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  • Joel Embiid returns to Sixers’ lineup vs. Hawks after missing nine games

    Joel Embiid returns to Sixers’ lineup vs. Hawks after missing nine games

    Joel Embiid is back.

    The 76ers center will return to action Sunday night against the Atlanta Hawks at Xfinity Mobile Arena. This comes after the 7-foot-2, 280-pounder missed nine consecutive games because of knee injuries.

    He sat out the Sixers’ previous eight games because of right knee injury management or soreness. Embiid’s availability comes after initially being listed as out on Saturday’s 5:30 p.m. injury report.

    The 2023 MVP was upgraded to questionable on Sunday’s 12:30 p.m. report before being cleared to play before the game.

    Rookie guard VJ Edgecombe (left calf strain) will also return to action against the Hawks after missing the last three games. And center Andre Drummond (sprained right knee) was available after being injured in Friday’s 115-103 victory over the Brooklyn Nets at the Barclays Center.

    Kelly Oubre Jr. (sprained left knee) and Trendon Watford (left adductor strain) will remain sidelined.

    Sixers Joel Embiid hits a shot in the first half of the Boston Celtics at Philadelphia 76ers NBA game at Xfinity Mobile Arena in Philadelphia on Friday, Oct. 31, 2025.

    Before missing the last eight games due to right knee injury, he also missed the Sixers’ 111-108 home loss to the Detroit Pistons on Nov. 9 because he doesn’t play on back-to-back nights to rest his left knee.

    Embiid has already missed 12 of the Sixers’ 18 games because of his knee ailments. He is averaging 19.7 points, 5.5 rebounds, 3.3 assists, and 1.5 blocks in 23.3 minutes.

    The seven-time All-Star had his best game of the season in his last matchup, a 130-120 home victory against the Toronto Raptors on Nov. 8. Embiid finished with 29 points on 10-for-16 shooting, along with making 8 of 9 free throws. He also had six rebounds, four assists, and one block while logging a season-high 25 minutes, 57 seconds.

  • N.J. Sen. Cory Booker ties the knot with girlfriend Alexis Lewis

    N.J. Sen. Cory Booker ties the knot with girlfriend Alexis Lewis

    After a brief engagement, New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker and real estate executive Alexis Lewis celebrated their nuptials Saturday in Washington, after a courthouse wedding last Monday.

    The couple, who have been relatively low-key about their relationship, posted the news to Instagram on Sunday, along with a carousel of photos highlighting the two events.

    “Overflowing with gratitude. We said ‘I do’ in two places that shaped us — Cory’s beloved Newark and Alexis’s hometown of Washington, D.C. — first at the courthouse, then with our families,” the couple said in the post. “Hearts full and so grateful.”

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overflow:hidden; padding:8px 0 7px; text-align:center; text-overflow:ellipsis; white-space:nowrap;"><a href="https://www.instagram.com/p/DRrnZWgDuNd/?utm_source=ig_embed&utm_campaign=loading" style=" color:#c9c8cd; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:14px; font-style:normal; font-weight:normal; line-height:17px; text-decoration:none;" target="_blank">A post shared by Cory Booker (@corybooker)</a></p></div></blockquote>
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    Booker, the former mayor of Newark and a former Democratic candidate for president, announced the couple’s engagement in September. He and Lewis had been dating for about a year and a half at that point.

    “Alexis is one of the greatest unearned blessings of my life,” Booker captioned the carousel of photos from the Hawaii beach proposal. “She has transformed me, helping me to ground and center my inner life, and discover the joys of building a nurturing home with someone you love.”

    He called Lewis “my partner, best friend, and now my fiancée.”

    Lewis, an executive at Brasa Capital Management, a real estate investment firm, previously worked for former Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti. She has an undergraduate degree from New York University and a master’s degree from Cornell University.

    Booker admitted to The Shade Room’s Thembi Mawema during a June appearance that he had Googled Lewis before going on a blind date with her (although he didn’t name her at the time). The pair was “fixed up by a friend,” he told Mawema.

    The only bachelor to run for president in 2020, Booker said on The Shade Room, “I want to be married, I still want to have kids,” adding that “dating [Lewis] has made me so much of a better senator.”

