Penn volleyball playing hard as seniors ready for last weekend
As we enter the final weekend of the 2015 season, Penn volleyball is already looking towards the future.
As we enter the final weekend of the 2015 season, Penn volleyball is already looking towards the future.
The year is 2012, and three wide-eyed freshmen walk onto the Ringe Courts as Red and Blue athletes for the first time, eager to take No.9 Penn men’s squash to new heights. If only it were that simple.
In college athletics, change is inevitable. After graduating the team’s two best shooters, Penn women’s basketball’s offense now runs through the post.
This year both Penn squash teams will look to accomplish some big things, but one squad in particular will look to add some big rings.
The year is 2012, and three wide-eyed freshmen walk onto the Ringe Courts as Red and Blue athletes for the first time, eager to take No.9 Penn men’s squash to new heights. If only it were that simple.
In college athletics, change is inevitable. After graduating the team’s two best shooters, Penn women’s basketball’s offense now runs through the post.
On March 7, 2014, then-sophomore Kasey Chambers took the floor in the second round of the MAAC Tournament with her Monmouth women’s basketball teammates.
This season, Penn women's basketball captains have some big shoes to fill, and some unorthodox ways to go about filling them.
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.
Every athlete knows there’s no “I” in team.
Penn fencing is opening its season, lunging.
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.
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.
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.