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George Springer to donate Hartford Whalers batting gloves to Hockey Hall of Fame
Esports

George Springer to donate Hartford Whalers batting gloves to Hockey Hall of Fame

by admin September 30, 2025


Come the end of the Toronto Blue Jays’ season, veteran outfielder George Springer’s batting gloves will have a new home — but they won’t be going far.

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Springer’s Hartford Whalers-themed batting gloves will be going to the hall of fame — not the Baseball Hall of Fame, in Cooperstown, New York, but the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto.

The 36-year-old outfielder’s gloves pay homage to his since-departed childhood team. Springer is a native of New Britain, Connecticut, located approximately 20 minutes southwest of the state’s capital of Hartford. Born in 1989, Springer was a child during the final years of the Whalers in Connecticut, with the franchise playing its last game in Hartford in 1997 before relocating and rebranding to the Carolina Hurricanes.

Evidently impressed by the tribute, the Hockey Hall of Fame requested Springer’s gloves once the season comes to a close.

George Springer’s batting gloves pay homage to the Hartford Whalers, who relocated from Springer’s home state of Connecticut when the now-MLB outfielder was a child. Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images

Springer is entering the postseason on the back of a resurgent 2025 campaign. He finished the regular season with 32 home runs, 84 RBIs and a .560 slugging percentage, all personal bests since his run of three straight All-Star Games from 2017-19. With his help, the Toronto Blue Jays won the AL East for the first time since 2015.

The Blue Jays will play their first game of the 2025 playoffs on Oct. 4, against the winner of the New York Yankees/Boston Red Sox wild-card series.



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September 30, 2025 0 comments
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Resident Evil 1 zombie
Gaming Gear

The next Resident Evil movie is being directed by Zach Cregger of Weapons fame, who played ‘thousands and thousands of hours of Resident Evil’ but hasn’t seen any of the movies

by admin September 7, 2025



The sketch-comedian-to-horror-movie-director pipeline is real. Jordan Peele went from Mad TV and Key & Peele to Get Out, Nope, and Us. Josh Ruben went from CollegeHumor to Werewolves Within, Heart Eyes, and Scare Me. And now Zach Cregger of The Whitest Kids U’ Know has become a horror-movie name to watch with Barbarian, Weapons, and an upcoming Resident Evil movie.

Weapons was great, a twisty Stephen King-adjacent story of missing kids in the suburbs, but a zombie action-horror movie will be a whole different kettle of fish. I just hope Cregger doesn’t leave his sense of humor behind, because the worst thing you could do with the camp tone of Resi is try to pretend it’s Serious Business.

Speaking to Double Toasted, Cregger said he’s “played I don’t know how many thousands and thousands of hours of Resident Evil” and is planning to make a movie that “probably lives more in the world of 2 and 3, but I’d say it adheres more to the tone of 4.”


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He couldn’t say which of the existing movies it’ll resemble, however, because he hasn’t watched them. “I’ve never seen a Resident Evil movie,” he said, “and so, you know, I imagine that if there are people out there that are just rabid fans of the movie franchise, they’re probably not really prepared for what I’m going to be doing. But I think the people that are fans of the games are probably going to be stoked.”

Vocal haters of the movies will be pleased, but I am a little disappointed that 2021’s Welcome to Raccoon City isn’t going to be followed up on. Sure, it had some awkward dialogue that felt like it had been inserted to explain things from scenes that were cut when its budget was slashed, but setting it in 1998 and giving Wesker a PalmPilot was inspired.

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.



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September 7, 2025 0 comments
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Hall of Fame Canadiens goaltender Ken Dryden dies at age 78
Esports

Hall of Fame Canadiens goaltender Ken Dryden dies at age 78

by admin September 6, 2025


MONTREAL — Ken Dryden, the Hall of Fame goaltender who helped the Montreal Canadiens win six Stanley Cup titles in the 1970s, died of cancer at age 78.

