Penn's strong pitching can't get past Lehigh
In a pitcher’s duel, one inning can make the difference between winning and losing. And in two pitcher’s duels, two innings can change the face of a doubleheader.
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In a pitcher’s duel, one inning can make the difference between winning and losing. And in two pitcher’s duels, two innings can change the face of a doubleheader.
The average Penn men’s pole vaulter hails from Los Angeles, stands six feet and one inch tall and attended the same high school as Miles Cartwright. His high school team won three Division II California state championships, and he has his eyes set on breaking the 16-foot mark this outdoor season. As it turns out, the average Penn men’s pole vaulter is freshman Everett Hateley.
In a weekend filled with both triumphs and disappointments, senior Bryan Ortenzio punctuated Penn’s trip to the Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association Championships by capturing the conference title at 133 pounds.
Playing a highly competitive schedule featuring virtually all of the nation’s best squads, the Penn women’s squash team has lost to just three teams this season—and they will likely need to beat all three of them this weekend in order to bring home a national title.
The Penn men’s squash team narrowly missed qualifying for the A Division national championships, finishing the year ranked ninth in the nation, just outside of the top eight contenders that advance to the Potter Cup.
Over the course of their squash careers at Penn, senior Thomas Mattsson and junior Nabilla Ariffin have earned the right to play the vast majority of their matches as the No. 1 player of the men’s and women’s teams, respectively..
Identical twins Leslie and Madeleine Gill are usually indistinguishable. But when they step on the squash court this weekend, it will be clear where their allegiances lie.
A year ago, a No. 3 Trinity women’s squash team defeated the No. 5 Penn team, 6-3, on the Quakers’ own Ringe Courts.
Having toppled former No. 3 Princeton to open the season, the Penn women’s squash team looked to begin the spring semester by dethroning No. 1 Harvard.
After an eight-year hiatus, a familiar ally has returned to Penn wrestling.
While Penn men’s basketball has gotten attention for its rigorous nonconference schedule, it has a long way to go before it can compete with the strength of the schedule facing the women’s squash program this season.
You would think a state championship would be enough to boost anyone’s confidence. But then again, you probably aren’t from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. You may not even realize it exists.
While the emotions of senior night hung in the brisk air at Rhodes Field, the Penn women’s soccer team had business to attend to: a rival to beat, a home winning streak to extend and a championship to defend.
A midweek, nonconference road game is hardly an ideal scenario for any team, much less a team competing to defend its Ivy League title. But for Penn women’s soccer, that is no excuse for sub-par effort.
Penn women’s soccer may have lost its dynamic duo. But in its wake, a fab five has emerged.
Penn women’s soccer is arguably off to its best start in program history, boasting the best overall winning percentage in the Ivy League and two separate win streaks of at least five games. But the Quakers can’t rest on their laurels quite yet — they’re still a game out of first place.
For the Penn women’s soccer team, there’s no place like home.