Wisconsin basketball experiences a classic East Coast big-city problem…traffic

Wisconsin experiences a classic New York problem…….traffic

Wisconsin basketball has arrived in New York ahead of the team’s NCAA Tournament round of 64 matchup with James Madison in Brooklyn on Friday night.

The Badgers went through an open practice at the Barclays Center on Thursday afternoon. That practice was followed by media availability, during which it was made clear that Wisconsin showed up late to the arena due to a classic East Coast big city problem: traffic.

Related: Wisconsin Badgers vs. James Madison Dukes: Preview and prediction for NCAA Tournament round of 64

Gard addressed the situation after practice, saying it was “a little longer bus ride than we were told it was going to be. New York traffic is not quite like Wisconsin.”

I can relate to the team’s struggle as an East Coast resident, though I must note that I also ran into plenty of traffic on the beltline during my years living in Madison, Wisconsin.

But Jim Polzin’s assertion is correct, New York City has a bit more traffic than Cobb, Wisconsin.

Contact/Follow @TheBadgersWire on X (formerly Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin Badgers news, notes, and opinion. Follow Ben Kenney on X.

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Courtside fan video shows Kyrie Irving blaming NYC Mayor Eric Adams for guard’s Nets tenure

Kyrie Irving blamed Mayor Adams for why it didn’t work out in Brooklyn.

The Brooklyn Nets hosted the Dallas Mavericks and it was the first time Kyrie Irving played at the Barclays Center since he was traded.

Irving finished with a game-high 36 points (including a shocking alley-oop dunk) during a victory for the Mavericks over the Nets. He also added six 3-pointers, five assists, and two steals.

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During the game, a fan sitting courtside asked Irving why he didn’t play like that during his time in Brooklyn between 2019 and 2023. The eight-time All-Star had an interesting answer that has caught the attention of folks who have seen the clip.

“You can thank Mayor Adams for that, bro,” Irving responded.

In a part of his tenure with the franchise, Irving was unable to play home games in Brooklyn due to his unwillingness to get vaccinated. He was also benched by the team for the same reason.

For the majority of the 2021-22 season, New York City had a vaccine mandate that barred unvaccinated athletes from playing home games.

Kevin Durant, Irving’s former teammate on the Nets, was critical of NYC Mayor Eric Adams for the confusing rule that allowed unvaccinated players to attend games but not play.

By late March 2022, Adams reversed the decision. This, however, was not the only controversy that Irving faced during his time on the Nets. Last season, Irving was also suspended without pay for multiple games after he refused to unequivocally say that held no antisemitic beliefs.

The vaccine mandate upheld by Adams may have prevented Irving from ever finding a rhythm. Perhaps that played a role in why Durant and James Harden eventually demanded trades from the Nets, too.

But it was far from the only reason why Irving’s time with Brooklyn was such a disappointment.

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Where to play golf around New York City: Golfweek’s Best 2023 public-access courses

The best golf courses within two hours of New York City include layouts in four states.

nLooking for the best public-access golf around New York City? If you’re willing to drive a bit, there are more than a dozen courses available that appear on the Golfweek’s Best rankings of top public-access layouts in each state.

But it’s not as easy as pulling up our state-by-state rankings, because the Big Apple sits at a crossroads of states and golfers frequently cross state lines to find a game. This list includes courses in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Pennsylvania.

How’d we come up with that? For the purpose of this exercise, we limited driving time to two hours from the city, with LaGuardia Airport as a starting point.

Why two hours? Because it takes awhile to get around New York, of course, and two hours seemed like a reasonable amount of time in a car to reach great golf.

And why LaGuardia? Because that airport is a fair starting point for the courses to the north and those out to the west. (We used Google Maps for its drive times, keying in LaGuardia on a mid-afternoon that showed no significant traffic slowdowns; take all drive times around New York with a grain of salt, of course, as backups can be considerable.)

Included with this list is a general map of where to find all these courses. Each one on the list below is represented with a number on the map – keep scrolling to see the numbers. These numbers are not intended to be a ranking of the best courses around New York, but simply indicate their position on the map.

However, included with each course is its position in its state on the Golfweek’s Best public-access list. For courses that appear on other popular rankings lists, those positions are included as well.

A little background: The hundreds of members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them on 10 criteria on a points basis of 1 through 10. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings are averaged to produce all our Golfweek’s Best course rankings.

