The end of an era for UB men's tennis as season comes to a close
Senior Sergio Arevalillo still remembers his greatest moment on a tennis court.
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Senior Sergio Arevalillo still remembers his greatest moment on a tennis court.
Although no UB players heard their name called in the 2016 NFL Draft, at least three will get an opportunity to continue their football careers.
Every time Darien Johnson walked to the intersection of Genesee Street and Plymouth Avenue, he knew there was a chance he would never come back. It may have just been a few blocks from his mother’s Rochester, New York home, but it was still, after all, rival territory.
UB football's head coach Lance Leipold reached an agreement with the university on Wednesday for a one-year contract extension. With the extension, Leipold is under contract with Buffalo until 2020.
At the 2015 outdoor NCAA Championships, UB senior shot putter Jonathan Jones set his eyes on achieving a historic first for his university. He is the first national champion in UB’s Division I program.
When UB all-time receiving touchdown leader Alex Neutz graduated two years ago, no one was quite sure who was going to replace him as the Buffalo football team’s No. 1 wide receiver.
For senior tennis player Sergio Arevalillo, April 10 was just like any other game day this season. He showed up at the Miller Tennis Center for his singles match and played his heart out, like he always hopes to, and came away with a victory for his team.
10) Football holds Pro Day
Most freshmen student-athletes at UB enter their names into a lottery to determine where they will live on campus.
When the New York Knicks brought Carmelo Anthony to New York City back in 2011, the team thought it had finally added some stability on and off the court to the public relations nightmare it had been for more than a decade.
The Buffalo wrestling team experienced a bit of a renaissance this season.
Buffalo softball head coach Trena Peel is ready to find out which of her players have the mental toughness to produce right away.
Coming in losers of seven of eight, it looked like the Buffalo women’s basketball team would continue its skid Saturday.
The star quarterback from Texas A&M that dazzled defenses and fans around the country will be nothing more than a footnote in football history.
No team wants to find itself down 15 point less than 10 minutes into the game.
When the men’s tennis team drew the No. 11 team in the country, Ohio State, in the first round of its first-ever NCAA Tournament appearance, head coach Lee Nickell and multiple players admitted it was going to be a tough match to play.
Eleven-year-old Alexis Curtiss was “the featured presentation” on her prestigious, county championship-winning baseball team, according to her former teammate Callan McClurg. Players on opposing teams “bowed down” to her in unworthiness, and chanted her name when they were not playing.
Much like the baseball team’s season, its weekend of play was one step forward, but two steps back.
With multiple underclassmen getting playing time this season, the baseball team is in search of its identity in the early stages of the season.
The softball team’s inexperience showed this weekend.