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No UConn games at XL Center until fall of 2021; Sacred Heart, BYU emerge as possible nonconference opponents for men’s basketball with Big East scheduling still taking shape
AdvertisementBy Hartford CourantOct 07, 2020 at 4:11 pmThe UConn men’s basketball team can begin practicing next Wednesday. The Huskies can play their first game as soon as Nov. 25, according to the NCAA.Not much more is certain regarding the schedule for the upcoming season, with the coronavirus still making it difficult to impossible to plan.AdvertisementFor that reason, it is certain that there will be no UConn basketball games, men’s or women’s, nor ice hockey games at the XL Center this season, Mike Freimuth, executive director of the Capital Region Development Authority said on...…AdvertisementBy Hartford CourantOct 07, 2020 at 4:11 pmThe UConn men’s basketball team can begin practicing next Wednesday. The Huskies can play their first game as soon as Nov. 25, according to the NCAA.Not much more is certain regarding the schedule for the upcoming season, with the coronavirus still making it difficult to impossible to plan.AdvertisementFor that reason, it is certain that there will be no UConn basketball games, men’s or women’s, nor ice hockey games at the XL Center this season, Mike Freimuth, executive director of the Capital Region Development Authority said on...WW…
Steve Dalkowski, flame-throwing figure of baseball lore, dies of coronavirus in New Britain
AdvertisementBy Hartford CourantApr 24, 2020 at 6:43 pmSteve Dalkowski, who possessed a terrifying fastball he could not control and, though he never made the major leagues, became an enduring figure of baseball lore, died on Sunday in his hometown of New Britain.Dalkowski, a victim of COVID-19, was 80.Advertisement“He’s in a better place now,” said Patty Cain, his sister, who brought Dalkowski, suffering from alcohol-related dementia, back home to Connecticut 26 years ago. “He is resting. He had a rough couple of months.”One of the most written-about subjects in baseball history, Dalkowski...…AdvertisementBy Hartford CourantApr 24, 2020 at 6:43 pmSteve Dalkowski, who possessed a terrifying fastball he could not control and, though he never made the major leagues, became an enduring figure of baseball lore, died on Sunday in his hometown of New Britain.Dalkowski, a victim of COVID-19, was 80.Advertisement“He’s in a better place now,” said Patty Cain, his sister, who brought Dalkowski, suffering from alcohol-related dementia, back home to Connecticut 26 years ago. “He is resting. He had a rough couple of months.”One of the most written-about subjects in baseball history, Dalkowski...WW…
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