On Princeton womenโs basketballโs Senior Day on March 4, senior guard Abby Meyers showed much of what she brings to the Tigers on a single possession. She rebounded teammate Julia Cunninghamโs missed 3-pointer, missed the put-back, got her own rebound and put up an alley-oop floater to beat the first-half buzzer. She pumped her fist and smiled broadly when the ball went in, punctuating a 13-0 run against archrival Penn.
Princeton has gotten plenty of buckets, rebounds and smiles from Meyers this season en route to a 22-4 overall record and a 14-0 mark in Ivy League play. This week, the Tigers co-captain was named the unanimous Ivy League Player of the Year and one of five finalists for the Becky Hammon Mid-Major Player of the Year Award. She is averaging 17.7 points, 6.1 rebounds, 1.7 assists and 1.5 steals per game while shooting 40.9% from behind the arc. And beyond her on-court production, she is the confident, calm, sometimes goofy leader of a Princeton team that has outscored conference opponents by 27.0 points per game.
Meyersโ star turn is coming later than she originally imagined, after a leave of absence and the COVID-19 pandemic cost her two seasons in five years. But her unorthodox college career has helped her grow into exactly what Princeton needs this season.
โIt’s honestly a success story in my mind, seeing the past four years and the first three years being really rough and challenging,โ Meyersโ twin sister Olivia told The Next. โโฆ For her senior season to be going so well, for her to be captain, to be leader of the court, to be the playmaker, to be scoring like she used to score in high school, it’s honestly a happy ending, like a fairy tale.โ
Growing up in Potomac, Maryland, sports were a constant for Abby, Olivia and their older sister Emily. โWe had too much energy for [our parents] to deal with,โ Abby told The Next, so Valerie and Steven Meyers put their daughters in recreational leagues and other structured activities.
Abby continued to play multiple sports until college, but her talent for basketball was obvious. โShe was always the scorer, the dribbler, the playmaker, the assister,โ Olivia said. โShe did everything โฆ from elementary school to middle school and into high school. It never changed.โ
She was also highly competitive, both with her sisters and with anyone who dared line up across from her. According to Abby, Valerie likes to tell the story of how Abby, still too young for her youth league to allow full-court pressing, โwould be waiting like a hungry tigerโ at half court on defense. โWhen the girl would dribble over, I would just attack her,โ Abby said.
โShe would rip balls out of little kidsโ hands in elementary school,โ Olivia confirmed.
As Abby developed as a playerโgrowing to 5โ11 and rising to 54th in the 2017 HoopGurlz recruiting rankingsโshe heeded one piece of advice in particular from her dad. โBe the player that the other teamโs coach calls timeout for in the first two minutes,โ Steven would say. โHit them with a floater and then hit them with a 3-pointer; be unpredictable.โ
Princeton 27, Penn 22 | 2:16 2nd
Abby with the three and pick-six! Five quick points from the senior captain leads to a Penn timeout!#GetStops ๐ฏ๐ pic.twitter.com/vEtXP4mPPt
โ Princeton WBB (@PrincetonWBB) March 5, 2022
She did that well enough to become Walt Whitman High Schoolโs all-time leading scorer and a two-time Montgomery County Player of the Year, and her college suitors included Princeton, Stanford, Northwestern and Michigan.
โRecruiting her was great because I felt like at first she could be a real floor spacer, meaning someone who could really knock down shots. And then also, she was a gym rat,โ former Princeton head coach Courtney Banghart told The Next. โThose are the kind of kids you know you can get better.โ
Columbia head coach Megan Griffith, who worked under Banghart at Princeton until 2016 and helped recruit Abby, recalled how she was at a Whitman game with Banghart when Whitman head coach Peter Kenah asked her to do the halftime shooting challengeโmake a layup, a free throw and a 3-pointer.
โI was like, โAre you kidding me?โโ Griffith said. โBut I was like, โIf it’s going to help us get this kid, I’ll do whatever it takes.โโ
Abby eventually chose Princetonโand, surprisingly, so did Olivia. The twins had expected to attend different colleges, but they were โpretty inseparable,โ Olivia said, as they adjusted to college life. By her own admission, Abby got โhumbledโ as she learned how to be a role player as a freshman. She also learned the hard way what playing defense at Princeton entailed.
โWe were doing a drill, and Banghart stops the drill and is like, โAbby, did Peter Kenah ever teach you defense?โโ Abby said. โAnd so it’s kind of been โฆ I guess, not [an] insecurity, but you can call it that โฆ Defense has always been my weakness.โ
Despite the work-in-progress defense, Abby earned 17.4 minutes per game off the bench as a freshman, averaging 9.4 points, 3.0 rebounds and 1.4 assists. Olivia was a ubiquitous presence on the sidelines and rallied any classmates she could find to join her. And in private, Olivia always provided a listening ear.
