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Tag: injuries

  • Injured snowmobilers in Grand County rescued, flown to hospital

    Search and rescue personnel responded to a snowmobile incident in Grand County on Wednesday, and two injured snowmobilers were flown to hospitals.

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  • Cam Johnson injury: Nuggets say forward out 4 to 6 weeks with hyperextended knee

    As two Nuggets starters inch closer to a return, another will replace them in street clothes on the sideline.

    Cam Johnson is expected to miss at least four to six weeks after hyperextending his right knee Tuesday in Dallas, the team announced before hosting Minnesota on Christmas. Johnson underwent an MRI that revealed a bone bruise on Wednesday — a best-case outcome after a painful landing that could’ve resulted in structural ligament damage.

    Still, after another day of assessing the severity of the injury, Denver determined Johnson will be its third starter to miss a stretch of four or more weeks this season. Aaron Gordon (hamstring) and Christian Braun (ankle) have not played in December, with coach David Adelman eyeing an upcoming seven-game road trip as the earliest opportunity for one or both to return from injuries.

    Johnson, 29, is averaging 11.7 points, 3.6 rebounds and 2.4 assists per game in his first season as a Nugget. Denver traded Michael Porter Jr. and a future first-round pick for him in June. He started the season in a nasty slump but turned a corner around mid-November, helping the Nuggets to an 10-5 record in games without Gordon and Braun.

    Bennett Durando

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  • Motorcyclist injured in Denver rush hour hit-and-run on Interstate 70

    Denver police are searching for the driver responsible for a Monday morning hit-and-run on Interstate 70 that injured a motorcyclist, according to the agency.

    An unknown driver hit the motorcyclist while changing lanes on westbound I-70 near Sheridan Boulevard at about 7:15 a.m. Monday, according to an alert from the Denver Police Department.

    Police said the suspect was driving a white or light-colored Jeep Cherokee with unknown license plates and fled the scene after the crash.

    Paramedics took the motorcyclist, who has not been publicly identified, to the hospital with serious injuries, police said.

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  • 3 injured in overnight Denver crashes, police say

    Two motorists and a pedestrian were injured in Sunday night crashes across Denver, police said.

    The Denver Police Department posted about the first crash involving a car and a pedestrian at S. Federal Boulevard and W. Florida Avenue, on the edge of the city’s Mar Lee and Ruby Hill neighborhoods, at 7:40 p.m. Sunday.

    Paramedics took the pedestrian to the hospital with serious injuries, police said. Additional information about the crash, including whether the pedestrian was in a crosswalk, was not immediately available Monday morning.

    The second crash involved three drivers near S. Forest Street and Leetsdale Drive in Denver’s Washington Virginia Vale neighborhood, about 9 miles east of the first crash, police said at 7:47 p.m. Sunday.

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  • How a violent police academy drill has been tied to deaths and injuries across the country

    Associated Press — When recruits were repeatedly punched and tackled during a role-playing exercise at the Texas game wardens academy last year, they were taking part in a longstanding police training tradition that critics say should be retired.

    By the end of the day, at least 13 of the cadets reported injuries. At least two concussions. A torn knee. A bloody nose. A broken wrist. Two would need surgery. One would resign in protest. Another quit even before the drill.

    A state investigation later found nothing wrong with the drill, which its supporters say is intended to teach recruits to make good decisions under intense physical and mental stress. The experience on Dec. 13, 2024, may have been traumatizing for some at the Texas Game Warden Training Center in Hamilton, Texas, but it was not unique.

    Since 2005, drills intended to teach defensive tactics at law enforcement academies have been linked to at least a dozen deaths and hundreds of injuries, some resulting in disability, according to a review by The Associated Press.

    The drills — frequently referred to as RedMan training for the brand and color of protective gear worn by participants – are intended to teach law enforcement recruits how to defend themselves against combative suspects. They’re among the most challenging tests at police academies. Law enforcement experts say that when properly designed and supervised, they teach new officers critical skills.

    But critics say they can put recruits at risk of physical and mental abuse that runs some promising officers out of the profession. Academies have wide latitude in running such exercises, given a lack of national standards governing police training.

    Here are some takeaways from AP’s report.

    A string of tragedies across the nation in recent years has brought new attention to the details of curricula at law enforcement academies.

    In August, 30-year-old Jon-Marques Psalms died two days after a training exercise at the San Francisco Police Department Academy. He suffered a head injury while fighting an instructor in a padded suit.

    An autopsy found his death was an accident caused by complications of muscle and organ damage “in the setting of a high-intensity training exercise.” His family has filed a legal claim against the city and hired experts for a second autopsy.

    In November 2024, a 24-year-old Kentucky game warden recruit died after fighting an instructor in a pool to the point of collapse, video obtained by AP shows. William Bailey’s death was ruled an accidental drowning due to a “sudden cardiac dysrhythmia during physical exertion.”

    A year earlier, a Denver police recruit had both legs amputated after a training fight that his attorney called a “barbaric hazing ritual” left him hospitalized. An Indiana recruit died of exertion after he was pummeled by a larger instructor, and a classmate was disabled after fighting the same man.

    Academies have discretion to design training within state guidelines, and AP found the drills take many forms at local police, county sheriff and state departments. They’re sometimes called “combat training,” “Fight Day” or “stress reaction training.”

    Some recruits have to ward off several assailants at once. Others fight a series of instructors, one after another. Some academies intentionally use larger, more skilled instructors. The stated goals are generally the same: to use skills learned in the academy to fend off or subdue assailants and to never give up.

