Men’s basketball drops third-straight game to William & Mary
If there’s one thing the University of Richmond basketball team needed heading into play, it was a victory.
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If there’s one thing the University of Richmond basketball team needed heading into play, it was a victory.
To beat the sixth-best college basketball team in the country, almost everything has to go right when it comes to gameplay and execution.
The University of Richmond women’s basketball team put an exclamation point on its undefeated early-season run at the Daytona Beach Classic, picking up victories against Oakland University on Nov. 29 and Oklahoma State University on Nov. 30 in the post-Thanksgiving showcase.
Up until its devastating 20-16 loss to Lehigh University in the first round Football Championship Subdivision playoffs on Nov. 30, it had been 84 days since the University of Richmond football team had lost a game.
Tournaments can often be beneficial for teams in the long run.
Another nail-biter for the University of Richmond men’s basketball team swung in favor of its opponent, as the Spiders lost 65-62 to Louisiana Tech University in game two of the Gulf Coast Showcase on Nov. 26.
Six games have come and gone and the University of Richmond men’s basketball team still has yet to find its identity.
It’s late November, and the University of Richmond women’s basketball team still has yet to lose a game.
Go 1-0 every week.
For the second straight season, the University of Richmond football team captured the ever-elusive Capital Cup trophy against its longtime rival, the College of William & Mary.
2016 marked the University of Richmond football team’s third trip to the Football Championship Subdivision playoffs in a row at the time, having also made postseason appearances in 2014 and 2015.
With just one win on its record through the first four games of the season, the University of Richmond men’s basketball team entered game five in need of a victory to flip the script on the non-conference portion of its schedule.
It had been 613 days since University of Richmond women’s basketball graduate forward Anna Camden had suited up for a basketball game heading into the team’s season opener against Temple University on Nov. 4.
When I first started my journey as a Division I athlete, I had all these ideas about what success would look like. I thought it was about playing time, starting every game, and being at the top of my sport. But what I’ve come to realize is that, in this new era of Name Image and Likeness, success in Division I athletics is not defined by how much playing time I get or even whether I’m a starter or not—every athlete has a platform, and every athlete can be an influencer. For me, this has been my definition of success.
It was a different story in the University of Richmond men’s basketball team’s second game of the season than it was in its first.
The roster has some new faces, of course, but two games into this season, the University of Richmond women’s basketball squad that won the 2024 Atlantic 10 championship back in March is already looking like a program prepped to make noise for a second-straight year in the conference.
The University of Richmond field hockey team lost 6-1 against tournament second seed, No. 9 Saint Joseph’s University in the Atlantic 10 Championship semi-finals on Nov. 9.
It took the University of Richmond men’s basketball team almost 12 minutes of gameplay to make any meaningful separation on the scoreboard against the University of Mount Olive in its season opener, but the Spiders eventually made their presence known, defeating their Division II opponent handily, 101-68, Nov. 6.
It’s evident a team has depth when one of its typical leading scorers puts up a goose egg in the box score and it’s still able to pull out a seven-point victory.
A defensive clinic on homecoming saw the University of Richmond football team cruise past Towson University 35-24 on Nov. 2 to remain atop the Coastal Athletic Association.