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  • Jalen Hurts has never been better in saving the Eagles against the Vikings

    Jalen Hurts has never been better in saving the Eagles against the Vikings

    MINNEAPOLIS — Jalen Hurts was rolling to his right, and he continued that way until the slice of available space for him to keep rolling got precariously thin. It was third-and-13 midway through the fourth quarter Sunday, the Eagles leading by two and one failed play away from handing the ball — and maybe the game — back to the Vikings. Two Minnesota defenders, tackle Javon Hargrave and linebacker Dallas Turner, were chasing Hurts, right at his heels, when he zipped a pass to A.J. Brown right at the marker. Thirteen yards. A first down. Just what the Eagles needed, just when they needed it.

    That was Hurts all day, all throughout the Eagles’ 28-22 victory. Whatever they needed, he gave them. And they needed a lot.

    They had lost their previous two games. One team leader, Lane Johnson, had called the offense predictable. Another, Brown, was pleading publicly for change, for improvement. Their offensive line is as leaky and damaged as the Titanic post-iceberg. Center Cam Jurgens, who already was playing through pain while still recovering from offseason back surgery, left Sunday’s game with a knee injury. Brett Toth replaced him, and the line, which was rarely opening holes for Saquon Barkley as it was, pretty much stopped generating push on any run plays. Those struggles have done more than just render Barkley mortal. They have made him practically a nonfactor. That ought to be impossible, and it certainly ought to be impossible for the Eagles to win when it happens.

    But it did, and they won anyway. They won because Vic Fangio’s defense kept holding the Vikings to field goals in the red zone, and because Carson Wentz — as anyone who remembers his Eagles career knows — remains a maddeningly inconsistent quarterback: glorious individual plays one moment, inexplicable mistakes the next. He threw two interceptions, one of which edge rusher Jalyx Hunt (who played safety in college) returned for a touchdown.

    Mostly, though, the Eagles won because their quarterback was as good as he’s ever been for them. Hurts was 19-of-23 for 326 yards, three touchdowns, and a perfect passer rating of 158.3. When has he been better? Perhaps in Super Bowl LIX. This one was a close second, though, at least. A championship wasn’t at stake Sunday, of course, but given the current state of this team, this was as meaningful as a regular-season game gets, and Hurts met the moment.

    “Definitely, there was some fire there,” he said. “But within that fire, you have to be the calm.”

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    He did it by feeding his two playmakers on the outside often. Brown and DeVonta Smith combined for 304 receiving yards and all three of those scores, the first of which came when Hurts and Brown improvised on a fourth-and-4 play on the Eagles’ first possession. Brown was supposed to go short. But when Hurts pointed downfield for Brown to go long, their old teammate Isaiah Rodgers, charged with covering Brown, never had a chance.

    “He’s got so much swag, a swagginess to him,” tackle Jordan Mailata said. “When he’s in control, you can see the look in his eye … that sharpness to his eye.”

    Offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo even broke from what had been par for his play-calling course over the season’s first six weeks by putting Hurts under center and having him throw, and throw deep, from that formation, including on Smith’s 79-yard TD catch in the third quarter. The play marked, according to the research firm Tru Media, the first passing yards that the Eagles had gained all season on a play-action pass in which Hurts had been under center.

    “It frees up the passing game a lot more,” Mailata said. “You don’t know if it’s going to be a run. You don’t know if it’s going to be play-action. And you don’t know if it’s going to be a shot play. It gives us versatility.”

    Hurts’ final completion again was to Brown — and just as vital as his previous one. Third-and-9 with 1 minute, 45 seconds to go, the sound rising inside U.S. Bank Stadium, the Eagles needing a first down to force the Vikings to burn their timeouts, and Hurts lofted a rainbow to Brown for 45 yards, for that all-important first down, for a chance to finish the Vikings off, finally.

    “He’s always clutch in those moments,” coach Nick Sirianni said. “It’s why I have the confidence to go for it on the first drive, on a fourth-and-4, because you know the guys will make plays. Sometimes you watch a game, and it’s like, ‘Analytics say you should go for it here.’ Do you trust your players in those moments? That’s what you lean on.”

    It’s maybe the most reliable aspect of Hurts’ game and career. He can be inconsistent. His passing numbers can be sickly. Yet he seems to save his best games for the biggest games. Stability restored, back-to-back losses now buried, he sauntered through the stadium back to the visiting locker room and said, loud enough to be heard but to no one in particular, “We ain’t [obscenity] losers no more.” The Eagles can thank him for that.

  • Jalen Hurts outduels predecessor Carson Wentz as Eagles hold off Vikings, 28-22

    Jalen Hurts outduels predecessor Carson Wentz as Eagles hold off Vikings, 28-22

    MINNEAPOLIS — Eagles 2, Carson Wentz 0.

    In facing their former quarterback Carson Wentz for a second time, the Eagles emerged victorious again, defeating the Minnesota Vikings, 28-22, on Sunday afternoon.

    Jalen Hurts, the player who replaced him permanently in Philadelphia in 2021, was the better quarterback in the duel. He went 19 for 23 for 326 yards and three touchdowns, earning a perfect quarterback rating of 158.3.

    Wentz went 26 for 42 for 313 yards and two interceptions. He did not have a passing touchdown. His QB rating was 64.9.

    Here’s our instant analysis from the Eagles’ Week 7 win that snapped their two-game skid:

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    Hurts hurts the Vikings

    Hurts may not be using his legs much on designed quarterback runs — aside from the Tush Push — but he certainly had a knack for using them to extend plays on Sunday afternoon.

    His first touchdown came on a scramble drill, even though it didn’t require him to flee the pocket. The Eagles had decided to go for it on fourth-and-4 from the Vikings’ 37-yard line on their opening drive. Hurts first looked to his right for DeVonta Smith, who was covered by former Eagles cornerback Isaiah Rodgers.