    Recruits and instructors wear protective gear to cushion their heads from blows. But there are no uniform safety guidelines, including whether academies must have medical personnel on site.

    One of the recruits injured last year was Heather Sterling, a former Wyoming game warden who had moved back to her home state of Texas to continue her career.

    Sterling had been a defensive tactics instructor in Wyoming before enrolling in the Texas academy, and she was concerned when she learned about the so-called four-on-one drill.

    During the exercise, cadets faced a barrage of attacks from four instructors playing the role of violent assailants. Cadets would have to kick and punch a bag held by an instructor and try to fend off attacks for 90 seconds or more.

    Sterling thought the scenario was unrealistic. She said she had never been ambushed on the job, and she would be able to use her firearm or other force if that happened in real life.

    Video shows that Sterling was punched seven times in the head in less than two minutes, and the last blow knocked off her wrestling helmet. She was also thrown to the ground.

    Sterling said she had a pounding headache, and later drove herself to get medical treatment. She was diagnosed with a concussion.

    Sterling passed the drill but resigned from the academy in protest. Now she’s speaking out in the hopes of bringing change to practices in Texas and elsewhere.

    “I’m worried that someone is going to get killed,” she said. “This is a poorly disguised assault.”

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  • ‘We all panicked and ran’: Brown University freshman speaks after deadly shooting

    ‘We all panicked and ran’: Brown University freshman speaks after deadly shooting

    PROVIDENCE TODAY. THAT’S RIGHT. BEN, THAT VIGIL ACTUALLY JUST WRAPPED UP A FEW MOMENTS AGO HERE AT LIPPITT MEMORIAL PARK. AND YOU CAN SEE PEOPLE ARE STILL LINGERING AROUND HERE WANTING TO BE IN COMMUNITY AFTER THIS UNTHINKABLE TRAGEDY HAPPENED AT BROWN UNIVERSITY. IT WAS REALLY A BEAUTIFUL CEREMONY. THERE WAS SINGING, THERE WAS PRAYER, AND OF COURSE, COMMUNITY COMING TOGETHER AFTER THIS UNIMAGINABLE EVENT. I SPOKE TO SEVERAL PEOPLE HERE, BOTH COMMUNITY MEMBERS, FACULTY AT THE UNIVERSITY AND PEOPLE WHO LIVE IN THIS AREA, ALL SAYING THEY THEY COULD NOT BELIEVE SOMETHING LIKE THIS HAPPENED HERE. THERE WAS ACTUALLY A HOLIDAY EVENT ALREADY SCHEDULED TO TAKE PLACE AT THIS PARK. OF COURSE, WITH EVERYTHING HAPPENING AT BROWN UNIVERSITY, THE EVENT RAPIDLY SWITCHED INTO A VIGIL AND A MOMENT FOR THE COMMUNITY TO COME TOGETHER. HERE’S WHAT SOME PEOPLE HAD TO SAY ABOUT HOW TIGHT KNIT THIS PLACE IS. THIS IS A SMALL SCHOOL. EVERYONE KNOWS EVERYONE. IT’S GREAT. STRENGTH IS ITS INTIMACY, AND WE’RE SEEING THAT TONIGHT. AND, YOU KNOW, IT’S TERRIBLE REASON FOR US TO GET TOGETHER. BUT IT IS VERY HEARTWARMING TO SEE HOW MANY PEOPLE ARE HERE AND HOW MUCH LOVE THERE IS. THE RED CROSS WAS ALSO HERE, AS WELL AS OTHER COMMUNITY PARTNERS, MAKING SURE EVERYONE HAD EVERYTHING THEY NEEDED TO BE ABLE TO COME TOGETHER SAFELY. THERE’S ALSO ENHANCED LAW ENFORCEMENT PRESENCE HERE. I CAN TELL YOU THERE HAVE BEEN MULTIPLE PATROLS HAPPENING AROUND THIS PARK, AS WELL AS LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS WALKING THROUGHOUT THE CROWD, MAKING SURE EVERYONE FELT COMFORTABLE. BUT OF COURSE, AFTER SOMETHING LIKE THIS HAPPENS, THE COMMUNITY WANTS TO COME TOGETHER. AND FROM WHAT EVERYONE IS SAYING, PROVIDENCE IS SUCH A TIGHT KNIT COMMUNITY. THEY REALLY WANT IT TO BE TOGETHER IN THIS MOMENT. AND THAT’S EXACTLY WHAT THEY DID. FOR NOW, WE’RE LIVE IN PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND. DANAE BUCCI WCVB NEWSCENTER 5. AND OUR THANKS TO JENNY FOR THAT. AND IF YOU’RE NOT FAMILIAR WITH PROVIDENCE AND BROWN UNIVERSITY, SO HERE ON THAT SIDE OF THE STREET IS THE ENGINEERING BUILDING. BARRAS AND HOLLY ON THIS SIDE OF THE STREET ARE HOMES. THIS UNIVERSITY IS VERY MUCH INTERCONNECTED AND INTERTWINED WITH PROVIDENCE NEIGHBORHOODS HERE. AND SO THIS EVENT, THIS SHOOTING IS CERTAINLY IMPACTING MORE THAN JUST THE BROWN UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY. IT’S IMPACTING THE GREATER PROVIDENCE COMMUNITY AS WELL. OUR CAITLIN GALEHOUSE, WITH THIS PART OF THE STORY, AS A LOT OF BUSINESSES IN THIS CITY STILL REMAIN CLOSED, THE PROVIDENCE COMMUNITY HAS BEEN SHAKEN BY THIS TRAGEDY. WE’RE IN WAYLAND SQUARE. THIS IS ABOUT A MILE OFF CAMPUS, AND IT’S BEEN RELATIVELY QUIET THIS AFTERNOON. IN FACT, SOME STORES ARE ACTUALLY CLOSED BECAUSE OF THE SHOOTING. I DIDN’T KNOW WHAT WAS GOING ON AT ALL. FEAR, ANXIETY. TRAGEDY. STRIKING PROVIDENCE SATURDAY AFTER A MAN OPENED FIRE IN A CLASSROOM AT BROWN UNIVERSITY, KILLING TWO STUDENTS AND INJURING NINE OTHERS. THIS IS DEFINITELY BONDING EVERYONE CLOSER TOGETHER. KIND OF SOUNDS AS HORRIBLE AS IT IS. IT’S KIND OF LIKE TRAUMA BONDING IN A WAY. WE’RE ALL HERE AT THE SAME EXACT UNIVERSITY, YOU KNOW, GOING THROUGH THE SAME THINGS. IT’S BEEN ONE DAY SINCE THE TRAGIC INCIDENT BROKE OUT AT THE UNIVERSITY, AND MANY ARE STILL DIGESTING THE REALITY OF WHAT HAPPENED. I’M JUST SADDENED FOR THE BROWN COMMUNITY AND THE ENTIRE STATE. IT’S JUST TRAGIC, THE THE TRAGEDY BEING SO CLOSE TO CHRISTMAS AND, YOU KNOW, FINISHING OUT THE SCHOOL YEAR AND READY TO CELEBRATE YOUR ACCOMPLISHMENTS AND ALL, TO HAVE THAT TAKEN AWAY JUST BY SOME SENSELESS ACT. THE SHELTER IN PLACE ORDER WAS LIFTED EARLY SUNDAY MORNING, BUT THE STREETS ARE STILL QUIET, PROBABLY LESS PEOPLE OUT OF THE COFFEE SHOPS THERE WAS YESTERDAY. WE WERE GOING TO GO OUT TO DINNER. WE DID, AND OBVIOUSLY WE JUST STAYED INSIDE. IT’S A LOT. IT’S IT’S SAD. IT’S SCARY. WE HAD A LOT OF PEOPLE, COWORKERS, THINGS LIKE THAT, CHECKING IN ON US LAST NIGHT. AND I HAVE A LOT OF FRIENDS THAT ALSO KIND OF LIVE LIKE SURROUNDING EAST SIDE AREA. SO YEAH, EVERYONE JUST TRYING TO FIGURE OUT HOW TO HOW TO PROCESS AND HOW TO MOVE ON. BROWN UNIVERSITY HAS CANCELED CLASSES AND FINAL EXAMS FOR THE REMAINDER OF THE SEMESTER DUE TO THE CIRCUMSTANCES. REPORTING IN P

