F. Hockey spies a possible edge
Penn field hockey coach Val Cloud admits she doesn't know much about the Bucknell squad. But by Saturday night, Cloud hopes to figure out the Quakers' Sunday opponent.
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Penn field hockey coach Val Cloud admits she doesn't know much about the Bucknell squad. But by Saturday night, Cloud hopes to figure out the Quakers' Sunday opponent.
After losing its first four games, the Penn field hockey team has finally started to gel, winning three in a row. Considering the Quakers' next opponent, it couldn't have come at a better time.
After two weeks without a game, the Penn field hockey team (2-4, 1-1 Ivy) will be back in action tomorrow, as Penn hosts Dartmouth in both team's third Ancient Eight game of the year.
As the Cornell field hockey team visits Penn tomorrow, the squads find themselves facing two very different scenarios.
Since the Ivy League was formed in 1954, Cornell hasn't won an outright title. And after last year's 3-4 Ivy record, it wouldn't seem that the Big Red were on the right track.
The Penn field hockey team has already made history in its 2007 campaign. Too bad it's negative history.
The Penn Field Hockey team is three games into its 2007 campaign. But after this start, they'd rather the season started tomorrow.
The Penn field hockey team seemingly outplayed St. Joseph's last night, especially in the second half.
Penn has 26 varsity head coaches. Only one won a national coach of the year award during the 2006-07 season: women's lacrosse coach Karin Brower.
This year the Penn women's lacrosse team earned its first Final Four berth, achieved its highest national ranking ever and went undefeated in the Ivy League for the first time.
Despite a 13-game winning streak and a No. 2 national ranking this season, the Penn women's lacrosse team is no blueblood in the sport. In fact, this year's appearance in the NCAA tournament is only the third in team history.
This year the Penn women's lacrosse team earned its first ever Final Four berth, achieved its highest national ranking and went undefeated in the Ivy League for the first time.
With an 11-game winning streak, a No. 2 national ranking, and only one loss this year - to No. 1 Northwestern - women's lacrosse coach Karin Brower hoped for a top-three seed in the NCAA Tournament.
Coming into Sunday's first round of the Women's Lacrosse NCAA Tournament, Penn and Boston University had winning streaks of 11 and 9 games respectively.
Not 13 minutes into the biggest game of their lives, against No. 5 seed Maryland on Sunday, rock-solid Penn goalkeeper Sarah Waxman and the rest of the No. 4 Quakers were shell-shocked.
If only every Penn-Princeton game went this way.
Five seconds into the second half of the biggest lacrosse game of her life, Penn sophomore Becca Edwards was flat on her back.
If the Penn women's lacrosse team wants to win its first outright Ivy League title since 1982, it has to follow a simple plan: win the next two games. Doing so would clinch the league's automatic bid to the team's first NCAA tournament since 1984.
When Penn last beat Dartmouth, junior attacker Rachel Manson was four years old and "had a lacrosse stick around but I wasn't really playing," she said.
Beating a city rival is great. Beating a city rival on a walk-off single is better.