    Booker made history in March for giving the longest individual Senate speech delivered in the chamber.

    During the Saturday ceremony, which was attended by family only, the New York Times reported, a rabbi and a pastor blessed the couple under a huppah, in a ceremony marking the couple’s faiths — Booker is Christian and Lewis is Jewish.

    The couple married on Nov. 24, at the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey in Newark, the Times reported. Their parents witnessed the nuptials and U.S. District Judge Julien Xavier Neals officiated.

  • The season’s first bout of winter weather is possible in Philly early this week

    The season’s first bout of winter weather is possible in Philly early this week

    Philadelphia could experience the season’s first significant blast of winter weather early this week.

    A brewing winter storm may bring a mix of rain and snow to Philly, Trenton, and Wilmington early Tuesday, impacting the morning rush hour, forecasters at the National Weather Service in Mount Holly said. Up to an inch of snowfall is possible.

    Meanwhile, the southern Poconos and northwest New Jersey could see anywhere from 4 to 8 inches of snow. The weather service has issued a winter storm watch for Carbon and Monroe Counties in Pennsylvania and Sussex County in New Jersey.

    Any snow in Philly could quickly change to rain by mid-morning Tuesday, with high temperatures in the low 40s. More than an inch of rain is possible but flooding is not expected, according to Sunday evening’s forecast. Along the coast, 5- to 8-foot seas and gusty winds are possible Tuesday night.

    Sunny conditions are expected Wednesday.

    Over the last five winters, an average of only 11.3 inches of snow per season has been measured in Philadelphia, which is half the long-term yearly average.

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    In more than a century of recordkeeping, half of the top 10 snow years have occurred in the last three decades. And periods of snow lulls are not uncommon, either: In the five winters ending 1931-32, the average was 10.1 inches, and in the five seasons that ended with the winter of 1952-53, the average was 11.8 inches.

  • An early-morning shooting temporarily shut down part of I-95 in Philadelphia

    An early-morning shooting temporarily shut down part of I-95 in Philadelphia

    State police are investigating an early-morning shooting on I-95 that left one person wounded and partially shut down traffic for several hours.

    The shooting occurred around 7 a.m. Sunday, in the northbound lanes of the highway approaching the Cottman Avenue exit, a Pennsylvania State Police spokesperson said.

    The victim sustained a non-life-threatening injury to the shoulder. The suspected shooter was taken into custody, police said.

    Portions of I-95 northbound remained closed until just before noon Sunday, the spokesperson said, while investigators gathered evidence from the crime scene.

    Police have yet to release a motive or any charges in the incident. The identities of the victim and alleged shooter were not immediately available.

  • Flyers place Adam Ginning on waivers, signaling Emil Andrae is sticking around

    Flyers place Adam Ginning on waivers, signaling Emil Andrae is sticking around

    Returning from a productive four-game road trip and with a six-game homestand beginning on Monday, the Flyers placed Adam Ginning on waivers on Sunday.

    To be placed on waivers, the defenseman was first recalled from his conditioning loan to Lehigh Valley of the American Hockey League, which began on Nov. 18. Conditioning loans are for 14 days, with the player remaining on the active 23-man roster.

    By placing Ginning on waivers, it opens up a roster spot for the Flyers, and, not that he needed any more confirmation, but it’s pretty clear Emil Andrae is sticking around for the long haul.

    After some movement between Philly and Allentown, as one of three players on the roster who are waiver exempt — Nikita Grebenkin and Matvei Michkov are the other two — Andrae has been back with the Flyers since Nov. 3. He has played in every game since, and with each passing day, has garnered more responsibilities from the coaching staff.

    Originally on the third pairing, he is now alongside Jamie Drysdale on the second unit. According to Natural Stat Trick, since becoming partners during the Flyers’ 3-2 overtime win against the St. Louis Blues on Nov. 20, they have played 85:28 together and have been on the ice for five Flyers goals for and four against.

    In the past eight games, Andrae’s ice time has jumped, and he is averaging 18 minutes, 45 seconds. It is the fourth-most on the team, behind defensemen Travis Sanheim, Cam York, and Drysdale, as he has also been getting time on the power play and in overtime. Across 14 games this season, he has one goal and five assists with a plus-minus of plus-4.

