Daily Archives: October 7, 2021

Odds shrinking for sports betting legalization this year in Massachusetts – Boston Herald

Posted: October 7, 2021 at 4:35 pm

The odds that Massachusetts lawmakers will legalize sports betting this year are shrinking as state Senate leaders signaled the money-making measure isnt high on the fall priority list.

We have to do redistricting, we have to close out the books and do a (supplemental) budget, we need to do a more permanent Votes act, our temporary (provisions) end in December, Senate President Karen Spilka told State House News Service. Some of it will depend upon bandwidth and how it stands.

The House passed a sports betting bill in July the chambers second time doing so which supporters said could generate up to $70 million in tax revenue annually plus another $80 million every five years for licensing fees.

But a lack of urgency for action on sports betting in the state Senate could mean the measure meets its demise once again.

Lawmakers have tried and failed to pass sports wagering legislation since 2018 when the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the nearly nationwide prohibition as unconstitutional.

A similar sports betting bill died in the Senate last session when Spilka spiked the measure, declaring it was not a legislative priority during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Ashland Democrat signaled sports wagering is again low on her list with lawmakers already preoccupied with spending state governments cache of American Rescue Plan Act funding, closing the books on fiscal year 2021, election reforms, mental and behavioral health parity, and redrawing political district lines.

Thirty states including neighboring Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Hampshire and New York have all legalized sports wagering in some form, making supporters eager for legalization as the state bleeds money to wagers placed in border states.

On the day of the Patriots season opener, Gov. Charlie Baker took to Twitter to give his thoughts on legal sports betting.

He wrote, Great to see the @Patriots back! We filed a bill in 2019 and again this year to legalize sports betting in MA its time to act and get this done. MA is losing out to many of our neighbors on this one.

Sports betting has proven to be a slam dunk for the gaming industry and has helped revenues rebound, even as the pandemic rages on across the U.S. It accounts for about 13% of all commercial gaming revenue, with sports wagering revenues up 650% in two years as more states legalize.

The Massachusetts Legislature breaks for the holidays on Thanksgiving, giving lawmakers roughly six weeks to debate and pass a sports betting bill. Spilka said the Senate Ways and Means Committee is looking at it.

Herald wire services contributed to this report.

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Odds shrinking for sports betting legalization this year in Massachusetts - Boston Herald

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Sports betting tops $1.6 billion in Virginia but where does that money go? – 8News

Posted: at 4:35 pm

RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) Virginians have wagered more than $1.6 billion on athletic competitions since sports betting was legalized on Jan. 21, 2021.

Some of that money made its way back to bettors when they won their wagers but a lot of it didnt. So where does the cash go?

Its no surprise to anyone who knows how bookmaking works that a good portion of the handle the total of bets placed in a given period goes back to bettors as winnings. The remainder known as the hold goes back to the operator.

But not all of that money can be taxed by the state. Under the regulatory framework enacted on Jan. 21, companies can deduct bonuses, promotions, and some other operating expenses. These deductions, which totaled over half of the hold since January, dont count towards the amount taxed at 15%.

The remainder is the Adjusted Gross Revenue (AGR), from which taxes are deducted over $11 million since January.

That left operators with a cool $59 million nothing to sneeze at.

State Senator Jeremy McPike (D-Prince William) was one of the patrons of the bill that legalized sports betting in the commonwealth. He said the legislation recognizes a market thats always existed, We know sports betting existed before this, but its never been legal before.

One of the consequences of legalization has been a new source of funding for the state. A small portion of that revenue is set aside by law for the treatment of problem gambling, $276,850 in total.

That includes a program for Virginians to voluntarily exclude themselves from gambling institutions for 1 year, 5 years, or a lifetime.

The rest of the money has been deposited directly into the general fund, where it will be available during budget negotiations. McPike said hed like to see the money go to school reconstruction a proposal that has precedent with the Virginia Lottery.

But McPike also emphasized the importance of balancing the rate at which sports betting revenues are taxed, to ensure that bettors dont go back to the unregulated market.

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Sports betting tops $1.6 billion in Virginia but where does that money go? - 8News

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Three sports betting initiatives could be on November, 2022 ballot – Porterville Recorder

Posted: at 4:35 pm

It's extremely likely sports wagering in California will become legal after the November 8, 2022 general election.

But how and more specifically where that sports betting will be allowed remains a huge question. Polls show considerable support for legalized sports betting in the state.

