October 11, 2000
Sports
Double
trouble
Young
and Carmody bolt for greener pastures
Football
comes up short to start season
Tigers
lose in final minutes to Lafayette and Lehigh
Scores
and Schedules
Sports Web Exclusives! Matt
Golden's From
the Cheap Seats column
Double
trouble
Young
and Carmody bolt for greener pastures
The
lure of big money, bright lights, and exciting opportunities was
just too tempting to allow baseball/basketball star Chris Young
'02 and head basketball coach Bill Carmody to remain at Princeton.
The Tiger basketball team lost its two most recognizable names in
a single week when Young signed a professional baseball contract
with the Pittsburgh Pirates on August 30 and Carmody accepted the
head coaching position at Northwestern University on September 6.
Assistant coach and former Princeton player John Thompson III '88
assumed the head job following Carmody's departure, but replacing
the 6-foot, 10-inch Young will prove a daunting challenge for the
basketball program.
Young's
decision to sign with the Pirates and forgo his basketball eligibility
at Princeton comes as a mild surprise to fans of the two-sport standout.
Young was a first-team All-Ivy and honorable mention All-America
selection in basketball last season after leading the Tigers to
a second consecutive National Invitational Tournament berth. The
center was on pace to finish his basketball career second only to
Bill Bradley '65 in career scoring, and he was poised to become
the Tigers' all-time leader in blocked shots. Despite Young's status
as a National Basketball
Association prospect, his dominance as a pitcher for the Princeton
baseball team prompted Pittsburgh to select the hard-throwing right-hander
in the third round of Major League Baseball's June amateur draft.
Last spring, Young helped
pitch the Tiger baseball team into the NCAA tournament by posting
five wins and no losses with a 1.82 earned run average. Though clearly
a top pitching prospect, Young's commitment to basketball and his
education at Princeton made him a draft risk for the financially
strapped Pirates. After declining Pittsburgh's initial offer, Young
spent most of the summer pitching for the Chatham A's of the prestigious
Cape Cod League. It was his performance there, against the top college
baseball players in the nation, that dramatically raised Young's
baseball stock - persuading the Pirates to up the ante to a reported
$1.65 million signing bonus.
In addition to the bonus,
the Pirates will pay for the remainder of Young's Princeton education
and will allow him to complete a continuous junior year before reporting
to their spring training complex in late May. Young says, "I
wanted midlevel first-round money and the Pirates exceeded that.
A Princeton University education is priceless, and if they offered
me $10 million and asked me to forgo my education, this deal wouldn't
have happened."
Under MLB rules, Young
was available to the Pirates after his sophomore year because he
turned 21 years old on May 25, before the June draft. He also had
the option of returning to school to continue his two-sport career
as a junior, giving him unusual leverage in his negotiations. In
fact, Young never budged from his original demands. He explains,
"I told them that I was in a win-win situation. Either by going
back to school or signing a contract, I was going to win."
In Young's case, an early
departure was imminent
- it was only a question of how soon. Carmody following suit, though,
came as a shock. A fixture on the Princeton sidelines for the last
18 years - the last four as head coach - Carmody enjoyed great success
with the Tigers and compiled a career record of 92 wins and 25 losses.
His 1997-98 squad finished the season with a 27-2 record, and, at
one point, was ranked eighth in the country.
Carmody takes the reins
of a perennially woeful Northwestern team that finished last season
with only five wins against 25 losses. He also faces the unenviable
challenge of competing against the defending national champion Michigan
State Spartans and other Big Ten conference titans. Carmody said
at his press conference that "to be able to coach at a school
with such a tremendous academic standing and in the top conference
in Division I basketball was something that
I could not turn down."
Carmody's longstanding
acquaintance with Northwestern president Henry Bienen, former dean
of the Woodrow Wilson School, may have played a role in his decision,
as did, probably, the reported long-term contract and hefty pay
raise Carmody received. Whatever his motives, Carmody will certainly
be put to the test at Northwestern.
So will Thompson, who
has spent the past five years on the Princeton bench as an assistant
coach. And Tiger fans are left wondering whether their team, on
the threshold of reclaiming the Ivy throne from the Penn Quakers,
will be equal to the task, minus two of its brightest stars.
By M.G.
Football
comes up short to start season
Tigers
lose in final minutes to Lafayette and Lehigh
Roger Hughes was the
offensive coordinator of Dartmouth's football team from 1992-99.
During that time, the Big Green featured an explosive offense that
was triggered by the precision passing of current Miami Dolphin
quarterback Jay Fiedler. So when Hughes replaced Steve Tosches as
Princeton's head football coach, Tiger fans were optimistic that
the new coach's innovative style would lead to an entertaining and
successful 2000 campaign.
Some of that flash was
evident in Princeton's first two games of the season. The Tigers
used several different offensive formations and some creative designs
to get the ball into the hands of playmakers like sophomore receiver
Chisom Opara. Princeton also mounted strong second-half comebacks
against both Lafayette and Lehigh before losing in heartbreaking
fashion. And the Tigers showed tremendous improvement from week
one to week two. But some old demons - big plays against the Princeton
defensive secondary and inconsistent play on special teams - returned
to haunt the Tigers and their new coach.
