Sports
Princeton University
Twelve Tigers from 10 programs have been recognized as Collegiate Sports Communicators At-Large Academic All-District honorees for their outstanding academic and athletic accomplishments during the 2024-25 school year. At-large honors are given by CSC for those sports sponsored by the NCAA that do not have their own CSC academic awards. Schools can select six men […]

At-large honors are given by CSC for those sports sponsored by the NCAA that do not have their own CSC academic awards. Schools can select six men or six women for the at-large honors across all the eligible sports.
Here are the 12 Tigers recognized:
Men’s
William Huang, golf, senior, economics
A PING All-Region selection for the second year in a row, William Huang was named honorable mention All-Ivy this season to record his fourth career All-Ivy selection — just the 13th golfer in Ivy history to earn four career All-Ivy honors.
Nicholas Lawson, fencing, senior, physics
Lawson was an All-American at the NCAA Championships this season, finishing ninth in épée. He earned first-team All-Ivy honors after going 9-2 at the league meet, and he was also the team’s Academic All-Ivy selection.
Brandon Lee, fencing, junior, computer science
Lee won All-American honors, finishing third at the NCAA Championships this year. He was the NCAA regional foil champion and a first-team all-region honoree.
Gavin Molloy, water polo, senior, Public and International Affairs
Molloy was part of the Princeton squad that won its fourth straight Northeast Water Polo Conference title. The senior captain was named a All-NWPC honorable mention, NWPC All-tournament honorable mention and was part of the ACWPC All-Academic team.
Charlie Palmer, golf, sophomore, economics
A second-team All-Ivy selection this season, Palmer was also named PING All-Region to build off a 2024 year where he was named Ivy League Rookie of the Year.
Tucker Wade, lacrosse, sophomore, economics
Wade was Princeton’s first sophomore midfielder to earn first-team All-Ivy League honors in 13 years, as well as an honorable mention All-American. His five goals in the NCAA opening round win over Towson were one off the program record for an NCAA game.
Women’s
Rachael Carver, water polo, senior, Public and International Affairs
Carver was second-team all-conference who graduates as the program all-time leader in career assists (260). She started every game for the Tigers, leading the team with 60 assists along with 44 goals, 26 steals and 25 drawn ejections as the team made the CWPA Championship game.
Ella Cashman, field hockey, sophomore, molecular biology
A first-team All-Ivy League defender, Cashman also scored six goals to help Princeton to a 7-0 run through the Ivy League to win the championship and reach the NCAA quarterfinals. Cashman, a first-team All-Region selection as well, scored both goals, including the game-winner in OT, in Princeton’s win over Harvard that decided the league title. She was also an NFHCA All-Academic selection.
Sara Covin, open rowing, senior, psychology
Covin coxed the first varsity to Ivy League gold, taking down previously unbeaten Yale in the Grand Final. She earned first-team All-Ivy honors.
Hadley Husisian, fencing, sophomore, English
Husisian was an All-American honoree in 2025, finishing third at the NCAAs. She was also the NCAA regional épée champion, a first-team all-region honoree, and a first-team All-Ivy honoree, going 14-4 at the Ivy meet.
Victoria Liu, golf, senior, computer science
A first-team All-Ivy honoree in 2025, Liu finished her Princeton career as a three-time first-team All-Ivy selection. She recorded one victory this season, winning her home tournament at the Princeton Invitational for the third time.
Issy Wunder, hockey, junior, psychology
Wunder had a career year in which she was named a top-10 finalist for the Patty Kazmaier award, the Ivy League Player of the Year, First-Team All-Ivy, All-ECAC First Team, ECAC Forward of the Year, finalist for ECAC Player of the Year and Academic All-Ivy. Wunder was third in Division I in goals per game (0.81) and fourth in points per game (1.56). She racked up 50 total points on. 26 goals and 24 assists to help lead the Tigers to the ECAC Quarterfinals.