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Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026
The Daily Pennsylvanian
Once again, Quakers playing the big guns

It's not often that any Penn team gets a chance to face the No. 1-ranked team in the nation, let alone three top-20 teams in as many days. But that is exactly what the men's tennis team has on its plate this weekend as it heads into the USTA/ITA National Indoor Championships, to be held in Chicago.


The disappointment of not making the bus for the championships did not get members of the men's and women's swimming teams down. Instead of traveling to Princeton for the Ivy League championships or EISL championships, those swimmers will compete in the ECAC Championships in Massachusetts this weekend.

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If it was at all apprehensive about its upcoming weekend match against a nationally ranked team, the Penn women's tennis team failed to show it. "This is a team we always look forward to playing. They're tough," captain Julia Koulbitskaya said about No. 14 Virginia Commonwealth.

The women's squash team would like nothing more to than to get a second chance at Princeton. Just over two weeks ago, Penn saw its undefeated season end after a 7-2 romp by the Tigers. But in order to see an opportunity for revenge, the Quakers (8-1) will have to get through Williams (9-5), the first team they will face today during the Howe Cup in New Haven, Conn.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

The women's squash team would like nothing more to than to get a second chance at Princeton. Just over two weeks ago, Penn saw its undefeated season end after a 7-2 romp by the Tigers. But in order to see an opportunity for revenge, the Quakers (8-1) will have to get through Williams (9-5), the first team they will face today during the Howe Cup in New Haven, Conn.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

The disappointment of not making the bus for the championships did not get members of the men's and women's swimming teams down. Instead of traveling to Princeton for the Ivy League championships or EISL championships, those swimmers will compete in the ECAC Championships in Massachusetts this weekend.



M. Hoops: After giving Penn the top spot, Big Red wants it too

With a thrilling win over Yale last weekend, Cornell actually bumped Penn into first place in the Ivy League, giving the Quakers control of their own destiny. On Saturday, the Big Red (13-9, 6-2 Ivy) will attempt to steal the conference's top spot and undo what it did for Penn (15-8, 6-1 Ivy) a week ago.


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M. Hoops stays on top

By Josh and Josh Wheeling · Feb. 16, 2007

Coming into the weekend, Penn, Cornell and Yale were within a half a game of each other in the Ivy title race, but the Quakers made sure that didn't last. Against a Big Red squad that was a whole lot tougher than most Penn fans would have thought, the Quakers eked out an 83-71 win that was closer than the score might indicate.


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To quote Frank Sinatra, the Quakers will "try to make a brand new start of it in old New York this weekend." One week after being shellacked by both Harvard and Dartmouth, the womnen's basketball team (8-12, 3-4 Ivy) will look to rebound and regain ground in the Ivy League.


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If the Penn wrestling team is going to make a move, it will have to be soon. A week after being soundly defeated by Cornell and then losing a disappointing match to Columbia, the Quakers will try to turn it around this weekend with three scheduled matches.



No third place (yet), but don't blame Coenen

PRINCETON, N.J., Feb. 15 - It might only be Day One of the 2007 Ivy League Women's Swimming Championship, but Penn has already made history. "We had a finalist in every event, and that's the first time that's happened in school history," coach Mike Schnur said.


Naeve's philosophy: Do one thing, do it well

Cornell center Andrew Naeve knows his role. Bully your way to the hoop and score. Get back on defense. Repeat. It shows up on his stat sheet: In 651 minutes this season, he has taken only one three-point shot. According to Naeve, "I don't even remember taking that three.


4th place isn't good enough anymore

Since its season began, the team has focused on one meet. And the time has come for the Penn women's swim team. From today until Saturday, the Ivy League Championship Meet will be held at Princeton's Denunzio Pool. Unlike most Ancient Eight sports, the swimming champion is not determined by the regular season.



M. Hoops Notebook: Outburst on defense comes at the right time

Penn's three-game winning streak has by no means been pretty. The Quakers have not run anyone off the Palestra floor, and they have played sloppily for stretches on both ends of the floor. But three wins are three wins, and they have vaulted Penn back into sole possession of first place in the Ivy League at 6-1.


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All throughout the Big 5 season, Penn has played a smooth, up-tempo, non-traditional game. Last night, the Quakers finally learned how to play ugly. Against a Princeton offense that is the slowest in Division I (53.1 possessions per game), Penn accepted that it couldn't run up and down the court.


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Last night Penn and Princeton played their 215th basketball game against each other. The game on the court may have diminished in quality from previous years, but the state of the programs is still strong. And what makes Penn and Princeton special is not just their seemingly endless string of Ivy League Championships or the crowds that come to watch them play, it is the tradition of the programs.


Not Even Close

Not Even Close

By Zachary Levine · Feb. 14, 2007

The Quakers had heard it all. Throw out the records. A trap game against a 1-5 team. A speed bump on the road to an Ivy League title. No bump here. Just full speed ahead. Penn got over a brief lapse in the second half with a 12-0 run to put Princeton away in a 48-35 win at the Palestra.


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One-horse race. That's that would come to mind if someone was asked to describe the EIWA tournament over the past five years. The word "parity" would not have been in EIWA coaches' vocabularies, but it is slowly finding its way back to their tongues this year.