Princeton University Athletics
Men's Squash All-Time Coaches
Updated following 2024-25 season
The history of men's squash coaches at Princeton University.
| Name | Years | W | L | Pct. | Titles | 
| W.F. White | 1931-36 | 27 | 7 | .794 | |
| Walter Knorr | 1936-40 | 14 | 13 | .519 | |
| John Conroy | 1940-69 | 180 | 69 | .723 | 1 Ivy, 2 National | 
| Bill Summers | 1969-74 | 36 | 17 | .679 | 1 Ivy, 1 National | 
| David Benjamin | 1974-78 | 36 | 1 | .971 | 3 Ivy, 3 National | 
| Norm Peck | 1978-80 | 24 | 1 | .960 | 1 Ivy, 1 National | 
| Peter Thompson | 1980-81 | 10 | 0 | 1.00 | 1 Ivy, 1 National | 
| Bob Callahan | 1981-2013 | 316 | 68 | .823 | 11 Ivy, 3 National | 
| Sean Wilkinson | 2013-present | 93 | 77 | .547 | 1 Ivy | 
| TOTALS | 726 | 244 | .748 | 19 Ivy, 11 National | 
While Princeton has had a long succession of successful squash coaches, there are two Hall of Famers who have accounted for nearly 500 of the program's victories.
John Conroy was named head coach prior to the 1940-41 season, and he went on to win 180 matches (.723 win percentage), and won the program's first Ivy League championship in 1957. Also a highly successful tennis coach at the University, Conroy was inducted into the College Squash Hall of Fame in 1990, as well as the Intercollegiate Tennis Coaches Hall of Fame in 1985. The Conroy Cup, awarded to the winning team in the D Flight at the CSA Team Championships, is named after John Conroy.
Princeton's winningest coach, and one of its most revered presences throughout the department, is Bob Callahan, who retired following the 2013 Ivy League championship season. Both a College Hall of Fame and US Squash Hall of Fame inductee, Callahan won more matches (316) and Ivy titles (11) than any coach in program history. He won a national title as a senior captain in 1977, and he finished his career with back-to-back Ivy titles (2012-13) and the memorable 2012 national title. Read more about Callahan here.






