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13 minute read
Darleny Cepin or Momo Wolapaye, at Princeton Univ.
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
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Women’s basketball sweeps Cornell and Columbia to remain undefeated in Ivy League play
By Matt Drapkin and Rachel Posner
Staff Sports Writers
Last weekend, the women’s basketball team (16–4, 8–0 Ivy League) played back-to-back Ivy League opponents in Jadwin Gymnasium, first defeating Cornell (7–12, 2–6) in a 75–37 blowout win, and then taking care of Columbia (16–4, 7–1) 57–39.
On Friday, Feb. 4, the Tigers’ solid defense prevented Cornell from scoring for the first eight minutes of the game, and by halftime the Tigers led 35–14. They were able to maintain this 20-point advantage throughout the second half, ultimately doubling Cornell’s score by winning 75–37.
Plank hit two three-point shots and Nwokeji scored in the last 20 seconds of the game, both making major contributions after coming off the bench late.
Junior guard Grace Stone had a particularly strong game, scoring 14 points, grabbing seven rebounds, and dishing five assists. Other impressive performances included 12 points from senior guard Abby Meyers and 11 points from junior guard Julia Cunningham.
Coming out strong in the second half of a backto-back is a difficult ask for any basketball team. Doing so against the Columbia Lions, undefeated in the Ivy League, is even tougher. The Tigers, however, made it look easy, defeating Columbia in a 57–39 victory on Saturday evening, giving them complete control of the top spot in the Ivy League.
Princeton was in control from the very start, refusing to give up their lead through all four quarters. At the half, the Tigers led 35–16, fueled by stellar offensive performances from Julia Cunningham and Abby Meyers. The two combined for 24 firsthalf points, giving the Tigers a comfortable cushion heading into the intermission.
The second half was no different for the Tigers, who continued dominating on both sides of the floor. Not only did they move the ball more effectively — finishing the game with 13 team assists compared to Columbia’s five — but they also played the passing lanes with great precision, ending with 11 steals and 23 points off turnovers.
Cunningham led all scorers with 19 points and five rebounds, followed by Meyers’ 16 points and five rebounds. Grace Stone added a strong 10 points and seven rebounds, and Ellie Mitchell did all of the little things in the win, ending with a game-high 14 rebounds and a team-high five assists.
At the game, the athletics department also honored the 36th annual National Girls and Women in Sports Day. As a part of the festivities, the first 100 fans to arrive received a copy of “I Can Do Anything: Stories From the First 50 Years of Women’s Athletics at Princeton.” Author Jerry Price, who serves as a senior communications advisor and historian for the Princeton athletics department, was also on hand to sign the books for fans.
The Tigers remain undefeated in the Ivy League at 8–0. They will look to defend their spotless conference record this Saturday, Feb. 12, when they travel up north to take on Dartmouth (2–18, 1–7 Ivy).
Rachel Posner is a Staff Sports Writer for the ‘Prince’ sports section who typically covers sports features. She is also a staff writer for the Features section. She can be reached at rposner@ princeton.edu.
PHOTO COURTESY OF @PRINCETONWBB/TWITTER
Junior guard Julia Cunningham drains a three-pointer against Columbia as her friends celebrate.
MEN’S BASKETBALL
Princeton men’s basketball shoots the lights out in 85–63 win over Columbia
By Wilson Conn
Head Sports Editor
When the Tigers shoot well from three-point range, they’re nearly impossible to beat.
Following their second consecutive conference loss in a shootout with Cornell (12–7, 4–4 Ivy League) on Friday in Ithaca, the Princeton men’s basketball team (16–5, 6–2 Ivy) traveled to New York City on Saturday to finish up their weekend trip against the Columbia Lions (4–16, 1–7 Ivy), winning 85–63.
All but one Tiger made the trip successfully from Ithaca to the Big Apple, as men’s basketball head coach Mitch Henderson ’98 was forced to leave the team after entering into the COVID-19 health and safety protocols prior to Friday’s matchup with Cornell. Associate head coach Brett MacConnell took the reins of the head coaching position temporarily for the second consecutive game and the third time in his tenure on Saturday night.
Henderson did, however, lead the Tigers to a 84–69 win in their first matchup against Columbia on Jan. 7 in what was both teams’ first Ivy League game of the season. The Tigers trailed by 12 at halftime in that game, but ended up winning by 15 points thanks to a 51-point second half.
On Feb. 5, the Lions opened up an eight-point lead before the under-16 media timeout for the second matchup in a row between the two teams. Six of these eight opening points came from Columbia’s guard Geronimo Rubio de La Rosa, who led Columbia with 15 points on the night.
