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Princeton Heads To Georgetown For NCAA Tournament Opening Round
May 10, 2007 | Men's Lacrosse
The head of the FBI is Robert Mueller, who scored 45 goals as a Princeton men's lacrosse attackman before graduating in 1966. It was 10 years later that George Tenet graduated from Georgetown after playing midfield for the Hoyas. Tenet would go on to become the head of the CIA, and his tenure would overlap for nearly three years wtih Mueller's before Tenet stepped down in 2004.
Couple that with the fact that Princeton head coach Bill Tierney and Georgetown coach Dave Urick are both Cortland State graduates from the early 1970s, and you'd figure there won't be many secrets left unearthed when Princeton and Georgetown get together Sunday (noon, ESPNU, WPRB FM 103.3) in the opening round of the NCAA tournament. The game will be played at Georgetown's Multi-Purpose Field in Washington, D.C.
For the winner of the game, there is a berth in the quarterfinals opposite the winner of the Johns Hopkins-Notre Dame game. Regardless of whether it is Georgetown or Princeton, the quarterfinal game will be played at Princeton Stadium next Saturday, May 19. Princeton Stadium has been the site for the quarterfinals twice before - and those were the only two times since 1990 that Princeton has not been in the quarterfinals. Georgetown, on the other hand, has played at Princeton Stadium in the quarterfinals, having fallen to Maryland in overtime in 2005.
Princeton leads the series with Georgetown 5-0, but the teams have only played once in the last 11 years. That game was in the 2002 NCAA quarterfinals at Hofstra, where Ryan Boyle's goal with four seconds remaining gave Princeton a 14-13 win. Such a high goal total this time around is unlikely; only three times in a combined 26 games have opponents reached double figures against Georgetown and Princeton this season. Princeton leads Division I in scoring defense at 6.0 goals per game.
Princeton, all under Tierney, has a .744 winning percentage in NCAA tournament games, the best in Division I history. That pecentage is even better in close games, as Princeton is 22-4 all-time in NCAA games decided by three goals or fewer and 14-3 in games decided by one goal. Princeton's Peter Trombino is the only player in this year's tournament who has scored an overtime goal in an NCAA game, which he did in the 2004 quarterfinals against Maryland.
Princeton vs. Georgetown
NCAA Tournament ? Opening Round
The site Multi-Sport Field ? Washington, D.C.
The date Sunday, May 13, 2007 ? noon
Radio/TV WPRB FM 103.3; www.goprincetontigers.com/ESNPU
The seedings Princeton: unseeded; Georgetown: No. 6
The records Princeton: 10-3 (5-1 Ivy League); Georgetown: 11-2 (7-0 ECAC)
The coaches Princeton: Bill Tierney (23rd season overall, 252-83); Georgetown: Dave Urick (28th season overall, 305-99)
The series Princeton leads 5-0
Last meeting Princeton defeated Georgetown 14-13 ? May 18, 2002
Just win, baby ? Georgetown's Dave Urick (.755) and Princeton's Bill Tierney (.752) rank 1-2 among Division I head coaches in career winning percentage.
Nice to see you again ? Princeton and Georgetown meet for the first time since the 2002 NCAA quarterfinals at Hofstra, won 14-13 by Princeton on Ryan Boyle's goal with four seconds remaining in regulation.
History lesson ? Princeton leads the all-time series with Georgetown 5-0. The 2002 quarterfinal game is the only postseason meeting between the schools and the only meeting between the schools in the last 11 years.
Coming attractions ? The winner of the Princeton-Georgetown game will play the winner of the Johns Hopkins-Notre Dame in the quarterfinal round, to be held May 19 at Princeton Stadium.
The whammy ? Princeton has played in 15 of the last 17 NCAA quarterfinals. The only times the Tigers did not advance to the quarterfinals were 1999 and 2005, the only times before this season that Princeton Stadium has been the site for the quarters.
