How the Timberwolves’ playoff run is fueling the Twin Cities: ‘I’m euphoric about this moment’

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Tom Reid has always fashioned his sports bar on West Seventh Street in downtown St. Paul as the place to watch hockey. The name speaks for itself. It’s literally called Tom Reid’s Hockey City Pub.

That said, Reid has seen a different fervor as of late, with many of his customers coming in with the sole purpose of watching the Timberwolves on one of the many TVs at the bar and restaurant. The playoff run has consumed the state of Minnesota over the past few weeks with the Timberwolves looking the part of a legitimate NBA title contender.

“It’s been so exciting to watch,” said Reid, a former North Stars player and a current radio broadcaster for the Wild. “Everybody wants to be a part of it.”

That statement rings true throughout the Twin Cities as bars, restaurants and breweries alike have seen an uptick in business during Timberwolves playoff games. If a fan can’t watch the Timberwolves play in person, watching at a local establishment, and living and dying with every possession, has emerged as the next best thing in replicating the atmosphere.

That explains why the Timberwolves have partnered with nearly a dozen bars and restaurants in and around downtown Minneapolis ahead of Friday night’s Game 3 of their Western Conference semifinal series against the defending NBA champion Denver Nuggets at Target Center. The Timberwolves lead the best-of-7-games series 2-0, with Games 3 and 4 coming to their home court.

The official list of bars partnering with the Timberwolves includes Tom’s Watch Bar, Kieran’s​ Irish Pub, Lyons Pub​, The Loop​, 8th Street Grill​, The Local​, Sneaky Pete’s​, Jackson’s Hole​, The Loon​, Gluek’s, and The Corner Bar.

“You walk in there and every screen is on the Timberwolves,” said Tom Ryan, co founder of Tom’s Watch Bar, which is located a block away from Target Center. “It’s majestic in there.”

As this particular group of players continues to capture the collective consciousness locally, nationally and even internationally, Timberwolves Chief Operating Officer Ryan Tanke admitted he hasn’t seen anything quite like this during his decades with the organization.

He started as an intern in the late 1990s, left to work for the San Diego Chargers, then came back in the mid 2000s. He has been around for snapshot moments in time that felt big for the Timberwolves, like the rise of Ricky Rubio, the rebirth of Kevin Love’ and the return of Kevin Garnett.

“Nothing remotely close to what we’re seeing and experiencing right now,” Tanke said. “We knew from really early on that this season was going to be special, and to see that build, then over these last couple of weeks and spill into the bars, restaurants and breweries around town, it’s been amazing.”

The scenes around the Twin Cities during Timberwolves playoff games have been pretty incredible.

“This is a really hungry fan base that hasn’t had a lot of success over the past 20 years,” Tanke said. “We’ve got sort of a pent-up interest that is bubbling over.”

There were more than 800 people outside of Falling Knife Brewing Company in Minneapolis last weekend to watch the Timberwolves beat the Nuggets in Denver in the first two games of the series.

Minnesota Timberwolves fans gather outside Falling Knife Brewery in Minneapolis on April 20, 2024 to watch an NBA playoff game between the Timberwolves and the Phoenix Suns. (Courtesy of Jason Ehrreich)

“It gets insane in here,” said Falling Knife co founder Dan Herman, who opened the brewery with his good friends Andy Rutledge and Tom Berg, with hopes of carving out a niche as a Timberwolves bar. “I’m euphoric about this moment because this is literally what I wanted our place to be.”

It was a similar scene at Headflyer Brewing last weekend with its taproom completely full cheering for the Timberwolves.

“Our anniversary party for the brewery happened to coincide with the Timberwolves playing the Nuggets,” said Headflyer marketing director Megan Russell, adding that the brewery recently created a new space aptly named the Wolves Den. “The stars definitely aligned for us. There’s no other way to describe it than electric. We haven’t had this in so long as Minnesotans, so I think everybody is hungry for it.”

The pergola at Park Tavern in St. Louis Park was packed for a watch party last weekend with people sticking around to mingle long after the Timberwolves secured the win. .

“You can feel the momentum,” Park Tavern events coordinator Cheryl Gallagher Watson said. “We’ve seen it grow organically throughout this season. It’s been a lot of fun to see the excitement. It’s gotten way bigger than we would’ve anticipated.”

