Gators breeze by Gauchos, advance to face UCLA
By GREG LUCA< | Mar. 17, 2011TAMPA- After three seasons without an NCAA Tournament victory, the Gators worked their way back into the win column in dominating fashion.
TAMPA- After three seasons without an NCAA Tournament victory, the Gators worked their way back into the win column in dominating fashion.
The Gators have something in common with their opening-round opponent in the Women’s National Invitation Tournament on Friday.
After a rough morning at the 2011 NCAA Women’s Swimming and Diving Championships, Florida bounced back to finish the first day in 10th place with 53 points.
Despite being the top-ranked team in the nation and getting off to the program’s best start since 1992, coach Kevin O’Sullivan has one concern about his squad heading into Southeastern Conference play.
By making a conscious effort to push tomorrow out of their minds, the Gators have strived tirelessly to avoid jumping ahead of themselves throughout the season.
For the fourth time this season, the UF men's tennis team showed its weakness against a top-ranked opponent, as the Gators dropped a tight 4-3 match to Southern California.
The City Commission will offer a bus tour, a spring break camp and a chance to see a fire engine up close.
A sixth-place finish in February’s John Hayt Invitational and a third-place showing at the Bandon Dunes Championship have left the Florida men’s golf team searching for answers.
So far this season for the No. 10 Gators, home is where the wins have been.
Tim Walton has coached some great players in his career — Stacey Nelson, Kim Waleszonia, Francesca Enea, Stephanie Brombacher and so on.
Will Claye fits the mold of a champion.
MTV will hold an open casting call Saturday to find seven or eight strangers to stop being polite and start getting real for season 26 of “The Real World.”
A police traffic service that cut down car crashes may be coming back after a lack of funding took it off the books.
Jill Burton pushes her voice through her throat in different tones. It’s soft, then louder, then softer again. It sounds like a didgeridoo.
We expect half of our readers will have a massive hangover when they see this, so we’ll make it short.
The economy is in the tank. Unemployment is stagnant. The budget crisis has brought us to the brink of a government shutdown. Libya is burning, and Egypt is still in turmoil.
Senior Stacie Lavender touched more lives during her time at UF than she may ever have realized.
In most instances, shields, hubcaps and baseball bats are best reserved for scrapyards and street fights.
If you planned on eating Hooters’ famous wings anytime soon in Gainesville, think again.
With candles in hand, 250 people gathered at the Reitz Union Amphitheater Thursday night to remember the lives affected by the 8.9-magnitude earthquake and tsunami in Japan last week