Women's tennis enacts revenge on Owls at Levy Pavilion
After 10 days away from competition, Penn women’s tennis returned to Levy Pavilion picking up right where it left off, earning a 5-2 win over Temple Wednesday.
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After 10 days away from competition, Penn women’s tennis returned to Levy Pavilion picking up right where it left off, earning a 5-2 win over Temple Wednesday.
Very little of what conspired this weekend matters at all, as Penn and Princeton square off tonight for the first time this season. But so as not to make everyone else feel unimportant, here’s the word on Ivy basketball from the weekend:
A loss like this sets a fog over campus thicker than the real one that lifted an hour before tip-off Saturday night.
It’s been said many times, many ways that winning will bring the fans back to the Palestra.
As the Steelers and Packers square off in Super Bowl XLV Sunday, they’ll put to bed a hallmark year for the NFL, one in which the league took major action to repair its image in the wake of growing awareness of head injuries and their impact.
Hey Harvard, we’re reading your books! Yes, you might have heard that those naughty librarians up in Cambridge are finally sharing their massive library holdings with the rest of the Ancient Eight after a decade of greedy book-hoarding.
The Quakers drowned local foe West Chester Friday, as the men and women won 170-105 and 164-111, respectively.
If there was ever a day for Penn basketball recruit Xavier Harris to take a trip to Penn, Saturday was it.
With Ivy play beginning for Penn Friday night, this is our last chance to romp through the Ancient Eight without implications, without being shot down by those roaring Lions of Columbia. So here we go:
Sportswriters, even more so than athletes, love to get caught up in a good storyline.
Travelling to Harvard for their final dual meets of the year, the men’s and women’s swimming team both lost to the Crimson Sunday.
In its only appearance at Hutchinson Gymnasium this season, the men’s fencing squad had no trouble handling the six visitors at the Philadelphia Invitational on Saturday, going 6-0.
The congratulations rolled in for the women’s basketball team.
Freshman phenom Connie Hsu made her spring debut for the women’s tennis team Wednesday, picking up where she left off after a stellar fall season.
If you’re a fan of the Eagles (the band, not the disappointment of a football team), you know exactly the motto that traveling partners Penn and Princeton are living by this January: take it easy. So while the Quakers are playing weekly Big 5 opponents to the wire and Princeton is busy eating Cheetos (or studying for finals — who schedules exams a month after classes end, anyway?) on its collective couch during an 18-day layoff, it’s up to the other six Ivy teams to entertain.
Midway through the winter sports season, Director of Penn Athletics Steve Bilsky sat down with the Sports Editors of The Daily Pennsylvanian to talk about a successful fall for the Quakers and what’s on tap for 2011.
It is with great pleasure that we re-introduce a long-lost feature of DP Sports, the Ivy Roundup. In principle, it’s the same as the recent Ivy Notebook feature, with one small difference: Less Plotnick! There’s something in the water. Our journey through the Ancient Eight begins in Princeton, N.J., where the Tigers (11-4) extended a home winning-streak to eight games with a 68-57 victory over Marist. (That’s right, the same Marist that gave Penn a big “womp womp” back in December).
As the pregame clock winds down in Lexington, Ky., the lights go dark and the booming P.A. announcer takes over from the hip hop blasting earlier. Welcome to Rupp Arena, “home of the greatest tradition in college basketball,” he says.
When Noblesville, Ind., native Jack Eggleston left for the big city and Big 5 basketball, one of his first opponents in Philadelphia was Jerrell Williams. The summer before both began college — Eggleston at Penn and Williams at La Salle — they worked out together under late local hoops trainer John Hartnett.
LEXINGTON Ky. — Tyler Bernardini gave Quakers fans the most exciting 16 minutes of the men’s basketball season thus far.