inicio mail me! sindicaci;ón

YouTube potpourri LXXXVI.

Here's the latest collection of videos from various corners of the Princeton basketball family. Above, Elon's highlights from Saturday's loss to the Tigers.

Eight additional videos - including footage of three different Princeton recruits - follow after the jump.

Washed out highlights of Princeton and Arkansas in the 1990 NCAA Tournament.

Here's some clips of future Tiger Amir Bell and East Brunswick.

Steven Cook and New Trier against St. Joseph.

Henry Caruso in action.

Joe Scott following Denver's recent victory over UT-San Antonio.

Air Force/Richmond highlights.

Will Venable took part in a recent charity event.

The game-winning three pointer for Brown versus Providence.

John Poole said,

January 8, 2013 @ 3:39 pm

Good Grief! -- I think that Elon snuffed us something like 40 - 0 on the highlights.

Jon Solomon said,

January 8, 2013 @ 3:42 pm

My favorite edit in that package is the shot by Hans Brase that is blocked out to T.J. Bray for a three pointer which cuts away just as Bray is stepping into his attempt...

Steven Postrel said,

January 8, 2013 @ 4:32 pm

Let those Elon editors have at last night's BCS championship and they could have Notre Dame winning the title.

Does that kind of homerism really keep up fan morale? There must be a happy medium for school SIDs between old-time BBC objectivity and Baghdad Bob/Pyongyang-style propaganda.

Jon Solomon said,

January 8, 2013 @ 4:48 pm

Relatively recently, I watched 15:00+ school-created highlight packages for the 1992, 1993 and 1994 Northwestern football seasons.

Before I looked up the results for those campaigns it was hard to tell which games were victories and which were 56-14 losses.

Editing!

Jon

Steven Postrel said,

January 8, 2013 @ 7:41 pm

The old NFL films in the 1970s had the right idea when they did season profiles of teams. They'd show each and every loss and heartbreaking moment but would make it all seem terribly romantic and meaningful by setting the whole thing to Sam Spence music and having it narrated dramatically (portentiously? or pretentiously?) by John Facenda's Voice of Doom. They'd also show the same good play multiple times from multiple angles at different points of the narrative to illustrate different points.

Hum some of that Spence music to yourself when you're doing something quotidian for a rush of faux excitement.

RSS feed for comments on this post

Leave a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.