Tag: topic-link-auto

  • Federal shutdown may bring a halt to food assistance for half a million Philadelphians

    Federal shutdown may bring a halt to food assistance for half a million Philadelphians

    Nearly 2 million Pennsylvanians — including 500,000 Philadelphia residents — won’t receive SNAP benefits in November if the federal government shutdown continues, state officials said.

    The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program provides $366 million a month to low-income people in the state, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Health and Human Services (DHS). Most households that receive SNAP benefits consist of elderly people, children, or individuals with disabilities, according to hunger experts.

    This is the first federal shutdown in at least 20 years in which SNAP will not be made available, said George Matysik, executive director of the Share Food Program, a food bank that serves 500,000 people living in the region.

    “It’s like a horror movie where the call is coming from within the house,” Matysik said in an interview last week. “Our own federal government is making the choice to take benefits from Pennsylvanians,” who are among 42 million people nationwide who participate in the program.

    In Philadelphia, Share has seen a 120% increase in food need over the last three years, Matysik said. “And that was with SNAP,” he added, saying the city faces a greater food crisis now than it did during the pandemic.

    In an email Monday, the Pennsylvania DHS blamed Republicans “who control the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House, and the White House” for failing to pass a budget and causing the current difficulties Americans endure.

    “We urge Republicans in Congress to reopen the government and protect vulnerable Pennsylvanians at risk because of this inaction,” the email said.

    Gov. Josh Shapiro’s office could not be reached for comment. In May, Shapiro said that the commonwealth would be unable to replace lost funding for SNAP should the federal government fail to pay.

    The U.S. Department of Agriculture, which administers SNAP, did not return calls for comment. The White House issued a statement that the shutdown is affecting personnel in its press office, delaying responses. The statement blamed Democrats for the government’s closure: “Please remember this could have been avoided if the Democrats voted for the clean Continuing Resolution to keep the government open.”

    To receive SNAP benefits, individuals carry EBT (electronic benefits transfer) cards that are loaded monthly with the amounts to which they are entitled.

    The shutdown began Oct. 1 after Congress could not reach a compromise to allow funding to continue. The region’s 46,000 federal workers found themselves without paychecks. The Trump administration, meanwhile, began laying off federal workers, with a goal of sacking 4,000 of them. A federal judge in California intervened to halt the layoffs. A hearing is scheduled for Tuesday.

    Like other states, New Jersey faces the same funding difficulty. If the federal government remains closed by Nov. 1, about 800,000 people will be without SNAP benefits.

    Elderly people who rely on SNAP will suffer throughout Pennsylvania because, for them, “food is medicine,” said Allen Glicksman, director of research at the Eastern Pennsylvania Geriatrics Society in Newtown Square. “Without it, there’s the chance of a health catastrophe that will cost more money in Medicaid and in emergency room visits.”

    There are 234,638 Philadelphians age 65 and older, 104,972 (45%) of whom live below the federal poverty line ($21,150 for two individuals in a household), Glicksman calculated.

    Brian Gralnick, executive director of the Center for Advocacy for the Rights and Interests of Elders (CARIE) in Center City, agreed. “Consequences will be devastating. Without federal government dollars, ending or even addressing hunger in the region will be as successful as draining the Delaware River using Eagles helmets.”

    For children, the potential shortage of SNAP benefits will be no less calamitous, said sociologist Judith Levine, director of the Public Policy Lab at Temple University.

    “Food is a necessary element for brain development and growth,” she said. “And there’s a clear connection between hunger and the ability to perform in school.

    “This is a complete crisis we are facing.”

    One in four Philadelphia children experiences food insecurity — lack of enough food over the course of a year to live a healthy life — according to a City Council report.

    In the neighborhoods, the word about the halt to SNAP benefits is circulating. Fear and confusion had already been growing after the Trump administration announced changes to the SNAP program that would make it more difficult for some people to access benefits.

    Among the changes: Some SNAP recipients ages 18 to 54 who are able to work and do not support a child under 18 are now required to report at least 20 hours of work, training, or volunteering per week, or 80 hours per month, to keep their benefits.

