Basketball Supplement | Penn basketball coach Steve Donahue's career comes full circle
A lot has changed since Steve Donahue last coached for Penn basketball.
A lot has changed since Steve Donahue last coached for Penn basketball.
It’s no secret: there are some fresh faces at the Palestra.
From the Red and Blue to the Red, White and Blue, Gilly Lane had a busy summer. The former assistant coach of Penn Squash begins a new chapter as Associate Head Coach following his promotion in July.
Coach Steve Donahue is not the only new fixture at the Palestra these days for Penn men’s basketball. Since the dawn of the official 2015-16 season, the Quakers have welcomed another newcomer into their practices, this one a little more technologically advanced than the new head coach.
It’s no secret: there are some fresh faces at the Palestra.
From the Red and Blue to the Red, White and Blue, Gilly Lane had a busy summer. The former assistant coach of Penn Squash begins a new chapter as Associate Head Coach following his promotion in July.
Do you dream of representing your nation at the World Cup?
Every athlete knows there’s no “I” in team.
Penn fencing is opening its season, lunging.
Tony Hicks was objectively the most talented player on Penn basketball’s roster.
Same, same but different. The typical American collegiate experience is four years. While some deviate from that path and finish early or late, a majority of students at Penn find themselves on a similar track.
It was like déjà vu all over again. In a season where putting goals in the net has been a struggle for Penn men's soccer, Saturday night's final home game for the Red and Blue felt all too familiar, as they fell to Princeton, 2-0.
In front of a homecoming crowd, Penn football pulled a miraculous comeback out of their hats to defeat Princeton 26-23 in overtime.
Bill Wagner, who has headed Penn’s sprint football program for the past forty-five years, has coached thousands of players during his time in Franklin Field.
When Penn football and Princeton face off each season, the game is always meaningful.
It's been a rough season for the Quakers, but they'll certainly be entering their final home game of the year on a high note.
Their biggest meet may still be months away, but the Quakers will finally have a chance to get their feet wet this weekend. The Penn swimming season will get underway when the women head to New York to face Columbia on Friday before heading to Baltimore, where they will be joined by the men's team, as both squads face off against UMBC on Saturday. Both teams are coming off fourth-place finishes in last year's Ivy championships.
For many, transitioning to college is like a cannonball dive. You plunge into the cold waters and just hope that the undercurrent doesn’t pull you down.
Not many things in this world get better with age, but don’t tell that to the pair of Penn men's swimming senior captains. Over the last three seasons, Eric Schultz and Chris Swanson have won countless races and championships, including a combined eight individual Ivy titles.
Country roads are taking the Quakers away from home down to West Virginia.