Football Notebook | There's no 'i' in schadenfreude
Though TV scheduling issues led to a rare 6 p.m. start time for Penn's Saturday meeting at Lafayette, many Quakers were sure to make the most of their twilight kickoff.
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Though TV scheduling issues led to a rare 6 p.m. start time for Penn's Saturday meeting at Lafayette, many Quakers were sure to make the most of their twilight kickoff.
Listening to Lafayette coach Frank Tavani wax philosophical at Saturday's postgame press conference, you might have thought the ghosts of Lombardi and Rockne had lent a hand in his team's victory.
EASTON, Pa. - Robert Irvin dropped back and let it fly over the middle.
Robert Irvin dropped back and let it fly over the middle.
In the interest of team chemistry, many athletes take great pains to keep from airing their dirty laundry in the locker room.
Before his first season at Columbia began in 2006, coach Norries Wilson offered a bold prediction in an interview with Columbia College Today.
For a Penn squad that struggled to find its groove week after week, the defensive unit was a rare bastion of consistency.
You'll have to forgive Lauren Sadaka for feeling a little long in the tooth.
Like any NFL coach worth his weight in clipboards, James Urban knew his stuff.
Trailing first-place Columbia by 4.5 games with five Ivy contests to go, Penn knows that this weekend's two doubleheaders against the Lions represent the team's final chance to repeat as Gehrig Division champs.
"Come on now, you're better than that!" bellowed a voice from the corner of the Penn dugout in the bottom of the fifth inning.
Facing a Dartmouth team hitting over .320 on the season, the Quakers knew that keeping the ball off their opponent's sweet spot would have to be a high priority.
Tom Grandieri is nothing if not considerate.
For Steve Gable, 300 means more than just a number or a movie or an upper-level college course.
The last time the Penn baseball team shared a field with Brown, the Bears dumped 20 runs on the visiting Quakers to complete a two-game sweep in the Ivy League Championship Series last May.
For seven innings, Penn's makeshift pitching operation bent but didn't break, allowing just three runs despite 13 baserunners.
In a contest riddled with walks, balks, hit batters and wild pitches, the only thing Penn's hurlers couldn't tally was a win.
Too much sun is bad for you anyway, right?
After months of inclement weather, infield puddles and indoor practices, the Penn baseball team is finally headed for greener pastures - if only for one week.
Penn women's basketball has beaten just one team since November.