From the weight room to the lecture hall: How Penn student-athletes schedule their classes
A deep dive into the schedules of Penn's Division I student-athletes.
A deep dive into the schedules of Penn's Division I student-athletes.
NCAAs will be Fallon's last collegiate swim meet.
The funding pause followed Trump’s Feb. 5 executive order that threatened to remove federal funding from universities that allow transgender athletes to participate in women’s sports.
Fallon will compete for his first NCAA title in his last collegiate race.
NCAAs will be Fallon's last collegiate swim meet.
The funding pause followed Trump’s Feb. 5 executive order that threatened to remove federal funding from universities that allow transgender athletes to participate in women’s sports.
Penn followed the rules. Now, the president is rewriting history, and the future of NCAA athletics is at stake.
Moehn scored a personal-best time in the 1650-yard freestyle at Federal Way, Wash.
The Daily Pennsylvanian took a look back at Thomas’ journey to Penn, her time representing Penn Athletics, and her impact after graduation.
At least one Quaker distance freestyler has qualified NCAAs for three seasons-straight.
Fallon now holds the title of fastest 200 breaststroker in the NCAA this season.
How watching my first collegiate swim meet reshaped my view of the sport.
Olympian and senior breaststroke/individual medley specialist Matt Fallon starts his final championship season with the Red and Blue.
The Quakers took down three program records at Princeton.
From early practices to late nights watching film — managers give their all to support the teams they love.
Junior Anna Moehn and freshman Kayla Fu are set to shine in the 1650-yard freestyle and 100 butterfly, respectively.
Thomas, a former Penn swimmer and transgender woman, may be affected by sweeping NCAA policy changes.
The NCAA announced the policy change Thursday after its Board of Governors voted to update the league's policy following Trump’s executive order.
The case was filed in federal court on Feb. 4 and alleges that the four defendants — Penn, Harvard University, the Ivy League, and the NCAA — violated Title IX regulations.
The executive order promises to “rescind all funds from educational programs that deprive women and girls of fair athletic opportunities."