Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
The Daily Pennsylvanian
Not the senior night they had scripted

Senior night for the men's squash team will definitely be one they will never forget. But not for good reasons. The Quakers fell 9-0 to No. 2 Princeton last night, and only one match lasted longer than three games. They are now just 39-6 against the Tigers over the past five seasons.


The Class of 1923 Arena is aging along with Penn Hockey's most beloved fan. With 2,900 seats, Pennsylvania's largest collegiate hockey facility is far from crowded, averaging 20 spectators for Penn hockey games. But every time Penn takes the ice, standing by himself in front of Seat 23 is a capped man with glasses.

The Penn men's basketball team went 4-for-15 from three over the weekend. Instead of being disappointed with that first number, the squad is content with the second one. The nation's 334th-best three-point shooting team was attempting 17.3 per game coming into the weekend but managed to get different kinds of looks in wins over Harvard and Dartmouth.

The Latest
By Ashley Humienny · Feb. 7, 2008

The Penn women's tennis team can now leave the Levy Pavilion courts without having lost there. The Quakers won't return home until April 11, when it will be warm enough to play outdoors. And in their indoor finale, they slipped by an all-international Old Dominion 4-3 to remain undefeated in their spring season.

A year removed from a one-loss run to the Ivy crown, the Harvard women's basketball team came within seconds of suffering its second conference defeat in its first three games. The worst part? Penn - losers of 10 straight at the time - was the team that nearly knocked the Crimson (10-8, 3-1 Ivy) past last year's loss total, leading virtually wire-to-wire before junior Emily Tay's game-winning hoop with 14 seconds to play.

After last week's cakewalk, tonight's match could be a rude awakening for the men's squash team. Eight days ago, Penn routed Franklin and Marshall 9-0 in a match that senior captain Ryan Rayfield said "went pretty much as expected." Tonight promises to be different as the Quakers host the far more formidable Princeton Tigers, whom coach Craig Thorpe-Clark has never beaten in his nine years at Penn.


Orange and Black have been a black and blue for Squash

After last week's cakewalk, tonight's match could be a rude awakening for the men's squash team. Eight days ago, Penn routed Franklin and Marshall 9-0 in a match that senior captain Ryan Rayfield said "went pretty much as expected." Tonight promises to be different as the Quakers host the far more formidable Princeton Tigers, whom coach Craig Thorpe-Clark has never beaten in his nine years at Penn.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

The Class of 1923 Arena is aging along with Penn Hockey's most beloved fan. With 2,900 seats, Pennsylvania's largest collegiate hockey facility is far from crowded, averaging 20 spectators for Penn hockey games. But every time Penn takes the ice, standing by himself in front of Seat 23 is a capped man with glasses.


M. Hoops Notebook | 0-for-5? Miller is happy with that

The Penn men's basketball team went 4-for-15 from three over the weekend. Instead of being disappointed with that first number, the squad is content with the second one. The nation's 334th-best three-point shooting team was attempting 17.3 per game coming into the weekend but managed to get different kinds of looks in wins over Harvard and Dartmouth.


Four continents descending on Lott Courts

The Lady Monarchs technically hail from Norfolk, Va., where their school is based. But when the Old Dominion tennis team heads to the Lott Courts today, the match will have a far more international flavor. Old Dominion's roster more closely resembles a United Nations roll call than a list of varsity athletes.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

Men's soccer coach Rudy Fuller believes that in a tight season, experience is "what can put you over the edge." If he's right, then he has a lot to look forward to next year, when the team will feature 12 seniors. But on the flip side, it also means that 12 players will graduate in 2009.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

Saint Joseph's coach Phil Martelli said he was "shocked" that the better team, the New England Patriots, did not win the Super Bowl. He was less shocked that his Hawks beat Villanova easily last night, although the Wildcats' 14-game winning streak in the Big 5 had caused more fickle minds to wonder.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

It is the only true Ivy League duel of the year. The seven schools with fencing programs met in New Haven, Conn. on Sunday for Day 1 of the Ivy League Round Robin. The Quakers men and women entered with a combined 18-2 record, and they continued to bout well, defeating both Harvard and Yale.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

More than anything, this weekend's opening Ivy League games were a chance for the Quakers to rebound from a rough first half of the season. And rebound they did. In the two games this weekend, Penn beat Harvard and Dartmouth on the glass by a combined 88-63.


Wildcats no longer the class of Philly

The annual Saint Joseph's-Villanova matchup is always the most emotional Big 5 game, and for the past two years it provided the most convincing argument that the Wildcats were the city's best team. The Holy War was no less consequential this year, and the result was a clear reflection of the Big 5's new balance of power.


On the Scene | Wingin' it at the Wachovia Center

One is a licensed surgeon wearing scrubs and a black wig. One is 6-foot-5, 320 pounds and has calves the size of tree trunks. One was described as the "biggest, fattest, nastiest pig" that Philadelphia sports radio personality Al Morganti has ever seen.


6-3 Egee comes up big with blocks

It was a nightmarish few minutes for Penn, but the ending was as good as anyone could have dreamed. The Quakers had just seen a 16-point advantage vanish in only 12 minutes. Down by two with 6.5 seconds on the clock, Dartmouth had one last opportunity to complete a miracle comeback.



After perfection on Saturday, W. Squash eyes perfect season

After a gutsy come-from-behind win against Princeton last Wednesday, the women's squash team showed no sign of a letdown in a doubleheader against a pair of upstart squash programs on Saturday. In its first year as a varsity program, George Washington was doomed from the start.


Bruised Quakers split weekend

Injuries and illness could not stop the men's and women's tennis teams from earning victories this weekend. But they eventually took their toll on the men, who after winning against Georgetown on Saturday fell in a contested battle with Old Dominion, 4-3, one day later.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

It ended up as a typical weekend of Ivy League basketball, with everything that entails. Sparse crowds, bad defense, bad offense, terrible officiating and Penn and Princeton winning. How refreshing. With all the forces rippling through the conference - the rise of peers like the Patriot League; coaching transitions at Harvard, Princeton, Brown and Penn; fear of a league stratified by financial aid - it was not unreasonable to think that this season might mark a turning point in a new era, or at least a new balance of power.


Friday opener yields testy win

If Friday's Ivy League tipoff against Harvard was any indication, this season is going to be a fight. The Crimson scratched and clawed - and even wrestled - for 40 minutes, but it wasn't enough to give Penn its first home Ivy loss in four years. The Red and Blue used a 20-point effort from Tyler Bernardini and a 15-point, nine-rebound, four-assist performance from Brian Grandieri to hold off Harvard, 73-69.


Three opponents, three pins for Penn

Two rounds into its match against No. 21 Maryland on Saturday at the Palestra, the wrestling team found itself down 9-0. It looked like the rout was on. But the Quakers battled back, tying the game at 16 going into the final match. And in that match, it was all Quakers, as sophomore 125-pounder Rollie Peterkin dominated his opponent 6-0, leading the Quakers to a 19-16 upset win.