Crunch time for the Quakers
Three games in five days for Penn to seize the day.
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Three games in five days for Penn to seize the day.
Before Jeff Cragg begins his approach to the diving board, he faces the expansive pool beneath him. With his back toward the Sheerr record board, he takes a deep breath and begins with a short step, arms down by his side.
I’d be lying if I said this wasn’t the most emotional weekend of my time in college.
Two weeks.
I’m a Giants fan and even after yesterday’s win I’ll be the first to one to admit that the Indianapolis Colts’ Peyton Manning is the better Manning.
We get it, Princeton. You beat us last year, you beat Harvard in the playoff for the Ivy Championship, you played well against Kentucky before collapsing in the final minutes (Penn did it too, alright?).
When Princeton’s Dan Mavradies hit Douglas Davis in the far court off an inbounds pass, time slowed down.
For the last four years, the sight of Thomas Brandt and Christian Barreiro patrolling the middle of Rhodes Field has become a familiar sight.
For the first time ever, two Penn soccer players were chosen in the same MLS Supplemental Draft.
It has been exactly 311 days since Penn last played with Ivy pride on the line.
Many students come to Penn with dreams to become a nurse, a teacher or even an investment banker. But senior Christian Barreiro had another goal in mind.
A new year may be a time to forget past worries, but for Penn women’s basketball, January has brought only pain for the young team.
A week of sweet sun, beautiful weather and team bonding turned sour over the course of a few hours.
Charlie Powell is finally calling it quits from Penn track.
Monday marked a momentous day for Harvard and a sign of its dominance within the Ivy League.
Ranked teams don’t normally schedule Penn women’s basketball. But this year’s team is different and needs to be challenged.
Groans emanate from the stands as Robert Morris scores yet again in transition. It’s a Saturday night at the Palestra in the early portion of basketball season, and Stuart Suss is sitting right behind the Penn bench watching intently. Suss, who has made the drive from his West Chester, Pa., home, finally manages to take down his notes with a break in the action.
Penn women’s basketball was cruising Saturday afternoon. The Quakers’ shots were falling, their defense was creating turnovers and they were taking care of the ball.
Four losses and each by one goal. Three wins and each by one goal.
Penn against Harvard. The country’s No. 4 team against the No. 3 team. But it wasn’t football that dominated the headlines the weekend of Oct. 29, 1971. No, that was the other game.