The Canadiens announced his death early Saturday, saying Dryden’s family asked for privacy. A team spokesperson said a close friend of Dryden’s appointed by the family contacted the organization, adding that he died peacefully Friday at his home.

“Ken Dryden was an exceptional athlete, but he was also an exceptional man,” owner Geoff Molson said. “Behind the mask he was larger than life. We mourn today not only the loss of the cornerstone of one of hockey’s greatest dynasties but also a family man, a thoughtful citizen and a gentleman who deeply impacted our lives and communities across generations.”

Dryden backstopped the NHL’s most successful franchise to the championship in six of his eight seasons in the league from 1970-71 to 1978-79. He won the Calder Trophy as rookie of the year, the Vezina as the best goalie five times and the Conn Smythe as playoff MVP in 1971, while being a six-time All-Star.

“Ken embodied the best of everything the Montreal Canadiens are about,” Molson said.

Ken Dryden, the legendary Montreal Canadiens goaltender who backstopped the team’s 1970s dynasty to six Stanley Cups, has passed away at the age of 78 following a battle with cancer.

News release ↓https://t.co/yKQdmTE8Me

— Canadiens Montréal (@CanadiensMTL) September 6, 2025

Known for resting his blocker and glove hands on top of his stick in a relaxed manner that became one of hockey’s most recognizable poses, the 6-foot-4 Dryden retired at just 31 in 1979.

“From the moment Ken Dryden joined the Montreal Canadiens as a 23-year-old rookie in 1971, he made an immediate and lasting impact on the NHL, the Canadiens franchise and the goaltending position,” NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said. “Ken’s love for his country was evident both on and off the ice.”

Inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1983, Dryden amassed a record of 258-57-74 with a .922 save percentage, 2.24 goals-against average and 46 shutouts in just over seven seasons. He went 80-32 in the playoffs.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney posted on social media that he was “deeply saddened to learn of the passing of the Hon. Ken Dryden, a Canadian hockey legend and hall of famer, public servant and inspiration.”

“Few Canadians have given more, or stood taller, for our country,” Carney said. “Ken Dryden was Big Canada. And he was Best Canada. Rest in peace.”

From Hamilton, Ontario, Dryden played three seasons at Cornell University from 1966 to 1969, leading the Big Red to the 1967 NCAA title and finishing with a career record of 76-4-1.

Dryden entered the NHL in 1971 and spent just six games in the crease before making his NHL postseason debut. He and Montreal upset rival Boston in the first round and beat Chicago in the final.

He also was a cornerstone of Canada’s 1972 Summit Series team that defeated the Soviet Union, starting in goal in the decisive 6-5 victory in Game 8.

“I feel the history of that tournament, the legacy of that team just as strongly as all Canadian fans do,” Dryden told The Canadian Press in a 2022 interview. “It never goes away. It’s kind of like a good wine, I guess. Actually, the legacy of it grows.”

He also worked at a Toronto firm while sitting out the 1973-74 NHL season — after previously earning a law degree at Montreal’s McGill University.

After retiring as a player, he went into broadcasting and wrote “The Game,” one of the best known books about the sport, after publishing “Face-off at the Summit” as part of an accomplished career as an author. He was the color analyst alongside Al Michaels for the “Miracle on Ice” when the U.S. beat the Soviet Union and went on to win the gold medal at the 1980 Winter Olympics.

Dryden served as president of the Toronto Maple Leafs from 1997 through 2004 — a stretch accented by trips to the Eastern Conference final in both 1999 and 2002 — before resigning to enter politics. He ran for the federal Liberals in 2004 and was named minister of social development in Prime Minister Paul Martin’s cabinet.

Dryden, who also taught at various universities across Canada, held on to his seat in Toronto’s York Centre riding in 2006 when the Liberals were ousted, and again in 2008, but lost in 2011.

Dryden is survived by wife Lynda and their two children.

His brother Dave Dryden was a longtime NHL and WHA goalie. He died in 2022 at age 81.





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September 6, 2025 0 comments
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