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You can say that again… Don’t see this often: Libertarian nominee for AG, Mark Ash, endorses Democratic opponent @RochelleMGarza. Ash has run statewide before, getting 2.5% in a 2020 SCOTX race. — Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) 1:50 PM – 27 October 2022 Here’s his opinion piece, which I hope gets picked up by some larger papers. My parents came to America from ex-Yugoslavia with no property or money. They had to learn American English and America’s customs. Like so many immigrants, they built a life in America for my brother and me. And they both became proud U.S. citizens. Our family’s story of authoritarianism has informed nearly every aspect of my life. It propelled me into the profession of law, to safeguard the freedoms guaranteed by our Constitution. It compels me to represent people accused of violating those laws and who can’t afford an attorney. And it is why I am a Libertarian. I fight every day to ensure that the State does not overstep its authority, and to protect our freedoms. That’s also why I decided to run for Attorney General of Texas. A democracy should offer choices. With only two major political parties on the ballot in an extremely important race, I entered this race to give Texans a third choice. But on the eve of the election, giving Texans a third choice feels inadequate. The stakes are now simply too high for me to settle merely to be another option for Texans who, like me, love our state, love our country and value our freedoms. I have thought long and hard how to say this, and I don’t say this lightly. Ken Paxton is the poster child for corruption and authoritarianism. And if he is allowed to continue, we might have to be the ones to flee. The office of the Attorney General is incredibly powerful and not very well understood. Basically, it acts as the police officer for the state, enforcing our laws. At least, that’s what it’s meant to do. Under Ken Paxton, it is a weapon that is used against innocent Texans. It is also a tool for him to avoid obeying the law himself. Like a bad cop on steroids, he is using his insider knowledge to get away with crimes, and his very great power to take away our freedoms, from intimidating people from voting to stealing property owners’ land. I know that many voters are reluctant to throw away their votes on a third-party candidate. So if you feel that your vote may not count, then voting for Rochelle Garza is the better choice. Therefore, I am taking the extraordinary of recommending Rochelle Garza for Attorney General over Ken Paxton. Not voting or voting for me may not be enough. This is a pivotal moment in American history that we are facing. Our way of life hangs in the balance. Ken Paxton isn’t playing politics-as-usual. He is taking pages from the authoritarian playbook. And we cannot afford to play politics-as-usual. That is why I am taking this unheard-of step. We must kick Ken Paxton out of office in order to save our liberties. While Rochelle is the Democratic candidate, there is a lot of overlap with our Libertarian values. She believes in legalizing marijuana and is against using public domain to steal our land for an ineffective border wall. I believe not only that she will respect the rule of law but that she will fight for our freedoms. While we have seen some prominent Republicans endorsing Democratic candidates this cycle, I can’t recall a situation like this before, in which a candidate running in a partisan race endorsed one of their opponents. I’d have to search to find the examples, but it’s happened in primaries and special elections and non-partisan races, usually when one candidate for whatever the reason suspends their campaign. If you can think of a recent on-point example to accompany this, please leave a comment. Does this make much of a difference in the race? Probably not much. It will be interesting to see if Ash score less than his Libertarian peers, as that will at least provide some kind of metric. And it only really matters if Paxton fails to get at least fifty percent of the vote. Whatever happens, I thank Mark Ash for recognizing the stakes of this race, and doing his part to make a difference.
http://www.offthekuff.com/wp/?p=107568
2022-10-31T00:13:58
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0.962337
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/jacksonville-jaguars/articles/41318028
2022-10-31T00:14:05
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0.738227
And by “we”, I mean DPS head Steve McCraw and everybody else. Weeks after Texas Department of Public Safety Director Steve McCraw said he would resign if his troopers had “any culpability” in the botched police response to the Uvalde school shooting, he told families calling for his resignation Thursday that the agency has not failed as an institution. “If DPS as an institution — as an institution — failed the families, failed the school or failed the community of Uvalde, then absolutely I need to go,” McCraw said during a heated Public Safety Commission meeting. “But I can tell you this right now: DPS as an institution, right now, did not fail the community — plain and simple.” McCraw made the remark during a frazzled nearly 15 minutes of comments after several families of the 19 children who were killed spoke during the meeting’s public hearing portion. Two teachers were also killed during the May 24 shooting at Robb Elementary. At least three sets of relatives — as well as state Sen. Roland Gutierrez, D-San Antonio — addressed McCraw, sharing the pain they endure every day and castigating government officials who have failed to release accurate and complete information about the shooting since it occurred. “Typically when situations like this come up, you expect people to tell you the truth, to be transparent, to own up to their mistakes — nothing much to it,” said an uncle of Jackie Cazares, one of the children killed. “But every single time, it seemed like a lie after lie, misinformation, roadblock after roadblock. You can’t begin the healing process.” Last week, DPS fired the first trooper in connection to the incident, Sgt. Juan Maldonado, who was one of the first and most senior troopers to get to the school. The agency revealed in September at least five troopers were under investigation for their conduct that day. […] As he spoke, relatives of the victims who were present in the room appeared infuriated. Looking at the leader of the state’s top law enforcement agency, they broke their stare to shake their heads. Afterward, McCraw told the commission he wanted any families present to have an opportunity to respond. Brett Cross, whose 10-year-old nephew Uziyah Garcia was among the children killed, walked to a podium. “Are you a man of your word?” Cross asked. “Absolutely,” McCraw said. “Then resign,” Cross responded. Honestly, I can’t add anything to that. I approve of this message. Texas Public Radio has more.