    ‘We all panicked and ran’: Brown University freshman speaks after deadly shooting

    Updated: 9:11 PM EST Dec 14, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    A shooting Saturday at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, that killed two students and injured nine others has left many students, families and city officials struggling to process the tragedy. Members of the Brown community expressed shock and sadness as they mourned the loss of the two students. Video above: Brown University students, community shaken by campus mass shootingAuthorities said the person believed to be responsible fled the scene, prompting a shelter-in-place order that lasted into the early morning hours Sunday. Students were told to stay where they were, silence their cellphones and, at one point, hide. Drew Nelson, a freshman at Brown, described the terrifying moments after the shooting. “We were running out probably a minute or two after the shooting, and there were already, I would guess, between five and 10 cop cars outside. I didn’t see anything that would, I would call a suspect. I didn’t see the shooter. I just kept running until I was nowhere near the building,” he said. Students are now leaving campus and returning home, but for many, that process of healing is only beginning.

    A shooting Saturday at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, that killed two students and injured nine others has left many students, families and city officials struggling to process the tragedy.

    Members of the Brown community expressed shock and sadness as they mourned the loss of the two students.

    Video above: Brown University students, community shaken by campus mass shooting

    Authorities said the person believed to be responsible fled the scene, prompting a shelter-in-place order that lasted into the early morning hours Sunday.

    Students were told to stay where they were, silence their cellphones and, at one point, hide.

    Drew Nelson, a freshman at Brown, described the terrifying moments after the shooting.

    “We were running out probably a minute or two after the shooting, and there were already, I would guess, between five and 10 cop cars outside. I didn’t see anything that would, I would call a suspect. I didn’t see the shooter. I just kept running until I was nowhere near the building,” he said.

    Students are now leaving campus and returning home, but for many, that process of healing is only beginning.

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  • LaMelo Ball still out, but Hornets set to welcome back Josh Green vs. Chicago

    Josh Green appears set to make his 2025-26 debut.

    The Charlotte Hornets guard is not listed on the injury report for Friday’s game against the Chicago Bulls at Spectrum Center, putting him in line to potentially play in a meaningful game for the first time since April.

    Green had been recovering from undergoing surgery in June to stabilize his left shoulder. He began training camp in October strictly limited to individual work and recently began ramping up his activity levels, which is the first sign of a return to the court for NBA game action.

    Last week while the team was in New York as part of a three-game road trip, the Hornets assigned Green to the G League’s Greensboro Swarm for practice back in North Carolina, allowing him to get in better condition.

