Denver, CO
Denver mourns Dana Crawford, a legend who shaped the city
Developer and preservationist Dana Crawford has died at 93, leaving a legacy of championing the stories of the past found in the buildings and spaces of Denver and Colorado.
“Her fingerprints are all over the place,” said Walter Isenberg, CEO and co-founder of Sage Hospitality and a close associate of Crawford for decades.
“Our city and frankly our state wouldn’t be what it is without Dana.”
“You just feel the power when you’re in her presence. And you know that what she says she means. She’s courageous, she’s bold. And my God she sees something out of nothing,” said Mary Jane Loevlie, who is leading the effort to redevelop the old Argo Mine in Idaho Springs that Crawford has been working on in recent years.
“Dana was a visionary whose passion and determination helped shape Denver into the historic and dynamic city it is today. Her legacy is found in the fabric of Denver — not just in the historic buildings she saved but also in the spirit of pride she instilled in our community,” said Denver’s City Council in a release.
Dana Crawford has restored and redeveloped nearly a million square feet of property in Denver, starting in the 1960s, with her first signature project coming after she drove down Larimer Street as she looked for opportunity and realized the historic buildings, though dilapidated, had enormous value.
“When she really first stated on Larimer Square, the notion of historic preservation wasn’t really in vogue,” said Isenberg. There were some properties being restored in St. Louis and San Francisco, soon in Boston. But urban renewal in the era commonly called for tearing down old buildings.
“She ran up against lenders and city officials and others who doubted her and they all were proved to be wrong,” said Isenberg, who later partnered with Crawford to restore the Crawford Hotel. She found herself in a world of development and finance dominated by men recalled Isenberg remembering a story she had told about seeking financial support.
“She went in to talk to these bankers and all men and the President of the bank wouldn’t even turn his chair around and look at her.”
“She was refused, turned down by all these men. So she had to have her husband be her front man,” said Mary Jane Loevlie, a friend who has been working with Crawford in recent years on the old Argo Mine project in Idaho Springs.
“She was doing the background manipulating but they were the front men saying, ‘OK Dana we can get this done for you.’”
The Argo Mine project calls for restoring the old mine building and building a gondola to a mountain top with restaurants and views along with miles of biking and hiking trails. Crawford loved the big round table where 10 people could sit in a circle and share ideas.
“Even though she had the power in the room nobody was the head of the table,” said Loevlie.
Crawford’s list of projects includes the restoration of Union Station where the Crawford Hotel bears her name – even though she didn’t want that at first. Isenberg recalls sitting in the restored Cruise Room in the Oxford.
“We walked out of the Cruise Room and walked down the street and walked into the Great Hall of Union Station and Dana said to me, she looked up and said, ‘We’re going to turn this into a great hotel.’” She had conceived rooms up on the third floor no one else may have thought of.
“What I’ve always said about Dana is, look where Dana’s going, wait four or five years and then go there because she is so far ahead of all of us,” said Isenberg.
What she recognized was the buildings were not just physical structures.
“That story was worth preserving. And with the preservation of the real estate you preserve the story of the place,” Isenberg recalled.
In the long list of projects there is Larimer Square, the Oxford, the Acme Lofts, the Edbrooke Lofts, Cooper Flats Condominiums and the Flour Mills Lofts where she lived. She had in recent years helped with projects in Pueblo and Trinidad in addition to Idaho Springs.
“We are bringing this place back to the economic generator that it once was at the turn of the 20th century and she saw it immediately,” said Loevlie.
Loevlie, who shared a birthday with Crawford, remembered her friend for the parties.
“We had some of the most raucous parties with the widest spectrum of people that you could imagine. There wasn’t a party that Dana didn’t like.”
Loevlie visited Crawford Thursday night before her passing. Earlier this month Crawford had been filing preservation documents on behalf of property in Trinidad. She was involved until the end.
“She knew I was there and she was surrounded by her loved ones in her beloved loft,” she said.
“She’s just always going to be in my soul.”
Denver, CO
Nemanja Jokic, the older brother of\u00a0Denver …
Nemanja Jokic, the older brother of Denver Nuggets superstar Nikola Jokic, has successfully transitioned from a protective family advisor into a credentialed professional by becoming a certified NBA agent, Serbian outlet Meridian Sports relayed on Tuesday. The middle of the three brothers had to navigate the strict licensing protocols dictated by the National Basketball Players Association, which stands as the sole governing body authorized to issue the official license required to negotiate contracts with league franchises. The former collegiate player turned team executive for Serbian club KK Joker Sombor completed the strict application process.
