Penn seniors look to finish on top at USAGs
For all intents and purposes, this should be considered one of Penn gymnastics’ best-ever seasons.
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For all intents and purposes, this should be considered one of Penn gymnastics’ best-ever seasons.
Sometimes one’s best isn’t quite good enough.
This is not the Ivy start the women’s tennis team envisioned when the season began.
Washington isn’t the only hotbed for the healthcare debate.
It takes time to get to know a team.
A loss to open the conference schedule hurts — especially when it comes at the hands of an archrival.
Some sporting events appear to be scripted.
Penn’s gymnastics team has set the bar high.
The Penn women’s tennis team will begin conference play at the end of this month, but before the team sets its sights on Ivy League opponents, it has one last nonconference match: crosstown rival Temple.
The Quakers’ basketball season isn’t over — and neither is the season of one of their recruits of the Class of 2016.
Often in team sports, the best players don’t secure the best results. Penn’s squash teams demonstrated that at their individual championships this break.
Zack Rosen and the Quakers reminded fans that their season is far from over by pulling off an upset in Boston. While the Red and Blue continue to captivate, many new players must fill Penn’s soon-to-be depleted roster. This week, The Daily Pennsylvanian spoke with a member of Penn’s incoming recruiting class, Jamal Lewis.
On Saturday, with all of Quaker Nation watching them, Zack Rosen and Penn’s basketball team took a large step toward winning their first Ivy title since 2007. The following day, Penn’s gymnastics squad inconspicuously clinched its second straight league title.
Anyone who follows Penn squash knows of Thomas Mattsson. Over four years, the team’s senior co-captain has played in 52 matches for Penn, almost exclusively at the No. 1 spot.
Jerome Allen might be losing four seniors at the end of this season, most notably Zack Rosen, but on the bright side, he will pick up several solid recruits. The Daily Pennsylvanian recently talked with one of the players who will come to Penn to rock the Palestra next year: Darien Nelson-Henry.
It seems that every time the Penn gymnastics team has a meet, it validates the notion that this is the best squad Penn’s had in a while.
In the last 10 seasons, the Penn men’s squash team has been excluded from the ‘A’ tournament thrice.
David Geatz may be the new coach of the men’s tennis team, but just two years ago, he was coaching Cornell to a win over the Quakers. Old rivalries aside, the Red and the Blue are glad to have him now. He led two schools — Ohio State and Minnesota — to top-10 national finishes and coached one player at Minnesota to the No. 1 position nationally in singles. He commanded Cornell to its then-best Ivy finish in program history. The Daily Pennsylvanian recently sat down with Geatz for a Q&A session.
Penn squash had a busy weekend.
Usually when a team loses its best athlete to injury, the absence is palpable.