So as many as three initiatives could be on the November, 2022 ballot that would legalize sports betting. All three of the initiatives would allow sports betting for collegiate and professional sports and other events such as the Olympics.

One of the them, the California Legalize Sports Betting on American Indian Lands Initiative has already qualified for the November, 2022 ballot.

That initiative would would allow sports betting at tribal casinos and at licensed racetracks in the state. The initiative would also legalize roulette and craps games at tribal casinos.

Native American Tribes are obviously in support of this initiative. But Native American Tribes will also be against two other initiatives that would legalize sports betting in all of the state, not just at tribal casinos. Native American Tribes want exclusive control of the sports betting in the state.

The initiative that would legalize sports betting at tribal casinos and racetracks would place a 10 percent tax on sports betting done at those places. Seventy percent of that tax revenue wold go to the state's general fund.

Fifteen percent of that tax revenue would be used by the California Department of Health to implement programs to deal with gambling addiction and mental health and would provide grants to cities and counties to deal with problem gambling and mental health. And 15 percent of the tax revenue would be used for the Bureau of Gambling Control administration when it comes to sports betting.

One possible ballot measure legalizing sports betting that could be placed on the November, 2022 ballot is the California Sports Wagering and Consumer Protection Act. A number of cities in the state are in support of this initiative, including Gardena, San Jose, Inglewood and Colma.

Card rooms, race tracks, Native American tribes and professional sports teams would be able to offer sports betting in person and online under this initiative. So professional sports teams could have sports books at their stadiums and arenas under this initiative.

This initiative would charge a much higher tax, 26 percent, 25 percent and 1 percent to be used toward problem gambling.

The initiative legalizing sports betting just at tribal casinos and race tracks doesn't include online sports betting.

Paul Yoder, who advises Tulare County on State Legislative issues, also updated the Tulare County Board of Supervisors at their meeting on Tuesday on a third sports betting initiative that could go to the November, 2022 ballot: The California Legalize Sports Betting and Revenue for Homeless Prevention Fund Initiative.

Eighty-five percent of tax revenue from that initiative would be provided to cities and counties to deal with mental health homelessness issues. Yoder said it's estimated the initiative could generate $2 billion annually in tax revenue with 85 percent going to cities and counties.

For the cities-back initiative and the sports betting initiative devoted to mental health issues and homelessness issues to be placed on the ballot, they would need 997,139 valid signatures by April.

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Winter Olympics 2022: Everything you need to know about Beijing Games – USA TODAY

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Tokyo Olympics: Some of the most kind and heroic moments

The Tokyo Olympics has delivered many heartwarming moments that have captivated fans. Here are just a few.

Staff Video, USA TODAY

It might feel like the Summer Olymipcsjust ended, but the Winter Games are already just around the corner.

The 2022 Beijing Olympicsare quickly approaching, and they'll be the third consecutive Games to be held in Asia, following the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics and the Tokyo Games, which were postponed from 2020 to 2021 because of COVID-19.

As another edition of the Olympics nears, here's everything you need to know about when and where the Beijing Games will take place, the COVID-19 protocols that will be in place and when you'll be able to watch Chloe Kim, Mikaela Shiffrin and the rest of Team USA compete for gold.

The opening ceremony of the Beijing Games is slated for Feb. 4, less than six months after the closing ceremony of the Summer Games in Tokyo.

It will be the first time in three decades that the Summer and Winter Olympics will occur less than a year apart.The two events used to be held in the same calendar year but have taken place in alternate even-numbered years since 1994.

The closing ceremony for the Beijing Games will take place on Feb. 20.

Beijing won the right to host the 2022 Winter Games in a tight raceoverAlmaty,Kazakhstan. (Oslo, Norway, was the other finalist but withdrew its bid because of a lack of public support.)

While Beijing will have its name on the event, the Games venues will be spread across three distinct areas.

Events like curling, figure skating, ice hockey and speed skating will take place in the city center, including at several venues that were used when the city hosted the 2008 Summer Olympics. Sliding sports and alpine skiing will be held about an hour northwest of the city, in the district ofYanqing. And the remaining sports, including snowboarding, will take place in the neighboring city ofZhangjiakou, which is an hour farther in the same direction.

While the opening ceremony is Feb. 4, preliminary competition will begin in some sports two days earlier.

In one of the premier winter sports, figure skating, medals will be up for grabs once every three days on average for almost the duration of the Games, from Feb. 7 to Feb. 19.

