Princeton University Athletics

Madison St. Rose
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No. 23 Women's Basketball Has Five Named All-Ivy
March 10, 2026 | Women's Basketball
PRINCETON – The No. 23 Princeton Women's Basketball Team had five players honored as All-Ivy, the league announced today.
Madison St. Rose (first team), Skye Belker (second team), Fadima Tall (second team), Olivia Hutcherson (honorable mention) and Ashley Chea (honorable mention) all earned All-Ivy honors. Taylor Charles was selected as Academic All-Ivy while Princeton also was picked as Ivy Coaching Staff of the Year.
This is St. Rose's second All-Ivy honor (second team, 2024) while she also nabbed Ivy Rookie of the Year in 2023. The senior captain led the Tigers in scoring (16.0), adding 4.6 boards, 2.1 assists and 1.0 steals per contest. She contributed double digits in all but four games for Princeton, posting double-doubles vs. Penn State (Nov. 22 - 23 points, 10 rebounds) and at A-10 regular season and tournament champion Rhode Island (Nov. 26 - 21 points and 13 rebounds). Her signature performance was a career-high 30 points on 9-of-15 shooting vs. Brown (Feb. 21), leading to her first Ivy Player of the Week award (Feb. 23).
St. Rose also collected her 1,000th career point at Penn (Jan. 4) and will likely become the 15th player in program history to reach 1,200 career points in the Ivy League Tournament.
Belker nabs second-team honors for the second straight season as she has sits with personal highs in shooting percentage (.466), three-point shooting percentage (.418), scoring (13.1), and rebounds (2.4). The junior recorded double figures in 21 games, posting three 20+ outings. Belker dropped a career-best 27 points on 9-of-13 from the floor vs. Penn State (Nov. 22), leading her to being named Ivy Player of the Week (Nov. 24).
Tall corrals her second consecutive second team laurel after setting career marks in three-point field goal percentage (.373), free throw percentage (.843), rebounding (7.4), steals (2.3) and scoring (13.0). The junior had four 20+ point performances led by a personal-high 28 points on 7-of-14 shooting along with five steals and four rebounds vs. Rutgers (Dec. 10). The forward collected Ann Meyers USBWA National Player (Nov. 11, Dec. 16) and Ivy Player of the Week twice (Nov. 17, Dec. 15).
Chea has earned her second All-Ivy selection (first team, 2025) after averaging 9.8 points, 3.8 assists and 2.8 rebounds per game. With one more assist, she will set a new personal high while also setting new marks in steals (40) and free throw percentage (.800). Some of her best games include 22 points vs. DePaul (Nov. 30), 19 points vs. Harvard including the game-tying triple as time expired (Jan. 19) and a career-high nine assists at Dartmouth (Feb. 27).
Hutcherson was honored with her first All-Ivy accolade after a banner year that featured new benchmarks in points (11.1), shooting percentage (.541), free throw percentage (.649), rebounding (5.6), assists (1.4). The junior had two double-doubles with 19 points and 11 rebounds at Belmont (Dec. 6) and 17 points and 10 rebounds vs. Columbia (Jan. 30). Hutcherson was Ivy Player of the Week (Jan. 5, Feb. 2) after scoring 20 points at Penn (Jan. 3) and her performances at Columbia (Jan. 30) and Cornell (Jan. 31) where she had 20 points, seven rebounds and three steals.
Charles had career marks in scoring (2.3) and rebounding (3.7), playing in every game for the Tigers. The senior captain recorded her first career double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds at Dartmouth (Feb. 27).
Princeton is 24-3 this season with a net ranking of 38. The Tigers have a quad one victory at Villanova and four quad two decisions. The Tigers have a non-conference strength of schedule that is 25th best in the country. If the NCAA still considered RPI, Princeton would be 12th overall with a non-conference RPI that trails on Connecticut. This is the third time in the Berube era that the Tigers have had Ivy Coach/Coaching Staff of the Year.
Madison St. Rose (first team), Skye Belker (second team), Fadima Tall (second team), Olivia Hutcherson (honorable mention) and Ashley Chea (honorable mention) all earned All-Ivy honors. Taylor Charles was selected as Academic All-Ivy while Princeton also was picked as Ivy Coaching Staff of the Year.
This is St. Rose's second All-Ivy honor (second team, 2024) while she also nabbed Ivy Rookie of the Year in 2023. The senior captain led the Tigers in scoring (16.0), adding 4.6 boards, 2.1 assists and 1.0 steals per contest. She contributed double digits in all but four games for Princeton, posting double-doubles vs. Penn State (Nov. 22 - 23 points, 10 rebounds) and at A-10 regular season and tournament champion Rhode Island (Nov. 26 - 21 points and 13 rebounds). Her signature performance was a career-high 30 points on 9-of-15 shooting vs. Brown (Feb. 21), leading to her first Ivy Player of the Week award (Feb. 23).
St. Rose also collected her 1,000th career point at Penn (Jan. 4) and will likely become the 15th player in program history to reach 1,200 career points in the Ivy League Tournament.
Belker nabs second-team honors for the second straight season as she has sits with personal highs in shooting percentage (.466), three-point shooting percentage (.418), scoring (13.1), and rebounds (2.4). The junior recorded double figures in 21 games, posting three 20+ outings. Belker dropped a career-best 27 points on 9-of-13 from the floor vs. Penn State (Nov. 22), leading her to being named Ivy Player of the Week (Nov. 24).
Tall corrals her second consecutive second team laurel after setting career marks in three-point field goal percentage (.373), free throw percentage (.843), rebounding (7.4), steals (2.3) and scoring (13.0). The junior had four 20+ point performances led by a personal-high 28 points on 7-of-14 shooting along with five steals and four rebounds vs. Rutgers (Dec. 10). The forward collected Ann Meyers USBWA National Player (Nov. 11, Dec. 16) and Ivy Player of the Week twice (Nov. 17, Dec. 15).
Chea has earned her second All-Ivy selection (first team, 2025) after averaging 9.8 points, 3.8 assists and 2.8 rebounds per game. With one more assist, she will set a new personal high while also setting new marks in steals (40) and free throw percentage (.800). Some of her best games include 22 points vs. DePaul (Nov. 30), 19 points vs. Harvard including the game-tying triple as time expired (Jan. 19) and a career-high nine assists at Dartmouth (Feb. 27).
Hutcherson was honored with her first All-Ivy accolade after a banner year that featured new benchmarks in points (11.1), shooting percentage (.541), free throw percentage (.649), rebounding (5.6), assists (1.4). The junior had two double-doubles with 19 points and 11 rebounds at Belmont (Dec. 6) and 17 points and 10 rebounds vs. Columbia (Jan. 30). Hutcherson was Ivy Player of the Week (Jan. 5, Feb. 2) after scoring 20 points at Penn (Jan. 3) and her performances at Columbia (Jan. 30) and Cornell (Jan. 31) where she had 20 points, seven rebounds and three steals.
Charles had career marks in scoring (2.3) and rebounding (3.7), playing in every game for the Tigers. The senior captain recorded her first career double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds at Dartmouth (Feb. 27).
Princeton is 24-3 this season with a net ranking of 38. The Tigers have a quad one victory at Villanova and four quad two decisions. The Tigers have a non-conference strength of schedule that is 25th best in the country. If the NCAA still considered RPI, Princeton would be 12th overall with a non-conference RPI that trails on Connecticut. This is the third time in the Berube era that the Tigers have had Ivy Coach/Coaching Staff of the Year.
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