Senior Column by David Figurelli | A reflection
I’ve been thinking about getting to this moment so much for the past four years that it’s hard to believe that it’s actually here.
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I’ve been thinking about getting to this moment so much for the past four years that it’s hard to believe that it’s actually here.
While finals were ending and seniors were preparing for their last goodbyes at graduation, the Penn football team began a new era by announcing the incoming class of 2021.
While most of the campus will be out celebrating Spring Fling on Saturday, Penn men’s lacrosse will be faced with a must-win game for the second week in a row if it wants to keep its Ivy League and NCAA Tournament hopes alive.
Win or go home.
After falling just short of pulling off a seven-goal comeback against Ivy rival Yale, Penn men’s lacrosse will face another tough test this weekend against conference foe and defending national semifinalist Brown on Saturday.
One goal. That was the margin of defeat for Penn men’s lacrosse in both of their games against Yale in 2016, including an 11-10 overtime defeat in the regular season and a heartbreaking 7-6 loss in the Ivy League tournament.
Penn wrestling officially finished its 2016-2017 season this past St. Patrick’s Day weekend, with five of the team’s top wrestlers taking on the nation’s best at the Scottrade Center in St. Louis.
Don’t fix what isn’t broken; so goes the old saying. Penn women’s lacrosse certainly did not fall prey to this adage against Johns Hopkins this weekend.
Nothing beats the taste of sweet, sweet revenge.
They went across the continent to win a world championship. Now, they’re tasked with something that hasn’t been done since 1988: help bring an Ivy League title back to University City.
Penn wrestling had mixed results in a brutal Saturday afternoon this past weekend, splitting a pair of critical back-to-back conference matchups against Ivy foes Harvard and Brown.
Two steps forward, one step back.
Saturday was just the beginning.
Championships are won in the offseason — so goes the age-old cliche. This saying holds true for the members of Penn squash, but there’s another more accurate saying for what they do in the offseason: championships are won all over the world.
You can’t say it was an ordinary offseason for Penn squash.
For the second time in just five days, Penn men’s soccer was taking on an Ivy League foe at Roberts Stadium in Princeton. But Wednesday night, their opponent was not the Tigers. Rather, the Red and Blue took on Columbia for the second time this season in a game with major Ivy League implications, scheduled just a few days ago as a result of Harvard canceling its season.
Gut check.
The articles all read the same. The offense gets the glory and the keeper gets a shout out for a great save. But what about the defense?
It’s not about where you start, it’s about where you end up
Last year, Penn field hockey’s opponents probably had one plan to keep the ball out of their net: find Alexa Hoover and keep the ball as far away from her as possible. Now? It’s not quite so simple.