Meanwhile, Mikaela Shiffrin will likely have her first shot at a medal Feb. 7, in women's giant slalom. The snowboarding halfpipe finals are slated for Feb. 10 (women) and Feb. 11 (men). And the gold-medal games in women's and men's hockey will take place Feb. 17 and Feb. 20, respectively.

For U.S. viewers, the Beijing Games will once again be televised on NBC and its platforms. The network has exclusive rights to broadcast every iteration of the Games through 2032, as part of a $7.75 billion deal it signed with the International Olympic Committee in 2014.

If its broadcast of the Tokyo Games is any indication, NBC likely will put some of its coverage on Peacock its new streaming service in addition to its various TV channels.

Will there be fans at the Olympics?

It appears so, but none from outside mainland China.

The IOCrevealed in late September that Beijing organizers planned to prohibit international spectators, including the family and friends of athletes, from attending the Winter Games but that they would sell tickets to Chinese fans who met certain conditions and complied with COVID-19 protocols.

Organizers did not immediately announce how many fans, or what percentage capacity, would be permitted to watch the events at various venues.

In addition to the ban on foreign spectators, Beijing organizers have pledged to create a "closed-loop" system for everyone who travels to China for the Games. This means everyone from athletes and coaches to media and referees/judges will be housed in a strict bubble, separate from the rest of China, and permitted only to move within that bubble.

Organizers have also all but mandated vaccination at the Winter Olympics. While unvaccinated people will technically be allowed to enter the "closed-loop" bubble, Beijing 2022 has indicated that they will have to quarantine in China for 21 days before doing so a duration of time that would seriously complicate athletes' training regimens, for instance, and likely be a non-starter.

That rule won't be an issue for Team USA, mind you. The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee announced in September that it would require all athletes, coaches and staff to be vaccinated before the Games.

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Winter Olympics 2022: Everything you need to know about Beijing Games - USA TODAY

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Two Winter Olympics Underdogs That Have Already Won – The New York Times

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Lanny Smith, the founder of Actively Black, an athleisure brand, does not take his new partnership with the Nigerian Bobsled and Skeleton Federation lightly.

When you look at historically whats happened with the Olympics and brand sponsorships, you see the biggest brands in the world, he said. Its something that most small to midsize businesses, most Black-owned brands, dont even have the resources to show our work at that level.

Actively Black announced its role as official outfitter for the Nigerian bobsled and skeleton teams for the Beijing Winter Olympics on Oct. 1, Nigerian Independence Day.

The brand is designing all of the clothes the teams will be seen in at the Games in February, including the opening ceremony outfits and the competition uniforms. Mr. Smith, 36, said he wanted the looks to pay homage to Nigeria, to the motherland; the tribal Ankara print in the designs is part of that goal.

The brand also released a merch collection alongside the partnership, featuring white and green detailing drawn from the colors of the Nigerian flag.

In 2018, Nigerias womens bobsled team became the first-ever African bobsled team to qualify for the Olympics. They worked with Under Armour then, before switching to Actively Black.

Actively Black is in this industry of giants, from Nike to Lululemon to Under Armour, Mr. Smith said. We are an underdog that is trying to carve out a space, and at the same time, you have this team, this federation that is competing in a sport that traditionally you dont see African countries participating in.

Indeed, being from a country so close to the Equator means that Nigerias bobsled and skeleton teams have had to travel as far as Pyeongchang, Korea, just to practice.

We have been able to create space against the odds for African people to be represented in the Winter Olympic games like never before, said Seun Adigun, 34, the founder of the Bobsled and Skeleton Federation of Nigeria.

The collaboration is also part of a larger trend of Olympic sponsorships increasingly becoming an important milestone for brands of all sizes, not just the usual athletics giants. Skims, Kim Kardashian Wests shapewear brand, was the official underwear outfitter for female athletes for Team U.S.A. at the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympic Games.

Also for the Tokyo games, Telfar sponsored and designed the uniforms for Team Liberia, which was of particular inspiration to Mr. Smith. Telfar, another Black-owned brand thats killing it right now, was able to do something similar with Team Liberia this past summer Olympics, he said.

Mr. Smith and Ms. Adigun met in college at the University of Houston, where they were student athletes. When Mr. Smith founded Actively Black in November 2020, Ms. Adigun kept up with his work. And as Team Nigeria started to search for another sports apparel partner for the upcoming Olympic Games after their Under Armour sponsorship ended, Ms. Adigun offered the spot to Actively Black.

