Nicol: You couldn’t tell which team had spent big in Chelsea vs. Crystal Palace (1:28) Steve Nicol reacts to Chelsea’s 1-1 draw at home to Crystal Palace in the Premier League. (1:28) Anthony Gharib, ESPNSep 1, 2024, 04:24 PM ET Yusuf Dikec is still influencing athletes around the world a month after his viral pose
Month: September 2024
George Clooney and Brad Pitt Work Better Together in ‘Wolfs’
It’s been 23 years since George Clooney and Brad Pitt first teamed up to do a caper, forming one of the more indelible movie pairings […]
Trump Says His Abortion Strategy Is “States’ Rights”—But Even He Doesn’t Follow It
This week, one Floridian—Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump—weighed in on how he might vote on the state’s abortion access ballot initiative come November. Florida’s near-total […]
NBA Teams That Can Realistically Beat Vegas Win Projections
NBA Teams That Can Realistically Beat Vegas Win Projections0 of 7 Nikola Jokić and Jamal MurrayBart Young/NBAE via Getty Images For teams with preseason games outside North America, practice for the 2024-25 NBA season starts this month. That’s right. You almost made it. The draft, free agency and most of trade season (at least until
B/R NHL Trade Block Big Board: September 2024
Lyle Richardson @@SpectorsHockey Featured Columnist IVSeptember 1, 2024B/R NHL Trade Block Big Board: September 2024 0 of 10 Calgary Flames center Nazem Kadri Keith Gillett/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images August is usually a quiet time for NHL trade activity. With most major deals made earlier in the offseason, the focus shifts toward the remaining unsigned
Even desert plants known for their resilience are burning and dying in the heat
Sept. 1, 2024, 11:00 AM UTCThe Summary Increasingly frequent and severe heat waves in the Southwest are damaging some desert plants known for thriving in harsh conditions. Saguaro cacti and agave have both suffered in sweltering weather this summer and last. Ecologists are working to figure out how various species respond to the persistent extreme
Latina stereotypes didn’t describe her female relatives, so she’s setting the record straight
Spicy sex object, invisible servant or unruly troublemaker: These stereotypes about Latinas didn’t describe the women who surrounded Prisca Dorcas Mojica Rodríguez, 39, who was born in Nicaragua to two close families. The women around her — including her grandmothers, aunts and cousins — were smart, strong and fearless. Where, Mojica Rodríguez wondered, were the