Lewisburg laugher
When Bucknell's A.J. Kizekai rushed into the end zone nine minutes into the first quarter on Saturday, the Bison looked ready and able to notch their first win over Penn since 1999.
When Bucknell's A.J. Kizekai rushed into the end zone nine minutes into the first quarter on Saturday, the Bison looked ready and able to notch their first win over Penn since 1999.
For the second match in a row, the women's soccer team gets a crack at a team that it feels it should have beaten last year. The Quakers (6-2-1, 1-1 Ivy) are looking to avenge last year's heartbreaking loss to Columbia. In their wet and windy 2005 matchup, Penn had eight shots on goal to double Columbia's tally, yet the Lions scored the 1-0 winner in the 89th minute of play.
Saturday, the Quakers travel to Lewisburg, Pa. Where, you ask? A quaint town lost somewhere in the mountains between Pittsburgh and Harrisburg. Along the banks of the mighty Susquehanna lies the home of the not-so-mighty Bucknell Bison. (Much unlike the Buffalo, native only to Asia and Africa).
This weekend, much is at stake for both the Penn men and women's golf teams, as both play for more than a 'W.' The men will be competing for a bid to the regional collegiate tournament while the women will take part in the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference Tournament.
For the second match in a row, the women's soccer team gets a crack at a team that it feels it should have beaten last year. The Quakers (6-2-1, 1-1 Ivy) are looking to avenge last year's heartbreaking loss to Columbia. In their wet and windy 2005 matchup, Penn had eight shots on goal to double Columbia's tally, yet the Lions scored the 1-0 winner in the 89th minute of play.
Saturday, the Quakers travel to Lewisburg, Pa. Where, you ask? A quaint town lost somewhere in the mountains between Pittsburgh and Harrisburg. Along the banks of the mighty Susquehanna lies the home of the not-so-mighty Bucknell Bison. (Much unlike the Buffalo, native only to Asia and Africa).
What field hockey coach Val Cloud doesn't know could definitely hurt her. In Penn's first home game since beating Harvard 2-0 back on Sept. 9, the Quakers will play host to a relative unknown in Lock Haven on Sunday at 1 p.m. In between those two games, the Quakers have taken some steps forward (with wins over Lafayette and Rutgers) and one big step back (a 2-1 defeat at Dartmouth that severely damaged the team's Ivy League title aspirations).
As far as Mike Klein is concerned, tomorrow's game against Columbia could be a soap opera in the making. When asked about the Quakers' intense rivalry with the Lions, the sophomore forward seemed concerned about the possibility that Columbia may have some insider information on the Red and Blue.
The duo of Yulia Rivelis and Julia Koulbitskaya are held to high expectations this weekend at the National Tennis Invitational in New York. Both players are first-team All-Ivy honorees who last year led the women's tennis team to a second-place finish in the ECAC Championships in addition to qualifying for the NCAA Tournament.
When the Quakers walk off the bus in Cambridge, Mass., they will be focused one thing: defense. The Penn volleyball team's first Ivy League victory hinges on its ability to defend a much-improved Harvard team. Much of this defensive responsibility rests with senior libero Liz Hurst, who has the team focused in the right direction.
With 36 seconds remaining in the first half of last weekend’s football game against Dartmouth, coach Al Bagnoli was presented with a decision. The Quakers had the ball at the Dartmouth 9-yard line on 4th-and-1. Should Penn go for the first down or try to kick a 26-yard field goal?Bagnoli decided to call in his kicker — and he shanked it.
Bucknell football coach Tim Landis is certainly happy to have Andrew Lair on his team, but the circumstances in which the sophomore got there were hardly cause for celebration. Just over a year ago, Lair was in the thick of training camp as a freshman quarterback at the United States Naval Academy.
It all begins with a popping or ripping sound, and then the knee suddenly buckles. What follows next is excruciating pain and swelling - all signs of tearing the anterior cruciate ligament in the knee, or ACL.
Despite not seeing a single snap last season, sophomore cornerback Tyson Maugle is already contributing.
Mark your calendars: Saturday, Sept. 30, 2017. We don't know who'll be president; it won't be George Bush or whoever succeeds him, even if that person gets two terms. But we do know that Penn will open its Ivy League football schedule hosting Dartmouth that day.
After three weeks of Ivy League football, the dust has begun to settle a little. The standings have become more orderly, and already there is some separation between the good teams and the not-so-good teams. The first intra-league games seemed to validate the non-conference records, especially with the luck of three teams with .
During warm-ups, the Penn volleyball team was all smiles and visibly loose heading into its match against La Salle. As it turned out, the Explorers couldn't wipe the smile off their opponent's faces, as Penn cruised to a 3-0 win last night at the Palestra.
The Ivy League-leading wide receiver from Week 1 may not be back in Penn's lineup for Saturday's game at Bucknell as originally expected. Penn wideout Dan Coleman sat out the Dartmouth game with a moderate ankle sprain, but afterward, head coach Al Bagnoli said he believed the junior would be ready to play the following week.
Molly Weir's goals were all the Quakers needed in a dominating 3-0 win against Lafayette last night at Rhodes Field.
Sometimes teams win games they deserve to lose. Sometimes teams lose games they deserve to win. When both teams deserve to win, they're lucky to tie. Last night the Penn men's soccer team faced Seton Hall at Rhodes Field, the first of two Big East opponents.