Colorado
Game Preview: 12.10.24 vs. Colorado Avalanche | Pittsburgh Penguins
* Sidney Crosby (Cole Harbour, NS) and Nathan MacKinnon (Halifax, NS) grew up just minutes apart in the Halifax Regional Municipality. Tomorrow’s game will mark the 18th head-to-head matchup between Crosby and MacKinnon, where Crosby’s Penguins have gone 9-7-1 in the first 17 games.
* Sidney Crosby enters the game one multi-point performance back of tying Steve Yzerman (477) for seventh place on the NHL’s all-time multi-point games list.
* Sidney Crosby and Kris Letang have combined on 305 goals in their careers. They are one goal shy of tying Boston’s Phil Esposito and Bobby Orr for the second-most goals combined on by a forward-defenseman duo in NHL history.
* Evgeni Malkin enters this contest just one even-strength goal shy of surpassing Jaromir Jagr for sole possession of third place on the Penguins all-time even-strength goals list. Sidney Crosby is just one even-strength goal shy of tying Teemu Selanne for the 12th most even-strength goals in NHL history.
* Bryan Rust has eight points (5G-3A) in his last seven games played against the Avalanche. He has an active five-game point streak (4G-2A) versus them.
* In nine career games played against Colorado, Michael Bunting has recorded 11 points (6G-5A). It’s his second-most points notched against any one team (Detroit, 15).
Michael Bunting has 11 points (6G-5A) over his last 16 games after recording just one point (1A) in his first 12 games. Since his first goal of the season on November 5 against the New York Islanders, he is tied for the team lead in goals with six, and he has 11 points (6G-5A) in those past 16 games, tying for second on Pittsburgh in that span.
Bunting’s game-winning goal Saturday night against Toronto doubled as his fourth power-play goal of the season. No Penguin has more power-play goals this season than Bunting.
* Blake Lizotte tallied an empty-net goal Saturday night against Toronto for his second goal in as many games. With a point on Saturday, Lizotte extended his point streak to a career-long four games (3G-3A). No Penguin has more points than Lizotte’s six in the team’s last four games. The forward also ranks third on Pittsburgh in points per game this season (min. 10 GP). Pittsburgh has points in 10 of 13 games when Lizotte is in the lineup (8-3-2).
* Goaltender Tristan Jarry stopped 25 of 27 shots on Saturday against Toronto en route to his fourth-straight win, his longest such streak since November 4-14, 2023. Jarry is seeking his first five-game win streak since December 1-22, 2022 when he won seven-consecutive starts.
Since his winning streak began on November 27 against Vancouver, Jarry leads all goaltenders in wins.
During this span, Jarry ranks eighth among all goaltenders with a .914 save percentage (min. four games played).
* The Penguins’ power play has been much more efficient this season, especially as of late. In their last nine games, the team has scored nine power-play goals, including two games where they scored multiple power-play goals. The Penguins rank sixth in the NHL in power-play goals over this nine-game span.
The Penguins rank 13th in the NHL in total power-play percentage at 22.6%. Through 28 games this season, the team has 19 power-play goals. They achieved this number in 11 fewer games than last year, as it took the team 39 games to record the same number of power-play goals.
Colorado
Telluride Ski Resort in Colorado to close Saturday due to labor dispute
FORT COLLINS, Colo. — Telluride, one of the best-known ski resorts in the Western U.S., plans to close in the coming days due to a labor dispute between its owner and the ski patrol union.
The Telluride Professional Ski Patrol Association voted Tuesday to strike Saturday after contract negotiations since June failed to yield an agreement on pay. With no more talks planned before the weekend, Telluride Ski Resort said it will not open that day.
“We are concerned that any organization, particularly one that exists to help people, would do something that will have such a devastating effect on our community,” owner Chuck Horning said Wednesday in a statement.
It was not immediately clear whether the closure will last longer. Resort officials were working on a plan to reopen even if the strike continues, according to the statement.
The patrollers are seeking to be paid more in line with their counterparts at other resorts in the region.
The union wants starting pay to rise from $21 to $28 per hour, and for wages for patrollers with more than 30 years of experience to increase from $30-$36 per hour to $39-$48.60 per hour.
While resort officials sought to lay blame for the impending closure on the union, Andy Dennis, interim safety director and spokesperson for patrollers’ association, said it lies with Horning.
“He’s being a bully. This is what bullies do, take their toys and run,” Dennis said. “All he has to do is give us a fair contract, and this would all be over.”
Ski patrollers sometimes argue for more pay on the grounds that the cost of living is high in ski towns and they are responsible for people’s safety. Patrollers’ duties include attending to injured skiers and the controlled release of avalanches with explosives when nobody is in range.
