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My new favorite Princeton basketball image

My new favorite Princeton basketball image

Now that you’ve watched Doug Davis’ shot from a dozen different angles (instruct me in the Douglas!) and contemplated the cool name of Ian Hummer ‘13 (objective view: fairly cool, but nothing to write home about), it’s time to get serious. NIT? Thanks, but no thanks. CBI? Don’t call us, we’ll call you. We’re talking the Big Dance, ladies and gentlemen. Or rather, the Big Dances. We’re less than 24 hours from tip-off, and the Tigers have not one but TWO teams in the NCAA tournament. We’re breaking down what to watch for, what to expect, and how to savor the sweet, sweet runs of the twin Tiger squads.

Princeton Women’s Basketball

2010-2011 Rec0rd: 24-2

Seed: #12

First Round Game: #5 Georgetown, College Park, MD @ 2:50 p.m. on Sunday

Broadcast: ESPN2 or ESPN3 Simulcast

Yeah yeah, it’s the men and their late season heroics that are getting all the attention, and the SportsCenter Top Tens, etc., etc. But we’re starting with the Lady Tigers because this tournament trip for them is about more than just beating Harvard — it’s about a chance to make a real run and maybe even win a game or two.

This is the second straight year the women have won the Ivy League and earned themselves an NCAA tournament bid, which is pretty remarkable when you consider that they had never been to the tournament before last year. But to make the jump from “great Ivy League team” to just “great team,” period, the women need to prove themselves against five seed Georgetown, playing in what essentially is a home game in Baltimore, just a bit north of their D.C. stomping grounds. And they’ll have to do it without Niveen Rasheed ‘13, who Princeton lost for the season after an ACL injury in December. Still, head coach Courtney Banghart (another cool name!) seemed cool and confident in an interview with The Trentonian: “We are in it to win the game.” The long-term chances might not be great for the women (they’re in the same region as #1 UConn…), but any win would be huge. Go get ‘em!

Princeton Men’s Basketball

2010-2011 Rec0rd: 25-6

Seed: #13

First Round Game: #4 Kentucky, Tampa, FL @ 2:45 p.m. on Thursday

Broadcast: CBS

No matter how the tournament works out, the 2010-2011 season will always be remembered for the Pump ‘n’ Jump that sent the Tigers to the Tourney. The men’s team hasn’t been to the NCAA tournament since 2004. And they face some steep opposition in four seed Kentucky. But harken to the wisdom of Kareem Maddox ‘11, Ivy League Defensive Player of the Year and personal folk hero, speaking on the Tigers’ matchup against the Wildcats: “We’ll be the wildest cats there.” And remember: the last time Princeton was a 13 seed was 1996, when the Tigers — including a sprightly Sydney Johnson, now the coach of the men’s team — stunned #4 UCLA, the defending champions. So don’t lose hope! After all, we’ve got TigerBlood.

And the good news for the Tigers? Well, according to the folks running the Payscale.com bracket, of all the schools in the tournament, Princeton wins when it comes to potential earning after college, defeating Georgetown in the final, $102,000 to $94,900. So, at the risk of pushing the douche-o-meter all the way up to 11, at least we’ve got that going for us.

My inbox is fairly uneventful. It’s not too often that official-looking University email addresses pose questions to me in the form of caps-locked, declarative statements, so this afternoon’s missive was worthy of a double-take. “DO YOU WANT TO BE THE PRINCETON TIGER!” read the subject line. I didn’t, but I was also curious. Fortunately the email revealed more, including a brief job description and portrait:

Princeton University Students, do you want to support your Tigers and head to the NCAA Tournament with the Women’s basketball team, well now is your chance.  We are looking for an outgoing and fun PU Student to be the Princeton Tiger mascot during next week’s NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament, site TBD.  If you want to learn more please email Scott at sjurgens@princeton.edu

DO YOU WANT TO BE THIS!

DO YOU WANT TO BE THIS!

We did email Scott, who happens to be Director of Athletic Marketing Scott Jurgens. He informed us that the usual mascot will be traveling with his family over spring break and can’t accompany the team to the Big Dance. He’s looking for more eager candidates for the rest of this year and is also looking ahead to next year. These are big paws to fill, however, and according to Jurgens, it takes “enthusiasm, school spirit, personality, agility.” (Which of these is unlike the others?)  The prospective tiger must be thick-skinned, able to handle teasing from the opposition. He or she must also assume the sacred vow of mascot silence. He or she must also not do this.

