Yale will look to ruin Harvard's Ivy title hopes in the 126th edition of The Game.
While Harvard travels to Yale praying for a Penn loss, the Quakers (7-2, 6-0) will try to claim the title for themselves tomorrow beginning at 1 p.m. at Franklin Field.
The Ivy League is the only FCS conference that prohibits its champion from participating in the postseason tournament.
Cornell senior wide receiver and special teams ace Bryan Walters reached two offensive milestones.
For coach Al Bagnoli and the Quakers football team, the number seven has many different meanings.
If anybody had known that Al Bagnoli would be forced to cycle through four quarterbacks and deploy his top receiver under center, nobody would have picked the Quakers to win it all.
As Bagnoli celebrates his seventh championship, he better be congratulating Lewko and the defense.
The offense scored early and the defense shut the door, as Penn sealed a share of its first Ivy title since 2003 with a 17-7 win over Harvard on Saturday.
At a young age, Ho’s father died and his mother was institutionalized with schizophrenia. Without anyone to raise him and his sister, the two siblings moved in with their aunt and uncle in Martinez, Ga., when he was only twelve years old.
This weekend’s contest will decide the Ivy champ, and it’s no surprise that winning the crown will be on everyone’s mind. Penn last won the Ivy title in 2003.