Garry Tomashowski talks about his cabin in Mount Charleston.
Marc-Andre Fleury said it would have been nice to be a Vezina Trophy finalist but he said he understands. (Steve Carp/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
Golden Knights Defenseman Brayden McNabb and Nate Schimdt talk about the upcoming games against the Sharks. Head coach Gerard Gallant talks about Brayden McNabb’s role on the ice.
Ellis Island, which operates a casino, brewery and hotel just off the Strip, purchased the Mt. Charleston Lodge in early April.
Adam Hill talks to Bellator MMA heavyweight Frank Mir about his upcoming fight.
Avicii Dead at 28 The Swedish DJ, whose real name is Tim Bergling, died on Friday afternoon in Muscat, Oman, according to his publicist. Diana Baron, Avicii’s publicist Diana Baron, Avicii’s publicist Avicii had retired from performing live music in 2016 for health reasons. Last year, he posted a statement on his website saying that just because he wasn’t doing live performances didn’t mean he would stop making music. Avicii
Victor Joecks talks about the Clark County Registrar’s office struggling to keep its numbers straight.
Elaine Wilson and David Schoen were live at City National Arena for the Golden Knights first practice since sweeping the LA Kings in round one.
Terrible Herbst will open a large travel center in Southern Nevada this May. The 50,000-square-foot commercial travel center will include 96 fuel pumps and the third White Castle restaurant in Southern Nevada. The travel center is located near the intersection of Interstate 15 and Goodsprings Road. The center is across from the Gold Strike casino, and signs outside the travel center advertise the site as Terrible’s Road House. Terrible Herbst is calling the center the world’s largest Chevron.
UFC lightweight Kevin Lee can’t wait to welcome Edson Barboza back to the octagon. After his opponent’s one-sided loss to Khabib Nurmagomedov, Lee says he thinks he’s stronger mentally and can drag Barboza into deep waters.
Tony DeFrancesco talks about the loss to Fresno on April 19, 2018, at Cashman Field. (Betsy Helfand/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
J.H. Williams III, a comic artist, and his wife and manager Wendy Wright-Williams speak about their project, “Where We Live,” a comic anthology about the Oct. 1 shootings, at Alternate Reality Comics in Las Vegas.
Palo Verde beat Centennial on Thursday, 5-3, completing a three-game sweep. Palo Verde jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the first, and held on until the sixth. It was there the Bulldogs battled for three runs to tie the game. In the bottom of the sixth, Samantha Wade singled home a pair in what turned out to be the game-winning hit. Taylor Askland took care of business with a complete game, and struck out 10. It was the 15th straight win by Palo Verde dating back to 2014, including five playoff meetings. Palo Verde improved to 21-7, 12-0 in Northwest League play. Centennial fell to 20-11, 11-4.
UNLV coach Tony Sanchez recaps the Rebels’ spring football. (Mark Anderson/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
Nevada Gaming Commission Chairman Tony Alamo talks about an amendment making casinos subject to the same disciplinary standards of preventing people to gamble if impaired by drugs as they are for letting them play while intoxicated by alcohol.
The 50,000-square-foot commercial travel center will include 96 fuel pumps and the third White Castle restaurant in Southern Nevada. Wade Tyler Millward reports.
Golden Knights hockey fan Dee Dravnieks of Perth, Australia, talks about traveling more than 9,500 miles to see her favorite hockey team play in Las Vegas and Canada. (Ron Kantowski/ Las Vegas Review-Journal)
Las Vegas Morning Update – Saturday, April 21,2018
The team returns to the ice Friday at City National Arena to get ready for the second round vs. San Jose. (Steve Carp/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
The Flamingo Wildlife Habitat inside the Flamingo hotel-casino celebrates 23 years. The habitat is home to over 60 exotic birds, over 20 turtles and 300 fish.
Premier Vegas Sports host Bryan Salmond and Boxing beat writer Gilbert Manzano go over GGG’s new commercial and the upcoming fight card in New York.
This “Alice in Wonderland” cocktail changes colors and flavors while you sip
Tickets for the second-round series between the Golden Knights and the San Jose Sharks go on sale at noon Monday. Less than 1,000 tickets will be available per game. Prices range from $125 to $495, a 30 to 40 percent increase from the first round. There is a four-ticket maximum per game per purchase. Standing room for both the Tower Deck and upper balcony areas will also be on sale Monday.
Ben Gotz talks about how Lights FC is handling another bye week and what it has planned moving forward.
Vegas Nation video host Bryan Salmond and Raiders beat writer Michael Gehlken look at the wide receiver position for the upcoming NFL Draft.
