6:16: To be fair, it would probably fit. Somebody get him Governor Chris Christies Nets jersey. RT @DarynJones: NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!! pic.twitter.com/8blcF5fzTa — Cabbie Richards (@Cabbie) April 22, 20146:28 DeMar DeRozan seems pretty excited that the Toronto mayor is in the building. "I hope Rob Fords got my jersey on." - DeMar DeRozan — James Herbert (@outsidethenba) April 22, 20146:32: Amir Johnson seems more focused on fashion, than a Rob Ford appearance. Amir Johnson, appraised of Rob Fords imminence: You say Tom Ford or Rob Ford? — cathalkelly (@cathalkelly) April 22, 20146:33: #SELFIE So this just just happened with @iamdanielguerra #welp #rtz pic.twitter.com/Iz770wcRvX — Natasha (@Nat77) April 22, 20146:42: Another one? Sure, why not? Whats a trip to a Toronto sports game with out a picture with Rob Ford #LetsGoRaptors pic.twitter.com/qHZ1SDgvTG — pedromfarid (@pedromfarid) April 22, 20146:47: Update: OK good, Amir is cool with the Ford appearance. Amir Johnson is enjoying the celebrity quotient increasing at Raptors games. Cool with Rob Ford attending, intrigued by Jimmy Goldstein. — Ryan Wolstat (@WolstatSun) April 22, 20147:17: Just over ten minutes until tipoff, how about more #SELFIES Rob Ford posing with everyone! pic.twitter.com/RgDCwdtNk7 — Kevin Bryant (@KevinRashidi) April 22, 20147:27: Folks, he has taken a seat (in Section 318) Rob Ford in my section pic.twitter.com/AxTxroUvPP — AK (@AK47_Studios) April 22, 20147:32: Random jab by "3X NBA Champion/Producer/Actor/Dancer" Rick Fox. Anyone know if #RobFord is on the mic for Game2 pep rally? J/K #MasiUjiri love your passion for your team — Rick Fox (@Rickafox) April 22, 20147:36: Youre not wrong, Bruce. Rob Ford is high ... up in the arena. — Bruce Arthur (@bruce_arthur) April 22, 20148:11 BONUS! Drake lint rolls his pants. (h/t to @BenGolliver)8:13: Ford focus. Rob Ford gets a TSN shout-out! pic.twitter.com/Eiqqp3BGLq — Liam McGuire (@LiamRMcGuire) April 23, 20148:27: Wheres Fordo? Pretty sure the red dot at the centre of this photo is Mayor Ford. Up in the rafters tonight. #RapsOn1050 pic.twitter.com/KOGs14IOn0 — David William Naylor (@TSNDaveNaylor) April 23, 20148:47: His #SELFIE is in high demand Hafltime entertainment Nets-Raptors: Quick Change and fans taking photos and shaking hands with Toronto mayor Rob Ford. — Jeff Zillgitt (@JeffZillgitt) April 23, 2014 Yu Darvish Rangers Jersey . Cleary also had two assists and Patrick Eaves added two goals for the Red Wings, who also ousted Phoenix in seven games during the first round of the 2010 postseason. Todd Bertuzzi had a goal and an assist for Detroit, which got a goal apiece from Tomas Holmstrom and Niklas Kronwall and suffered no shortage of offense despite the absences of Henrik Zetterberg and Johan Franzen. Jonathan Hernandez Jersey . LeBron James believes hes a major reason for their early failures. https://www.cheaprangersbaseball.com/682...ey-rangers.html. - After spending the morning in the hospital, Logan Couture gave the San Jose Sharks the spark they needed. David Clyde Rangers Jersey . Though the 26-year-old said he was able to participate, coach Dwane Casey kept Johnson out as a precaution. Whitey Herzog Jersey . Minutes after the previously winless Colts got their first win, 27-13 over Tennessee, team vice chairman Bill Polian said the four-time league MVP will not play this season though he has begun throwing to teammates at the team complex. TORONTO -- The family of a Canadian skicross racer killed two years ago at a World Cup event feels vindicated now that sport authorities no longer blame him for the tragedy and instead have made safety improvements to course design, their lawyer said Monday. Lawyer Tim Danson said the family of Nik Zoricic feels his legacy has become something positive and to be celebrated. "We were not prepared to accept that Nik was responsible for his own death," Danson told The Canadian Press. "We just wanted the truth to be acknowledged." In the immediate aftermath of his fatal crash at an event in Grindelwald, Switzerland, on March 10, 2012, ski officials angered the family and others in the skiing community by suggesting Zoricic, 29, was to blame for his death. The family responded by arguing the death was "entirely avoidable" and blasted the course finish line for being a "death trap." In a letter to his parents this month, the International Ski Federation (FIS) called Zoricic a "talented, experienced, and skilled" World Cup skier who did not take unnecessary risks. "It would therefore not be right to describe his accident as a freak accident or pilot error, the federations president and secretary general wrote. The letter further states that the federation has updated its safety guidelines and beefed up the staff and experts who help organizers construct a course and its safety measures. In skicross, several racers hurtle down a mountain at the same time, making jumps and taking curves on the way. Zoricic, who grew up in Toronto, had raced on the World Cup circuit for more than three years and was competing in his 36th event in Grindelwaldd when he was killed at the finish line of a tight three-way race.dddddddddddd Video showed he was going as fast as 90 km/h when he veered to the right after the final jump, landing about a metre to the right of the official course line in "crud" rather than on a groomed shoulder. He snagged safety netting and tumbled into hard-packed snow, smashing his head. Among more stringent guidelines now in place is one calling for a much greater distance between the finish-line post and fencing. Hard objects, such as large mounds of packed snow, will no longer be allowed near the finish. "The fact that were making these significant changes is that there really are lessons learned from his death that will hopefully mean this kind of tragedy will never happen again," Danson said. The International Ski Federation also said it would commit $250,000 over five years to the Nik Zoricic Foundation, which aims to improve skicross safety. Neither Zoricics father Bebe, himself a veteran ski coach, nor his mother Silvia were immediately available to comment. Danson said it was a "difficult time" for them given the second anniversary of their sons death, but said they were "delighted" their son had been vindicated. At the Sochi Olympics last month, Canadian skicross racers wore denim-style ski pants as a tribute to their late teammate, who was known for wearing jeans on the mountain. Zoricic was born in Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina and moved with his father to Canada at age 5. He raced on the World Cup circuit for more than three years, placing fifth in the 2010-11 World Cup standings and eighth in the seasons world championship at Deer Valley, Utah. ' ' '