Book details

  • Genre:sports & recreation
  • Sub-genre:Basketball
  • Language:English
  • Pages:260
  • Hardcover ISBN:9798234082305

A Tradition of Excellence

By Princeton Basketball

Overview


Princeton's 125-year basketball history is filled with famous names and iconic games, but the full story of how the sport developed from its humble beginnings as a campus club to the nationally respected men's and women's programs that exist today has never been told. Until now. Rather than simply a year-by-year account, Princeton Basketball: A Tradition of Excellence focuses in depth on many of the most significant moments in Princeton basketball's rich history and reveals the behind-the-scenes stories of the players and coaches who made these moments happen. Highlights include: -- The serendipitous pairing of Bill Bradley and Coach Butch van Breda Kolff, including the 1965 run to the NCAA Final Four. -- The 1966-67 season, when the Tigers finished No. 5 in the nation. -- The 1975 team's surprising march to the NIT title. -- Princeton vs. Georgetown in 1989: "The Game That Saved March Madness." -- Upsetting UCLA in the opening round of the 1996 NCAA Tournament, for Coach Pete Carril's last victory. -- The 1997-98 team's magnificent 27-2 season. -- The history of the women's program and its rise to national prominence. While this collection includes contributions from such Princeton literary luminaries as John McPhee, Alexander Wolff, and Grant Wahl, the book is largely written from the perspective of the players themselves. The text is complemented by more than 350 captivating photographs, many of them never seen before. Includes forewords by President Christopher Eisgruber and Bill Bradley. A must-have for Tiger basketball fans!
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Description


Princeton's 125-year basketball history is filled with famous names and iconic games, but the full story of how the sport developed from its humble beginnings as a campus club to the nationally respected men's and women's programs that exist today has never been told. Until now. Rather than simply a year-by-year account, Princeton Basketball: A Tradition of Excellence focuses in depth on many of the most significant moments in Princeton basketball's rich history and reveals the behind-the-scenes stories of the players and coaches who made these moments happen. Highlights include: -- The serendipitous pairing of Bill Bradley and Coach Butch van Breda Kolff, including the 1965 run to the NCAA Final Four. -- The 1966-67 season, when the Tigers finished No. 5 in the nation. -- The 1975 team's surprising march to the NIT title. -- Princeton vs. Georgetown in 1989: "The Game That Saved March Madness." -- Upsetting UCLA in the opening round of the 1996 NCAA Tournament, for Coach Pete Carril's last victory. -- The 1997-98 team's magnificent 27-2 season. -- The history of the women's program and its rise to national prominence. While this collection includes contributions from such Princeton literary luminaries as John McPhee, Alexander Wolff, and Grant Wahl, the book is largely written from the perspective of the players themselves. The text is complemented by more than 350 captivating photographs, many of them never seen before. Includes forewords by President Christopher Eisgruber and Bill Bradley. A must-have for Tiger basketball fans!
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About The Author


Tom Chestnut is one of a handful of Princeton players to have been coached by both Butch van Breda Kolff and Pete Carril. In producing Princeton Basketball: A Tradition of Excellence, he has brought together a "dream team" of such Princeton literary luminaries as John McPhee, Alexander Wolff, and Grant Wahl, as well as a number of other sportswriters and former players to create the definitive account of Princeton basketball's illustrious 125-year history,
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