Controversial late foul call in Iowa’s victory over UConn prompts social media outcry No. 3 UConn was trailing by a single point on Friday with 3.9 seconds remaining when a foul was called on Aaliyah Edwards as she was setting up a screen with her team on their final offensive ... 04/6/2024 - 10:00 am | View Link
Gabbie Marshall: Received hate comments after call vs. UConn CLEVELAND -- Iowa guard Gabbie Marshall said Saturday she had to delete her social media because of hate comments she received following an offensive foul she drew against UConn that helped ... 04/6/2024 - 9:13 am | View Link
Iowa's Gabbie Marshall says illegal screen was 'the right call' in final seconds vs. UConn CLEVELAND − The discourse surrounding the debated illegal screen that went against UConn in the final seconds of Friday’s Final Four game led the player who drew the foul, Gabbie Marshall, to ... 04/6/2024 - 9:06 am | View Link
Controversial call in Iowa's narrow victory over UConn draws fiery reaction "My point of view, it was pretty clean," Edwards said of the offensive foul after the game. An emotional Paige Bueckers, who dropped 17 points, dismissed the significance the play had on the ... 04/6/2024 - 5:19 am | View Link
Social media reacts to offensive foul call against UConn’s Aaliyah Edwards in Final Four Despite giving up a double-digit lead, despite trailing by as many as seven points with four-plus minutes left, despite still missing five of the most significant players on the squad due to injur ... 04/6/2024 - 1:25 am | View Link
Every game presents a challenge for the Rockies’ floundering offense. Wednesday night’s 5-2 loss to the Padres presented a unique puzzle the Rockies couldn’t solve.
San Diego started knuckleball right-hander Matt Waldron, who had no problems making his pitch dance in the mile-high atmosphere at Coors Field. Over six innings, he gave up one run on four hits and struck out five in his first trip to LoDo.
Waldron said the baseball behaved “weird.”
“Definitely.
WINNIPEG — The Colorado Avalanche desperately needed a save, and Alexandar Georgiev delivered the biggest one of his season to date.
Colorado trailed 2-1 in Game 2 at Canada Life Centre. The Avs had just squandered a four-minute power play, missed on a Grade-A scoring chance and allowed the go-ahead goal on a fantastic one-handed tip-in by Winnipeg Jets center Mark Scheifele.
Given the way Game 1 had gone, it’s not that much of a stretch to say that Game 2 and clear control of the series hung breathlessly in the balance Tuesday night when Josh Manson and Jack Johnson had a miscommunication, and Manson’s pass in his own zone went astray.
Michael Malone’s individual film reviews this week keep encountering a distraction at the end.
His eyes wander from what’s transpiring on the court and focus instead on his team’s sideline, where the Nuggets are about to erupt into a celebration they’ll someday tell their grandchildren about.
His objective, of course, is to leave Jamal Murray’s Game 2 buzzer-beater in the rearview mirror for the time being.
The Rockies still hope Michael Toglia, their 2019 first-round draft choice, will eventually turn the corner. It hasn’t happened yet. Indeed, Toglia has gone in the wrong direction this season.
Wednesday, the first baseman/right fielder was optioned to Triple-A Albuquerque. The Rockies recalled utility player Hunter Goodman to take Togila’s place on the 26-man roster.
Sean Payton is Rice Krispies. He snaps, crackles and pops. And that’s just at postgame news conferences. But when he sees the right quarterback, the record scratches and he stops.
In what is the Broncos’ most important draft since 2018, the answer is simple: trust the coach.
He doesn’t make it easy.
Whether the Broncos move up, down or stay at No. 12, they are confident in their ability to land an impact player in the first round of the NFL draft on Thursday. The quarterback position has been the central focus of draft talks since the team benched Russell Wilson for the final two games of last season.