Tag Archives: Kevin

Kevin Colbert: I was happy for Antonio Brown winning the Super Bowl

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Boston kept close tabs on Tom Brady‘s first Super Bowl appearance for a team other than the Patriots and that wasn’t the only other NFL city with ties to this year’s Buccaneers squad.

The Steelers have plenty of connections to Tampa. Bucs head coach Bruce Arians was the Steelers offensive coordinator for five seasons while Bucs assistants Byron Leftwich, Larry Foote, and Antwan Randle-El all played for the team. So did defensive tackle Steve McLendon and cornerback Ross Cockrell, but the active player with the deepest history in Pittsburgh is likely wide receiver Antonio Brown.

Brown starred for the Steelers for nine seasons, but his tenure with the team ended in acrimony at the end of the 2018 season. Brown forced a trade away from the team after missing practices, criticizing quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, and generally making life miserable for the team. Despite all that, Steelers General Manager Kevin Colbert had a positive response to Sunday’s win.

“I was happy for A.B. to win a Super Bowl trophy,” Colbert said on WDVE, via the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. “That’s something that is unique. Once a player does it, there is nothing else that can compare. When you get that first one, it’s unique and you remember it. Those [ex-Steelers], I know they enjoyed that. That was a special group. And we are happy for all of them.”

Brown’s behavior with the Raiders made for a short stay with them and accusations of sexual assault brought his time with the Patriots to an end after one game. He served an eight-game suspension to open this season as well and the distance all of that provides from his time with the Steelers may have made it easier for Colbert to find a smile for the wideout on Sunday.

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Brooklyn Nets’ Kevin Durant won’t travel, may sit multiple games due to contact-tracing protocols

After a confounding night surrounding the status of Brooklyn Nets star Kevin Durant at the Barclays Center — which included him getting pulled out of the lineup in the pregame and third quarter for contact-tracing protocols — Durant won’t travel to Philadelphia for Saturday’s game and could be lost for multiple games for the second time in a month, sources tell ESPN.

Durant had come into contact with an associate on Friday who tested positive for the coronavirus Friday night, just hours after returning an inconclusive test shortly before the Nets’ 123-117 loss to the Toronto Raptors.

That inspired a most dramatic third-quarter scene: a Nets official informing Durant that he had to leave the bench for isolation, causing a flustered franchise star to trudge into the bowels of Barclays, where, presumably, he tweeted, “Free Me,” in the final minutes of the game.

The Nets informed the league office of the individual’s inconclusive test on Friday afternoon, and eventually were instructed to pull Durant out of pregame warmups. Nets general manager Sean Marks had been on the phone with the league office and delivered word down to the court.

Moments later, Steve Nash and his coaching staff found out that Durant would not be available to start the game.

Durant left the floor before the game, only to have the NBA clear him to return to the bench shortly after the start of the first quarter.

“Durant was initially held out of the game while that result was being reviewed,” the league statement said. “Under the league’s health and safety protocols, we do not require a player to be quarantined until a close contact has a confirmed positive test.”

Before Durant left the court for the final time during the third quarter, he was sitting on the bench while officials reviewed a play in which he had picked up his fifth foul of the evening. The foul was overturned, but Durant never checked back in.

As the timeout came to an end, a team official told Durant he wouldn’t be able to continue in the game. Durant shook his head in apparent frustration. As he walked back through the tunnel, Durant threw his water bottle.

Durant, who played 19 minutes in the game, kept tweeting on Friday night after the game, questioning the league’s timeline and details.

On the heels of NBA stars LeBron James and Giannis Antetokounmpo ridiculing the NBA and the NBPA’s plans for an Atlanta All-Star game on March 7, there emerged a late-week feeling of superstar revolt.

“I don’t understand the whole thing where he couldn’t play, then he came on the court, then they took him back,” Nets guard James Harden said. “There’s just a lot going on. There’s too much going on. It’s kind of overwhelming. We’re in the midst of a tough game, and these games are going to add up, especially if we’re talking about playoff seeding … to catch a rhythm. It’s overwhelming. It’s frustrating.”

“[Durant] feels the same way. Especially with him already having it and we get tested every single day. He’s been negative. So, I don’t understand what the problem is. The game should’ve been postponed, I feel like. If we’re talking about contact tracing. He was around all of us. So I don’t understand why he wasn’t allowed to play, then allowed to play, then taken back off the court. If that was the case, we should’ve postponed the game.”

