Given the team’s rebirth this season, the Quakers expect results at the Ivy Championships.
In an effort to (literally) shave off as much time as possible for this weekend’s Ivy League Championships, the members of the men's swimming team are shaving their heads, legs, arms and for some, even more.
Even with a chaotic slate, the Quakers managed to finish in the top half of the field in both the Ivy League and Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) championships.
While the Quakers’ top 17 swimmers began the Ivy League Championships yesterday in Boston, the rest of the team is traveling to Pittsburgh to compete in the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) Championships at Trees Pool.
For the next three days, the Quakers’ focus will be put to the test during the Ivy League Championships held at Harvard’s Blodgett Pool in Boston.
Under new leadership, the divers have helped carry their teams to numerous wins, including an impressive performance against West Chester.
After a month of tough competition, the Penn men’s and women’s swimming teams made their last home meet of the season an occasion for celebration.
Despite several season-ending injuries, the Penn men’s swimming team can still savor a battle for southeastern Pennsylvania swimming supremacy.
Ivy season may be over, but the Penn women’s swimming team still has a few more nonconference obstacles to face before League championships begin.
Last year, Penn’s women swimming team dominated Dartmouth yet were narrowly edged by Yale. In this year’s edition of the tri-team event, however, only half the script remained the same.