Brett Tomlinson
Brand New Vision
The Princeton Varsity Club thanks the PVC Board of Directors and
Advisory Committee members for their time and support.
PVC Board of Directors
Hewes Agnew ’58
Gog Boonswang ’96
Tara Christie ’97
Ralph DeNunzio ’53
Margie Gengler Smith ’73
Ed Glassmeyer ’63
Emily Goodfellow ’76
Richard Kazmaier ’52
Mike McCaffery ’75
Richard Prentke ’67
John Rogers ’80
Jay Sherrerd ’52
Gary Walters ’67
(Athletic Director)
Advisory Committee
Hamin Abdullah ’00
Chris Ahrens ’98
Alan Andreini ’68
Bob Baldwin ’42
Carl Behnke ’67
Priya Bhupathi ’02
Bill Bradley ’65
Pete Carril h44, h52,
h75, h84, h90
Sara Chang Guthrie ’84
Y.S. Chi ’69
John Claster ’67
Janet Clarke ’75
Ahmed El Nokali ’02
John Emery ’52
Bess Frank ’99
Debbie Garwood ’79
Ward Glassmeyer ’89
Wyc Grousbeck ’83
Wendy Herm ’99
Jay Higgins ’67
Mike Higgins ’01
Chuck Huggins ’83
John Hummer ’70
Ugwunna Ikpeowo ’96
John Ingram ’83
Marty Johnson ’81
Hayden Jones ’98
Devon Keefe ’01
Bert Kerstetter ’66
Bill Kingston ’65
Richard Korhammer ’89
Hilary Pushkin Kusel ’94
Larry Lucchino ’67
Tom Ludwig ’98
Podie Lynch ’71
John Mack ’00
Aila Winkler Main ’92
Lauren Mandell ’91
Jack McCarthy, Jr. ’43
John McGillicuddy ’52
Kristin Green Morse ’93
Jason Mraz ’89
Michael Novogratz ’87
Dan Okimoto ’65
Andre Parris ’97
Sue Perles ’75
Geoff Petrie ’70
Tom Pirelli ’69
Bill Powers ’79
Scott Rodgers ’71
John Scully ’66
Mark Shapiro ’89
Rod Shepard ’80
Tina Smith ’95
Trevor Smith ’03
Frank Sowinski ’78
Charlie Stillitano ’81
Chris Thomforde ’69
Kiersten Todt Coon ’94
Bob Varrin ’56
Aditi Viswanathan ’89
Frank Vuono ’78
Nathan Walton ’01
Bill Walton ’74
Marc Washington ’97
Margot Wheeler ’87
Becket Wolf ’97
Rick Wright ’64
Larry Zadra ’83
Ex-Official
Board Members
Royce Flippin ’56
Bob Myslik ’61
Undergraduate
Advisory Committee
Chanel Lattimer ’05
Weston Powell ’06
Neil Stevenson-Moore ’05
Football Improves Three-Fold, Looks To Continue Upswing In Football Improves Three-Fold, Looks To Continue Upswing In Common sense says a 4-5 team doesn’t play a must-win game, but those close to the Princeton
football team learned a long time ago to throw common sense out the window.Recent history has suggested that, if the football isn’t going to bounce Princeton’s way, it simply
won’t bounce at all. The ultimate in snakebitten teams, the Tigers entered the 2004 season finale with twice as many wins as they recorded in all of 2003. And yet, this was a must-win game.
Princeton won four of its first five, sometimes in dominant fashion and sometimes with late heroics. The Tigers then lost their next four, including three in a row that turned completely on special teams plays. When Cornell needed a blocked extra point to win, it happened. When Penn needed two at-tempts at the game-winning field goal, the Quakers got them.
All of a sudden, the vast improvements were getting lost amongst the couldas, the wouldas, and, as any member of this team will agree, the shouldas.
While it is under the direction of head coach Roger Hughes, no Princeton football team will ever enter a season lacking in optimism. That being true, the efforts of the 2005 Tigers would have been significantly buoyed if they could take away some positive feelings from the 2004 season, and the only way that would have happened was to end with both a win and a 5-5 record.
Not only did Princeton get that win, but the ball actually bounced Princeton’s way. Of course, it bounced in the way of the punter, but hey, it worked out.With 5:32 remaining in the fourth quarter of a 10-10 game, kicker Derek Javarone attempted a
42-yard field goal that would have given Princeton a 13-10 lead. Dartmouth defensive back Clayton Smith soared from the middle of the line and blocked the kick, sending the ball back to holder Colin McDonough. McDonough, the two-time All-Ivy punter, never panicked and ran for the first-down marker. He was jumped by a pair of defenders close to the marker, but continued to fight for the extra yardage. Teammate, classmate and fellow Iowan James Williams helped in the fight by trying to push the scrum into first-down territory.
Then he took matters into his own hands. More accurately, he took the football in his hands. Completely unnoticed by the eleven Dartmouth players who went to McDonough, Williams came out of the pile and sprinted 24 yards for the touchdown. Since he was ruled to be behind Mc-Donough when the transfer, or theft, happened, it was deemed a legal lateral and a touchdown.
Fate clearly smiled on Princeton on that play, although not necessarily the way most people originally thought. It took clear thinking for Mc-Donough to go for the first down, just as it did for Williams to get the football and go for the end zone. The fact that the ball went directly to Mc-
Donough off the block, and the fact that no Dartmouth defender was on Williams’ side of the scrum, well, that was the law of averages finally working in Princeton’s favor.
The ensuing locker room celebration was well-deserved by the Class of 2005, which had fought hard to bring Princeton football back from the depths of last season and put it back on the right track. The other three classes, led by a talented rising senior class, will move into next season with some dearly needed momentum.
Defensively, Princeton will return seven starters. Likely to use a 3-4 front again, the Tigers will have Williams returning to start on one end and a trio of underclassmen that saw significant time in the final six games of the season. First-team All-Ivy linebacker Zak Keasey is the biggest loss, but he is the only one of the four talented starting linebackers that won’t return next year. Co-captain and All-Ivy selection Justin Stull will continue to be the main run stopper, while All-Ivy teammate Abi Fadeyi, a player as versatile as any on the defense, could be primed for a breakout final season. Alan Borelli can cover, tackle and blitz, and any of four second-team linebackers from this season will need to step up as a starter.
