Rangers' Jonathan Quick is One Win Away From Making NHL History While Quick grew up idolizing former Rangers Hall of Fame goaltender Mike Richter, the league is filled with American-born goalies who were growing up while Quick dominated at the peak of his career. 01/3/2025 - 12:36 pm | View Link
‘Amazing’ Quick on verge of becoming 1st U.S. goalie to 400 wins He brought that to New York, signing a one-year, $825,000 contract with the Rangers on July 1, 2023. Quick went 18-6-2 with a 2.62 goals-against average and .911 save percentage in 27 games, including ... 01/3/2025 - 2:17 am | View Link
Jonathan Quick gets career win No. 399 as Rangers beat Bruins to end four-game skid Berard made it 2-0 when he entered the offensive zone on a two-on-one with linemate Will Cuylle and opted to shoot, rather than pass. He lifted a perfectly placed wrister over the glove arm of Boston ... 01/2/2025 - 11:54 am | View Link
Nailers rookie goalie sets franchise win-streak record The Wheeling Nailers 20-year-old Russian goaltender Sergei Murashov has already made a name for himself here in the Friendly City. The rookie now has the longest goalie win streak in franchise history ... 12/31/2024 - 10:01 am | View Link
Protas gets 2 goals for Capitals in win against Bruins WASHINGTON -- Aliaksei Protas scored two goals for the Washington Capitals in a 3-1 win against the Boston Bruins at Capital One Arena on Tuesday. 12/31/2024 - 7:48 am | View Link
A new law decades in the making could finally lead to the cleanup of some of the thousands of abandoned mines in Colorado that leak toxic metals and acid into the headwaters of the rivers that sustain life across the West.
The Good Samaritan Remediation of Abandoned Hardrock Mines Act, signed into law by President Joe Biden on Dec.
By Paul Mozur and Adam Satariano, The New York Times Company
KYIV, Ukraine — In the nearly three years since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the messaging app Telegram has been a lifeline for millions of Ukrainians. It provides information about coming attacks and helps communities organize food, medical aid and other support.
But what has been a salvation has increasingly turned into a major source of concern.
BUDAPEST, Hungary — Moving in a dense cloud, like throngs of people walking across a crowded public square, 100 drones maneuver through the night sky in Hungary’s capital, the result of over a decade of research and experimentation that scientists believe could change the future of unmanned flight.
The behavior of the swarm, made up of autonomous drones that make their own real-time decisions on collision avoidance and trajectory planning without pre-programming or centralized control, is guided by research the Hungarian scientists performed on the collective movements of creatures from the natural world.
“It’s very rare that you see some technology and you say it’s beautiful,” said Boldizsár Balázs, one of the researchers working on the project.
Watching a player writhe in pain might have been the best thing for the Avs’ mental health.
Thursday night, goalie Scott Wedgewood fell awkwardly onto Sabres forward Zach Benson, who was pushed into the net. With Wedgewood in agony, the officials refused to stop play as the puck trickled toward the corner.
Coach Jared Bednar blew a gasket.
Chiefs (15-1) at Broncos (9-7)
When: Sunday, 2:25 p.m. MT
Where: Empower Field at Mile High
Radio/TV: 850 AM, 94.1 FM/CBS
Broncos-Chiefs series: Denver is 55-73 in 128 regular-season games dating back to 1960; the Broncos lost 16-14 in the last meeting, on Nov. 10 on the road, and have dropped eight of the last nine games against Kansas City.
In the spotlight: Broncos prepare for Chiefs backup QB Carson Wentz
The Broncos don’t care if Carson Wentz has fallen from grace.
Protect public art from vandals. Keep it indoors.
Having a public art program in Denver which uses a developer’s tax to fund artists to create works of art in public spaces around the city is a great thing.
Having those same works of art defaced by gangs who “mark” them with their “signs” is horrible.
So until these gangs can be prevented from doing their thing, we should not be placing new public art works in places where they are sure to be defaced.
That, unfortunately, means in our public parks, particularly along Denver’s wonderful Cherry Creek hike and bike trail.
Murals on walls along this trail have been ravaged from Confluence Park to Colorado Boulevard, especially the huge mural across the creek from Cherry Creek Mall.
Yet the Denver Arts & Venues agency continues to offer the Public Arts Program a free pass to commission new murals and other works of art on its property, as if gang markings would not inevitably follow.
There are plenty of indoor locations in our city where public art works will be safe.