Penn men's tennis split Ivy matches behind De Alwis' victory
The Ivy season is still young, but if early results are any indication, things are going to be different for Penn men’s tennis this time around.
Below are your search results. You can also try a Basic Search.
The Ivy season is still young, but if early results are any indication, things are going to be different for Penn men’s tennis this time around.
An era has ended for Penn football.
After facing some turmoil on and off the field, Penn women’s lacrosse was able to keep itself focused and earn a much-needed victory.
Though rain pounded Penn’s campus over the weekend, the men’s and women’s rowing teams found different ways to deal with the precipitation.
It’s the beginning of a new era for the Penn men’s swimming team — and Chris Swanson is leading the way.
It looks like Penn baseball will have to wait a bit longer to settle the score with Lafayette.
For about 11 minutes, Penn men’s lacrosse was feeling it, on the verge of breaking an eight-year losing streak to Cornell.
For years, Cornell lacrosse has dominated the top of the Ivy League standings.
No. 12 Penn women’s lacrosse has dominated the Ivy League in recent years.
Shelby Fortin will have one last chance at NCAA glory.
2013 was a magical season for the Penn softball team, as the Quakers captured their second-ever Ivy title and made their first trip to the NCAA Tournament. Nine different Red and Blue players earned All-Ivy honors at the end of the magical season, which made choosing the top five moments from the campaign a difficult task. Read on and find out what made the cut:
2013 was a slog at times for Penn baseball, which endured a season-ending seven-game losing streak that culminated in coach John Cole’s dismissal. But there were plenty of happy moments for the Quakers, who finished above .500 at 22-21. Here are the top five.
It’s not a storybook ending, but it will have to do.
It’s not Gucci.
Though the Penn men’s and women’s tennis teams achieved mostly mediocre results last year, combining to go 3-11 in Ivy play, there were plenty of happy moments to go around at both the individual level. Let’s go through the Quaker’s top five moments of 2013:
After fouling out against Harvard, Henry Brooks was in need of a bounce-back effort.
Penn basketball’s hopes of an upset over Harvard were still afloat when freshman forward Dylan Jones found an open lane to the basket with 1:06 to go in the first half with his team down by just seven points.
Eric Friedman is just like you.
For Penn women’s lacrosse, 2013 was the same old story. Another Ivy League championship. A seventh consecutive bid to the NCAA Tournament. And though the Quakers lost in the first round to Virginia, 12-6, there were plenty of happy memories. Here are the top five:
PROVIDENCE, R.I.- Penn basketball’s descent into the surreal began before the team even stepped foot into Brown’s Pizzitola Sports Center.