More whammy ? Princeton has never played a quarterfinal game at Princeton Stadium; Georgetown has, having fallen to Maryland in overtime in 2005.
May madness ? Princeton has won six NCAA championships, played in eight NCAA championship games and advanced to 10 NCAA Final Fours in the last 15 years.
More madness ? Bill Tierney ranks second in career NCAA tournament wins with 29. Roy Simmons Jr. of Syracuse is first with 34.
Still more madness ? Princeton's .744 winning percentage in the NCAA tournament is the best of any program in Division I history.
No place like road ? The Princeton-Georgetown game will mark the first time that Princeto has played a road game in the opening round of the NCAA tournament since the field expanded to 16 teams.
More road ? Princeton will be playing its 40th NCAA tournament game all-time and its second on its opponents home field as a result of seeding. The only previous time was in the 1990 quarterfinals at Yale. Princeton has played twice on an opponent's field that was a predetermined site; both times (1997 final at Maryland, 2003 quarterfinal at Syracuse) Princeton was the higher seeded team.
Close shaves ? Princeton has won 29 NCAA tournament games all-time; 14 of those 29 have come by one goal.
More close ? Princeton is 14-3 all-time in NCAA tournament games decided by one goal and 22-4 all-time in NCAA tournament games decided by three goals or fewer.
Working overtime ? Princeton is 6-1 all-time in NCAA tournament games that have gone overtime; Princeton has won its last six NCAA tournament OT games after losing the 1991 quarterfinals 14-13 in triple OT against Towson.
More overtime ? Of Princeton's six NCAA championships, four have been won in overtime (1992 Andy Moe vs. Syracuse, 1994 Kevin Lowe vs. Virginia, 1996 Jesse Hubbard vs. Virginia, 2001 B.J. Prager vs. Syracuse).
Last OT ? Peter Trombino is the only player in this year's NCAA tournament who has scored an overtime goal in an NCAA tournament game (2004 quarterfinals vs. Maryland).
Triple play - Princeton's three losses were by 7-6 in double overtime to the third seed (Hopkins), 7-6 on a goal with 24 seconds left to the second seed (Virginia) and 10-6 to No. 4 seed Cornell.
Highly intelligent ? The current director of the FBI is a former Princeton lacrosse player (Robert Mueller '66). The recent director of the CIA is a former Georgetown lacrosse player (George Tenet '76). Their tenures overlapped from Sept. 4, 2001, when Mueller took over at the FBI, through July 11, 2004, when Tenet stepped down from the CIA.
D plus ? Princeton leads Division I in scoring defense (6.0 goals per game).
More D - No team has scored more than 10 goals against Princeton this season. Only one team (Cornell) has scored more than eight.
Aw, shoot - Princeton's opponents have a .192 shooting percentage.
More shoot - Georgetown averages 40.3 shots per game and allows an average of 31.4 shots per game; Princeton averages 40.1 shots per game and allows 30.4 shots per game.
I'm honored - Peter Trombino (A), Scott Sowanick (M), Zachary Jungers (D) and Mark Kovler (M) were all named first-team All-Ivy League. Alex Hewit (G) and Dan Cocoziello (D) were second-team selections; Chris Peyser (D) and Charlie Kolkin (D) were honorable mention selections.
More honored - When Peter Trombino, Scott Sowanick and Zachary Jungers were all named first-team All-Ivy League, it marked the first time in program history that the entire group of captains was named first-team All-Ivy.
Still more honored - Princeton's starting goalie and top four longsticks all earned All-Ivy honors.
Last honored - Princeton's Alex Hewit and Zachary Jungers are among the final 17 nominees for the Tewaaraton Trophy.
Ten speed - Princeton has won at least 10 games for the 16th time in Bill Tierney's 20 years as head coach; prior to Tierney's arrival, the program had never won at least 10 games in a season.
A league of their own - Princeton finished in second place in the Ivy League, marking the 17th straight year that the Tigers have finished either first (13 times) or second (four times).