โ[She] definitely saved me my freshman year,โ Abby said, โbecause I can tell you I vented to her a lot.โ
โI tried boosting her confidence, basically, because she went from having all the confidence in the world in high school โฆ to going to Princeton, where she had to prove herself more,โ Olivia said. โโฆ So I would just try to remind her of her history, what she has to offer and her talent.โ
Meyers started to hit her stride late in her freshman year, scoring in double figures in four straight games and prompting Banghart to call her the teamโs most improved player. But she had to take a leave of absence from Princeton the following year for academic reasons. That halted her basketball momentum but forced her to grow off the court as she spent the year interning for Ariel Investments in Chicago and participating in a cultural immersion program in Peru and Bolivia.
โShe was pulled away from her team, from the momentum she was gaining from her first year and isolated, separated from everyone, from campus, from the university itself, which was really hard for her in the beginning. And I was worried how she would be able to come back from it,โ Olivia said. โBut she is so resilient. She is so positive. I remember right after she told the family that she had to take a year off from school, she was writing down a list of things to do for the next year, how to make it worthwhile. She immediately put any negativity behind her.โ
Abby weathered challenges during what she calls her โfree year,โ including a torn meniscus that required surgery. But from her perspective, those challenges were โgood ups and downsโ that helped her develop her identity outside of sports and become more independent.
โShe rose to the occasion and came back a better person,โ Olivia said. โโฆ She just came out strong, like a diamond, like nothing can break her down.โ
As her sophomore season neared in 2019-20, Abby was still recovering from her knee injury, and she had to adjust to a new head coach, Carla Berube, after Banghart left to coach North Carolina. But Berube had heard plenty about Abbyโs potential: From the moment she took the job, other college coaches said to her, โWow, youโre going to be coaching Abby Meyers!โ
โThey’d say [current Dallas Wings forward] Bella Alarie, [All-Ivy point guard] Carlie Littlefield, but definitely Abby’s name came up as wellโjust a great basketball player, great talent, great skill set,โ Berube said.
Abby missed Princetonโs first four games that season, but she soon took on a similar role as her freshman year, averaging 6.3 points and 2.7 rebounds in 14.7 minutes per game off the bench. Although her statistics didnโt leap off the page, she again showed flashes of the player she could become toward the end of the season.
But the COVID-19 pandemic doused her hot streak, then canceled what wouldโve been her junior season. She was one of only a few Tigers who elected not to take a year off of school to preserve their Ivy League eligibility, wanting to keep progressing toward her degree. โI took a gap year before it was cool,โ she joked.
Now a senior in her third season on the court, Abby has had to adjust againโto a younger team that lost Alarie and Littlefield to graduation, and to the fact that Olivia graduated in 2021 and started veterinary school in Canada. But she hasnโt missed a beat, helping Princeton keep its 40-game Ivy League winning streak (including the conference tournament) alive and doubling or tripling nearly all of her per-game statistics from her sophomore year.
โLet me just tell you what, Abby Meyers can freakinโ hoop,โ Rhode Island head coach Tammi Reiss told The Next in November, after Meyers scored 22 points and made six 3-pointers against the Rams. โI have the utmost respect for that kid. If she’s not your [Ivy League] Player of the Yearโthat kid can flat-out ball.โ
Abby claimed that the difference in her performance as a senior is simple: She has the green light offensively. According to Berube, Abbyโs 3-point shooting, variety of attacking moves and ball-handling all improved during the canceled 2020-21 season, and she has been highly efficient this season scoring from everywhere on the court.

โEvery shot that she takes, Iโm feeling really good about it. So yeah, I love the confidence that she’s playing with,โ Berube said. โโฆ When she’s in the zone, she’s feeling it, Abby Meyers basketball is a joy to watch.โ
In December, Abby had a signature moment at then-No. 22 Florida Gulf Coast, hitting a game-winning turnaround jump shot to give Princeton its first win over a ranked team since 1978.
Princeton 57, FGCU 55 | 0:01 4th
BANG! ๐ค
You bet Abby hit that! Tigers with the ball after the Eagles’ turnover.
๐ฅ – https://t.co/hIOqo0XR9o
๐ – https://t.co/sKBMgVkhWR#GetStops ๐ฏ๐ | @NCAAWBB pic.twitter.com/lJrObAgTd9โ Princeton WBB (@PrincetonWBB) December 2, 2021
โThat’s in her DNA, right?โ Berube said postgame. โShe wants the ball in big situations, and we’re going to get it to her.โ
โAbby always steps up,โ added sophomore Kaitlyn Chen. โI mean, she’s ready for these moments. She works so hard for everything she does.โ
That includes defensively, as Abby worked to become a two-way player during the 2020-21 year. Only a few teammates were enrolled in classes and on campus last spring, so she got a lot of individual development with the coaches. She also played one-on-one โall the timeโ with Littlefield, the speedy point guard who is now starting for Banghart at North Carolina as a graduate transfer.