    Flyers defenseman Emil Andrae is averaging 18 minutes, 45 seconds per game, the fourth-most on the team.

    Since being loaned, Ginning has played in five games with the Phantoms, registering one assist, five shots on goal, and a minus-2. The Swede, who turns 26 in January, made the Flyers out of training camp and played five games this season on the third pair. He averaged 15:20, and although he did not register a point, he did have two shots on goal. At the time of his loan to Lehigh Valley, he was one of 11 skaters with at least an even plus-minus (minimum five games played).

    There is a chance the Swede could be snagged on the waiver wire. A big blueliner at 6-foot-4 and 210 pounds, Ginning is a defensive defenseman who will be an unrestricted free agent on July 1. Drafted by the Flyers in the second round of the 2018 draft, he has 16 NHL games under his belt, with one goal scored during the 2023-24 season.

  • Reports: Eagles front office exec Dave Caldwell becoming Florida GM

    Reports: Eagles front office exec Dave Caldwell becoming Florida GM

    A member of the Eagles’ front office staff will be joining a college football program.

    Eagles senior personnel director/advisor to the general manager Dave Caldwell will become the University of Florida’s college football general manager, per multiple reports. On3.com first reported the news.

    Caldwell will join the staff of Jon Sumrall, the Tulane coach that multiple outlets reported is finalizing a deal to take over the Gators program.

    Caldwell joined the Eagles in 2021 after an eight-year stint as general manager of the Jacksonville Jaguars. He spent time with the Atlanta Falcons (2008-12), Indianapolis Colts (1998-07) and the Carolina Panthers (1996-97) prior to to his Jaguars tenure.

    With name, image and likeness realities and the transfer portal taking over college athletics, Power Four programs have increasingly sought dedicated general managers with the experience to handle the acquisition and compensation details of players.

    Florida finished the 2025 season at 4-8.

  • Flyers takeaways: Rick Tocchet’s calm approach, tight-knit locker room netting real results

    Flyers takeaways: Rick Tocchet’s calm approach, tight-knit locker room netting real results

    NEWARK, N.J. — The calendar is set to turn to December, and while some will say it is too early to look at the standings, it doesn’t hurt to peek. Right?

    Right.

    Because the Flyers are not only in a playoff spot, but third in the Metropolitan Division. Entering Sunday, they sit two points ahead of the second wild-card team, the Pittsburgh Penguins, whom they play on Monday night at Xfinity Mobile Arena (7 p.m., NBCSP).

    And in a tight division, they are just two points behind the leaders, the New Jersey Devils, a team they have beaten twice in a week. The latest was a 5-3 victory in Newark on Saturday night. It closed out a four-game road trip with a pretty solid-looking 3-1-0 record, including the first win on the second night of a back-to-back this season.

    Here are two big things we learned from the Snowbird connection trip that saw the Flyers go from sunny Florida to the New York metro area.

    I’ve been the teacher

    There are different ways of coaching. Some coaches can be fiery and use that to spark their team. Other coaches, like Rick Tocchet, appear to maintain a cool, calming presence — unless, for example, one needs to yell at the referees, which seems warranted lately for the Flyers.

    Watching the bench, Tocchet seems levelheaded. The owner now of 300 wins in the NHL after Saturday night, he knows it is just 24 games into the season, and there’s a long road ahead. And although every moment is important, he doesn’t get too wrapped up in the ups and downs and momentum shifts of every game.

    Sure, he may have been spotted by the TV cameras saying a choice word or two when an unsuspecting Emil Andrae turned the puck over to Kyle Palmieri in Friday night’s shootout win against the New York Islanders — on a goal that actually should have been overturned for too-many men on the ice — but he wasn’t being demonstrative with his body language.

    But he didn’t bench Andrae, who finished the night with the third-most minutes, with an overtime shift. It’s important for a young team to have a coach who keeps his cool and lets them learn and grow from their mistakes.

    Plus, it helps that Tocchet is a guy who loves to teach. Instead of going crazy and yelling or benching players, he either talks things over or pulls out the whiteboard to show them. As Jon Cooper, the Tampa Bay Lightning and Hockey Canada coach who worked with Tocchet at 4 Nations and will do so again at the Olympics, told The Inquirer on Monday, Tocchet is known for his in-game adjustments.