    Hurts then looked to his left for A.J. Brown. Vikings safety Josh Metellus had him covered at the sticks, but Hurts pointed his way, directing him to keep running upfield. Brown breezed past Metellus and snared Hurts’ 37-yard pass for a touchdown to put the Eagles up, 7-0.

    After going three-and-out on three consecutive drives and failing to get into field goal position on the fourth just before the end of the first half, the Eagles offense woke up in the third quarter. They had been handed less-than-ideal field position when tight end Cameron Latu was called for an illegal double-team block on the kickoff.

    Eagles wide receiver DeVonta Smith had a career-high 183 yards on Sunday.

    But that didn’t matter to Hurts. On second-and-5 from his own 21, Hurts dropped back for a rare under-center play-action pass (behind a sixth offensive lineman in Fred Johnson), a formation and a play type that the Eagles utilized more frequently on Sunday. With plenty of time in the pocket, Hurts unleashed a deep ball for Smith, who had beaten Rodgers on a vertical route.

    Rodgers dived after Smith at the Vikings’ 10-yard line, but he couldn’t catch the wide receiver as he dashed into the end zone to make it 21-9, Eagles. Smith’s 79-yard touchdown reception was the longest of his career. It was the second-longest touchdown pass for Hurts.

    Smith said in the locker room afterward that they had the play in their back pocket “the whole game.” They got the right look to execute it — left tackle Jordan Mailata said left guard Landon Dickerson had noticed that the Vikings were bringing a safety down to the box when the Eagles were in their jumbo package, assuming it was going to be a run play.

    “We came back in here during halftime,” Smith said. “That’s all I was saying was, ‘Call this play,’ ‘cause they’re playing this, playing that. So when they called it, I was just happy. I was like, ‘OK, it’s here. I know it’s going to hit.’ It’s just a matter of us going out there and executing.”

    Hurts hit Smith again halfway through the fourth quarter on a scramble-drill hookup. Smith found a soft spot in the Vikings’ secondary, settling down and hauling in a 21-yard pass. The play set up a 26-yard touchdown throw to Brown, giving the Eagles a 28-19 lead.

    Smith had a career-high day, finishing the game with nine receptions for 183 yards and a touchdown. Brown was productive, too, adding four receptions for 121 yards and two touchdowns, including a third-and-9 conversion with a 45-yard reception to seal the win late in the fourth quarter.

    Wentz down the drain

    The Eagles defense saw a familiar face under center in Wentz, who made his second career appearance in a game against his former team on Sunday (in 2022, he lost, 24-8, to the Eagles while at quarterback for the Washington Commanders).

    Wentz didn’t fare well for the most part. He tossed back-to-back interceptions in the second quarter, with one returned for a touchdown. On third-and-5 from the Vikings’ 39-yard line, Vic Fangio channeled his inner Brian Flores and called a simulated pressure.

    Five Eagles defenders were at the line of scrimmage before the snap. Afterward, though, Jalyx Hunt dropped into coverage in the middle of the field to replace Zack Baun, who blitzed from the second level. Wentz never saw Hunt and lobbed a pass over the middle intended for Justin Jefferson, which the Eagles’ 2024 third-rounder out of Houston Christian easily corralled.

    Hunt turned upfield and returned the intercepted pass 42 yards for a touchdown to put the Eagles up, 14-3.

    Wentz gave the Eagles a freebie again on the ensuing drive. Back-to-back negative plays (an offensive holding on first down and a Wentz backward pass out of bounds on second down) brought the Vikings to second-and-27 from their own 9.

    Feeling the pressure from Moro Ojomo, Wentz rolled out to his right and heaved the ball downfield, this time looking for Jordan Addison. But Drew Mukuba jumped the pass from underneath for his second career interception.

    Eagles linebacker Jalyx Hunt (58) celebrates after his pick-six of Carson Wentz.

    The blunders continued in the second half. As Wentz attempted to avoid a sack on second down in the red zone, he tossed the ball on the turf with no intended receiver in the area and was flagged for intentional grounding. The play proved costly, as the following third-and-18 pass to tight end T.J. Hockenson was short of the sticks, forcing the Vikings to settle for a third field goal and bringing the score to 14-9, Eagles.

    The Vikings’ lone touchdown came from the Wildcat formation, with running back Jordan Mason taking the direct snap at the Philadelphia 1-yard line for the touchdown. The play cut the Eagles’ lead to 21-16 late in the third quarter.

    Wentz took his first sack of the game at the worst possible time. In the fourth quarter, Ojomo brought down the Vikings quarterback on third down in the red zone, forcing them to settle for another field goal.

    After a Hockenson touchdown was waved off in the fourth quarter as the Vikings were driving in the red zone, Joshua Uche added a sack, marking the first of his Eagles career.

    Run game still shaky

    Mailata remarked on Wednesday that establishing the run game would “take care of everything” for an Eagles offense still in search of its identity.

    The Eagles failed to do so. Barkley finished the game with 18 carries for 44 yards, averaging just 2.4 yards per carry.

    The run game’s woes were highlighted late in the third quarter and early in the fourth when the Eagles were just outside of the red zone. With 5 yards to the sticks, Barkley failed to pick up yardage on back-to-back carries on second and third down. Elliott missed the 42-yard field goal attempt.

    It was another frustrating day for Eagles running back Saquon Barkley.

    Barkley was injured on a carry halfway through the fourth quarter. However, he returned after just one play on the sideline. The Eagles announced that he was evaluated for a concussion and he was cleared to return.

    “Saquon is the best,” Hurts said. “I don’t want him to feel like he’s carrying that by himself. It is a group effort. Everyone is involved in that. Everyone has to look inward and say, ‘Well, how can we help get something going the way it needs to go?’