    Despite the revisions to the program, however, many people these days are more worried about what happens if SNAP halts.

    “People are very anxious about that,” said Pastor Tricia Neal, director of the Feast of Justice food pantry at St. John’s Lutheran Church in the Northeast.

    “The anxiety level is driving more people to come here, and, because we serve 5,500 households, we are well beyond the capacity of what we can support. It’s really horrendous to look at what’s happening here.”

    That much is clear, according to Rosemary Diem, who tries to stave off hunger for her and her husband by combining SNAP benefits with visits to Feast of Justice.

    “Everything at the pantry is running low,” said Diem, 60, who is disabled, as is her husband, Joseph, 63. “I see us getting hurt without SNAP. There won’t be money for milk and eggs.

    “How am I going to get through?”

  • Philly lawmakers want to ‘clamp down’ on smoke shops. Their landlords could be next.

    Philly lawmakers want to ‘clamp down’ on smoke shops. Their landlords could be next.

    There’s a smoke shop in North Philly peddling recreational drugs across the street from a daycare. A West Philly storefront that sells loose cigarettes on a residential block. A convenience store in Spring Garden that advertises urine to people looking to pass a drug test.

    These are among the so-called nuisance businesses that City Council members and neighborhood association leaders cited Monday as lawmakers advanced legislation to make it easier for the city to shut down stores that sell cannabis and tobacco products without licenses.

    And legislators said their next target could be the landlords who rent space to those businesses.

    “We have to work with our city departments and our state partners to clamp down on these businesses,” said City Council Majority Leader Katherine Gilmore Richardson, who represents the city at-large. “We’re just being inundated.”

    Members of Council’s Committee on Licenses and Inspections passed two bills Monday that city officials say seek to close loopholes store owners exploit to avoid being cited for failing to obtain proper permits.

    In introducing the legislation earlier this year, Gilmore Richardson cited an Inquirer report about Pennsylvania’s unregulated hemp stores, which sell products advertised as legal hemp that are often black market cannabis or contaminated with illicit toxins.

    One bill makes it easier for the city to shut down nuisance businesses by removing language that classifies some violations as criminal matters, requiring that the police investigate them as crimes rather than civil violations that are quicker to adjudicate.

    The second piece of legislation makes it illegal for businesses to essentially reorganize under a new name but conduct the same operations as a means of evading enforcement.

    Both pieces of legislation could come up for a full vote in the Democratic-dominated City Council in the coming weeks. Members of Mayor Cherelle L. Parker’s administration testified in favor of them, meaning the mayor is likely to sign both.

    A smoke shop in South Philadelphia.

    Neighborhood association leaders also testified Monday in favor of the changes, but several said more aggressive enforcement is needed. They said smoke shops in particular have popped up throughout their commercial corridors, as have convenience stores that don’t even have licenses to operate as businesses, let alone sell recreational drugs.

    “We’ve seen firsthand the selling of illegal drug paraphernalia and [loose cigarettes], many of which children walk past in order to get to the candy bars and seniors walk past to get to the milk,” said Heather Miller, of the Lawncrest Community Association. “We need to address this.”

    Elaine Petrossian, a Democratic ward leader in Center City and a community activist, called for “much” higher fines and penalties for landlords. She cited progress the municipal government has made in New York City, where authorities cracked down on building owners who knowingly rented space to tenants selling cannabis or tobacco without licenses to do so.

    Several lawmakers said they’d support a similar approach. Councilmember Mark Squilla, who represents a district that spans from South Philadelphia to Kensington, said landlords must be held “more accountable.”

    “If they had some skin in the game, maybe they’d think twice about renting to an illegal operation,” he said.

    Councilmember Jamie Gauthier, who represents parts of West Philadelphia, agreed. She said she recently attempted to meet with a building owner who rents space to a problematic smoke shop in her district, but was rebuffed.