The defensive backfield will be led by Jay McCareins, a first-team All-Ivy cornerback who finished second in the league with 12 passes defensed. J.J. Artis, a premier open-field tackler who improved his coverage abilities as the season progressed, is the likely starter opposite of McCareins, although Charles Bahlert has started games in each of the last two seasons and will push Artis. Tim Strickland will return as a strong safety after leading Princeton with four interceptions, and David Ochotorena is
the early favorite to replace the graduating Brandon Mueller at free safety.The offense will be led by the five men in the trenches, an athletic and vastly improved offensive line that should return five starters next season.
The only member of the 2004 team that graduates is center Jeremy Moore, but former All-Ivy selection Paul Lyons should to return in 2005 after tak-ing this past season off. Lyons’ return will bolster a line that helped the Princeton rushing attack rank third in the league while keeping quarterback Matt Verbit healthy for all 10 starts (and the 14 before this season).
The corps of wide receivers, which was thrust into the fire this year because of injury and the signing of B.J. Szymanski to a professional baseball contract, will draw from significant experience this past season. Six returners have scored at least one touchdown, including Greg Fields, whose explosiveness and speed forces defenses to gameplan against him. Fields also gives Princeton a consistent threat in the return game.
That leaves the offensive backfield, which loses its quarterback (Verbit), its platoon of starting tailbacks (Branden Benson and Jon Veach) and its fullback (Joel Mancl). There are underclassmen who will battle it out at each critical spot, which will make this spring’s 12 practices as interesting and important to the program as any in recent history. The Tigers don’t necessarily need to know who will be the starters at those skill positions before the team breaks for the summer, but they do need to know that the top competitors will come to fall camp with the mental and physical abilities to lead the progression of Princeton football if they win the starting role.
And that would be another bit of good fortune that this program deserves.
continued from page one
Junior Greg Fields ended his season among the national leaders in all-purpose yardage,
Junior linebacker and co-captain Justin Stull will be the leader of the Tiger defense in 2005.
D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 4 • Princeton Varsity club news • 4
10 Ways To Heat Up The Winter Months
D e c e m b e r 2004 • Princeton Varsity club news • 4
Men’s FencingHead Coach: Michel Sebastiani
2003-04 NCAA Finish: 7th
2003-04 Postseason Honors: Four fencers competed in the NCAA
championships (Eric Stodola, Alexjandro Bras, Benjamin Solo-
mon, Fenil Ghodadra)
2004-05 Tigers To Watch: Solomon, Ghodadra and Bras all return
from their NCAA championship runs, while Soren Thompson
will return to the lineup after his quarterfinal finish at the
Athens Olympics.
Key Dates: On Jan. 29, Princeton will play host to Ivy League foe
Columbia, Rutgers and St. John’s. Columbia finished one spot
ahead of the Tigers at the IFAs last year. Feb. 12 will feature the
H-Y-P meet at Cambridge, Mass. This annual meeting will give
a preview of what is in store for the IFA championships the fol-
lowing weekend in Providence, R.I.
Keys To Success: Princeton has started the season off strongly with
Thompson and Solomon finishing first and second, respectively,
in the 32 Penn State Garrett Open men’s epee. The Tigers also
won a 19-8 dual meet at UNC and a 15-13 bout with Penn
State. Since the squad is equipped with five NCAA champion-
ship competitors from the last two seasons, expect the team to
send more this
year. A fencer to
add to the watch
list is freshman
Tommi Hurme,
who finished in
the top-15 at the
Penn State Gar-
rett Open.
Men’s Swimming and DivingHead Coach: Rob Orr
2003-04 Record: 10-1, 9-0 EISL
2003-04 Postseason Honors: EISL champions, two swimmers in the
NCAA championship meet (Meir Hasbani, Will Reinhardt)
2004-05 Tigers To Watch: Hasbani and Reinhardt both return from
tremendous campaigns, while seniors Justin Chiles and Evan
Delaney will be among the league favorites in their respective
events.
Key Dates: Jan. 29 and 30 will feature the H-Y-P meet at New
Haven, Conn. Either Princeton or Harvard has won the EISL
title every year since 1972, and this annual meeting will
give a preview of the 2005 championships. The actual EISL
championship meet will take place at Harvard March 3-5.
Keys To Success: Princeton has already gotten off to a strong start
this season, going 4-0 and routing the field at the Princeton
Invitational. The Tigers have won two of the last three EISL titles,
so they will have plenty of championship experience to utilize
during the EISLs. The combination of Reinhardt and Chiles is
a strong 1-2 punch in the free events, both individually and
on the relay squads. Sophomore David Ashley made his EISL
debut a memorable one last year by winning the 1650 free,
and he is an early favorite to repeat again. The Tigers have title-
worthy swimmers in
each of their other
even t s , i nc lud-
ing Evan Delaney
(breast), Mike Zee
and Ryan Becker
(back) and Hasbani,
Becker and Ryan
Rimmele (fly). Keep
your eyes on a pair
of freshman divers
as well, as both Stu-
art Malcolm and
Miles Miller both
had a pair of Top-10
finishes at the Princ-
eton Invitational.Freestyle specialist Justin Chiles ’05
Women’s FencingHead Coach: Michel Sebastiani
2003-04 NCAA Finish: 7th
2003-04 Postseason Honors: Four fencers in the NCAA champion-
ships (Jacqueline Leahy, Sara Jew-Lim, Erin McGarry and Mina
Morova)
2004-05 Tigers To Watch: Leahy, Jew-Lim, McGarry and Morova all
return from their NCAA championship run from a season ago,
and Kira Hohense will also be on hand to battle in the epee.
Key Dates: Jan. 29 will feature Ivy League foe Columbia, who
finished one spot ahead of the Tigers at the IFAs last season.
On Feb. 12, the Tigers travel to Cambridge, Mass. for the H-Y-P
meet to prepare for what is to come in the IFA showdown on
Feb. 26 in Providence, R.I.
