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Candace Parker always said she d know when it woul <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.es>stanley taza</a> d <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.us>stanley us</a>  be time to retire. That day came Sunday.The three-time WNBA champion and two-time Olympic gold medalist announced on social media that her career was over after 16 seasons. The competitor in me always wants 1 more, but its time,  Parker wrote in an Instagram post.  My HEART  body knew, but I needed to give my mind time to accept it. Parker, 38, had told The Associated Press in November she wanted to play another season if she could get healthy from a foot injury that kept her off the court last season. But she cautioned that she didn t want to  cheat the game,  or herself, and expressed the same in announcing her retirement ahead of the Aces  attempt to win a third title in a row. Parker has had 10 surgeries over her career. I promised Id never cheat the game  that Id leave it in a better place than I came into it. ... I always wanted to walk off the court with no parade or tour, just privately with the ones I love,  she wrote.  What now was to be my last game, I walked off the court with my daughter. I ended the journey just as I started it, with her.                         Sue Ogrocki/AP                In this March 31, 2008, file photo, Tennessee s Candace Parker smiles as she takes questions from reporters.    Parker played her first 13 seasons in the league with the Los Angeles Sparks, <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.co.uk>stanley tumblers</a>  establishing her dominance early as a No. 1 pick who won Rookie of the Year and league MVP in the same season. Parker was the Mwjm More Americans seeking long-term relationships as pandemic changes dating scene
Millions of Americans are either at home trying to figure out how to pay their mounting bills, or out looking for work while worri <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.at>stanley becher</a> ed about exposure to a deadly virus. The troubling state of society is proving beneficial to one particular group: scammers. It makes sense that Americans are feeling that kind of economic and financial pressure, it is just really terrible that scammers are taking advantage of that,  said Lucy Baker.Baker is with the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, a watchdog organization based in Washington D.C that has been tracking COVID-19-related scams since May.In May, it found around 50,000 COVID-19 scams had been reported in the FTCs database. When it went back to check the numbers last month, reported COVID-19 scams had jumped to over 200,000. Kind of what was more shocking and right in your face was the nu <a href=https://www.stanleycups.com.mx>stanley en mexico</a> mber, 140 million,  said Baker.  That is the amount of money that had been lost due to these COVID-19 frauds. Most of the scams are related to companies or individuals selling fake COVID-19 cures. Some are marketing PPE that is supposed to work better but does not.In one case, people were receiving flyers in the mail that instructed them to go to a UR <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.co.uk>stanley mug</a> L that was supposed to be for coronavirus relief but instead it was a ploy for a used car business to get potential customers. The car dealership even sent fake checks with the flyers, stating it was money from the CARES Act for a new vehicle.According to U.S. PIRG, most people whove been scammed have l
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