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A Sports Authority store in Tanasbourne, Oregon on May 20, 2016, with sign announcing closure of the store. Another Sports Authority Store, this one in former Borders of Flemington, New Jersey, as seen on May 28, 2016. This location also has signs announcing the store's impending closure. On February 4, 2016, it was widely reported that Sports ...
This event commenced the end of the racial divide in high school sports in the New Orleans area. [8] This event inspired the made-for-television movie Passing Glory. Jesuit High School (New Orleans) offers a Lloyd (Hap) Glaudi Scholarship. Glaudi was the first sportscaster to be named to the New Orleans Prep Sports Hall of Fame. [9]
WWL (870 kHz) is an AM radio station in New Orleans, Louisiana, owned by Audacy, Inc. WWL and 105.3 WWL-FM simulcast a news/talk radio format with sports talk at night. The station's studios are in the 400 Poydras Tower in the New Orleans Central Business District.
The NBA Foundation has donated over $5 million to 18 New Orleans-area grantees, according to Sheridan. The vast majority has gone to solely local groups, with about one-fifth given to chapters of ...
The Bayou Segnette Sports complex, which the Alario Center is part of also includes Segnette Field, a baseball stadium that is the home of the Loyola University New Orleans' Wolfpack baseball program. The Alario Center is named for the father of John A. Alario Jr., the dean of the Louisiana State Legislature.
By 1985, Sports Phone's business model had changed, as its parent company, Phone Programs, was earning 2 cents per call from New York Telephone and making more than $1 million in revenue; this replaced a previous model in which Sports Phone received payments from AT&T before the breakup of the Bell System. Atlanta, Miami, and New Orleans had ...
YurView Louisiana (previously Cox 4) is an American local cable-only public, educational, and government access (PEG) cable TV station in Baton Rouge, New Orleans, and Lafayette owned by Cox Communications. It first signed on as Cox 4 in 2001. In February 2017, Cox rebranded the channel as YurView Louisiana and began offering the channel in HD. [1]