    Green took part in the team contact portions of practice on Thursday and appears poised to join a roster still littered with injuries. LaMelo Ball and Tre Mann have been ruled out for the Hornets’ matchup with the Bulls.

    Ball exited early in the second half of the Hornets’ 111-86 win over the Toronto Raptors at Scotiabank Arena on Friday night after injuring his left ankle and didn’t suit up in their loss to the Denver Nuggets on Sunday with what’s being called a left ankle bone bruise.

    Mann, who’s nursing a right knee bone bruise, won’t be available for the fifth straight outing and Collin Sexton is set to miss his third straight game with a left quad strain.

    Grant Williams (right knee) also remains out and Moussa Diabate (right knee soreness) is questionable. But at least the Hornets will welcome Green back into the fold.

    That’s a start.

    This story was originally published December 11, 2025 at 5:49 PM.

    Roderick Boone

    The Charlotte Observer

    Roderick Boone joined the Observer in September 2021 to cover the Charlotte Hornets and NBA. In his more than two decades of writing about the world of sports, he’s chronicled everything from high school rodeo to a major league baseball no-hitter to the Super Bowl to the Finals. The Long Island native has deep North Carolina roots and enjoys watching “The Fresh Prince of Bel Air” endlessly.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

    Roderick Boone

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  • Stephen Curry Bruises Right Quadriceps in Warriors’ Loss, Will Have MRI Exam

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Stephen Curry limped away from the bench late in Golden State’s 104-100 loss to the Houston Rockets on Wednesday night after bruising his right quadriceps. He will undergo an MRI exam on the injury to determine his status.

    The Warriors will have to regroup with the idea that Curry might be out for a stretch.

    “It obviously changes everything, our rotations, how we’re playing, who we’re playing through, so we’ll see,” coach Steve Kerr said. “When I heard it was a quad I was actually kind of relieved, better than an ankle or a knee, so hopefully he can recover quickly and be OK. But we’ve got to hold down the fort.”

    Curry and Amen Thompson went down hard under the basket with 3:24 remaining and the game tied at 91 after Thompson’s drive to the hoop, which initially was whistled an offensive foul. Houston challenged and the call was overturned to a block by Curry.

    Kerr said he could see Curry ailing after that play. The two-time MVP finished with 14 points on 4-for-13 shooting — 2 of 9 on 3-pointers — seven rebounds, five assists and seven of the Warriors’ 16 turnovers that led to 22 Houston points.

    “That’s a challenge, if Steph is out everybody else has to kind of improve their game a lot to fill that void,” rookie Will Richard said.

    Guard Gary Payton II also suffered a sprained left ankle that limited him to just under five minutes.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

    Associated Press

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  • These 6 Kitchen Tools Can Make or Break Your Thanksgiving Dinner

    It’s the start of Thanksgiving week, the time when home cooks across America suddenly recognize the daunting task ahead.

    More than 90% of people in the U.S. celebrate the food-centric holiday and more than 1 in 4 attend meals that include more than 10 other people, according to the Pew Research Center.

    Under that kind of pressure, what host wouldn’t want the best tools to make sure the holiday dinner goes off without a hitch?

    With that in mind, we asked national food safety experts which kitchen devices and aids are essential to ensure a safe and tasty Thanksgiving meal.

    Here are their top four suggestions for aids that can make or break your holiday dinner, plus two bonus tips for after the meal:

    Our panel of experts unanimously agreed that an instant-read digital thermometer is vital to making sure roast turkey and other dishes reach 165 degrees Fahrenheit (74 degrees Celsius) to eliminate the risk of food poisoning from germs like salmonella and Campylobacter.

    “This is non-negotiable,” said Darin Detwiler, a Northeastern University food safety expert. “A reliable thermometer ensures you’re not guessing, because guessing is not a food safety strategy.”


    Color-coded cutting boards

    In the hustle of a holiday kitchen, the risk of cross-contamination is real. That’s when germs from one food, such as raw turkey, may be spread to other foods, such as fresh vegetables or fruits.

    It’s best to use dedicated cutting boards for each type of food, and color-coding — red for meat, yellow for poultry, green for veggies — can help, said Barbara Kowalcyk, director of the Institute for Food Safety and Nutrition Security at George Washington University.

    “I try not to use wooden cutting boards,” said Kowalcyk, noting that they can retain bacteria that thrive and grow to large enough quantities to cause illness.

    As an emergency medicine doctor who has stitched up many Thanksgiving injuries, Dr. Tony Cirillo urges home cooks to make sure their kitchen knives are sharp.

    A sharp knife cuts cleanly, while a dull knife requires more pressure that can cause dangerous slips, said Cirillo, a spokesperson for the American College of Emergency Physicians.

    Pulling a hot turkey out of the oven is tricky, especially if the pan you cook it in is flimsy, Cirillo added. Use a sturdy metal roasting pan or, in a pinch, stack two foil roasting pans together for strength.

    “I’m a big fan of double-panning,” Cirillo said. “Dropping the turkey is generally not good on Thanksgiving.”

    Just as important as getting food to the table is making sure it doesn’t sit out too long, said Don Schaffner, a food safety expert at Rutgers University.

    Use a cooking timer or clock alarm to make sure to pack away leftovers within two hours to prevent bacterial growth that can cause illness.

    And when you’re storing those leftovers, make sure to put them in shallow containers, Schaffner said.

