Senior pitchers say their last goodbyes in tournament elimination
Goodbye is never easy. Goodbye on the heels of a devastating loss is much, much harder.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Collegian's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
578 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Goodbye is never easy. Goodbye on the heels of a devastating loss is much, much harder.
The Richmond baseball team battled through a pitchers duel again on Thursday, only this time they were left bloodied on the losing side of the crusade.
They say pitching wins championships, and the adage certainly proved true on Wednesday, as the second-seeded Richmond Spiders and the sixth-seeded George Washington Colonials opened the Atlantic-10 tournament with a pitcher’s duel.
The University of Richmond community gathered on April 21 to remember Kurt Schmitz, a former Richmond football player who died at the age of 22 this past November. Although there is still no official cause of Schmitz’s death, his brain has been donated to the Sports Legacy Institute, which conducts neuropathological studies of athletes’ brains.
[View the story "Richmond vs. VMI" on Storify]
Fresh faces on the women’s golf team, including a new coach and sister duo, are leading the team into next weekend's Patriot League tournament with higher hopes than the team has had in years.
Richmond coach Chris Mooney announced yesterday that two freshmen basketball players, Kadeem Smithen and Chandler Diekvoss, are transferring to different schools.
The Spiders were eliminated from the Women’s National Invitation Tournament following Tuesday’s last-second loss to conference rival Duquesne, ending Richmond’s season.
Richmond surrendered an 18-point lead in the second half and lost to Miami in the NIT quarterfinal, ending the Spiders' season and Kendall Anthony's career at Richmond.
[View the story "Richmond vs. Miami: NIT quarterfinals" on Storify]
University of Richmond men’s lacrosse set a season record for goals scored in a game on Monday at Robins Stadium against a team that Coach Dan Chemotti compared to last year’s Spiders.
The University of Richmond’s men’s tennis team is off to its best start in years a little after the midseason point, thanks in large part to brothers Ethan and Jacob Dunbar leading the way.
After defeating Arizona State in a tightly contested overtime game on Sunday night, the Spiders will host the Miami Hurricanes in the NIT quarterfinals. Both teams are riding hot streaks, and a spot in the NIT Final Four is on the line.
Yet again, the scene in the Robins Center was loud, tense and nerve-racking as the Spiders headed to overtime against the Arizona State Sun Devils.
[View the story "Richmond vs Arizona State: NIT round two" on Storify]
Richmond’s women’s basketball team beat the Stetson University Hatters by just one point on Friday night to advance to the second round of the Women’s National Invitational Tournament.
One of the NFL’s most promising players announced his retirement from football Monday because of fears of long-term brain damage, and referenced Richmond alum Ray Easterling as one of the cautionary tales that inspired his retirement.
Kendall Anthony did his best impression of, well, Kendall Anthony on Wednesday night against St. Francis, picking himself up out of a shooting slump with just three minutes to play and leading the Spiders to a win in the first round of the NIT.
[View the story "NIT Round One: Richmond vs St. Francis" on Storify]
University of Richmond’s club squash team traveled to Trinity College in Connecticut on Feb. 20-22 to participate in the 2015 Men’s National Team Championships, where it placed 45th in the country.