The College Football Playoff quarterfinal matchup ... a car into a large crowd of people celebrating the New Year on Bourbon Street, killing at least 10 people and injuring more than two dozen ...
Bourbon Street — famous worldwide for music, open-air drinking and festive vibes — reopened for business by early afternoon Thursday. The Sugar Bowl college football game between Notre Dame ...
The Kansas City Chiefs find themselves in yet another Super Bowl. The two-time defending world champions will represent the AFC in February’s big game for the fifth time in the last six ...
It had been too long since Notre Dame football did what it did on Thursday in that city against that perennial college ...
The NFL has ramped up its security plan for the Super Bowl in the wake of the deadly attack on Bourbon Street on New Year’s Day. The Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles will square off in Super ...
Travis Kelce and the Kansas City Chiefs will head to New Orleans for Super Bowl 59 on Sunday. The Chiefs, who are set to take ...
Authorities say there is "no definitive link" between the New Orleans attack and a Tesla Cybertruck explosion in Las Vegas.
Atlanta leaders say the New Year’s Eve vehicle attack on Bourbon Street in New Orleans has helped guide their security plans for college football’s national championship game.
A loving father of two, a former college football player, and a student from the University of Alabama were among the 14 people killed when a rented pickup truck plowed into a crowd celebrating the ...
all those lives that were lost down there at Bourbon Street,” Jeter said. “That’s terrible stuff. Prayers up to those families and hoping everybody’s OK.” After waiting 12 days to play again after a ...
On Thursday, the FBI confirmed that 14 people were killed in the New Year’s attack on Bourbon Street. The attacker ... was a former Princeton University football player and had been working ...
Notre Dame fans on site for the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans process their emotions in the wake of Bourbon Street fatalities.