SPORTS Saturday, June 1, 2019 East Oregonian B3 Undersized Hughes stands out as top NHL draft prospect By JOHN WAWROW AP Hockey Writer AP Photo/Ryan Kang, File In this Aug. 13, 2016, fi le photo, the Los Angeles Rams take the fi eld at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum for a preseason NFL football game against the Dallas Cowboys in Los Angeles. From functional to fancy, NFL stadiums have made a huge leap By DAVE CAMPBELL AP Pro Football Writer Next summer, the Raiders are slated to relocate to Las Vegas and begin playing in a sleek $1.8 billion dome with a transparent roof, a black glass exterior to match their boldest uniform color, and retractable doors to frame an 80-foot-tall and 215-foot-wide view of the casinos on the strip. Around the same time, the Rams and Chargers will set- tle in a Los Angeles suburb in a futuristic, covered-yet-light- fi lled stadium straight out of “The Jetsons” cartoon. It will be the centerpiece of a 298- acre entertainment and life- style complex originally pro- jected to cost $2.6 billion that could come close to doubling in price. Two years ago, the Falcons moved into Mercedes-Benz Stadium, a $1.6 billion facil- ity in Atlanta with a pin- wheel-like cover that opens and closes like a camera lens. The season before that, the Minnesota Vikings arrived at U.S. Bank Stadium, a $1.1 billion venue with the league’s fi rst translucent roof, fi ve pivoting glass front doors facing the Minneapolis sky- line, and a ship-like shape refl ecting the region’s Nordic heritage after extensive cul- tural research by the design- ing architectural fi rm HKS. In 2010, the New York Giants and New York Jets kicked off at $1.6 billion MetLife Stadium in New Jer- sey with an offi cial NFL-high seating capacity of 82,500. In the previous year, the Dal- las Cowboys unveiled their new $1.1 billion suburban home with a high-defi nition, four-sided, center-hung vid- eoboard that’s 160 feet long, equal to four city buses, and 71 feet high. These venues being added to the league over the last decade sure have taken quite the leap from Lambeau Field. Of course, even that hal- lowed home of the Green Bay Packers that opened in 1957 has undergone two signifi cant renovations since the turn of the century. The NFL’s smallest city has modern- ized and monetized the sta- dium and surrounding development. Of the current 32 teams, seven remain in facilities erected prior to 1995 — sort of. One, the Chicago Bears, moved out in 2002 so Sol- dier Field could be com- pletely rebuilt on the same site. Only the exterior colon- nades endured the $690 mil- lion renovation. The Miami Dolphins had Hard Rock Sta- dium (1987) remade for $500 million. Attending a game has become as much about expe- riencing the immediate area and enjoying the amenities as simply watching four quar- ters of football. “They have a personality. They have a powerful formal expression. They do things to create an iconic, glob- ally recognizable facility,” said Bryan Trubey, a princi- pal architect at HKS, the lead designer on the Rams-Char- gers, Vikings, and Cowboys projects. “For a billion dol- lars, you should get some- thing that the rest of the world looks at and recognizes instantly, whether there is a name on it or not.” The league has embarked on its 100th season, trigger- ing a natural refl ection on the transformation of the game from humble, helmet- less beginnings to a business with more than $14 billion in annual revenue that draws more 100 million people to watch the Super Bowl on tele- vision. Perhaps no aspect has evolved more drastically than the places where these games are played. “Without the people pres- ent to make the stadium a reality, they never would have happened, but stadiums can and should be celebrated for the moments in history that occurred within their con- fi nes,” said Eric Grubman, a former NFL executive who worked heavily on the devel- opment of new venues. “The great game, the great sadness, the great celebration, what- ever it may be.” According to Pro Football Reference’s online database, 166 stadiums have hosted at least one regular season game since the NFL began. That includes rival leagues — the All-American Football Con- ference (1946-49) and the American Football League (1960-69) — that were even- tually absorbed. One hundred of those venues have hosted 17 games or more. Over the fi rst half of the league’s life span, teams were frequently shoehorned into baseball parks where base- ball clubs took top billing. The Bears played at Wrig- ley Field for 50 seasons. The Giants had long-time homes at the Polo Grounds and Yan- kee Stadium. The Cardinals, now in Arizona after moving from St. Louis, were tenants at Comiskey Park and Wrig- ley Field where the franchise originated in Chicago. Then there were the pre-war pub- lic works projects like Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, where the Rams returned in 2016 from St. Louis after fi rst playing there from 1946- 1979. Cleveland Municipal Stadium housed the Browns for a half-century before their move to Baltimore that embittered the lakeside city. On through the AstroTurf era of the 1960s and 1970s, when several teams moved with their baseball counterparts into cookie-cutter circles with few frills, stadiums were still primarily taxpayer funded. By the time the mid-1990s came, though, multi-purpose was out. Fancy was in. M A K R A V N E L O H P Thanks to modern technology and