However, unlike the previous matchup, which didn’t see the Tigers respond and take the lead until early in the second half, Princeton immediately went on a run. Senior guard Ethan Wright hit a three-pointer to open the scoring with 16:10 remaining in the half, and Princeton scored 12 unanswered to bring the score to 12–8. Nine of the points on this run came from Wright, who entered the game shooting 63 percent from the field over his last four contests, and had scored double-digit points in nine of the last 10 games. Wright had also scored eight of the team’s first 10 points the night before against the Big Red.
Wright and the Tigers continued to pour it on from the three-point line, with four more threepointers from Wright, two from junior guard Ryan Langborg, and two from senior forward Drew Friberg, respectively, expanding the lead to 28–14. The three-ball has been a recipe for success for the Tigers all season, with a staggering 45 percent of their field goal attempts having been three-pointers through their first 20 games. Coming into the game against Columbia, they ranked 25th out of 353 Division-I programs in team threepoint percentage at 37.8 percent, and eighth in the country in three-pointers made per game with 10.6.
At half, Princeton led 46–30, and had nearly met their average with 10 threepointers made, including four in the last two minutes and 30 seconds of the half. Wright was leading the way with 18 points, including four three-pointers; Friberg and Langborg had combined for 22 more points and six three-pointers between them. The Tigers were also well on their way to meeting their team scoring average of 80.7 points per game, which was good for 14th in Division I entering the contest.
The Tigers picked up where they left off in the second half, as junior forward Tosan Evbuomwan found Friberg for a threepointer to extend the lead to 53–34. Senior guard Jaelin Llewellyn then found Wright for three-pointers on two consecutive possessions, widening the Princeton lead to 59–38.
Despite leading by around 20 points for most of the half, the Tigers were challenged with just under seven minutes on the clock, as a 10–0 Columbia scoring run cut the lead to just 12. However, thanks to two quick layups from Llewellyn and a string of defensive stops, the game was sealed for Princeton, 85–63. A late three-pointer from first-year guard Blake Peters was the icing on the cake, as it was their 16th triple of the game, setting a new season-high.
The return to dominance from the three-point line (16 makes on 42 attempts) for the Tigers was a welcome sight after a rough night in Ithaca Friday that saw them shoot just 7-for28 from deep, and the last matchup with Columbia which saw them shoot just 6-for-21 from beyond the arc. It seems the coaching staff is willing to live and die with the threeball, and the Tigers have lived more often than not this year. Last Saturday’s contest saw a whopping 62 percent of the team’s field goal attempts come from three-point range, up nearly 17 percentage points from their season average for that proportion.
Leading the way for Princeton in their stellar offensive performance was Ethan Wright, who scored 27 points on 7-for14 shooting from threepoint range, following up his 26-point, eight-rebound game against Cornell with another stellar performance. Wright, who entered the game shooting 39.7 percent from three (eighth-best in the Ivy League), shattered his season scoring average of 15.1 points per game.
The team’s two leading scorers, Jaelin Llewelyn and Tosan Evbuomwan (15.6 points per game each, tied fourth in Ivy) did not meet their scoring averages, with 10 and seven points, respectively; however, they found other ways to contribute. Llewelyn notched nine boards and five assists, while Evbuomwan picked up 11 rebounds, and also managed six assists to add to his Ivy League-leading total. Ryan Langborg and Drew Friberg added a combined 30 points on 8-for-21 three-point shooting for Princeton.
The win improved the Tigers, who had lost two consecutive games coming in, to 6–2 in the conference, keeping them in third place behind Penn (10–12, 7–2 Ivy) and Yale (12–9, 6–1). Columbia remains eighth in the league at 4–16 (1–7). With six games remaining on the schedule, the Tigers’ odds for finishing top-four in the league and qualifying for Ivy Madness remain high, as they are currently three wins ahead of fifth-place Harvard. However, the Tigers face a difficult slate of games ahead, including one more game each against Penn and Yale, and two matchups with Harvard, the results of which could easily change their fate.
Next up, though, Princeton will host Dartmouth (5-14, 2-6 Ivy) this Saturday, Feb. 12 at Jadwin Gymnasium, as they look to further improve their chances at Ivy Madness, and ultimately, the NCAA Tournament.
WOMEN’S HOCKEY
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Hockey goaltender Kim Newell ’16 represents China at the Beijing Winter Olympics
By Matt Drapkin
Staff Sports Writer
Even though she took nearly three years off from her hockey career after graduating from Princeton, Kim Newell ’16 is shining as bright as ever on the international stage.