Face it - Princeton has won 51.8% of its face-offs. The last time Princeton won at least 50% of its face-offs for a season was 2002.
Welcome to the Jungers ? Zachary Jungers is one of 10 finalists for the Lowe's Senior Class Award and one of 17 final nominees for the Tewaaraton Trophy.
More Jungers ? Princeton's Zachary Jungers is one of two players, along with Cornell's Matt McMonagle, to be a finalist for the Lowe's Senior Class Award and a final 17 nominee for the Tewaaraton Trophy.
Tommy boy ? Tommy Davis has at least one point in 19 straight games.
Injury update ? Starting defenseman Zachary Jungers has missed the last three games due to injury; starting midfielder Josh Lesko missed the last game due to injury. Their status for the NCAA tournament is uncertain.
Whit-ness ? Whitney Hayes started in place of Josh Lesko last week against Brown; Hayes made his first start of this season and 31st start of his career.
More Whit ? Whitney Hayes is tied with Peter Trombino for the most NCAA tournament points by an active Princeton player with nine.
Moving up the charts ? Peter Trombino is in 11th place all-time in points scored (148) and goals scored (96) at Princeton. He needs five points to tie Gerald Ronan for 10th and one goal to tie Ronan and Scott Conklin for ninth.
Points in A Career
247 Kevin E. Lowe (73G, 174A) 1991-94
232 Ryan J. Boyle (70G, 162A) 2001-04
215 Jonathan A. Hess (82G, 133A) 1995-98
211 Jesse H. Hubbard (163G, 48A) 1995-98
192 Christopher G. Massey (146G, 46A) 1995-98
182 David J. Heubeck (83G, 99A) 1977-80
174 Joseph S. Sollers III (114G, 60A) 1975-77
164 P. Justin Tortolani (120G, 44A) 1989-92
163 David H. Tickner (94G, 69A) 1975-77
153 Gerald P. Ronon (97G, 56A) 1980-83
148 Peter J. Trombino (93G, 51A) 2004-present
Goals in A Career
163 Jesse H. Hubbard 1995-98
146 Christopher G. Massey 1995-98
126 Sean P. Hartofilis 2000-03
120 P. Justin Tortolani 1989-92
118 William J. Prager 1999-2002
114 Joseph S. (Wick) Sollers III 1975-77
105 Jason M. Doneger 2001-05
103 Joshua S. Sims 1997-2000
97 Scott R. Conklin 1992-95
Gerald A. Ronan 1980-83
96 Peter J. Trombino 2004-present
The one and Trombino-nly ? Peter Trombino is the only player in Princeton men's lacrosse history with four seasons of at least 20 goals and at least 10 assists.
Seeing 20-20-20-20 ? Peter Trombino is one of five players in school history with four seasons of at least 20 goals. The other four: Jesse Hubbard, Chris Massey, B.J. Prager, Sean Hartofilis.
Three for all ? Peter Trombino is one of three players in school history - and the only one to play for Bill Tierney - with at least 95 goals and at least 50 assists in his career. The other two: Wick Sollers '77 (114G, 60A), Gerald Ronon '83 (97G, 56A).
Net results ? Princeton has a .160 shooting percentage in its three losses.
More net ? Princeton has outshot its opponent in all three losses.
It had to be Hewit ? Alex Hewit has a .667 save percentage in Princeton's five games that have been decided by one or two goals and a career .684 save percentage in games decided by one or two goals.
I'm honored ? Alex Hewit became the third Princeton goalie to play for Bill Tierney to win the Ensign C. Markland Kelly Award as the top goalie in Division I when he won the award last season, joining Scott Bacigalupo and Trevor Tierney. Hewit became the second player to play for Bill Tierney to be a first-team All-America without being first-team All-Ivy League (Bacigalupo in 1994).
