Men’s basketball falls short against Cornell to end historic season
The team that felt “blessed” to be there didn’t want its season to be over so early.
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The team that felt “blessed” to be there didn’t want its season to be over so early.
The Ivy League will compete in the Football Championship Subdivision playoffs in 2025, ending an 80-year-old policy that kept the Ivy League out of the postseason to maintain a focus on academics. The historic change allows Dartmouth and the other Ivy League teams to compete in postseason football for the first time since 1945.
Jackson Proctor ’25, desperate to keep the play alive, rolled to his right, stutter-stepped and made his way to the sideline. Hounded by zeroes on the clock, Proctor broke a tackle, set his feet and launched the football toward the right side of the endzone, 32 yards away.
Jackson Namian ’25 stumbled through a throng of Dartmouth blockers and found himself wide open with a Jackson Proctor ’25 floater coming right at him.
As defensive back Jordan Washington ’25 darted across the field, high on adrenaline and the Big Green’s impending 31-point lead over Fordham University, head coach Sammy McCorkle threw up a pointer finger and had a race of his own with the line judge.
For more than one week, Ben True ’08 has been the only coach commuting to Dartmouth’s track and field offices in Alumni Gym. Typically, the team has around five to six active coaches, according to coaching records.
Sometime in the early hours of July 29, a Safety and Security patrol vehicle crept up to the intersection of Old Tuck Drive and Tuck Mall. The officer inside the vehicle was responding to a noise complaint.
More than 75% of Dartmouth undergraduates are involved in sports — whether that be varsity, club and intramural teams or physical education programs. It is no surprise, then, that athletic activities are a popular pastime on the Green, especially during Sophomore Summer, when the grass is lush and spirits high.
The Service Employees International Union and men’s basketball player representatives released a statement following a ruling by the National Labor Relations Board regional official that Dartmouth men’s basketball players are university employees and can vote on whether to unionize.
Parts of this article were updated on Feb. 5 at 9:42 p.m.
Friday, Feb. 2
Five former members of the men’s cross country and track and field team who participated in the 2022-23 season have been given the code names Chris, Drew, Max, Sam and Tom, respectively. Each of them have been granted anonymity, so they may speak candidly about their experiences.
Exactly 20 minutes after the referee blew the final whistle in Providence, a smartphone held above the 45-yard line at Richard Gouse Field set off a chain reaction.
All Nick Howard ’23 could do was sigh.
A passerby would have needed only sound to identify who had won.
When the postgame press conference had run its course, Tim Murphy followed me into the hallway behind the Murr Center Lounge.
As Yale University’s cornerback leaped in front of Isaac Boston ’24 and snatched the interception with nothing but turf in front of him, assistant coach Danny O’Dea immediately lifted his hands to his headset and threw the headphones – audio still intact – behind him.
University of Pennsylvania head coach Ray Priore tried to be tricky when he called a timeout right before first-year Owen Zalc ’27 kicked the game-winning field goal on Saturday afternoon. Needless to say, the “icing” didn’t work.
On Sept. 28, Dartmouth hosted U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy and his seven living predecessors for a panel discussion titled “Future of Mental Health and Wellness.” The event ran from 1 to 3 p.m. in Leede Arena and was moderated by CNN Chief Medical Correspondent and neurosurgeon Sanjay Gupta. More than 1,400 people attended the event in person or watched online, according to Dartmouth News.
The light of several hundred candles was not nearly enough to emulate the brightness Buddy Teevens ’79 was to the world. But on Saturday night, a couple hours after football beat Lehigh University 34-17 in its home opener, approximately 400 mourners gathered for a candlelight vigil on the Green to honor Teevens, who died last week following injuries sustained in a bicycle accident in March.