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The Women of Winter
Womens squash and basketball teams turn
in strong performances.
By Noel Hynd
Sometimes certain victories
or athletic accomplishments stand out simply because theyve never happened
before. Such was the case in January when the Penn womens squash team
clashed with our friends from a certain other Ivy League university located
in central New Jersey. In the 24 years that Penns program has been in
existence, the womens team had never beaten Princetonuntil this
year.
But nothing is ever easy
the first time.
Playing in Philadelphia
at the Gimbel Gym courts, Penn (6-0, 4-0 Ivy League at this writing) took a
quick 3-0 lead as senior Katie Patrick won 3-1 at the No. 2 position, junior
Helen Bamber won 3-0 at No. 4 and sophomore Chrissy Eynon won 3-0 at the No.
8 position.
Princeton (5-1, 2-1 at
this writing) got on the scoreboard when Emily Eynon (sister of Penns
Chrissy) rallied from a 2-1 deficit for a 3-2 win over junior Megan Fuller at
the No. 6 position. Senior Patti Lin then earned a 3-0 victory at the No. 9
position to give Penn a nice-looking 4-1 advantage. The match was by no means
salted away, however.
Princeton won the next
two matches as Tiger senior Blair Irwin defeated Penn junior Rina Borromeo and
sophomore Courtenay Green beat senior Paige Kollock, both by 3-0 scores. Princeton
had closed to within one, 4-3. But the number 1 and 5 positions were still on
court to decide the match.
Princeton junior Julia
Beaver, a two-time All-American and the defending national champion, defeated
Penn freshman Runa Reta 3-1 in the No. 1 position, tying the match at four and
leaving the contest in the handsor wristsof Penn Junior Lauren Patrizio.
Patrizio was leaning in
the final match, 2-0, when the Beaver-Reta contest ended. As her teammates cheered
her on, Patrizioa 1999 All American playing in just her second match after
missing the first half of the season with a knee injuryclosed out her
pairing with a 9-4 victory in the third game, sealing the Penn womens
squash teams first-ever defeat of their Tigertown rivals in a quarter
century of play. No small accomplishment.
This is a well-deserved
win for our program, said eighth-year Penn head coach Demer Holleran,
a four-year All-American at Princeton, speaking of the win over her alma mater.
The experience of the seven upperclassmen made a difference in a tight
match like tonights.
The win also left the team
ranked first in the Ivy League and looking ahead to a Feb. 12 match at Harvard
(ranked second in the Ivies). The Harvard match (which takes place after the
Gazette goes to press) should determine the Ivy title. The Crimson are
the defending Ivy champions and have won seven of the last eight league crowns.
In the last issue, I wrote about Penns womens basketball
team and their shot at an Ivy title. Occasionally, I seem to know what Im
talking aboutand, to judge by the season so far, this would appear to
be one of those times. As of the end of January, the Quakers improved to 12-5
overall with three wins in one very successful week. Included were Ivy victories
over Columbia and Cornell, which left Penn tied for the Ivy League lead with
Harvard at 3-0. The Quakers victory over Cornell tied the Penn womens
basketball record for consecutive home wins with six straight and a 6-1 record
at the Palestra this season.
Junior forward Diana
Caramanico was named the Ivy League Player of the Week after recording 67 points
and 45 rebounds in the three Penn wins. She tied her career-high with 19 rebounds
against Columbia and then returned on Saturday to record a new career mark with
20 boards against Cornell.
After disposing of the
New York schools, Caramanico, a preseason All-American, was 116 points shy of
breaking Kirsten Brendels Penn career scoring record of 1,656 points.
Caramanico was averaging
25.1 points per game, which was good for first in the Ivy League and the Big
5, and second in NCAA Division I. After the incredible rebounding performances
against Columbia and Cornell, she was averaging 11.7 rebounds per game, which
was also good for first
in both leagues.
It is, by the way, a
great year to have such an excellent womens basketball squad in Philadelphia.
