K Hovnanian buys Royal Palm Beach home development site for $19 million National homebuilder K Hovnanian (NYSE: HOV) will build single-family homes in the Tuttle Royale community of Royal Palm Beach following a $19 million land deal. 12/31/2024 - 12:41 am | View Link
Under the lights: An essential guide to Palm Beach County high school football The 2024 season is here! Bookmark the go-to page for The Post's coverage of Palm Beach County high school football. 12/30/2024 - 5:55 pm | View Link
'How far our family has come': Child of Cuban immigrants rises to Palm Beach County judge Lourdes Casanova is the first Latina to be elected a Palm Beach County judge. Twenty years ago, she was valedictorian at Royal Palm Beach High School. 12/29/2024 - 9:02 pm | View Link
Fall 2024 All-County — The top high school athletes in Broward and Palm Beach counties All-County honorees, covering top high school athletes from Broward and Palm Beach counties in football, swimming, girls volleyball, cross country, golf and bowling. 12/29/2024 - 5:34 am | View Link
Fall All-County 2024: Don't miss out on the best of high school sports in Palm Beach County All-County selections are finalists for The Post's Player of the Year award and will be invited to the Palm Beach County High School Sports Awards Show in downtown West Palm Beach. The show is ... 12/23/2024 - 2:45 am | View Link
General Daily Insight for January 06, 2025
Our pasts still matter in the present. Intense Mars moves backward into guarded Cancer at 5:44 am EST, as its retrograde path has us revisiting any matters that we have yet to find closure on. Later, communicative Mercury pushes confusing Neptune, making it hard to tell up from down.
EAST RUTHERFORD, N. J. — Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill started the season by getting detained by police outside of Hard Rock Stadium prior to the opener against Jacksonville.
Hill ended the season by setting the Dolphins world on fire.
In between he trolled and trolled and trolled some more.
And nobody said a word to him.
Not general manager Chris Grier, not coach Mike McDaniel, who will be both be back next season, according to a statement released by the Dolphins after the game, and not a single player on the team.
Nobody says a word to Tyreek.
EAST RUTHERFORD, N. J. — The Miami Dolphins are bringing back general manager Chris Grier and coach Mike McDaniel for the 2025 season.
Owner Steve Ross released a statement Sunday night saying he’s bringing back the tandem after the team was eliminated with Miami’s season ending in a 32-20 loss against the New York Jets.
“As we now look towards 2025, our football operation will continue to be led Chris Grier and Mike McDaniel with my full support,” Ross said in his statement.
EAST RUTHERFORD, N. J. — The Miami Dolphins needed two things to happen to earn their third consecutive playoff berth: win their finale against the New York Jets and have Denver lose to Kansas City. Neither happened. Denver won, 38-0, before the Dolphins’ game was over.
It doesn’t matter.
The Dolphins’ 32-20 loss against the New York Jets (5-12) still goes down as one of the most embarrassing, humiliating and shameful losses in the Mike McDaniel era.
And that’s not a short list.
The Dolphins (8-9) ended the season with a whimper, finishing 3-6 on the road, 1-4 against playoff teams and 7-5 against non-playoff teams.
The 2024 season will go down as a complete failure.
Here are some more takeaways from Sunday’s game:
Snoop has rough game, might not be backup answer
Quarterback Tyler “Snoop” Huntley came up short in the Dolphins’ biggest game of the season with four fumbles and two interceptions, making you wonder whether he’s successfully completed his audition for 2025 backup quarterback.
The Dolphins needed leadership and stability at quarterback and didn’t get anything close to that.
It’s always a downer watching the final seconds tick away in a Miami Dolphins season, as they did again Sunday, the big hope of summer ending in the three … two … one … of another Groundhog Year of nothing.
That empty feeling felt magnified Sunday. It wasn’t just the too-lifeless loss to the New York Jets (5-12), considering the Dolphins (8-9) were eliminated from the playoffs by Denver’s win anyhow.
It’s what coming next, too.
Quick thoughts from South Florida Sun Sentinel staffers on the Miami Dolphins’ season-ending 32-20 loss to the New York Jets at MetLife Stadium on Sunday:
Dave Hyde, Columnist
Four turnovers in the finale isn’t the way to go out, though the sting was gone considering Denver makes the playoffs anyway. All this means is the Dolphins can’t say they had five straight winning seasons.