Milwaukee, WI
Milwaukee Admirals win season opener against Chicago Wolves
ROSEMONT, Unwell. – Devin Cooley stopped 28 photographs in purpose, serving to the Milwaukee Admirals to a season-opening 5-2 win over the Chicago Wolves on Saturday Evening at Allstate Enviornment.
Jimmy Huntington and Mark Jankowski every chipped in a purpose and an help and Jordan Gross had a pair of helpers to tempo an offense that noticed 12 completely different gamers discover the again of the web.
The Wolves had been outshooting the Advertisements 7-1 halfway by the primary interval, but it surely was Milwaukee who obtained on with a power-play purpose from newcomer Jankowski at 13:08 of the opening body. John Leonard had the puck on the blueline and handed it all the way down to Jankowski, who was stationed alongside on the left publish. He caught the puck on his backhand, spun round to his forehand and roofed it over Wolves goalie Pyotr Kochetkov.
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Lower than 90 seconds later Markus Nurmi made it 2-0 when his wrister from the left circle snuck by the left foot of Kochetkov for his first purpose in North America.
The Wolves would battle again to tie the rating at two with a pair of fast objectives of their very own within the second interval. The primary got here off the stick of Vasily Ponomarev at 5:25 after which Stelio Mattheos obtained his first of the season at 6:53 to knot the rating at two.
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Nonetheless, Tim Schaller pushed the Admirals again into the lead on the eventual recreation winner with precisely one minute to play within the second when he was capable of poke the unfastened puck by Kochetkov throughout a scrum in entrance of the Chicago internet.
Milwaukee picked up objectives late within the third by Roland McKeown and Huntington sealed it with an empty netter with 48 seconds left to play.
The Admirals will head to Grand Rapids subsequent Wednesday, Oct. 19 earlier than returning residence to kick off the house portion of their schedule subsequent Saturday, Oct. 22 at 6 p.m. in opposition to the Manitoba Moose at UW-Milwaukee Panther Enviornment.
Milwaukee, WI
Brewers General Manager Matt Arnold Provides Update On Two-Time All-Star’s Return
The Milwaukee Brewers front office will have plenty on their plate in the upcoming days with the July 30 trade deadline, but they won’t need to worry about their relievers.
The Brewers received devastating news that their superstar outfielder Christian Yelich will be sidelined for an unknown amount of time while rehabbing a lower back injury, however, one crucial part of their roster will be making his return very soon.
“Brewers GM Matt Arnold met with a group of reporters today to discuss the trade deadline and other matters,” MLB.com’s Adam McCalvy reported Friday afternoon. “One news item from the session: All-Star closer Devin Williams is expected back in “the next few days.” He must clear one more rehab outing first.”
Williams has a .000 ERA with a six-to-two strikeout-to-walk ratio, .000 batting average against and a 0.67 WHIP in three innings pitched across three games between the High-A Wisconsin Timber Rattlers and Triple-A Nashville Sounds in his rehab stints.
The 29-year-old is certainly ready to make his 2024 major league season debut after pumping out incredible numbers in the minor leagues, albeit against lesser-talented competition.
The righty will finally return to Major League Baseball after sustaining a back stress fracture in spring training which sidelined him for several months.
Williams will be joining an incredibly talented pool of relievers with a combined 3.26 ERA, good enough for the third-best in Major League Baseball, which aided Milwaukee in their journey to the top of the National League Central.
More MLB: Brewers Potential Target Traded To Red Sox, Adding Pressure To Deadline
Milwaukee, WI
Giannis Antetokounmpo isn’t the only member of the Milwaukee Bucks family who’ll be a part of the 2024 Paris Olympics
Experiencing the Paris Olympics opening ceremony the Parisian way
The Olympics are underway, and local Parisians are excited to welcome the world to their city with good friends, good food and an excellent view.
Giannis Antetokounmpo isn’t the only member of the Milwaukee Bucks family who’ll play a big part in the Paris Olympics.
Johnny Watson, the Bucks’ executive producer of broadcast and live events, will, too.
Watson and Antetokounmpo will both help lead teams — just in their own ways. Antetokounmpo will be representing his home country of Greece from the court, and Watson will be courtside as a venue producer for all men’s and women’s basketball games.
“It’s one of the most prominent sporting entertainment in the world,” Watson said. “It’s a huge deal. I’m honored.”
Watson will be show-calling, aka producing, the basketball games’ in-arena presentations with videos, graphics, music, special effects, lighting, on-court entertainment and national anthems. To pull this off, he’ll be working with a crew of at least 25 people per game who’ve come from around the world, including France, Finland, Australia, Canada and the U.S.
