Senior Farewell by John Phillips | How I learned to stop worrying and love the DP
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Enjoy it.
Amidst the buzz of students coming and going from class, of worries about grades and jobs, of the hectic life of Penn students, on this gorgeous day in late April, a group of four decided to dust off their old mitts.
Entering into a weekend series with Princeton, Penn softball was in a tight race for the South Division crown.
I t’s been well documented.
ITHACA - It only took a year.
NEW YORK - “this sh*t tough man.”
A llen Iverson and Jerome Allen shared an NBA court once, on Jan. 19, 1997.
Matt Howard sprinted down the court, poised to finish off a fast break that would push Penn closer to an upset of Columbia and cap off the best weekend of the rookie’s young collegiate career.
This is the time of year when you suspend all the cynicism.
Penn beats Columbia for an Ivy sweep, Harvard loses to Yale and all of a sudden, the Quakers have a pulse in the Ivy League. Here’s the Good, the Bad and the Ugly from the Quakers’ win over the Lions.
Jerome Allen told me once that if he weren’t a basketball coach, he’d be a teacher.
Coach Jerome Allen righted the ship against Princeton earlier this month, giving his team a chance to rejoin the conversation in the Ivy League race.
Coming off of one of the biggest games in his tenure as Penn’s head coach, Jerome Allen spoke on the Ivy League mid-season teleconference about the struggles his team has had with turnovers and the balance his team has.
Students will wake up this Saturday morning, in spite of whatever events of the night before that they may or may not remember, drape themselves in their lucky shirts and begin their journey.
Coach Jerome Allen loves verbally tipping his hat off to opposing teams or players. But tonight, in one of his biggest wins as Penn’s head coach, I take my hat off to him.
I’ve seen more Penn sports than I’d like to admit in the last year (including, miraculously, covering five of Penn basketball’s nine victories since January), so I’d like to think that my look into the next semester’s worth of Penn sports will yield some strong predictions.
There are natural comparisons in life.
If there were an odds-on favorite to put his team on his back on Tuesday night between Penn and Niagara, it would have been Niagara senior Antoine Mason.
On a night when sophomore goalie Max Polkinhorne electrified the large crowd at Rhodes Field, it was Providence’s keeper, Keasel Broome, who ended the night dancing before Penn’s student section.
It’s unclear when Penn men’s soccer took the leap.