    “He was like, ‘These people pay me rent, and that’s the extent to which I basically care,’” Gauthier said. “We need something that forces property owners to be more accountable than that, because neighbors are suffering.”

    Staff writers Max Marin and Ryan W. Briggs contributed to this article.

  • Acaden Lewis looks like ‘the real deal’ in Villanova’s debut, an exhibition win against VCU

    Acaden Lewis looks like ‘the real deal’ in Villanova’s debut, an exhibition win against VCU

    Villanova began a new era of men’s basketball Sunday with a 70-51 exhibition victory against Virginia Commonwealth at the Finneran Pavilion. Acaden Lewis scored a team-high 15 points and added three assists in his first collegiate minutes.

    “That Lewis kid is the real deal,” VCU coach Phil Martelli Jr. said of the freshman guard. “He’s going to be a problem for a lot of people. I didn’t realize his ability at that young of an age, to be able to play the game that much with the ball in your hands, to make the right reads, and to make the right plays.”

    Lewis starred last season at Sidwell Friends School in the Washington area. “It has been seamless,” Lewis said about his transition to college. “Sometimes I’m playing with really good players. … So I’ve tried my best to just let other dudes rock out and get mine when they’re needed in the flow of the game.”

    New coach Kevin Willard’s starting lineup included two first-year players. Lewis ran the point and was joined by redshirt sophomore Bryce Lindsay, junior Tyler Perkins, redshirt freshman Matthew Hodge, and senior Duke Brennan.

    VCU’s Terrence Hill guards Villanova’s Bryce Lindsay during the second half Sunday at Finneran Pavilion.

    “I think one of the biggest things with young players is getting the casualness out of their game, understanding that every possession is really important, ” Willard said. “They can score the ball in different ways, but getting them to understand college basketball, like you just can’t come down and just be casual. It has to have purpose on every possession.”

    The Wildcats made 44.6% of their shots (25 for 56) and went 6 for 21 (28.6%) from beyond the arc. Villanova’s defense smothered the Rams, forcing 15 turnovers.

    At forward, Hodge tied for the team high with seven rebounds along with 10 points in his Villanova debut. Sophomore guard Malachi Palmer and freshman Chris Jeffrey were the first off the bench.

    Fast-paced basketball

    Last season, Villanova averaged 64.8 possessions per 40 minutes, ranking 358th out of the 365 Division I teams. Willard noted over the summer that he wanted to play at a faster pace and the Wildcats finished Sunday with 69 possessions, which would have ranked in the top three games last season.

    He started three guards — Lewis, Lindsay, and Perkins — and the Wildcats had 18 points off turnovers along with 12 steals.

    Coach Kevin Willard directs Villanova in his first game with the team.

    “I think these guys are very unselfish,” Willard said. “ … They kind of understand at any one point, [Lewis] can get 30 [points]. Malachi can get 30. We have guys that can really score the basketball. I think they understand, as long as they play together, they’re all going to benefit.”

    Perkins finished with 14 points, Lindsay had 12, and Brennan 10.

    Injury report

    Grad student Devin Askew, a guard, remains out with a right knee sprain. He has been sidelined for two months, but Willard expects him back at practice after the season opener against Brigham Young on Nov. 3 in Las Vegas.

    “We kind of just have to piece together practice,” Willard said when discussing the injuries. “Once we get Dev back for practice, hopefully after BYU, I think that will help. [Lewis and Lindsay] don’t get any rest in practice. They take all the reps. … I’m more worried about long term when you hit in January and February, and all the sudden they’re a little gassed because they haven’t had rest in practice.”

    Two weeks ago, junior guard Zion Stanford suffered a left ankle sprain. Willard said he might not return until December. Senior forward Tafara Gapare (right foot) is set to practice next week.

    Up next

    Villanova will play an exhibition game at Virginia on Friday at 7 p.m. (radio: Villanova Sports Network).