Durant contracted the coronavirus in March and still had those antibodies in early January when he was lost for four games because of contact tracing. Four weeks later, Durant could be lost for a similar six-day stretch, sources said.

After Friday’s game, Nash said that he struggled, at times, to compartmentalize Durant’s absence during the game.

“I probably got a little distracted thinking about what it means long-term for our team,” Nash said. “We’ve already been playing guys a lot of minutes and if Kevin is not playing, are we gonna run the remaining guys too many minutes? So maybe I got a little distracted by the big picture.”

The Nets have road games on Saturday (Philadelphia) and Tuesday (Detroit) and return home on Wednesday (Indiana). The Nets start a West Coast trip next Saturday against Golden State.



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Nets ask why game was on amid Kevin Durant’s COVID-19 mess

Frustrated. Overwhelming. Downright bizarre.

Those are the words the Nets used to describe what happened Friday night, when Kevin Durant was pulled from their starting lineup moments before tipoff, then allowed to play only to be yanked off the court for COVID-19 contact tracing.

“I was frustrated, especially [since] we follow the protocols, we get tested every single day, so I don’t understand the whole thing where he couldn’t play and then he came on a court, and then they took him back. There’s just a lot going on. There’s too much going on. It’s kind of overwhelming,” said James Harden, who broached the question of whether the game should’ve been called altogether.

“If that was the case, the game should’ve been postponed. If we’re talking about contact tracing, he was around all of us, so I don’t understand why he wasn’t allowed to play and then was able to play and then taken back off the court. If that was the case, we should just postpone the game. That’s how I feel.”

James Harden questions a referee during the Nets’ loss to the Raptors on Friday.
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

Durant had tested negative three times in the previous 24 hours, including twice on Friday. Nevertheless, he was still pulled off the court and now isn’t expected to make the trip to Philadelphia for Saturday’s huge matchup against the 76ers. It left the Nets shorthanded and confused.

“Yeah, that’s I mean, it’s spot-on: Confusing, frustrating. I mean, it’s bizarre, right? For him to not start, and then be able to come in, play, and then be taken out again. It really just doesn’t make any sense,” said Joe Harris, who was bewildered by what this meant for the rest of the team in terms of contact tracing.

“Your guess is as good as mine. I would’ve said, ‘Hey, if he’s sitting for contact tracing, I mean, what the hell? He’s with all of us on the court.’ ”

Harden had the same contact tracing questions, wondering: If safety was that much of a concern, why play?

“I said what was going on and they just said contact tracing,” Harden said. “I’m thinking to myself, well if it’s contact tracing then we’re all in the locker room together: That means there’s no game if he’s not gonna be able to play. So that was my thought process, and once we started the game, I kind of forgot about it. Then Kevin enters the game and I’m like, there must’ve been confusion or something messed up.”

What the Nets — and others such as Lakers star LeBron James and De’Aaron Fox of the Kings — find messed up is the NBA scheduling the All-Star Game for March 7. It’s going to be held in Atlanta, and the COVID-19 positivity rate for Fulton County is over 11 percent.

“The guys that are actually All-Stars, I feel bad for,” Harris said. “Yeah, it’s just a lot of stuff where it really doesn’t make that much sense. But I’m not the one making the decisions. I just work here.”

It could impact Harden, who falls into James’ and Fox’s camp as not looking forward to it.

“I haven’t said anything publicly, but I feel the same way as some of the players who are like there’s so much going on as far as we’re trying to calm a virus and we’re putting on an event,” Harden said.

“I know what the reasoning it is, but I feel like — especially with a condensed schedule that was forced upon players — it’s already draining to play a lot of games in a week. I feel like that was a week for us to relax, be with our families to take a step away from basketball. So like I said, we’re just in it.”

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Kevin Durant ruled out due to COVID-19 protocols after coming off bench vs. Toronto Raptors

In a bizarre back-and-forth, Brooklyn Nets forward Kevin Durant’s night culminated with him being unexpectedly pulled from Friday’s 123-117 loss to the Toronto Raptors in the third quarter due to the health and safety protocols.

Durant was initially not available to start Friday’s game because someone he interacted with earlier in the day had an inconclusive test result for COVID-19, the league explained in a statement. He later came off the bench and checked into the game at the 4:13 mark of the first quarter.

