Princeton University Athletics

Tuesday TigerBlog - Skating To The Finish
February 10, 2026 | Tiger Blog
Today might be the day, finally.
For what, you might wonder? Today, for the first time in 28 days, the forecast for Princeton calls for temperatures to actually go above freezing.
If you're wondering, those 27 straight days without getting to at least 33 degrees is a record for these parts, by a lot. TigerBlog read a story about how the previous record was 14 straight days, set back in 1961 and equalled in 1979.
TB doesn't remember such a cold snap back in 1979, when he was in high school. He does know that the past four weeks here have been brutal.
He'd go so far as to say that this past Saturday was the coldest day he can ever remember in the Central New Jersey area, where he grew up and where he has worked for four decades. It was 1 degree Saturday morning when he got into his car, with the windchill somewhere around minus-20.
And now there is at least the slightest hint that winter might finally be letting its vice grip go. Oh, and TigerBlog can hear his longtime friend and fellow Ivy League sports chronicler Bruce Wood — he of the Big Green Alert and the Dartmouth coverage — laughing at TB for thinking that this is cold.
When TB asked the question a few weeks ago about who could possibly like winter more than summer, Bruce sent him a two-word email: "I can."
TigerBlog saw someone ice skating on the Delaware-Raritan Canal as he drove home yesterday afternoon. That's something he's never seen before.
There is still important ice skating to be done indoors at Baker Rink in the next few weeks.
There is only one weekend to go in the ECAC and Ivy League women's hockey regular seasons. For Princeton, that means home games against Yale Friday (6) and Brown Saturday (3). Here's the way things stand right now, starting with the ECAC:
* Princeton is in first place with 44 points, two ahead of second-place Yale as the teams get set to meet Friday night. Keep in mind that teams get three points for a regulation win, two points for an OT win, 1.5 points for a tie, one point for an OT loss and zero points for a regulation loss. TB leaves you to do the math. Quinnipiac, by the way, is in third with 40 points with games against Brown and Yale as well, and the Bears are tied for fourth place with 38 points along with Clarkson. The top four teams get a first-round tournament bye and will host the quarterfinal round.
* The Ivy League women's hockey champion is determined by the ECAC games involving Ivy teams against other Ivy teams, as opposed to a separate schedule of games. Princeton is in fourth place in the league and needs a sweep this weekend to have a chance at the Ivy title.
As for Princeton men's hockey, the Tigers have played 16 ECAC games so far, with six more to go. That's two per weekend for three more weeks.
A year ago, in 22 ECAC games, Princeton had 25 points, finishing in ninth place in the league standings. Through those 16 games this season, Princeton already has 31 points, leaving the team in fourth place at this stage.
Remember — the top four teams get a first-round tournament bye and get to host the quarterfinals.
What's the difference this year? Last year, Princeton gave up 73 goals in 22 ECAC games, which equals 3.32 goals-against per game. At the same time, Princeton scored 55 goals in 22 games, which is 2.5 per game.
This year, Princeton has already scored 51 goals in 16 games. That's 3.2 per game. And defensively? Princeton has allowed only 39 goals in 16 games, for an average of 2.4. That's one goal less allowed per game and one more scored per game.
That's a winning formula.
Not shockingly, Princeton's Arthur Smith was named the ECAC Goalie of the Week this past week after wins over Yale and Brown, with a 2.00 goals-against average and a .907 save percentage. Smith is now the first goalie in the league to win the honor twice this season.
It'll be a big weekend for the Tigers, who have a home-and-home against league-leading Quinnipiac, with a game Saturday in Connecticut and then home Sunday (4). Quinnipiac is 13-2-1 in the league, with the top offense and top defense (tied with Cornell) in the ECAC.


