Penn track flirts with several individual titles at Penn Relays
At last year’s Penn Relays, Penn track and field picked up three individual victories, the first time since 1922 that the program had done so.
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At last year’s Penn Relays, Penn track and field picked up three individual victories, the first time since 1922 that the program had done so.
Track and field is all about small moments and enormous stakes.
With all due respect to the first two days of Penn Relays competition, Saturday was the day that the track and field world had been waiting for.
Much like time itself, the Penn Relays have essentially become an inevitability over the past 120 years at Franklin Field. However, as Penn track and field understands on a deep level, the results that the Relays yield are all but inevitable.
The Penn Relays have a way of sneaking up on the Penn community as a whole, and this year was no different. Tucked between Spring Fling and final exams, it’s understandable; this is an especially busy time of year for students on campus.
The Penn Relays began in 1895 and have grown to become the largest annual track meet in the world. Steeped in prestige and tradition, the Relays regularly attract over 100,000 spectators throughout the multi-day event.
The first team captain in the Ray Priore era of Penn football may not have the speed or stature of a typical Division I athlete, but that doesn’t matter. He’s got enough heart and toughness for someone 10 times his size.
On Tuesday, Penn baseball took a seven-game winning streak to Plymouth Meeting, Pa., to take on Villanova in the Liberty Bell Classic. But for the first time in the past eight games, the bell did not toll for a Penn victory.
Penn track and field may be known for traveling distances quickly on the track, but this weekend the program will take its traveling abilities to the extreme.
How can Penn women’s lacrosse continue to push the envelope and improve as a program when the eight-time reigning Ivy League champions have seen such exorbitant success in the last decade?
In track and field, the starter’s gun usually goes off without a hitch. But sometimes it jams, temporarily postponing action.
The first week since spring break has seen the sun break through its winter haze, lighting up Penn’s campus with a newfound radiance.
When spring break rolls around, some college students go on extravagant excursions to exotic destinations seeking beautiful views, warm weather and adventure. Others catch the first ride home and decompress with their families and hometown friends for the remainder of the break.
NORFOLK, VA. – Here is a list of things I learned in my trip to Norfolk, Va.:
BETHLEHEM, PA. – It’s probably hyperbolic to say that Penn wrestling went into EIWAs – its conference championship meet – this weekend with a supercilious attitude, but it’s likely that the Red and Blue left the meet feeling a bit humbled.
When Penn basketball took the floor of the Palestra on Saturday night, there were multiple elephants in the room.
NEW YORK CITY – One of my favorite things to do when I’m in New York City is observe people who clearly haven’t been there in a while.
BETHLEHEM, PA. - Penn wrestling went into the first day of EIWAs at Lehigh with some of the highest expectations in the program’s recent history, taking six All-Ivy performers into the conference championship meet.
Penn women’s lacrosse has been perched atop the Ivy League throne for so long that it’s the only view any player on the current roster has known in her collegiate career.
Oftentimes in sports, the stats accurately show everything one would need to know about a contest. That was not the case for Penn men’s swimming over the weekend.