Paul McCartney Is Going Back On Tour

Paul McCartney is back in action. The former Beatles frontman announced his new tour will be entitled, “Got Back.”

The concert will kick off in April in Washington and run through June.

“I said at the end of the last tour that I’d see you next time,” the 79-year-old said in a press release. “I said I was going to get back to you. Well, I got back!”

The British rocker’s latest album, “McCartney III,” was released in 2020.

The companion record “McCartney III Imagined” dropped last year and featured collaborators such as Beck, Dominic Fike, Phoebe Bridgers, Robert Del Naja and Idris Elba.

Rangers Show Confidence With Igor Shesterkin In Net

Thursday night provided just the latest example of a Rangers victory not aligning with the peripheral numbers that are supposedly meant to measure a team’s true performance, independent of the scoreboard. 

So while the Rangers beat the Capitals, 4-1, while in command most of the match, in which every goal came at full strength, they came up short in the five-on-five attempts share (41.56 percent), shot share (38 percent), scoring chances (44.19 percent), high danger chances (45.45 percent) and expected goals (44.01 percent), as measured by Natural Stat Trick. 

MSG-TV analyst Steve Valiquette, using numbers from his own company’s operation, went on Twitter to call it a “stolen win,” by virtue of Igor Shesterkin outplaying Ilya Samsonov. 

Overall, the Rangers reside in the NHL’s nether regions pretty much across the board when it comes to analytics, with the most ardent believers having issues legitimizing the 33-13-5 record the team will take into its Saturday afternoon confrontation at Pittsburgh. 

And while the Rangers, of course, do want more puck possession and would like to limit chances against, they have found a formula for consistent success. If Shesterkin, whose save percentage of .940 is veering into historic territory, is a large part of that equation, his teammates are not apologizing for that. 

Undertaker To Headline WWE 2022 Hall Of Fame Class

The Undertaker will headline WWE’s 2022 Hall of Fame class.

The ceremony will be held during the weekend of WrestleMania 38, airing live on Peacock.

The Undertaker is the first inductee into the WWE Hall of Fame’s Class of 2022. He will be enshrined in the hallowed hall during the 2022 WWE Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony as part of WrestleMania Week.

The Undertaker, whose real name is Mark Callaway, is one of the most recognizable figures in professional wrestling history with a career spanning nearly 30 full years.

The Houston native is also credited for having the longest winning streak at WWE’s biggest event, WrestleMania, having gone 21-0 before experiencing his first loss to Brock Lesnar at WrestleMania 30 in 2014.