Princeton University Athletics
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Men's Swimming/Diving Remains Unbeaten With Win At Dartmouth
January 24, 2010 | Men's Swimming and Diving
The Princeton men's swimming and diving team prepared for its home showdown with Harvard and Yale by defeating Dartmouth 181-119 in Hanover Sunday. The win, which follows an extended winter break of more than six weeks, keeps Princeton undefeated in the Ivy League.
This weekend's tri-meet between Harvard, Yale and Princeton (Friday 6 p.m./Saturday noon, DeNunzio Pool) will feature every Ivy League champion since Columbia shared an Ivy League title with Princeton in 1988, as well as the final meet at DeNunzio by longtime Yale coach Frank Keefe. GoPrincetonTigers.com will have extended coverage this week of both the men's and women's meets, including video interviews with both Megan Waters and Jon Hartmann, as well as a full meet preview.
Princeton picked up wins in both swimming and diving events in Hanover. Freshman Stevie Vines opened the meet with an exciting victory in the three-meter competition; his score of 320.77 points edged Dartmouth's Mike Brown by just over one point. He added another tight win in the one-meter competition, as his score of 279.67 points topped teammate and reigning Ivy League champion Dan Dickerson by 1.12 points.
The Tigers got a relay win to start the swimming events. Freshman Kaspar Raigla led off a quartet that included Jonathan Christensen, Bryan Tay and Jonathan Hartmann to win the 200 medley relay in a time of 1:33.81.
Junior Brett Lullo won the 400 IM in a time of 4:03.70 for the first individual swimming win of the day. Tay then edged relay teammate Christensen to win the 200 free in 1:42.48.
Sophomore Travis McNamara fell in a dual with Dartmouth's Mickey Ahern in the 100 back; McNamara finished the race in 51.90. Senior tri-captain Christopher Quemena quickly got Princeton back on the winning side by winning the 100 breast in 1:00.32.
Patrick Biggs (1:59.09) placed fourth to a trio of Dartmouth swimmers in the 200 fly. Hartmann followed by edging teammates Colin Cordes and Will Lawley to win the 50 free in 21.36; each of the three Princeton swimmers finished with a sub-22 second time.
Junior Colin Hanna topped freshman teammate Andres Tung by .1 of a second to win the 100 free in 47.49. McNamara followed with a second-place finish in the 200 back (1:55.55), but Quemena was there again to shift momentum; he left the field to win the 200 breast by more than six seconds (2:08.58).
Cordes, Lawley and Hartmann went 1-2-3 in the 500 free, with Cordes winning in 4:41.82. Lawley took second in 4:45.39, while Hartmann placed third in 4:47.58. Tay won the 100 fly in 50.09, and Raigla won the 100 IM in 52.75. The meet ended with Geoff Faux, Hartmann, Lullo and Brian Barrett winning the 300 free relay in 2:09.10.
This weekend's tri-meet between Harvard, Yale and Princeton (Friday 6 p.m./Saturday noon, DeNunzio Pool) will feature every Ivy League champion since Columbia shared an Ivy League title with Princeton in 1988, as well as the final meet at DeNunzio by longtime Yale coach Frank Keefe. GoPrincetonTigers.com will have extended coverage this week of both the men's and women's meets, including video interviews with both Megan Waters and Jon Hartmann, as well as a full meet preview.
Princeton picked up wins in both swimming and diving events in Hanover. Freshman Stevie Vines opened the meet with an exciting victory in the three-meter competition; his score of 320.77 points edged Dartmouth's Mike Brown by just over one point. He added another tight win in the one-meter competition, as his score of 279.67 points topped teammate and reigning Ivy League champion Dan Dickerson by 1.12 points.
The Tigers got a relay win to start the swimming events. Freshman Kaspar Raigla led off a quartet that included Jonathan Christensen, Bryan Tay and Jonathan Hartmann to win the 200 medley relay in a time of 1:33.81.
Junior Brett Lullo won the 400 IM in a time of 4:03.70 for the first individual swimming win of the day. Tay then edged relay teammate Christensen to win the 200 free in 1:42.48.
Sophomore Travis McNamara fell in a dual with Dartmouth's Mickey Ahern in the 100 back; McNamara finished the race in 51.90. Senior tri-captain Christopher Quemena quickly got Princeton back on the winning side by winning the 100 breast in 1:00.32.
Patrick Biggs (1:59.09) placed fourth to a trio of Dartmouth swimmers in the 200 fly. Hartmann followed by edging teammates Colin Cordes and Will Lawley to win the 50 free in 21.36; each of the three Princeton swimmers finished with a sub-22 second time.
Junior Colin Hanna topped freshman teammate Andres Tung by .1 of a second to win the 100 free in 47.49. McNamara followed with a second-place finish in the 200 back (1:55.55), but Quemena was there again to shift momentum; he left the field to win the 200 breast by more than six seconds (2:08.58).
Cordes, Lawley and Hartmann went 1-2-3 in the 500 free, with Cordes winning in 4:41.82. Lawley took second in 4:45.39, while Hartmann placed third in 4:47.58. Tay won the 100 fly in 50.09, and Raigla won the 100 IM in 52.75. The meet ended with Geoff Faux, Hartmann, Lullo and Brian Barrett winning the 300 free relay in 2:09.10.
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