EuroHoops.net
Denver, CO
Denver Broncos Crack Top 10 in NFL Uniform Rankings
The Denver Broncos have undergone a uniform overhaul, beginning in 2024. The Broncos rolled out the Mile High Collection ahead of the 2024 season, which included three different uniform combinations, plus the ’77 Throwbacks.
In 2024, Broncos fans were also treated to a Midnight Navy jersey/pants combination with the white ‘D’ helmet on Monday Night Football against the Cleveland Browns. On top of that, the Broncos rocked their White Out look, which included the Summit White jersey/pants combination and their standard Bronco logo on a white helmet, against the Kansas City Chiefs on Christmas Day last season.
The Broncos are keeping things fresh, and it’s going to be fun to see the different jersey combinations the team rolls out each week this coming season. Fans are obviously partial to the designs, but where do the Broncos’ uniform combinations rank among their NFL peers?
Sports Illustrated‘s Mike Kadlick ranked all 32 NFL teams’ uniform combinations, with the Broncos checking in at No. 10.
“Known as the ‘Mile High’ collection, the Broncos’ new uniforms debuted ahead of the 2024 season, and they remain awesome. Jam-packed with nods to Denver and the surrounding area, their jerseys feature a sleeve cap with a mountain peak and subtle triangles along the sides to represent Colorado’s summit markers. Their helmets, meanwhile, don a bumper that reads “5280”—a reference to Denver’s elevation above sea level. Rounded out with an all-blue alternate kit and a classic throwback look that incorporates the team’s D helmet logo, the Broncos nailed their recent redesign,” Kadlick wrote.
Attention to Detail
It’s not No. 1, but at least the Broncos are in the top 10. As Kadlick noted, Denver’s attention to detail in the new uniform designs is second to none.
Kadlick had the Los Angeles Chargers ranked No. 1, which, I’ve got to admit, kind of surprised me. I’ve never been that impressed by the Chargers’ designs, but to each their own, I suppose.
The Chiefs ranked No. 11, with the Las Vegas Raiders at No. 14, for whatever it’s worth. Beauty is always in the eye of the beholder, but Kadlick had a few questionable uniform designs ranked ahead of the Broncos, I must say.
Besides the Chargers at the top, Kadlick had the Cincinnati Bengals (No. 5), Tampa Bay Buccaneers (No. 6), Washington Commanders (No. 8), and Miami Dolphins (No. 9) ranked above the Broncos. I’ll hear you out on the classic look of the Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers (with slight modern twists), as well as the cool options the Baltimore Ravens and Houston Texans are rolling out nowadays, but the Chargers are meh, the Bengals and Bucs are downright ugly, and the Commanders are just plain.
No big deal, though. Posts like this make for timely offseason fodder as we await the return of football. The Broncos just finished up their offseason training program, and we’re now firmly in the NFL summer.
The cleats will hit the grass again at Broncos Park Powered by CommonSpirit on July 28, when the veterans report for training camp. From there, the whirlwind of the 2026 season will begin in earnest.
Let’s hope the product on the field looks as good as the Broncos’ Mile High Collection uniforms. The Broncos have produced two double-digit-win seasons since the Walton-Penner ownership group rolled out the new uniform designs, so there is a precedent in place.
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Denver, CO
Nuggets decline Jalen Pickett’s team option for 2026-27 season, sources say
The Nuggets are declining Jalen Pickett’s fourth-year team option for the 2026-27 season, releasing him from his contract, league sources told The Denver Post.
Former Nuggets general manager Calvin Booth drafted Pickett with the 32nd overall pick in 2023. The 6-foot-2 reserve combo guard has struggled to break into Denver’s everyday rotation throughout his first three years in the league.
His $2.41 million salary next season would’ve offered the Nuggets a sliver of cap relief, but they chose instead to move on from the former Penn State star. Monday was the deadline to make a decision on his option.
Pickett, 26, averaged 5.2 points, 2.3 rebounds and 2.3 assists in 16.1 minutes per game last season. He appeared in 50 games, highlighted by a career-high 29-point, seven-assist performance in January to lead the Nuggets in an upset over Philadelphia without their entire starting lineup.
Pickett is shooting 38.7% from the 3-point line on two attempts per game in his first three years. He also boasts a sturdy 3.63 career assist-to-turnover ratio.
But he’s remained a deep bench option under two different head coaches in Denver, from Michael Malone to David Adelman. Booth was fired in April 2025. Then, new co-general managers Jon Wallace and Ben Tenzer signed veteran point guard Tyus Jones off the buyout market late last season when the Nuggets wanted ball-handling depth. Jones received playoff minutes over Pickett during their first-round series against the Timberwolves.
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