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Wrapping
Up
Baseballs escursione in Italia
and other year-end sports news.
By Noel Hynd
The varsity baseball squad
took its show on the road to Italy for two weeks in May and June, playing
seven games against a collection of local teams. This is not as strange
as it sounds. Baseball has been catching on in Italy over the last several
years. And do I need to remind you where Joe DiMaggios family was from?
However, the locals still
have a bit of work to do, judging from the 5-1-1 record amassed by the
Quaker nine. The team ended the trip with an 18-0 win over the Torreos
of Rimini, including six home runsthree by catcher Jeff Gregorio, a junior,
who finished the game with six RBIs; a grand-slam by freshman Andrew McCreery;
and two more homers by junior Ron Rolph and sophomore Dan Fitzgerald.
It was the first at-bat of the season for Fitzgerald, a pitcher.
Previously,
the team had posted victories against Anzio, Rome, Florence and Goda.
In the 10-3 victory against Goda, sophomore Bill Collins went two-for-three
with a double and three RBIs, while junior Chris May collected two hits
and an RBI. Freshman Paul Grumet allowed one run in three innings of work,
while teammate Mark Lacerenza, a sophomore, allowed two runs on three
hits in four strong innings, striking out four.
The
tie came against the San Marino Expos. The score was 6-6 when the evening
contest was called because of cold weather in the eighth inning. Freshman
Stephen Glass went two-for-two with a double and a run scored, while Gregorio
hit a three-run blast in the Quakers five-run third inning. Starter Ben
Krantz allowed five runs in four innings before being relieved by sophomore
Mike Mattern, who allowed only one run in four innings while fanning eight.
The
teams only defeat came in the second game of the touran 8-3 loss to
the Nettuno Indians.
One
of my favorite Penn squads is womens soccer, which, game-per-game, always
puts on an excellent show. The only problem seems to be that successful
peopleplayers and coachesmove through the program all too quickly.
Darren
Ambrose, an assistant coach at Florida State this past season under one-time
Penn head coach Patrick Baker, was named as the new head coach of the
womens soccer program. The fourth coach in the programs history, Ambrose
replaces Andy Nelson, who was named to the top spot at Stanford University
in March.
I
am honored to have been chosen to lead the Penn program, one which I believe
is on the verge of becoming a national power, said Ambrose. I hope to
continue the success of past coaches Patrick Baker and Andy Nelson. I
am truly excited about this opportunity.
At
Florida State, Ambrose was directly responsible for goalkeeper training,
monitoring the academic progress of the student athletes and managing
summer camp activities, in addition to administrative duties. Before joining
Bakers staff, Ambrose enjoyed three successful years as the mens and
womens assistant coach at Rhodes College in Memphis, Tenn. During his
tenure at Rhodes, the two programs had a combined record of 77-33-3, captured
a Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference (SCAC) Championship, made two
NCAA tournament appearances and posted three second-place finishes in
the SCAC.
Ambrose
inherits a Penn squad that just might do that national power thing.
Last years club went undefeated (7-0) at Rhodes Field (all shutouts)
en route to a 13-4-1 overall record. The team finished the year ranked
11th in the country in shutouts, with 10, and 12th in goals-against average
(0.70). Penn lost to James Madison, 1-0, in the opening round of the NCAA
Tournament, its first-ever NCAA appearance.
After
recording a 4-2 record at the No. 1 doubles spot in Ivy League competition,
junior Lenka Beranova and sophomore Rochelle Raiss were named to the First
Team All-Ivy League womens tennis team. Beranova, who played all seven
matches in Ivy action at the No. 1 singles position, was named to the
second team All-Ivy for singles, joining teammates Anastasia Pozdniakova
and Shubha Srinivasan. Srinivasan compiled an overall record of 20-14
on the season, including a 5-2 mark in Ivy play, while senior co-captain
Pozdniakova, a three-time First Team All-Ivy honoree, finished the season
19-17 overall, raising her total to an impressive 107 career singles victories.
The Quakers finished the season 5-2 in Ivy League play and 13-10 overall.
Mens
tennis had its share of stardom. Penn sophomore Fanda Stejskal, an all-Ivy
First Team selection who finished the season 20-14 overall, became the
first mens tennis player since 1973 to qualify for the NCAA Mens Tennis
Singles Championships. Unfortunately, Stejskal fell 6-2, 6-4 to Johann
Jooste of Baylor University in the first round. Stejskal overcame a nervous
first set and took a 3-1 lead in the second set before Jooste, Baylors
top singles player, rallied to win. Ironically, Stejskal and Jooste were
teammates at Baylor in the fall of 1998 before Stejskal transferred to
Penn.
If
you admire consistency, you might lift a summer highball to the Penn mens
heavyweight crew, who defeated Cornell on the Cayuga Lake Inlet in May
to win a sixth straight Madeira Cup. Penn has claimed the Cup 15 of the
last 16 years and 38 times overall. (That would make for a lot of highballs.)
The
Quakers took the early lead and finished in a zippy 5:50.2, while the
Big Red lumbered home in a lethargic 5:52.7. What WERE they doing with
those extra two and a half seconds?