Keys To Success: Princeton had a good start on the season after
Leahy, Morova, Hohense and McGarry finished with top-10
performances in the Penn State Garrett Open. Over 57 fenc-
ers competed in the meet and the Tigers claimed two top-five
finishes with Leahy second in the foil and Hohense third in the
epee. Princeton won 20-7 against Penn State and defeated North
Carolina 21-6 this season. The squad is equipped with four NCAA
championship
competi tors
from the last
two seasons,
and expec-
t a t ions a re
high for the
upcoming sea-
son due to the
return of those
fencers.
Women’s Swimming and DivingHead Coach: Susan Teeter
2003-04 Record: 10-1, 7-0 Ivy League
2003-04 Postseason Honors: Ivy League champions, two swim-
mers in the NCAA championship meet (Sarah Fraumann and
Stephanie Hsiao)
2004-05 Tigers To Watch: Hsiao is the leader on a deep and talented
team that includes 400 IM Ivy champion Kelly Hannigan, poten-
tial Ivy favorite Sarah Schaffer and newcomer Lisa Hamming.
Key Dates: Princeton will host Pitt, the team that ended the school-
record 47-meet win streak last year, on Jan. 4. That will be one
of Princeton’s stiffest tests before the Tigers welcome their Ivy
League rivals to DeNunzio for the 2005 Ivy League champion-
ships Feb. 26-28.
Keys To Success: You don’t win five straight Ivy League titles
without serious depth, and this team should have plenty of it,
including a major superstar in Hsiao. During the Princeton
Invitational, she was part of record-setting performances in the
200 free and 400 free relay, but even more impressively, she
broke a 22-year record in the 100 free by going 50.04. While
she has done what is expected of a senior captain, the freshman
standout (Hamming) raises her own expectations every time
she competes. At the same invitational, she recorded NCAA
B-cut qualifying
t imes in both
the 200 and 400
IMs, and she has
won at least one
event in every
Princeton meet
so far. Classmate
Bre t t Sh i f f l e t
has also looked
strong, and Schaf-
fer (back, breast),
Sobenna George
(free) and Mi-
chelle DeMond
(diving) should
also be steady
performers.
Head Coach: Fred Samara
2003-04 Heptagonal Finish: first
2003-04 Postseason Honors: After leading his team to a Heps
championship, Samara was named the regional Indoor Coach
of the Year following the season.
2004-05 Tigers To Watch: Senior co-captain Dwaine Banton and
senior Mike Kopp in the sprint events, classmate and co-captain
Alexis Tingan in the middle-distance events, Austin Smith in the
distance events and Mike Weishuhn in the high jump.
Key Dates: Feb. 26 and 27, when the Tigers will look to win their
sixth Indoor Heptagonal championship in the last eight years.
This year’s Indoor Heps meet is at Harvard.
Keys To Success: Samara has plenty of solid returners on the track,
but the Tigers’ performance in the field events could determine
whether or not Princeton continues its domination at Indoor
Heps. Eight-time Heptagonal weight-throw champion Josh Mc-
Caughey and NCAA javelin qualifier Tim Releford have gradu-
ated, so the Tigers will need to fill those holes with younger ath-
letes like Josh Probst (javelin) and Drew Geant (discus). Princeton
does have a potential Heps champion in senior co-captain Wei-
shuhn in the high jump. Princeton may be strongest this season
in the middle dis-
tance and sprint
events , where
Tingan is one of
the top threats in
the East in the 800
meters and Kopp
is an outstanding
400-meter run-
ner. Banton has
a chance to be a
Heps champion
in both the 60 and
100 meters.
Head Coach: Glenn Nelson
2004 Record: 13-10, 5-7 EIVA Tait
2004 Postseason Honors: EIVA quarterfinalists (lost 3-1 to George
Mason)
2005 Tigers To Watch: Outside hitter Blake Robinson broke his ankle
late last season and was unavailable for the postseason, but he
will likely be the team’s top hitter this season. Middle blocker
Brian Hamming had a breakout season in 2004 and will need
to be one of the top middles in the league this season.
Key Dates: March 1 and 6 will be major home dates for Princeton,
as Rutgers-Newark and George Mason will be coming to Dillon
Gym. The Tigers won a 3-2 thriller at home against Newark last
season and split with Mason before falling to the Patriots in the
league quarterfinals. Matches against those two teams will go
a long way in deciding playoff positioning in 2005.
Keys To Success: The good news is that Princeton returns both out-
side hitters, both middle blockers, the rightside hitter and the
libero from a team that reached the league quarterfinals last sea-
son. The bad news is that setter Jason Liljestrom, the team leader
who paced the offense, has graduated. The play of Princeton’s
setter, which will likely be junior Jack Pichard, will be the big-
gest factor in how successful the Tigers will be. Robinson and
Hamming will be
among the favorite
targets; Robinson
has led Princeton
in kills in each
of the last two
seasons, whi le
Hamming hit a
team-best .476.
Sean Vitousek (mid-
dle) came on strong
at the end of last
season and could
pair with Hamming
to be one of the top
middle duos in the
EIVA.
Outside hitter Blake Robinson ’05
Men’s Indoor Track & Field
Men’s Volleyball
2004 NCAA competitor Ben Solomon ’05 Foil specialist and All-Ivy selection Jacqueline Leahy ’05 Sprinter and co-captain Dwaine Banton ’05
D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 4 • Princeton Varsity club news • 4 � • Princeton Varsity club news • D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 4
10 Ways To Heat Up The Winter Months
� • Princeton Varsity club news • D e c e m b e r 2004
Women’s Indoor Track & FieldHead Coach: Peter Farrell
2003-04 Heptagonal Finish: second
2003-04 Postseason Honors: Cack Ferrell was an All-America in the
3,000 meters at last year’s NCAA meet.
2004-05 Tigers To Watch: School recordholder Chanel Lattimer in
the 60-meter hurdles, Cack Ferrell and Meredith Lambert in
the distance events and Jen Byrd in the long jump and hep-
tathlon/pentathlon.
Key Dates: The Heptagonal meet Feb. 26-27 at Harvard offers
Princeton a terrific opportunity to move up from second place a
year ago. The Tigers also face Penn, Harvard and Yale separately
before Heps.
