In yet another week when the schedule was hampered by weather-related postponements, Pennsylvania College of Technology spring sports teams went a combined 4-6. Nine scheduled contests were washed out. Softball After a 26-day layoff since it last played, the Wildcats suffered a 9-1 nonconference to crosstown rival Lycoming College on Wednesday. Penn College was limited to just three hits.
Courageously stepping up (and sitting down), the Penn College Athletics staff elects to receive. Front row (from left): Jeremy R. Bottorf, coordinator of intramural sports and campus recreation; Tyler S. Mensch; men's soccer coach/game day manager; Matt J. Blymier, assistant director of athletics/sports information director; Chris H. Howard, baseball coach/game day manager; John F.
During a week in which there were more postponements than there was play for Pennsylvania College of Technology spring sports teams, the sun shone, figuratively, on the baseball team that went 2-1 and the golf team that ended third in a six-team event on Sunday. Baseball Stepping up at NCAA Division II Mansfield University in nonconference play on Wednesday, Penn College lost, 8-4.
The last of the Pennsylvania College of Technology spring sports teams is scheduled to step into action this week when the women’s tennis squad travels to College of St. Elizabeth at 1 p.m. Saturday in North Eastern Athletic Conference play. Also this week, conference play is set to begin for the college’s baseball and softball teams.
Whether Mother Nature allows it to become a reality remains to be seen, but the Pennsylvania College of Technology golf team is scheduled to open its spring season later this week. “We had a couple of nice days (in February) and I was getting excited.
The men’s tennis team at Pennsylvania College of Technology is set to open its season this week while the baseball and softball teams are coming off great early-season showings over the past week, when they went a combined 9-6 during action in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
For more than 100 years, Pennsylvania College of Technology and its predecessors have tailored their curricular offerings to students’ dreams and employers’ needs. That responsiveness to businesses and their future employees – and the flexibility to foresee tomorrow’s jobs – will be on ample display at the college’s April 1 Open House.
Pennsylvania College of Technology archers got their season underway last week while its baseball and softball teams began weeklong play Sunday in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. Archery The Wildcats opened their season Feb. 25-26 at the Pennsylvania Field and Target Archers Indoor State Championships in Taylor and coach Chad Karstetter liked what he saw.
The wrestling season has ended, women’s softball season is about to begin and baseball is underway at Pennsylvania College of Technology. Wrestling Competing Sunday in the ninth annual National Collegiate Open Championship at Dover, Delaware, freshman Dylan Otis, of Towanda, posted a 1-2 record at 285 to lead the Wildcats.
In formation behind Penn College coach George T. Vance Jr., martial artists prepare for a belt-promotion event last fall. Multiple training sessions and a tournament were included as the Penn College Shotokan Karate Club hosted the East Coast Collegiate Karate Union camp this past weekend.
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