Penn field hockey revives season with 3-0 victory over Dartmouth
It’s not about how many times you fall down, but rather how many times you get back up — and Penn field hockey emphatically did the latter on Saturday afternoon.
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It’s not about how many times you fall down, but rather how many times you get back up — and Penn field hockey emphatically did the latter on Saturday afternoon.
On June 26, Jason Calhoun, the husband of Penn’s Athletic Director, Dr. M. Grace Calhoun, was announced as the next head coach of the men’s golf program.
It’s no secret that if Penn football wants to pull off its unprecedented Ivy League three-peat, some new kids on the block will have to step up.
With a pair of conference championships in Ray Priore’s first two seasons, it’s no secret that Penn football’s turnaround has been one for the history books.
All athletes know that the onset of summer means one thing: no days off. Wharton sophomore and professional wakeboarder Larisa Morales certainly took that to heart.
Penn football still has its eyes on the coveted Ivy League three-peat, but the road to making history just got a bit tougher.
As the weeks count down until opening kickoff, it’s hard to find too many holes in Penn football’s personnel. Big names like Justin Watson, Louis Vecchio, Tre Solomon and Mason Williams headline a group of 11 returning All-Ivy selections, which is a full four more than Princeton — the squad with the second-most All-Ivy players coming back.
The search for Penn men’s golf is over — again.
America’s most prominent Penn alumnus is in the national spotlight yet again this week, and this time, he finds himself in direct conflict with another former Quaker.
Erica Higa really, really loved her first visit to Rwanda a year ago.
For many, summer is a great time to relax and recover from nine months of late-night cramming and early-morning rising.
They don’t call it May Madness for nothing.
Sometimes, the sports writer’s job is made real easy.
It’d been sixteen days since Penn women’s lacrosse topped Princeton in an emotional, physical affair, leading from start to finish and giving their bitter rivals their first — and ultimately only — Ivy League loss of the year.
At this point, there’s only one word for Penn women’s lacrosse: dynasty.
So it all comes down to this.
As the 2016-17 school year nears its close, there have been some incredible Penn Athletics feats to reflect upon. Football took home its second straight Ivy League championship only two years after finishing in sixth place. Sprint football finished undefeated for only the second time in program history. Men’s cross country brought home Ancient Eight glory for the first time in 43 years. Women’s basketball continued its dynastic run with its third Ivy title in four years — the list goes on and on.
It was a big-time stage for a big-time game — but by the slimmest of possible margins, Penn baseball couldn’t get the big-time win it’d been seeking for decades.
Having been on the brink of elimination from its tenth regular season conference championship in 11 years for more than a month, there’s been only one focus for Penn women’s lacrosse — staying alive.
To pick just one star from Penn baseball’s four-game demolition of bitter rival and defending Ivy League champion Princeton — a series that saw the Quakers take four wins by a combined score of 35-12 — seems like it’d be a crime. But even in a weekend full of standout performances, the consistent offensive dominance from senior outfielder Tim Graul stood out from the pack.