Penn football Ivy League title look back: 1988
Penn football regained the Ivy League title in 1988, its fifth in the previous six years and first after missing out in the 1987 season.
Penn football regained the Ivy League title in 1988, its fifth in the previous six years and first after missing out in the 1987 season.
Training together is impossible with the team divided, but a few of Penn's men's cross country runners are traveling way outside the box and using this time to get a leg up on the competition.
The Daily Pennsylvanian asked Penn men's soccer's Joey Bhangdia 15 questions about his sport, his time at Penn, and his life overall. Here's what the senior midfielder had to say.
For the first time since 1904, the Quakers accomplished a perfect season, en route to their fifth straight Ivy League championship.
Training together is impossible with the team divided, but a few of Penn's men's cross country runners are traveling way outside the box and using this time to get a leg up on the competition.
The Daily Pennsylvanian asked Penn men's soccer's Joey Bhangdia 15 questions about his sport, his time at Penn, and his life overall. Here's what the senior midfielder had to say.
Men's soccer coach Brian Gill is providing leadership to his team during this trying time, as he does all he can to unify a team spread out across the country.
In coach Jerry Berndt fifth year, the Quakers finished the 1985 season with a 7-2-1 record — including a 6-1 Ivy League slate — repeating as back-to-back outright championships.
Right in the middle of Penn football's hot streak was the 1984 season, where the Quakers went 8-1 overall and 7-0 in Ivy League play.
So close, yet so far. For the second straight season, Penn football was on top of the Ivy League, once again sharing the title with Harvard.
Boasting a strong senior class headlined by center Matt Hermann, wideout Billy Murphy, and quarterback Eddie Jenkins, the Red and Blue finished third in last season's CSFL standings.
Under coach Bob Seddon, the star-studded roster boasted talent from the most experienced veterans to the greenest rookies.
Athletes are celebrities. Millions of fans, many of them children, look up to their favorite sports stars as role models for how they should act.
Williams outlined a number of concrete actions for Penn Athletics to undertake in an effort become an “anti-racist organization."
According to Penn Athletics’ statement from Athletics Director M. Grace Calhoun, approximately 30 Black athletes from Penn met with the athletics administration to construct a concrete plan to move forward.
With an extra year of eligibility, former Penn pole vaulter Sean Clarke is looking to take flight with a new team.
For the first time in Penn history, the process of getting to know their new coaches and teammates would have to be done completely off the field, if it could be done at all.
O’Neill was a multi-sport athlete in high school, but by his sophomore season, he knew he had found a passion in football.
Originally from East Syracuse, N.Y., senior forward Jake Kohlbrenner burst onto the scene for Penn men's soccer in 2017 and 2018, his first two seasons with the team.
Johnson has spent over 30 years on the Penn Relays staff and will continue to monitor the event next year, but in a reduced capacity from his current job.