    “Offensively as a unit, as a team, it doesn’t matter how it looks. In hindsight, it’s about finding ways to win games. But we want to make sure all areas of our yard are green and in a good place.”

    Injury report

    Three Eagles players exited the game due to injury in the first quarter — center Cam Jurgens (knee), edge rusher Azeez Ojulari (hamstring), and linebacker Jeremiah Trotter Jr. (ankle).

    Jurgens played just two drives in the first quarter, then Brett Toth took over at center for the rest of the game. All three players were ruled out in the third quarter.

    Adoree’ Jackson went down in the third quarter after he appeared to hit his head while colliding with Hockenson. He was quickly ruled out with a concussion.

    Ojomo was also evaluated for a concussion in the fourth quarter when he collided head-first with Kelee Ringo, who had entered the game in relief of Jackson.

  • Paul George is a full participant at Sixers practice

    Paul George is a full participant at Sixers practice

    Paul George’s return to the court remains a work in progress.

    The 76ers forward missed the final 21 games of last season and all four of the team’s exhibition games this fall. But his full participation Sunday in practice indicate that he could be returning to game action soon.

    “He looked good,” coach Nick Nurse said. “He’s moving good. He needs to have some more conditioning and things. But he looked good. He’s really pushing himself to get in shape.

    “Defensively, he looked really good. He was really moving.”

    The 6-foot-8, 220-pounder did a solid job of reading what was about to happen. Then George used his length to get back on defense and close out on shooters.

    “He really knows what he is doing on that end,” Nurse said. “But yeah, he’s making progress.”

    The 35-year-old played in only 41 games last season, hampered by various injuries. George was ruled out for the remainder of the season on March 17, the day he received injections in the left adductor muscle in his groin and his left knee.

    He was expected to return in time for training camp. However, the nine-time All-Star had arthroscopic surgery in his left knee on July 11, causing him to miss attentional time.

    Sunday’s practice came after George participated in five-on-five scrimmaging on Thursday, following three-on-three drills on Wednesday.

    Sixers forward Paul George played in only 41 games last season.

    Joel Embiid (left knee management) was also a full participant Sunday. Trendon Watford (right hamstring) was a partial participant. Watford took part in the drills at the start of practice and in the five-on-zero work.

    The Sixers would not provide injury status reports for Wednesday’s season opener against the Boston Celtics at TD Garden. There were reports last week that George was unlikely to face the Celtics.

    Nurse was asked if the nine-time All-Star was ahead of schedule.

    “I don’t know about that,” he said. “… But he’s out there. I think he made progress in each of the last three sessions. Again, it’s been the first practice that he’s been all the way through. And the last practice was the first time he’d ever played five-on-five.

    “We’re happy to see him out there. We’ll just keep making progressions.”

    After Wednesday, the Sixers will play the Charlotte Hornets on Saturday in the home opener at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Then they’ll entertain the Orlando Magic on Oct. 27 before facing the Washington Wizards the next night at Capital One Arena. The Sixers will close out the month at home against the Celtics on Oct. 31.

    Embiid made his debut Friday in a 126-110 victory over the Minnesota Timberwolves. He finished with 14 points, seven rebounds, eight assists, and three steals in his first contest since Feb. 22 against the Brooklyn Nets.

  • The Union’s first-round match is set as MLS releases playoff schedule

    The Union’s first-round match is set as MLS releases playoff schedule

    Major League Soccer announced the leaguewide first-round playoff schedule on Sunday afternoon, kicking off what the Union hope is a long playoff run beginning next Sunday at Subaru Park.

    The Union will face the winner of Wednesday’s Eastern Conference wild-card game, the No. 8 seed Chicago Fire or No. 9 Orlando City, in a 5:55 p.m. kickoff.

    That will give the Union plenty of time to avoid a clash with the Eagles’ 1 p.m. kickoff against the New York Giants at Lincoln Financial Field.

    There also will be the bonus of a traditional TV broadcast on FS1, the Union’s first game on traditional TV since March 16 and just their second of the year. All of the playoffs are on Apple TV’s streaming platform as usual.

    Game 2 of the series, which would be the Union’s only road game of the playoffs, is set for 5:40 p.m. on Nov. 1.

    If you’re planning to travel, know that if it’s in Chicago, the game won’t be at Soldier Field. The Fire’s usual home is booked by a major international rugby game between powerhouses New Zealand and Ireland, an event that has been on the calendar since February.

    Instead, the Fire would host the game at their old home, SeatGeek Stadium in the southern suburb of Bridgeview, Ill.

    If the series goes to a decisive third game, it would be played at Subaru Park on Nov. 8, at a time to be determined.

    Former U.S. men’s national team manager Gregg Berhalter revitalized the Chicago Fire this year, helping the team earn its first playoff berth since 2017.

    After the first round, MLS will pause for the November FIFA window, including the U.S. men’s national team’s much-anticipated game at Subaru Park against Paraguay on Nov. 15.

    The playoffs will resume the weekend of Nov. 22-23 with the conference semifinals. The conference finals are Nov. 29-30, and the MLS Cup final is Dec. 6. All rounds after the first round are one game, hosted by the highest seed involved.

    2025 MLS playoffs first round schedule

    Note that all of Apple’s broadcasts will be available on Apple TV+, the tech company’s main subscription streaming platform. (It’s the same one that has had baseball for the last few years and will have Formula 1 auto racing starting next year.) If you don’t have the separate MLS Season Pass package, an Apple TV+ subscription will be enough.