Randomly - Princeton was shut out in the fourth quarter during two of its five Ivy League victories. Princeton is 2-0 on the year when scoring five goals (5-4 against Hofstra, 5-3 against Yale). Finally, Princeton is 10-0 when it does not score six goals and 0-3 when it does.
Bling, bling ? Princeton's four coaches have combined for 21 NCAA championship rings. Bill Tierney has six as Princeton head coach and two as an assistant coach at Johns Hopkins; David Metzbower and Bryce Chase have six each at Princeton; Greg Raymond has one as a player from Johns Hopkins.
Something in common ? Princeton and Georgetown have two common opponents. Princeton defeated Syracuse 12-8 and Rutgers 15-8; Georgetown lost to Syracuse 14-9 and defeated Rutgers 12-8.
More in common ? Princeton head coach Bill Tierney and Georgetown head coach Dave Urick are both graduates of Cortland State, have both coached the U.S. national team to the World Championship and are two of six coaches who have coached their sons in Division I tournament.
Quarterly report ? Princeton has outscored its opponents by 31 goals in the first quarter, by 18 in the second quarter, by 12 in the third quarter and by two in the fourth quarter.
Princeton Lacrosse '07 ... By The Numbers
1 Princeton's rank in Division I in scoring defense (6.0 goals per game)
2 Princeton players among the final 17 nominees for the Tewaaraton Trophy (G Alex Hewit, D Zachary Jungers)
3 players in Princeton history with at least 95 career goals and at least 50 career assists (Wick Sollers, Gerald Ronan, Peter Trombino)
4 seconds remaining in regulation when Ryan Boyle scored to defeat Georgetown 14-13 in the 2002 NCAA quarterfinals at Hofstra in the last meeting between the schools
5 players in school history with four seasons of at least 20 goals (Peter Trombino, Jesse Hubbard, Chris Massey, Sean Hartofilis, B.J. Prager)
5.80 lowest single-season goal total by a Bill Tierney-coached team in his first 19 seasons as Tiger head coach; Princeton currently allows 6.0 goals per game
8 Princeton players who earned All-Ivy League honors: D Zachary Jungers (first team), M Mark Kovler (first team), M Scott Sowanick (first team), A Peter Trombino (first team), D Dan Cocoziello (second team), G Alex Hewit (second team), D Charlie Kolkin (honorable mention), D Chris Peyser (honorable mention)
15 quarterfinal appearances in the last 17 years by Princeton; the only times in that stretch that Princeton did not reach the quarterfinals were 1999 and 2005, the only times prior to this season that Princeton Stadium hosted the quarterfinals
17 one-goal NCAA tournament games in which Princeton has played; Princeton has won 14 of them
19 consecutive games with at least one point by Tommy Davis
21 goals by midfielder Mark Kovler, the third Tiger middie this decade to reach 20 goals (Brad Dumont had 22 in 2002; Drew Casino had 24 in 2004)
29 NCAA tournament wins for Bill Tierney, second all-time behind Syracuse's Roy Simmons Jr. (34)
56 games played by Princeton since the start of the 2004 season; Scott Sowanick and Peter Trombino have started all 56
74.4 percentage of NCAA tournament games won by
Princeton (29-10) for the highest NCAA winning percentage in
Division I history
What Can You Say About ...