Keys To Success: Princeton’s cross country team has qualified for
the NCAA championships two consecutive years, and the in-
door track team will certainly count on those distance runners
to carry the load in 2004-05. Start with Cack Ferrell, certainly
the most feared all-around distance runner in the league and
an All-America in the 3,000 last year. Add Meredith Lambert,
a 10,000-meter NCAA qualifier, and Princeton has maybe the
best distance group in the league. In the sprints, Chanel Lattimer
is a senior and is the school recordholder in the 60 meters in-
doors. Senior co-captain Jen Byrd could have a breakout year in
both the long jump
and in the heptath-
lon. In the middle
distance, senior
Carrie Strickland,
a cross country
captain, will of-
fer versatility as
both an 800-me-
ter runner and a
top 3 ,000-me-
ter steeplechase
competitor.
Men’s SquashHead Coach: Bob Callahan
2003-04 Record: 9-5, 4-2 Ivy League
2003-04 Postseason Honors: Yasser El Halaby ’06 won his second
straight national title; team placed fourth at the Potter Cup
championships (team nationals)
2004-05 Tigers To Watch: Yasser El Halaby is the national player to
watch, as he is halfway to becoming the first male to win four
straight collegiate individual titles. Freshman Robert Hong and
sophomores Michael Gilman and Michael Yu will also be key
figures in the lineup.
Key Dates: Princeton welcomes Harvard on Feb. 6 in a match that
features both the annual rivalry between the two squash powers
and a potential national final showdown between El Halaby and
Harvard’s Ilan Oren or Siddharth Suchde.
Keys To Success: Princeton took it on the chin in the offseason,
losing nine of its top 11 returners prior to the season opener,
including its top incoming freshman, who decided to withdraw
from school and return to Germany. Fortunately, one of those
nine players wasn’t El Halaby, the two-time defending national
champion and team leader. Hong has looked strong early in
the season and could be pressed into the difficult No. 2 slot,
where he will face top competition later in the season. A talented
sophomore class, led by Gilman, Yu, Parker Sutton and Tim Cal-
lahan, will need to come of age quickly, as the Tigers will face
major competition in January and February before the national
team championships at Harvard Feb. 24-26.
Two-time national champion Yasser El Halaby ’06 (right)
Head Coach: Gail Ramsay
2003-04 Record: 10-3, 5-1 Ivy League
2003-04 Postseason: team placed third at the Howe Cup champion-
ships (team nationals) following 5-4 win over Harvard.
2004-05 Tigers To Watch: Sophomore Claire Rein-Weston returns
for her second season as the No. 1 player in the lineup. A pair
of her classmates, Marilla Hiltz and Genevieve Lessard, should
combine to own the top three spots.
Key Dates: Princeton will travel to 2004 Ivy League champion
Yale Jan. 29 with hopes of unseating the Bulldogs. If it can pull
that off, it will get a rematch with Harvard Feb. 6 at the Jadwin
Squash Courts; Princeton defeated Harvard in a pair of 5-4
thrillers last season. The Howe Cup championships will take
place at Princeton from Feb. 18-20.
Keys To Success: Princeton started the season 5-0 and will only
get better considering the youth that permeates through the
lineup. For instance, in Princeton’s 8-1 win over Brown during
the first weekend of December, each of the first eight players in
the lineup were either freshmen or sophomores. If the top three
players, Rein-Weston, Hiltz and Lessard, can give Princeton a
boost at the top of the lineup while the Princeton freshmen (Lena
Neufeld, Christina Fast, Margaret Kent and Carly Grabowski)
adjust to the pres-
sure of collegiate
squash, this team
could be extremely
successful. Depth
was huge for Princ-
eton in its wins
over Harvard last
season , a s the
Tigers swept spots
5-9 to clinch each
match. The sooner
the top three start
earning wins, the
closer this team is
to reclaiming the
Ivy League title.
Head Coach: Michael New
2003-04 Record: 2-13, 0-5 EIWA
2003-04 Postseason Honors: Milo Adams, Jake Butler and Brian
Kirschbaum each earned all-league recognition.
2004-05 Tigers To Watch: Butler (197) is the anchor of Princeton’s
strongest part of the lineup, which also includes two tri-
captains, Charlie Wiggins (165) and Jack Fleming (184).
Key Dates: Princeton will celebrate the 100th year of its wrestling
program on Feb. 12 when it takes on a solid Franklin & Mar-
shall squad at Dillon Gym. The Tigers will look to make some
noise at the EIWA championships, which begin March 4 in
Annapolis, Md.
Keys To Success: As New looks to build a new tradition of excel-
lence at Princeton, he will look to his middle to upperweights
to try to earn key wins. The stretch of Wiggins, Matt DeNicholo,
Fleming and Butler is clearly Princeton’s strongest in the lineup,
and they will be expected to contribute points if Princeton is
going to challenge some of the powers in a very strong EIWA
this season. Butler, who has fought injuries throughout his
career, grew significantly during last season’s EIWA champion-
ships, where he wrestled his way back to all-league honors
after an early loss. His talent and technique will only get
better as he gets more matches under his belt, and both Wig-
gins and Fleming are battle-tested in this lineup. One name
to keep an eye on is freshman Alex Enriquez, who will start
at 157. If the two-time Florida state champion can get his
career off to a quick start, it would be a solid springboard to the
strength of the lineup.
Women’s Squash
Wrestling
Junior All-EIWA performer Jake Butler
Distance specialist Carrie Strickland ’05 No. 1 player Claire Rein-Weston ’07
D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 4 • Princeton Varsity club news • �
..........
Optimism was abounding as the Princeton men’s hockey team opened the 2004-05 season in late
October. Princeton opened the season with a new coaching staff and an aggressive style of play as the
Tigers looked to reassert themselves as a team to be feared in the ECAC Hockey League.
Under the reins of first-year Tiger coach Guy Gadowsky, the Tigers have played aggressive and of-
fensive hockey and are at or near the top in several of the league’s offensive categories. After opening
the season 0-2-1, the Tigers and Gadowsky earned their first win of the season on Nov. 6, at Dartmouth,
blanking the league’s preseason favorite, 3-0. Since then, Princeton has wins over Brown, Rensselaer
and Yale, and has dropped nail-biters against Harvard, Union and Colgate.