    Measure using a ruler — or even the short side of a credit card — to make sure that dense foods like stuffing and sweet potatoes reach a depth of no more than 2 inches (5 centimeters) to allow for quick and complete cooling in the refrigerator.

    The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

    Associated Press

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  • Gunman who killed Florida deputy dies from injuries after eviction notice shooting

    VERO BEACH, Fla. — A gunman who killed a Florida deputy earlier this week died on Saturday from injuries received in the confrontation, authorities say.

    Michael Halberstam, 37, shot two Indian River County deputies and a locksmith on Friday when they were serving an eviction notice at a home near Vero Beach where Halberstam’s mother was trying to evict him, officials said. Officers returned fire, striking Halberstam multiple times and he succumbed to his injuries Saturday afternoon, the county’s sheriff’s department said in a post online.

    One of the deputies, Terri Sweeting-Mashkow, was killed and another is recovering from a shoulder injury. The locksmith was in critical condition after the shooting and underwent surgery, Alexander Hagan, a spokesman for HCA Florida Lawnwood Hospital, said Friday. The locksmith wasn’t identified.

    Over the past month, the sheriff’s office had received seven calls from the home, “almost all” of which were from the mother calling about her son, Indian River County Sheriff Eric Flowers said Friday at a news conference. Still, he said, deputies weren’t expecting any trouble when they arrived to carry out the eviction.

    “This was a standard call for service,” the sheriff said, adding there was nothing in Halberstam’s record that would have precluded him from having a weapon.

    Sweeting-Mashkow was a 25-year-veteran of the sheriff’s office, Flowers said, growing emotional as he praised the deputy and described working alongside him his entire career.

    “I can tell you that our team will feel this forever,” Flowers said.

    Sweeting-Mashkow was posthumously promoted to sergeant in the sheriff’s office on Saturday.

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  • NFL ref leaves Bills-Texans game after scary non-contact injury

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    Injuries have ravaged NFL teams throughout the 2025 season, and on Thursday night, the issue struck NFL officials during the Buffalo Bills and Houston Texans game.

    Head referee Adrian Hill pulled up lame during a play on a Texans drive in the third quarter. He was seen in the end zone watching a play unfold. As he started to move, Hill grabbed his left leg.

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    Referee Adrian Hill on the field during a game between the Chicago Bears and the New York Giants at Soldier Field on Nov. 9, 2025 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Wesley Hitt/Getty Images)

    Hill was helped off the field and needed to be carted to the locker room. Umpire Roy Ellison took over as the head referee for the rest of the game.

    Hill has been an NFL official since 2010, making his debut on Sept. 12, 2010, in a game between the Washington Redskins and Dallas Cowboys as a line judge. He was promoted to a referee in 2019 after Pete Morelli and Walt Coleman retired.

    Ellison is a longtime official himself and has some controversy attached to his career in the NFL.

    COWBOYS’ CEEDEE LAMB CLEARS UP RUMORS ABOUT WHY HE, TEAMMATE WERE BENCHED VS RAIDERS

    Terrel Bernard injured

    Buffalo Bills linebacker Terrel Bernard (8) is attended to by medical staff after suffering an unknown injury in the second half of an NFL football game against the Houston Texans Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025, in Houston. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis)

    In 2018, he had a run-in with Bills defensive lineman Jerry Hughes. The NFL player confronted Ellison in the tunnel following a game between the Bills and Miami Dolphins. Hughes accused Ellison of calling him an expletive. Ellison was reportedly fined one game check for the incident.

    Both teams were also dealing with injuries during the game.

    Bills quarterback Josh Allen had to check out after being roughed up on a play. Bills wide receiver Khalil Shakir, defensive back Maxwell Hairston and offensive lineman Dion Dawkins were each evaluated for a concussion. Bills linebacker Terrel Bernard suffered an elbow injury and was out for the rest of the game.

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    The Texans were playing without quarterback C.J. Stroud as well as safety Jalen Pitre, who were both injured.

    Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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  • Nebraska basketball player appears to chip tooth after being punched in back of head during game

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    Nebraska guard Connor Essegian suffered what appeared to be a chipped tooth after he was punched in the back of the head during the Cornhuskers’ 84-72 win over New Mexico on Thursday night. 

    The ugly scene unfolded in the first half of the game when one of the Lobos’ leading scorers this season, Deyton Albury, took aim at the back of Essegian’s head with just over a minute remaining in the half. 

    Nebraska Cornhuskers guard Connor Essegian (0) reacts after scoring against the Minnesota Golden Gophers during the second half at Pinnacle Bank Arena in Lincoln, Nebraska, on March 1, 2025. (Steven Branscombe/Imagn Images)

    Albury was assessed a flagrant foul 2 for the contact and ejected from the game.

    LOUISVILLE MEN’S BASKETBALL COACH SUFFERS BIZARRE INJURY TRYING TO AVOID CELEBRATION

    “It looked like there was contact to his head, which is what they called it,” New Mexico coach Eric Olen said after the game, via The Santa Fe New Mexican. “That was a tough moment for us, losing Deyton like that and that took the wind out of our sails and we didn’t really finish the half.”

    Essegian finished the game with 6 points, 7 rebounds and one assist in 31 minutes in the win that extended Nebraska’s winning streak to nine games. But he walked away with another trophy of sorts. 

    Connor Essegian celebrates after a play

    Nebraska Cornhuskers guard Connor Essegian (0) celebrates after a play in the first half of the championship game of the College Basketball Crown tournament against the UCF Knights at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, on April 6, 2025. (Ian Maule/Getty Images)

    The senior from Indiana took to social media after the game to show what appeared to be a chipped tooth.