Nikhil Ashra #23
? has an .867 save percentage and 3.38 goals-against average in 35:33 as back-up goalie
? made seven saves while allowing two goals in 25:50 against Bellarmine
? made three saves without allowing a goal against Canisius and Dartmouth
John Bennett #37
? in fourth season of splitting longstick midfield position
Alex Berg #13
? has won 90 of 160 face-offs
? has .562 winning percentage on face-offs, 20th in Division I
? .562 winning percentage would be highest for single-season at Princeton since Matt Bailer had a .590 percentage in the 2000 season
? has won 23 of his last 31 face-offs (.742) after winning 11 of 30 (.367) prior to that
? won 11 of 15 against Brown
? won 12 of 16 against Dartmouth
? won 7 of 9 against Bellarmine
? won 6 of 10 against Rutgers
? won 8 of 10 against Canisius
? won 6 of 12 against Virginia
? won 11 of 21 against Syracuse
? missed the Hofstra game due to injury suffered against RU
Michael Biles #6
? had a goal against Johns Hopkins and Canisius
? missed almost all of last year with injury
? played in 24 games first two years
Dan Cocoziello #1
? preseason first-team All-America by Inside Lacrosse
? second-team All-America a year ago
? named to Tewaaraton Trophy preseason watch list
? unanimous first-team All-Ivy League defenseman in 2006
? second-team All-Ivy League in 2007
? held Penn's leading scorer, Craig Andrzejewski, without a goal and with only one shot
? held Harvard's Brian Mahler, who entered the game tied for team lead in goals, to no goals and two shots
? had three goals last season, one off school single-season record for a longstick, set by John Harrington in 1998
? became first defenseman to be named Ivy League Rookie of the Year when he won the award in 2005
? has started every game of his career
? had an assist against Rutgers
Trip Cowin #4
? had a goal against Brown
? had an assist against Canisius
? came back from off-season knee surgery
Tommy Davis #7
? leads team with 15 assists
? second on team with 33 points and third on team with 18 goals
? has a 19-game streak with at least one point
? scored five goals in two NCAA tournament games a year ago (three vs. UMBC, two vs. Maryland)
? scored two goals and had one assist against Syracuse
? had two goals and two assists against Dartmouth
? scored three goals (on four shots) against Penn
? had a goal and assist against Cornell
? had two goals against Harvard
? had a goal and assist against Yale; was only Princeton player with more than one point in that game
? scored two goals against Hofstra, including game-winner with eight seconds remaining
? had two goals and five assists against Canisius
? had five assists against Canisius after having one all last year
? scored two goals on two shots against Canisius
? had a goal and assist against Hopkins
? had an assist against UVa
? had a goal and three assists against Bellarmine
? missed game against Rutgers due to injury
? missed last six games of 2006 regular season with shoulder injury suffered against Syracuse
Mike DeSantis #32
? returned against Dartmouth after missing previous five games due to injury
? has won 30 of 58 face-offs
? had a goal against Hofstra
? had first career goal against Rutgers
? goal came 15 seconds after an RU goal had made it a two-goal game in the fourth quarter
? also had an assist against Rutgers for first career two-point game
? has four career points
? won 7 of 11 face-offs against Hofstra
? won 6 of 8 face-offs against Hopkins
? won 7 of 10 face-offs against Canisius
? won exactly 50% of his draws as both a sophomore and junior
Rob Engelke #22
? has played in every game as fourth attackman
? had first career assist in win over Hofstra
? had a goal and two assists against Bellarmine
? scored three goals against Canisius
? named Ivy League Rookie of the Week after that game
? became second Princeton player in last 12 years to score three goals in first game of freshman year (Tommy Davis in 2006)
? scored three goals on three shots against Canisius
? scored more than 100 points as a junior and senior at Garden City High School
Mike Gaudio #8
? tore his ACL in second quarter of last year's game against Hopkins and missed remainder of season
? scored first goal since ACL injury with goal against Yale
? also had a goal against Harvard and Brown
? returned from injury to play against Canisius
? had 13-game goal scoring streak snapped against Canisius
? had assists against Virginia and Penn
? honorable mention All-Ivy selection in 2005
