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grading the week

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Keeler: Broncos pariah Russell Wilson is a Hall-of-Fame QB. But he’ll be brutal TV. – The Denver Post

by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor junio 6, 2026
written by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor

Despite a miserable two seasons in Denver that were the beginning of the end of a good career, it was, on the whole, a very good career. A Hall-of- …

—– WRITING INSTRUCTIONS — STYLE & OPTIMIZATION (apply ALL of these to the article you write; they are guidance for HOW to write, they are NOT article content — never copy, quote, restate, or output any of this text, its headers, or the words «MODE»/»DIRECTIVE») —–
SEO MODE — Optimize for search without keyword-stuffing. Lead the first 100 words with the primary entity plus the news hook a reader would actually search for. Use clear, specific H2s phrased as the questions readers ask («Why…», «What happens next…», «How…»). Front-load the answer in each section. Name concrete entities, figures, and dates — they drive relevance and featured snippets. Use the head term naturally a few times; never repeat it mechanically.
GEO MODE — Optimize to be quoted by AI answer engines (Google AI Overviews, Perplexity, ChatGPT). Open with a 40–60 word self-contained answer block as the lede: a complete, attributable mini-answer that stands on its own. Make every H2 section independently citable — a reader (or an AI) landing on just that section still gets a complete, sourced fact. State claims plainly with attribution («according to [source]»). Prefer concrete, liftable sentences over vague framing.
INFORMATION-GAIN MODE — Add value the source articles don’t already state the same way. Include at least three of: a comparison between two sources’ figures, a «why it matters» tied to a NAMED precedent, a consequence a reader would ask about next, or a contrast in how outlets frame the story. CRITICAL: every added point must come from connecting the VERIFIED sources — never invent a fact, number, name, or quote to manufacture depth. If the sources don’t support more, stay shorter rather than pad.
HUMAN MODE — Write so it doesn’t read like AI. Vary sentence length sharply (mix 5–8 word sentences with 20–25 word ones). Use contractions. Anchor every paragraph with one concrete detail, number, or name. Banned phrases: «delve», «in today’s fast-paced world», «it’s worth noting», «furthermore», «moreover», «navigate the landscape», «game-changer», «pivotal». Banned headings: «What It Means», «Key Takeaways», «In Conclusion». Read each sentence aloud — if it sounds like a press release, rewrite it. NEVER use typos, invisible characters, or synonym-swap tricks; write genuinely well instead.
E-E-A-T MODE — Demonstrate Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trust. Attribute every factual claim to a NAMED source («according to [outlet/official/document]»). Anchor the story in time with explicit dates. Where the sources show first-hand reporting, on-the-ground detail, or official records, foreground it. Distinguish what is confirmed vs. reported vs. alleged. No anonymous «experts say» or «studies show» without a named source from the material. Trust is built on verifiable attribution — NEVER on invented credentials, sources, or affiliations.
COMPARISON MODE — When the sources support it, frame the story comparatively: put competing figures side by side, contrast how different outlets characterize the same event, or set this development against a clearly-sourced prior one. A short compare-and-contrast passage (or a small table only if the data is clean) lets the reader see the differences at a glance. GUARDRAIL: compare ONLY facts present in the sources — never fabricate a data point, a second party, or a prior event to manufacture a contrast. If there is nothing real to compare, don’t force it.
—– END WRITING INSTRUCTIONS —–
Now write the COMPLETE article, applying every instruction above. Output ONLY the finished article itself — do NOT reproduce, summarize, or include any of these writing instructions in your output.

junio 6, 2026 0 comments
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Noticias

Lu Dort is lucky Nuggets’ Nikola Jokic didn’t try to rearrange Dort’s teeth after dirty trip

by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor marzo 1, 2026
written by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor

Nikola Jokic had every right to be M-V-Peeved.