http://www.offthekuff.com/wp/?p=107575
2022-10-31T00:14:05
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0.985608
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/jacksonville-jaguars/articles/41318134
2022-10-31T00:14:11
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0.738227
It’s something, I guess. A lawyer for nearly 100 property owners who are living with the threat of their land being seized said he will seek legal action against Texas Central, the company that for a decade has promised to build a bullet train between Dallas and Houston, if the company does not provide more details about the looming project. Landowners whose property could be in the path of the train track have petitioned the company to answer their questions. Patrick McShan, the lawyer representing property owners, said he’s prepared to ask a judge to allow him to depose the company — which has said little about the project — to get answers for his clients. […] McShan’s list of questions included inquiries about the company’s leadership and permits for the project. Robert Neblett, Texas Central’s attorney, said the company spent a “considerable sum” of money acquiring property for this project. Neblett added the company owns hundreds of tracts of land purchased for this project, but he did not confirm The Texas Tribune’s analysis of property owned by Texas Central. “Texas Central’s chief executive is Michael Bui. Texas Central is not currently looking for a CEO to replace him nor is it looking for a new Board of Directors,” Neblett said in an emailed statement to the Tribune. Neblett added that Texas Central plans to obtain any and all federal Surface Transportation Board certifications required to construct and operate the project. Bui is a senior management consultant with FTI Consulting, a business advisory that lists corporate recovery as one of his qualifications. Bui also served as an adviser to a private energy company that provided power to the Electric Reliability Council of Texas following its court-ordered restructuring after the February 2021 freeze that caused hundreds of deaths while knocking out power and heat to millions of people. Texas Central made a rare public statement Wednesday, sharing a photograph of Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner, Houston City Council members and Greater Houston Partnership President and CEO Bob Harvey during an “investment and trade mission” in Tokyo and Chiba, a sister city of Houston. According to a news release Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner’s office released Thursday, unnamed representatives of Texas Central said, “the landscape changed since March 2022, when the company underwent a restructuring effort, and the future of the high-speed train remains bright.” Houston and Dallas leaders have long championed the project that would connect the two cities. Turner said the bullet train would be an economic stimulant for the entire state. “We had some very productive and constructive discussions about the train in Japan,” Turner said. “The leadership in Houston is very supportive and wants it to happen. I look forward to working with Texas Central and our state and federal partners to advance this project. If you build it, people will take full advantage of it.” Still in contention is how much land the company has acquired in the 10 years since the project was announced, and how much land is still needed for the bullet train. See here, here, and here for the background. As noted in the story, the Texas Central Twitter page had its first new post since July, so that’s something. I’d like to see more activity than that, but at least the mirror test shows that there’s still some breath in there. For now, I’ll take it.
http://www.offthekuff.com/wp/?p=107581
2022-10-31T00:14:13
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0.972619
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/jacksonville-jaguars/articles/41318449
2022-10-31T00:14:17
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0.738227
The numbers are what they are. Nearly half as many people have so far voted by mail in Harris County as in 2018 during the same period, state data show. About 31,000 voters submitted mail-in ballots by the end of the day Thursday, compared with 56,000 at this point four years ago. A similar trend is taking shape at the statewide level, where Republican voters who previously relied on mail ballots are likely opting to vote in person early or on Election Day, political analysts say. Overall, turnout during early voting has also trailed slightly behind 2018. In the 30 counties with the most registered voters, about 11.1 percent have cast a ballot so far, though four counties had not yet submitted updated tallies as of Friday morning. About 16.1 percent had voted by this time four years ago. The 31,000 mail ballots in Harris County make up about 1.2 percent of its registered voters. But in 2018, about 2.4 percent of registered voters’ ballots had been shipped off and counted by now. Republicans in the past have had a 2-to-1 advantage in the vote-by-mail category, and the practice expanded in the 2020 election as the coronavirus spread. But as the pandemic waned, and after former President Donald Trump cast doubt on the integrity of the method, data shows Democrats now have the edge. “Prior to 2018, voting by mail was really the bread and butter for Republican candidates,” said Derek Ryan, a GOP strategist whose company produces election data analyses. “And then (Trump) started discussing how potentially unsafe voting by mail could be, and I think that message has resonated with the Republican base.” As of Wednesday in Harris County, 52 percent had previously voted in a Democratic primary, and 36 percent of mail voters had previously voted in a Republican primary, according to Ryan’s analysis. Yet, Republican voters have the upper hand in person, 41 percent to 34 percent. […] Ryan, who’s been involved in politics in Texas since 2000, said this is the first election cycle he can remember in which most Republican candidates have not sent out mail ballot applications to registered voters. Harris County elections spokeswoman Leah Shah said the county received far fewer applications that came from campaigns in this election — about 27,000 compared to 57,000 in 2018. Overall, the county received about 78,000 applications, compared with nearly 120,000 in 2018, she said. “We’ve done a significant amount of education through the summer to ensure people feel confident in voting by mail,” Shah said. “It’s still an extremely important option for people who can’t come in person. We certainly want to encourage people to do so if needed and if they’re eligible.” As noted, the in person early voting totals for Harris County right now are quite close to the 2018 numbers. The vote by mail totals are down quite a bit, and for sure that’s mostly Republican dropoff. For what it’s worth, in the 2018 general election in Harris County, Republicans had a slight lead in straight ticket votes on the mail ballots, though the Dem candidates for the most part had a modest edge overall. In 2020 Dems had a solid lead i mail votes, and I expect the same this year though with a smaller number of total mail votes cast. In the end, as I’ve said before, I would expect most of the former mail voters to turn out in person. As for the Republican voters having an edge so far with in person voters, remember three things: One, the earliest voters tend to be the most faithful ones, so they’re disproportionately the strongest partisans. Two, going back to 2012 there have generally been more votes cast in Republican primaries than in Democratic primaries. The high water total for both parties in a primary is about 329K, with Dems hitting that mark in 2020 and Republicans in 2016. Not everyone votes in a given year’s primary so you can’t just add up the votes for each year, but my point is that to a first order approximation, the total number of people with an R primary history and the people with a D voting history are roughly the same. (Yes, there were 410K Dem primary voters in 2008. That was 14 years ago. People move, people die, and we have about 700K more registered voters now in Harris County than we did then.) Finally, there are a lot of people with no primary voting history. In 2008, when Dems had 159K primary voters and Republicans had 167K, every Dem other than Lina Hidalgo got at least 606K votes in November, while Republicans of the non-Ed Emmett variety got at most 560K (Hidalgo beat Emmett 595K to 575K). In 2020, with 329K Dem primary votes and 195K Republicans, it was at least 814K votes for Dems and at most 740K for Republicans. There are a lot of votes still to be cast. Here are the totals through Friday. Final EV totals from 2018 are here and from 2014 are here. The Day Five totals for 2022 are here. Year Mail Early Total =============================== 2014 54,300 104,147 158,447 2018 65,232 315,030 380,262 2022 37,810 287,185 324,995 There were about 55K in person voters on both Thursday and Friday. Given the rains on Friday, it’s possible that total might have been higher otherwise. The 2022 in person tally continues to run at a bit more than 90% of the 2018 total (91.2%, if you want to be more precise), while the mail ballot total is about 80% of what it was in 2018. A simple and dumb extrapolation would suggest about 698K in person early voters plus 52K mail voters for a total of 750K, compared to 855K in 2018. I still think we wind up closer than that. The Trib has a nice daily tracker that as of last night was updated through Thursday, if you want to follow that along. I’ll post the next update Monday morning.
