Volleyball: Bobcats' scores show continued excellence
For the sixth year in a row, Ohio’s volleyball team proved it has the ability to ace tests as well as serve aces on the court.
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.
221 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
For the sixth year in a row, Ohio’s volleyball team proved it has the ability to ace tests as well as serve aces on the court.
Finding a strategy for success in college football begins long before the opening kickoff, two-a-days and even recruitment. It begins when scheduling non-conference opponents.
Ohio is scheduling to gain wins by playing more mid-major opponents, but other Mid-American Conference teams are carrying out a different modus operandi.
At the end of next season, Ohio’s longest-tenured coach will be a Bobcat no more.
Outside of Halloween parties and Foot Locker stores, referees generally are not highly esteemed — sometimes for good reason. But before throwing (another) temper tantrum and/or beer at that TV you can’t afford to replace, take a moment to think about what you can expect from the men in stripes, navy blue or, in the NBA’s case, gray.
Editor's Note: This version of the earlier story, "Coach to call it quits after 23 years," was updated with quotes from current and former players at 6:50 p.m.
Trading pom-poms and megaphones for hoses and towels, the most spirited group of Bobcats added a glimmer of sunshine to an otherwise cloudy afternoon yesterday to give a final cheer for a fallen football player.
Whether they view the NCAA rulebook as a testy nuisance or a time-tested testament to athletic excellence, Ohio coaches are put to the test every year.
When it comes to compliance in college athletics, just about every program has been caught with its hand in the metaphorical cookie jar. But some programs, both large and small, have taken the next step and have been caught robbing the Oreo factory.
He was born a simple boy from Georgia. He died a humble, happy old man in Michigan. What happened in between, however, was one of the most extraordinary journeys in sports.
A former Ohio University football player died because of a blood clot in his lung, his father said Sunday.
The father of a former Ohio University football player who died last week said Sunday his son’s death resulted from a blood clot in his lung.
An Ohio University professor is out to prove to self-proclaimed NFL Draft experts that predicting the best picks is less of a piece of cake and more about pi.
During spring practices at Peden Stadium, coaches take in the action from the sidelines or the offensive and defensive backfield. Quarterback Phil Bates also spent most of his time observing from about 20 yards behind the offense.
For the past four weeks, four days a week, coach Frank Solich took to the turf at Peden Stadium to oversee his squad’s progress through spring football practice. Rain or shine, 3 p.m. or 9 p.m., he wore a beige sun hat and a green Ohio polo shirt.
On April 18, 1775, minuteman Paul Revere made his celebrated horseback ride through Massachusetts to warn John Hancock and Samuel Adams that the British were coming. Two days and 236 years later, the Mid-American Conference delivered a different message: The Minutemen are coming.
The phrase “good hands” can mean multiple things within the context of football. Some draw the image of the good-hands team, which is responsible for recovering onside kicks. The more commercially minded will recall the Allstate-sponsored net that catches field goals at the west end of Peden Stadium.
At the end of Saturday’s spring game, two things were evident: satisfaction and dissatisfaction.
At the end of Saturday’s spring game, two things were evident: satisfaction and dissatisfaction.