With almost a third of the season completed and 10 of its 22 ECAC games played, Princeton will
look to build on its early-season success and learn from its mistakes once the league season resumes
in January as the Tigers battle for home ice in the ECAC playoffs.
“We have put together some good games,” says Gadowsky. “But we have also made costly mis-
takes. We are an intelligent team and we need to learn from the mistakes and limit them in order to
improve in the second half of the season.”
Several Tigers have stepped up to help lead the charge. Three of Princeton’s top four scorers have
already established career highs, and the fourth is just three points shy. Junior Dustin Sproat, who
has 10 goals and eight assists, leads the group. He has scored in eight of his last nine games and set
a Tiger record with a goal in six consecutive games early in the season.
Sophomore Grant Goeckner-Zoeller, who led the Tigers in scoring as a freshman, has 17 points
on the year, three fewer than his mark of 20 last season. Senior defenseman Luc Paquin, who had
10 career points entering the season, already has
16 this season and leads the nation in scoring by a
defenseman, while junior co-captain Patrick Neun-
dorfer has 15 points on six goals and nine assists.
“Although our results haven’t necessarily shown
it, we have been making strides each weekend,”
says Sproat. “Unfortunately small mistakes like bad
penalties and sloppy play in the defensive zone
have kept us from putting together a lot of momen-
tum. We need to work on consistently sticking with
our team identity in order to avoid similar mistakes
in the future. Our schedule for January is filled with
home games, so hopefully we can use this to build
momentum going into the stretch run.”
The Tigers resume league play on Jan. 7 when
they host Clarkson. From that point forward, Princ-
eton plays eight of its final 12 league games of the
season at Baker Rink. The Tigers were 4-6 in league
games in the first part of the year and 2-1 in ECAC
home games.
When the Princeton women’s hockey Class
of 2004 graduated, the coaching staff knew it
would have some holes to fill, namely first-team
All-ECAC forward Gretchen Anderson, and first-
team All-Ivy goaltender Megan Van Beusekom.
For four years, the two anchored their respective
ends of the ice, with Anderson scoring the goals
and Van Beusekom stopping them.
Fast forward 13 games into the 2004-05
season and Princeton has filled one of those
holes and will work on the second when the
second half of the year begins on New Year’s
Day at New Hampshire.
The story of the Tiger season thus far has
been team defense and keeping opponents off
the scoreboard. The team is 7-4-2 overall and
3-3-1 in the ECAC Hockey League and has only
allowed four goals in a game once this season.
Three of Princeton’s wins, and one of the ties,
have been shutouts, and the Tigers have allowed
two or fewer goals in seven of their 11 games.
Those numbers are bolstered by the strong
play of junior goaltender Roxanne Gaudiel. As Van Beusekom’s understudy the past two seasons,
she had a 7-1 record with a 1.38 goals-against average and a .917 save percentage in limited action.
This season she is 7-4-2 with a 1.53 GAA, a .937 save percentage and four shutouts, playing every
minute in the Princeton net. She is also on pace to unseat Van Beusekom as the Princeton record
holder in several categories.
“Roxy’s been great,” says head coach Jeff Kampersal. “Thank God we have her. Otherwise we’d
be in a lot of trouble right now. She has stepped up and done the job that was expected of her. She
is no slouch in there. It’s just up to us to make the most of our opportunities. She’s giving us a chance
to stay in these games but we’re not taking advantage of it.”
The question in goal has been answered, but at the other end of the ice, the Tigers have struggled.
Princeton has only scored four goals in a game three times this season and has only reached three
goals twice in the last nine games played. In order to light the spark and get the offense going,
Kampersal and his staff have tried everything and are starting to see results.
“We’re trying to create as many scoring lines as possible,” says Kampersal. “In our wins against
Providence, Connecticut and Cornell, [Laura] Watt, [Liz] Keady and [Kim] Pearce all played together.
It’s becoming a no-brainer. Socially it’s a good fit for them, and athletically they get around the rink
pretty good. They’re skilled players, and the scoring should come around.”
Last season seven Tigers had 15 or more points. That group includes Keady, Watt, Pearce and
junior Heather Jackson. That group will help lead the Princeton offense in the second half of the
The women’s basketball team started the 2004-05 season with a 2-4 record. The Tigers returned
all five of their starters to this season’s roster and added four players (Meagan Cowher, Kristin Lynch,
Ali Prichard and Ariel Rogers) who have vied for playing time.
The season opened for the Tigers with a thrilling 57-52 overtime win over Monmouth at Jadwin
Gym. With her first field goal of the game, junior Katy O’Brien connected on a three-pointer at the
buzzer and sent the opener into overtime. Cowher, the daughter of Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Bill
Cowher, earned Ivy League Rookie of the Week accolades following her double-double (10 points,
10 rebounds) output in the game.
The Tigers then packed their bags and headed to Lehigh on Nov. 23. Although three players finished
in double figures (Cowher, 12; Becky Brown, 14; Katy Digovich, 15), the Mountain Hawks won 64-51.
O’Brien had six assists in the game, but it was the team’s 17 turnovers that proved costly.
During the Thanksgiving break, Princeton traveled to ACC country for a pair of games at Wake Forest
and Georgia Tech. Against the Demon Deacons, Princeton only saw the charity stripe four times, whereas
Wake Forest earned 15 trips. The Demon Deacons won 76-43. Digovich led the Tigers with 16.
Princeton converted on eight three-pointers and led against Georgia Tech until the 13:38 mark in
the second half. In an exciting matchup that featured two lead changes and five ties, the Tigers fell
60-50 to the Yellow Jackets. With a little under two minutes left in the game, Princeton was down
one but was in foul trouble and sent Georgia Tech to the foul line.
Princeton, in need of a win, dominated Wagner on Dec. 1. The Tigers made 11 treys in the contest
and got 34 points from the bench. O’Brien converted on 6 of 9 threes and finished with a season-high
18 points. Junior Ali Smith finished with 13 points and Cowher earned her second Ivy Rookie of the
Week selection following a 15-point game.
Following a brief break, the Tigers headed
back on the road to meet a team with one loss,
a national poll ranking of 20 and a coach seek-
ing her 700th career win, Rutgers. Princeton fell
behind early in the game and couldn’t chip
away enough at the lead. Although both teams
shot 46% from the field, the Tigers dropped a
68-46 decision to the Scarlet Knights. Sopho-
more Elyse Umeda scored all of her 10 points
in the second half.