  • Apple Studios’ ‘Cheesesteak’ movie starring Mark Wahlberg is casting in Philly

    Apple Studios’ ‘Cheesesteak’ movie starring Mark Wahlberg is casting in Philly

    Philly can’t seem to stay off the screen lately — and now, Apple Studios is getting in on the action. Following recent buzz from Task, Abbott Elementary, and the ever-enduring It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, a new movie production titled Cheesesteak is setting up shop in the city that invented the sandwich.

    According to the casting magazine Backstage, Apple is holding open calls for Cheesesteak, a film starring Mark Wahlberg and directed by Stephen Chbosky (The Perks of Being a Wallflower, Dear Evan Hansen).

    Boston Casting Inc. is seeking extras ages 18 and older to play basketball fans for a scene filming in Philadelphia on Nov. 9.

    The project — which has also gone by the working title Weekend Warriors — is based on the 2023 German sports comedy-drama Weekend Rebels.

    Inspired by the true story of Mirco and Jason von Juterzcenka, the original film follows a father and his autistic son as they travel across Europe to visit every Premier League soccer club so Jason can decide which team to root for.

    In the American remake, soccer becomes basketball and Europe becomes the United States.

    According to CBS News, Wahlberg plays a long-haul truck driver who takes his son on a cross-country journey to visit NBA arenas — a story that blends sports fandom, family tension, and plenty of heart.

    The Philly filming location has yet to be revealed. Filming has already taken place in Worcester County, Mass., and other parts of New England, with Wahlberg spotted shooting scenes at a basketball court in Lynn, Mass., last month.

    The Philadelphia shoot marks the latest stop, and a fitting one for a movie named after the city’s most iconic sandwich.

    Mark Wahlberg arrives at the world premiere of “All the Money in the World” at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater on Monday, Dec. 18, 2017, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File)

    The film is produced by Dede Gardner and Jeremy Kleiner for Plan B, alongside LeBron James and Maverick Carter’s SpringHill Company, according to Deadline.

    A separate casting notice describes Cheesesteak as the story of “a self-made restaurateur fighting to keep his family business alive amid fame, rivalry, and secrets that could change everything” — a premise that feels right at home in Philly.

    From left: Ben Platt, Nik Dodani, and director Stephen Chbosky on the set of “Dear Evan Hansen.”

    🎬 How to apply

    Boston Casting Inc. is seeking local talent ages 18 and older to appear as basketball fans in a crowd scene filming Nov. 9 in Philadelphia.

    • Pay: $17.50 an hour (estimated $140 for an eight-hour day)
    • Company: Boston Casting Inc.
    • Location: Philadelphia
    • To apply, visit Backstage and search “Cheesesteak.”
  • Phil Martelli Jr. makes his VCU coaching debut in an exhibition against Villanova

    Phil Martelli Jr. makes his VCU coaching debut in an exhibition against Villanova

    The first thing Virginia Commonwealth coach Phil Martelli Jr. wanted to know when he walked into his postgame news conference Sunday was whether the Eagles won.

    “Shoot, our offense looked like [the Eagles] offense for the first how many weeks,” Martelli joked as he sat down to address the media.

    Martelli was raised in Drexel Hill, which means Philadelphia is in his blood. He grew up watching his father, coach Phil Martelli Sr., lead St. Joseph’s for 24 seasons. It allowed the younger Martelli to spend countless hours inside Big 5 venues as a child, player, recruiter, and now coach.

    With his father and family in the stands watching, Martelli led the Rams from the sideline for the first time in an exhibition game against Villanova. He is no stranger to the Finneran Pavilion, playing there in PIAA District 1 playoff games with St. Joseph’s Prep and later in college with St. Joe’s.

    “I mean, it’s huge to be able to come back here,” Martelli said. “Any time is fun. Honestly, I was hoping to be back here while an NLCS or World Series run [for the Phillies] was going on, but that wasn’t in the cards. Playing here, coaching here, recruiting here, just being here for whatever, it’s special. It’s special to walk into those places.”

    Villanova forward Matt Hodge (33) and VCU forward Jadrian Tracey (2) reach for the ball during an exhibition game on Sunday.

