Penn football's three-peat quest begins
The way senior defensive back Matt Hamscher sees it, Penn football never rebuilds.
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The way senior defensive back Matt Hamscher sees it, Penn football never rebuilds.
Men’s club soccer captain Ben Wang recalls a spring day last year when field space was so limited, the team held practice on varsity baseball’s batting cage field.
At this time last year, I thought Kevin Kolb would emerge as the Eagles’ quarterback of the future, Cliff Lee would never pitch in a Phillies uniform again and LeBron James would finally earn the title of ‘King.’
If there was anything easy about Penn football’s run to a second straight Ivy League championship last year, it was finding a source of motivation.
The average Philadelphia sports fan’s attitude toward the NBA lockout can be summarized in four words.
It’s another inevitability of summer, along with humidity and unpaid internships: coaching moves. They all bring with them impending change, sometimes complete overhaul, and a fresh outlook — two things the Penn men’s tennis program desperately needs.
The resignation of head coach Nik DeVore on Friday allows the Penn tennis team to close the book on a difficult four-year run in which the Quakers finished a combined 6-22 in the Ivy League.
California native Casey James arrived at Penn this year as a member of a heralded freshman class of seven accomplished high-school players.
What does a tennis prodigy look like?
Since his appointment as Penn’s 19th head basketball coach, I’ve taken Jerome Allen as a given.
While Penn waits for its potential first Public League recruit in 30 years, Constitution High's Xavier Harris, to attain the necessary SAT score to gain admission, another could join the Quakers in 2012.
The recruitment of United Kingdom basketball standouts Keelan Cairns and Simeon Esprit began four months ago but, in a way, it extends as far back as 1997.
The last time I ventured out to the Wells Fargo Center for a major wrestling event was in third grade.
The last time coach Fran Dunphy won an NCAA tournament game was in 1994, when a point guard named Jerome Allen starred in a Penn upset of Nebraska.
On an NCAA tournament opening day filled with drama, Princeton fell just shy of adding to its storied history of upsets.
With Princeton set to take on Kentucky at 2:45 p.m. on CBS, we asked Penn men’s basketball assistant coach Mike Martin, who has scouted both teams, for his thoughts on the matchup.
The sight from Saturday night was both refreshing and repulsive.
So many words can describe Penn basketball’s 2010-11 season, depending on whether your highball is half-full or half-empty — thrilling or heartbreaking, a step in the right direction or a missed opportunity, inconsistent or intermittently great.
As general manager of the Oakland Athletics, Billy Beane designed a formula — which author Michael Lewis called Moneyball in his revolutionary 2003 baseball book — that allowed his small-market club to compete with the mighty Yankees and Red Sox of the world.
Jordan and Pippen. Shaq and Kobe. Even Ibby and Zoller.