http://www.offthekuff.com/wp/?p=107583
2022-10-31T00:14:21
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0.972047
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/jacksonville-jaguars/articles/41318451
2022-10-31T00:14:23
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0.738227
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/jacksonville-jaguars/articles/41318490
2022-10-31T00:14:29
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0.738227
However long it’s been, they’re back at it. A federal appeals court on Wednesday revived a 2021 Texas law that set new residency requirements for voter registration, including one that civil rights groups alleged essentially blocked college students from signing up. The ruling by a three-judge panel of the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a lower court’s ruling that blocked most of the law for creating an unconstitutional burden on the right to vote. […] The judges found the groups, LULAC and Voto Latino, failed to prove they had endured harm as a result of the law and therefore lacked standing. “It’s unfortunate that we have such a conservative, anti-voting rights 5th Circuit,” LULAC President Domingo Garcia said. “We’ve been representing Latinos of Texas since 1929. This is the first time in recent memory a court has ruled we do not have standing. We believe we were right on the merits that this is a voter suppression bill that should be overturned.” Garcia added that the group plans to request a rehearing by the full court, which is often considered one of the most conservative courts in the country. Senate Bill 1111, which took effect Sept. 1 of last year, requires that anyone using a P.O. Box to register must also provide documentation of a physical residential address, such as a photocopy of a driver’s license. It also prohibits voters from establishing or maintaining a residence “for the purpose of influencing the outcome of a certain election.” Lastly, it bars voters from establishing a residence in a place they have not inhabited or at a previous residence, unless they live there at the time of the designation and intend to remain there. “It’s a recognition of the obvious that they really didn’t have standing and they are not harmed because all (the bill) does is simply say: Don’t register at an impossible address,” said state Sen. Paul Bettencourt, who authored the bill. LULAC and Voto Latino had argued that the law had forced them to have to divert resources toward educating the public about the changes and it chilled their speech when it came to what they could say about how to register to vote. Garcia said LULAC spent more than $1 million to counteract election laws like SB 1111, but the judges sided with Texas in finding that the group failed to show how such expenses were directly related to that law, as several election laws were passed in 2021. U.S. District Judge Lee Yeakel mostly left the P.O. Box provision in-tact, reasoning that the state has an interest in preventing voter registration fraud and the request for verification of a physical address is not a severe burden. A response to that request with a new address, Yeakel clarified, should be considered a change of address with no further action needed. Yeakel had enjoined the two other provisions. He argued that there are valid reasons for changing an address that may influence the outcome of an election but not in a malicious way, such as “voting, volunteering with a political campaign, or running for an elected office.” The final provision relating to where a person lives or intends to stay would make registration near-impossible for college students, senators or other groups of people who live in multiple locations throughout the year, Yeakel said. “The burden imposed is ‘severe,’ if not insurmountable,” Yeakel wrote. “Such an insurmountable burden is not easily overcome … And the possible repercussions are not just complete disenfranchisement, but also criminal liability.” See here for the background. You will note that I anticipated this outcome, so at least I’ve got that going for me. I would just like to know, if this law is constitutional, if we can prevent certain lowlife perennial candidates from registering at warehouses around town for the purposes of establishing “residency” to run for office. I’m sure the Fifth Circuit will be able to justify that, I would just like to see them do it.
