@LUFC1992_v2@CoJo_3@Larrydn22@Cli5hy Fado’s in
Midtown or Buckhead for the early matches today. Sports & Social at the Battery (largest space, open container and plenty of food/drink places in the Battery).
@cursive_kid@IamKingWilliams That’s the key. The more people they get to live there (and who can live there due to more housing), the more businesses and employers will commit to downtown. David Cummings is involved/investing in downtown. That’s a great sign.
An arena built to resemble a volcano, 200ft tiers and an iconic lighthouse landmark.
The 2026 World Cup stadiums feature some impressive architecture - but which has the best all-round experience?
We asked our writers, who are visiting the 16 arenas during the World Cup, to rate them.
Here are the results...
🔗 https://t.co/DuGF01o3TZ
WAIT FOR IT ⚽⚽⚽
This is the reaction from fans of DR Congo when their team scored a tying goal against Cristiano Ronaldo and Portugal at in World Cup action at Houston Stadium today.
Game recap: https://t.co/yCeub3G5GN
Sixty years ago Atlanta built a stadium before it had a team.
The city wanted to be major league badly enough to bet on itself first. Build the stage before the cast.
That instinct never stopped. It's why a World Cup semifinal is here this summer.
https://t.co/f9V93Ja4nH
@VanLathan Don’t see where the NCAA is receiving additional $$ for Genius being able to sell data to a Sportsbook and others as of 2025. But I also haven’t located the full decision to see how the court addressed that argument. Have a hard time conceiving how that fits under TRO factors.
The Judge set a pretty interesting precedent in the Sorsby case. Part of Sorsby's argument was that the NCAA's hard and fast no-gambling rules are BS because of the close ties between college sports and Gambling companies.
The judge bought that, at least in part. That softens the argument for strict penalties for gambling on games, even games your team is playing in, as long as the NCAA maintains any type of relationship, even through broadcast partners, with gambling.
Essentially, this judge has said the NCAA can't really tell you not to gamble anymore, because they are making too much money off of it.
Now, that's not the entirety of the judge's reasoning, and this is just an injunction, but that certainly is an interesting development.