Penn women's lacrosse preps for Ivy League Tournament
Move along, regular season. It’s playoffs time.
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Move along, regular season. It’s playoffs time.
After Wednesday night’s loss to Princeton, Penn women’s lacrosse knew it had no choice but to win on Senior Day against a surprisingly good Brown team.
Once again, the Quakers couldn’t tame the Wildcats.
A ll year long, we listened to the theme of how youth, inexperience and a slew of injuries resulted in a roller coaster 2013-14 season for Penn wrestling.
Last year, in the first ever meeting between Penn women’s lacrosse and Vanderbilt, the Quakers managed to eke out a one-point victory, 14-13, after the Commodores rallied back from an 11-6 deficit midway through the second half.
In every sport, come the postseason, there’s an old cliche that says “experience matters.”
Ask any wrestler, and he’ll tell you nothing is more important than being the champion.
The big day has finally arrived for Penn wrestling.
With the most important challenge of the year looming on the horizon, sometimes all a team needs is a little morale boost.
Since the introduction of the Ivy League Tournament in 2010, only one team can be at the top of Ancient Eight women’s lacrosse each year.
After two straight Ivy losses, the Penn men’s lacrosse team finally rekindled the fire that led to the surprising start to its season.
Turnover is an inherent part of sports, and that fact holds true at any level — but even more so in college.
In the midst of the disappointment after this year’s NCAA Championships, the Penn wrestling team is looking forward to better horizons.
After posting their first winning regular season since the 2004-05 season, the Quakers are not quite done yet.
As excruciating as it might be, some things are simply worth waiting for.
What a strange night for Penn basketball.
One year after Zack Rosen and company rallied Penn men’s basketball during the second half of the Ivy season, the now Rosen-less Quakers are at a crossroads.
On Monday, Maria Reyes Garcia-Pellon, charged with the stabbing of her husband, former Penn basketball center Matt White, was declared competent to stand trial and waived her preliminary hearing.
NEW YORK — For the fourth Ivy weekend in a row, the Penn men’s basketball team once again followed a winning effort with inconsistency.
On Tuesday, the International Olympic Committee decided to drop wrestling from the Olympic program starting with the 2020 Summer Games. The Daily Pennsylvanian spoke with Penn wrestling coach Rob Eiter — who wrestled for the U.S. at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics in the 105-pound weightclass — to gain some insight on the IOC’s decision.