http://www.offthekuff.com/wp/?p=107585
2022-10-31T00:14:29
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0.971684
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/toronto-raptors/articles/41317518
2022-10-31T00:14:35
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0.738227
Hoping for a blue result at the top and at least closer races below it, but we’ll see. Eight years after voting for Gov. Greg Abbott, Angela Martinez found herself waiting in line Tuesday to snap a photo with Beto O’Rourke, his challenger in this year’s nail-biting gubernatorial contest. Martinez, a 33-year-old marketer for a pediatric home health agency, has never identified as strictly liberal or conservative, she said, and sometimes feels like “a walking contradiction.” If there’s a spot for her on the traditional political spectrum, she hasn’t found it. When she voted for Abbott in 2014, Martinez identified with what she saw as the then-attorney general’s Christian family values. But since then, Martinez has soured on Abbott. She feels Abbott didn’t do enough in the wake of the deadly winter freeze in February 2021 to prevent the state’s electrical grid from collapsing should a similarly catastrophic weather event hit Texas in the future. As someone who values “the sanctity of life,” Martinez is uneasy about the state’s blanket ban on abortions that took effect after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade earlier this year. “My mother had the freedom (to seek an abortion), my aunts had the freedom,” Martinez said while waiting to meet O’Rourke at the University of North Texas Health Science Center in Fort Worth. “Why shouldn’t we?” Voters in Tarrant County, the state’s last major urban county dominated by Republicans, just barely broke for Democrats at the top of the ticket in the last two elections — O’Rourke won there during his 2018 Senate bid and so did President Joe Biden two years ago — stoking Democrats’ hopes that the path to the governor’s mansion, and the end of their decadeslong exile from statewide office, goes through Tarrant. Boosting those hopes is infighting this year among Tarrant County Republicans — who insist the party is united. The year that O’Rourke carried Tarrant during his near-miss bid to unseat U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, Abbott won the county by more than 66,000 votes and nearly 11 percentage points — outperforming every other statewide Republican on the ticket. Four years later, Abbott’s team is “confident” the governor will win Tarrant County once more, Abbott’s chief strategist Dave Carney told reporters last week while acknowledging the county is competitive. “It’s going to be a battle,” Carney said. At his campaign stop at the UNT Health Science Center, O’Rourke expressed optimism that 125,000 people who have been added to the county’s voter rolls since he ran in 2018, combined with discontent over the power grid failure during last year’s winter storm, the state’s abortion ban and Abbott’s response to school shootings would help deliver him the county. “Abbott has given us a huge, huge opening” in Tarrant County, O’Rourke said. “So many people are looking for the common ground and the common sense that’s been missing from our state government.” But as Democrats express optimism because of O’Rourke and Biden’s victories, Republicans continue to dominate down-ballot races in Tarrant County — a sign of the GOP’s enduring dominance here. “They have now a little bit of history that suggests that Democrats might be able to win in Tarrant County,” said James Riddlesperger, a political science professor at Texas Christian University. “On the other hand, there has not been a countywide Democrat elected for county office in Tarrant County in this century.” Statewide Democratic candidates in 2018 and 2020 slightly outperformed their cumulative margins in Tarrant County. In 2018, the small number of local countywide candidates did a tad better than the statewide slate as a whole, scoring in the 47-48% range. In 2020, the same slight improvement was still there among a larger collection of local countywide candidates, but they finished in the 46-47% range for the most part. Tarrant, as noted before, had been a reliable bellwether of the state as a whole through the 2016 election, but as with the other large urban counties, and several of the large suburban counties, it became more Democratic than the state. It’s just that Tarrant started in a redder place than the others, so they still lag behind by a bit. I suspect they will again be slightly bluer than the state as a whole, but if there’s a step back from 2018 or 2020, that will be reflected in Tarrant’s numbers as well. I believe the larger trends will continue, whether this year is in line with that or not. I hope that means a blue Tarrant sooner rather than later – as we know, there are a plethora of State House districts that were drawn to be modestly red, and CD24 looms as the best future pickup opportunity – but whether that’s this year or not I couldn’t say.
http://www.offthekuff.com/wp/?p=107587
2022-10-31T00:14:37
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0.965303
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/toronto-raptors/articles/41317702
2022-10-31T00:14:41
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0.738227
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/toronto-raptors/articles/41317767
2022-10-31T00:14:47
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0.738227
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/toronto-raptors/articles/41318132
2022-10-31T00:14:53
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0.738227
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/toronto-raptors/articles/41318434
2022-10-31T00:14:59
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0.738227
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/los-angeles-rams/articles/41318408
2022-10-31T00:15:05
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0.738227
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/los-angeles-rams/articles/41318436
2022-10-31T00:15:11
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/los-angeles-rams/articles/41318437
2022-10-31T00:15:18
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/los-angeles-rams/articles/41318484
2022-10-31T00:15:24
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/los-angeles-rams/articles/41318494
2022-10-31T00:15:30
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0.738227
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/los-angeles-rams/articles/41318597
2022-10-31T00:15:36
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Keeping a lid on it: Coach Mike Tomlin stressed it time and again during his postgame press conference following the Steelers 35-13 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles. The defense didn't keep a lid on it. "From my perspective it's less about what they do and about the things that we're not doing," said Tomlin. "We're not positioning ourselves to win games. We didn't today, and we got to own that. "Some fundamental things have fallen short. We got to keep a lid on it. If you don't keep a lid on it in the NFL, you don't give yourself a chance to play. "We didn't do that. And I thought it was a domino effect from there on. I thought our eyes weren't in the right place defensively and it's capable of happening when you're not keeping a lid on it. You got to keep a lid on it. I thought we were too penalized. I look at those penalties. Some of them I thought were questionable, but that's life. "I just thought the penalty component of it and our inability to keep a lid on it was Steelers vs. Steelers and when you're playing good people like this group, you're not going to put yourself in position to do the things you need to do." Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts hit A.J. Brown for three touchdowns, 39, 27 and 29 yards, and also hit Zach Pascal for a 34-yard touchdown despite coverage. "Position is just a component of playmaking," said Tomlin. "The finish is probably equally as important as the positioning and we were in position, but their guy made a play, and we didn't. We were in one-on-one circumstances on the other side of the ball, and it was a different outcome. One time we were out of bounds, one time was OPI, one time the ground dislodged the ball and that's the minutiae. That's the playmaking, that's the difference. "They were making those plays and we were not, and we got to own that. We got to see it with clear eyes and make no mistake we do. There is nothing comfortable about it, but we see it with clear eyes. "We got to make those plays. We got to break those balls up or catch them on defense. We got to finish them legally on offense in bounds or otherwise." The loss sends the Steelers into their bye week at 2-6, with time to look deep at what is happening. "Keep working," said Tomlin. "We obviously got an opportunity to assess ourselves and get rightly focused and get better and that's what we intend to do. "Words are not going to get it done, actions are. So, we're going to work hard to say very little, and roll our sleeves up and continue this process." Tomlin also referred to penalties, which included nine for 60 yards, including multiple pre-snap penalties. "Just fundamental things," said Tomlin. "We'll get officials at practice, we'll focus on the things that are problematic for us, particularly in this opportunity that's called the bye week." Knowing the playbook: Quarterback Kenny Pickett didn't pull punches in assessing what the offense must address first and foremost with the Steelers limping into their bye week at 2-6. "Playbook, we gotta know what we're doing," Pickett maintained in the immediate aftermath of Eagles 35, Steelers 13. "Not getting in the right spot, having some procedural penalties, personnel in and out of huddle, all things we can control. There's no talent issues, anyone in here can go do that as long as they know what they're doing. "We gotta get right there and it starts with me. I gotta be more on my stuff, getting these guys right. I'll take ownership of it." The mental mistakes need to be called out, Pickett emphasized, much more than plays that aren't made. "Physical stuff, you don't do that to a player," he said. "He drops a ball, you don't rip him for that. But the mental stuff needs to get addressed and that will get addressed. That has to get addressed. We can't keep doing that and hurting ourselves and not even give us a chance to be successful, so that needs to be addressed. "You feel progress and then we have a penalty or something mental that we can control, and those are the things that frustrate you more than anything. A guy dropping a ball, or missing a block, or I miss a throw, the physical things, pat each other on the back and we'll go get 'em next time. Those are things you can put up with. "But the stuff we can't put up with is the mental mistakes and that needs to get fixed. We're close, everyone's saying we're close. When we fix that stuff I think then we'll be close." The problems have persisted, Pickett insisted, and had been plaguing the Steelers well in advance of the loss at Philadelphia. It's up to the players to acknowledge them and eliminate them, in the rookie quarterback's estimation. "Something's gotta change, right?" Pickett said. "It's insane to keep doing that same thing over and over again and expect something different. We've been having these problems all year, so that has to get changed. That has to get fixed. We need to look each other in the eyes and get it turned around. "Coaches can say whatever they want. Everyone else in the media and fans can say what they want but at the end of the day it's down to us. We gotta figure it out." Being accountable: A subdued Cameron Heyward stood in the media room on Sunday after the loss to the Eagles and his frustration was palpable. Heyward knows there are problems that are leading to the Steelers 2-6 record and all he wants is to turn things around, especially with extra time as the team has their bye week. "I think on the defensive side, big plays," said Heyward. "First half you stopped the run, second half you give it up. Pressure can be inconsistent sometimes. But overall, our eye discipline on both sides of the ball is very poor. There's a multitude of things going wrong, but we've got to clean it up. We got two weeks to think about this and we got to grow." Being accountable for that growth is something that is going to have to fall on every player in the Steelers locker room. "Either you learn and are accountable or you're not going to play," said Heyward. "We've all been given chances to succeed. If you can't do it, you won't play and that goes for everybody. Not singling one guy out. We all got to be accountable, myself included, as a leader. I got to take most of the blame. It's easy to point. It's better to look yourself in the mirror and say I gotta get better. So, I'm gonna use this time to truly do that." One thing Heyward was steadfast on was that those in that locker room are good enough to get the job done, despite what they have shown so far. "When you play like that it tells on yourself," said Heyward. "There's a dysfunction in what we're putting on the field right now. "We've been going through these losses and there's an eagerness to get this bad taste out of your mouth. Got two weeks to really dive in and see what's going on. A lot of times you don't get to address all the problems you want to do, because you got to move on to the next opponent. We get to really sit back and see what the (heck) is going on. And I'm looking forward to diving into that. "We'll get back to Pittsburgh and really digest this film, but don't hide from it. Expose the wounds. That's the only way you get better. Not speaking up, not being accountable, not asking the questions. That sets us back. When guys, everybody in our group, when we're not asking the right questions, and we're not taking the accountability and we're not taking on to the practice field and then to the game, there's a dysfunction."
https://www.steelers.com/news/from-the-press-room-steelers-at-eagles
2022-10-31T00:15:37
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/los-angeles-rams/articles/41318599
2022-10-31T00:15:42
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MALIK REED Outside Linebacker The Steelers were defeated decisively on Sunday in Philadelphia and handing out individual accolades following a 35-13 outcome is difficult because statistics can be misleading in those kinds of games. The game got away from the Steelers early in the second half, which makes a lot of the statistics accumulated after that point less meaningful than the things done before that. Malik Reed had four tackles, including one for loss, plus one of the Steelers' three sacks, and a pass defensed where he broke up a potential big play by getting a hand on the ball as it was coming out of Jaylen Hurts' hand. It was Reed's best game since coming to the Steelers, and he is the Steelers Digest Player of the Week. Also considered were Chase Claypool, who threw a 1-yard touchdown pass to Derek Watt on a gadget play and had four catches for 45 yards; Cam Sutton , who had four tackles and two passes defensed; Steven Sims, who ran two jet sweeps for 21 yards, had a 10-yard punt return, and two kickoff returns for 47 yards, a total skewed by a 38-yard return that was nullified by a holding penalty on Tre Norwood; and Jaylen Warren, who rushed for 50 yards on 6 carries and caught 3 passes for 25 more.