Needless to say the energy is palpable across the Twin Cities with more and more fans showing up each time the Timberwolves win. Why have so many people latched on?

“Because it doesn’t happen very often for us,” Herman said with a laugh. “It feels like with this team people are finally starting to let  go of the curse of Minnesota sports. They are just enjoying it for what it is. It’s a really fun thing for everybody right now.”

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The Biden-Netanyahu relationship is strained like never before. Can the two leaders move forward?

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By AAMER MADHANI, ZEKE MILLER and JULIA FRANKEL (Associated Press)

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have long managed a complicated relationship, but they’re running out of space to maneuver as their views on the Gaza war diverge and their political futures hang in the balance.

Their ties have hit a low point as Biden holds up the delivery of heavy bombs to Israel — and warns that the provision of artillery and other weaponry also could be suspended if Netanyahu moves forward with a widescale operation in the southern Gaza city of Rafah.

Netanyahu, for his part, is brushing off Biden’s warnings and vowing to press ahead, saying, “If we have to stand alone, we will stand alone.”

“If we need to, we will fight with our fingernails. But we have much more than fingernails,” he said.

Biden has long prided himself on being able to manage Netanyahu more with carrots than sticks. But the escalation of friction over the past seven months suggests that his approach may be long past its best-by date.

With both men balancing an explosive Mideast situation against their own domestic political problems, Netanyahu has grown increasingly resistant to Biden’s public charm offensives and private pleading, prompting the president’s more assertive pushback in the past several weeks.

“If they go into Rafah, I’m not supplying the weapons that have been used historically to deal with Rafah, to deal with the cities, that deal with that problem,” Biden said in a CNN interview Wednesday, laying bare his growing differences with Netanyahu.

Biden aides nonetheless insist the president is unwilling to allow the U.S.-Israel relationship to truly rupture on his watch. They cite not only the political imperative — a majority of Americans support Israel — but also Biden’s personal history with the country and his belief in its right to defend itself.

The president’s aides, watching how pro-Palestinian protests have roiled his party and the college campuses that have been breeding grounds for Democratic voters, have mused for months that Biden could be the last classically pro-Israel Democrat in the White House.

Their optimism about their ability to contain Netanyahu may be falling into the same trap that has vexed a long line of American presidents who have clashed with the Israeli leader over the decades.

White House national security spokesman John Kirby on Thursday declined to say whether Biden informed Netanyahu of his decision to suspend shipment of 3,500 bombs when the leaders spoke earlier this week. But he said Biden has been “direct and forthright” with Netanyahu about his concerns.

Biden and Netanyahu have known each other since Biden was a young senator and Netanyahu was a senior official in Israel’s embassy in Washington.

They’ve hit rough patches before.

There were differences over Israel building settlements in the West Bank during Barack Obama’s administration when Biden was vice president. Later, Netanyahu vehemently opposed Biden’s push to resurrect the Iran nuclear deal sealed by Obama and scrapped by Donald Trump. Netanyahu chafed at Biden prodding him to de-escalate tensions during Israel’s bloody 11-day war with Hamas in 2021.

The leaders went more than a month earlier this year without talking as Biden’s frustration with Netanyahu grew over the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

The relationship remained workable despite such differences between the center-left Democrat and the leader of the most far-right coalition government in Israel’s history.

But with the Biden-Netanyahu relationship now coming under greater strain than ever before, it is unclear how the leaders will move forward.

Netanyahu is caught between public pressure for a hostage deal and hard-liners in his coalition who want him to expand the Rafah invasion, despite global alarm about the harm it could do to some 1.3 million Palestinians sheltering there. He’s made clear that he will push forward with a Rafah operation with or without a deal for hostages.

The Israeli leader vowed to destroy Hamas after its Oct. 7 rampage in southern Israel in which 1,200 people were killed and some 250 were captured and taken hostage. But his public standing has cratered since then, as he faces pressure to find a pathway to a truce that would bring home the remaining hostages and the remains of Israelis who have died in captivity.

He’s resisted an investigation into what led to the intelligence and military failures leading up to the Hamas attack. All the while, he’s still facing legal problems, including a long-running corruption trial in which he is charged with fraud and accepting bribes.

