Penn basketball sets eyes on Princeton
And so it begins.
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And so it begins.
Unfortunately for Penn women’s hoops, history repeated itself Sunday afternoon at the Palestra.
Yesterday we reported that a highly reputable source told the Daily Pennsylvanian that Miles Cartwright, Henry Brooks, Tony Hicks, Darien Nelson-Henry and Steve Rennard were all suspended for Penn basketball’s game at Delaware on Dec. 21 after failing random drug tests. Now the Daily Pennsylvanian is hearing from various sources that alcohol may have played a role in the suspensions. Our original sources, though, maintain that positive drug tests triggered the suspensions.
A highly reputable source has told the Daily Pennsylvanian that Miles Cartwright, Henry Brooks, Tony Hicks, Darien Nelson-Henry and Steve Rennard were all suspended for Penn basketball’s game at Delaware on Dec. 21 after failing random drug tests. The official word after the game was that these five players were suspended for violating team rules, which Penn coach Jerome Allen did not elaborate on in his postgame press conference.
You only need a few quick glances at the Quakers’ statistics to confirm that Penn’s turnover situation is indeed as ugly as it looks.
This was supposed to be the year that Penn men’s basketball stopped being a one-man show.
There are many reasons why one should expect Penn to beat Cornell on Saturday to win the Ivy Championship outright — the Quakers have the upper hand in momentum, experience and physicality over the Big Red.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — After an 84-69 loss to Delaware Monday night that was more crushing than its score indicated, the Penn men’s basketball team could not right the ship against Fairfield in the second round of the NIT Season Tip-Off Tournament Tuesday afternoon.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — It’s hard to land a punch when every swing is aimless.
Big names go a long way in college basketball.
Perhaps no single unit on the Penn football team has been more responsible for bringing the Quakers back from the dead after a crushing loss at Yale earlier this season than the secondary.
Be careful where you toss your toast the next time you watch Penn football at Franklin Field.
Few acts in the recent history of Penn Athletics have been tougher to follow than the women’s soccer team’s defensive performance in 2011.
Don’t blame Billy Ragone.
During the preseason, coach Al Bagnoli, offensive coordinator Jon McLaughlin and senior quarterback Billy Ragone all promised that the Quakers would pass the ball more often this season.
Before Alan Schwarz exposed the severity of concussions among football players of all ages as a Pulitzer Prize-nominated reporter for the New York Times or hosted ESPN’s Baseball Today, he helped save the toast toss at Penn.
Coach Darren Ambrose couldn’t be happier that history is repeating itself for the Penn women’s soccer team.
PMS isn’t a curse. It’s an advantage.
The best thing Alex Dayneka and Claire Walker of the Penn women’s soccer team did this summer was get away.
On Monday, new Penn men’s golf coach Bob Heintz got the response he was looking for.