“Durant was initially held out of the game while that result was being reviewed,” the statement read. “Under the league’s health and safety protocols, we do not require a player to be quarantined until a close contact has a confirmed positive test.”

However, during the game, a positive result was returned for that person and Durant was removed from the game in the third quarter “out of an abundance of caution,” according to the league.

Durant has tested negative for COVID-19 three times in the past 24 hours, including two PCR tests on Friday, the league said. Contact tracing is underway to determine if Durant was in fact a close contact of the individual who tested positive.

The rest of the Nets have been cleared to travel to Philadelphia for Saturday’s game against the 76ers, but Durant will not make the trip, sources told ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

As he sat on a bench during a break, Durant was informed by a Nets staffer he was being pulled from the game. A visibly stunned Durant shook his head and as he walked through the tunnel to the locker room tossed a water bottle in frustration.

Durant tweeted “Free me” shortly after being removed then criticized the NBA in another tweet after the game.

Durant finished with just 8 points on 3-of-8 shooting in 19 minutes, plus 6 rebounds and 5 assists. It marked only the second time in the past 10 seasons Durant failed to reach double figures, breaking a streak of 166 straight games. Durant scored zero points Feb. 28, 2017, against the Wizards, leaving the game 90 seconds in after an injury to his knee.

Friday’s game also marked the first time Durant has come off the bench in his 13-year NBA career.

Moments before he was pulled from the game, Durant was whistled for his fifth foul, but the Nets won a challenge to overturn the call on the floor. It’s the first time in Durant’s career he finished a game with more fouls than field goals.

Durant, who had COVID-19 last March, is the second-leading scorer in the NBA, averaging 30.8 points per game. He previously missed three games in early January due to the health and safety protocols.



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Nets’ Kyrie Irving, Kevin Durant, James Harden shine in thrilling win over Clippers: Takeaways

Another contender traveled to Brooklyn to take on the Eastern Conference favorites on Tuesday, and another contender fell against the might of their big three. This time, it was the Los Angeles Clippers attempting to contain the unstoppable Nets, and they failed in a 124-120 defeat at the hands of the NBA’s best offensive trio. Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving and James Harden combined for 90 points in the victory and came back from a 12-point first-half deficit to take the game and move within two of the Philadelphia 76ers for the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference. 

The Clippers can at least leave New York satisfied that they held their own in the measuring stick contest. The Clippers opened the season with big wins against the Lakers and Nuggets, but have played a weak schedule since then. Now, more than 20 games into the season, they’ve seen where they stand against one of the teams they might need to beat in order to win the championship. Here is what they, and the Nets, can take away from Tuesday’s clash of the titans. 

1. Brooklyn’s formula

Ignore the hiccups against Washington and Cleveland. Ignore the gaudy opposing point totals, the season-high individual scoring numbers from opponents and the late-game mistakes. Brooklyn has now played three playoff teams since acquiring James Harden, and a formula is beginning to present itself: keep the game in the 120s, not the 140s, get efficient offense from all three stars, and trust that one of them will break out with a 40-point explosion or monster triple-double. 

That, in essence, is what happened against the Clippers. Irving led the way with 39 points, but Durant and Harden combined to shoot 64 percent from the field. Brooklyn’s defense has actually fared better on a relative-basis against good offenses (ranked 20th against top-10 scoring units since acquiring Harden, per Cleaning the Glass) than it has against mediocre ones (dead last) and bottom-10 opponents (23rd). That suggests that effort, to some extent, can lift the Nets up to competence, and it has against their best opponents. 

On paper, this is what the Nets would probably want a Finals game to look like. Their offense, as a whole, is defense-proof. No team is ever going to lock down all three of their stars at once. They don’t have to be great on defense. They just have to be good enough to supplement an offense that will give them a chance against any opponent, and it was on Tuesday. 

2. Big or small?

When Brooklyn played Milwaukee in its first possible playoff preview of the Harden era, it devoted 38 of a possible 48 minutes to DeAndre Jordan in an effort to deter Giannis Antetokounmpo at the basket. It worked, but Steve Nash has remained adaptable. Jordan played only 16 minutes against the Clippers as Jeff Green got the remaining 32 at center. 

