inicio mail me! sindicaci;ón

Remembering Bill Sword.

Before you read further, click on this picture. It was taken two seasons ago at the buzzer after Princeton defeated Harvard 54-51. Many of you are in it.

In the stands to your left of Will Barrett and to your right of assistant coach Tony Newsom, clapping with both hands while wearing a light blue shirt, stands Bill Sword '76.

Bill died during Hurricane Sandy on Monday night at the age of 61 when a tree in his yard fell on him.

If you sat behind the bench at Jadwin Gym, you might not have known Bill personally, but you certainly knew his voice.

When I told my wife with disbelief on Tuesday morning "Bill Sword died!" nothing registered.

When I said "the 'YOU'RE MONEY, WILL!' man died!" she joined my shock and sadness.

Bill seemed to arrive habitually late to games in a rush to reach his seat while still well-dressed from work, usually around the first media time out. Once he was seated he immediately made up for lost time.

The sections behind the Princeton team are a faithful yet traditionally quiet bunch with few exceptions.

One of those exceptions was Bill.

His support of specific Tigers (like Will Venable, who I referenced above) and playful derision of certain members of the opposition (he took particular glee in how Princeton shut down Zack Rosen and kept the Quakers from a share of last year's Ivy title) always cut through the air and found my ears.

If they could reach backwards 8-10 rows, I'm sure his words found their intended targets on the court more than a few times.

Jadwin Gym will be a less fun, less-spirited place without Bill Sword.

When he renewed his site subscription just last week, I wrote Bill a note of appreciation for his continued support of what I do. His response was a short one, but included the following:

"highlight of the year is re-upping and getting season tickets!"

I'm so very sorry he won't be able to use those tickets this season. Whomever fills Bill's bleacher seat in future years will be hard-pressed to match his passion and level of caring when it comes to Princeton basketball.

He will be missed.

My condolences to his wife Martha and his three children.



Henry Caruso commits to Princeton.

Word broke last night that 6'5" forward Henry Caruso from Junípero Serra High School in California had verbally committed to Princeton, joining the Tigers' now-five member 2013 recruiting class.

Serra is the same high school Dan Mavraides attended before taking a post-graduate year at Phillips Exeter Academy.

I've reached out to Caruso's high school coach for quotes and observations but given that we've been without power for 60+ hours now at princetonbasketball HQ, it might be a while.

So, enjoy five different videos in the interim of Caruso after the jump.

Read the rest of this entry »



« Previous entries