Knee-deep into fifth year
Nine minutes. Nine minutes is all it took for Monmouth senior guard Whitney Coleman’s 2008-09 season to be over.
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Nine minutes. Nine minutes is all it took for Monmouth senior guard Whitney Coleman’s 2008-09 season to be over.
Jawan Carter likes playing in the state of Delaware.
Philadelphia won’t see a repeat World Series parade this year. Last night in the Bronx, the New York Yankees handed the Phillies a 7-3 loss to win the Fall Classic four games to two.
What do Princeton senior offensive lineman Mark Paski and baseball legend Cal Ripken, Jr. have in common? Both have shown that they can keep going and going longer than the Energizer Bunny.
If Penn sprint football thought its 57-7 victory over Princeton Sept.25 was a rout, the Quakers apparently had no powers of premonition.
Good news for the Penn sprint football team: it has already beaten Cornell this season. Bad news: The Quakers are coming off of their first loss of the season at the hands of Army in West Point, N.Y.
Princeton field hockey’s Kathleen Sharkey has a flair for the dramatic.
Dartmouth Athletics relies quite heavily on one arm and one leg of Don Kephart.
Friday night’s game was a tale of two emotions for the Penn field hockey team. First, the Quakers were riding an extreme high after coming back from a 2-0 second half deficit to tie Cornell with two minutes left in regulation at Franklin Field. Then, three minutes later, it was a dejected low as Cornell’s Catie de Stio scored the decisive goal only 22 seconds into overtime. At the end of the night, all the Quakers ended up with was a hard-fought, 3-2 loss that left many of them in tears. “We really wanted it. We gave it our all to just get mad and just get it in the cage,” senior captain Sarah Warner said. “The first two goals, we didn’t want to accept them — we just had to get back. It was just tough.” De Stio was a problem for the Red and Blue all night, as Cornell’s two regulation goals also came off her stick. The first, 9:59 into the contest, was an unassisted tally that deflected off Penn keeper Kieran Sweeney’s pads. De Stio’s second goal early in the second half also came unassisted, and Cornell coach Donna Hornibrook described it as a “wrist-flick” that just “rolled into the net.” Exactly five minutes later, Penn (2-4, 0-1 Ivy) got the spark it was looking for — maybe from one of the most unlikely sources. Freshman Sarah Hasson’s unassisted goal — the first score of her college career — was a result of fine stickwork to maintain possession of the ball. “We needed someone like that to do that,” Warner said, “and I’m glad it was one of our best freshmen.” Late in the second half, the Quakers’ upperclassmen decided to take the game into their own hands. Senior midfielder Katie Rose took a Warner shot off the corner and deflected it in past Cornell goalkeeper Melanie Jue to tie the game at two goals apiece. While Hornibrook admitted that “it felt like we were a little bit bunkering in instead of continuing to attack upfield” in the second half, the comeback was due more to the Quakers’ solid play. “Definitely give [Penn] credit for the second half,” she said. Unfortunately for the Quakers, Cornell (5-0, 1-0) has had recent experience playing in overtime. “We were in overtime last weekend, and we got it done in a minute and a half,” Hornibrook said, “and we were like, ‘Hey, it’s a new game. It’s gonna be more space. Let’s take care of the ball and let’s get it done’.” While an overtime loss is a tough pill to swallow, the end result was bittersweet. “[We needed to] pick it up. We were lazy, I think,” Warner said of her team’s first-half performance. “We had to get moving, get ready to go in, and we fought back and I’m really proud of us.” — Sports Editor Noah Rosenstein contributed reporting to this article.
This season, the Brown football team hopes not to get a taste of its own medicine.
Cornell has not won an Ivy League championship since 1990 — the second-longest active drought — and it doesn’t look like its spell will end in 2009.
On certain days, winning isn't everything.
After losing 12 players to graduation and returning only two starters, it's not surprising that the men's soccer team is having a bit of an identity crisis.
After losing 12 players to graduation and returning only two starters, it's not surprising that the men's soccer team is having a bit of an identity crisis.
*This article appeared in the 2009 joke issue.
*This article appeared in the 2009 joke issue.
*This article appeared in the 2009 joke issue.
*This article appeared in the 2009 joke issue.
New England is no stranger to undefeated seasons. After watching their Patriots go a perfect 16-0 in the regular season before losing in Super Bowl XLII to the New York Giants, those fans in the Northeast can only hope that the Dartmouth women's basketball team doesn't follow in the Pats' footsteps.
PROVIDENCE, R.I., Feb. 13- Maybe just for a week, Penn men's basketball coach Glen Miller wished he had never left Providence, R.I., for the big, bad streets of West Philadelphia.