In losing the season
opener 24-17 to the Lafayette Leopards, Princeton's defensive backs
were routinely victimized by Lafayette freshman quarterback Marko
Glavic, who completed 18 of 30 passes for 243 yards and two touchdowns.
Glavic made a habit of picking on Princeton sophomore defensive
back Paul Simbi. The diminutive Simbi was twice flagged for pass
interference, gave up both Lafayette touchdown passes, and was in
coverage when Glavic completed a 54-yard pass to the Princeton 15-yard
line with seconds remaining in the game and the score knotted at
17. Glavic then lofted a pass to the right corner of the end zone,
where Leopard receiver Phil Yarberough out-leaped Simbi for the
game-winning touchdown.
The Princeton special
teams also made some costly errors in the defeat. A fumbled punt
return gave Lafayette possession at the Princeton 48-yard line,
leading to a first-quarter field goal. And junior place kicker Taylor
Northrop missed two first-half field goal attempts.
Hughes characterized
the team's mood as disappointed but not discouraged heading into
the week two match-up with the Lehigh Mountain Hawks, who were ranked
19th nationally in Division 1-AA. He said, "The mistakes we
made were correctable," adding, "I saw a couple of things
offensively in the fourth-quarter that were encouraging."
Entering the Lehigh game
as a decided underdog, the Tigers nearly pulled off the upset. On
a rainy night under the lights of Princeton Stadium, the Tiger defense
put forth a tremendous effort. Buoyed by the improved play of the
defensive secondary, which held Lehigh to 150 passing yards, Princeton
managed to give the Mountain Hawks a major scare. Limited mostly
to short completions, the potent Lehigh offense failed to muster
a score after the second quarter and produced just 95 second-half
yards.
Northrop rebounded from
his opening-week misses to convert on field goals of 26, 27, 46,
and 50 yards - keeping the Tigers within striking distance throughout
the game.
Tailing 20-12 with 7:45
remaining in the game, the Tigers embarked on a 15-play, 85-yard
drive that was capped when senior running back Kyle Brandt dove
and extended the ball across the goal line for a touchdown, making
the score 20-18. Princeton then lined up for a two-point conversion
that would tie the score with 1:18 to play. Opara went in motion
and took a hand-off from junior quarterback Tommy Crenshaw. Rolling
right, Opara lofted the ball toward freshman receiver Blair Morrison,
but a Lehigh defender deflected the pass and preserved the Mountain
Hawk victory.
Still looking for his
first win at Princeton, Hughes was pleased with his team's early
progress, saying, "If we play at this level the rest of the
season, I think we're going to win a lot of games."
Lehigh coach Kevin Higgins
echoed Hughes's sentiments, saying of the Tigers, "This is
a team that will get better and better as the season goes along.
They're well coached and have a bright future."
By M.G.
Scores
and Schedules
Men's
Teams
Football
(overall 0-2, Ivy
0-0)
Lafayette 24, Princeton
17
Lehigh 20, Princeton
18
October 14 Brown
October 21 Harvard
Soccer
(overall 4-1, Ivy
0-1)
Princeton 2, Old
Dominion 1
Princeton 2, William
& Mary 1
Princeton 3, Rider
0
Dartmouth 3, Princeton
1
October 11 Seton
Hall
October 14 Brown
October 18 at Loyola
October 21 Harvard
Cross Country
October 14 at Lafayette
Invitational
October 14 NCAA
District II Regionals at Ames, IA*
Golf
October 13-14 at
Stabler Invitational
Sprint Football
October 15 at Pride
Bowl (Newark, NJ)
vs. Army
Water Polo
(overall 4-1, Ivy
0-0)
Princeton 13, George
Washington 1
Princeton 12, Bucknell
1
St. Francis 12,
Princeton 8
Princeton 9, UC
Davis 5
|
Women's
Teams
Field Hockey
(overall 5-0, Ivy
2-0)
Princeton 6, Drexel
0
Princeton 3, Columbia
1
Princeton 5, Dartmouth
0
October 14 Brown
October 15 Duke
October 18 Delaware
October 21 Harvard
October 22 Penn
State
Golf
October 21-22 at
ECAC Tournament*
Soccer
(overall 5-0, Ivy
2-0)
Princeton 1, Seton
Hall 0
Princeton 2, Yale
0
Princeton 2, Lehigh
0
Princeton 1, Dartmouth
0
October 13 Brown
October 15 Boston
University
October 20 Harvard
Tennis
October 13-15 ECAC
Championships*
October 16-22 at
ITA Championships (Los Angeles, CA)*
Cross Country
October 11 at Lafayette
Invitational
October 13 at NIT
(Ames, IA)
Volleyball
(overall 3-1, Ivy
0-0)
October 11 Fordham
October 13 Yale
October 14 Brown
October 20 Penn
Notes: ·
Home games in italics ·
|
*if team qualifies
|