Identity crisis
Forward Steve Danley's broken nose may have only been the second-most troublesome facial adjustment Penn witnessed this weekend.
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Forward Steve Danley's broken nose may have only been the second-most troublesome facial adjustment Penn witnessed this weekend.
To the casual tennis fan, the doubles game probably doesn't seem too different from the singles game.
Roman Shor might be Penn's best athlete not on a varsity squad.
The men's squash team has not won a match against Western Ontario since junior captain Gilly Lane got to Penn, but don't blame him for this streak of futility.
Alexis Plukas is learning what college tennis is all about.
In his final match at the Ringe Squash Courts, Jacob Himmelrich was just being Jacob Himmelrich.
One burden that this year's Penn men's tennis team will not have to shoulder is the pressure to live up to the success of past seasons.
When the Penn squash team took on the top-ranked team in the nation, a handful of the fans cheering on the Quakers knew what the team was going through.
The No. 5 Penn women's squash team has been so dominant lately that any result other than a 9-0 victory is a bit surprising.
The freshmen on the women's squash team may not have a lot of collegiate squash under their belts, but don't try to tell them that they aren't experienced.
About 600 Penn students study abroad every year, but student-athletes are rarely able to take advantage of this opportunity.
Even though the Penn men's squash team has yet to travel to Cambridge to play No. 2 Harvard, the Quakers' hardest day in Massachusetts may be behind them.
In their last game before winter break, the men's squash team did not feel the need to go out with a bang against Franklin & Marshall. Coming away with a victory was enough.
Since the end of his freshman season in 2003-04, All-American squash player Gilly Lane has climbed the individual ranks from No. 18 to No. 7. More importantly, he has taken the Penn team with him.
After the Penn volleyball team's 3-1 loss to Princeton in the season finale, at least one thing is clear -- it was not due to lack of desire.
After ending last season ranked No. 5 in the country, the highest finish for the men's squash team in over 10 years, it would be easy for the Quakers to enter the season complacent, even cocky.