    His adjustments and demeanor are translating to the ice as the players are playing connected but loose.

    “The one thing I love with this group is they always want to learn, whether we win or lose, or it’s a bad period, it’s a good period, they’re asking questions,” Tocchet said. “They’re trying to learn. And that’s what we’re doing every day, and trying to build some blocks here.”

    Brick by brick is the motto right now. After a dismal performance against the Lightning to start the trip — they were shut out for the first time this season — Trevor Zegras said the group held a meeting “on things that we wanted to do to get better, to play tighter, to play more connected, and I think the last three we did that.”

    Coach Rick Tocchet speaks to Travis Sanheim after Dallas Stars forward Jason Robertson scored a power-play goal on Nov. 15.

    Learning is critical for a team that boasts one of the youngest rosters in the NHL at an average age of 27. Although they’ve scored the first goal now for two straight games, they’ve won nine of 16 games where they’ve trailed early. They lead the league with 10 comeback wins, including a 4-2 win against the two-time defending champion Florida Panthers on Thanksgiving Eve, and they are 7-3-3 in one-goal games.

    Tocchet sees positives and steps forward in his group. They are much better at executing under pressure. Do they need to clean up some things? All teams do, but “whether we’re battling back, or we’re giving up leads, there’s not a lot of panic on the bench. There’s a lot of resolve,” he said.

    And that starts from the top.

    I’ll Be There For You

    The last two seasons, there’s been talk about how tight the Flyers locker room is. It’s still tight, but now the words family and love are being used more and more often.

    And it’s showing on the ice with how they are playing. Alternate captain Travis Konecny has spoken often about the little details in the game that players are doing that are actually critical to success.

    Before the goal that was eventually credited to Matvei Michkov to make it 3-1 — Konecny took the shot, and it went in off the Russian winger in front — captain Sean Couturier threw a hit on Devils forward Paul Cotter in the defensive zone. It allowed the Flyers to get possession and skate out of their end. Just 27 seconds later, after some sustained pressure, the puck was behind Jacob Markstrom.

    “That’s the stuff I’m talking about. When it’s your turn, it’s your turn,” Konecny said. “And I think that’s something that Tocc’s been preaching a lot. [Tyson Foerster is tied for] the most goals on our team right now, and this guy blocks a shot every other game, and he’s a competitor.

    “Like those are the examples right there of guys that, you just show up for your teammates and whatever your job is, in that moment, that play, that game, you execute it to the best of your abilities. And if everyone does that over the course of 82 games, you would think it’d put us in a pretty good spot.”

    The Flyers are getting some pretty balanced scoring right now. Across the four-game road trip, 11 players recorded at least a point, and while Noah Cates did not, he still boasted an impressive plus-minus of plus-3.

    Michkov led the way with three goals and tied Owen Tippett — who notched the 100th goal, 100th assist, and, therefore, 200th point, of his NHL career — atop the leaderboard with four points. The pairing of Andrae and Jamie Drysdale may have had a few hiccups, but they are rounding into form. Couturier snapped a long goal drought with a pair of goals, Foerster continues to impress with his 200-foot game that more often than not sees the puck find the back of the net, and Nikita Grebenkin played in three games.

    “We’re all contributing in different ways. And if it’s your turn to be on the score sheet, that’s what you do. If it’s your turn to have a big block or big save from the goalies, like everyone’s just stepping up,” added Konecny, who noted the leadership in the room, too, like when veteran defenseman Nick Seeler spoke up during intermission on Saturday about the importance of points now for down the road.

    “We love this group. It’s a lot of guys that just want to play for each other and do the right things.”

    Flyers goaltender Dan Vladar has been one of the best players on the roster.

    And what else can one say about the play of Dan Vladař, except that we told you so.

    Among NHL goalies with a minimum of 12 games, he ranks tied for sixth in wins (10) with guys like former Flyers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky, who he just bested on Wednesday, sixth in goals-against average (2.43), and tied for seventh in save percentage (. 912). And according to Money Puck, his goals saved above expected ranks seventh in the NHL at 11.3.

