Reins of Hope 2026 is now LIVE.
The racing community has always come together when it matters most. After the devastating Saratoga harness barn fire, this auction was created to help those rebuilding their lives.
🗓️ Bidding is open now through July 21
❤️ 100% of proceeds benefit the victims of the fire.
You’ll find incredible racing memorabilia, stallion seasons, artwork, VIP experiences, jewelry, vacations, and so much more—all donated by an unbelievably generous community.
Please bid if you can, and if not, a repost would mean the world.
🔗 https://t.co/oiQqgMeDkg
#ReinsOfHope #HorseRacing #Saratoga #HarnessRacing #ThoroughbredRacing
The Hill is out with my column on how America is celebrating our 250th anniversary with a mix of fanfare and fury. https://t.co/3n9AfX2rt1 Despite the hatefest by some on the left, we remain a country committed to a common article of faith: "E pluribus unum" — "out of many, one."
Miles Russell was introduced to golf by his dad Joe and grandpa Ron at age 2.
Russell brought his dad inside the ropes to caddie on the 72nd hole in his first U.S. Open.
A Father's Day they'll never forget ❤️
57 years ago this week, June 17, 1969, an insurance agent, a lawyer and a real estate guy - Eddie Andelman, Mark Witken, Jim McCarthy - created a call-in sports talkshow named the “Sports Huddle”. The rest, as they say, is history.
#TheGodfatherOfSportsRadio
If i had been the Ipswich, MA school admin, and someone whined that the lacrosse players took a photo with cigars, I would’ve scheduled a hearing for them - the day after the championship game.
But I’m not a dweeb into abusing power to finally get revenge against the jocks.
Foreign actors aren’t just hacking computers. They’re hacking minds. They’re funding influence networks, bankrolling fake grassroots movements, and flooding your social media feed with content specifically engineered to make you angrier, more divided, and more likely to hate your own country and each other!
OK, for those of you who are not NFL fans, please allow me to identify the folks involved here:
1. Jaxson Dart is the second year quarterback of the New York Football Giants. He is from Utah, graduated from Ole Miss, and is a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Yesterday he introduced President Trump at a political rally in New York, not too far from New York City.
2. Abdul Carter is a second year edge rusher for the New York Football Giants. He is from Philadelphia and graduated from Penn State. He is a devout Muslim who prays to Allah on the field before games, and is extremely open about his faith in and out of the locker room. When Carter saw that his teammate had the temerity to accept the honor of introducing President Trump, he ripped him on X.
3. Both Carter and Dart were 1st Round draft picks last year, and both had strong rookie seasons. Giants’ ownership and management hopefully consider them to be the cornerstones of a team-wide revival to be led by new head coach John Harbaugh (a Super Bowl winner with the Baltimore Ravens and also someone who is not afraid to meet with President Trump). (That optimism exists even though Carter could not stay awake in team meetings last season.)
So with that background in mind, I have this to say to Abdul Carter:
Muslim terrorists destroyed a large swathe of New York City in the name of Allah, yet you are accepted on your team and in NYC, and no one challenges your beliefs or your right to express them. So how about you shut the fudge up, focus on learning how to sack the QB at the NFL level, learn how to stay awake in team meetings, and stop tearing your team apart when your teammate is given the honor of introducing the President of the United States of America?
This is a free country. You are free to worship a deity that enslaves women, and Dart is free to say hello to the President. How about you just accept that, Abdul?
Deal?
On Boylston Street, bronze spires that glow at night and granite markers sourced from meaningful locations honor the victims of the Boston Marathon attacks.
💙