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Sin City Hockey Spotlight
Las Vegas was once treated like a hockey punchline, a desert gamble that traditionalists thought would never survive the grind of the NHL. Then the Golden Knights arrived and burned the old map. Since 2017, Vegas has delivered instant credibility, a Stanley Cup, packed houses, a world-class fan experience, and a destination weekend no Original…
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The Road To East Rutherford
The countdown is nearly over. The 2026 FIFA World Cup is about to turn North America into the center of the sporting universe, with the United States, Canada, and Mexico hosting the biggest tournament the game has ever seen. Argentina, led by Lionel Messi, left Qatar in 2022 as world champions. Now the throne is…
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Cancer Behind Bars
The Supreme Court narrowed compassionate release in Rutherford, but it did not kill mercy. It pushed the fight back where it belongs: serious illness, medical neglect, custody control, and human survival. That is why Philip Kenner’s case matters. Kenner says the Bureau of Prisons delayed cancer diagnosis, interrupted treatment, blocked outside options, and now hides…
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Knicks Fever Hits New York As Pols Fumble The Glory
New York is not just watching a Knicks championship run. New York is feeling it in its bones. This is 1973 coming back through the Garden rafters, through old men naming Willis Reed, Walt Frazier, Earl Monroe, Dave DeBusschere, and Bill Bradley like scripture, and through a new generation watching Jalen Brunson and Josh Hart…
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McCrimmon’s Masterstroke Still Pays Off for Golden Knights
The Vegas Golden Knights were never supposed to beat the NHL’s timetable this badly. Expansion teams are supposed to lose, rebuild, and politely wait their turn. Vegas had other plans. Kelly McCrimmon entered the organization as part of the original front-office brain trust, and the Golden Knights quickly showed they were not interested in collecting…
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Federal Prison Pandora’s Box
Philip Kenner’s compassionate-release battle may force the Eastern District of New York to confront years of alleged cancer-related medical delay, interrupted treatment protocols, and a larger prosecutorial scandal hiding behind the Bureau of Prisons’ favorite excuse: “He is still alive.”
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Hockey’s Warrior Problem: Claude Lemieux and CTE
Claude Lemieux was not built for polite hockey. He was built for May and June, for elbows, hate, pressure, brawls, and the brutal playoff theater that turns ordinary players into legends. Four Stanley Cups. A Conn Smythe Trophy. Eighty playoff goals. A career spent on the edge of the sport’s violence and glory. Now, after…
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The Frozen Throne Shifts South
Canada used to treat hockey like a birthright. The Stanley Cup was supposed to live somewhere north of the border, guarded by tradition, Original Six ghosts, and cold-weather mythology. But the facts now cut like a skate blade: no Canadian NHL franchise has won the Cup since Montreal in 1993, while American teams have turned…


















