UF golf's total team effort brings home title
By LANDON WATNICK< | Oct. 18, 2011The Gators entered Tuesday with a 10-stroke lead. Turns out the cushion was more than enough.
The Gators entered Tuesday with a 10-stroke lead. Turns out the cushion was more than enough.
Florida finally found its rhythm Monday.
The best football is found in the Southeastern Conference, but thankfully for the Gators, the same cannot be said for cross country.
Though the UF men’s and women’s swimming teams won convincingly against LSU on Saturday, coach Gregg Troy made sure the dual meet was anything but comfortable for his swimmers.
The Gators left the warm, humid Florida weather and got the cold shoulder in Wisconsin by some of the top competition in the country on Friday.
After blowing away the competition at the All-Florida Invitational last weekend, the Florida men’s and women’s swimming teams face a much stiffer test Saturday at 1 p.m., when LSU's 20th-ranked men's team and 18th-ranked women's squad comes to Gainesville.
Trapped. Three miles in, with another two to go, but still trapped.
To the Gators, brotherly love looks sweeter in orange and blue.
Junior Allie Will has spent her last few months jumping back and forth between two worlds of tennis.
Florida’s goal is to win a national championship.
Coming into his first collegiate meet, freshman Matt Elliott wasn’t sure what to expect.
Things went according to plan for the Florida men’s and women’s swim teams as both squads continued to dominate the All-Florida Invitational.
Coming into this weekend’s All-Florida
As the Florida men’s and women’s swimming teams prepare for the 2011-12 season, there will certainly be no shortage of motivation.
Ever since T.J. Vogel transferred to Florida, his game has slowly returned to form.
If it takes 21 days to make a habit, Florida’s cross country teams are trying to do two better with 19 days between the Gators’ last meet and their next one.
When the women’s tennis team returned to campus in May as national champions, Gator Nation celebrated the team’s accomplishments.
Former Gators swimmer Lily Ramirez, 21, was arrested Monday night for cocaine possession and resisting an officer without violence at the Alachua County Fair Grounds.
In their second tournament of the year, the Gators finished in a tie for seventh place.
Former Gators swimmer Lily Ramirez, 21, was arrested Monday night for cocaine possession and resisting an officer without violence at the Alachua County Fair Grounds.