industry-leading expertise, Phonak is able to bring you the best possible solutions for your hearing needs BUFFALO, N.Y. — Dan Marr will never forget the fi rst time Jack Hughes landed on his radar as a potential top NHL draft prospect. It happened last sum- mer, when the NHL Cen- tral Scouting director was attending a skills camp in Toronto. After listing New Jer- sey’s Taylor Hall, Edmon- ton’s Connor McDavid and then-Islanders captain John Tavares as the best three players on the ice, Marr added: “The next best player was Jack Hughes.” Even at 5-foot-10 and 170 pounds, Marr said the 17-year-old stood out for a variety of reasons. “It was a series of drills that they were doing that involved skating, quick- ness, speed, execution, pre- cision. And right away you could see he already has an NHL shot,” Marr said Fri- day, speaking at the NHL’s annual pre-draft scouting combine being held in Buf- falo. “So he’s got the tal- ent that he belongs in that group.” Very little has happened to change Marr or anyone else’s mind since. From Orlando, Florida, Hughes is Central Scouting’s top-ranked North Ameri- can skater after spending the past two seasons setting USA Hockey National Team Development Program’s record by combining for 228 points (74 goals, 154 assists) in 110 games. Finland’s Kaapo Kakko is the top-ranked European skater after completing a season in which he helped his nation complete a gold- medal sweep of international titles by winning the world championship last weekend, the world junior title in Jan- uary and the Under-18 title last year. The two are projected to be selected with one of the two top picks — the Dev- ils select fi rst followed by the New York Rangers — at the NHL draft at Vancouver, British Columbia on June 21-22. After joking he’d look good in either a red Dev- ils’ or blue Rangers’ jersey, Hughes said he’d obviously prefer to go fi rst. “You always dream of being No. 1,” Hughes said. “You don’t dream of being two, three or four when you’re a young kid.” Hughes is also aware of how he and Kakko will draw comparisons with the likeli- hood of the two playing on Metropolitan Division rivals. “We’ll be linked to each other for a lot of years with the Rangers and Devils right there,” Hughes said. Kakko is not attending the combine because the week- long event, which includes player-team interviews and medical testing, began a day after Finland beat Canada to win the world champion- ships in Slovakia on Sunday. “It has zero affect really,” Marr said about Kakko’s absence. “I think the teams understand that. And the teams at the top, they’re just going to have to spend a little bit more time with him when he comes over for the draft.” The two players differ in size and style of play. At 6-foot-2 and 194 pounds, Kakko is known for his goal-scoring ability and considered more of a power forward. He led Finland with six goals in 10 games at the World Championship. His 22 goals in the Finnish Elite League last season were the most by a draft-eligible player. Seahawks sue former draft pick McDowell for bonus repayment DETROIT (AP) — The Seattle Seahawks have fi led a lawsuit in U.S. Dis- trict Court in Michigan seeking repayment of a nearly $800,000 of the sign- ing bonus given to former draft pick Malik McDow- ell claiming he violated his NFL contract. The Seahawks fi led the suit this week in the East- ern District of Michigan seeking $799,238. McDow- ell was a second-round pick of the Seahawks in 2017, but never played a snap for Seat- tle after suffering serious injuries in an ATV accident prior to the start of train- ing camp before his rookie season. According to the law- suit, an arbitration hear- ing last February found that McDowell had “breached paragraph 3 of his NFL Player Contract,” and as a result was ordered to repay his signing bonus within 30 days. The Seahawks say they have not been paid. McDowell was waived by Seattle in March after spending the past two sea- sons on the non-football injury list. The Detroit News fi rst reported the lawsuit. P E N D L E T O N th of july HOSTED BY THE PENDLETON VFW “LET’ ER BUCK” POST 922 10 AM Thursday, July 4, 2019 THEME: “Only in America” Horse Staging Area: Western Auto/Baxter Parking Lot Line-Up Area: SW Dorion Street From City of Pendleton building on SW Dorion to Main Street to SW Court to the Convention Center Any Individual, Organization or Business - ALL ARE WELCOME All Entries will receive a participation ribbon. Trophies will be awarded in the following 14 Categories: MOTORIZED - Best ClubMOTORIZED - Judges’ Choice BUSINESS/COMMERCIAL • FIRST RESPONDERS & ARMED FORCES PEOPLE WITH PETS • BAND / DRUM & BUGLE • YOUTH DANCE & DRILL GROUPS • FLOATS • CIVIC GROUPS & SERVICE CLUBS YOUTH GROUPS • EQUESTRIAN (2 riders or less) EQUESTRIAN GROUPS • EQUESTRIAN GROUPS - Royalty HORSE & BUGGY/WAGON In Addition, the VFW will award the “Patriot Trophy” to the entrant with the most overall votes (Winner of Patriot Trophy not eligible for additional trophies) May be picked up at the Pendleton Chamber of Commerce, Dean’s Athletic, DG Gifts, Elite Guns & Tactical and the Pendleton Downtown Association You may also mail requests to VFW Post 922 • PO Box 787 • Pendleton, OR 97801 or email requests to: fbradbury@yahoo.com Renata Anderson, MA 2237 SW Court, Pendleton • 541-276-5053 www.renataanderson.com Questions? Call Fred Bradbury at 541-377-7474 MASTER PRINTERS N W Printing • Copy Center • Graphic Design