https://www.steelers.com/news/reed-is-digest-player-of-the-week
2022-10-31T00:15:43
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/los-angeles-rams/articles/41318601
2022-10-31T00:15:48
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PHILADELPHIA -- The Steelers' woes in Philadelphia have now reached into a new decade. Having not won in Philadelphia against their cross-state rivals since 1965, the Steelers faced a daunting task coming here Sunday against the NFL's last unbeaten team. And the Eagles showed why they're the lone remaining unbeaten team, as A.J. Brown caught three long touchdown passes in the first half alone as Philadelphia defeated the Steelers, 35-13, here at Lincoln Financial Field. "We've got to keep a lid on it. If you don't keep a lid on it in the NFL, you don't give yourself a chance to play," Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin said. "We didn't do that, and I thought it was a domino effect from there on." Brown, acquired by the Eagles (7-0) in the offseason via a trade with the Titans, proved he was worth the first- and third-round draft picks Philadelphia sent to Tennessee to acquire him, catching six passes for 156 yards and the three scores in the game. And when Philadelphia quarterback Jalen Hurts wasn't throwing the ball to Brown, he was targeting tight end Dallas Goedert, who finished with six catches for 66 yards as Hurts threw for 285 yards and four scores before being replaced by backup Gardner Minshew in the fourth quarter. That proved to be too much to overcome for a Steelers offense that was busy shooting itself in the foot with penalties. The Steelers, who head into their bye week at 2-6, had nine penalties in the game, including six on offense. "We've got to stop beating ourselves before we do anything," said running back Najee Harris. "We beat ourselves up. We helped the other team by doing the stuff that we do. We have pre-snap penalties. I don't know if we lead the league in pre-snap penalties, but I think we do." Compounding issues with the penalties was rookie quarterback Kenny Pickett getting sacked six times and losing a fumble while also being intercepted once as Pittsburgh lost the turnover battle, 2-0. Philadelphia entered the game plus-12 in turnover ratio, the best in the NFL. Philadelphia scored on its first two possessions, getting a 39-yard touchdown catch by Brown to the deep middle of the field on a pass that safety Minkah Fitzpatrick had lined up for a potential interception only to have Brown leap in front of him and make the catch. The Steelers answered with a touchdown drive of their own, overcoming three penalties. The Eagles helped the drive with a pair of penalties of their own, the second of which came after Tomlin had sent his field goal team onto the field on fourth-and-goal from the 2. Philadelphia's Brandon Graham was called for delay of game for simulating a snap call, moving the ball to the 1. Game action photos from the Steelers' Week 8 game against the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field Tomlin sent his offense back onto the field and Chase Claypool took a jet sweep handoff from Pickett and tossed a 1-yard pass to fullback Derek Watt to tie the game at 7-7. The Eagles quickly marched downfield on their next possession, scoring on a 27-yard pass from Hurts to Brown, who was working against cornerback Ahkello Witherspoon, for a 14-7 lead. The two teams traded punts before Hurts and Brown struck again midway through the second quarter with a 29-yard touchdown pass that was nearly identical to his previous throw. Brown ran down the sideline with Witherspoon on his inside hip and Hurts dropped the ball in on his outside shoulder for a 21-7 Philadelphia lead. Witherspoon, who was coming back from missing the past four games with a hamstring injury, was pulled at halftime, replaced by James Pierre. Pierre later left with a foot injury. "That's on me to make the plays when I'm in that position. Coaches trust me to do my job and I didn't do that," Witherspoon said. "You've just got to try to make the play. I don't think I did a good enough job to try to make the play. It's as simple as that." The Steelers answered with a scoring drive of their own, going 45 yards on 12 plays for a 38-yard field goal from Nick Sciba, who was subbing for injured Chris Boswell, that made it 21-10 at the half. But the Eagles quickly extended that lead to 28-10 on the opening possession of the second half with Hurts throwing a 34-yard touchdown to Zach Pascal on a blown coverage that made it 28-10. The Steelers again answered, but with another field goal drive after stalling in the red zone. Sciba kicked a 29-yard field goal to finish off a 15-play, 64-yard drive that pulled the Steelers back within two scores at 28-13 with 5:55 remaining in the third quarter. Marcus Allen converted a fourth-and-2 taking a direct snap in punt formation, while Chase Claypool also had a nice catch and run of 25 yards during the drive. Sciba, however, kicked the ensuing kickoff out of bounds, giving the Eagles the ball at their own 40. But the defense held and forced a punt that was downed at the Philadelphia 1. The Steelers moved the ball all the way to the Philadelphia 36, but Pickett was sacked by former Pittsburgh defensive tackle Javon Hargrave and fumbled. The loose ball was picked up by former Pitt cornerback Avonte Maddox and returned to the Philadelphia 46 with 13:30 remaining in the game. Hargrave had two sacks against his former team. On the first play coming out of the stoppage following the turnover, Hurts connected with Brown over the middle on a catch-and-run to the Pittsburgh 11, and one play later, Miles Sanders scored on an 11-yard run to put the game away. "It sucks because we know what type of talent we have as a team," said outside linebacker Alex Highsmith. "But we're not producing right now. We've really got to reassess ourselves during the bye week. The character of our team is really going to be tested. Are we going to fold or are we going to take the next nine games and take advantage and bring our season alive? We've just really got to reassess ourselves during the bye week and get better."
