Princeton University Athletics
Players Mentioned
Postgame Notes: Princeton 78, Lipscomb 64
December 13, 2015 | Men's Basketball
• Princeton now leads the all-time series with Lipscomb 2-0. The teams met last season in Jadwin Gym, a 77-55 Tiger victory.
• The double-doubles by Henry Caruso, Pete Miller and Spencer Weisz marked the first time three Princeton players achieved double-doubles in the same game.
• Princeton has had six double-doubles already this season, and they've come from four different players. Last season, Princeton had five double-doubles all year, all coming from Hans Brase.
• Caruso's double-double was his third of the season, along with 13 points and 10 boards versus Lafayette and 27 points and 10 boards versus FDU. Caruso, a junior, had no double-doubles entering this season. Caruso's team-high 24 points were just three off his career high and his 12 boards were a career best.
• Miller, a junior, earned his first career double-double. His 12 points were a season high and just two short of his career best, and his 10 boards were also two off his career best.
• Weisz, a junior, earned a double-double for the first time since his freshman season, when he had two. His 21 points were a season high and just one off his career high, and the 11 rebounds were one off his career best, set last time out against Saint Joseph's. Weisz is averaging 11.5 rebounds a game over the last two contests after averaging 5.0 per game over the first five games.
• Weisz hit a game-high five 3-pointers, a career best.
• Caruso has had three 20-point games over the first seven games of the season. He had no such games as a rookie and two all of last season.
• Princeton shot 40.9 percent from the field, getting back above .400 after dipping below that for the first two times this season against Stony Brook and Saint Joseph's. The Tigers were a combined .329 against those two teams in their only two losses of the season to date.
• Princeton's 55 rebounds were a high for the Mitch Henderson era against a Division I opponent, and the high comes just four games after the Tigers had reached 50 boards for the first time under Henderson, against Lafayette.