    Wednesday, Oct. 22

    8:30 p.m.: E8. Chicago Fire vs. E9. Orlando City (Apple TV)

    10:30 p.m.: W8. Portland Timbers vs. W9. Real Salt Lake (Apple TV)

    Friday, Oct. 24

    8:25 p.m.: E3 Inter Miami vs. E6. Nashville SC (FS1 starting at 8:00, Fox Deportes, Apple TV)

    Sunday, Oct. 26

    5:55 p.m.: E1. Union vs. E8. Chicago Fire or E9. Orlando City (FS1 starting at 5:30, Fox Deportes, Apple TV)

    7:30 p.m.: W2. Vancouver Whitecaps FC vs W7. FC Dallas (Apple TV)

    9:30 p.m.: W1. San Diego FC vs. W8. Portland Timbers or W9. Real Salt Lake (Apple TV)

    Monday, Oct. 27

    6:55 p.m.: E2. FC Cincinnati vs. E7. Columbus Crew (FS1 starting at 6:45, Fox Deportes, Apple TV)

    9 p.m.: W4. Minnesota United FC vs. W5.Seattle Sounders (FS1, Fox Deportes, Apple TV)

    Tuesday, Oct. 28

    6:55 p.m.: E4. Charlotte FC vs. E5. New York City (FS1 starting at 6:45, Fox Deportes, Apple TV)

    Wednesday, Oct. 29

    10:30 p.m.: W3. Los Angeles FC vs. No. 6 Austin FC (Apple TV)

    Saturday, Nov. 1

    3:30 p.m.: E5. New York City FC vs. E4. Charlotte FC (Apple TV)

    5:30 p.m.: E8. Chicago Fire or E9. Orlando City vs. E1. Union (Apple TV)

    7:30 p.m.: E6. Nashville SC vs. E3. Inter Miami (Apple TV)

    9:30 p.m.: W7. FC Dallas vs. W2. Vancouver Whitecaps FC (Apple TV)

    9:30 p.m.: W8. Portland Timbers or W9. Real Salt Lake vs W1. San Diego FC (Apple TV)

    Sunday, Nov. 2

    6:30 p.m.: E7. Columbus Crew vs. E2. FC Cincinnati (Apple TV)

    8:55 p.m.: W6. Austin FC vs. W3. Los Angeles FC (FS1 starting at 8:30, Fox Deportes, Apple TV)

    Monday, Nov. 3

    10:55 p.m.: W5 Seattle Sounders FC vs. No. 4 Minnesota United (FS1 starting at 10:30, Fox Deportes, Apple TV)

    Friday, Nov. 7

    Time TBD: E4. Charlotte FC vs. No. 5 New York City FC if necessary (Apple TV)

    Time TBD: W2. Vancouver Whitecaps vs. W7. FC Dallas if necessary (Apple TV)

    Saturday, Nov. 8

    Time TBD: E1. Union vs. E8. Chicago Fire or E9. Orlando City if necessary (Apple TV)

    Time TBD: E2. FC Cincinnati vs. E7. Columbus Crew if necessary (Apple TV)

    Time TBD: E3. Inter Miami vs. E6. Nashville SC if necessary (Apple TV)

    Time TBD: W3. Los Angeles FC vs. W6. Austin FC if necessary (Apple TV)

    Time TBD: W4. Minnesota United FC vs. W5. Seattle Sounders if necessary (Apple TV)

    Sunday, Nov. 9

    Time TBD: W1. San Diego FC vs. W8. Portland Timbers or W9. Real Salt Lake if necessary (Apple TV)

  • There were no kings, but there was music royalty at the Philly protest this weekend

    There were no kings, but there was music royalty at the Philly protest this weekend

    Former Talking Heads front man David Byrne, in Philadelphia for a three-night stop on his latest tour, joined the “No Kings” protest in Philadelphia on Saturday to show support for the anti-Trump movement and snap a few photos with fans along the way.

    Several marchers posted photos of themselves on social media with Byrne, who rode a bike during the march, which went from City Hall to Independence Mall.

    Ryan Godfrey, a 54-year-old software solutions engineer, was among those who chatted with Byrne, shortly after surreptitiously taking a photo of Byrne behind him.

    Godfrey attended one of Byrne’s concerts on Thursday and recognized the singer when he saw him on his bicycle alongside marchers on Market Street.

    “I knew he was a big bike guy — and we had just seen him on Thursday,” Godfrey said. He decided to introduce himself.

    “I said, ‘Hi, I really appreciated your concert the other night. It was amazing; thank you so much for that.’ He said, ‘Of course, thanks for enjoying it,’ and then I said, ‘And also thank you very much for being here today — this is very important, that you’re doing this,’” Godfrey recalled.

    “And he said, ‘Of course. I wanted to be here for this.’”

    West Philadelphia residents Ryan Godfrey and Jessica Lowenthal pose for a selfie, surreptitiously photographing singer David Byrne in the background on the left, during the “No Kings” march on Oct. 18, 2025, on Market Street in Philadelphia.

    Godfrey regretted not asking Byrne one question: How were the videos at his concert projected around the stage and on the floor without the performers casting shadows on them?

    “It was a kind of magic trick that I don’t really understand,” Godfrey said. Godfrey has been a fan of Byrne’s since the ‘80s, but his interest was renewed when he saw the 1984 Talking Heads concert film Stop Making Sense in a theater last year.

    “I was sorry that I had waited that long because it was almost certainly the greatest concert film I’ve ever seen,” he said.

    He said Byrne was anything but aloof with marchers.

    “He was very genial, very kind and very friendly and open to interactions from everyone around him,” he said

    Another fan quoted Byrne in the sign they carried in the march, then got to hold the sign next to a laughing Byrne. The message? “Love & acceptance are now ‘punk ideologies.’”

    Byrne has been critical of Trump both in his music and in interviews and writings. During Saturday’s show, he mentioned the “No Kings” rally, drawing applause from the crowd, according to social media posts.

    One Bluesky poster said Byrne — who can be seen carrying a camera during the protest — showed photos of himself and his band at the march on the stage backdrop during Saturday night’s concert.