    “Well that was a first for me,” he wrote in a post on X, with a picture of a piece of his tooth in his hand. 

    He joked in a later post that users on the social media platform were “undefeated” after someone created an account with the handle, “Connor Essegian’s Tooth.”

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM 

    “Y’a’ll are too quick,” he wrote. 

    Albury posted an apology on X after the game, calling his actions a “selfish decision.” His message did not include an apology to Essegian.

    “Lobo Nation you deserve better than what I displayed tonight. Regardless of what led to my selfish decision I put myself before the team during a time when I needed to demonstrate composure and leadership.

    Deyton Albury shoots over a Nebraska guard

    New Mexico guard Deyton Albury shoots over Nebraska guard Sam Hoiberg (1) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game at T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri, on Nov. 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

    “My actions are not a reflection of our players, coaches or the UNM basketball program. I sincerely apologize to Coach Olen and the rest of the staff, my teammates, Lobo fans and supporters, especially the young kids who witnessed my foolish decision on a national TV stage.

    “Representing UNM and the city of Albuquerque is a privilege not a right. I accept full responsibility for what happened. I will never let our team, fans and the city down like this again.”

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    The Cornhuskers are 5-0 to start the season, and their winning streak dating back to last season is the longest streak in the nation.

    Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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  • Apartment fire displaces 50, injures 7 in Colorado Springs

    An early morning apartment fire in Colorado Springs sent two people to the hospital and displaced dozens from their homes, according to fire officials.

    Colorado Springs firefighters responded to the blaze at 5320 Pikes Peak Avenue shortly after 1:30 a.m. Sunday, according to the fire department.

    A video posted by the Colorado Springs Fire Department shows smoke wafting from the building, with burnt and peeling siding visible toward the upper floors.

    Firefighters rescued four people from the burning building with ladders and seven people were injured, fire officials said. Five of those injured were treated and released at the scene, but paramedics took two to the hospital with unknown injuries.

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  • Bengals’ Joe Flacco indifferent about Joe Burrow’s return to practice: ‘I really don’t care’

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    Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow has returned to the practice field, but veteran backup Joe Flacco appears indifferent about the news. 

    Burrow returned to practice Monday, opening a 21-day window for the star to return to the lineup, but Burrow’s return to the field was not a concern for Flacco. 

    “I don’t know, I think backups probably do it a good amount where they know like, ‘Hey, this guy’s coming back, he’s got a three-week injury or whatever it is,’” Flacco said, according to The Cincinnati Enquirer. 

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    Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Flacco runs off the field before a field goal attempt in the fourth quarter of a game against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Paycor Stadium in downtown Cincinnati Oct. 16, 2025. (Sam Greene/The Enquirer/USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

    “I’m honestly not really thinking about it. It’s not really a part of my process. I really don’t care. It’s this week, and that’s all that matters. And I think to think about that stuff would just be a distraction. So, it’s not really something I’m worried about. Like I said, I’m just worried about doing my job, and this week that’s going out and playing against Pittsburgh.”

    Burrow sustained a toe injury in September that forced backup quarterback Jake Browning into the lineup. Browning struggled, and the team acquired Flacco from the Cleveland Browns to take over. 

    EAGLES STAR JORDAN MAILATA POLITELY INTERRUPTS REPORTER MID-QUESTION TO ENFORCE ‘LADIES FIRST’ POLICY

    Joe Burrow needs help walking into locker room

    Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow was unable to put weight on his ankle after getting injured against the Jaguars. (Imagn)

    Flacco, who struggled with the Browns prior to being benched for Dillon Gabriel, has filled in admirably for Burrow. In four starts with the Bengals, Flacco has completed 64.7% of his passes for 1,254 yards with 11 touchdowns and two interceptions.

    By comparison, in Flacco’s four starts with the Browns, he completed just 58.1% of his passes for 815 yards with two touchdowns and six interceptions. 

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    Joe Flacco finds a receiver

    Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Flacco throws a pass against the Chicago Bears during the second quarter at Paycor Stadium Nov. 2, 2025. (Katie Stratman/Imagn Images)

    While Flacco has played well, the Bengals are just 1-3 in his four starts because of their porous defense. The Bengals are 3-6 and need to get hot down the stretch to give themselves a chance at making the playoffs. 

    Their next game is a key divisional matchup against the Pittsburgh Steelers (5-4) Sunday at 1 p.m. ET.

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  • 5 storylines as the Miami Heat began its 2025-26 season. Are they happening now?

    The curated articles on the Miami Heat’s 2025-26 season highlight key storylines such as preseason preparations, handling injuries, and strategic roster decisions. There’s a focus on team dynamics and upcoming challenges.

    The Heat will embark on a preseason trip to Puerto Rico, marking a history-rich return with games against the Orlando Magic. These games are significant for players like Ethan Thompson, who have personal connections to Puerto Rico. Injuries have sidelined key players like Tyler Herro, impacting roster decisions. The team has opted to pick up contract options on Jaime Jaquez Jr. and Kel’el Ware, betting on their continued development to fill the void. Erik Spoelstra has implemented a faster-paced offense. The Heat showcased this approach by dominating Memphis at a historic pace. This change aims to shake the team’s past offensive struggles and energize the roster. The new season sees the Heat navigating through preseason fixtures and roster changes, aiming to adapt and thrive amidst player injuries and strategic plays.

