Arrests could impact the way the university is viewed by outsiders
By ANTHONY CHIANG | June 16, 2010We are now at 28 and counting.
We are now at 28 and counting.
They say Americans don’t care about soccer. They say Americans will never embrace the sport the way they embrace football, basketball, baseball and even hockey.
The old adage is proving to be true – be careful what you wish for.
Go ahead and add another national championship to Florida’s collection.
Kevin O’Sullivan is the R. Kelly of college baseball coaches.
Integrity is one of the key reasons we all love sports.
Georgia was the gift that kept giving last weekend.
For some reason we were all surprised.
You have 15 seconds to translate UF doctorate student Andrew Charles Thoron’s thesis into plain English.
When Mike McCall told then-Sports Editor Bryan Jones that he should give me a job at the Alligator despite having no experience, he thought he was doing me a favor.
Win big. Lose big.
College basketball is in need of a change, and a 96-team tournament isn’t it.
Thanks to injuries and absences throughout the spring, we still don’t know what Florida’s offense will look like in the fall.
I’m going to let you in on a little secret.
Who doesn’t enjoy sitting in a stadium in 90-degree heat watching a meaningless football game?
I feel like the dad telling his son not to drink at the after-party as he walks out the door for the prom.
It’s fair to say that college softball is often thought of as college baseball’s little sister.
A week ago, UF football coach Urban Meyer went on a rampage and nearly crippled a reporter.