The courses on this list allow public access in some fashion, be it standard daily green fees, through a resort or by staying at an affiliated hotel. If there’s a will, there’s a tee time – no membership required.

New York City Golfweek's Best map
(Google Earth/Golfweek)

These 5 outdoor experiences are all within an hour of NYC

Explore outside the city.

New York City has something for everyone, and that includes outdoorsy people. Outside the labyrinth of skyscrapers and sidewalks, there are some pretty outstanding adventures waiting for you.

You don’t have to travel far from NYC for a great escape into nature. Nearby Harriman State Park offers fishing, camping, and mountain biking opportunities. Birders can cross state lines into New Jersey to visit Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge. And if you don’t want to leave city limits, Central Park is an excellent place for a walk. These aren’t your only options, though. For a new and exciting hiking, kayaking, or bouldering experience, try these five spots that are all an hour or less away from NYC.

Why the 2023 NFL Draft is not in New York City

The 2023 NFL Draft is in Kansas City this year. Why is it not in New York City?

If you’re a longtime NFL Draft fan, you may remember all the years of New York Jets and Giants fans booing Roger Goodell at Radio City Music Hall.

However, the draft hasn’t been in the Big Apple in quite some time. Why is that?

Well, the NFL Draft ended its residency at Radio City Music Hall in 2015 when it completed a two-year stint in Chicago, Illinois, at the Auditorium Theatre.

After that, the NFL Draft went on the road, making stops in cities like Philadelphia, Arlington (Texas), Nashville, Cleveland and Las Vegas.

This year’s draft will take place in Kansas City at Union Station. Next year’s draft is set for Detroit.

Maybe the NFL Draft will return to New York City one day, where it was annually held at various locations from 1964 to 2014.

Until then, expect the traveling nature of the marquee NFL event to continue, perhaps coming to a city near you in the future.

Aimé Leon Dore features NBA guard Jose Alvarado in Fall/Winter 2022 campaign, and it’s brilliant

Grand Theft Alvarado for ALD?!

New Orleans Pelicans guard Jose Alvarado stars in the latest campaign for New Balance and Aimé Leon Dore, the popular Lower East Side menswear store.

The undrafted guard from Georgia Tech is originally from Brooklyn and he attended Christ The King High School — the same school as Sue Bird and Lamar Odom.

Alvarado, who is known for hiding on the court and sneaking up to force turnovers, is first seen practicing free throws at the ALD / NB Masaryk Community Gym on the Lower East Side in Manhattan. He then watches game highlights with his mother as she tells him she always knew he was going to be special.

We then see some beautiful shots of New York City as Alvarado talks about the tenacious basketball culture that he grew up around. He also discusses his father’s boxing career and creating his own legacy.

“My goal was to take this orange ball as far I can,” Alvarado says.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CjDY4yUjIUO/

Despite going undrafted out of college, the former Georgia Tech standout cracked the rotation for the Pelicans during his first year in the league. He played an instrumental role for the team during their postseason run.

Alvarado played AAU basketball for the legendary NY Rens program, but this campaign is a collaboration with Team SONNY, a 15U AAU basketball team.

Visual artist Tyrrell Winston, who we profiled earlier this year, has an installation at the flagship Aimé Leon Dore store. Mike Sykes reviewed the ALD 550 for our sneaker show, Special Delivery.

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Former St. John’s guard Omar Cook should be celebrated as he ends a long international career

The NYC legend is calling it a career.

For thousands of young basketball players across the country, playing in the NBA is the ultimate dream. Anything short of that can feel like a failure.

However, not everyone can make the NBA. There are only 450 roster spots, and only a small fraction of those open up each year. For players who prove good enough to play professionally while being unable to crack one of those coveted spots, international play has always been a great alternative. Playing overseas has provided countless players the opportunity to extend their careers and get paid doing something they love. No one is a better example of that than Omar Cook, the former St. John’s guard who announced his likely retirement Saturday at 40 years old.

If you’ve never heard of Cook, it’s not your fault. He’s been playing in European leagues since 2006. But make no mistake, the former McDonald’s All-American was a legend at home in New York City before his one year in college. As a freshman at St. John’s in 2000-01, he was second in the country in assists per game at 8.7 and led the team in scoring at 15.3 points per game.