Actively Black has tried to incorporate cultural change from its beginnings. Were really trying to redefine just even the word Black and what that means and to take away the negative connotations to really have something thats a sense of pride for people, Mr. Smith said.

His desire to launch the brand grew while in quarantine in 2020, as a racial awakening spread across the world. I saw all these companies coming out with these pledges that they were going to do this and that for the Black community, and I felt like a lot of it was performative, he said.

The label focuses on clothes that match up to all the other mainstream brands that we wear, but is something that speaks to our culture and also has the main purpose of reinvesting back into our communities, Mr. Smith said.

Weve been asking for a seat at the table for so long, and we just decided to build our own table and serve our people that way, he said. Part of that reinvesting, Mr. Smith added, includes holding fund-raising events for organizations like the Liberation Fund.

For Mr. Smith, this is only a start. I hope that it just inspires other Black designers and other Black-owned brands to dream big and know that theres no limits to what we can do, he said.

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Two Winter Olympics Underdogs That Have Already Won - The New York Times

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Auston Matthews, Patrick Kane, and Seth Jones Named to Team USA 2022 Winter Olympic Roster – bleachernation.com

Posted: at 4:34 pm

Tell me Stan Bowman is biased without telling me Stan Bowman is biased.

Ahead of the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, each team participating in the Mens Hockey tournament was asked to select three preliminary players to their rosters ahead of named their expanded roster invite list later this month. On Thursday, Team USA announced their first three selections from Team USA GM Stan Bowman. The first three players named to Team USAs 2022 Winter Olympic Mens Hockey team are Auston Matthews, Patrick Kane, and Seth Jones.

The first two players are not surprising whatsoever. Kane and Matthews are arguably the top two U.S.-born players on the planet right now. There was no doubt they would be on the team. Seth Jones on the other hand, was a bubble-player for the upcoming 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics.

But with Blackhawks GM Stan Bowman serving in the same role with Team USA for the 2022 Winter Olympics, not only is his new No. 1 defenseman in Chicago on the team, he is one of the first three players given a roster spot.

Even I had to laugh that Jones was named as one of the first three players to the team. With U.S.-born defensemen like Adam Fox, Charlie McAvoy, Zach Werenski, and Jaccob Slavin in the mix, its hilarious that Bowman just went ahead and chose Jones right out of the gate.

From Bowman and Team USAs official press release:

Its no secret were excited about the prospects of our team for the 2022 Games, saidStan Bowman, general manager of the 2022 U.S. Olympic Mens Ice Hockey Team. Patrick, Auston and Seth reflect the high level of talent that will make up our final roster as we strive to bring gold back home to the U.S.

All three of Jones, Matthews, and Kane have represented Team USA in the past at various levels, all with relative success. Jones was part of the 2013 World Junior Championships Gold Medal USA team, as well as the 2015 World Championships Bronze Medal team. Matthews has won two U18 World Junior Championships Gold Medals with Team USA in 2014 and 2015, and won Bronze at the 2016 World Junior Championships. Kane won the 2006 U18 World Junior Championships Gold Medal, the 2007 World Junior Championships Bronze Medal, the 2010 Olympics Silver Medal, and the 2018 World Championships Bronze Medal as Captain of that USA squad.

With this clearly biased move by Bowman, theres a 100% chance Alex DeBrincat will also be headed to Beijing with Team USA. Heres hoping now that, not only will Jones earn his contract extensions worth with the Blackhawks, but now hell have to earn his early roster spot with Team USA. No pressure, right?

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46 Special Olympics Teams Compete In Soccer Tournament In Owasso – News On 6

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More than 40 Special Olympics teams from around the state competed in a soccer tournament in Owasso Wednesday.

Organizers said these players know the true value of sports.

"It is just as competitive as any other sport you have ever been to," said John Seals with Special Olympics Oklahoma.

It is a very warm welcome back to in-person events for Special Olympics Oklahoma.The players have come from all over the state to be a part of the games.The teams are made up of players with and without intellectual disabilities.

"We think it adds so much to people's lives to come out and compete and we haven't got to do this for almost two years now," saidSeals."We have got 46 teams here from all over the state."

COVID-19 has changed the way these games happen. The public isn't allowed to come watch and cheer the players on, it's just family, players, and coaches but regardless of the changes, the kids were having a ball.

The referees volunteer their time to be here, saying these games are what sports should be.

"This is for the true love of sport- it is not playing for money, it is not playing for college scholarship, it is not people spending all of their money taking their kids all over the country- they are playing for the love of the game,"saidSeals.

