Gill leads lacrosse with offense, leadership roles
By Katie Jacob | April 27, 2001If you are a kid growing up in Baltimore, you play lacrosse. For Conor Gill, it was no different.
If you are a kid growing up in Baltimore, you play lacrosse. For Conor Gill, it was no different.
The rivalry between the No. 4 Virginia men's lacrosse team and No. 19 North Carolina (4-4, 0-2 ACC) resumes at 3 p.m.
The cold temperatures and snow on the ground yesterday did not chill the heated atmosphere at the Aquatic & Fitness Center last night.
As the host of the 2001 ACC Women's Swimming and Diving Championships, Virginia hopes history will repeat itself. Virginia (7-1, 4-1 ACC) and North Carolina (8-1, 5-0), both swimming and diving powerhouses, have won the championship the past two years with the home team swimming to victory each year.
As a junior at Sherwood High School in Olney, Md., Jamie Grimes did not think he would swim in college. Nor did he ever think he would make such an impact at a Division I school such as Virginia.
When you think of women's college soccer, two words should come to mind: North Carolina. When Virginia thinks of what stands in the way of its run for a national championship, the same two words come to mind. Tomorrow night at 7 p.m.
The Cavalier women's soccer team wants to go to California. Not simply because the fall chill has descended upon Charlottesville, but also because the NCAA Final Four is at San Jose State this year.
The Virginia baseball team will have two new faces in the dugout this spring. Coach Dennis Womack named Chip Schaffner and Luis Giraldo as the two newest members of his coaching staff.
The Virginia field hockey team had two reasons to celebrate last night. Not only was it coach Jessica Wilk's birthday, but the team rebounded from a loss to No.
After a disappointing loss to Hartford, the Virginia women's soccer team is hungry for a win. The Cavs hope to notch their first ACC victory tonight against N.C.