  • Despite a surprising slide, Penn State doesn’t intend to play scared under interim coach Terry Smith

    Despite a surprising slide, Penn State doesn’t intend to play scared under interim coach Terry Smith

    STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — Penn State didn’t play scared in its 25-24 loss to Iowa on Saturday.

    Interim head coach Terry Smith, who took over after James Franklin’s dismissal last Sunday, trusted his first-time starting quarterback in a hostile environment. He allowed Kaytron Allen to be a workhorse running back. He went for it on several fourth downs, including one at his team’s 40-yard line.

    Most importantly, he showed belief in a group searching for some confidence amid an emotional coaching change and a three-game slide.

    His team repaid that trust against the Hawkeyes (5-2, 3-1 Big Ten), enough to earn a chance to win late. But Ethan Grunkemeyer’s fourth-down heave fell incomplete, and so did the Nittany Lions’ comeback bid.

    Penn State quarterback Ethan Grunkemeyer performed well in his first start in place of the injured Drew Allar.

    Smith asked his players to leave it all on the field. His message was well received.

    “I think our guys played hard. I think our guys left it out there,” Smith said. “They gave everything they had. There was no one who didn’t give great effort. We just have to execute.”

    Penn State (3-4, 0-4) fell under .500 for the first time since 2021, the same year it last lost four straight games.

    Emptying the clip

    Under Franklin, Penn State stuck to a script. It played the same players, no matter their production, and rarely gambled on fourth down or in end-of-half situations.

    Saturday showcased Smith’s differing approach, one that asked his team to “empty the clip.”

    Penn State converted two fourth downs on its first scoring drive and later attempted two more. Its offense aggressively pushed to score at the end of the first half rather than worrying about handing its opponent an extra possession, which Franklin did against UCLA earlier this season.

    “We knew coming into the game we wanted to be aggressive,” Smith said. “You’re on the road at night in a place like this. You have to come to win. You can’t try to just lose your way into victory.”

    Smith played several players who rarely, if ever, saw action through the first six games. Notably, Koby Howard and Jaxon Smolik, who both had not played since Sept. 13.

    Howard, a freshman wide receiver, caught a 14-yard pass in the opening quarter for his first collegiate reception. Smolik, Penn State’s speedy backup quarterback, ran several option plays, an added element to Andy Kotelnicki’s offense. He finished with four carries before exiting with an injury and returning with an air cast on his left arm.

    Smith also relied heavily on Allen, who entered Saturday tied in total carries with Nick Singleton despite averaging nearly 3 more yards per carry. Against Iowa, Allen rushed a career-high 28 times for 145 yards and two touchdowns. Singleton rushed six times for 15 yards, both season lows.

    When Smith assumed the interim title, he said no one would question his team’s effort. That included Allen, who refused to quit amid Penn State’s four-game slide.

    “I’m all about playing football for my team,” Allen said. “I would never quit on my team, never quit on anybody. That’s just who I am. Whatever I start, I’ve got to finish.”

    Getting used to QB1

    Grunkemeyer’s inexperience showed in his first collegiate start.

    In a hostile environment, he seemed to rush his decisions. And against the nation’s No. 8 scoring defense, his two interceptions proved costly.

    The redshirt sophomore completed 15 of his 28 pass attempts for 93 yards. He pushed Penn State to midfield on its final drive but couldn’t march farther.

    “Not good enough,” Grunkemeyer said. “We lost the game, so [we’ve] got to get better and learn from it.”

    His biggest blunder came late in the first half when he tossed a third-down pass off Luke Reynolds’ face mask and into an awaiting Iowa defender’s grasp. The Hawkeyes followed with a touchdown to take the lead. Smith said Grunkemeyer forced his throw to Reynolds but praised his overall performance.

    “I thought [Grunkemeyer’s] game was solid,” Smith said. “I thought he managed the line of scrimmage, the calls at the line of scrimmage, and handled the crowd.”

    It wasn’t all bad for Grunkemeyer, who led two 10-play scoring drives and completed five straight passes in the second quarter.

    Up next

    Penn State gets to regroup on a bye week before its road clash with No. 1 Ohio State (7-0, 4-0) on Nov. 1.

  • Then they fight you: How the ‘No Kings’ protests are winning America

    Then they fight you: How the ‘No Kings’ protests are winning America

    Outlined against a blue, gray October sky on a perfect fall morning, Carol Otis, in her Obama-Biden T-shirt, joined more than 1,000 people Saturday who lined both sides of the busy Eagle Road thoroughfare in Havertown to yell, wave signs, and provoke an endless cacophony of car horns against an authoritarian Donald Trump regime.

    “I could probably name 7,000 reasons why,” the 77-year-old recent retiree from Drexel Hill told me, “because every day there are 18 things that happen that are just what Trump says — and then there’s the GOP talking about this ‘hate rally.’

    So Otis didn’t make a sign and chose instead — like many in this protest in the heart of suburban Delaware County — to wave an American flag, “because people who carry the flag do not hate America, and as you can see, there are a lot of flags.”

    She laughed, then added sarcastically, parrying one of the more absurd GOP talking points: “We’re all paid protesters! George” — Soros, the liberal billionaire — “where are you? I don’t see you. I’m waiting for my handout.”

    Carol Otis, 77, a retiree from Drexel Hill, at the “No Kings” protest Saturday in Havertown.

    There is a famous quote about mass protest movements — with murky origins (misattributed frequently to Gandhi) — that says, “First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.” Saturday’s massive “No Kings” protest that filled Main Streets and public squares from New York and Washington, D.C., to smaller burgs like Havertown showed that the effort to halt and reverse dictatorship in mid-2020s America has already prompted a half-laughing, half-fighting response from an increasingly unpopular White House and its allies.

    Ignored at first, the “No Kings” protest movement is rapidly accelerating toward the then-you-win phase. Indeed, the over-the-top alarmism from Republicans like House Speaker Mike Johnson, who called it a “hate America rally,” or Texas Gov. Greg Abbott — who called up his state’s National Guard in Austin to pump up a ridiculous narrative about rock-throwing radicals instead of the peaceful, joyous events in 2,700 different locales — proved that “No Kings” struck a raw nerve.