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2010. A year of the same old Princeton happenings–bitching about Dean’s Date, bitching about grade deflation, bitching about bad FML posts. But there were a few things that we think set Oh-Ten apart: Robot Unicorn Attack, Supreme Court dominance, and the demise of Four Loko.

Here’s what happened in 2010:

  • January: There were exams. There are always exams. For the four years you are at Princeton, you will never have a January that isn’t at least partly awful, on account of exams. However: Dean’s Date liveblog. —DCW
  • February: Chatroulette was just starting to become a campus phenomenon, and by phenomenon, we mean something that people would do at parties when they were drunk. In February, we brought you the story of three friends who ran into each other on Chatroulette–while 16,216 other users from around the world were also chatting and nexting each other. -AW
    All month, we crossed our fingers and it happened: February 10th – Snow Day! With classes cancelled, Princetonians’ inner five-year-olds came out to play. The day unfolded like a story — like Beginner’s Reading story from Highlights For Children where nothing bad ever happens ever and instead the characters perform one wholesome recreational activity after another until it’s time to go home and get warm and Mom’s made hot chocolate with marshmallows oh yeah! It was simple. It was uncool. It was so, so wonderful. It was: Snowball fight in the Junior Slums! Quick now sled down Whitman Hill! Hide out in an igloo! Build a snowman on Alexander Beach! How could you not go to bed that night with a smile? — DCW
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    O(bama), ye of little faith.

    As he filled out his b(a)racket for the Women’s NCAA Tournament this year, he had our Tigers going down in the first round. If you’re really “surrounded by these Princeton Tigers” like you say you are, I suggest that they pounce. We think our women’s basketball team — making their first ever appearance at the Big Dance — will prove him wrong on Saturday.

    fIf you’re not already in love with the women’s basketball team, you really should be now – they’re the 2010 Ivy League Champions!

    The Tigers are going to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in school history. The team boasts a 25-2 overall record and chalked up a perfect 13-0 record in the Ivy League. Oh, and they haven’t lost in 20 games. Talk about a streak.

    You can still catch the team serving it up this Tuesday when the Tigers face Penn at Jadwin @ 5 p.m. If they win (which seems to be the trend) the ladies will complete the first perfect Ivy League season since Harvard’s in 2002-03.

    (image and statistics courtesy of goprincetontigers.com)

    Princeton's other (better) basketball team

    Princeton's other (better) basketball team

    Well, after all the excitement around the Princeton men’s basketball team possibly going undefeated in the Ivy League, we lost to Cornell and Brown in a span of three short games. There are still a few games left in the season, but Princeton has been all but eliminated from winning the Ivy League title.

    But lost in our otherwise obsessive coverage of Princeton basketball has been this year’s real story: the women’s team is good.

    Like, really, really, really good.

    How good, you ask? Hold on to your socks:

    How about a 21-2 overall record, including an undefeated 9-0 in the Ivy League?

    How about their 21 wins being the most ever by the women’s basketball team. And they still have 5 games left on the schedule!

    How about the only two losses on the year coming to perennial national powerhouses UCLA and Rutgers?

    How about all of this coming from a team that went 14-14 last year?

    But if you want to know if a team’s really good, listen to the way its coach talks after a blowout win. Following Saturday’s 64-38 drubbing of Brown in Providence, head coach Courtney Banghart said, “That wasn’t our best game, but it was a win. We will regroup and be ready for Cornell and Columbia next weekend.”

    God help Cornell and Columbia.

    In other words, this is our mea culpa basketball blog post. Yes, it was fun and exciting to write about a team that Pat Forde talked about on ESPN. But at the end of the day, only one Princeton basketball team has played this season in a way that’s truly transcendent, and that’s the Lady Tigers. Sorry it took us 23 games to figure that out.

    (image and statistics from goprincetontigers.com)

    from goprincetontigers.com

    Lauren Polansky and Niveen Rasheed after Dec. 20's Houston game, from goprincetontigers.com

    So it’s a slow news um, month here in snowy Princeton–a month of no classes, of students shuffling to and from Firestone’s confining basement floors, greeting each other with the number of pages they’ve yet to finish before Tuesday, at 4 pm. Welcome to reading period at Princeton.

    But things are still happening, Inkblots! Real things! Newsy things!

    Are we being “post-racial,” or just normal, when we ask…Why is this a story?