'This is huge': Windsor hosting draft events as NFL fans in Canada flock to city
While Detroit is the focus of the NFL Draft, across the river in Canada, Windsor is also ready for the premiere event to begin.
While Detroit is the focus of the NFL Draft, across the river in Canada, Windsor is also ready for the premiere event to begin.
Yahoo Sports' Charles McDonald breaks down the Lions' 2024 draft.
Detroit's revival as a football city was on full display Thursday night.
In some cities, hosting the NFL Draft is just that — a fun, unique three-day event that has toured the country since 2016. For Detroit, it was seen as something more.
Caleb Williams will walk into an ideal situation. Seriously. Meanwhile, Josh Allen's potential No. 1 wideout could flash plenty of upside. And why not all-world tight end Brock Bowers?
Get caught up on this morning’s news: The House’s antisemitism bill, Trump’s second contempt hearing and more in today’s edition of The Yodel newsletter
Investors are accentuating the positive in Jerome Powell's policy comments and looking ahead to Apple earnings.
TikTok and Universal Music Group have signed a deal that will allow Taylor Swift, Olivia Rodrigo, The Weeknd and other artists to return to the platform.
Over a year after announcing it would acquire Mint Mobile for up to $1.35 billion, T-Mobile has closed the deal.
Anthropic has released a Claude mobile app for iOS that any user can download for free.
The University of Houston is doing something rare: publicly defying the NFL.
Andy Behrens highlights non-rookies to see their fantasy football value on the rise coming out of the NFL Draft.
Dan Wetzel, Ross Dellenger, and SI's Pat Forde unpack the latest update on the House v. NCAA case, react to Twitter beef happening at Colorado, and the worst Kentucky Derby names ever.
Amid final exams and upcoming graduations, Columbia students are grappling with fluctuating tensions on campus and the national attention these protests have received.
Viewership was still better than what the NFL Draft drew two years ago.
It remains to be seen if this year's layoff trends follow last year's, in which layoffs slowed down in the summer, before cuts began ramping up yet again toward the winter. Unfortunately, it also serves as a reminder of the deeply human impact of layoffs and how risk profiles could evolve from here. Below you’ll find a comprehensive list of all the known layoffs in tech that started last year, to be updated monthly.
Elly De La Cruz was a thrill ride in April.
South Carolina will begin issuing tickets to motorists who drive a "squatted" vehicle; the modification has been banned since November 2023.
Matt Harmon and Andy Behrens go where no pod has gone before after the NFL Draft. They identify the biggest winners and losers in the fantasy world. This is totally an original idea so don't fact check us. Behrens also reveals the four biggest debates he had when putting together his rookie dynasty rankings.
Ahead of Google's annual I/O developer conference in May, the tech giant has laid off staff across key teams like Flutter, Dart, Python and others, according to reports from affected employees shared on social media. Google confirmed the layoffs to TechCrunch, but not the specific teams, roles or how many people were let go. "As we’ve said, we’re responsibly investing in our company's biggest priorities and the significant opportunities ahead," said Google spokesperson Alex García-Kummert.
John Green fans, are you ready for the 'Turtles All the Way Down' movie?