The New York Times – Sports:
The N.F.L. has a number of options, none of them perfect, for how to handle competition for the last week of the regular season and the playoffs.
The New York Times – Sports:
The N.F.L. has a number of options, none of them perfect, for how to handle competition for the last week of the regular season and the playoffs.
The New York Times – Sports:
The N.F.L. has a number of options, none of them perfect, for how to handle competition for the last week of the regular season and the playoffs.
The New York Times – Sports:
After Damar Hamlin’s collapse during an N.F.L. game, fans, coaches and players processed what it meant to love a sport that carries the risk of bodily harm for its participants.
The New York Times – Sports:
Teams will return to practices on Wednesday, two days after Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin suffered a cardiac arrest during a game. He remains hospitalized.
The New York Times – Sports:
The question everyone wanted to know, including those at the sports network: What had happened to Damar Hamlin, and would he be OK?
The New York Times – Sports:
In a wrenching year for the city, the Bills offered a beloved distraction, until the horrifying collapse of their 24-year-old safety on Monday night.
The New York Times – Sports:
The appetite for football has never been higher, even as viewers look past the toll the sport takes on players’ lives. Damar Hamlin’s collapse during a prime-time game should force a reconsideration.
The New York Times – Sports:
Cardiac doctors say that blows to the chest causing an erratic heart rhythm are highly unusual, but not unheard-of in sports.
The New York Times – Sports:
Pro football has never been more popular, or lucrative, but the collapse of Damar Hamlin during a prime-time game was a reminder of the sport’s inherent risk.