We Predict These Five Student Athletes Will Be Future Stars

Maia Weintraub fencing

Maia Weintraub ’25, right, competes in the women’s foil team final at the 2022 Fenc­ing World Championships in Cairo, Egypt.

Photo: Xinhua / Alamy

Brett Tomlinson
By Brett Tomlinson

Published Dec. 12, 2024

8 min read

In choosing their list of the greatest Princeton athletes, our panelists compared past stars with a handful who are still competing. No current students made the cut, but if we were to revisit the rankings in 10 years, which active athletes might merit stronger consideration?

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Maia Weintraub holds her Princeton fencing helmet in her left hand and a foil in her right.

Maia Weintraub ’26

Princeton Athletics

Maia Weintraub ’26
women’s fencing
Weintraub was a clutch performer for the U.S. women’s foil team at the 2024 Paris Olympics, becoming the first Princeton fencer to earn a gold medal. She also won an NCAA individual title in 2022 as a freshman, finished third in 2023, and is back on campus for her third season with the Tigers. At age 22, Weintraub could have more Olympic opportunities in her future.

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A woman in a soccer uniform, #14, runs across a field.

Pietra Tordin ’26

Princeton Athletics

Pietra Tordin ’26
women’s soccer
In September, Tordin proved herself as one of the nation’s most dynamic players in her age group, leading the U.S. with four goals at the FIFA Under-20 Women’s World Cup. Then she returned to Princeton and led the Tigers to the Ivy League regular season and tournament championships. She’s been the Ivy’s Offensive Player of the Year (2024) and Rookie of the Year (2022).

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Roko Pozaric ’25 palms the ball as he prepares to throw it in a water polo game.

Roko Pozaric ’25

Princeton Athletics

Roko Pozaric ’25
men’s water polo
Pozaric shattered Princeton’s career record for goals and climbed to No. 2 on the career list for assists — all while helping the Tigers win an unprecedented four straight league titles in the Northeast Water Polo Conference and reach the NCAA semifinals in 2023. The Croatian star told PAW that he also has Canadian citizenship and might try to earn a spot on Canada’s national team after graduation.

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Beth Yeager ’26 holds a field hockey stick across the back of her neck and poses for a photo in her Princeton uniform, #17.

Beth Yeager ’26

Princeton Athletics

Beth Yeager ’26
field hockey
Yeager, a 2024 Olympian, scored or assisted in each of Princeton’s Ivy games in 2024 and has won Ivy Offensive Player of the Year honors three times. With another season left, she has a chance to become Princeton’s first four-time first-team All-American — a remarkable feat in a program that has consistently ranked among the nation’s best.

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Caden Pierce ’26 dribbles past an opponent during a basketball game.

Caden Pierce ’26

Princeton Athletics

Caden Pierce ’26
men’s basketball
Pierce, a versatile scorer, rebounder, and passer, has been an ideal fit for the Tigers, who won or shared the Ivy title in each of his first two seasons. A breakout freshman star on Princeton’s Sweet 16 team in 2023, he elevated his game to become the first sophomore in program history to win Ivy Player of the Year.


The 25 Greatest Athletes in Princeton History

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