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Despite invite, Venus 'not playing' Indian Wells
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- Rangers escape with uninspiring win over last-place Penguins as NHL trade deadline looms
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- NBA All-Star Devin Booker pleads for Hooters to stay afloat amid bankruptcy reports
NBA All-Star Devin Booker pleads for Hooters to stay afloat amid bankruptcy reports
The looming bankruptcy for Hooters has one NBA All-Star worrying.
Phoenix Suns guard Devin Booker posted on X one day after it came out that the restaurant chain could be heading to Chapter 11.
"Plz don’t go @Hooters," Booker tweeted after the team’s win over the Chicago Bulls on Saturday.
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Booker wasn’t the only one nervous about the restaurant’s future, with many posting to social media, including golf influencer Paige Spiranac.
"Not on my watch," Spiranac tweeted after seeing the news.
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Hooters of America is reportedly working with creditors to restructure its debt of $300 million through a Chapter 11 filing.
The chain is working with the law firm Ropes & Gray to prepare for a filing, per Bloomberg, but the plans are not final.
Hooters has closed several locations throughout the country as its business declined. Around 40 locations have shut their doors, but none where Booker is in Arizona.
Bloomberg also reported the company sold around $300 million in asset-backed bonds in 2021.
While Hooters battles to stay afloat, Booker is hoping to do the same with his Suns this season.
Phoenix is 27-29 on the year despite a talented roster, and if the season ended today, it wouldn’t make the Play-In Tournament because it is 11th in the Western Conference.
The 28-year-old is averaging 26.0 points, 6.7 assists and 4.0 rebounds in his 10th NBA season, all of which have been in Phoenix.
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- Oklahoma’s Duke Miles shatters teeth diving for ball in frightening scene
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- Paige Spiranac wants 'ban' of controversial putting method in pro golf
Paige Spiranac wants 'ban' of controversial putting method in pro golf
Golf influencer Paige Spiranac has declared a stance on a hot debate on the course.
AimPoint, a method of finding a putting line on the green, has been criticized by those who don’t use it, saying that it affects the pace of play on the PGA Tour.
Spiranac is in that camp after what she saw on the LPGA Tour – a player going through their AimPoint routine a foot from the hole.
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"Ban Aim Point," Spiranac posted on X over a picture of the LPGA Tour player.
Slow play has been a controversial topic in golf recently, especially with rounds in tournaments like the Farmers Insurance Open taking almost six hours to complete.
PGA Tour golfer Lucas Glover said on SiriusXm PGA Tour Radio that, while it isn’t proven AimPoint is causing these pace of play issues on the course, it can take too long to get the read and the results are not any better than other methods.
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"AimPoint statistically hasn’t helped anybody make more putts since its inception on the PGA Tour, statistics have borne that out," Glover said.
Glover also pointed out how the method requires players to walk near the hole and make their way back to the ball.
"It’s also kind of rude to be up near the hole and stomping around, figuring out where the break is in your feet. It needs to be banned. It takes forever," he said.
There are others, however, who believe if AimPoint was adopted by more, the game would move quicker.
"It would speed up play as it takes an average of 10 seconds to get a read," Europe’s senior instructor Jamie Donaldson told Golf Monthly.
Collin Morikawa, who uses AimPoint, heard what Glover had to say and retorted with a proposed ban on "long putters," which the latter uses.
As of now, the PGA will continue to allow AimPoint, but pace of play will continue to be a hot topic moving forward.
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- Brett Favre has 1-word response to Wisconsin gov's proposal that would replace word 'mother' in state law
Brett Favre has 1-word response to Wisconsin gov's proposal that would replace word 'mother' in state law
Former Green Bay Packers star Brett Favre offered a short response on social media to the proposal from Wisconsin’s Democratic governor to replace "mother" with "inseminated person."
But it was far from the only proposal in Tony Evers administration’s budget recommendation. Other so-called gendered terms were also called on to change, including "paternity" to "parentage," "wife" or "husband" to "spouse" and "father" to "parent." The word "mother" was also recommended to change to the phrase "parent who gave birth to the child."
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The term "inseminated person" would be used when talking about artificial insemination, according to the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel.
Favre used one word on X in response to the proposal.
"Nonsense," he wrote along with a disappointed emoji.
Evers faced more backlash over the proposed changes.
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"Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers’ latest left-wing push isn’t just out of touch, it’s offensive to mothers," Republican Governors Association executive director Sara Craig said in a statement. "Being a mother is the greatest privilege I will have in my lifetime, and every mother I know feels the same. If Tony Evers can reduce motherhood to an ‘inseminated person’ then our society is lost."
Evers said his plan would eliminate income tax on tips, prevent homeowners from seeing property tax increases and improve the state’s infrastructure, among other things, when he introduced the budget proposal.
However, he made no mention of the language in the bill.
Fox News’ Rachel Wolf contributed to this report.
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