1988–89 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team

1988–89 Princeton Tigers men's basketball
Ivy League Champion
ConferenceIvy League
Record19–8 (11–3, 1st Ivy)
Head coach
CaptainBob Scrabis
Home arenaJadwin Gymnasium
1988–89 Ivy League men's basketball standings
Conf. Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Princeton 11 3   .786 19 8   .704
Dartmouth 10 4   .714 17 9   .654
Penn 9 5   .643 13 13   .500
Harvard 7 7   .500 11 15   .423
Cornell 7 7   .500 10 16   .385
Yale 6 8   .429 11 17   .393
Columbia 4 10   .286 8 18   .308
Brown 2 12   .143 7 19   .269
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1988–89 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team represented Princeton University in intercollegiate college basketball during the 1988–89 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The head coach was Pete Carril and the team captains was Bob Scrabis. The team played its home games in the Jadwin Gymnasium on the university campus in Princeton, New Jersey. The team was the champion of the Ivy League, which earned them an invitation to the 64-team 1989 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament where they were seeded sixteenth in the East Region.

The team posted a 19–8 overall record and an 11–3 conference record. When the team defeated Colgate 43–33 on November 30, 1988, it established a new National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I record for fewest combined points (since 1986), using the Princeton offense. The record would stand until December 16, 1989. In an East regional first-round game of the 1989 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament against the Georgetown Hoyas, they lost by a 50–49 margin. The game matched the unheralded sixteenth-seeded Princeton Tigers against the number one seeded Hoyas who featured freshman Alonzo Mourning and senior guard Charles Smith. Mourning blocked shots by Scrabis and Kit Mueller in the final six seconds to save the one-point victory for the Hoyas.

The team was led by first team All-Ivy League selections Scrabis and Mueller. Scrabis earned the Ivy League Men's Basketball Player of the Year award. Mueller shot 70.9% on his field goals to earn the second of three Ivy League statistical championships for field goal percentage. The team won the first of twelve consecutive national statistical championships in scoring defense with a 53.0 points allowed average.