? scored 16 goals in 2005
Zack Goldberg #33
? top shortstick defensive midfielder
? had a goal against Yale
? had a goal and assist against Rutgers
? had an assist against Canisius and Harvard
? has seven career goals
Whitney Hayes #3
? leads all active players with four career NCAA tournament assists and is tied for team lead with nine career NCAA tournament points
? has five goals, four of which came in the Ivy League season
? had two goals against Cornell
? had a goal against Dartmouth
? had a goal against Penn
? had a goal against Canisius
? has started 31 career games, including one this year
Alex Haynie #12
? scored three goals against Canisius to tie career high
? had a goal and assist against Penn
? had two goals and an assist against Dartmouth
? had a goal against Virginia and Cornell
? had two assists against UVa and against Syracuse
? had an assist against Hofstra
? had two goals against Bellarmine
? active with Athletes In Action
Alex Hewit #15
? 2006 first-team All-America
? 2007 preseason first-team All-America
? one of 17 nominees for the Tewaaraton Trophy
? 2006 first-team All-America despite not being first-team All-Ivy League (Cornell's Matt McMonagle)
? career goals-against average of 6.33 is second all-time behind Navy's Matt Russell (5.86 from 2003-06)
? second-team All-Ivy League in 2007
? second in Division I in goals-against (6.12) and sixth in save percentage (.604)
? has .667 save percentage in five games this season decided by two goals or less (Hopkins, Virginia, Hofstra, Yale, Brown)
? has a career .684 save percentage in games decided by one or two goals
? made 27 saves while allowing 19 goals in two NCAA games a year ago (.587)
? named Ivy League Player of the Week after 14-save, three-goals-against, .824 save percentage performance against Yale
? had 13 saves while allowing three goals against Harvard
? made 12 saves against Syracuse
? made 11 saves while allowing four goals against Hofstra (.733 save percentage)
? made 10 saves against Virginia
? has made 30 saves and allowed 14 goals in last two games against UVa
? is the only goalie to hold Virginia under 10 goals during each of the last two seasons
? had 11 saves against Brown
? made 10 saves against Johns Hopkins, Cornell and Rutgers
? had an assist against Bellarmine for first career point
? had a career-low .300 save percentage (seven goals-against, three saves) against Canisius
? has a career .630 save percentage
Zachary Jungers #36
? first-team All-Ivy League in 2007
? third-team All-America a year ago
? preseason second-team All-America by Inside Lacrosse
? one of 17 nominees for the Tewaaraton Trophy
? one of 10 finalists for Lowe's Senior Class
? started every game on close defense last two years after being top longstick midfielder first two years
? missed all of Dartmouth and Brown game and almost all of Cornell game due to knee injury; status for NCAA tournament is uncertain
? held Hofstra's Tommy Dooley without a goal or assist; Dooley was Hofstra's leading scorer and the 2006 Colonial Athletic Association Rookie of the Year after scoring 38 goals
? held Colin Checcio, Rutgers' leading scorer, to one goal, which came with three minutes remaining
? had first career point with an assist against Bellarmine
? competed at tryouts for U.S. national team in 2005
Charlie Kolkin #43
? No. 1 longstick midfielder
? honorable mention All-Ivy League
? moved to close defense for most of Cornell game when Zachary Jungers was injured
? made first career start on close defense against Dartmouth and held Green's Brian Koch without a goal; Koch had scored five against Albany in previous game
? also started against Brown
? scored first goal of career in win over Rutgers
? has played in every game of career
Mark Kovler #17
? 2007 first-team All-Ivy League
? second on team with 21 goals
? has more goals than any sophomore midfielder at Princeton since Josh Sims had 32 in 1998
? third Princeton midfielder to reach 20 for a season this decade (Brad Dumont 22 in 2002; Drew Casino 24 in 2004)
? had a career-high four goals and a career-high five points against Syracuse
? had three goals against Harvard
? had two goals against Brown
? scored three goals against Rutgers and Bellarmine
? had a goal against Hofstra and Cornell
? scored tying goal in fourth quarter against Johns Hopkins
? had two goals and an assist against Canisius
? was sixth all-time among freshman goal scorers (third among midfielders) at Princeton with 18