    The day was not only nonviolent but also historic. The estimated nearly seven million who showed up across America marked the second-largest one-day protest in U.S. history, surpassed only by a very different type of event: the first Earth Day in 1970. That was roughly 40% larger than the first “No Kings” event in June, and in talking to protesters Saturday, it seemed the turnout was only boosted by the right-wing rhetoric that anti-Trump protesters must be some kind of domestic terrorists.

    “Knowing that they’re feeling threatened makes me know this is what needs to happen,” Gary Fishbein — 65, from Bala Cynwyd, with his American flag T-shirt and Eagles cap — told me. His words were nearly drowned out by the steady honking of supportive cars passing the undulating sea of signs that were as funny as “Does This Ass Make My Country Look Small” or as simple as “Dogs Against Fascism” (held by the canine’s companion) or just “Freedom to Speak.”

    The official White House reaction, as related to one reporter, was “Who cares?” But guess what? They clearly cared — a lot. You could see that in the week leading up to the demonstration, with the increasingly insane rhetoric and warnings about “antifa” — a tiny, unorganized sliver of young rock-throwing radicals who were nowhere in sight Saturday — that aimed to neutralize the reality that millions of everyday Americans are sick of seeing a masked secret police snatch people off the streets.

    In a maneuver North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un must have surely applauded, Trump’s Pentagon fired some artillery shells over a closed I-5 in the heart of Southern California’s anti-Trump rally as the protests were taking place — ostensibly to mark the 250th anniversary of the armed forces, but also as a reminder of the regime’s military might as Trump weighs invoking the Insurrection Act.

    Ben Liptock, a 38-year-old Philadelphia public school teacher who lives in Havertown, attended the “No Kings” protest there Saturday with his 9-year-old son, Bobby.

    Just a short time after the “Who cares?” comment, Trump himself posted a shocking — to the extent that anything can be truly shocking anymore — AI-created video to Truth Social that showed him piloting a jet fighter wearing a king’s crown (!!) and “bombing” a large U.S. urban protest march with brown, liquid, um, excrement.

    I guess that was supposed to be the fascist version of four-dimensional chess, that our 47th and possibly last president could mock, ridicule, and dismiss “No Kings” by confirming everything the largest protest in 56 years was all about: that our government is hijacked by a monarch who defecates on his own subjects. The reality is that Trump’s late-night video reeked more of panic and fear than its crude subject matter.

    The biggest American protest doesn’t happen in a vacuum. The reason seven million people are in the streets is that Trump long ago squandered any chance for a honeymoon after his narrow reelection in 2024. His approval rating is just 40% in the latest Gallup poll (even lower in some other surveys). And like the protester Otis said, there are about 7,000 reasons — including higher prices in the supermarket, a looming doubling of health insurance premiums for millions of Americans, and a 20-day-and-counting shutdown of the federal government with no end in sight.

    But it was Trump’s mass deportation crusade, and the brutal tactics by those masked and unbadged goons for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and other federal agencies — grabbing migrants (and, in at least 170 documented cases, U.S. citizens) off the street and lobbing tear gas at anyone who protests — that was cited again and again by the marchers when I asked them why they are in the streets.

    Ben Liptock — 38, who lives in Havertown and teaches in a North Philadelphia public school, and came with his 9-year-old son, Bobby — explained that we need to “continue to show people that you’re not alone in today’s America — it’s scary to protest.” But he said he felt they had to be there for his many immigrant students — some who’ve gone home to find their dads deported — who can’t safely demonstrate themselves.

    Emilio Ovalle, a 19-year-old West Chester University student, attended the “No Kings” protest Saturday in Havertown.

    “If I looked a little different, I wouldn’t be able to show my face and protest power,” Liptock said. “There are people in the shadows right now, and they’re terrified.”

    It arguably cut both ways that the suburban crowd in Havertown was overwhelmingly white, with most older than the median U.S. age of 38. Others echoed Liptock that this breed of protester can use its privilege to speak for those who can’t, and any true mass movement needs the white metro middle class to succeed. But the lack of Black and brown faces, or members of Gen Z (who’ve powered uprisings in parts of Asia and Africa), remains a significant problem for “No Kings.”

    Someone like Emilio Ovalle ― a lanky 19-year-old student from West Chester University waving a sign with a Mark Twain quotation — stood out in the crowd on Saturday. The son of an immigrant from Guatemala, Ovalle also cited the deportations as his No. 1 issue, and while he said many of his friends oppose Trump, he also understands their reluctance to protest.

    “Part of it has to be the Democrats — they’re not good at getting the young vote,” he said. “The right is very good at appealing to a lot of the insecurities, especially in younger men.”

    This would seem to be the next mission for “No Kings” going forward: to build a bigger network with groups such as Gen Z teens and 20-somethings or African Americans. Those groups also have major issues with the Trump presidency, but feel them in different ways and express them in different venues than the ones like Facebook or MSNBC that are popular with the first wave of protesters.

    That said, it’s impossible to ignore what the “No Kings” movement has accomplished in a matter of months. By raising their voices, protesters have encouraged Democrats in Washington to at least slightly stiffen their backbones, as shown by the current budget battle. They are winning new converts from the disaffected middle by exposing the depths of Trump’s unpopularity.

    And they are reassuring their friends and neighbors to keep the faith in a dark moment — that there are far more Americans who want democracy than dictatorship. “It makes you feel good that you are not alone, that a lot of people feel the same way,” Michael Tempone, a 73-year-old from Upper Darby, waving American flags with his wife, Stephanie, told me.