Netanyahu’s political survival may depend on the Rafah offensive. If he reaches a hostage deal that stops short of conquering Rafah, hardliners in his coalition have threatened to topple the government and trigger new elections at a time when opinion polls forecast he would lose.

“To keep his partners on board and prevent them from pre-empting an election, in which Likud will be decimated and he will be turned out of office, he needs to keep the ‘total victory’ myth alive – and that is only possible by avoiding a deal with Hamas,” wrote Anshel Pfeffer, a columnist and author of a Netanyahu biography, in the Haaretz daily.

Aviv Bushinsky, a former spokesman and chief of staff for Netanyahu, said the Israeli leader remains focused on the war’s primary goal – defeating Hamas – because of concerns about his image and legacy.

He said Netanyahu has spent his career branding himself as the “tough guy on terror.”

“He thinks this is how he will be remembered. He’s been promising for a decade to cream Hamas,” Bushinsky said. “If he doesn’t, in his mind he’ll be remembered as the worst prime minister of all time.”

Biden, meanwhile, faces mounting protests from young Americans, a segment of the electorate critical to his reelection. And he’s faced backlash from Muslim Americans, a key voting bloc in the battleground state of Michigan. Some have threatened to withhold their votes in November to protest his administration’s handling of the war.

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, a Biden ally who has been frustrated by the administration’s handling of the war, said Thursday Biden should go further and suspend delivery of all offensive weaponry to Israel.

“The United States does and should stand by its allies, but our allies must also stand by the values and the laws of the United States of America,” Sanders said. “We must use all of our leverage to prevent the catastrophe in Gaza from becoming even worse.”

At the same time, Biden is facing bruising criticism from Republicans, including presumptive 2024 GOP presidential nominee Trump, who say that his decision to hold back weapons is a betrayal of an essential Mideast ally.

“What Biden is doing with respect to Israel is disgraceful. If any Jewish person voted for Joe Biden, they should be ashamed of themselves. He’s totally abandoned Israel,” Trump told reporters on Thursday.

Idaho Sen. Jim Risch, the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said Biden’s move is “simply a nod to the left flank” that is handing “a great victory to Hamas.”

Friction between the U.S. and Israeli leaders is not without precedent.

President George H.W. Bush and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir’s relationship was strained as the Republican administration threatened to withhold $10 billion in aid to thwart new settlement activity in the West Bank. Obama and Netanyahu’s relationship was marked by mutual distrust over the Democrat’s effort to reignite the Middle East peace process and forge the Iran nuclear deal.

“There were always workarounds if the heads of government really don’t get along. We may get to that,” said Elliot Abrams, a senior national security official in the George W. Bush administration. “But of course, this may be a sort of problem that solves itself in that one or both of them may be gone from office” in a matter of months.

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AP writers Mary Clare Jalonick in Washington and Adriana Gomez Licon in Miami contributed reporting. Frankel reported from Jerusalem.

Trump is limited in what he can say about his court case. His GOP allies are showing up to help

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By ADRIANA GOMEZ LICON (Associated Press)

Former President Donald Trump is limited in what he can publicly say as he fights charges that he made payments to a porn actor to illegally influence the 2016 election. But he’s getting help from some GOP allies who are glad to show up and talk.

U.S. Sen. Rick Scott of Florida was the latest surrogate to accompany Trump, joining him Thursday for the 14th day of his hush money trial in New York. Last week, it was Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton who joined the presumptive GOP presidential nominee.

The Republicans’ courtroom presence can help Trump connect with constituents while he’s stuck in court and feeling the pressure of a gag order placed on him by the judge. Both Scott and Paxton have been through legal troubles of their own, and have railed against what they call politically motivated prosecutions — a message that echoes Trump’s own. And while having friends by one’s side is a common practice encouraged by attorneys to show support for defendants in court, it’s also a chance for Trump’s friends to publicly demonstrate their loyalty to the leader of the GOP.

Scott started his day Thursday as the 6 a.m. guest on the morning show “Fox & Friends.” He later entered the courtroom behind Trump and witnessed the tense exchange between Stormy Daniels and Trump’s defense attorney as they were going over the alleged 2006 sexual encounter between the former president and the porn actor.

