Brief | M. Hoops staff gets a little bit Wiser
With over 20 players set to be on the Penn men’s basketball team’s roster next season, the Quakers could certainly use all the coaching they can find.
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With over 20 players set to be on the Penn men’s basketball team’s roster next season, the Quakers could certainly use all the coaching they can find.
As the seconds ticked down during the Penn basketball team’s fifteenth loss of this past season, to Harvard February 6, little-used freshman Brian Fitzpatrick sat on the bench wondering why he had spent the entire game riding the pine yet again.
Ali DeLuca scored 148 goals during her four-year lacrosse career, the most in Penn history, and has received enough accolades to fill an entire trophy case.
As recently graduated Penn pitcher Todd Roth watched Philadelphia Phillies ace Roy Halladay finish off the 20th perfect game in Major League Baseball history Saturday, he had a thought that few people who’ve ever played baseball could have had.
For two Penn track and field athletes, the year-long wait after a heartbreaking finish last May is finally over.
Men’s soccer coach Rudy Fuller, along with the rest of the Penn Athletics community, had heard about the University’s plans for the George A. Weiss Pavilion — connected to historic Franklin Field — since they were released last summer.
Two months and 37 games after the Penn baseball team opened its season, the Gehrig Division title is sitting right in front of the Quakers’ faces.
Travel to a football stadium or basketball court, and you won’t be coming across any 150-yard fields or 12-foot rims.
If the Penn baseball team wants to race to the top of the Ivy League, it will first have to clear a Big Red roadblock.
Major League Baseball scouts always had their eyes on Doug Glanville.
While the Cornell community was celebrating the Big Red’s NCAA Tournament run earlier this month, folks in Princeton, N.J., were doing the same.
Four years and two coaches since Fran Dunphy’s stunning departure, the Penn basketball program is back to square one.
After eight games in 11 days — a busy opening schedule to say the least — the Penn baseball team is ready to restore order to its season this weekend.
Spending spring break in the Sunshine State has inspired Penn baseball coach John Cole to look on the bright side of his team’s season-opening road trip.
If the Penn baseball team needs time to shake off some winter cobwebs, it will certainly get the chance to do so over spring break.
It’s 11 p.m. on a weeknight. And while many fraternity brothers have just begun their Thirsty Thursday festivities, junior Marty Borowsky is getting ready for bed.
One would think a team that’s already gone toe-to-toe with No. 1 Kansas and compiled a 14-3 non-conference record would have already cleared its biggest hurdle.
With his team sitting on a 16-point cushion at halftime, Brown coach Jesse Agel gave his team one simple instruction.
A few hoops teams currently squeezed in the middle of the Ivy pack will be looking to break free at The Palestra this weekend.
For Dan Monckton, dunking a basketball is somewhat of a guilty pleasure.