Pittsburg, PA
Cold weather Tuesday prompts more closures, opens warming centers in Pittsburgh
Pittsburg, PA
2026 NFL Draft Campus in Pittsburgh renderings revealed
The Draft Theater viewing area will create a dramatic setting for pick selections and televised coverage. Globally-televised shots from the stage will feature Pittsburgh’s skyline, rivers and bridges – a backdrop that reflects the ingenuity and character of the city known as the one that helped build America and forged an unmatched football legacy.
“These renderings bring the 2026 NFL Draft vision to life in a way that is uniquely Pittsburgh,” said Peter O’Reilly, NFL Executive Vice President of Club Business, International and League Events. “From the North Shore to Point State Park, this campus design captures the city’s energy, authenticity, and deep-rooted connection to the game, while delivering an unforgettable experience for fans around the world.”
Elements of the NFL Draft Experience, the league’s interactive fan festival, will be located at Point State Park, transforming one of Pittsburgh’s most historic and scenic public spaces into a vibrant hub of football, community and culture. Set at the confluence of the city’s three rivers, the Draft Experience will feature interactive activities, youth programming, food and beverage offerings, and immersive NFL exhibits designed for fans of all ages.
Connecting the Draft Theater and the NFL Draft Experience will be two signature Pittsburgh elements. The Roberto Clemente Bridge will be closed to vehicle traffic and activated as a pedestrian-only fan corridor, creating a dramatic and walkable connection between the North Shore and Downtown. In addition, the Gateway Clipper Fleet will provide river transportation between Draft sites, offering fans a distinctly Pittsburgh way to experience the event while highlighting the city’s waterways.
Pittsburg, PA
Musings: Penguins Win Streak Snapped Against Senators | Pittsburgh Penguins
On Monday, the Pittsburgh Penguins saw their six-game winning streak snapped in their final home game before the Olympic break, falling 3-2 to the Ottawa Senators.
“What we had today wasn’t much, and we still hung in there all the way to the end,” Erik Karlsson said. “It’s obviously never fun losing, but I don’t think that we deserved to win this one, even though we were hoping that we could hang in there a little bit to the end and at least get into overtime.”
Even though the Penguins were able to score first, off a pass from Evgeni Malkin to Egor Chinakhov, the Senators controlled the majority of the play. It was goaltender Arturs Silovs who kept his team in it, making several quality saves in the first period.
“I think him and [Skinner] have been standing on their head every night for us and tonight, unfortunately, Artie was forced into that,” Blake Lizotte said. “He did a great job and deserved better from us out in front of him.”
Throughout the first 40 minutes of play, the score was only 1-1 while the Penguins got outshot 22-10 in the process. While the team has been playing incredible hockey since the holiday break, going 13-2-2 in the process, tonight the team struggled to sustain possession and get into the offensive zone.
“I don’t think that we played the game that we have been for the past six weeks,” Karlsson said. “This was probably one of the very few games where we couldn’t seem to figure out how we wanted to play. I don’t think anyone in here, myself included, feels very good about how we started.”
The team also found themselves short-handed a lot throughout the first two periods when they took four straight penalties.
“It’s just too many penalties,” Lizotte said. “It takes guys out of the game. But from a team perspective, that’s disappointing to take that many. But from a PK perspective, really proud of the way the guys battled tonight, even though we didn’t have our best stuff.”
In the third period, Ottawa was able to get their first lead of the game after Tim Stutzle buried the rebound after Drake Batherson’s breakaway opportunity.
Just two minutes later, the Penguins were able to fight and tie the game after Ryan Shea’s shot from the boards snuck past Linus Ullmark, and Novak was there to get his tenth goal of the season.
“I think when you come out flat for two periods and you’re still in the game, you have a chance to win,” Lizotte said on the team’s effort in the third period. “I think there was a little bit of juice there, but overall, you’re not going to win many hockey games playing like that over 60 minutes.”
With just over five-minutes left in regulation, Claude Giroux found himself on a partial breakaway. Silovs stopped the initial shot, but the contact from Karlsson had Giroux crash into the net, which led the puck to cross the goal line.
Head Coach Dan Muse challenged the call for goaltender interference, but after further review, the referees ruled it a goal.
“He came in, I stopped the puck. He goes like 25 miles (per hour) going down,” Silovs said. “What (do) they expect me to do? I would understand if it would go straight away in. Then, I would agree with the call. But it’s a second effort. I don’t really agree with the call.”
Down by one, the Penguins pulled Silovs and tried to tie the game, but couldn’t break the Senators’ defense to beat Ullmark before time ultimately ran out.
The team will have a quick turnaround before traveling to New York to face the Islanders on Tuesday.
“This was not the brand of hockey that we’ve been accustomed to playing,” Karlsson said. “Gotta wash this one away. We know we’re a much better hockey team. We got a big game again tomorrow, and I think everybody’s already looking forward to turning the page.