With a tough road schedule behind them
and a few home games in store, the Tigers
are looking to get both wins and confidence
under their belts before they open Ivy League
play Jan. 28 at Brown.
For all the talk about the now-famous Princeton offense,
it’s been the Tigers’ matchup zone defense that has shone
brightly in the first few weeks of head coach Joe Scott’s first
season at the helm at his alma mater.
The Tigers held Lafayette to 38 points in a Nov. 27 win
over the Leopards, the fewest points allowed by a Princeton
team in a non-conference game against a Division I team in
six seasons. Four days later, the Tigers held Holy Cross under
40 points until a late Crusader run in the final three minutes.
Maybe the most impressive performance of all came Dec. 8,
when Rutgers came into Jadwin Gym and left with a 53-40
defeat, scoring just 17 second-half points and shooting just
33% for the game.
“We feel with our defense that we should be able to hold
teams to around 20 points per half,” center Judson Wallace
said after the Rutgers game. “We’ve done it a few times early,
and there’s no reason we can’t continue to do that throughout the season.”
That defense, and some timely three-point shooting, left Princeton with an outstanding 4-2 start to
the season heading into its game at rival Monmouth Dec. 12. The Tigers’ lone losses in the season’s
opening month had come at sixth-ranked Syracuse, which had moved up to No. 3 in the rankings by
early December, and on the road at Wyoming, a 64-59 double-overtime affair that certainly could
have gone either way.
The 4-2 start to the 2004-05 season, which included five games away from Jadwin Gym before that
first home game against Rutgers, was even more solid considering Princeton’s injury woes. Starting
forward and senior Andre Logan had a third knee surgery Nov. 5 and missed the early season, while
sophomore forward Luke Owings, who started the first four games, also had to leave the lineup due to
a stress fracture in his left foot.
While those injuries may have hurt Princeton’s depth, they also afforded opportunities to two
members of the Tigers’ terrific freshman class. Noah Savage may not have begun the year as a starter if
Logan was healthy, but Savage used the opportunity to showcase some excellent three-point shooting
and solid all-around play, scoring in double figures three times in Princeton’s first six games. Classmate
Matt Sargeant entered the starting lineup after Owings’ injury and helped Princeton to wins at Holy Cross
and against Rutgers, and freshman Kyle Koncz has also seen time in the early season.
Still, on the offensive end, the Tigers have depended on experience, most notably from 2003-04
first-team All-Ivy selections Wallace and Will Venable. Both players were averaging in double figures
in scoring as of Dec. 9, and Wallace notched his fourth career “double-double” in the win over Rutgers
with 18 points and 11 rebounds. Junior guard Scott Greenman has also been a key contributor, leading
the team in three-point shots and dishing out twice as many assists as he has turnovers.
The rest of Princeton’s pre-conference schedule features a nationally-televised game at Duke
Jan. 5, a game that will commemorate the first game ever played at Duke’s Cameron Indoor
Stadium, also between the Blue Devils and the Tigers. That game took place on Jan. 6, 1940,
nearly 65 years to the day of this year’s game.
Men’s Basketball Women’s Basketball
Men’s Hockey Women’s Hockey
Katy Digovich
Roxanne Gaudiel
Luc Paquin
Noah Savage
2004-05Basketball and Hockey
Previews
D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 4 • Princeton Varsity club news • � � • Princeton Varsity club news • D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 4
Water Polocontinued from page 1
Catch-22 (and 13 and 500)Glenn Nelson’s 22nd season was highlighted by a magical three-week November stretch.
It was September of 1982, and William Paterson made the trip
south for a women’s volleyball match. Cindy Cohen was still a year
away from taking the softball job at Princeton, Alex Brown hadn’t
been born yet and Glenn Nelson was 0-0 as a head coach.
Twenty-two years, two months and the technological progres-
sion from Beta to TiVO later, Cohen was now an associate director
of athletics at William Paterson, Brown was all grown up and just
dominating Ivy League competition and Nelson was still a head
coach.
But instead of having zero wins, he entered a match with Co-
lumbia with 499 victories.
He left that match as the third coach in Princeton history with 500
wins, and his team left that match in the middle of a wild journey
to the program’s 13th Ivy League championship.
The win over Columbia put Nelson in the company of Cohen
(564) and men’s basketball coach Pete Carril (514) at Princeton.
Not happy that he was even the focus of the game program cover
that day, Nelson was more focused on the Ivy League race at the
end of the day.
It didn’t mean that everybody else was, though.
“It means a lot to us to be part of it,” said Brown, the team co-
captain, after hitting .389 in the 3-0 win over Columbia. “I shouldn’t
say this, but he’s been coach here longer than we’ve all been alive.
I haven’t even played in 500 matches in my life. We really wanted
to win this for him.”
“The thing I remember most about Glenn was his passion for the
sport and his team,” Cohen said. “He told me when I retired that he
was glad I did so he could catch up to me.”
Nelson, who admitted to being “a bit of a wild man at the
matches” during his early days as a coach, now spends the major-
ity of his time teaching in practice and observing during games. He
can stay quiet for significant stretches of time during a match, but
that passion and competitive fire certainly jumps out when mental
mistakes force them.
This team, like all others before them,
was not immune to mistakes, but it also
showed the type of work ethic that has
made so many teams before it successful.
Once the excitement of winning No. 500
for Nelson calmed down, the team looked
for the biggest goal of all, an Ivy League
championship – something that no member
of the team had ever experienced.
Princeton had lost to Cornell that week-
end, which put the Tigers into a hole with
three matches remaining. The team needed to sweep its final three
matches and get some help to clinch a share of the title. The run started
at first-place Harvard, where the Tigers were fairly dominant in a 3-1
win. Then came Dartmouth, where the Big Green played inspired
volleyball on Senior Night and basically shut down every member
of the team not named Alex Brown.
That would not be enough, as Brown carried the team to a 3-2
win with 27 kills, six blocks, five digs and a .568 attack percentage.
Those wins, combined with a 3-0 win by Yale over Cornell set Princ-
eton up for a shot at the title against three-time defending champion
Penn at Dillon Gym, where Nelson has won so many of his now 504
career victories.
