Penn football preps for clash with Harvard with title on line
Either Penn or Harvard has had at least a share of the Ivy League football championship for the last eight seasons.
Either Penn or Harvard has had at least a share of the Ivy League football championship for the last eight seasons.
Winning percentage isn’t the only thing being raised in Ray Priore’s first year at the helm of Penn football.
It was no tricks, all treats for Penn football on Halloween against Brown.
When Penn football and Princeton face off each season, the game is always meaningful.
Winning percentage isn’t the only thing being raised in Ray Priore’s first year at the helm of Penn football.
It was no tricks, all treats for Penn football on Halloween against Brown.
This is the Penn football we're accustomed to seeing.
For Watson, things are looking pretty elementary. Justin Watson, that is. Through the first six games of Penn football’s season, the sophomore wide receiver is putting together one of the best pass-catching seasons in recent memory.
Move over Pope Francis — another cavalcade of stars is preparing to take over Philadelphia.
Penn football found itself in an unfamiliar spot on Friday night. And no, that spot isn’t only the winner’s column.
After Penn football’s week two victory against fourth-ranked Villanova, my colleague Colin Henderson made a bold statement: The Quakers' win was no fluke. Five games into the season, with the Red and Blue sitting at 2-3 heading into Friday’s game against Yale, I still didn’t know what to make of that statement.
Maybe Penn football should spot its opponents early points in every game.
For Penn football, the first five games of the season have exposed stars on both sides of the line of scrimmage.
If Penn football hosts a game under the lights and nobody is there to see it, does it really happen?
Two Penn freshman – football’s Christian Pearson and women’s soccer’s Sasha Stevens – were named the Ivy League’s Rookie of the Week in their respective sports Monday.
In addition to the branding overhaul of the University, Grace Calhoun is quietly upgrading – no, revolutionizing – what it means to practice for Penn Athletics.
On to the next. Now that the dust has cleared, there’s not much more to say about Penn football’s win on Saturday.
Still Columbia. As the 2015 season has developed and Columbia football has attempted to regain any semblance of dignity after two consecutive winless seasons, I've frequently used the above phrase to describe the product the Lions have put on the field in five games. Although not inherently connected to what we've seen from Columbia in years past, there are certain aspects of the Light Blue's play that reminds us that this team went 0-for-its last 24 until its win over Wagner on Oct.
Penn football scored early and often in its reunion with former head coach Al Bagnoli, drubbing Columbia 42-7. The win is the Quaker’s nineteenth consecutive victory over the Lions.
In the weeks leading up to Penn football’s upcoming matchup against Columbia, the game has been framed in countless ways. One of the first winnable games of the season for the Quakers.