    There were thousands of American flags across the nation Saturday, and no reported violence, and close to no arrests — zero in New York City (where the New York Police Department is not known for its restraint) or San Diego or fearmongered Austin. That is driving the Trump regime bat-guano crazy, because it has not crushed the resistance, and it knows its days are numbered. As I walked back to my car, I heard one protester chuckle to his partner, “This is the best ‘hate America’ rally that I’ve ever been to.”

  • Brandon Graham ‘strongly considering’ coming out of retirement to rejoin Eagles

    Brandon Graham ‘strongly considering’ coming out of retirement to rejoin Eagles

    Brandon Graham is considering ending his retirement and rejoining the Eagles, league sources told The Inquirer, and the wheels are in motion for the defensive end to possibly return to playing football seven months after he left the sport.

    The Eagles were already down multiple edge rushers before Za’Darius Smith’s surprising retirement on Monday, and Graham, 37, would provide some needed depth with Nolan Smith (triceps) still on injured reserve.

    PHLY Sports, which produces Brandon Graham Unblocked, Graham’s weekly podcast, was first to report the news Sunday morning. ESPN also said Graham was “strongly considering” ending his retirement.

    Graham, who played all 15 of his seasons with the Eagles, addressed the topic at the beginning of his podcast on Wednesday, although he did his best to not reveal much about where his mind was. He didn’t rule out a return. He said he was “flattered” that his name was being mentioned.

    “You’re always going to feel like you can do something,” he said. “You want people to grow, too, and right now it’s hard for some people. It’s hard, especially for the young guys.

    “They got some battles that they got to fight, but if they do it together, they’ll be in a good spot.”

    Perhaps they’ll have Graham back in the building to help them along.

    Eagles defensive end Brandon Graham celebrates on the Art Museum steps during the Super Bowl LIX victory parade.

    Graham announced his retirement in March after making a surprising return from a triceps injury to play in the Super Bowl. He is third all-time in Eagles franchise history in sacks (76½) and first in games played (206).

    It’s unclear how quickly Graham could ramp up if he is to rejoin the Eagles. He suffered a second torn triceps during that victory and has probably not been working out like a professional football player in the seven months since he announced his retirement.

    Graham would be a low-cost addition to the edge rushing corps, one that, when Nolan Smith returns, includes Smith, Jalyx Hunt, Joshua Uche, Azeez Ojulari, and Patrick Johnson. Of that group, only Johnson had a sack this season entering Sunday as the pass rush struggled to get home. Smith is likely to return after the Week 9 bye. But the Eagles took another hit Sunday when Ojulari went down with a hamstring injury and did not return.

    The Eagles wouldn’t need Graham to come in and replace Za’Darius Smith’s 26-plus snaps per game workload. Graham played about 28 snaps per game last season before suffering what was thought to be a season-ending injury in Week 12. But the Eagles could certainly use some help in the rotation and Graham would help set the edge against the run.

    More than what he brings to the field, the Eagles could also use Graham’s leadership on defense. They brought in Za’Darius Smith after Week 1 because they needed more talent, but also because of his veteran status. He even assumed Graham’s former locker and vowed to be a mentor. He had assumed the locker stall vacated by Graham, one that remains open as of this week.

    “BG is BG, man. He’s just an amazing guy,” defensive tackle Moro Ojomo said. “I love to be around that guy.

    “Jeffrey Lurie said it last year, said it perfectly, that there are people that are energy takers and energy givers and BG is an energy giver and I think we all feel that.”

    Eagles linebacker Zack Baun said Graham would bring “the juice, the energy, the vibe. He just lives his life with so much to give. Obviously his play as well. I thought last year, him retiring, he was at the point where he could still do a lot and still go out there and play and play well. But I think we miss his vibe in the locker room.”

    Graham was pretty effective during his farewell tour last year. He factored in on his fourth sack of the season before he got hurt against the Rams in November.

    He returned for the Super Bowl ahead of schedule and logged 13 snaps. Graham retired a few weeks later and was flanked by two Lombardi trophies on the stage inside the auditorium at the NovaCare Complex. He cried before finishing the first sentence of the speech he prepared.

    He closed his speech with this: “E-A-G-L-E-S, Eagles. Fly, Eagles fly. My last one. BG out, baby.”

    Perhaps it wasn’t his last one, after all.

    Staff writer Jeff McLane contributed to this article.

  • Eagles will have Jalen Carter, Landon Dickerson back from injury Sunday vs. Vikings

    Eagles will have Jalen Carter, Landon Dickerson back from injury Sunday vs. Vikings

    MINNEAPOLIS — The Eagles are getting two key players back after each missed the team’s Week 6 loss vs. the New York Giants.

    Jalen Carter and Landon Dickerson are both active for Sunday’s game at U.S. Bank Stadium vs. the Minnesota Vikings. They were listed as questionable on the final injury report after practice on Friday.

    Carter, who has been managing a shoulder injury, missed the game last week with a heel injury. That same injury had him as a limited participant in practice twice this week. Dickerson, meanwhile, has been dealing with an ankle injury that knocked him from the Eagles’ Week 5 loss vs. Denver. Dickerson was limited on Wednesday and Thursday but was upgraded to a full participant on Friday.

    Carter, Dickerson, and Grant Calcaterra, who is out with an oblique injury, were the only three Eagles carrying an injury designation into Sunday.

    Here are the inactive Eagles for Sunday’s game:

    Running back AJ Dillon is a healthy scratch for the first time this season. That means Tank Bigsby could see his first action with the offense. He has struggled in his role as a kick returner, and the Eagles have another option to return kicks now with wide receiver Xavier Gipson active for the first time.

    The Eagles also elevated tight end EJ Jenkins from the practice squad for Sunday’s game. He is dressing for the first time this season.

    The Eagles will face off against former quarterback Carson Wentz Sunday as J.J. McCarthy is officially inactive with an ankle injury for Minnesota.