The senator filed into the first row of the courtroom gallery behind the defense table, joining Trump’s entourage, and spoke with Trump lawyer and spokesperson Alina Habba before taking a seat.

After an hour and a half, Scott left the courtroom and walked across the street to speak to news outlets. There, he commented on a a subject Trump has been ordered not to, bringing up Judge Juan Merchan’s daughter and saying she was a political operative who raises money for Democrats.

“This is just a bunch of Democrats saying we want to make sure that Donald Trump can’t talk,” Scott said. “Then they’ve got a gag order, so he can’t go campaign. They’ve got him holed up in a courtroom.”

The gag order prohibits Trump from making or directing others to make public statements about people connected to the case, including the judge’s family.

Scott denied his presence had anything to do with the gag order.

“No. I’m fed up,” he said. “This is just simply they don’t want this guy on the ballot.”

Paxton did not speak publicly when he joined Trump last week, but he gave interviews later to Fox Business and Newsmax about the trial, calling it “perversion of justice.”

“This is tyrannical, and to stop him from speaking out and defending himself and keep him from basically campaigning, I think is hard to believe and I hope the American people do not put up with this,” Paxton told Fox Business the day after.

David Weinstein, a legal analyst and former federal prosecutor, said Trump can’t directly or indirectly comment, adding that an indirect comment would include a friend saying something Trump shared or told. But surrogates like Scott are free to speak.

“They can say whatever they want to say. They are not bound by a gag order,” he said.

Weinstein said Trump is not only on trial for the crimes he is charged with, but he’s also before the court of opinion while trying to win an election.

“He can bring other people in, can show constituents of other states that he has the backing of other politicians,” he said. “This is a political and a public relations tactic. It’s got nothing to do with his defense.”

Trump’s attorneys have argued against the gag order, saying the former president should be allowed to respond to Daniels’ testimony. But Merchan on Thursday refused a request to modify it.

Gustavo Lage, a criminal defense attorney, said it is controversial as to what extent this gag order applies.

“I think the court would have a hard time saying that a third party can’t voice their opinion or their feelings about a trial,” Lage said.

As far as connecting with voters by bringing in surrogates and allies, Lage said that should not be relevant in court.

“I don’t think that is something the court could or should control as long as it doesn’t interfere with the administration of justice in the courtroom,” he said.

The Schubert Club Mix season will include local performer and vocalist Bradley Greenwald

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The Schubert Club’s 2024-25 newly announced lineup for its Schubert Club Mix includes a program curated by local performer and vocalist Bradley Greenwald along with other national acts presented in a more approachable setting.

Season ticket packages for the series are not available this season as tickets to two of the performances (So Percussion and Caroline Shaw and the Dreamers’ Circus) are now available from the Walker Art Center. Subscribers can still purchase tickets at a 20 percent discount and single tickets will go on sale in early August. For details, call 651-292-3268 or go to schubert.org.

The Schubert Club Mix season includes:

New York City-based So Percussion and vocalist/violinist/composer Caroline Shaw perform works from their album collaboration “Let the Soil Play Its Simple Part”; 7:30 p.m. Oct. 19, Walker Art Center.
Bradley Greenwald and Friends present an evening of song and collaboration; 3 p.m. Feb. 2, Amsterdam Bar and Hall.
Nordic acoustic trio Dreamers’ Circus; 7:30 p.m. March 4, Walker Art Center.
Two-time Grammy winners Turtle Island Quartet perform works by David Balakrishnan, Terence Blanchard, Rhiannon Giddens and Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ Tate; 7:30 p.m. May 10, Parkway Theater.

Accordo ensemble

The Schubert Club has also opened sales for $100 season tickets for Accordo, a string ensemble composed of present and former principal string players of the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra and Minnesota Orchestra.

Accordo’s Monday evening performances (Nov. 18, Jan. 13 and June 2) will take place at Westminster Hall at Westminster Presbyterian Church in downtown Minneapolis. Each concert will be repeated the following night at Icehouse in Minneapolis in an abbreviated, more casual format. The group will also play a special concert at St. Paul’s Ordway Concert Hall on May 13 featuring silent films accompanied by original live music.

Founded in 1893, the Schubert Club is Minnesota’s oldest arts organization.

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