    But, of course, while he said he worked on his lateral plays — like when he robbed Nico Hischier with 16 seconds left in the first period backdoor off a cross-crease pass during a penalty assessed to Michkov — the netminder will give credit to his team.

    “I feel comfortable overall, but it’s also the biggest thing is those … 18 to 20 guys that are playing in front of me every single night,” the Czech goalie said. “You see [that] guys are willing to block shots, making not comfortable plays but those plays that really matter for our team to come [away] with those two points.

    “So very proud of the group, but we know that we got a lot of hockey left, so got to keep going for sure.”

  • During Patti Smith’s celebration of ‘Horses,’ the night belonged to Philadelphia

    During Patti Smith’s celebration of ‘Horses,’ the night belonged to Philadelphia

    Patti Smith stood onstage at the Met Philadelphia on Saturday during her 50th anniversary tour for her 1975 album Horses. She recalled her elementary school report cards when she was growing up in Germantown in the 1950s.

    “They would always say, ‘Patti Lee shows a lot of potential, but she daydreams too much,’” she said. “‘Will she amount to anything?’”

    The revered punk poet and undiminished life force, who will turn 79 on Dec. 30, smiled and looked out at the cheering sold-out crowd, mirroring their affection.

    “You are my answer,” she said.

    Philadelphia was the final stop on the Horses tour, commemorating the majestic John Cale-produced album with an iconic cover photo by Robert Mapplethorpe that lit the fuse for a punk rock conflagration to come.

    Smith came onstage dressed in black jeans and a suit jacket, accompanied by her band, with original 1970s members Lenny Kaye and Jay Dee Daugherty on guitar and drums, joined by her son, Jackson Smith, on guitar, and Tony Shanahan on bass and keyboard.

    They started with “Gloria,” Smith’s reworked version of the 1964 Van Morrison-penned Them hit that began, as always, with the still startling declaration, “Jesus died for somebody’s sins, but not mine.” She then went on to take responsibility for her own actions, seeking rock and roll salvation on her own terms.

    “My sins, my own,” she sang in a voice that has lowered in register in the last half century but lost none of its power. She often sounded as if she were channeling otherworldly spirits.

    “They belong to me,” she sang.

    Patti Smith and her band perform “Horses” on its 50th anniversary at the Met Philadelphia on Saturday, Nov. 29, 2025.

    The band steadily built to a roar, with Kaye and Shanahan chiming in along with the crowd on chanted vocals.

    Track one, side one. “G-L-O-R-I-A!” — catharsis was already achieved.

    The eight-song Horses was performed in its entirety, essentially straight through but with a few songs flip-flopped in order. “Free Money,” about dreaming of hitting the lottery and lifting her family up financially, preceded the epic improvised-in-the-studio “Birdland.” For that song, Smith put on glasses to read out the rapid-fire incantatory lyrics from one of her own books, as the song built to a crescendo.

    There was little chitchat during Horses itself, save for a dedication of “Elegie” to Jimi Hendrix and a story about hanging out in the 1970s with the late Television guitarist Tom Verlaine at a Manhattan magazine shop called Flying Saucer News. The duo teamed to write “Break It Up,” a song inspired by Smith’s dream of coming upon a marble statue of Jim Morrison, “like Prometheus in chains, with long flowing hair,” lying in a clearing in the woods.

    Horses built to a climax with “Land,” complete with its ecstatic “Do the Watusi” romp through Chris Kenner’s “Land of 1000 Dances” and a reprise of “Gloria.” Then, Smith took a break.

    While offstage, the band served up a treat: a three-song tribute to Television, the Smith group’s “sister band” with whom it shared a four-nights-a-week residency at CBGB in New York in 1975. Kaye and Shanahan took turns on vocals on “See No Evil,” “Friction,” and “Marquee Moon,” and Kaye and Jackson Smith (who shone throughout the evening) paid aural homage to Verlaine and Richard Lloyd’s guitar interplay.

    Patti Smith and her band perform “Horses” on its 50th anniversary at the Met Philadelphia on Saturday, Nov. 29, 2025.