โ[Playing with Littlefield] kind of just gave me the confidence to be like, โYou’re a good defender. โฆ You have the lateral quickness to defend anybody,โโ Abby said. โโฆ It’s all a mentality, at the end of the day.โ
โShe’s definitely gotten a lot better [defensively],โ Berube confirmed. โShe’s reading the offense well, she’s working well within our defense and communicating well โฆ It’s miles apart from two years ago.โ
But that leap isnโt the biggest difference Berube sees between the former role player turned star. โI think the most improvement has just been the day-in and day-out consistency,โ Berube said. โโฆ Practices, workouts, any kind of film sessions, she’s just really dialed in.โ That has shown on the stat sheet, as Abby has scored in double figures in 27 straight games dating back to 2019-20, breaking Alarieโs school record of 26.
Princeton 53, Brown 27 | 4:50 3rd
Need a bucket? Throw up the Abby symbol. She’s got 25 points on 11-of-16 shooting.
๐ฅ – https://t.co/PmtjwfsqQy
๐ – https://t.co/0WMBYlbm7m#GetStops ๐ฏ๐ pic.twitter.com/lxwFww5l8bโ Princeton WBB (@PrincetonWBB) February 19, 2022
That kind of consistency begets confidence, and Abby is playing with a swagger that is palpable even through the television broadcast. She doesnโt get sped up and is always composed. Griffith said sheโs โplaying like a senior,โ while Banghart called her performance โinspired.โ She knows what Berube wantsโand knows that she and her teammates can execute it.
โI think everyone kind of needs that edge, that little swag, to give them the confidence to get on the court and ball out,โ Abby said. โโฆ I’ve always had that confidence in me. It’s a matter of when that confidence can really shine and be visible, and I think just this year, being named captain, having the trust and confidence for my teammates and coaches and in myself, [it is].โ
The captaincy is deeply meaningful to her because it reflects how far she has come.
โFreshman year, even sophomore year, too, people would never have thought I’d be named captain my senior year,โ she said. โโฆ I was just a whole different kind of person [and] player.โ
It took time for Abbyโs teammates to recognize her ability to lead, Olivia said, especially because her โpuppy dog energy and enthusiasmโ doesnโt fit the mold for a captain. Abby remains goofy and upbeat, able to diffuse tense moments with a smile or a laugh, but she has matured, too. Her leadership also benefited from the canceled season, as she learned from Littlefield, a former captain, and practiced by mentoring then-freshmen Chen and Chet Nweke, who were both on campus last spring.
In her final year at Princeton, Abby has โput all the pieces together,โ according to Berube, and is having a brilliant season on the court while being the consummate teammate and leader. Berube said that Abby always checks in with younger players about how theyโre doing on and off the court, and she is quick to nominate teammates for Practice Player of the Day honors.
โShe’s always thinking about who stood out at practice, why they stood out in practice, what made them impactful โฆ She’s just thinking about others and how to โฆ bring positivity to our program every single day,โ Berube said.
โShe’s just confident in herself, [and] she wants to instill that confidence and that positivity in other people,โ Olivia said.

The past five years have taught Abby how to be adaptable and made her not only a complete player, but also a more complete person. During Princetonโs most recent alumni game, Abby said, two former teammates praised her: โOh my god, you’ve changed so much! You’re nothing like your freshman year self. You’re so mature and successful and impressive!โ
And although it has been bumpy at times, Abby is grateful for her unusually โdynamicโ road to Senior Day. โIt’s not what I expected. But I wouldn’t redo the process because, at the end of the day, we’ve gotten three rings in three seasons,โ she said. โSo that’s pretty successful, if you ask me.โ
Abby will try to win her second Ivy League Tournament title in as many tries this week (the 2019-20 tournament was canceled due to COVID-19) and then lead the Tigers on an NCAA Tournament run. As of March 9, ESPNโs Charlie Creme projects Princeton as a 10-seed playing in Baton Rouge, Louisiana โ though there is an outside chance the Tigers could play in College Park, Maryland, just 20 miles from Abbyโs hometown.
Wherever the Tigers end up, Abby will bring that swagger, scoring punch and defensive focusโand her team will be a tough out because of it.
โAny given game, we walk on the court and we feel like we’re in a good place to win this game because Abby’s on the court with us,โ Berube said. โWe’ve got our leader out there, and โฆ we’re in a good spot.โ