However, Cook’s decision to come out of a college after that year backfired, as he waited until the second round of the 2001 draft to hear his name called. After being selected by the Orlando Magic, he bounced around the D League a few years and played just 22 NBA games before making his way to Europe.

Instead of letting that decision define him, Cook stuck with his passion and turned himself into a mainstay overseas for nearly two decades. He’ll finish his career as the Liga ACB all-time leader in assists per game — sixth all-time in total assists — and he’s top 15 all-time in EuroCup assists, according to Basketball-Reference. His NBA dream didn’t work out but he was still able to make a name for himself in basketball. And he should be celebrated for that.

Cheers to an amazing career.

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Los jugadores de los Mets y Yankees que no estén vacunados no podrán jugar en casa

La oficina del alcalde de New York confirmó hoy a USA TODAY Sports que los jugadores de los Yankees y de los Mets están sujetos al mandato de vacunas de los empleadores privados de la ciudad, es decir, que los Yankees y los Mets que no estén …

La oficina del alcalde de New York confirmó hoy a USA TODAY Sports que los jugadores de los Yankees y de los Mets están sujetos al mandato de vacunas de los empleadores privados de la ciudad, es decir, que los Yankees y los Mets que no estén vacunados no podrán jugar los partidos como locales.

El martes, la estrella de los Yankees Aaron Judge se sacudió la pregunta sobre las vacunas durante el entrenamiento de primavera en Florida.

Judge le dijo a los reporteros, “Estoy muy enfocado en llegar al primer juego del entrenamiento de primavera, así que creo que enfrentaremos ese tema cuando llegue el momento. Justo ahora pueden pasar tantas cosas así que ahora no estoy realmente preocupado por eso.”.

Más específicamente, la estrella de los Brooklyn Nets Kyrie Irving, quien no está vacunado, no ha podido jugar los juegos en casa en el Barclays Center de Brooklyn ni en los juegos como visitante en el Madison Square Garden de los New York Knicks.

El lunes, la NBA multó a los Nets con $50,000 por “violar la ley local de la ciudad de New York y los protocolos de salud y seguridad de la liga” cuando “le permitieron a Kyrie Irving, quien asistió al juego, entrar a los vestidores del equipo”, según dijo la liga.

La política fue criticada porque sí permite jugar en la ciudad de New York a los oponentes que no se han vacunado, la estrella de los Nets Kevin Durant lanzó un llamado al alcalde de New York Eric Adams después de la victoria del domingo de Brooklyn contra New York.

Durant le dijo a los reporteros, “Ya hay personas sin vacunar en el edificio. Tenemos a una persona que puede entrar al edificio. ¿Temen por nuestra seguridad? No lo entiendo. Todos estamos confundidos. Casi todos en el mundo están confundidos a estas alturas. A principios de la temporada la gente no entendía qué estaba pasando, pero ahora ya esto se ve como algo tonto. Así que, Eric, ojalá puedas resolver esto.”.

Pero el lunes, Durant le dio la vuelta a sus comentarios con una declaración: “Los últimos dos años han sido difíciles para los neoyorquinos, también ha sido muy confuso con todos los cambios en las reglas y mandatos. Aprecio la tarea que el alcalde tiene frente a él con todo lo que la ciudad ha vivido. Mi frustración con la situación no cambia el hecho de que siempre estaré comprometido a ayudar a las comunidades y a las ciudades en las que vivo y en las que juego.”.

Adams ha alabado el mandato, diciendo que ha ayudado a reducir las tasas de COVID en la ciudad, y no parece que la presión pública lo convencerá de dejar la política.

Aún hay esperanzas para que la organización de los Nets abandone la política para cuando empiece la postemporada de la NBA, dentro de un mes, que coincide con el arranque de la temporada regular de la MLB.

 

Artículo traducido por Ana Lucía Toledo

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NFLPA: Coronavirus cases in Jets’ market declining compared to rest of league

The Jets and Giants have a significantly fewer amount of cases on average over the past two weeks than most other metropolitan areas.

As the coronavirus continues to spread across the country, the NFL and its fans continue to keep a constant eye on how the virus could affect the upcoming 2020 season. 

COVID-19 cases continue to spike nationwide, but some areas with NFL teams have seen fewer daily cases per 100,000 people in the past 14 days than others. The NFL Players Association released data from Johns Hopkins University on the metropolitan areas for every team in the league. The New York City-New Jersey-Pennsylvania area, home to plenty of Jets and Giants fans, rank among the lowest with just 3.5 daily cases per 100,000 people as of July 15.