    Miami Heat mascot Burnie holds the flag of Puerto Rico as the team announces a preseason game against the Orlando Magic in Puerto Rico during a press conference at the Heat practice court at Kaseya Center in Miami on August 12, 2025. By SAM NAVARRO

    NO. 1: HEAT HEADING TO PUERTO RICO FOR PRESEASON GAME VS. MAGIC. HERE’S HEAT’S FULL PRESEASON SCHEDULE

    The Miami Heat will take a trip to Puerto Rico before the start of the regular season. | Published August 12, 2025 | Read Full Story by Anthony Chiang



    Miami Heat guard Tyler Herro (14) looks on during the second half of Game 4 of the Eastern Conference NBA Playoffs against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Kaseya Center on April 28, 2025, in Miami. By D.A. Varela

    NO. 2: WHO WILL STEP UP IN TYLER HERRO’S ABSENCE? HOW HERRO’S INJURY AFFECTS REST OF HEAT GUARDS

    The Miami Heat will need to find a way to survive a challenging early season schedule without one of its best players. | Published September 22, 2025 | Read Full Story by Anthony Chiang



    Miami Heat center Kel’el Ware (7) reacts alongside Jaime Jaquez Jr. (11) during the first half of an NBA game against the Utah Jazz at Kaseya Center on January 4, 2025, in Miami. By D.A. Varela

    NO. 3: HEAT PICKS UP CONTRACT OPTIONS ON JAIME JAQUEZ JR. AND KEL’EL WARE. WHAT IT MEANS

    As expected, the Miami Heat guaranteed another season on the rookie-scale contracts of forward Jaime Jaquez Jr. | Published September 23, 2025 | Read Full Story by Anthony Chiang



    Miami Heat guard Ethan Thompson catches the ball during practice drills at Abessino Court at Eleanor R. Baldwin Arena at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton on October 2, 2025. By PHOTO BY AL DIAZ

    NO. 4: HEAT’S PRESEASON GAME IN PUERTO RICO MEANINGFUL FOR ONE PLAYER. ALSO, FIVE GUARDS SIDELINED

    As Miami Heat guard Ethan Thompson continues to pursue his NBA dream, he’ll realize another dream this weekend. | Published October 3, 2025 | Read Full Story by Anthony Chiang



    Andrew Wiggins #22 of the Miami Heat and Jaime Jaquez Jr. #11 of the Miami Heat reacts during the first half against the Memphis Grizzlies at FedExForum on October 24, 2025 in Memphis, Tennessee. By Justin Ford

    NO. 5: HEAT PLAYING FAST, HAVING FUN. CAN IT BE SUSTAINED? ‘WE’RE TRYING TO MAKE IT LAST ALL SEASON’

    After finishing with one of the NBA’s 10 worst offensive ratings in three straight seasons, Miami Heat coach Erik Spoelstra knew something needed to change. | Published October 25, 2025 | Read Full Story by Anthony Chiang

    The summary above was drafted with the help of AI tools and edited by journalists in our News division. All stories listed were reported, written and edited by McClatchy journalists.

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  • Clippers’ Bradley Beal out for the season with hip fracture, will have surgery

    INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Los Angeles Clippers guard Bradley Beal is done for the season.

    He has a hip fracture and will undergo surgery, the team announced Wednesday. He is expected to make a full recovery in six to nine months.

    The three-time All-Star played in just six games this season, averaging 8.2 points and 1.7 assists. He signed an $11 million, two-year deal with the Clippers in July after the final two years of his contract were bought out by the Phoenix Suns.

    The 32-year-old was listed as out for Wednesday night’s game against the Denver Nuggets because of left hip soreness. Beal had already missed games because of a left knee injury and lower back soreness.

    Beal’s two seasons in Phoenix were riddled by injury. The 14-year veteran hasn’t played at least 60 games in a season since 2020-21 when he was with the Washington Wizards.

    ___

    AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

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  • Clippers’ Bradley Beal Out for the Season With Hip Fracture, Will Have Surgery

    INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — Los Angeles Clippers guard Bradley Beal is done for the season.

    He has a hip fracture and will undergo surgery, the team announced Wednesday. He is expected to make a full recovery in six to nine months.

    The three-time All-Star played in just six games this season, averaging 8.2 points and 1.7 assists. He signed an $11 million, two-year deal with the Clippers in July after the final two years of his contract were bought out by the Phoenix Suns.

    The 32-year-old was listed as out for Wednesday night’s game against the Denver Nuggets because of left hip soreness. Beal had already missed games because of a left knee injury and lower back soreness.

    Beal’s two seasons in Phoenix were riddled by injury. The 14-year veteran hasn’t played at least 60 games in a season since 2020-21 when he was with the Washington Wizards.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    Associated Press

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  • Small Businesses, Big Ouches. These 7 Weird Workplace Injuries Stand Out

    The frequency and costs of workplace accidents leave entrepreneurs particularly vulnerable, because they have a much bigger impact on smaller companies. The latest annual study by Denver-based Pie Insurance detailed the rate and financial impact of those mishaps to small-business owners, and listed some of the weirdest incidents in the past year.

    The main finding of the recently released Pie Insurance 2025 State of Workplace Safety Report was the high percentage of small businesses involved in workplace accidents. Its survey of 1,018 company owners found 75 percent saying they’d had to manage worker injuries over the past year, and that 50 percent of those were preventable. Nearly a third of those entrepreneurs said on-the-job incidents had cost them an average of $20,000 per employee involved, as well four workdays typically lost while an employee recovered.