? second-team All-Ivy League in 2006
? preseason honorable mention All-America
? 2006 honorable mention All-America
Josh Lesko #19
? preseason honorable mention All-America by Inside Lacrosse
? started first 12 games before missing season finale against Brown due to injury
? had one goal in each of first four games
? had a goal and assist against UVa
? had one goal against Hopkins, Penn and Canisius
? had a streak of nine straight games with at least one goal snapped against Hofstra; had exactly one goal in each of the nine games during streak
? had an assist against Hofstra and Bellarmine
? had a goal against Syracuse
Scott MacKenzie #2
? had first career point with an assist against Canisius
? also had an assist against Dartmouth
Chris Peyser #38
? honorable mention All-Ivy League
? started every game this season on close defense
? played in every game last year as fourth defender
? shut out Cornell's David Mitchell, who had 31 goals in 10 games prior to facing Princeton
? shut out Hofstra's Ryan Miller in 5-4 Princeton win
? held Dartmouth's Nick Bonnacci without a goal until Princeton had built a 9-2 second-half lead
? started one game a year ago
Brendan Reilly #29
? one of top shortstick defensive midfielders
? had first career goal in win over Dartmouth
? had first career assist in win over Syracuse
? played in a backup role last year
Bob Schneider #28
? had two goals against Rutgers
? had one goal against Hofstra, UVa, Bellarmine and Canisius
? missed last three games due to injury
? has played attack and midfield in career
Greg Seaman #42
? scored first career goal in win over Canisius
? had a goal against Rutgers
? won 2 of 5 face-offs against Canisius
? son of Towson coach Tony Seaman
Tripp Shriner #10
? made first career start against Rutgers
? had a goal and assist against Rutgers
? had an assist against Penn
Scott Sowanick #5
? 2007 first-team All-Ivy League
? named to Tewaaraton Trophy preseason watch list
? preseason second-team All-America by Inside Lacrosse
? honorable mention All-Ivy League in 2006
? had two goals and two assists against Dartmouth
? had three goals against Penn
? had a goal and two assists against Harvard
? had a goal and assist against Hopkins
? had a goal and three assists against Rutgers
? had a goal against Cornell
? assisted on all three of Mark Kovler's goals against Rutgers
? had an assist against Canisius and Syracuse
? has started every game of career
? has 119 career points
Derek Sudan #46
? veteran shortstick defensive midfielder
? scored first career goal in win over Yale
? also had a goal against Dartmouth
? had first career point with an assist against Rutgers
? has played in every game last two years
Peter Trombino #20
? 2007 first-team All-Ivy League
? named to Tewaaraton Trophy preseason watch list
? preseason second-team All-America by Inside Lacrosse
? only player in 2007 tournament who has scored an overtime goal in an NCAA tournament game, which he did against Maryland in 2004 quarterfinals
? only player in school history with four seasons of at least 20 goals and at least 10 assists
? has 96 career goals and 52 career assists
? third player in school history, first to play for Bill Tierney, with at least 95 career goals and 50 career assists; other two are Wick Sollers '77 (114G, 60A), Gerald Ronon '83 (97G, 56A)
? one of five players in school history with four seasons of at least 20 goals (Jesse Hubbard, Chris Massey, B.J. Prager, Sean Hartofilis)
? ranks 11th all-time in goals scored at Princeton, one away from a three-way tie for ninth
? ranks 11th all-time in points scored at Princeton, five away from 10th
? leads all active players with seven career NCAA tournament goals and is tied for team lead with nine career NCAA tournament points
? leads team in goals (28) and points (36)
? 23rd in Division in goals per game
? had career-highs in goals (five) and points (seven) against Syracuse
? had two goals and two assists against Penn
? named Ivy League Player of the Week after three-goal, two-assist performance against Dartmouth
? had three goals and an assist against Brown
? assisted on Tommy Davis' game-winning goal against Hofstra with eight seconds remaining
? had three goals against Virginia
? had two goals and an assist against Rutgers
? had a goal against Hopkins and Yale
? had a goal against Yale
? had four goals against Bellarmine, all in the first half




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