Menls Lacrosse

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Menls Lacrosse MEN’S LACROSSE Updated After 2015 Season First Game: 1882 — exact date unkown (vs. New York Lacrosse Club ) All-Time Record: 664-460-19 (.587) Head Coaching Register: W L T Pct. Al Nies (1921-35) 74 39 7 .646 Bill Logan (1936-45) 49 31 0 .613 Dick Colman (1946-49) 28 15 0 .651 Ernie Ransome (1950) 7 2 1 .750 Ferris Thomsen (1951-70) 115 99 7 .536 Art Robinson (1971-76) 32 49 0 .395 Mike Hanna (1977-81) 31 31 0 .500 Jerry Schmidt (1982-87) 27 58 0 .318 Bill Tierney (1988-2009) 238 86 0 .735 Chris Bates (2010-present) 51 35 0 .593 Ivy League Championships (26): 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1967, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2015 Ivy League Tournament Championships (1): 2010 NCAA Tournament Appearances (20): 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2012 NCAA Championships (6): 1992, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2001 Ivy League Player of the Year (9): Kevin Lowe (1994), Jesse Hubbard (1996), Jon Hess (1997), Josh Sims (2000), Ryan Mollett (2001), Ryan Boyle (2002), Ryan Boyle (2004), Tyler Fiorito (2012), Mike MacDonald (2015) Ivy League Rookie of the Year (11): Torr Marro (1990), Scott Bacigalupo (1991), Jesse Hubbard (1995), B.J. Prager (1999), Ryan Boyle (2001), Peter Trombino (2004(, Dan Cocoziello (2005), Jack McBride (2008), Mike Chanenchuk (2010), Tom Schreiber (2011), Jake Froccaro (2013) Quick Facts: • Chris Bates has led Princeton to three Ivy League championships, two NCAA tournament appearances and four Ivy League tournaments, including the outright league championship in 2012, when Princeton went 6-0 in the league and outscored its opponents 81-35. In 2010, Bates led Princeton to a share of the Ivy League championship and then the title of the first-ever Ivy League tournament, which the Tigers won by defeat- ing Cornell 10-9 in OT on a goal by Jack McBride. The 2015 Tigers shared the Ivy title and reached the Ivy tournament final. • Bill Tierney, a member of the U.S. Lacrosse Hall of Fame, won 238 games in 22 seasons as Princeton head coach before leaving at the end of the 2009 season. Tierney took Princeton to 14 Ivy League championships, 10 NCAA Final Fours, eight NCAA championship games and six NCAA titles. • Princeton has won six NCAA championships since 1992, of which four have come in overtime. The four overtime goals: Andy Moe (unassisted) in 1992; Kevin Lowe (assist from Jeff MacBean) in 1994; Jesse Hub- bard (assist from Lorne Smith) in 1996; B.J. Prager (assist from Ryan Boyle) in 2001. Princeton's other two NCAA championships came in 1997 and 1998 by a combined total of 22 goals. Princeton lost in the NCAA championship game in 2000, 13-7 to Syracuse, and 2002, 13-12 to Syracuse. Men’s Lacrosse 1 • Princeton's 2001 season ended with a 10-9 overtime win over Syracuse in the NCAA final. Princeton led 8-4 entering the fourth quarter and 9-8 with 30 seconds remaining before having to pull the game out in overtime. The Tigers won all three of their NCAA tournament games by one goal, running their NCAA tournament winning streak in one-goal games to 11 straight. Princeton outscored its Ivy opponents 88-21 in winning its seventh-straight title. • The 1998 season saw the Tigers win their third straight national title and fifth in a seven-year span. The Ti- gers went 14-1, with their only loss coming in the second game of the season to end the second-longest win- ning streak in lacrosse history at 29 games. Princeton went on to win its final 13 games and defeat Maryland 15-5 in the national championship game. Princeton was led by national defenseman of the year Christian Cook, national midfielder of the year Josh Sims and the All-America attack of Jon Hess, Jesse Hubbard and Chris Massey, who scored 618 points in 60 career games. • The 1997 season was the best in school history, as the Tigers set a school record for wins by going 15-0 and placed 10 players on the All-America teams. The perfect season was the second in school history and first since 1935 (9-0). The Tigers pushed their school-record winning streak to 28 games, had 13 players named All-Ivy League after going perfect through the league for