W. Hoops hopes for repeat of '05 blowout
The Quakers wiped away Rider last season in one of only two non-conference victories
The Quakers wiped away Rider last season in one of only two non-conference victories
With a promotion to the Division I Atlantic Sun conference on the horizon, the Florida Gulf Coast men's basketball team is making every effort to prepare for more difficult competition. And luckily for them, the Eagles will be able to benefit from some Division I experience of their own.
And then there were two. The Lehigh women's basketball team was in a good position at the beginning of preseason, returning four from its starting lineup. But after two of those players went down with anterior cruciate ligament injuries, there was a gap to fill in the starting five.
To use a punting analogy, Daniel Gold got a bad snap. Ready to start his third semester abroad from the University of Melbourne...
With a promotion to the Division I Atlantic Sun conference on the horizon, the Florida Gulf Coast men's basketball team is making every effort to prepare for more difficult competition. And luckily for them, the Eagles will be able to benefit from some Division I experience of their own.
And then there were two. The Lehigh women's basketball team was in a good position at the beginning of preseason, returning four from its starting lineup. But after two of those players went down with anterior cruciate ligament injuries, there was a gap to fill in the starting five.
The Quakers had one of the worst seasons in the history of Penn women's basketball last season, winning only five games. What little success they had, however, can largely be attributed to one player: Joey Rhoads. She sat on the bench for only 53 minutes of the 27-game season.
Let there be no doubt about which of Penn's next two opponents is stronger. Yesterday Drexel whaled on Florida Gulf Coast, 73-37, in both teams' season opener.
The women's basketball team compiled a dismal 5-22 overall record last season, yet somehow eluded last place in the Ivy League with a 3-11 mark, beating out both Yale and Columbia. But coach Pat Knapp has already put on the blinders. "Our mentality is that we have moved forward.
Hoping for revenge against the Tigers for a 3-1 defeat at the Palestra earlier in the season, the Penn volleyball team looked to get one back on Princeton's home court last night. In an electrifying and competitive match, the Quakers lost to the Tigers in three highly contested games (28-30, 25-30, 29-31).
Penn really wasted an opportunity for a quality win when it could not put away Texas-El Paso in its season opener. Those are victories that really impress the NCAA Tournament committee come Selection Sunday and help a team get a better seed. And over the course of the season, how many of these chances does Penn really have? The answer is realistically two, or at the absolute most, four.
n Women's Water Polo. The squad hosted a five-team tournament at Sheerr Pool last Saturday and Sunday. They dominated all of their opponents, finishing the weekend with a perfect 4-0 record. After easily defeating Penn State and West Chester, Penn had tougher match-ups against Washington and Jefferson - a varsity squad - and the Greenwich Club team.
As it ends its 2006 season, the Penn volleyball team will try to finish on a high note when it travels to play Princeton tonight. The Quakers (11-13, 6-7 Ivy) will try to reverse their earlier 3-1 loss to the Tigers (20-3, 10-3). When these two teams first met on Sept.
The road that senior running back Joe Sandberg has traveled started at Penn and will end at Penn, but it won't end this year. While he is a senior by name, Sandberg has only used three years of his NCAA eligibility, and will most likely be back for another year in the Quakers' backfield.
With its strongest recruiting class in recent memory, nine returning letterwinners and two All-America seniors, expectations have never been higher for Penn men's squash. The team enters the season ranked sixth in the nation, its highest preseason ranking in years.
In recent years, the charity stripe has been anything but charitable to the Penn men's basketball team.
The nation's No. 4 women's squash team has not lost any starters from the previous season
By Zachary Levine The Daily Pennsylvanian With all-Ivy swingman Lenny Collins gone, the Cornell basketball team was pinning most of its hopes on Adam Gore, last year's Ivy League Rookie of the Year. Now, the Big Red will have to find another option. Gore will miss the rest of the season with a torn anterior cruciate ligament.
Big Ten basketball fans beware - Randy Wittman is back. No, not the Randy Wittman who won a national championship with Indiana in 1981 and was the Big Ten Player of the Year two years later - his son, Randy Scott Wittman, a freshman guard at Cornell.
In the penultimate week of play, only three teams in the Ivy League had anything to play for.