    That’s all part of the $176.5 billion toll workplace accidents cost employers annually in recent years. Most larger companies suffer even higher losses from accidents than small-business owners, with their average per-injury cost rising to $43,000.

    But if expenditures for accidents in founder-owned workplaces were less than half of those suffered by larger companies, smaller businesses outdid themselves in the category of strangest mishaps reported over the last year.

    Among what Pie Insurance charitably referred to as the “most unique and unusual” of those included truly strange accidents involving employees who:

    • Refused to stop hitting golf balls in the workplace, causing another worker to be knocked out after being hit in the head by one
    • Suffered third-degree burns after sitting on “a freshly cleaned hot office chair”
    • Were knocked unconscious by a frozen fish propelled by a malfunctioning conveyor belt
    • Slipped on a pickle in the lunchroom and cracked their spine
    • Forgot to turn off the lights, leading to a blown fuse that caused burns to another employee the following day
    • Choked on a bone at a Christmas party, resulting in a trip to the emergency room
    • Stapled their hand instead of the document they were working on

    Authors of the Pie Insurance report further demonstrated their gift of comic understatement by citing incidents worthy of a workplace sitcom with the reminder that, “despite our best efforts, workplace safety can sometimes be affected by the most unexpected circumstances.”

    Nevertheless, some small-business owners who participated in the survey were apparently determined to improve their workplace safety records—even if that meant anticipating improbable, and in some cases seemingly impossible, accidents. As a result, new measures they introduced over the past year included:

    • Requiring employees to have their pupils checked before using ladders to ensure they’re not under the influence of prohibited substances
    • Instituting a “no high-heels” rule to reduce foot and ankle injuries from long hours of walking on hard floors
    • Prohibiting employees from making their own coffee to prevent burns, with only managers being allowed to operate brewing machines
    • Establishing a “no drone zone” policy after an employee’s aerial hobby became a workplace safety hazard
    • Banning chewing gum after an improperly disposed wad resulted in a worker’s injury

    And last but not least, there was the small-business owner who formally prohibited employees from swatting golf balls in the workplace, after learning the painful and costly lesson of that activity one too many times already.

    Bruce Crumley

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  • Three hospitalized after multi-vehicle crash on I-95, officials say

    Multi-vehicle crash on I-95 near Miami Gardens Drive involved five cars and sent three people to HCA Florida Aventura Hospital with serious injuries.

    Multi-vehicle crash on I-95 near Miami Gardens Drive involved five cars and sent three people to HCA Florida Aventura Hospital with serious injuries.

    A multi-vehicle crash on Interstate 95 in Miami-Dade sent three people to the hospital with serious injuries Saturday morning, according to the Florida Highway Patrol.

    At around 5:10 a.m. five cars were involved in a crash in the southbound lanes near Miami Gardens Drive, said Lt. Alejandro Camacho of FHP. Two cars collided into the concrete center median barrier wall. Three lanes were blocked after the crash, but have since reopened.

    Three people were taken to HCA Florida Aventura Hospital. FHP did not say what their condition is.

    Milena Malaver

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  • NFL cracks down on Ravens with major fine tied to Lamar Jackson injury report

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    The NFL hit the Baltimore Ravens with a hefty fine for improperly listing quarterback Lamar Jackson’s practice participation last Friday. 

    The NFL fined the Ravens $100,000 for violating the league’s injury report policy, according to ESPN.

    The NFL believes the error came from negligence, not the Ravens trying to gain a competitive advantage. Had the NFL found the violation to be intentional, the potential discipline could have resulted in a loss of draft picks, according to the report. 

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    Lamar Jackson of the Baltimore Ravens throws a pass during warm-up prior to the game against the Miami Dolphins at Hard Rock Stadium on Oct. 30, 2025 in Miami Gardens, Florida. (Logan Bowles/Getty Images)

    “It is critical that the Baltimore Ravens always operate with integrity and in full accordance with NFL guidelines,” the team said in a statement.

    “We clearly made an error regarding player injury reporting and cooperated transparently with the league’s investigation. We accept the decision by the NFL that we violated the policy and have taken steps to ensure that we will be compliant moving forward. We will not appeal the ruling and are focused on our upcoming game against the Vikings.”

    Jackson was labeled a limited participant on Monday, Wednesday and Thursday last week and then was named a full participant on Friday despite running the scout team. 

    RAVENS’ LAMAR JACKSON LIGHTS UP DOLPHINS WITH 4 TDS IN DOMINANT RETURN FROM INJURY

    Ravens helmets on field

    Baltimore Ravens helmets await use during training camp at the Under Armour Performance Center in Owings Mills, Maryland, on July 23, 2025. (Mitch Stringer/Imagn Images)

    The two-time MVP was then downgraded to limited and eventually ruled out for the team’s game against the Chicago Bears. 

    Tyler “Snoop” Huntley started in Jackson’s place and led the team to a 30-16 win over the Bears. Jackson returned to the field in the team’s 28-6 win over the Miami Dolphins on Thursday night. 

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    Lamar Jackson stands on sideline

    Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson (8) stands on the sideline during the first half of an NFL football game against the Chicago Bears in Baltimore, Maryland, on Oct. 26, 2025. (Nick Wass/AP Photo)

    With two wins in five days, the Ravens have improved to 3-5 after a dreadful start to the season and are right in the middle of contention in the AFC North. 

    The Ravens’ next game is against the Vikings (3-4) on Nov. 9.

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