Carlos Estevez, who had been connected to the Toronto Blue Jays earlier this offseason, has signed on with the Kansas City Royals. It's a two-year deal.
Witnesses have said Sabapathy climbed to the top of the pole before he fell onto the sidewalk and struck his head.
A college student who was hurt when he climbed a street pole and fell while Philadelphia Eagles fans celebrated the team’s victory in Sunday’s NFC championship game has died from his injuries
Tyler Sabapathy, an 18-year-old Toronto, Canada native who was studying at Temple University in Philadelphia, passed away On Tuesday, January 28, after sustaining critical injuries over the weekend.
PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) -- An 18-year-old Temple University student died Tuesday after he fell from a light pole during celebrations after the Eagles NFC Championship win over the weekend. Tyler Sabapathy was a first-year student at Temple.
An 18-year-old man who was celebrating the Philadelphia Eagles victory in the NFC championship on Sunday has died after he fell from a light pole during the celebrations.
Although they may seem like an unlikely trade partner, the Raptors have somehow found themselves in conversation for the six-time All-Star.
PHILADELPHIA — A car hit and injured three pedestrians in a crowd of people that was leaving the Philadelphia Eagles playoff game on Sunday night, police said. A driver is in custody and the collision did not immediately appear to be intentional, the Philadelphia Police Department said in a social media post.
Tyler Sabapathy is being remembered as an accomplished gymnast. CTV News Toronto’s Janice Golding has more from the people who knew him.
The Raptors weren't playing on Sunday, but they still found a way to remain relevant on one of the biggest days in the sports calendar.
Ball fixes a lot of those problems. He's a great communicator and a defensive savant who can still get a ton of steals despite not having the same mobility he did before his multiple knee surgeries. He will point teammates into the right position and has an uncanny knack for anticipating where the ball will go.