A search for Lani Pallister on CODE Sports does not turn up a fresh update, interview or result. It lands on a cookie-access notice, with instructions for turning cookies on in older versions of Internet Explorer, Firefox, Google Chrome and Mobile Safari.
That is why the name is being searched now: the page gives readers browser steps for Internet Explorer 7, 8 and 9, plus guidance for iPhone and iPad, but no reporting on Pallister herself. The gap is plain. A headline promise has become a utility page, and the expected story is nowhere in the text.
For readers, that matters because it blocks the path to the article they were trying to reach. Instead of news, they are handed a how-to note about browser settings, the kind of interruption that usually appears when site access depends on cookies being enabled. The notice points to a technical fix, not a sporting development.
The friction is that Pallister’s name is part of the search, but it does not appear in the material that follows. There is no race result, no quote, no match report and no update to anchor the name to a new event. What exists is a cookie instruction page from CODE Sports, and that leaves the central question unanswered: where is the Pallister story the reader came for?
The most likely answer is that it is not available in this source at all. If readers want news about Lani Pallister, they will need a different page or a corrected link; this one only explains how to enable cookies in several browsers and on mobile devices.