Even without a strike, Telluride has yet to get going fully this season, with unusually warm weather meaning just 20 of the resort’s 149 trails have been able to open.
Patrollers around the Rocky Mountain region have been voting on unionizing recently.
Last year an almost two-week strike closed many runs and caused long lift lines at Utah’s Park City Mountain Resort. That strike ended when Colorado-based Vail Resorts acceded to demands including a $2-an-hour base pay increase and raises for senior ski patrollers.
Colorado
Colorado-based coffee shop opening new West Michigan location soon
OTTAWA COUNTY, MI – A new coffee shop is planned for a Hudsonville neighborhood this month.
Ziggi’s Coffee is set to open a new location at 3830 32nd St., Suite 100, starting Dec. 30, just before locals pencil in their New Year’s Eve plans.
A Colorado-based chain, local franchisees operate locations across Michigan. There’s one in Zeeland, which opened in 2022, and another near Ann Arbor, which opened in 2024.
Each coffeehouse offers a wide range of coffee and other beverages, from cold brews and lattes to energy infusions and smoothies. Ziggi’s also offers sandwiches, breakfast items and pastries.
For the new Hudsonville location, customers can expect the same offerings, right down to the decor.
The 1,500-square-foot space will mimic the franchise’s other spaces, complete with an urban industrial decor and a cozy rustic atmosphere.
The solid dark wood tables and padded vinyl seats set the tone for an in-house lunch, combined with pops of earthy tones and black-and-white photos for a retro touch.
As for the menu, the top orders across the company’s 100-plus locations are the dirty sodas.
The customizable beverage features a soda base, such as Mountain Dew or Coke, mixed with flavored syrups such as coconut milk, and toppings including gummy candies or cold foam.
The seasonal feature is the “Sleighin’ Dirty” soda. It comes with Dr. Pepper mixed with a splash of eggnog and cinnamon syrup, finished with a sprinkle of nutmeg.
Prices start at $4.29 for a 20-ounce drink.
Another favorite is the “kidZone” for children too young for coffee or Ziggi’s Red Bull infusions. This part of the menu offers blenders, which are similar to milkshakes, along with fizzy drinks with customizable flavors.
The store hours for Hudsonville will be from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday, 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday and 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday.
Customers can sign up online for rewards to receive a free drink. To learn more, visit the coffeehouse’s Facebook page.
Colorado
Colorado mom accused of killing 2 kids, fleeing to UK arrives back in US to face murder charges: ‘Momentous day’
A Colorado mom who is accused of stabbing her two young children to death and then fleeing the country after trying to frame her ex-husband finally arrived back in the US on Tuesday — almost two years after she was arrested in the UK.
Colorado District Attorney Michael Allen announced Kimberlee Singler’s return to the US during a somber press conference Tuesday afternoon. The 36-year-old faces two counts of first-degree murder and life behind bars if convicted.
“It’s a momentous day today,” Allen said, adding that her return “marks the first step in the criminal justice process.”
Singler is accused of killing her 9-year-old daughter and 7-year-old son and slashing her 11-year-old daughter amidst a bitter custody battle with her ex-husband on Dec. 18, 2023.
Her ex had recently been awarded more parenting time and his sister had been due to pick the three children up for the holidays two days before the slayings — but Singler refused to hand the kids over.
The husband’s lawyer then got a court order on Dec. 18, the day of the gruesome stabbings, for her to exchange the children two days later.
The mom called cops just after midnight on Dec. 19, claiming someone had burglarized the family’s Colorado Springs apartment. When police arrived, they said they found her two youngest children dead and her eldest injured.
Singler then told police that her ex-husband “had previously dreamt about killing his family” and that he was “always trying to ‘frame her’ and ‘get her arrested’ and to have the kids taken away from her,” Judge John Zani at Westminster Magistrates’ Court said in his January ruling when he rejected the challenge to her extradition to face murder charges.
A warrant was issued for her arrest mere days after the slaying, but she’d fled the country by then.
Singler’s extradition from the UK had repeatedly been stalled due to challenges ever since she was arrested in London on Dec. 30, 2023, less than two weeks after she allegedly killed her 9-year-old daughter and 7-year-old son.
She tried to argue that her extradition would violate the European human rights protections on the basis that a potential first-degree murder conviction would slap her with an automatic life-without-parole sentence, per Colorado law.
An eleventh-hour appeal was rejected in November, clearing her long-awaited extradition.
Allen, meanwhile, reiterated the importance of granting her eldest daughter, now 13, and her distraught family the privacy they desperately need.
The sole survivor previously recounted the moment her disturbed mother led her and her siblings to their bedrooms while muttering that “God was telling her to do it or their father was going to take them away.”
Singler faces seven first-degree charges for murder, attempted murder, and first-degree assault, Allen said.
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