Column: Sale of Packers’ stock is a meaningless ploy
At 8 a.m. Tuesday morning, Wisconsinites and Green Bay Packers fans worldwide had the chance to buy a $250 piece of paper that means practically nothing.
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At 8 a.m. Tuesday morning, Wisconsinites and Green Bay Packers fans worldwide had the chance to buy a $250 piece of paper that means practically nothing.
When a group as talented as the No. 1 Wisconsin women’s hockey team (9-1 WCHA, 15-1 overall) outscores its opponent 11-1 over two games, it would be easy to think it was cruising without incident.
Here’s the thing about the women’s hockey matchup between top-ranked Wisconsin and WCHA cellar team St. Cloud State this weekend: It is not going to be close.
Since news of the Penn State scandal first broke and as the horrifying details of alleged sexual assaults and cover-ups unfolded over the next week and a half, there has been one question nagging at so many sports fans: Could it happen here?
We all have legal responsibilities, and we all have moral ones; things we must do, and things society expects us to do.
We all have legal responsibilities, and we all have moral ones; things we must do, and things society expects us to do.
Fuck you. Eat shit.
Rutherford Road is a wide stretch of Canadian asphalt that shoots from east to west across a small piece of the suburban sprawl emanating north from Toronto.
Rutherford Road is a wide stretch of Canadian asphalt that shoots from east to west across a small piece of the suburban sprawl emanating north from Toronto.
Fuck you. Eat shit.
The last time the Wisconsin women's hockey team lost a game, it went almost 11 months without dropping another one.
On Sunday night, the Atlanta Thrashers took the ice for their season opener, and began their year in the dismal fashion to which their fans must be accustomed: With a 5-1 loss at the hands of the Montreal Canadiens.
It means something when Wisconsin and Minnesota meet, no matter the sport. And considering the schools represent two-thirds of the elite trio at the top of college women's hockey, it will mean something a bit extra when the Badgers and Gophers face off this weekend at the Kohl Center.
Badger fans have earned themselves plenty of praise over the past few years.
For Lindenwood, the goal going in to a series with defending national champion Wisconsin must have been to contain the Badgers' offense as best it could. Keep it close and they could get good experience against a quality opponent or, if the unthinkable happened, pull off an amazing upset. And the plan worked – for 20 minutes.
I love hockey.
On Sept. 17, the Wisconsin women's hockey team gathered for its first official practice ahead of the 2011-'12 season. The Badgers received their national championship rings, and could be forgiven for letting their minds drift back to last spring, when they rode the momentum from a dominant season into the Frozen Four and captured the fourth title in their program's history.
The National Hockey League and USA Hockey are honoring a pair of Wisconsin coaches for their service to the national hockey team and the sport in general.
Before opening its season Friday night, the top-ranked Wisconsin women's hockey team will watch as a banner celebrating its 2011 national championship rises to the Kohl Center rafters. Once there, that banner will occupy space next to three others from title runs in 2006, 2007 and 2009—and, the Badgers hope, will be joined in a year's time by another reading ""2012.""
This fall semester is scarcely more than a week old, and already our campus is engulfed in yet another controversial debate.