Also worthy of note:
The womens squash team won both national
and Ivy League championships and Runa Reta was named Ivy League Rookie
of the Year
Brett Matter was National Champion, Ivy League and EIWA
Wrestler of the Year
Gymnastics was Ivy Classic Champions and sophomore
Lauren Hittner was the ECAC Gymnast of the Year
In mens tennis, Ryan
Harwood was ITA Region I Rookie of the Year
In varsity track, senior
Sean MacMillan has qualified for the Olympic Trials
Womens basketball
coach Kelly Greenberg was the Big 5 Coach of the Year and guided the squad
to its best record in school history. Their star player, junior Diana
Caramanico, was Ivy League and Big 5 Player of the Year, honorable-mention
All America, and USA Basketball Jones Cup tryout
In mens hoops, senior
Michael Jordan became four-time First Team All-Ivy player and Ivy League
Player of the Year, freshman Ugonna Onyekwe was Ivy League Rookie of the
Year, andlets not forgetmens basketball notched another Ivy crown
with a 14-0 league record
Sophomore Kenneth Goh was the Ivy Champion
in the 100-yard breaststroke
In baseball, senior Glen Ambrosius became
Penns all-time leader in career hits
Sophomore Gavin Hoffman and senior
Kris Ryan set several season records for football in 1999.
Speaking
of football, the 2000 season opens at Lafayette on September 16which,
now that I think of it, is not too far off.
Noel Hynd C70 writes on sports for the Gazette.
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Copyright 2000 The Pennsylvania
Gazette | Last modified 6/30/00
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SCOREBOARD
From March 16 to April 29
Baseball
(20-21)
Temple 5, Penn 4
Lafayette 10, Penn
9
Penn 5, Yale 3
Penn 9, Yale 1
Penn 9, Brown
2
Brown 4, Penn
3
Penn 33, La Salle 13
Dartmouth 10, Penn
2
Penn 8, Dartmouth 1
Harvard 4, Penn 2
Harvard 8, Penn 7
Penn 10, Temple 3
Penn 6, Cornell 2
Penn 4, Cornell 0
Penn 10, Cornell 2
Cornell 5, Penn 3
Penn 6, Drexel 5
Princeton 12, Penn
5
Princeton 5, Penn 4
Princeton 8, Penn 1
Princeton 6, Penn 5
Lehigh 5, Penn
4
Columbia 10, Penn 9
Columbia 9, Penn 7
Penn 13, Columbia 3
Penn 13, Columbia 9
Heavyweight
Crew
San Diego Crew Classic,
5th Place
Princeton & Columbia,
2nd Place
Columbia & Yale,
1st Place
Womens
Crew
Navy & Georgetown,
1st Place
Columbia & Yale,
2nd Place
Syracuse & Northeastern,
2nd Place
Rutgers & Cornell,
2nd Place
Princeton & Dartmouth,
3rd Place
Lightweight
Crew
Harvard & Cornell,
3rd Place
Columbia & Yale,
3rd Place
Princeton & Navy,
3rd Place
Mens
Golf
East Carolina Invitational,
21st Place
George Washington Invitational,
2nd Place
Navy Invitational,
7th Place
Ivy Championships,
2nd Place
Princeton Invitational,
2nd Place
Womens
Golf
William & Mary
Invitational, 19th Place
Ivy Championships,
6th Place
Mens
Lacrosse (5-9)
Penn 19, St. Josephs 9
Cornell 16, Penn 7
Princeton 10, Penn
4
Penn 7, Dartmouth 4
Villanova
15, Penn 14
Brown 9, Penn 7
Syracuse 9, Penn 4
Delaware 12, Penn 6
Womens
Lacrosse (6-8)
Penn 11, Lafayette
8
Penn
11, Columbia 7
Penn 18, La Salle 6
Harvard 11, Penn 9
Rutgers 15, Penn 11
Dartmouth 17, Penn
8
Princeton 19, Penn
4
Brown 9, Penn 5
Temple 15, Penn 11
Penn 11, Monmouth 10
Softball
(13-30-1)
Villanova 9, Penn 0
Penn
5, Villanova 5
Penn 6, Temple 2
Temple 4, Penn 2
Army 4, Penn 1
Army 7, Penn 1
Penn 6, Lehigh 5
Penn 11, Lehigh 8
Yale 1, Penn 0
Yale 10, Penn 1
Brown 4, Penn 2
Brown
8, Penn 1
Drexel 4, Penn 1
Drexel 1, Penn 0
Penn 3, Princeton 1
Princeton 8, Penn 0
Penn 5, Cornell 4
Cornell
7, Penn 0
Harvard 10, Penn 5
Harvard 9, Penn 1
Dartmouth 5, Penn 2
Dartmouth 2, Penn 0
Delaware 4, Penn 2
Delaware 7, Penn 1
Mens
Track & Field
Princeton & Penn
State
& Villanova, 3rd Place
Womens
Track & Field
Yale & Princeton,
2nd Place
Mens
Tennis (12-12)
Penn 5, Navy 2
Princeton 5, Penn 2
Penn 4, Brown 3
Penn 5, Yale 2
Penn 5, Dartmouth 2
Harvard 6, Penn 1
Columbia 6, Penn 1
Cornell 4, Penn 3
Womens
Tennis (13-10)
Penn 9, Rutgers 0
Princeton 6, Penn 3
Penn 9, Brown 0
Penn 7, Yale 2
Penn 7, Dartmouth 2
Harvard 5, Penn 4
Penn 5, Columbia 4
Penn 6, Cornell 3
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