Fencing Issue | Individual play awaits Penn fencing this weekend
Every athlete knows there’s no “I” in team.
Every athlete knows there’s no “I” in team.
It’s time to say goodbye.
Well, this one stings.
On Saturday, mere hours after Penn football triumphed in front of a raucous home crowd, the women’s soccer team faced Princeton on Rhodes Field.
It’s time to say goodbye.
Well, this one stings.
When Penn field hockey’s four seniors step onto the field for their last regular season game this Saturday, things will be different.
For the Quakers, it’s Tiger-taming time again.
There’s no place like home. There’s no time like Homecoming.
Penn women’s soccer has nothing to lose.
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.
One sis, two sis, Red sis, Blue sis.
Statistics have always been an integral part of sports.
Country roads are taking the Quakers away from home down to West Virginia.
Dig. Set. Kill. The success of a volleyball team’s offense often relies on the relationship between the setters and the outside hitters. Penn’s primary setter, senior Ronnie Bither, has spent the past four years working to make sure the Quakers' offense runs smoothly.
It was storybook night for one of the Ivy League soccer teams playing in Providence this weekend. Unfortunately, that team wasn’t Penn.
What a difference 42 years makes. In Friday’s Ivy League Heptagonal Championships in the Bronx, N.Y., Penn cross country secured a second-place finish on the men's side and a fifth-place finish on the women's side, the best the men have performed at Heps since 1973.
Two days. Six sets. One win. One loss.
Penn field hockey is going big game hunting.