The NCAA Womens Final Four will play in Philadelphia at the First Union
Center on the weekend of March 31-April 2. Penn and St. Josephs University
are the host institutions.
The womens final
four has been gaining in well-deserved media and public attention over the last
few years. There will be free clinics and free practice sessions open to the
public. Philadelphia is the first city in the Northeast to host the NCAA Womens
Basketball Finals since 1982, when the NCAA took over the event from the Association
of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women.
A final
basketball note, this time mens: If you check out a Chicago Bulls box
score this season and see the name Maloney, that would be Matt C95, formerly
of the Houston Rockets and, obviously, also formerly of Penn.
Noel Hynd C70 writes on sports for the
Gazette.
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SCOREBOARD
From Dec. 6 to Feb. 6
Mens
Basketball (11-7)
La Salle 83, Penn 76
Auburn 77, Penn 70
Penn 84, Portland State 74
Penn 74, California 71
Kansas 105, Penn 59
Villanova 67, Penn 65
Penn 80, Lafayette 76
Penn 59, Lehigh 54
Temple 44, Penn 40
Penn 54, Drexel 46
Penn 63, Columbia 37
Penn 50, Cornell 47
Penn 68, St. Josephs 65
Penn 61, Yale 36
Penn 83, Brown 48
Womens
Basketball (14-5)
St. Josephs 76, Penn 47
Penn 81, Maryland (Balt.) 60
Drexel 66, Penn 64
Penn 82, St. Francis (N.Y.) 56
Penn 92, Bucknell 73
Penn 92, Princeton 82
Penn 84, Lehigh 64
Villanova 85, Penn 76
Penn 76, Towson 67
Penn 79, Lafayette 62
Penn 79, Columbia 43
Penn 66, Cornell 57
Penn 72, Yale 69
Penn 69, Brown 52
Mens
Fencing (8-1)
Penn 14, Rutgers 13
Penn 21, Duke 6
Penn 24, Haverford 3
Penn 24, Johns Hopkins 3
Penn 15, Yale 12
Penn 3, Brandeis 1
Womens
Fencing (5-3)
Rutgers 14, Penn 13
Penn 18, Duke 9
Penn 24, Haverford 3
Yale 17, Penn 10
Penn 3, Brandeis 1
Mens Swimming (7-4)
Penn 146, Columbia 88
Penn 139, Drexel 98
Penn 166, Army 77
Navy 132, Penn 72
Penn 189, Dartmouth 97
Yale 169, Penn 113
Brown 161, Penn 79
Penn 186, Bucknell 112
Womens Swimming
(6-6)
Columbia 189, Penn 108
Penn 132, Drexel 97
Harvard 223, Penn 72Penn 169, Army 129
Navy 164, Penn 133
Penn 158, Dartmouth 142
Yale 175, Penn 114
Brown 232, Penn 59
Penn 170, Bucknell 127
Gymnastics (2-2)
Cornell 186.660, Penn 186.125
Penn 188.075, Ursinus 174.300
GW Invitational, 3rd Place
Yale 189.175, Penn 188.000
Penn 188.225, Brown 185.975
Wrestling (7-4)
Penn 22, Penn State 16
Purdue 18, Penn 16
Michigan 18, Penn 17
Penn 23, West Virginia 20
Oklahoma State 26, Penn 9
Arizona State 22, Penn 16
Penn 19, Cornell 16
Penn 44, Columbia 6
Penn 44, Franklin & Marshall 6
Penn 24, Brown 13
Penn 23, Harvard 16
Mens Squash (2-6)
Denison 9, Penn 0
Navy 5, Penn 4
Penn 6, Amherst 3
Williams 9, Penn 0
Princeton 8, Penn 1
Womens Squash
(6-0)
Penn 8, Trinity 1
Penn 5, Princeton 4
Mens Track
Penn State, 2nd Place
Cornell Invitational, 2nd Place
Womens Track (0-1)
Delaware Invitational, 3rd Place
Cornell Invitational, 2nd Place
Princeton 66, Penn 61
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