Even more specifically, that's Princeton ice hockey, not the field kind.
Before that, though, TigerBlog would like to say two things about college football.
First, every Ivy League football fan does need to offer a tip of the hat to Yale for its performance in the FCS Playoffs, which saw the Bulldogs defeat Youngstown State 43-42 last week in the opening round and then fall 21-13 Saturday to a Montana State team that could very easily win the whole thing. For the first year of the Ivy participation in the playoffs, it was a positive result — two teams got bids, one won a game.
Don't underestimate how much impact this will have on Ivy League football overall.
Second, what in the world is up with the College Football Playoff selection committee? May TigerBlog make a suggestion? Get rid of the in-season updates.
You don't need to do anything to artificially inflate interest in the sport. It already has all that it needs. All you did was put yourself in a completely unjustifiable position for leaving out Notre Dame.
Also, Texas would have certainly been in had it opened its season at home against, say, Ohio, rather than at Ohio State. That's not a great message to send.
Okay, enough of that.
Princeton hockey, remember?
The Princeton men and women combined to go 4-0 on their respective road trips, with a women's Central New York sweep of No. 14 Colgate (6-1 Friday night) and No. 8 Cornell (3-2 Saturday). The men also had a pair of wins in New York, 5-1 at Union Friday night and 4-0 at RPI Saturday night.
That's a combined four wins by a combined score of 18-3. That's pretty good stuff.
When was the last time Princeton had both hockey teams sweep on the road in the same weekend? It's only happened twice before, in 1998 and in 1989. TigerBlog would like to say that he researched that all afternoon yesterday, but really he just asked his colleague Chas Dorman, who had the answer.
For the women, Mackenzie Alexander had her first career hat trick in the win at Colgate. Issy Wunder had two goals Saturday. Emerson O'Leary had a goal and four assists for the weekend.
The men got five goals from five different players in the win at Union and had seven different players with at least one on the weekend. The only Tiger with more than one on the weekend and with at least one in both games was Jake Manfre, who had one against Union and two against RPI.
Conor Callaghan was in goal for both games for the men, and he made a combined 51 saves while allowing one goal in 120 minutes. Again, those are impressive numbers.
It would hardly be surprising to see some league honors come Callaghan's way.
The women have now won seven straight games. The men were swept at Bowling Green Thanksgiving weekend but have won four straight ECAC games.
Where does that leave everyone?
The women are in first place in the league with 22 points after 10 games. Usually at this time of year there's a discrepancy in games played, but 10 of the ECAC teams (including Princeton) have played 10, while Clarkson and St. Lawrence have played nine each.
The men are in fourth place after having played six ECAC games, which is equal to the fewest anyone has in the league.
Next up for the men will be a home game Dec. 28 against Brown. That is a Sunday by the way, and there will be no accompanying Yale game that weekend, in that this Princeton-Brown game will not count in the standings for either the ECAC or Ivy League.
That game, by the way, will be the first of five straight on Hobey Baker ice, with home weekends against Dartmouth and Harvard and then RPI and Union to start 2026. Dartmouth, by the way, is the only unbeaten team in Division men's hockey and is currently No. 1 in the national NPI rankings, a system that has replaced Pairwise as the official ratings.
Princeton is 18th in the NPI, as an aside.
The women are off now until the first weekend in January, when Stonehill will come to Hobey Baker Rink.
The 2025 portion of the schedule has been fun for both teams. The 2026 part should keep getting better.









