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Henry Ruggs will remain behind bars. The Nevada Board of Parole Commissioners denied the former NFL wide receiver parole nearly five years after he killed a woman in a Las Vegas car crash. Ruggs was driving at nearly one hundred fifty miles per hour with a blood alcohol level twice the legal limit when the collision occurred. The board's decision sends a clear message that the consequences here are not negotiable.
Shifting to baseball, and Aroldis Chapman is putting the Yankees on notice. The Red Sox closer says if New York wants to bring him back, GM Brian Cashman owes him a personal apology for how his last stint with the club ended. Chapman's arm is still elite, but apparently so is his memory. Cashman's next move could be as much about pride as it is about pitching.
And out on the PGA Tour, Sahith Theegala is making a serious statement at the RBC Canadian Open in Toronto. The twenty-eight-year-old chipped in on his opening hole and never looked back, firing a six-under sixty-four to grab the early lead. That's the best first-round score of his entire season, and he's two strokes clear of the field heading into day two.
That's your play-by-play. Sports Desk, back to the booth.
