A TV spot for Thunderbolts* confirms Lewis Pullman's Sentry is stronger than all of the Avengers, and he's in the cast of ...
933 slash line on his second games, should go back-to-back this weekend with the Rangers in Columbus on Saturday and at the Garden on Sunday against the Oilers. If not this weekend, then when?
The new collection of MLB hats from New Era has caused quite a stir online. The Texas Rangers have already removed their cap from the online team store, and more teams have followed suit.
If the Rangers are ever in need of offense, their penalty kill may just be the place to find it. Their power play is marred in a 1-for-21 skid − it's probably no coincidence that 20 of those ...
A unique, new line of MLB hats for fans displays a team’s uniform logo with its hat logo superimposed on top of it in the center. The mishmash of letters created a different word altogether ...
Take, for example, the Texas Rangers hat. By superimposing the Rangers’ “T” logo over its “Texas” wordmark, the hat appeared to be labeled with a vulgar Spanish word used for women’s ...
Wade, 43, shared the moment he became "scared" while consulting different doctors about his symptoms during Today with Jenna & Friends on Tuesday, March 11. The retired NBA star said he learned "a ...
MLB A new collection of Major League Baseball hats are under review after the version for the Texas Rangers unintentionally evoked a Spanish vulgarity. In New Era’s Overlap 5950 collection ...
A number of teams' hats were stylistically flawed, but the Rangers' cap was worse — it spelled out a vulgarity and was pulled from circulation. Here is more on why the Rangers cap will not be ...
The hats have the logo of each team over the team's nickname. The Rangers' hat has a big T over Texas, which makes it looks like it spells out a Spanish slang vulgarity. The Dallas Morning News ...
The Texas Rangers' edition of the cap was so bad that they had to pull it from the online store! Here's the gist. The design features each team's standard cap logo superimposed over their jersey ...
As part of a new collection from New Era, which markets caps with an MLB license, an officially licensed Rangers cap appeared briefly online that featured an unfortunate Spanish slang vulgarity.