Penn swimming and diving has split results in home Ivy Tri-Meet
Once again, Harvard ruined a perfect afternoon.
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Once again, Harvard ruined a perfect afternoon.
This one has been a long time coming.
While it might be a new season for Penn swimming and diving, the big names haven’t changed that much.
On a day when everything else in the Ivy League went right for Penn women’s soccer, one moment was enough to break the spirits of the Red and Blue.
After a demoralizing loss to Harvard last week, it was hard not to wonder if last year’s scoring draught had returned to haunt Penn women’s soccer.
If you got to Rhodes Field 10 minutes late for Sunday’s game, then you missed a few things.
The weather this weekend started to heat up, and so too did the Penn men’s and women’s track and field teams. On Saturday, amid perfect conditions, Penn’s two track programs combined for 11 event victories and several personal best times at the Chester Quarry Classic, hosted by Widener University.
Every senior hopes for a storybook ending when they get ready to compete for the last time, and that’s just what Penn men’s swimming senior Chris Swanson got at this weekend’s NCAA National Swimming and Diving Championships.
Ten games in seven days. That’s how Penn softball spent its spring break, as the team kicked off their 2016 season with a week of training and competition in Clearwater, Fla.
The phrase “all-time best” gets tossed around a lot in sports. However, no other phrase better captures Penn men’s swimming’s performance at this year’s Ivy League Championship meet.
While Senior Day may have only been Saturday, that didn’t stop Penn swimming and diving from sending out their graduating class with a full weekend of success.
It’s Harvard’s world, and unfortunately for Penn swimming, they are still living in it.
“Unfortunately you don’t get to play defense in swimming.”
It was a storybook night for one of the Ivy League soccer teams playing in Providence this weekend.
It was a dark night at Rhodes Field on Saturday — and not just because the lights went out.
Parity was the name of the game under the lights at Penn Park on Friday night.
The first big road trip of the season is always a challenge, and while Penn women’s soccer’s weekend in South Carolina was by no means perfect, the two games the squad played offered plenty of reasons for optimism.
Sunday was a day of firsts for Penn women’s soccer at Rhodes Field.
It’s familiar territory for Penn softball. Win this weekend, and there will be playoff softball at Penn Park again this year. Lose, and the season may well be over.
It wasn’t exactly an easy weekend, but Penn softball found a way to get the job done.