a second-straight time and won a second- straight national championship by defeating Maryland 19-7 in the final. • The Tigers stunned top-ranked Syracuse, 10-9, in double overtime to win the 1992 NCAA championship, the first NCAA team title for Princeton since the men’s fencing team won in 1964 (crew is not an NCAA sport). Andy Moe ’92, who four years earlier had played on the first Princeton lacrosse team to go winless in Ivy League play, sealed the dramatic turnaround by scoring the championship-winning goal nine seconds into the second extra session. • Princeton won its second NCAA title in a three-year span with a dramatic 9-8 overtime victory against the University of Virginia. Kevin Lowe ’94 scored the game-winning goal off an assist from Jeff MacBean ’96 just 42 seconds into the overtime. Goaltender Scott Bacigalupo ’94 earned MVP honors in the title game for the second time in his career. • Princeton won its third national championship with a 13-12 win over Virginia accomplished, like the first two, in overtime. Jesse Hubbard scored the game-winner 34 seconds into the overtime. • Six Princeton teams were voted as national champions (1884, 1885, 1937, 1942, 1951 and 1953). • Princeton dominated the decade of the 1990s in Ivy League lacrosse, winning seven championships. Princ- eton had perfect 6-0 league records in 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998 and 1999 • From 1957 to 1965, Princeton dominated Ivy lacrosse action, stringing together nine consecutive league titles. The Tigers were undefeated in Ivy competition from 1957-63, chalking up 5-0 records in each of those league seasons except for 1960, when they tied Harvard, 11-11, for a 4-0-1 record. Men’s Lacrosse 2 Letterwinners 1931 A.H. Vrooman ’34 A.R. Ormond ’38 L.R. Albright, Jr. ’31§ Charles W.B. Wardell, Jr. ’35 P.C. Ralli ’37 1940 J.B. Boyd ’33 J.T. Woodward ’33 Samuel W. Robinson ’37 John R. Arnzen ’41 R.W. Boyd, Jr. ’32 C.B. Rogers ’36 E.B. Baetjer ’40 James A. Brooks ’33 1934 W.L. Schwenk ’37 Harrison Black ’40 J.H. Brown ’31 E.F. Britten III ’36 R.F. Shaffer ’38 William Callery, Jr. ’42 J.R. Carnochan ’31 C.B. Ceppi ’34 W.M. Woodward ’37 J.P. Cleaver ’41§ W.P. Davis III ’31 A.G. Chapman, Jr. ’35 C.T. Crolius ’42 W.W. Evans ’32 C.H. Classen ’34 1937 N.P. Findley, Jr. ’40 B.H. Griswold ’33 E.G. Collister ’34 James D.J. Brady ’38 Hugh N. Gehman ’42 L.M. Hirsch ’33 R.W. Doyle ’35 J.N. Classen ’38 J.S. Green III ’42 W.M. Jenifer ’31 Paul Fitting ’35 T.P. Cobb ’38¥ H.A. Holland, Jr. ’41 T.L. Keese ’31 H.W. Ghriskey ’34 Charles M. Dering ’37† O.W. Ketcham ’40 R.W. Kesler ’32 R.T. Henshaw, Jr. ’34 E.M. Finck, Jr. ’37 John D.B. King ’41 R.M. Kime ’31 Owen A. Kirkland ’34† Herbert W. Foedisch ’38 J.V.C. Koppelman ’40 R.D. Kreitler ’31 J.H. Marks ’35 ¥ T.B. Foster ’38 R.E. Livesey ’41 D.G. Levick, Jr. ’31 D.H. McIlvaine ’34§ C.P. King ’38 W.D. Lynn ’40 J.W. Lord, Jr. ’32 C.D. Murphy ’34 M.S. Lazaron, Jr. ’38 R.W. Mayer ’42 D.G. McIntosh III ’33 P.H. Remington ’34 J.L. Martin, Jr. ’37§ A.H. Munkenbeck, Jr. ’41 R.A. Mestres ’31 A.G. Rytina ’35 E.R. McLean ’38 Lawrence P. Naylor III ’41 Algernon Roberts ’32 C.J. Schmidlapp ’35 T.H. Moyer, Jr. ’38 D.H. Patterson ’40 H.D. Schwaab ’33 E.R. Schuh ’34 R.S. Mueller, Jr. ’38 J.F. Peckham ’40§ Edwin S. Schwab ’33 J.H.K. Shannahan, Jr. ’34 A.R. Ormond ’38 R.J. Stewart ’40 George A. Schwarzenbach ’31† N.B. Shea ’35 P.C. Ralli ’37 D.K. Stuckey II ’42 Caspar Wister ’32 A.H. Vrooman ’34 Samuel W. Robinson ’37 R.M. Thomas ’42 J.T. Woodward ’33 Charles W.B. Wardell, Jr. ’35 R.F. Shaffer ’38 Charles T. Turner ’40† W.H. Yeckley ’32 E.T.P. Watson ’36 W.M. Woodward ’37 J. Elmer Weisheit, Jr. ’42 D.R. Wintermann ’34 J.H. Worth ’40 1932 1938 J.B. Boyd ’33 1935 E.B. Baetjer ’40 1941 R.W. Boyd, Jr. ’32 W.N. Abbott ’36¥ A.H. Bolte ’39§ Gordon M. Allen ’43 James A. Brooks ’33 J.G. Anderson ’35 James D.J. Brady ’38† John R. Arnzen ’41 Charles B. Ceppi ’34 W.H. Bedell ’36 J.N. Classen ’38 E.M. Barrett ’42 C.H. Classen ’34 E.F. Britten III ’36 T.P. Cobb ’38§ William Callery, Jr.’42 W.B. Davis ’34 R.H. Carter ’35 N.P. Findley, Jr. ’40 M. Tyler Campbell ’43 R.K. Fairman ’34 A.G. Chapman, Jr. ’35 Herbert W. Foedisch ’38 J.P.
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