More from Muse on Monday’s performance against Ottawa:
How did you see the sequence unfold on the game-winning goal? What was the explanation that you received?: I didn’t get an explanation. I saw it as they called a slash, he makes the save, and is run into, no chance at all. There’s nothing else that he can do there. I felt like that was one we could challenge. That’s why I challenged it. I don’t have any explanation.
Was tonight’s game just a flat performance? Is there anything that you can put your finger on?: It was flat, it was execution, races, battles. I think [Silovs] had a really strong game, and our penalty kill did a good job. Outside of that, I don’t think there’s much else I’m walking away here liking.
Is there a way to handle the systems and structure that Ottawa had tonight?: No, we’ve seen it this year. This isn’t the first time we’ve seen it. I do think we can be better. I think there’s been games where we have been better. I don’t think this is going to be like saved all the time. I thought it wasn’t it tonight. You look at the missed opportunities, starting with just our execution coming out of our zone. The first couple of shifts, there’s plays to be made. We’re not making them, or the support is not there. I thought as you got to the end of it, especially the back half of the first and throughout most of the rest of the game, it was just kind of playing into the game that they want to play. And I think we’ve also shown enough throughout the course of the year that we can generate off the forecheck. We can get into the offensive zone. We don’t have to force it early on, and we can generate that way. We weren’t doing that tonight. And so now we spent, it felt like the great, great, great majority of the game either defending or without the puck. And you don’t want to play that game. And so, I mean, that’s a credit to them. They work hard, they check hard, and they’re playing well. But at the same time, I thought a lot of this, we got to look in the mirror tonight in terms of the game that we played. And the only reason that this was a close game was just because of Artie.
With the huge game tomorrow against the Islanders, was tonight a wake-up call for the team?: Because it’s a quick turnaround, like, it’s nice that we get to play tomorrow night, but we also can’t just say that this didn’t happen. Like, we have to be better than this. For me, it’s so far off the mark from where we’ve been playing and where we’re working to get to. And so, it’s an opportunity tomorrow to show ourselves that there’s a much better game that we have the ability to play than that.
You’ve had a couple of challenges this year that haven’t gone your way around the net. Does the league explain what is or isn’t goaltender interference?: Yeah, I think a lot of it also is that there are a lot of factors that are at play. We get all of them. We get the explanations. So, I mean, I would challenge that one again.
Pittsburg, PA
Noah Kahan bringing tour to Pittsburgh’s PNC Park this summer
“Stick Season” singer Noah Kahan is coming to Pittsburgh this summer.
As part of his North American tour, the Grammy-nominated superstar will stop at PNC Park on Friday, July 3.
The news of his tour comes on the heels of the announcement of his upcoming fourth studio album, “The Great Divide,” and his latest single of the same name.
The Great Divide Tour will kick off in Orlando, Florida, on June 11. Kahan will make nearly two dozen stops across North America and wrap up in Seattle on Aug. 30. He’ll be joined by Gigi Perez.
“I’m hitting the road this summer. Can’t wait to bring The Great Divide Tour to stadiums across North America!” Kahan wrote in a post on Instagram.
“The Great Divide” is the much-anticipated follow-up to “Stick Season.” The Vermont singer-songwriter’s 2022 album and breakout single propelled him to multiple Grammy nominations, billions of streams and 1.5 million tickets sold in venues around the world, including two sold-out nights at New York’s Madison Square Garden and Boston’s Fenway Park. His last tour brought him to Star Lake in May of 2023.
Fans who want access to the presale need to sign up on Ticketmaster by Thursday, Feb. 5 at 11:59 p.m. Presale starts Tuesday, Feb. 10 at noon local time. Kahan says tickets bought on Ticketmaster will be non-transferable and can only be sold on Ticketmaster at face value.
A portion of each ticket from The Great Divide Tour will be donated to Kahan’s mental health initiative, The Busyhead Project.
-
Indiana2 days ago13-year-old rider dies following incident at northwest Indiana BMX park
-
Massachusetts3 days agoTV star fisherman, crew all presumed dead after boat sinks off Massachusetts coast
-
Tennessee3 days agoUPDATE: Ohio woman charged in shooting death of West TN deputy
-
Pennsylvania1 week agoRare ‘avalanche’ blocks Pennsylvania road during major snowstorm
-
Movie Reviews1 week agoVikram Prabhu’s Sirai Telugu Dubbed OTT Movie Review and Rating
-
Indiana1 day ago13-year-old boy dies in BMX accident, officials, Steel Wheels BMX says
-
Austin, TX4 days ago
TEA is on board with almost all of Austin ISD’s turnaround plans
-
Politics1 week agoTrump’s playbook falters in crisis response to Minneapolis shooting
