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Lindsey Vonn is going to enter an official ski race for the first time in nearly six years this weekend at age 40. Vonn announced last month that she was coming out of retirement and she will race lower-level FIS downhills and super-Gs on Saturday and Sunday in Copper Mountain, Colorado.
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A judge has rejected a request to block a San Jose State women's volleyball team member from playing in a conference tournament on grounds that she's transgender. Monday's ruling by U.S. Magistrate Judge S. Kato Crews in Denver will allow the player to continue competing in the Mountain West Conference women's championship in Las Vegas this week.
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A Weld District Court judge put the Future Legends structures under receivership Tuesday, after Future Legends and owner Jeff Katofsky failed to pay six notes that now total more than $45 million.
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Athlete Drew Petersen says he found an unusual lifeline when he was suffering from depression: He set out to run a 100-mile ultramarathon in Colorado’s high country. Petersen documented the physical and emotional struggles in a new film called Feel It All. Hear the story behind that film, which is screening at several festivals around the state, on today's In The NoCo.
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Breaking makes its debut as an official Olympic event in Paris – as 32 B-boys and B-girls from around the globe compete for the gold. We talk with a hip-hop instructor from CU Boulder to learn some of the history and culture of the art of breaking on today's In The NoCo.
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The new documentary 'Copa 71' looks at the status of women’s soccer over the past 115 years or so, with a focus on the first FIFA Women’s World Cup played in 1971. But the film is about a lot more than the game of soccer.
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Rodeo is a popular sport all summer long across Colorado. But if you’ve never been to one -- you might feel intimidated or just not sure how to get the most out of it. Today on In The NoCo, we get insights from veteran bull rider Abe Morris about his time in the arena – and why rodeo matters here in the West.
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Earlier this year, two men allegedly stole and destroyed a bronze statue of the trailblazing baseball player and civil rights hero Jackie Robinson. Now metalworkers at a foundry in Loveland are creating a replacement. Today on In The NoCo, we talk with the foundry's owner to learn how the work is going, and what makes the statue so special.
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Metalsmiths in Loveland are remaking Jackie Robinson in bronze after the theft of a beloved Kansas statue of the civil rights baseball icon set off a national outpouring of donations.
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There are sports teams around the country who have Native American mascots or names, or use Native motifs and symbols. For decades, many groups have been fighting to remove these names and images.