-- [ From: Adam Wodon * EMC.Ver #2.10P ] -- > to rehash the Princeton perspective: the tennis balls at > Baker started in '91-'92, Don Cahoon's first year. I'm not > sure exactly why, other than the then-juniors had some > pretty rowdy friends who were very into the games. Cahoon > absolutely hated the growing "tradition" because it > inevitably took away the momentum Princeton had just > gained by scoring as the rink crew needed several minutes > to clean up. Dartmouth fell victim to the barrage on Nov. > 30, 1991 on the way to a 9-1 Princeton victory. The inanity of it all is that Dartmouth fans somehow took this personally - like it was only done to Dartmouth. You should have seen the absolute venom being spewed by Dartmouth students - such as obscene gestures, as if Princeton was the cause for all their woes. Unfortunately, in this case, Princeton could not benefit from the momentum stop. The referees should have called a penalty on Dartmouth, but couldn't because they never gave an initial warning. They should've given the warning before the game, because this happens every year. Maybe Don Cahoon should've been aware to remind the officials. This is how it stopped, finally, at Princton. Princeton got warned before hand, then when it happened, they got a penalty. It never happened after that. I enjoy obnoxious fans -- but only when it's in a creative, semi- intelligent way, as in the way Cornell fans have the greatest set of chants there are. Yes, they have the Harvard thing, but it's once and it isn't a big thing (though still not condoned). If Dartmouth held it just to tennis balls, that might not be too bad, but to go to Oranges is dumb. Finally, it was funny to note that Don Cahoon immediately took his team off the ice toward the dressing room with 3:33 remaining in the first period. Referee John Melanson said, "Hey, where you going?" Cahoon said, look, I just got hit with a tennis ball, we're going off -- and Melanson said OK. He then told a bewildered Roger Demment what was happening. AW HOCKEY-L is for discussion of college ice hockey; send information to [log in to unmask], The College Hockey Information List.