In theory, the plan worked. The Nets won the game, and even with Green as their small-ball five, they more than held their own inside. The two teams tied with 44 paint points apiece and Brooklyn won the rebounding battle 44-39. The Clippers aren’t a particularly paint-oriented team. The bulk of their shots are jumpers, and switching tends to be the best defense against such offenses. But playing that way allowed Kawhi Leonard to hunt for ideal matchups quite a bit early on. He managed to find Irving and Joe Harris on several early possessions as the Clippers built their first-half lead, and that strategy is going to be a common one Brooklyn should expect against elite offenses in the playoffs. 

That’s not to say that, on balance, small-ball is a negative. Aside from the spacing benefits, it makes it far easier for the Nets to park Harden in the post defensively, where he is most comfortable and made an enormous impact on Tuesday. But the Nets won Jordan’s minutes by six points and lost Green’s by two. That’s not an enormous difference, but it points to the difficulty of shifting between identities. If the Nets can’t master one approach, how will they split the difference against teams that can punish both? 

3. Who’s ready for primetime?

Every Nets starter played at least 32 minutes in this game. Four Clippers starters did, and Marcus Morris gave them 31 minutes off of the bench. Both teams held on for dear life when their reserves had to play. Not a single Clippers reserve had a positive point-differential. Brooklyn’s backups aside from Jordan attempted only five shots. 

The Lakers won the championship last season for a variety of reasons, but nailing their minimum-salary signings was one of the biggest. Getting Dwight Howard, Markieff Morris and Rajon Rondo off of the scrap heap allowed them to play through the entire postseason without worrying about devoting minutes to any outright liabilities. 

The Clippers are getting closer to that. Nic Batum has been a revelation, and Reggie Jackson is slowly starting to return to his Detroit form. The Nets still have a ways to go. They’ve allowed Landry Shamet to play through his struggles, but he’s still hovering around 30 percent from behind the arc. Timothe Luwawu-Cabarrot has been too inconsistent, and while Bruce Brown’s defense is sorely needed, he’s shooting less than 20 percent on corner-3’s so far this season. 

The Nets trust only six players right now. The Clippers run deeper than that, but watching Luke Kennard play only four minutes in such a big game isn’t particularly encouraging. Brooklyn has the time and tools to improve its bench. The Clippers can reasonably hope that their answers are internal. But right now, both are relying very heavily on their starters to win games. That can work in the regular season, but champions need role players like Rondo and Howard to step up if they’re going to last four rounds. 

4. Don’t forget who the Clippers were missing

Not to rain on Brooklyn’s parade, but this wasn’t quite the possible Finals preview we were hoping for largely because of one absence. Irving scored 39 points in this game, but the absence of Patrick Beverley, an All-Defense point guard, likely contributed to that. The Clippers are over 10 points per 100 possessions better with Beverley on the floor (allowing 101.7 points per 100 possessions) than they are with him off of it (111.8). 

That isn’t to say that Beverley would shut Irving down. Nobody can do that. But rarely do All-Defense selections allow 39 points on 15-of-23 shooting. In a game with such thin margins, Beverley making Irving work a bit harder, or at least giving the Clippers more matchup versatility and limiting Jackson’s minutes on the floor, might have made all the difference. Eventually, the Nets are going to run into a team with three high-end perimeter stoppers in the postseason. Boston has three between Marcus Smart, Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum. Philadelphia has three between Ben Simmons, Matisse Thybulle and Danny Green. Milwaukee has never proven willing to deploy their best players this way, but Antetokounmpo, Khris Middleton and Jrue Holiday would all pose problems for Brooklyn’s stars. We still haven’t seen how the Nets would handle such defensive depth. They’ve had at least one exploitable matchup in all of their games thus far, but that is eventually going to change, and pegging Brooklyn’s playoff potential is going to be impossible before we see how they handle that. 

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Kevin Hart Buys New Muscle Car After Near-Fatal Crash

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Wendy Williams names her ex-husband Kevin Hunter’s baby mama for the first time

Wendy Williams named her former husband Kevin Hunter’s baby mama for the first time on her popular daytime show.

On Tuesday the host wore a bright yellow dress as she sipped her coffee and made the shocking comments on the program.

‘Welcome to Hot Topics, Sharina Hudson!’ said Williams. ‘Getting out of my car … with my money.’

