Aggressive ‘D’ helps and hinders Henry Brooks on the court
To a fan, a statistician or even a sportswriter, sophomore Henry Brooks looks like a train with broken brakes, moving too fast and too aggressively for his own good.
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To a fan, a statistician or even a sportswriter, sophomore Henry Brooks looks like a train with broken brakes, moving too fast and too aggressively for his own good.
PRINCETON — The Quakers might have better players than the Tigers. In some alternate universe, they might even be the better team.
All year, the fans and critics of Penn basketball have blamed many of the team’s losses on the turnovers and lack of continuity on the offensive floor.
NEWARK, Del. – Like any good drama story, Penn men’s hoops leaves us with more questions than they do answers after falling to Delaware for the second time this season, 83-60.
As finals loom over campus this week, the Quakers have a midterm scheduled for Saturday at the Palestra.
For coach Jerome Allen, Happy Valley could just as well be Death Valley, or the Grand Canyon.
It’s always tough to predict the success of college basketball teams year in and year out because of one unknown: freshmen.
If Penn’s last two games were examples of a young team making youthful mistakes, then Saturday’s Battle for 33rd Street against Drexel was what the Quakers look like when living up to their potential.
The word “dynasty” seems to get thrown around far too often in sports.
If the Quakers auditioned for America’s Got Talent, they’d be kicked off in a heartbeat.
The Quakers have faced their fair share of challenges this season, from turnovers and defensive collapses to hurricanes and nor’easters.
It’s Election Day, and while the country’s path for the next four years will be decided today in the polling booth, the Ivy League title will be decided Saturday at Franklin Field.
PRINCETON, N.J. — Following another fourth quarter comeback for the cardiac Quakers, the road to the Ivy League title will go through Franklin Field next weekend after Penn beat Princeton, 28-21, on Saturday afternoon at Princeton Stadium.
Over the course of the last two seasons, in the past 23 games, Penn men’s soccer hasn’t been able to keep a team off the scoreboard.
Fitting with the season, the Quakers traveled to Yale on Saturday, only to find themselves immersed in a horror story. For what it lacked in blood and gore, this tale made up for in psychological torture.
Mariano Gonzalez-Guerineau knows the drill.
Give the Quakers a deficit, and then they’ll get going.
Just take a glance at the stat sheet, and it’s easy to deduce that the Penn soccer team’s defense hasn’t been up to par this season.
Last week, captain Brandon Copeland called a meeting with his defensive line, which had failed to record a sack through the first two games of the season.