While this may sound like a lot, Watson’s done it before. He worked the men’s basketball games and the women’s basketball medal rounds for the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics. Plus, the FIBA Basketball World Cup in China in 2019 and in Indonesia in 2023.
Watson said it’s nearly the same as what he does for Bucks games at Fiserv Forum. And, internationally with his team on occasion, like when the Bucks played in London in 2015 and Abu Dhabi in 2022.
Here’s a glimpse into Watson’s Olympic journey, from planning meetings that began months ago to what a day in his life will look like during the Games.
“It’s obviously an honor to be here, represent Milwaukee, the Bucks, my family,” Watson said. “It’s pretty special to be a part of it.”
From months of meetings to what game days will look like
About six months ago, Watson started having meetings for the Olympics, which ramped up as the Games got closer. Those meetings focused on processes, staffing, logistics and more, he said. Once that was solidified, planning the programs, what the shows will look like, commenced.
Watson arrived in Paris in mid-July and took an hour train ride to Lille, where the group phases will take place. He’ll head to Paris proper for the medal rounds and stay there through Aug. 13.
There will be four basketball games a day. Watson will arrive about two hours before the first for meetings and to rehearse, step-by-step, what he and his team — including talent, music DJs and graphic operators — will be doing during the game.
“Then, the doors open and you go and you start,” he said.
When the game ends, Watson and his crew will meet and rehearse for the next one.
“It makes for a really long day, but it’s the Olympics,” Watson said. “It’s the pinnacle of sport.”
Watson will be reunited with fellow Bucks representative Giannis Antetokounmpo when Greece takes on Canada Saturday. Antetokounmpo helped lead his home country into its first Games in men’s basketball since 2008 and was a flag bearer for the opening ceremonies.
Heading into his 13th season with the Bucks, Watson’s been with the organization since B.A., before Antetokounmpo.
“To see his growth and know his story now of where he came from and how much it means to him to be a part of the Olympics is pretty, pretty special,” Watson said. “I’m really excited to obviously see him and see some of the other Bucks staff here, too.”
With this being Watson’s first time in Paris, he’s carved out time to explore before heading back home. He’s planning to check out the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre and the Champs-Élysées.
The Bucks’ Johnny Watson will be headed to the US Open in New York next
As if the Olympics weren’t enough for one summer, Watson will be off to the US Open in New York next month to be a stadium director.
As a former All-American tennis player at Coe College with numerous accolades in the sport, this is a “bucket list lifelong dream” for him.
Watson has attended the U.S. Open as a fan with his dad — who got Watson into tennis when he was 7 — around six times.
Watson helped out with the event for the first time in 2022. He mainly co-managed content for the screens at the Flushing Meadows grounds. His role this time around will be more what he does with the Bucks, he said — programming shows and making them happen.
“My main priority is the (Bucks), but the fact that they look at this as professional development, something I’m very passionate about …” Watson said. “The fact that they give me the opportunity to do this or they tell me it’s OK to do these things in the summer and other times, it means a lot to me.”
Milwaukee, WI
Another commissioner resigns from the SDC board | Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service
Another commissioner is leaving the Social Development Commission board, as leaders continue to work on a restructuring plan, SDC attorney William Sulton said Friday.
Sulton said Serina Chavez, who was elected to represent SDC’s District 5 and serves as the board’s secretary, indicated that she planned to resign at the Board of Commissioners meeting Thursday at the African American Chamber of Commerce of Wisconsin, 1920 N. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Drive.
He received her official resignation on Friday.
“She indicates in her correspondence that essentially that the work that’s necessary is beyond what she is able to commit,” Sulton said.
Chavez’s resignation follows the departure of four board members, including former board chair Elmer Moore Jr., since SDC suspended operations and laid off its employees in late April.
The all-volunteer board has met frequently since the spring to sort through new information and work on a plan to reopen SDC, handling its day-to-day operations.
Most of Thursday’s board meeting was spent in closed session.
Here’s more on the SDC
Tax appointments for former SDC clients will close at IRS office on July 24
‘It’s heartbreaking’: Residents, vendors left in limbo after SDC’s closing
SDC’s inconsistent meeting notices raise transparency concerns. Here’s what you need to know.
What you need to know about the SDC’s closing
Meredith Melland is the neighborhoods reporter for the Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service and a corps member of Report for America, a national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on under-covered issues and communities. Report for America plays no role in editorial decisions in the NNS newsroom.
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