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Erik Tait ready to represent North America at the Olympics of magic – Columbus Alive

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Erik Tait felt understandably anxious going into the early October trials to rep the North American team at the Fdration Internationale des Socits Magiques (FISM), which the Columbus magician described as the Olympics of magic.

Not only did Tait have to contend with the strict competition rules(performers were given a precise time frame in which to set up, complete a trick and then completely empty the stage), but he was also working with a less familiar brand of cards, which added a degree of difficulty to a trick that had long ago started to feel like second nature.

I elected to use a different brand of cards than my normal deck for reasons specifically related to the competition, and the deck felt a little alien in my hand, said Taitby phone the day after he returned from the competition in Quebec City. The brand of card Ive used for five years, the weight of the deck, the thickness of the paper, the finish, the flexibility and the rigidness of the card stock, its something my hand is very used to.

On top of that, Tait said he has long harbored feelings of discomfort while performing in front of magicians, who made up a majority of the audience during the competition in Quebec City, an unease he traced both to a long-held imposter syndrome Taits belief that he didnt belong on the same stage with the true wizards of the craft as well as the difference in the responses between a lay audience and one filled with performers, where the silences and cheers fall at divergent moments.

In competition, everyone is watching you more critically rather than for entertainment value, said Tait, who has worked with a therapist for much of the past year, the last half centered more intensely on this aspect of performance. Ive spent the last six months working [with my therapist] on my nerves in front of magicians. I get extremely nervous in competition and shake a lot, and then my hands dont quite operate right, and we very specifically worked on that.

As a result of these sessions, Tait was able to better control his nerves in Quebec City, where he performed what he described as an extended version of the invisible three-card Monte trick that he previously did on-air in an episode of Penn & Teller: Fool Us. (Tait also won the International Brotherhood of Magicians Gold Cups International Award of Excellence in Close-Up Performance for the trick in 2018.)

Still, following Taits delivery of the trick, which unfolded precisely as he hoped it would, he wasnt exactly brimming with confidence, believing he might have scored just high enough to scrape by in the qualifying. Instead, when results were announced, Taitlearned that he had placed in the top three for close-up magic, securing a spot on the North American team, which will take on global challengers at FISM 2022, also in Quebec City.

FISM was always kind of an unattainable goal, something for the giants of the industry and the real wizards who live among us, not guys who do a couple of card tricks like me, said Tait, who came to magic two decades ago via juggling and still maintains a similarmindset when he performs, balancing a series of highly technical sleight of hand tricks that he compared with the act of keeping multiple balls in the air. I grew up looking at FISM and thinking, man, it would be cool to do that, but never thinking I actually would. And now Im in that situation, and its pretty overwhelming.

Following the trials, overcome with the emotion of the moment, Tait escaped to a pub across the street from the venue to have a drink and relax his nerves. While seated at the bar, he was approached by a local who noticed him shuffling cards and, after striking up a conversation, requested Tait do a couple of tricks, which left the man gobsmacked. The manthen invited Tait to join him at a table with friends, introducing the magician by saying, This is Erik. Please be quiet. He is the wizard.

And he and his friends were just really enthusiastic, and asking lots of questions, and there wasnt this sense of, Oh, do you do childrens birthday parties? said Tait, who plans to spend the next 10 months working with a team to refine and perfect his trick in advance of FISM. They were really treating what I did as an art form, and asking probing and interesting questions. … They were sharing this sense of wonder that is really unique to the human species, and it was this grounding moment that, yes, we were there for a competition, and, yes, we were there to test our mettle. Butat the end of the day, the reason we do magic is to be able to share this moment of mystery and wonder with other humans. And it kind of brought me back to the real world, and I was like, OK, lets go do this again. Lets share this moment and experience with others.

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On path to Beijing Olympics, U.S. women’s hockey team makes it’s home at the Super Rink in Blaine – Minneapolis Star Tribune

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The commute can't be beat. It takes Maddie Rooney only eight minutes to drive from her home to the Super Rink in Blaine, where the former Minnesota Duluth goalie and her U.S. women's hockey teammates will train for the next four months as they prepare for the Winter Olympics.

A native of Andover, Rooney already knew her way around the Super Rink, where she took skating lessons as a kid. She felt even more comfortable Tuesday, when the U.S. women's national team officially began its pre-Olympic residency program. With new signage and a locker room designed just for them, Rink 6 has been turned into a true home base for the 28 players training toward the Beijing Games in February.

