Updated 6:32 a.m.
Greetings on this soon-to-be-bright Friday morning.
New Yorkâs teams and their fans will be glad to crumple up 2013 and throw it away.
Not that 2014 looks much brighter, but the future, at least, is a blank slate.
The past is not. With the help of our colleagues in the Sports department of The Times, here are a few of the yearâs more unforgettably forgettable moments:
- Jets: A communication lapse caused the center to hike the ball into the wide receiverâs groin as he ran by. The opposing Ravens recovered it.
- Devils: Back in April, a 10-game losing streak tied a franchise record.
- Knicks: âI donât want to keep using âembarrassment,â â Carmelo Anthony said in the wake of a 41-point loss, âbut right now, the losing is just becoming unacceptable.â Yet it continues.
- Mets: A 20-inning, six-and-a-half hour loss to one of the few teams in the league worse than them.
- Giants: On the very first play of the year, a running back ran the wrong way and a tackle pushed a defender right into the path of a pass from Eli Manning. The first of many interceptions.
- Yankees: A clergy group held a prayer vigil outside the offices of Major League Baseball to seek divine intervention for A-Rod in his bid to beat a steroid suspension.
- Islanders: How many hockey teams can say they were scored on by a kneeling man?
- Rangers: Having a 19-year-old opponent shoot between his legs for his fourth goal of the game is a real morale-builder.
- Nets: With his team trailing in the final seconds, Coach Jason Kidd purposely spilled a soda on the court to stop the clock. They lost anyway, and he was fined $50,000.
Hereâs what else you need to know for Friday and the weekend.
WEATHER
Nice, in a low-key way. Mostly sunny with a high of 40.
Even nicer Saturday, with a high near 50.
Not nice on Sunday â" rain, possibly quite a bit.
COMMUTE
Subways: O.K. Check latest status.
Rails: Scattered delays on L.I.R.R. Check L.I.R.R., Metro-North or New Jersey Transit status.
Roads: No major delays. Check traffic map or radio report on the 1s or the 8s.
Alternate-side parking is in effect.
Weekend Travel Hassles: Check subway disruptions or list of street closings.
DE BLASIO WATCH
- The mayor-elect made 1,000 inauguration tickets available to the general public yesterday.
- They were gone within 90 minutes, but some went to scalpers. One was charging $20. [New York Post]
- Mr. de Blasio has appointed only three of the nearly 50 agency heads he will need, the least of any incoming mayor since John V. Lindsay. [Newsday]
- All the appointees he has named to prominent posts have significant public-sector experience â" a break from the Bloomberg era. [Capital New York]
- Mr. de Blasio is said to be looking for a replacement for his spokeswoman Lis Smith, who has been romantically linked to Eliot Spitzer. [New York Post]
COMING UP TODAY
- All those boats chugging up the West Side are on their way to the New York Boat Show, which opens next week at the Javits Center.
- High school track-and-field athletes from around the East Coast compete in the Marine Corps Holiday Classic at the armory in Washington Heights. 9 a.m.
- A protest march from 125th Street in Harlem to the South Bronx against the incoming police commissioner, William J. Bratton. 6 p.m. [This one was mistakenly listed yesterday. It really is today.]
- Turn Christmas cards into LED lanterns at a âRemake the Holidaysâ workshop at the New York Hall of Science in Queens. [$12]
- Make zawadi and otherwise learn about Kwanzaa at the Brooklyn Public Library. 3 p.m. [Free]
- The radio D.J. Imhotep Gary Byrd hosts a Kwanzaa celebration at the Apollo Theater. 7:30 p.m. [$18]
- The acclaimed East Williamsburg restaurant Gwynnett St. reopens, two weeks after its ownerâs arrest on charges of receiving chemicals used to make Ecstasy. [New York Times]
IN THE NEWS
- A 2001 interview with then-candidate Bloomberg was unearthed. He called himself âa big believer in term limits.â [New York Times]
- Minimum wage in New York state goes up to $8 an hour at yearâs end â" 75 cents above the old wage, which was the federal minimum. [Associated Press]
- Mr. Spitzerâs family-owned real estate company bought a four-acre development site on the West Side for $88 million. [New York Times]
- Youâll be able to pay the parking meter via smartphone starting in 2015. [Daily News]
- Florida will soon be more populous than New York State. [New York Times]
- Cleaning house: Brooklynâs incoming district attorney wants his predecessorâs toilet seat replaced. [New York Post]
THE WEEKEND
Saturday
- College football at Yankee Stadium: Itâs the New Era Pinstripe Bowl. 12:15 p.m. [$50 and up]
- The Valentinos doo-wop at the Bronx Library Center. 2:30 p.m. [Free]
- Tour the decorated farmhouse at the Queens County Farm Museum. 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. [Free, with mulled cider]
- Last day to see Toscaâs leap at the Met. 12:30 p.m. [$30 and up]
Sunday
- A seal watch is on at Orchard Beach in the Bronx. 2 p.m. [Free]
- Last day to see 48 haunting tintypes of contemporary soldiers and veterans at the Alice Austen House Museum on Staten Island. [$3 suggested donation]
- Last day to hear Satchmo read ââTwas the Night Before Christmasâ on a holiday tour of the Louis Armstrong House Museum in Queens. [$10]
- âThe Wizard of Ozâ screens in 3-D at Film Forum. 11 a.m. [$12.50]
- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.
Joseph Burgess, Michael M. Grynbaum, Andrew Keh, Naila-Jean Meyers, Bill Pennington and Ben Shpigel contributed reporting.
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