Penn track and field struggles at Heptagonals, finishing seventh
Nobody said that it would be easy.
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Nobody said that it would be easy.
The wait is finally over.
It should come as no surprise that high-jumping is based on the art of avoiding the bar.
It was supposed to be the easy part of the weekend.
Last year, the Penn men’s lacrosse team danced with the Blue Devils and came out on top. This year, the team wasn’t quite as lucky.
The athletes of Penn track and field could certainly use a break.
The Penn men’s lacrosse team may have ended the 2013 season on a sour note, but don’t let that fool you. The Quakers also provided many great moments en route to a solid 8-5 season. Let’s look back at the top five:
Penn track and field has fought through a lot already this season, but there will be no rest for the weary anytime soon.
Some say that the only way to get better in sports is to take on the best. On Saturday, the athletes of Penn men’s swimming got exactly that chance.
Penn was able to hold on for a 90-83 victory in what was an absolute must-win game against the lowly Cornell Big Red. It was an outstanding offensive performance and it put a stop to a two-game losing streak in the process, but the Quakers will need to put together a more complete performance to compete with the tougher Ivies. To examine further, here’s the Good, the Bad & the Ugly:
It is no secret that Penn’s Director of Track and Field Steve Dolan is a distance runner at heart. It should come as no surprise, then, that he has instilled a distance runner’s strategy in his program’s approach to the indoor season: to stay the course and finish strong.
Penn women’s basketball entered the heart of Ivy League play with great expectations, and much like another Dickens novel, it was the best of times all weekend for the Quakers.
Despite coaching some of Penn’s fastest athletes, head track and field coach Steve Dolan has always favored steady progress over immediate results, and not even the hustle and bustle of New York City could separate him from this philosophy.
Harvard came into Saturday leading the Ivy League and looking to extend its lead with an improbable sweep of both Princeton and Penn.
New York City. It is said that if you can make it there, you can make it anywhere.
The freshman class has stirred the waters for Penn women’s swimming, but it has been one of the quietest freshmen who has made the biggest splash.
With the toughest stretch of its schedule completed and Ivy League play fast approaching, Saturday’s matchup at home against the NJIT presented itself as the eye of the storm for Penn women’s basketball.
On Tuesday, heavy snowfall made travel on roads throughout the Philadelphia area particularly treacherous. Similarly, Penn women’s basketball has had a tough road to navigate, starting with the beginning of the month.
It was an anticlimactic ending to a day filled with so much excitement surrounding Penn basketball.
With ESPN’s College GameDay bus parked outside the Palestra, the Penn men’s basketball team gained much of the weekend’s attention among Penn sports fans.