The women won their third consecutive NE10 Championship while the men extended their historic run to nine straight, a standard the athletes have come to expect.
Catcher Karley Austin, a junior, makes contact with the ball. Photos by William Gagné
Hunter O. Lyle — Sports Editor As the National Football League enters week number four and as Major League Baseball nears its post-season, students and sports fans alike will most likely be
Sam Tapper — Sports Writer After losing five games in a row, the Owls’ volleyball team got back on track with a 3-0 sweep of Pace University in the opener of NE10
Edward Rudman — Contributor The Southern men’s soccer team’s season is in full swing and the team has imported some new talent to the team this year in Brazilian goalkeeper Andrey Carvalho.
Sam Tapper — Sports Writer After the first four weeks, the heart of the college football season has finally arrived. Across the NE10, there has been quite a bit of action to
Sam Tapper — Sports Writer If you go to a town like Cheshire, Conn., you will find many girls who began playing field hockey young. However, Southern’s star goalkeeper Brianna Craft’s field
Hunter O. Lyle — Sports Editor In collegiate athletics, regardless of the sport, the regular season can be a long, exhausting climb to something in which the only payoff is an elusive
Sam Tapper — Sports Writer Despite their best efforts and a late second half lead, the Owls’ women’s soccer team suffered an overtime loss to the Southern New Hampshire University Penmen in
Jackson Volenec — Reporter Southern’s field hockey team lost 0-6 to Assumption College on Saturday, at Jess Dow Field, despite goalie Brianna Craft’s 29 saves, marking a new career high. The Owls, who
Hunter O. Lyle — Sports Editor There seems to be a new past-time on Southern’s athletic fields, and it is not America’s historically favored baseball. Baseball’s little brother, football, has finally stepped out
Sam Tapper — Sports Writer Athletes are largely judged by their performance on the field, but their work behind the scenes can be forgotten. Yet for women’s soccer captain Mikaela Magee, her