"This is going to be a great setup for us,'' said Rooney, who helped the U.S. win gold at the 2018 Olympics. "We feel welcomed and valued here. And that's so important when you're working toward a goal like this.''

The work started in earnest Tuesday, as the residency program returned to Blaine for the first time in more than a decade. Though players from 13 states are part of the program, it has a pronounced Minnesota flavor.

The group includes six Minnesotans and eight current or former Gophers. Minnesota State, Mankato senior defenseman Anna Wilgren was added last week. The roster will be cut to 23 for the Olympics, with the Winter Games roster expected to be announced Jan. 1 during the NHL Winter Classic at Target Field.

Over the next few months, the U.S. will play nine games against archrival Canada in a series called the "My Why Tour.'' The tour, which includes a Dec. 20 game at Xcel Energy Center, kicks off Oct. 22 in Allentown, Pa.

The U.S. also has scheduled several scrimmages with North American Hockey League teams, local boys' high-performance and elite league teams and a group of top women's players who are not training with the national team.

Like Rooney, USA Hockey is plenty familiar with the Super Rink. Before the 2010 Vancouver Olympics, it held its first-ever women's pre-Olympic residency at the facility, bringing players from all over the country to live and train in Blaine. The locker room was built specifically for the U.S. women's team with $350,000 in donated funds.

USA Hockey moved the program to Boston for the 2014 Sochi Games and to the Tampa, Fla., area for the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics. Katie Million, hired in 2019 as director of USA Hockey's women's national teams, didn't know the history in Blaine when she came on board. Once she learned about it, she knew she wanted the program to return perhaps permanently.

"When I came and saw it, I said, 'Why are we not using this space? It's fabulous,' '' said Million, who is based in Minneapolis. "It just made a lot of sense. We really would like to keep it home.''

In addition to the locker room, which has been renovated, Million cited the abundance of high-level local competition and Blaine's central location as factors in the decision to return. Several players already were living in the Twin Cities. So was Joel Johnson, coach of the U.S. women's national program.

Johnson, the longtime associate head coach for the Gophers women, was hired last summer to coach the St. Thomas women's team, about six weeks before he was named the Olympic coach. Having the national team in Blaine will allow him to juggle both jobs. Johnson plans to be behind the Tommies bench whenever possible, with St. Thomas assistant Bethany Brausen assuming head coaching duties when Johnson is busy with the national team.

"I'm here in the morning, then I grab lunch and head down and continue to coach at St. Thomas in the afternoon,'' said Johnson, who coached the U.S. women to a silver medal at the world championships in August. "It's pretty seamless.''

Johnson said the team has everything it needs at the Super Rink, a sentiment shared by his players.

"The locker room, the signs, all the red, white and blue, it makes us feel at home,'' said forward Abbey Murphy, who is taking this season off from the Gophers to train with the national team. "It's awesome.''

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On path to Beijing Olympics, U.S. women's hockey team makes it's home at the Super Rink in Blaine - Minneapolis Star Tribune

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Gabriel could’ve made Olympics but prioritised Arsenal & the long-term – Daily Cannon

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LONDON, ENGLAND: Teemu Pukki of Norwich City is shut out by Ben White and Gabriel Magalhaes of Arsenal during the Premier League match between Arsenal and Norwich City at Emirates Stadium on September 11, 2021. (Photo by Julian Finney/Getty Images)

Over the summer, Gabriel Magalhaes was initially called up to the Brazil Olympic team, but he decided to pull out with tendonitis and swelling in his right knee.

Speaking to ESPN this week, Gabriel admitted he could actually have played at the Olympics. He talked to the doctors, he talked to his family. Eventually, he decided to withdraw, despite the fact it was one of his dreams to take part in the event.

Discussing the decision, Gabriel said he was thinking about the new season with Arsenal. He says he could have risked it, but hes happy with the choice he made.

I could have even played in the competition, Gabriel said of the Olympics. But I thought a lot about the season. I thought of Arsenal too, and that I know they will need me a lot.

I was there watching all the (Brazil) games,rooting for them a lot. Im happy the players who went there were able to respond well by winning the Gold.

But Im happy to have returned (to fitness) and to have returned well and to be able to continue this journey.

And of course, my dream is to play for the Seleo (the Brazil senior national team). So Im going to work for it and Im going to keep going.

Arsenal will certainly be grateful for Gabriels decision. Not only has the initial disappointment and absence set him up in a much better fashion for the coming seasons, but hes also performing excellently for the Gunners right now.

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