3-on-3: Early season overview for Red and Blue
1. What individual athlete has been most impressive throughout the early part of the season?
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1. What individual athlete has been most impressive throughout the early part of the season?
Three games into Nicole Van Dyke’s tenure, Penn women’s soccer is firing on all cylinders. And to hear her players tell it, most of the credit should go to the first-year coach.
After a tough 2014 campaign, one that featured the loss of All-American defender Caroline Dwyer to injury before Ivy League play and ended with the departure of longtime coach Darren Ambrose, Penn women’s soccer looks to rebound this season.
As the offseason dwindled to a close this August, Penn men’s soccer coach Rudy Fuller noticed that, while his team was coming together nicely, something was missing. An X factor.
There’s fresh blood running through Penn women’s soccer’s veins this season as it gears up for the first game of new coach Nicole Van Dyke’s tenure.
In preparation for the upcoming season, Penn football held its annual Media Day on Tuesday. With a new head coach, as well as offensive and defensive coordinators, there was certainly a lot to be said. Here are the most interesting takeaways from the day.
Watching Sam Mattis throw a discus is perhaps the most exciting athletic event I have witnessed in my short time at Penn.
Penn freshman track and field star Mike Monroe loves to jump. And Mike Monroe can jump pretty damn high.
For the second straight year, Penn baseball controls its own destiny with a four-game series against the Columbia Lions on the horizon.
The Quakers may have won three out of four games against a color, but the Dragons were an entirely different beast.
While Penn track and field’s runners and jumpers practice on the track at famous Franklin Field, the Quakers' throwing team is almost always hidden, tucked out of view behind the Hollenback Center down River Fields Drive.
For once Jerome Allen wasn’t dressed in his trademark Italian threads. Instead, as he graced the sidelines for one final time as the head coach of Penn men’s basketball, he donned his old varsity sweater.
Are you ready to rumble?
It was a mismatch from the opening tip. And the Red and Blue frontcourt of freshman Michelle Nwokedi, sophomore Sydney Stipanovich and senior Kara Bonenberger reaped the benefits all night as they powered the Quakers to a 75-58 victory.
Heading into a four-game road streak against a slew of Ivy foes, Penn men’s basketball — owner of the longest active losing streak in the Ivy League — is hoping a change of scenery will improve its fortunes.
As a Florida native, Phil Parchment hasn’t had the pleasure of playing football on the frozen tundra of the northeast. But the 6-foot-4, 280-pound offensive lineman welcomes the new challenge with exuberance.
The Columbia Lions were the latest wrestling squad to feel the wrath of the Red and Blue — and with that, Penn is officially on a hot streak.
It’s never easy to step away and leave the past behind, especially if it was glorious while it lasted.
In the age of social media it’s hard to keep a secret. But when the athletes of Penn women’s soccer were called in for a meeting Thursday afternoon with coach Darren Ambrose, none of the players had heard the news.
In a year barren of home meets for Penn swimming, a weekend slate of away matches against locals La Salle and West Chester will nearly feel like home.