Four games into the preliminary round for Olympic Women’s Ice Hockey, Princeton alumna Zhou Jiaying — known at the University as Kim Newell — has found her groove in the crease. Although she hails from Canada, Newell represents China, her mother’s home country, on the international stage. As the starting goalkeeper for the national team, she locks down opposing offenses at an elite level.
Newell has been on a tear to start the 2022 Olympics Games in Beijing. Her breakout performances thus far have put her in third place internationally in saves percentage, ahead of all but two other Olympic goalkeepers, with a rate of 95.51 percent.
Her successes on an international level are no surprise to anyone who knew Newell in her days at Princeton. Both then and now, she was a competitor that no opponent wanted to face up against. As a Tiger, she earned First-Team All-Ivy League honors, an Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) Hockey Goalie of the Month award, three separate ECAC Goalie of the Week recognitions, and made the ECAC All-Academic team all four years.
Newell’s shot-blocking abilities have been essential to China’s success. On Sunday, Feb. 6, her skills were put on full display for the world to see when the Japanese National Team took China into a penalty-shot shootout. She successfully saved all five of Japan’s penalty-shot attempts, giving her teammates the opportunity to make a play and take home the win. Chinese forward Mi Le zipped the puck past the opposing goalkeeper, ultimately giving China the 2–1 victory.
Not only is Newell dominating the ice, but she is doing so in style. Her customized goalkeeper mask and pads show off the famous Chinese-style golden dragons.
China ended with a 2–2 record in the Women’s Preliminary Round, good for fourth place in Group B. Since only the top three teams in Group B advance to the quarterfinals, their 2022 Olympic run has officially come to an end. The next women’s hockey matchup at the Olympics will take place on Friday, Feb. 11, when the United States will compete against the Czech Republic to kick off the Women’s Play-offs Quarterfinals.
After the Olympics, it is unclear what Newell’s next move is going to be. Likely, she will choose to return to her professional team in China, the Kunlun Red Star, to resume play in the Kontinental Hockey League.
Regardless of her future plans, though, the Princetonian has officially left her mark on the biggest stage of them all.
Matt Drapkin is a Staff Sports Writer for the ‘Prince’ sports section. He can be reached at mattdrapkin@princeton.edu or on Twitter at @mattdrapkin.
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PHOTO COURTESY OF GO PRINCETON TIGERS. Kim Newell ‘16 was a goaltender for the Tigers from 2013-2016.
WOMEN’S LACROSSE
Women’s lacrosse ranked first in Ivy League preseason poll
By Julia Nguyen
Head Sports Editor
The preseason poll rankings for the Ivy League women’s lacrosse teams are in, and Princeton sits atop the poll after receiving a unanimous first-place selection, receiving all 18 votes.
The Penn Quakers follow in second place. They are one of the best teams Princeton will play, including their out-of-conference opponents.
The Tigers are also ranked No. 13 and No. 15 in the Nike/US Lacrosse and ILWomen/IWLCA Division I preseason rankings, respectively.
In spring 2019 — the most recent season in which they competed — Princeton took home the Ivy Championships, one of 13 in program history. The Tigers have held this title for six consecutive years from 2014 to 2019.
The Tigers have had 25 total NCAA tournament appearances, the most in Ivy League history by a wide margin; next up are Dartmouth with 14 appearances and Penn with 12. Three of the Tigers’ 25 appearances yielded an NCAA Championship (1994, 2002, 2003). The only other Ivy team to have held this title was Harvard in 1990.
Head Coach Chris Sailer has witnessed many of the Tigers’ storied successes first-hand. She joined the coaching staff more than three decades ago in 1987. Since then, she has won all three national titles, 15 Ivy titles, and has accumulated 418 wins during her Princeton career.
The team recently learned that this season will be the Sailer’s last, as she leads the Tigers on their quest for another title.
Coach Sailer’s accomplishments in the last 36 years have not gone unnoticed — especially by her players.
“Coach Sailer is a legend and it’s an honor to play for her as a senior in her last year,“ senior attacker Tara Shecter commented.
The Tigers’ season will open on the road against No. 11 Virginia on Sunday, Feb. 20.
“We’re super excited to start playing games after almost two years! Our first game against UVA in two weeks will be a great way to showcase all of the hard work we’ve been putting in this fall,” Shecter added.
The home opener is scheduled for Saturday, Feb. 26 against Temple, followed by the Ivy opener against Cornell on Saturday, March 5 at Sherrerd Field.
Julia Nguyen is a Head Sports Editor at the ‘Prince’ who usually covers the weekly recaps. She can be reached at trucn@princeton.edu or on instagram at @jt.nguyen.
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