
Rangers’ gold-medal winning trio call Olympics ‘dream come true’
NY Post
The Rangers’ gold medal-winning contingent returned to their training facility Wednesday, rejoining the last-place team after experiencing the complete opposite during the championship run in Milan.
Admittedly exhausted forwards Vincent Trocheck and J.T. Miller — as well as head coach Mike Sullivan, who helmed Team USA — were back on the ice as the Rangers prepared to resume their regular-season schedule with the first of their final 25 games Thursday night against the Flyers at the Garden.
“I think everyone understood the magnitude of it prior to the tournament and what it would mean to win, and then everything coming true, it’s like a dream come true,” Miller said after practice in Tarrytown. “We haven’t had any time to take anything in, we were just kind of living in the moment the last three, four days. I’m gonna enjoy going to sit on the couch with my family and talk about it all.”
The Rangers captain said he and Trocheck arrived back in New York around 2 a.m. after attending President Trump’s State of the Union address Tuesday night at the U.S. Capitol with many of the other American players.
The team also had partied together the previous days in Miami, with the 32-year-old Miller even going viral for crowd surfing and singing during one of the nightclub celebrations there.
“No, certainly not,” Miller replied when asked if he’d ever done that before. “I’ve done karaoke a time or two, but definitely haven’t crowd surfed. I thought if there’s ever a time and place, why not?”

SAN DIEGO — As you may have seen elsewhere in this newspaper (and also if you haven’t deleted me yet from your social media), I have a book coming out Tuesday called “The Bosses of The Bronx.” Much of it details the 37 years’ worth of antics, winning, losing, winning again and overall mania of George Steinbrenner’s time with the Yankees.

Cade Cunningham, almost inarguably the best player in the East this season, is likely out for the remainder of the regular season. That’s the word out of Detroit following the depressing news that Cunningham punctured a lung when he took a knee to his side Tuesday from Washington’s Tre Johnson while chasing a loose ball.











