Penn soccer's Duke of the pitch
It was love at first sight for Duke LaCroix.
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It was love at first sight for Duke LaCroix.
One hundred wins. Two Ivy League titles. Two NCAA tournament wins.
Hours after the men’s soccer team arrived in San Diego this weekend, power was lost throughout the region.
Following an hour and a half of practice on a scorching hot August morning, men’s soccer coach Rudy Fuller blew his whistle, and his team began to run.
Following last weekend’s games against Princeton, Penn senior Dan Williams stood four hits away from breaking the program’s all-time hits record.
It’s the top of the second, with a man on second and no outs, and Penn freshman Rick Brebner is up to bat.
It almost sounds like a Chuck Norris joke: Will Davis can run through walls.
Seven innings pitched. Ten strikeouts. Zero earned runs.
Even at the age of five, Caroline Bunting constantly carried a lacrosse stick in her hand.
Ever since she picked up a squash racket at the age of ten, Penn sophomore Nabilla Ariffin has done whatever it takes to win, even if it meant cutting a few corners.
The women’s squash team returned to practice Monday with a sobering taste of reality: the team portion of the season is over.
On a dreary Saturday afternoon two weeks ago, Penn women’s squash hosted top-ranked Harvard.
The statistics speak for themselves: 16 matches, 16 wins, one Women’s College Squash Association Individual Championship.
Yarden Odinak’s teammates claim she’s indestructible.
After Williams junior Courtney Bogel dropped a point to Penn sophomore Rachael Goh during Sunday’s squash match, Bogel had some choice words for the official, arguing that there had been interference.
Before the start of Friday night’s NCAA first-round match against Ohio, the public-address announcer at Cameron Indoor Stadium forgot to introduce Penn junior Logan Johnson.
Heading into the fifth-set tiebreaker Sunday against Yale, a berth to the NCAA tournament looked like it might slip out of the Penn volleyball team’s grasp.
As Madison Wojciechowski prepared to serve for the Ivy title, the senior tried to stay calm.
Some holes are too deep for even the defending Ivy champions to dig their way out of.
Early into Wednesday’s game, a frustrated Wagner fan could be heard yelling over the persistent rubble emanating from the stands.