https://www.steelers.com/news/steelers-fall-to-eagles-35-13
2022-10-31T00:15:49
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/los-angeles-rams/articles/41318602
2022-10-31T00:15:54
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Guys are called playmakers in the NFL because they … wait for it … make plays. Right now, however, the Steelers are lacking in that category. They've got plenty of talented guys on their roster. But their playmakers, the guys expected to make big plays, haven't been doing that often enough – certainly not to the level of some of their opponents. That was clearly obvious in Sunday's 35-13 loss by the Steelers are Philadelphia. Eagles wide receiver A.J. Brown made big plays seemingly every time he touched the ball, finishing with six receptions for 156 yards and three touchdowns. The Eagles had seven plays of 20 or more yards in this game. The Steelers? They had two. It's been a recurring theme in the first half of this season. But it wasn't like the Steelers didn't try to make those plays offensively. Rookie receiver George Pickens was targeted three times down the field. Diontae Johnson got a deep shot, as well. But the Steelers had a rough go of it down the sideline against Philadelphia's physical cornerbacks, Darius Slay and James Bradberry. Pickens landed out of bounds on one deep ball when Slay pushed him out while he was in the air. On another, Pickens made the catch, but officials ruled he had pushed off on the play. On his final chance, he caught the ball on Bradberry, only to have it jar loose when he landed on the ground. "He was out of bounds on the one, on the double move," said Steelers quarterback Kenny Pickett. "We had the (pass interference) on the one. I thought he caught the one on the sideline he didn't come down with. So it's just things like that." Johnson, meanwhile, drew a pass interference penalty on Bradberry on his deep ball attempt, which is nice, but if he can somehow run under the ball after getting behind the cornerback, he might still be running. Pickens entered this weekend leading the NFL in "go" routes. Johnson was fourth. "We're pushing it downfield," said Pickett. "We just have to do more of it. We have to get guys in space more to get some more run after (the catch), guys catching the ball on the move. That's me putting it on them and hitting them in stride." It's a recurring theme for the Steelers this season. Their skill position players continue to underwhelm. Only in this game, it wasn't just the Steelers' lack of playmaking offensively that stood out. It was painfully obvious when compared to the plays Brown and the rest of the Eagles made. "Position is just a component of playmaking. The finish is probably equally as important as the positioning," said Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin. "We were in position, but their guy made a play. And we didn't. We were in one-on-one circumstances on the other side of the ball and it was a different outcome. One time it was out of bounds. One time it was OPI. One time the ground dislodged the ball. That's the minutiae. That's the playmaking. That's the difference. They were making those plays, and we were not. We've got to own that and see it with clear eyes." • At 2-6 heading into the bye week, the Steelers get a much-needed chance to take a step back and look at what's been going on. Mostly, each player and coach needs to take a look in the mirror and assess how they've gotten themselves to this point It won't be pretty. "We've got to keep our head up. It's rough right now. It's obvious," said running back Najee Harris. "We lack a lot of stuff. We lack a lot of experience. We lack a lot of discipline, accountability. We lack a lot. We can't go forward without correcting the little things that are affecting us. That's the stuff we talk about every week. We've just got to keep our head up. I know that in time it will click. You've just got to keep grinding it out." The Steelers were penalized nine times for 60 yards in this game. Three of those were pre-snap penalties on offense. "Pre-snap penalties. You see what's happening? I said the same thing last week and the week before that," said Harris. "We can't do anything other than go to practice and put your head down and grind. We've got to stop beating ourselves before we do anything. We beat ourselves up. We helped the other team by doing the stuff that we do. We have pre-snap penalties. I don't know if we lead the league in pre-snap penalties, but I think we do." Whether they do or not is beside the point. Fact of the matter is, those are the kind of things that can't happen – at least not of you want to beat good teams. • Those things aside, this offense continues to show that it can potentially be formidable once things start clicking – whenever that might be. The Steelers had drives of 15, 13 and 12 plays Sunday. Those are tough to accomplish in the NFL. The difference in this game is that the Eagles only had one drive that went 11 plays. All of their other drives were shorter than that because they were making big plays. "When you're running 14 plays, 16 plays, something is going to happen sooner or later," said Pickett. "Guys get tired up front. It causes problems. It's a dual-edged sword. It's good to stay on the field and control the football and chew some clock up. We have to finish with points. If we're not getting points, it's really not doing any good." In this game, all 13 of the Steelers' points came on those long drives. But as it has been all season, punching the ball into the end zone from in close has been an issue. Game action photos from the Steelers' Week 8 game against the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field Pickens and Claypool have one touchdown each, as does tight end Pat Freiermuth. Johnson has yet to score despite having a team-high 43 receptions. The Steelers were 1 of 3 scoring touchdowns on red zone trips in this game. That drops them under 50 percent for the season in scoring touchdowns in the red zone. And when you also consider they're the only team in the league that doesn't have a touchdown from outside the red zone – it's making life too difficult. • It's no secret Brown is a weapon for the Eagles. In fact, he's not just a weapon, he's THE weapon for the Eagles. Brown entered this game averaging 15.2 yards per catch. It was no secret they wanted to get him the ball. And yet he had three touchdowns in this game of 39, 27 and 24 yards. The Eagles had obviously watched the Steelers defensive backs struggle with the ball in the air against the Bills a few weeks ago. And they attacked. "We talked about it during the week," nickel cornerback Arthur Maulet said. "It leaves a sour taste in your mouth from a few weeks ago when we played the Bills. It's one of those things we preached on. We've got to have better ball drills and make plays. We've got a bye this week. We're going to work on it. We'll be on it. Work hard and hopefully get better at it." Ahkello Witherspoon was beaten on the final two of those touchdown passes, while safety Minkah Fitzpatrick was in position to intercept the first, only to have Brown go up in front of him and make the play. It wound up getting Witherspoon, who was returning to play after being out for a month with a hamstring injury, benched at halftime in favor of James Pierre. "That's on me to make the plays when I'm in that position. Coaches trust me to do my job and I didn't do that," Witherspoon said. "That's the NFL. Shots and chunk plays are the easiest way to win in the NFL. We didn't win when we needed to. "You've just got to try to make the play. I don't think I did a good enough job to try to make the play. It's as simple as that." • Much was made in the offseason about the loss of leadership on this team, particularly on the offensive side of the ball, after Ben Roethlisberger's retirement. There are some young leaders being severely tested in this instance. And as the quarterback of an especially young group, Pickett is being thrust into that much earlier than Roethlisberger had to be when he broke into the lineup with a veteran group around him as a rookie. There is no Jerome Bettis, Hines Ward or Alan Faneca to handle that on the offensive side of things for this team. A lot of it is falling on Pickett's shoulders. But he does seem to be handling it – albeit in losing efforts. "Something has to change," Pickett said. "It's insane to keep doing the