    The second half of the two-hour-plus show surveyed Smith’s five-decade post-Horses career, with ‘70s rock radio hits like “Dancing Barefoot” and her Bruce Springsteen co-write “Because the Night.” That was dedicated to her late husband, Fred “Sonic” Smith, and included an exultant, crowd-pleasing declaration that she was back onstage in the city that shaped her “because the night belongs to Philadelphia.”

    “Ain’t It Strange” and “Pissing in the River,” two songs from 1976’s Horses follow-up Radio Ethiopia were included, both holding up well in stately versions. The latter included an origin story about Smith walking to school with her sisters and being afraid of high winds blowing them into Wissahickon Creek.

    Smith explained that “Peaceable Kingdom” — a song that shares a title with a painting by Quaker artist Edward Hicks at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts — was written “for the Palestinian people” with Shanahan “with great hope” in 2003.

    “Now,” she said, “we sing it with great sorrow.”

    A slowed, and somber, segment of “People Have the Power,” her populist anthem penned with her late husband, was added onto the end of the prayerlike song.

    For an encore, Smith brought out her daughter, Jesse Paris Smith — who will join the singer and author, Jackson Smith, and Shanahan at Marian Anderson Hall on Monday for a “Songs & Stories” performance that kicks off a book tour for her new memoir, Bread of Angels.

    Together with Kaye, Smith sang “Ghost Dance,” a song from 1978’s Easter that she said the two wrote “with great respect and love for the Hopi tribe.” She urged that “we need to be diligent” in resisting “our present administration who show no empathy, respect, or love for our Native Americans.”

    That was followed by the full-on, rocked-out “People Have the Power,” for which the band was joined by New Jersey guitarist and longtime Smith associate James Mastro.

    But before leaping into her testament of faith in democratic ideals that name-checked the Declaration of Independence and Independence Hall, Smith had a few more words for the city where “I discovered art, and battled bullies.”

    “I’m just so happy to be in Philadelphia,” she said. “In 1967, I had to leave Philadelphia to look for a job. I got on the Greyhound bus and went to New York City. I was 20 years old and I built a new life, … but it all began with that decision to get on that bus. And I might have left Philadelphia physically, but it’s always been in my heart.”

    “People Have the Power” was reliably inspiring, stirring the heart with marching music fit for taking to the streets. But Smith took the extra step of adding a closer that she often covered in her mid-1970s Horses era: the Who’s “My Generation.”

    “Hope I die before I get old,” she sang, gleefully echoing Pete Townshend’s 1960s youth culture mantra. But then, she added her own in-song commentary that playfully raised the possibility of future Horses anniversary tours just as thrilling as this one.

    “And I am old!” Smith shouted. “And I’m going to get older! I’m going to live to a hundred and two!”

    Songs & Stories with Patti Smith: Bread of Angels Book Tour at Marian Anderson Hall, 300 S. Broad St. at 7 p.m. Monday. ensembleartsphilly.org.

  • Penn State is bowl eligible. But the Nittany Lions’ future beyond that remains uncertain.

    Penn State is bowl eligible. But the Nittany Lions’ future beyond that remains uncertain.

    PISCATAWAY, N.J. — Penn State fans flocked into SHI Stadium on Saturday for their team’s season finale, many repping the school’s blue and white colors as they led “We Are” chants through the stadium’s concourse.

    But several of their sweatshirts and signs did not contain the iconic Nittany Lions logo or traditional “We Are” motto. Many were instead etched with “Hire Terry Smith” as Penn State (6-6, 3-6 Big Ten) earned a 40-36 win over Rutgers (5-7, 2-7) to finish the season on a three-game winning streak.

    It was a small peek into a game with bowl eligibility on the line where the aftermath seemed bigger than the final score, at least for one side. It showcased the uncertainty surrounding the Nittany Lions’ program — one in search of a new head coach for the first time since 2014.

    This season Penn State fired its long-time head coach, lost its star quarterback to a season-ending injury and endured a six-game losing streak, but still managed to extend its bowl streak to five seasons. At the forefront of that turnaround was interim head coach Terry Smith, whose passion and honesty galvanized a reeling program.

