Penn falls to Harvard, 56-50
Penn played with stretches of that old Palestra magic and had a crowd of 7,462 absolutely roaring at times.
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Penn played with stretches of that old Palestra magic and had a crowd of 7,462 absolutely roaring at times.
It’s 4:50 p.m. on a Sunday and Rudy Wise is getting ready for practice in the Palestra. Zack Rosen is sitting on the bottom row of the bleachers next to a bucket of ice. A sweaty Rob Belcore is taking some extra shots.
Pack the Palestra. Such was the title of a Daily Pennsylvanian editorial from Feb. 4, 2011.
Penn has two players in the top five in scoring in the Ivy League — an impressive distinction that no other Ivy team can claim.
Of the 1,696 players currently on NFL rosters, only six played their college ball in the Ivy League. If Erik Rask has his way, that number will be at least seven next season.
I’ve finally figured it out.
Penn needed this win in the worst way. The Manhattan Jaspers fought hard — maybe harder than Penn at times — but it was the Quakers who tallied another one in the win column.
After capturing two consecutive Ivy League titles, expectations for the 2011 Quakers were sky high.
Since Jeff Mathews entered the Ivy League last year, it’s been common knowledge that the Cornell quarterback has talent.
Zack Rosen does a lot of things for the Penn basketball program. Heck, he may even be the face of Penn’s athletic community. One thing the Quakers don’t want him to be, however, is their only go-to scorer.
It’s a new season and a new slate, with a few new Quakers.
By now, the seniors on the Penn football team know each other like family. Playing football with the same group of guys for four years has a funny way of strengthening camaraderie.
For a football game in which only six total points were scored, it’s actually not difficult to name an MVP: the weather.
PROVIDENCE, R.I., — The Penn football team did not score a single point on Saturday. The last time that happened, Bill Clinton was at the beginning of his second term as president, and the U.S. economy was booming.
As the third quarter came to a close Saturday, several members of the Yale football team held four fingers aloft. It was a gesture of confidence that said, “We own the fourth quarter.”
In a country where food is rationed and a lack of housing is increasingly becoming a problem, it should come as little surprise that thousands of children have no equipment with which to play their national sport.
A gutsy performance, a huge win, a confidence-booster: Saturday’s game under the lights at Dartmouth was all of the above.
HANOVER, N.H. — In Dartmouth’s first-ever game under the lights at Memorial Field, the Quakers and quarterback Billy Ragone stole the spotlight.
Aaron Bailey looked like he was going to be good, maybe even special.
Coach Al Bagnoli wanted to take full responsibility for Penn’s 37-12 loss to Lafayette. He used words like “embarrassed” and “humbling” and blamed himself for not preparing the team adequately.