After the demolition, pieces of the stadium were dumped into adjacent Lake Erie to help create an artificial reef to promote sea growth — common practice with military ships, not so much with public stadia. Well, thanks to Hurricane Sandy, the remnants of Cleveland Stadium have returned from their watery grave, washing ashore in the wake of the storm, according to Tremont Electric.
Pieces of Cleveland Stadium now litter the Lake Erie coastline by Cleveland Browns Stadium (where Cleveland Stadium once stood), an impressive display of the storm’s power. Keep in mind that Cleveland is quite a ways from the hardest-hit areas on the East Coast.
Photo via Twitter/Tim Russo
Fresh from inking his new deal, David Ortiz showed up for the Celtics’ home opener. The Celts’ play Friday night ought remind him of another Boston sports franchise.
“We got to win this week. We know it and we’re going to. … We need to win now. That’s what we’re going to do. I know
the record (3-4) is not what we want it to be, but the ball is bouncing
strange ways. When that thing starts evening out, we’re going to be
great, and we’re going to keep playing.”
—Rob Ryan, taking a page out of his brother’s playbook and guaranteeing a Cowboys’ win against a perfect 7-0 Falcons squad
In the business of journalism, this is what we call “aggregation.”
BREAKING: Now I’m reporting that everyone on Twitter is reporting the NYC Marathon has been cancelled
— Eric Stangel (@EricStangel) November 2, 2012
The AHL’s Abbotsford Heat scored two goals in just three seconds on Thursday night. Keep in mind that the NHL record is four seconds.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6z3dSvVEEU%5D