    “Terry’s swag, the way he approaches things, brought the fun back to [the game],” said Kaytron Allen, who rushed for 226 yards and a touchdown against the Scarlet Knights. “I appreciate Coach Terry. I hope he is the next head coach [at Penn State].”

    As Allen exited the field, he found athletic director Patrick Kraft, showed him a “Hire Terry Smith” sign and said, “You see this?” Kraft nodded his head, acknowledging not only Allen’s message but also the tough decision that lay ahead of him.

    Smith believes the respect he has throughout the program, his ownership of the locker room and his pedigree on the recruiting trail make him the best candidate for the job — a desire he made known in recent weeks. His players agree, specifically Allen and the entire starting offensive line, who again lobbied for Smith to become the program’s next coach following Saturday’s win.

    Penn State Nittany Lions interim coach Terry Smith has expressed interest in becoming head coach.

    With Early National Signing Day scheduled for Wednesday and a looming transfer portal window, Kraft has to make a decision soon. Who he names 17th head coach in Penn State history holds major implications inside the Lasch Building.

    But not for Smith, who remained grounded Saturday. The 56-year-old expressed gratitude for the opportunity to serve as head coach at his alma mater, the university he spent four seasons at as a player and 12 more as a coach.

    “I’m just thankful we won the game, thankful for these guys that played their hearts out,” Smith said. “We are bowl eligible. The guys really wanted that. I’m looking forward to playing in a bowl game.”

    An uncertain future

    It is not unusual for college football players to opt out of bowl games. And it is especially not atypical for players to do so after a program fires the head coach who recruited them.

    That means, despite Penn State securing bowl eligibility Saturday with its sixth victory of the season, it is not a given that the team will participate. And judging by the mixed reaction from its players, they also do not know what the future holds.

    “We’re not sure yet. We’ll see what happens,” left guard Olaivavega Ioane said when asked about his desire to play in a bowl game.

    “We literally just finished a game. I’m seeing [the media] before I see my Mom, so we’re not sure yet,” center Nick Dawkins said.

    Andrew Rappleyea, Penn State’s tight end who caught a 53-yard touchdown pass to tie the contest in the opening quarter, said he had no idea what the following days or weeks would hold. He wanted to live in the moment and enjoy the victory.

    Allen, who Saturday became the first Penn State player to eclipse 4,000 career rushing yards, shared that approach.

    “I’m just trying to take this game in, one game at a time,” Allen said. “We just got out of the game, so I’m not thinking about that. We got a win, [and] that’s all that matters.”

    Penn State Nittany Lions running back Kaytron Allen ran for 226 yards and a touchdown.

    Not every Penn State player was indecisive about their bowl game intentions.

    Dominic DeLuca, Penn State’s redshirt senior linebacker, fought through tears following the Nittany Lions’ 37-10 victory over Nebraska last weekend as he shared what the program meant to him. He thanked Smith for “putting the pieces back together” and bringing Penn State football back to life.

    And on Saturday, his passion for Penn State again showed as he took a different approach than his teammates. Bottom line: If there is a bowl game, DeLuca will be ready to play.

    “I would do anything to play one more game with these guys,” DeLuca said. “It’s no question for me. I’ll be playing with [my teammates] no matter what.”

  • Inmate dies at Fort Dix prison

    Inmate dies at Fort Dix prison

    A 25-year-old man died on Saturday at the federal prison at Fort Dix in New Jersey, prompting prison officials to notify the FBI, officials said in a statement.

    Jarrette Morales was found unresponsive at 2:15 a.m. at the Federal Correctional Institution Fort Dix at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst in Burlington County, according to the statement. He was pronounced dead by EMS officials.

    The statement did not indicate where in the prison Morales was found, who found him, or what the cause of death was. No one else at the prison was injured, the statement said, and there was no danger to the public.

    Morales was serving a 76-month sentence in Puerto Rico for convictions on conspiracy to distribute cocaine, and possession of a firearm in a drug trafficking crime, according to prison officials. He had been in custody at FCI Fort Dix since July 2, 2024.

    Morales is the third inmate to die at Fort Dix this year, NJ.com reported; Javier Francisco Villalba-Reyes of Mexico died in March and Marcos Sanchez-Santana of Puerto Rico died in April. No cause of death has been released for either man.