YES she did: Wendy Williams named her former husband Kevin Hunter’s baby mama for the first time on her popular daytime show

Then she mentioned the baby Kevin had with massage therapist Sharnia: ‘She’ll be almost three – I think she’ll be three next month, don’t you know.’

Next she said hello to her ex. ‘Good morning, Kelvin,’ she said. Kelvin is Kevin’s legal name. ‘It’s my truth.’ 

Also this week she called Hunter a ‘serial cheat.’

The 56-year-old talk show host filed for divorce from Kevin Hunter in April 2019 after he fathered a child with another woman but she admitted his infidelity didn’t come as a shock because he had slept with other people throughout their 21-year marriage.

Chic while dishing: On Tuesday the host wore a bright yellow dress as she sipped her coffee and made her shocking comments

‘We were married for almost 22 years. We were together for 25 years,’ she told SiriusXM’s The Jess Cagle Show. ‘I don’t regret the day of meeting him. I don’t regret putting up with him for all 25 years — and that has nothing to do with him having this baby or him having this side girl for almost 15 years of our marriage.’

She added, ‘I’ve known about her almost since the beginning. I’ve known that Kevin is a serial cheat.’

Wendy first found out the 48-year-old producer had been unfaithful while she was pregnant with their son Kevin Jr., now 20.

Directed at her: ‘Welcome to Hot Topics, Sharina Hudson!’ said Williams. ‘Getting out of my car … with my money’

The Chanel life: Hudson leaving her New Jersey home in tight workout clothes

She continued: ‘The first time I found out was while I was pregnant with our son [Kevin Hunter Jr.] on bedrest. During that time I gave birth to him, he was in the delivery room. … He’s passing out cigars and [saying], you know, “My wife and I and little Kev.”‘

Wendy ‘plotted to divorce’ Kevin and is happy with how things have worked out for her.

She said: ‘I sacrificed a lot of myself to come out successful on the other side, and it all worked.’

The Ask Wendy writer previously admitted Kevin’s ‘major indiscretion’ in fathering another child was the final straw for her.

A good mom: Wendy and son Kevin Hunter Jr. attend the ceremony honoring Williams with Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2019

She said: ‘Kevin had a major indiscretion that he will have to deal with for the rest of his life. An indiscretion that I will not deal with.

‘I never thought that I would be in this position. I’m a very forgiving person, but there’s one thing that I could never be a part of, and that one thing happened.’

This comes after Williams said she wants her next boyfriend to be out of the spotlight.

The host is keen that her future partner isn’t famous like herself or even in the showbiz industry but insists he must have ‘a sense of humour for the business’.

She used to hang with him: A shot of Eric Sermon, an old pal of Wendy’s

She shared: ‘I’m 56 now. I’m a mom, I’m not a single woman running around town with [rappers and DJs] like Eric B anymore. Those days are over. 

‘My next boyfriend, hopefully husband he’ll turn into, I don’t want him to be in this business. He’s got to appreciate my humour and have a sense of humour for the business that I’m in, and not try to stop me. But he’s also got to be very, very comfortable in the man that he is. And he’s got to be 45 years or older.’

And Wendy – who finalized her divorce from Kevin last year after 22 years of marriage – is excited to have more say on her career and her future goals.

And discussing her future career moves, she added to Entertainment Tonight: ‘Now that I am my own boss, as opposed to having Kevin bossing me around and telling me what to do and me playing the role, I am in on everything. Now I would like to produce more stuff. And that stuff would be for other people to star in, not me – I’m not an actress.

‘I liked being part of the process of writing, and also I would like to sit in that director’s chair one day. Just to be an associate director or something.’

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Borderlands movie casts Kevin Hart as Roland

Eli Roth’s adaptation of Gearbox Software’s Borderlands has cast its Roland. Kevin Hart gets the part of the ex-Crimson Lance merc, joining Cate Blanchett (Lilith) as one of the sci-fi shooter’s four original heroes.

Lionsgate announced the casting on Tuesday, noting that Hart has starred in 10 films that have opened as box office No. 1s. His most recent role was in 2019’s Jumanji: The Next Level, whose $59 million domestic opening was tops for its premiere week.

“I’m thrilled to be working with Kevin,” Roth (director, Hostel, and also a star in Inglourious Basterds) said in a statement. “Borderlands is a different kind of role for him, and we are excited to thrill audiences with a side of Kevin they’ve never seen before.”