Lu Dort knew exactly what he was doing late Friday night with 8:03 left in regulation of the Nuggets’ loss at Oklahoma City. That collision with Joker? Watch the Thunder guard’s right leg in real time. Then watch in slo-mo. Doesn’t matter.

That’s not a basketball move. It’s a Cobra Kai one.

It’s not a plant. Or a jostle. Or even a trip. It’s a stinking sweep of the Joker’s left leg. The leg connected to Jokic’s left knee.

You know, the one No. 15 accidentally hyperextended in Miami back on Dec. 29.

It’s one thing to play on the edge. To play physically. Thunder players delight in making you earn everything they get. They push. They poke. They prod. They crawl inside your heads and pitch a tent there. They foul so many times that it’s hard for officials to ever administer true justice.

But there’s a difference between dancing on the edge and knifing somebody in the back. There’s a difference between setting a tone, getting a mental edge, and a deliberate cheap shot.

Jokic keeping himself from ripping Dort’s face off — A

Team Grading The Week wants a good, clean hoops game as much as the next stiff. But if we were in Jokic’s shoes, we would have threatened to re-arrange a few of Dort’s teeth, right then and there. The OKC agitator should consider himself lucky that he ran into one of Jokic’s Stone Cold Steve Austin stares and not into one of Jokic’s knuckles.

In fact, the GTW ruffians have to give the Big Honey some props for his relative restraint in the heat of the moment. It was one of those unfortunate incidents in which a star player often retaliates by swinging a justifiable fist. Replays showed that the most threatening thing Jokic did with his arms was try to dislodge himself from the Thunder’s Jaylin Williams.

It was the chippiest moment of a chippy, playoff-ish kind of game. Four techs, two flagrants and one ejection — Dort, for the aforementioned trip, which fit the definition of both “unnecessary” and “excessive,” given the circumstances.

Nuggets’ up-down-up week — C

While we now have a Joker “crazy eyes” meme to play with for the rest of eternity, it was a tough finish to an up-and-down week for Nuggets Nation.

Denver lost at Golden State last Sunday while the Warriors were without Steph Curry, Kristaps Porzingis, Draymond Green and Jimmy Butler. They ended the week by being outscored 20-14 in overtime at OKC while the Thunder intentionally rested Shai Gilgeous-Alexander for the entirety of the extra period. That’s the kind of stuff that can get between your ears. And linger.

Broncos NFLPA grades — A

The NFL lawyered up to keep the annual NFLPA team report cards for franchises from being released publicly, but that didn’t stop reporters from getting copies and publishing the thing, naturally. And if you’re the Broncos, you want those grades on every refrigerator in all 50 states. Especially the fridges that belong to potential free agents.

With the exception of the locker room (‘D’), which is small, cramped and scheduled to be replaced soon, Denver’s player grades were kind to outright effusive.

Head coach Sean Payton received a ‘B’ grade, same as a year ago. Every coordinator received an ‘A’ or A-minus’ grade. GM George Paton received an ‘A.’ Ownership got an ‘A-plus.’

Weight room? ‘A.’ Strength coaches? ‘A.’ Training room? ‘A-minus.’ Team travel? ‘A-minus.’ Home game field? ‘A.’

Pretty good GPA, huh? The kind that tells you that the Broncos are going to have some serious veterans wanting to be a part of The Bo Show.

Summit FC kits — A

The GTW crew has never been praised for its collective fashion sense, granted. We don’t know much about soccer kits — that’s jerseys, to you non-footie fans — but we know what we like.

Green is a tough color to nail. Yet Summit FC’s new primary “Evergreen” kit does it perfectly. Although we’re somewhat partial to the “Snow” secondary kit, which was also revealed last week — especially the way the team’s green/orange/yellow badge, which captures a Front Range sunset, really pops in contrast to the shirt’s white base.

Want more sports news? Sign up for the Sports Omelette to get all our analysis on Denver’s teams.

marzo 1, 2026 0 comments
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