This wouldn’t even be one of Princeton’s most dramatic matches,
as seniors Brown, Lauren Loban and
Ashley Weber capped their careers with
an Ivy League title by topping Penn 3-
0. While Brown and Weber have had
spectacular careers as longtime starters,
it was Loban whose star shined brightest
that night.
“I knew it was my last match here,
and Penn has been our biggest rival,”
Loban said after killing 16 balls and hit-
ting a team-high .282 to lead Princeton
to its 19th win of the season. “Mentally I
just came into the match and wanted to
play my best.”
Although Princeton would have to
share the league title and would fall just
short of the NCAA tournament during a
playoff for the league’s automatic berth,
those three weeks in November proved to
be ones that would never be forgotten.
By Craig Sachson
to become the first Ivy League school ever to reach the women’s
soccer College Cup; the win over Washington came in front of 2,504 fans,
the largest crowd ever to see the Tigers play soccer in Princeton
… finished the year ranked fourth nationally, one spot ahead of North
Carolina
… outscored its opponents 58-11, ranking first nationally in scoring de-
fense and scoring more goals than any team in school history
… had two Academic All-Americas, two Academic All-Ivy League selec-
tions and won the NSCAA team academic award
By any definition, it was a season for the ages, one of the greatest seasons
any Princeton team has ever put together. Princeton’s women’s soccer team
became the first Ivy League team in any sport to reach the semifinals of a
64-team NCAA tournament. Indeed, no Ivy team had ever won more than
one game in a 64-team event before.
P r i n c e t o n a d v a n c e d t o t h e C o l l e g e C u p w i t h f o u r w o n d r o u s N C A A
tournament wins, all played at Lourie-Love Field. The run began with a 5-0 win over Central Connecticut on a night when the temperature was
near freezing and pouring rain fell from start to finish. Princeton then made it two straight with a 1-0 win over Villanova on Maura Gallagher’s
goal off a corner kick in the second overtime.
The Tigers then hosted Boston College in the Sweet 16, and Emily Behncke scored a pair of goals less than two minutes apart after the
teams had played 80 scoreless minutes. The 2-0 win advanced Princeton to the Elite Eight against Washington, a team that had spent four
weeks ranked third in the country. Playing in front of an overflow crowd at Lourie-Love, Princeton defeated the Huskies 3-1, snapping a 1-1
halftime tie on goals by Esmeralda Negron and Kristina Fontanez.
As a result, Princeton advanced to the College Cup in Cary, N.C., for a Dec. 3 semifinal date against UCLA, coached by Shackford’s best friend,
Jillian Ellis. Unfortunately for the Tigers, UCLA ended Princeton’s run, scoring two second-half goals in a 2-0 victory played in front of 8.325.
Negron, an easy choice for her second straight Ivy League Player of the Year award and candidate for first-team All-America honors, ended
her career as the holder of almost every Princeton record, and her 47 career goals and 111 career points are more than any other male or female
player in Princeton history. Diana Matheson, the Ivy Rookie of the Year, joined Negron on the All-Mid-Atlantic Region team. Those two, plus
Romy Trigg-Smith and Behncke, were first-team All-Ivy League selections.
Shackford was the Mid-Atlantic Region Coach of the Year and is one of six finalists for national Coach of the Year honors.
Still, this wasn’t about the accomplishments of the individuals. This was a team, in the truest sense of the word, in the very best sense collegiate
athletics can offer, that rarest of teams that demanded the attention of those who saw it and took them along for the entire glorious ride.
This was their time, and they took full advantage of it.
Women’s Soccer
defeated Southern regular season gave Princeton the top seed, and
the Tigers rolled to the championship game by beating Mercyhurst,
Grove City and Bucknell. In the championship game, Princeton
faced second-seeded Navy and got the better of its rival, 10-9.
Navy led for almost the entire game but could never get more
than a goal ahead of the Tigers. A late Princeton rally resulted in
Victor Wakefield tying the game with 2:46 remaining and Motlagh
posting the game-winner with just 1:47 left on the clock. The goal
clinched Princeton’s second straight Southern Championship and
the Tigers fourth in five years.
The Southern Championship resulted in another top seed for the
Tigers two weeks later at the Eastern Championships at Bucknell.
Once again, Princeton cruised in its first two matches before an
epic title game against St. Francis. The Tigers and Terriers had split
their previous two matchups during the season, and the rubber
game lived up to the hype as it went four overtimes until Seaver
scored to lift Princeton to a 3-2 win. Joseph and Stover also scored
for Princeton, but Sabbatini was the story of the day as he kept
Princeton in contention throughout the game. He was named the
tournament’s Most Valuable Player.
The Eastern’s title was Princeton’s second overall and first
since 1992 and eased the memory of an 8-6 loss to Navy in the
Eastern championship a season ago. The win also clinched the
Collegiate Water Polo Association’s automatic bid to the NCAA
Championship. Princeton joined the field of four, which
featured the nation’s top two teams, UCLA and Stanford, along
with Loyola Marymount. The Tigers were seeded third and faced
UCLA in the semifinals.
After Princeton fell 15-4 to Stanford on Oct. 1, it was possible
that the Bruins overlooked the Tigers heading into the game. That
almost came back to haunt the eventual national champion, as the
Bruins needed overtime to knock off a pesky Tiger team.
The game was close throughout and was either tied or a one-
goal game throughout regulation. UCLA went ahead with 5:45 left,
but Stover forced overtime with 45 seconds left as he knotted the
game up at 5-5. In overtime, UCLA scored twice to pull out the
7-5 win, but the Princeton water polo team represented its league and
school extremely well. The following day, the Tigers dropped another
close game, falling to Loyola Marymount in the third-place game.
“We’re obviously disappointed,” head coach Luis Nicolao said
after leading Princeton to its second trip to the water polo Final
Four. “It was one of those bittersweet games. We couldn’t have
asked more of our guys. We’re proud of our guys. We played great.
We’re always battling for respect. We feel strongly that we have
some good water polo back East. We’re always looking to make
a name for ourselves. We do a good job of playing defense and
letting our goalie know where the ball is coming from.”
