Penn baseball dominates Lehigh for seventh consecutive win on Wednesday afternoon
With its 13-2 win against Lehigh on Wednesday afternoon, Penn baseball secured its seventh consecutive victory.
With its 13-2 win against Lehigh on Wednesday afternoon, Penn baseball secured its seventh consecutive victory.
Professional athletes get paid for their talents. So why can't college athletes also get compensated?
After their 65-54 loss to Princeton in the Ivy League Tournament final, the Quakers will host American in the first round of the WNIT.
The former roommates turned housemates are entering their second baseball season as Quakers with a friendship that rivals few others.
Professional athletes get paid for their talents. So why can't college athletes also get compensated?
After their 65-54 loss to Princeton in the Ivy League Tournament final, the Quakers will host American in the first round of the WNIT.
For the Quakers on the diamond, keeping their hot streaks alive includes being a bit superstitious and having fascinating game-day routines.
On Saturday, the women defeated Temple with a clean sweep. But things were not as easy as the scoreboard suggested.
Junior attackman Adam Goldner, who had already notched 16 goals on the year, went off for five more in a 19-10 drubbing of Princeton.
Penn baseball played in two doubleheaders over the span of two days and was able to walk away with four wins against Fairleigh Dickinson. The Quakers were victorious by scores of 8-4, 18-5, 8-5, and 16-2, extending their winning streak to six games.
Optimism for next season won’t make the Red and Blue feel any better. The Quakers fell tantalizingly, agonizingly short. That hurts.
Penn women’s basketball lost to Princeton, 65-54, in the Ivy League Tournament title game, a game which was much closer than the score indicates.
After dispatching No. 3 Harvard with ease Saturday night, No. 2 Penn women's basketball takes on No. 1 Princeton for the Ivy League Tournament championship.
Penn handled Harvard the same way Sunday’s foe, Princeton, handled a much worse Cornell team. Unfortunately, Saturday's games don't matter on Sunday.
The Quakers used a strong second-half showing to see off Princeton by a score of 19-10 to win their first Ivy League game of the season.
The Red and Blue cruised past No. 3 Harvard, 91-62, in the second semifinal on the women’s side. They used a 15-0 run, spanning the first and second quarters, to get a comfortable lead and they never looked back.
All that to say: Penn men’s basketball lost in the semifinals of the Ivy League Tournament. This season was still a success.
In a hotly contested matchup that came down to the final minute, Penn men’s basketball fell to Harvard, 66-58, in the semifinal of the Ivy League Tournament.
Penn men's and women's basketball will both play Harvard in their respective Ivy Madness semifinal games on Saturday.
Here are a few keys to success Penn men's basketball will need if it wants to pull off the win over top-seeded Harvard on Saturday.