Pelley and, a hockey stars number one fan. They finally meet. Im shaking. This is the cbs evening news with scott pelley. Pelley this is our western edition. A federal appeals curate in San Francisco has ruled against President Trump. His ban on refugees and on travel from seven predominantlymuslim countries will remain on hold. Mr. Trump, who once vowed to ban all muslim immigration, says this limited ban is essential to americas security. Tonight, he signaled he intends to appeal to the Supreme Court. He tweeted, see you in court. The security of our nation is at stake. Chief Legal Correspondent jan crawford is following the case. Jan . Reporter well, scott, in the 29page, unanimous opinion, the veeals court rejected the administrations arguments that the travel ban should be reinstated, which keeps in place a lower court order that has l baended the ban nationwide. Now, this is not a decision on the merits. The question at this point only thiswhether the ban would remain suspended w
And more than a few contacts.
Those include Mickey Farrell, senior vice-president of the Tampa Sports Authority which manages the stadium, and Brian Ford, COO of the Super Bowl champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers, who play there. They were both instrumental in us getting the facility, said Manning, who calls it a world-class venue.
Raymond James is just the latest stop on TFC s pandemic travels. Toronto, which finished out last season playing in East Hartford, Conn., has set up shop in Orlando this year.
Orlando s Exploria Stadium wasn t available for Tuesday s CONCACAF Champions League match and Manning said the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex in nearby Lake Buena Vista, which TFC had used for a round-of-16 match against Mexico s Club Leon, wasn t going to work for CONCACAF for the quarterfinal.
Neil Davidson
Raymond James Stadium rises in the distance ahead of Super Bowl 55 Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021, in Tampa, Fla. Toronto FC s Scotiabank CONCACAF Champions League quarterfinal at Raymond James Stadium was a trip down Memory Lane for club president Bill Manning and GM Ali Curtis. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP/Charlie Riedel April 28, 2021 - 9:51 AM
Toronto FC s Scotiabank CONCACAF Champions League quarterfinal at Raymond James Stadium was a trip down Memory Lane for both club president Bill Manning and GM Ali Curtis.
Back in 2000-01, Manning was president and GM of the Tampa Bay Mutiny, which played there before folding after a dismal 4-21-2 campaign in 2001. And Curtis was drafted by Tampa second overall in the 2001 MLS SuperDraft (former TFC coach Ryan Nelsen went two picks later to D.C. United).