Several Tigers earned postseason honors. Stover, Sabbatini
and Joseph were named first-team All-Southern. Sabbatini and
Stover were named first-team All-Eastern. Sabbatini, Stover and
Motlagh were named second-team All-Tournament at the NCAA
championships.
“The weekend meant a lot for Princeton,” says Sabbatini. “And
to the guys on the team this meant a lot. It meant a lot to have all
the fans (in the stands). Our parents, fans, friends and players who
could not travel today with the team all supported us from the
beginning to the end of the season. Our alumni are amazing. It
means a lot to us.”
In all, it was an extremely successful year for Princeton water
polo. The Tigers set a new mark for wins in a season, won three
tournaments, including Easterns for the first time in 12 seasons,
and played with the best teams the nation has to offer at the NCAA
championships.
by Yariv Amir
continued from page 1
John Stover helped lead the men’s water polo team to the NCAA final four, where Princeton nearly topped eventual champion UCLA.
Senior co-captains Ashley Weber (left) and Alex Brown accept the Ivy League trophy after leading Princeton through a wild season that included Glenn Nelson’s 500th win and the program’s 13th Ivy League championship.
The women’s soccer team celebrates one of its four NCAA tournament wins.
Glenn Nelson
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Over the years, an ongoing debate has taken place regarding the role and relative importance of athletics at Princeton. While Princeton has enjoyed great success over the decades in collegiate competition, it has never fully become comfortable with its athletic prowess. This dichotomy of views was brought to the forefront in a PAW article written by Doug Lederman regarding Bill Bowen’s view on Princeton athletes, question-ing their relevancy as part of the university community. While much correspondence and debate has taken place, I truly believe that the experiences and lessons learned in competition are fundamental components of the Princeton experience. I know many share
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that view and believe that it’s important to ensure that the University remains true to striving for excel-lence not solely in the classroom, but in all facets of campus life. For many, the experiences outside the academic world have had as profound an effect on who they are as individuals as any lessons learned in the classroom.
Athletes at Princeton have a truly unique op-portunity and set of challenges. The University offers world-class academic opportunities while maintain-ing excellent facilities for non-academic pursuits. As an athlete, you enter the University knowing full well that there is little or no chance you will play your sport professionally. You know you will face a tremendous challenge balancing the demands of your academic workload, your sport and whatever other extracurricular activities you chose. You will be challenged in the classroom by teachers and classmates who are among the best in the world. You will also be challenged on playing fields, competing against the highest caliber of collegiate competition. Of course, at the same time you will also have the challenge of defining who you will be as a person, who your friends will be and what values you will use to guide yourself and lead others. In many cases you will take on these challenges while you and your parents assume the financial burden of paying for your education when in some cases, you could have received a scholarship elsewhere.
Inevitably, a fact of life for the Princeton athlete is that you will be challenged by those who ques-tion the legitimacy of what you’re trying to achieve at the University. Many in the classroom couldn’t care less about the challenges of being an athlete. Similarly, your athletic competition will question your legitimacy as athletes and, if anything, find inspiration in having the opportunity to defeat an Ivy League opponent. You will question why you take on these challenges when there are significantly easier paths to pursue.
The reason, of course, is that you are motivated to achieve all that you can using all your skills and talents. You find inspiration and great satisfaction in
striving to achieve excellence in the classroom and on the field. You will find no class on leadership in any course guide; however, you will learn that there is no better forum to understand adversity, teamwork and leadership than in high-level collegiate com-petition. It will provide you an environment that will offer all the challenges and adversity you can handle. You may very well fall short of your goal. You may not be capable of achieving all that you hoped when you first entered the University. You may be criticized when you fail, but you will be better off because of it.
Twenty-five years ago I had the opportunity to play basketball and receive an engineering degree from Princeton. Despite the team having won the NIT and participating in two NCAA tournaments in the mid-1970s, Jadwin was rarely more than one-third full. The Daily Princetonian complained that $11 in meal money for a weekend road trip exceeded what was given in other sports. Moreover, the two pairs of sneakers given to a player rarely lasted the season, so several players wore taped shoes while playing in post-season tournaments.
For many athletes at Princeton, there were many benefits from athletic competition. First, you were better able to deal with adversity than the vast majority of your peers. Second, you learned to focus on the task and challenge at hand even while being criticized both on and off the field or court. Third, you learned who you can trust and depend on when the going gets tough. (These bonds often form some of the strongest friendships you will have in life.) Finally, you found that while you should never discount the value of raw intelligence, an understanding of teamwork, the desire to win in the face of great odds and the perseverance to never quit will more often than not determine success and failure.
I vaguely remember Bill Bowen writing me a note when he was president of Princeton congratu-lating me on being Ivy League Player of the Year and achieving All-East honors. I also remember many other athletes like me who did not graduate with
honors, but who persevered and endeavored to be the best they could at Princeton. After our 25th reunion, I can happily report that those “athletes” have done quite well. Many went on to graduate school. Most have done very well in the fields of medicine, politics and business. Several became teachers. A healthy percentage coach or run com-munity athletic programs so kids can learn the values and lessons experienced in sports. It was also striking how many of the leading donors in the class, and class officers, were athletes despite the fact there has been an ongoing debate as to their relevance on campus. A great number of gifts were directed to athletic programs. Why? Those gifts are to support the athletes on campus in their endeavor to be the best they can be in both worlds. While inevitably, some athletes on campus may fall short of the ideals of what a student athlete should be, there are thousands of others who are much better for the experience. The University, whether it wishes to admit it or not, is better off as well.
As athletic alumni, it’s important to reflect on our experiences at the University and help ensure that the Princeton experience of the fu-ture continues to support excellence both within and outside the classroom. While many have continued their support of athletics through team-specific Friends programs, it’s also important to support and enhance the experience of current and future Princeton student athletes. By becom-ing a member of the Princeton Varsity Club, you will be making a contribution to maintaining the spirit, tradition and excellence of athletics at Princeton. If nothing else, it acknowledges that in some way, Princeton athletics made a difference in your life both on campus and after graduation. It’s a small way of ensuring that opportunity con-tinues in the future.
Frank Sowinski ’78Sowinski was the 1977 Ivy League Player of
the Year in men’s basketball and ranks 12th on