Football reaches new low with pitiful performance
By Chris Hurtgen | September 27, 1993CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.--Duke's 35-0 thrashing at Virginia Saturday was a pitiful excuse for a football game.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.--Duke's 35-0 thrashing at Virginia Saturday was a pitiful excuse for a football game.
By JONATHAN GANZ.
The men's soccer team's first conference win did not come easily.
The men's and women's tennis teams both opened their fall seasons this past weekend.
Can things get any worse for the field hockey team?.
Obviously the women's volleyball team's recent success has been getting them many weekend dates.
CHAPEL HILL -- Sometimes it isn't pretty.
The volleyball team went into the weekend well aware of the task at hand.
"I went to a fight and a Clemson soccer game broke out.".
Saturday afternoon at Wallace Wade Stadium could have been compared to a Civil War confrontation -- an Army from the north invades an opponent's home turf, hoping to win the battle.
By the time Saturday morning came around, the Yale and Duke cross country teams were ready to race.
"Geez, how hard can it be to get that little ball in the goal?" was a common question heard in the crowd during the field hockey team's game against Temple Sunday at the West Campus Turf...
Imagine this: The football team enters the fourth quarter tied with Army 21-21. The Blue Devils proceed to tighten up, make careless errors down the stretch and lose a heartbreaker to the Cadets.
Trajan Langdon, a 6-4 guard from Anchorage East High School in Alaska, will verbally commit today to become a member of the men's basketball team in 1994.
RALEIGH -- The weather this weekend was terrible. Heavy rains and cloudy skies dominated both Saturday and Sunday.
Heidi Durham led the way last weekend as the women's soccer team started its season with two fairly comfortable victories.
Volleyball coach Jon Wilson said that he has never seen as high a hitting percentage by a team as he saw this weekend during the Blue Devil's season-opening round-robin tournament in Georgia.
In 1938, head football coach Wallace Wade guided the Duke football team through an undefeated regular season.
It was only fitting that the last Bulls game in the Durham Athletic Park would be a rain-out.