Author: Michael

HOUSTON – For a minute there late Monday night in the national championship glow, Connecticut coach Dan Hurley forgot his address.
“There’s so many people. My wife, Andrea. My boys. My dad. My brother. My mom,” he said after routing San Diego State, 76-59, in the title game as if accepting an Oscar.

UConn Huskies Win Own Iditarod Invitational, Running Away From San Diego St. And Everyone Else For NCAA Men’s Title

“Jersey City,” he said and pumped up the volume. “Jersey City! Jersey City, New Jersey!”
Suddenly, he sounded like Springsteen in concert.

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Sunday’s national championship between LSU and Iowa marked a watershed moment for women’s sports, in large part due to the glut of water-cooler discussions its many storylines generated.
One such storyline came near the end of the Tigers’ 102–85 win, when LSU forward Angel Reese pointed to her ring finger and mocked Hawkeyes guard Caitlin Clark’s favorite celebration—WWE great John Cena’s “you can’t see me” move.
While many took offense to Reese’s actions, Clark didn’t, telling ESPN as such Tuesday afternoon.

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An F1 fan at this past weekend’s Australian Grand Prix — which was insane, by the way — was hit by debris from his favorite driver’s car, leaving him with a laceration on his forearm.
No, he didn’t get to take home the piece of debris either.
The incident happened on Lap 54 when Haas’ Kevin Magnussen clipped one of the walls around Melbourne’s Albert Park Circuit which shredded his right rear tire of VF-23.

The incident involving Kevin Magnussen that led to our third restart of the day! #AusGP #F1 pic.twitter.

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It appears that Raiders coach Josh McDaniels added an old friend from New England to his coaching staff during the offseason. Oliver Thomas of Forbes was the first to notice that former NFL wide receiver Danny Amendola is now listed as a assistant returners coach on Las Vegas’s coaching staff on Tuesday. 
McDaniels, who was a longtime Patriots offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach, is very familiar with the former wideout. Amendola played for 13 years and called it a career in 2022 after playing for seven different NFL franchises.

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