  • Flyers-Wild takeaways: Already up to three goals, Owen Tippett flashes his size and speed

    Flyers-Wild takeaways: Already up to three goals, Owen Tippett flashes his size and speed

    For the second straight game, the Flyers faced a road team fine playing the long game in a low-event contest.

    Saturday night’s game saw a combined 106 shot attempts, with just 37 shots needing to be stopped by the netminders. But unlike Thursday’s loss to the Winnipeg Jets, the Flyers beat the Minnesota Wild, 2-1, in overtime on a goal by Noah Cates.

    The Flyers are now 2-2-1, and here are two key contributors who helped them get to .500.

    Tippett scores again

    The season is only five games old, but Owen Tippett has been flying around the ice in midseason form. On Saturday night, he notched his third goal; the last two seasons, it took him 14 games to reach that mark, with his first goal coming both years in Game 7.

    “I said it since the start of camp, coming in with a clear mind after maybe not the start I wanted last year,” he said. “And, you know, a clean slate and just going game by game.”

    Once again, Tippett was clearly one of the Flyers’ best players as he used his legs and big body to create opportunities. On Thursday, the speedy winger scored with a burst through the neutral zone before firing off a shot from the right faceoff circle.

    On Saturday, he tried a similar move in the second period, this time using his legs and cutting to the middle before sending a backhand wide. He had four missed shots and another one blocked, but didn’t let that deter him as he scored on his fourth of five shots, staying with the play — after his initial shot couldn’t be handled cleanly by goalie Jesper Wallstedt — before banking it in.

    There wasn’t much speed on the goal, and while Minnesota defenseman Brock Faber had to transition to defense quickly after Trevor Zegras and Christian Dvorak created a neutral zone turnover, you had to wonder whether the knowledge that Tippett can turn it on was on the blueliner’s mind.

    “You just saw his speed and his confidence going,” Cates said. “He scored two nights ago. He scored tonight. So when he gets into the game, you can see, he turns the tide. He can be a one-man show with his speed. So obviously, we need him to keep going.”

    Added Zegras, who got the primary assist: “He’s the fastest skater I’ve ever seen. It’s awesome. “I’ve never played with a guy that has that much speed. And he does some wild stuff. I think he did like a spin-o-rama in the third period. I’m just like, oh my God. Somebody so big that skates that fast, it’s fun to watch.”

    Although NHL Edge had Bobby Brink as the Flyers’ fastest skater with a max burst of 23.30 mph, that was his only one. Tippett’s max right now is 22.89, but he’s had six bursts at 22-plus, 18 at 20-22 mph, and 40 at 18-20 mph.

    “I think that’s one of the things I’ve kind of focused on is if my legs are there, the rest will kind of follow,” Tippett said. “I think there’s times when I don’t need to be going 100 miles an hour all the time, but I think if I can get in the first shift or two, if I can kind of feel my legs a little bit, it usually sets me up pretty well.”

    Flyers forward Owen Tippett was quite busy against Minnesota, collecting a game-high five shots on goal and 10 shot attempts. He also threw three hits.

    Vladař making his case

    Several eyebrows were raised externally when the Flyers signed Dan Vladař on July 1. It’s early, and he’s only made three starts, but those naysayers are certainly being proved wrong right now.

    Vladař has stepped up and become not just a reliable goalie partner for Sam Ersson — something that was desperately needed after the 25-year-old Swede carried the workload the last two seasons — but has maybe even supplanted him.

    After an impressive 32-save performance against the two-time defending champion Florida Panthers in a loss on opening night, he stopped 24 of 26 in a win against the same team in the home opener. Vladař earned his second win of the season, stopping 15 of 16 shots against the Wild.

    “He’s a big guy who moves well,” said Cates, adding that he has a big personality to boot. “Any time you’ve got a guy with that size, you’re going to have to pick corners pretty precisely. And, he’s kept us in a lot of games.

    “Every time he’s in there, we trust him back there — both our goalies have been great so far, and we trust both of them back there. But he’s put up some big minutes for us so far, made some big saves.”

    Minnesota didn’t make it easy for Vladař. Although Natural Stat Trick had him down for just three saves on high-danger shots — the lone goal by Vladimir Tarasenko was mid-danger — the stat is a little misleading. Several of the nine low-danger saves he was credited with came despite screens set or players skating through the slot as the shot was being taken.

    “You know that’s their strength,” said Vladař, who entered the night with a 3-1-1 record and .896 save percentage against the Wild across five games. “They really get in front of the goalies, and really good at tipping the pucks and stuff. They’ve got a big, heavy team. So, you know, good for them, but I thought we had our legs tonight and we played a really good hockey [game].”

    Flyers goalie Dan Vladar keeps the puck and the Wild’s Marco Rossi out of the net in the overtime period Saturday.

    The idea behind coach Rick Tocchet’s box-and-one defense is to keep shots to the outside and allow the goaltender to see it. The Wild, a team Tocchet has seen quite a bit in his last few years with the Vancouver Canucks, have several big guys who try to take away the goalie’s eyes — like Joel Eriksson Ek, who tipped a shot as he was backing in for the screen on a power-play in the second period. But part of the coach’s system is to avoid double deflections. The Flyers blocked 16 shots, but it looked like they avoided those double deflections that can trick goalies.

    But while he was great at dealing with the traffic, Vladař also moves and reads plays exceptionally well. He didn’t get an assist on the game-winner, but after making a glove save on Matt Boldy, he opted to play the puck despite Marco Rossi being there and all over Jamie Drysdale. Luckily, the fleet-footed skater got away, and 15 seconds later, Cates scored.

    “He’s great,” Zegras said of Vladař. “I saw a ton of him over the last couple of years when he was in Calgary, and he was always unbelievable. He’s just so big and great at keeping pucks into the corner and plays it really well, too. So he was awesome tonight.”