A Borderlands feature film has been discussed since 2015. Roth was named director in February 2020, and Blanchett was brought aboard in May.

The first Borderlands launched in 2009; it’s since become one of Gearbox and publisher 2K Games’ most successful franchises, leading to three full sequels and an episodic spinoff from Telltale Games. Borderlands 3 launched in September 2019 for PlayStation 4, Windows PC, and Xbox One, and an updated version for PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X launched with the new consoles in November.

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Kevin Hart Closes Deal for ‘Borderlands’ Movie

Eli Roth is directing the Borderlands movie, which also has Cate Blanchett set to star as legendary thief Lilith. Emmy-winning Chernobyl creator Craig Mazin penned the script.

“I’m thrilled to be working with Kevin,” said Roth in a statement. “Borderlands is a different kind of role for him, and we are excited to thrill audiences with a side of Kevin they’ve never seen before. He’s going to be an amazing Roland.”

Added Nathan Kahane, President of the Lionsgate Motion Picture Group: “Kevin has been behind some of the world’s biggest blockbusters, and our source material is inspired by one of the world’s best-selling video games. We love the way our filmmaking team has adapted this story and we couldn’t be in better creative hands.”

The Borderlands video game launched in 2009 to acclaim, with Gearbox Software and publisher 2K debuting Borderlands 3 in September 2019. The series has sold more than 66 million units.

Avi Arad and Ari Arad are producing Borderlands via their Arad Productions banner. Erik Feig is producing through Picturstart.  The executive producers are Randy Pitchford, executive producer of the Borderlands video game franchise and founder of the Gearbox Entertainment Company, and Strauss Zelnick, chairman and CEO of Take-Two Interactive.

Hart last appeared on the big screen in 2019’s Jumanji: The Next Level, and has a number of projects in the pipeline, including the action-comedy Man from Toronto, which he has wrapped opposite Woody Harrelson and Kaley Cuoco. He has also wrapped on Fatherhood, which follows a man whose wife dies shortly after childbirth. In November, Hart and Netflix launched his latest comedy special, No F**s Given, and earlier this month, he inked a rich film and first-look deal with the streaming service.

Hart is repped by UTA.



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Kevin Costner Posts a Special 66th Birthday Photo and Message for Fans on Instagram

  • Kevin Costner, who was born on January 18, 1955, turned 66 this week.
  • The actor, famous for roles in blockbusters like Dances with Wolves and Field of Dreams, currently stars in the hit TV show Yellowstone.

    Kevin Costner turned 66 this week, and celebratory messages poured in from fans. He took to Instagram and posted a black-and-white photo to express his gratitude. The star of the hit TV show Yellowstone and the 2020 film Let Him Go seems to be kicking up his feet for some well-deserved relaxation. Costner has enjoyed a decades-long career in Hollywood, going all the way back to the 1981 movie Hot Malibu Summer. The actor, Academy Award-winning director, musician, and father of seven (!) certainly deserves it.

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    Dressed casually in boots, jeans, and sunglasses, Costner captioned the photo, “Thanks for all the birthday wishes. Incredibly grateful for another trip around the sun.” Costner, who is also the frontman for the country-rock band Kevin Costner & The Modern West, looks relaxed and happy in the photo as he strums his guitar with his feet propped up.

    Fans replied with thousands of “happy birthday” messages to the star.

    “Happy birthday! Thinking about three of my faves on your day, Robinhood, Dances with Wolves, and Field of dreams! Yellowstone is a fave too! Cheers to many more years of life, love and doing what you love!” one fan wrote on Instagram.

    “Happy Birthday to the wonderful father, great husband, excellent actor, director, and to the exceptional person,” another fan commented.

    “Happy Birthday sir! Waitin on season 4 of Yellowstone and watched The Guardian last night,” another said.

    “Happy birthday to the man who taught me to clear my mind when I’m pitching. Forever thankful for the life lessons you’ve taught me,” another fan posted.

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    The Yellowstone Instagram account also posted a birthday tribute, and celebs like costar Wendy Moniz-Grillo and sportscaster Erin Andrews offered their well wishes.

    “Happy Bday! Obsessed w your show,” Andrews wrote.

    Moniz-Grillo added, “Happy Birthday @kevincostnermodernwest”

    Here’s to another amazing year, Kevin!


    Katie Bowlby is the Deputy Managing Editor, Digital, at Country Living.

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