In mid-April, that number hovered around 61 per 100,00 people, showing just how far the area has come in slowing the spread of the virus. Meanwhile, the national average hovers around 16.8 daily cases per 100,000 people over that same stretch.

The cumulative case number and cumulative death rate, though, remain well above the national average – likely because of the initial outbreak in New York City and New Jersey at the beginning of the pandemic. The area’s cumulative cases per 100,000 people are still relatively high at 2,591 – compared with the national average of 1,022 – while the cumulative death rate remains high, too, at 223 per 100,000 compared to the national average of 41. Fortunately, the death rate has dropped to the national average of 0.2 deaths per 100,000 over a 14-day period.

The New York Times, which aggregated data from state and local health officials, broke it down even further into daily average cases over a seven-day period. New York City and New Jersey saw declines in daily average cases with 317 and 324, respectively, while Pennslyvania saw an increase with 792, as of July 15. That fits in line with data from the Centers for Disease Control, which reports New York City totaled 2,285 cases in the past seven days. New Jersey had 2,239 and Pennsylvania had 5,579. 

This is all could be moot, though, considering the NFL still doesn’t have a solidified plan for keeping players, staff and other team personnel safe. According to the NFLPA, 72 known players have already tested positive for COVID-19, but teams still don’t know what the league will do if a player tests positive during the season.

NFL players have also been working out across the country – either on their own or with other players – so it’s had to gauge how their return to their respective teams will affect the spread. Sam Darnold worked out in California and Florida, Jamison Crowder went to North Carolina, and Chris Herndon and Steve McLendon have been in Georgia. 

In response to a lack of information, Texans’ defensive end J.J. Watt tweeted a list of demands players want from the league before returning to play, including an Infectious Disease Emergency Response (IDER) plan, testing protocols and a plan for training camp, which is scheduled to begin on July 19 for rookies and July 28 for veterans. The only thing players know for sure is they won’t be allowed to swap jerseys after games, something Jamal Adams said he would still do despite the league’s instance on social distancing after games.

Then there’s the big elephant in the room – money. The NFLPA and the league are reportedly fighting over keeping a portion of the players’ salaries to lighten the burden of a potential revenue loss. The league could lose billions of dollars if fans aren’t allowed at stadiums this season, and the salary cap could decrease as well. Philadelphia already announced fans wouldn’t be able to attend Eagles’ home games this season, while other teams like the Jaguars and Patriots plan to open stadiums to fans at minimal capacity.

There’s no word on if Metlife Stadium will be open to fans, but New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy said there’s “some hope” Jets and Giants fans will be able to attend games this season

Teofimo Lopez and family have been riding out coronvirus in Arkansas

Lightweight titleholder Teofimo Lopez and his family left New York City and relocated to Arkansas to ride out the worst of the coronavirus.

Teofimo Lopez evidently wasn’t taking any chances.

The lightweight titleholder, believing his hometown of New York City would be hit hard by the coronavirus, moved with his family to Arkansas – where his wife has relatives – to ride out the worst of the pandemic, according to TMZ.

Lopez felt he had no choice to but to relocate because he has asthma, which makes him susceptible to the worst symptoms of the disease.

As of Saturday, 131,263 had tested positive for the coronavirus and 8,893 had died from it.

“You ever seen those movies like ‘2012’? Obviously the major cities are always gonna get hit first,” he said. “… “Me and my wife, we took our 3 dogs with us. We pretty much just left. Man, honestly, we were lucky. We left two or three days before it got hit hard.

“And, ya know we had to, due to my health condition. I have asthma. Not a lot of people know about it. I’ve been diagnosed with is since I was 6 years old. I know coronavirus, COVID-19, it hits the lungs. I just can’t risk it.”

Lopez was scheduled to fight fellow titlteholder Vasiliy Lomachenko on May 30 but the fight was postponed indefinitely because of the pandemic. Still, he says he’s staying in shape.

“I’m still working ou,” he said. “I been two weeks already just doing the treadmill, just running, and pretty much pumping weights. Hitting the bag. … I’m getting big!”

Lopez suggested Lomachenko, who is in Ukraine, follow his lead. He said, “Stay in shape, you fat f—!”