Predicting what sports fans will be saying at the end of 2021
Since we don’t know any better after all of the uncertainty in 2020, let’s try our best to guess what sports fans will be saying towards the end of 2021.
Since we don’t know any better after all of the uncertainty in 2020, let’s try our best to guess what sports fans will be saying towards the end of 2021.
As 2020’s rookies finish up their first season, where should they rank in comparison to NFL Draft classes from recent years?
Just a few weeks before the start of the 2020-2021 regular season, the NBA offseason delivered an early holiday gift for fans of blockbuster trades.
Kyler Murray and the Cardinals are living up to the hype in 2020, and it could be a problem for the rest of the NFL.
In 2020, the AFC East’s top contender isn’t Bill Belichick’s New England Patriots. It’s Sean McDermott’s Buffalo Bills.
Instead of jumping to conclusions, let’s evaluate some of the biggest and most common overreactions to come to light following the first week of the 2020 NFL season.
LeBron James’ televised announcement that he was joining the Heat a decade ago seems to loom even larger than the actual four years he spent playing in the Sunshine State.
The Patriots have officially returned to the conversation when it comes to the NFL’s most interesting quarterback rooms, signing former Panthers QB and league MVP Cam Newton to a one-year deal.
The 2020 NFL season’s schedule was finally released on May 7, sending fans into a frenzy about each team’s upcoming matchups.
Boston Bruins fans experienced the ultimate hockey heartbreak in June of 2019, but if current trends continue, they could be the first team in more than 60 years to flip the script when the playoffs roll around in 2020.
It’s late at night on the East Coast, and numerous stars are on the move to a high-profile team out in Los Angeles. Sound familiar?
As confirmation came down about Kobe Bryant’s death, fans were left devastated as the realization began that one of the league’s all-time greats had passed.
Why has it become so hard for the NFL to get its players to play in the Pro Bowl when it’s time for kickoff down in Orlando? More importantly, what can they do to fix that?
After a grueling 17 weeks across the NFL, it’s officially time: the 2019 playoffs have officially arrived.
While the end of 2019 may seem like a stopping point for both the year and decade, it truly serves as a time to reflect on the start of something fresh: a new era in each of the Big Four leagues.
While the laundry list of names that filled the league’s centennial team made sense in most cases, there were a few head-scratching additions and many large-scale omissions in the eyes of many.