Football coach firings hurt universities' wallets
After every college football season, heads roll.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Post's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
70 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
After every college football season, heads roll.
On a cold Monday morning, Ohio coach Greg Werner said that the swimmers get out of a competition what they put into it.
November is the time of year when Americans eat a combined 675 million pounds of turkey, shoppers do anything for a good sale, and swimmers complete in their first meets of the season.
Impressive, phenomenal, huge — those are only a few of the many positive adjectives Ohio swim coach Greg Werner uses to describe his diving team. Werner’s voice sounds excited whenever he talks about the diving program.
American author F. Scott Fitzgerald once said: “Never confuse a single defeat with a final defeat.” The Bobcats matched the quote perfectly by clinching the Patriot Invitational at George Mason in Fairfax, Va., after losing the first two dual meets this season.
The distance between Ohio University and Ohio State University amounts to exactly 81.9 miles, but in the swimming meet, the universities were farther apart.
Ohio is 0-1 against Ohio State during this academic year, as the Bobcats’ field hockey squad fell to the Buckeyes early this fall. On Saturday, though, the Bobcats will try to remedy that when they dive into the pool against the state’s only Big Ten Conference school.
As Hurricane Sandy puts a definite ending to the season’s warm temperatures and the calendar is about to hit November, Ohio’s swimming and diving season is in full swing.
Several months with no competition left the Ohio University Aquatic Center quiet but the excitement, the cheers and the sound of splashing water returned Saturday afternoon.