same thing over and over again and expect something different. We've been having these problems all year. That has to get changed. That has to get fixed. We need to look each other in the eye and get it turned around. We're only going to be able to do it. Coaches can say whatever they want. Everyone in the media and fans can say whatever they want. At the end of the day, it's down to us, so we have to figure it out." That's owning the struggles. Obviously, it's not all on Pickett. But as the leader of this young offense, he's holding himself – and those around him – responsible. • The Steelers did cobble together a rushing attack in this game, finishing with 144 yards on 24 carries. Now, some of that came later in the game when things were a little out of hand, but they were having success with some non-traditional runs. Steven Sims had 21 yards on a pair of end arounds. Pickett chipped in 37 yards on scrambles. But in terms of a traditional rushing attack? That was tough sledding early. Harris had four carries for no yards at the half, even though the Steelers had 51 yards on the ground on 12 rushing attempts. Jaylen Warren finished this game with 50 yards on six attempts. "I'm not a big east-to-west guy. I've been taught to just get downhill," Warren said. "I'm not a big dance guy. That's what I've been taught." Now, some of that is Warren running in third-down or long-yardage situations, but he certainly hits the hole and goes. Harris doesn't feel like the holes have always been there for him. "I've never had a stat line like that," Harris said of his first-half line. "I can't make. I can't do everything. I try to control what I can control. I don't know what more I can do other than vocalize it." Harris did finish with eight carries for 32 yards, so his final four rushing attempts were much more fruitful. - Dale Lolley is co-host of "SNR Drive" on Steelers Nation Radio. Subscribe to the podcast here: Apple Podcast | iHeart Podcast • So, will getting T.J. Watt back following the bye week change things? It will at least make the Steelers defense more dangerous. The deep passes the team has been susceptible to early in this season take time to develop. If Watt is playing, perhaps they don't get dialed up nearly as often. • The Eagles had the success they did in this game with five players catching passes. Five. It just goes to show that it's not necessarily how many guys are incorporated into an offense that leads to success. Find what you do well – or who gives you the best chance to win – and get those guys the ball. • Pickens, by the way, had no catches on three targets in this game. Those three targets tied him with Warren and Steven Sims for fifth-most on the team Sunday. • Tomlin has to feel a little like the little Dutch boy in the Hans Brinker story. Every time he sticks his finger in the dike to plug one hole, another opens. But he's been in this situation before. In 2013, the Steelers also started 2-6. Things looked bleak at midseason after a 55-31 throttling at the hands of the Patriots in New England. They then rattled off six wins in their final eight games to finish 8-8 and just miss the playoffs. It was nothing mystical then. It just required players to stop making the mistakes that had put them in an early hole. In that season, that meant stop turning the ball over. The Steelers had 17 turnovers in their first eight games that season. They turned it over seven times in their final eight games. Tomlin will keep coaching this team up and get them better. And this team won't quit. "We have the team, we're just not executing right now," said linebacker Alex Highsmith. "We're shooting ourselves in the foot. We've just got to play fundamental ball. We weren't good on the fundamentals today. You can't beat yourself in this league. "We know what type of team we can be. We have too much talent in here for the record to be what it is and we know that. We're going to be better. It sucks where we are right now. It sucks. But you can't fold." • Pickett took care of the football in this game – until he didn't, losing a fumble and then throwing a late interception. Those simply looking at the stats will view this as another turnover-laden game for the rookie. But that wasn't the case. Circumstances dictated Pickett take more chances late. And that's when the turnovers happened. "I thought we did a good job until we got one-dimensional," Pickett said. "When you get one-dimensional and those guys know you're passing it, the second is going to have a bead on it. The guys up front are going to pin their ears back. It just makes your life a lot harder, so we can't get in those situations."
https://www.steelers.com/news/steelers-lack-big-plays-offense-lolley-eagles
2022-10-31T00:15:55
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/los-angeles-rams/articles/41318620
2022-10-31T00:16:00
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https://sportspyder.com/nba/detroit-pistons/articles/41316966
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2022-10-31T00:21:13
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2022-10-31T00:21:19
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https://sportspyder.com/nhl/vancouver-canucks/articles/41318711
2022-10-31T00:21:23
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https://sportspyder.com/cf/syracuse-orangemen-football/articles/41318131
2022-10-31T00:21:35
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/atlanta-braves/articles/41316192
2022-10-31T00:21:43
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https://sportspyder.com/mlb/atlanta-braves/articles/41317239
2022-10-31T00:21:49
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/philadelphia-eagles/articles/41317844
2022-10-31T00:21:55
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/philadelphia-eagles/articles/41317916
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/philadelphia-eagles/articles/41317981
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/philadelphia-eagles/articles/41317986
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/philadelphia-eagles/articles/41318069
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/philadelphia-eagles/articles/41318190
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/arizona-cardinals/articles/41317497
2022-10-31T00:23:44
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Red Bull driver Max Verstappen finished in first place at the Mexican Grand Prix to claim his record-setting 14th win of the season on Sunday. The 25-year-old’s 14th victory of the season allows him to pass Michael Schumacher and Sebastian Vettel for the most in a single season in Formula 1 history. Earlier in October, Verstappen claimed his second career world championship at the Japanese Grand Prix, and last week he won the US Grand Prix in Austin, Texas, which saw him share the record for number of season race wins. Speaking after Sunday’s race at Autodromo Hermanos Rodríguez in Mexico City, Mexico, Verstappen looked forward to more successes. “An incredible result. It’s been an incredible year so far. We’re definitely enjoying it and we’ll try to go for more,” the Dutch driver said. Seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton finished in second place, and Red Bull’s Sergio Perez came in third. Two races remain on the F 1 calendar with the Brazilian Grand Prix scheduled on November 13 and the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix on November 20.
https://www.cnn.com/2022/10/30/motorsport/max-verstappen-win-record-mexico-grand-prix-spt-intl/index.html
2022-10-31T00:23:44
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/arizona-cardinals/articles/41317576
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/arizona-cardinals/articles/41317585
2022-10-31T00:23:56
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2022-10-31T00:24:02
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/arizona-cardinals/articles/41317676
2022-10-31T00:24:08
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/arizona-cardinals/articles/41317678
2022-10-31T00:24:14
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2022-10-31T00:24:26
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/arizona-cardinals/articles/41317859
2022-10-31T00:24:32
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https://sportspyder.com/nfl/arizona-cardinals/articles/41317890
2022-10-31T00:24:38
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