    Martelli coached Bryant to an NCAA Tournament berth last season. He thanked Villanova coach Kevin Willard, who is also in his first season with a new program, for his willingness to play and host VCU. The Wildcats prevailed, 70-51.

    “I really appreciate Kevin, his staff, and everyone here at Villanova for having us,” he said. “We make a lot of these calls to try and get games like this specifically for the regular season, but now with exhibitions, and there’s a lot of people that either don’t respond or come up with a reason not to play. They were very willing to play, and I’m very appreciative of that.”

    Before heading to shootaround on Saturday night, the Rams headed to Martelli’s parents’ house for dinner.

    “To be able to do that and share that with the players and share that with my family will always be the ultimate for me,” he said.

    With VCU in the Atlantic 10 Conference, the team will face two Big 5 programs: La Salle and St. Joe’s. The Rams will host Martelli’s alma mater and his father’s former program, the Hawks, in conference play on Jan. 19 (3 p.m., CBSSN).

    VCU will return to Philadelphia on Feb. 11 to face La Salle (6:30 p.m., ESPN+).

  • The Louvre heist has us thinking about past art heists in Philly

    The Louvre heist has us thinking about past art heists in Philly

    The world’s most-visited museum was closed Monday following a professional heist that resulted in the theft of priceless jewels. Within minutes, thieves entered and exited the Louvre on Sunday, taking eight treasures.

    The result? One of the highest-profile museum thefts in living memory amid a climate where museum staffs — worldwide, not just at the Louvre — are complaining about crowding, thin staffing, high turnover, and strained security.

    Here’s what we know so far.

    How did the Louvre heist happen?

    Within minutes, thieves rode up a basket lift outside the Louvre’s facade, forced open a window, smashed display cases, and fled with priceless Napoleonic jewels, officials said.

    The heist took place on Sunday, only 30 minutes after opening, with visitors already inside.

    The theft took four minutes inside the building and less than eight in total, according to French Culture Minister Rachida Dati, who called it a “professional” operation.

    “They went straight to the display windows,” Dati said. “They knew exactly what they wanted. They were very efficient.”

    Sunday’s theft focused on the gilded Apollo Gallery, where the crown jewels are displayed. Alarms brought Louvre agents to the room, forcing the intruders to bolt on motorbikes, but the robbery was already over.

    It’s unclear how many people took part in the theft and whether they had inside assistance. French media reported there were four perpetrators, including two dressed as construction workers. Authorities have not commented on the specifics.

    What was taken from the Louvre?

    Eight pieces of “priceless” jewels were stolen from the Louvre in Paris. Here is what they were.

    Eight objects were taken, according to officials:

    • A sapphire diadem, necklace, and single earring from a matching set linked to 19th-century French queens Marie-Amélie and Hortense.
    • An emerald necklace and earrings from the matching set of Empress Marie-Louise, Napoleon Bonaparte’s second wife.
    • A reliquary brooch.
    • Empress Eugénie’s diadem and her large corsage-bow brooch, a prized 19th-century imperial ensemble.

    A ninth object, the emerald-set imperial crown of Napoleon III’s wife, Empress Eugénie, was also taken but apparently dropped by the thieves. The crown, with more than 1,300 diamonds, was damaged but recovered outside the museum.

    All of the items are considered priceless, though officials have not disclosed an overall estimate.

    What will happen to the stolen jewels?

    The Louvre has been closed since the robbery on Sunday morning for the investigation.

    Experts say the initial hours after a heist are critical before the scent grows colder and thieves have more time to dispose of the jewels.

    The big concern is that the thieves are motivated by commodity vs. art, and will scrap the priceless works for sale on the black market, breaking the pieces for their stones and melting down the precious metals. In doing so, the thieves can make more high-ticket sales while remaining undetected.

    Has this ever happened before at the Louvre?

    According to National Geographic, the Louvre has a long history of bold heists — but it’s been a while until now.

    In 1911, the Mona Lisa — then a lesser-known piece by Leonardo da Vinci — was taken by Vincenzo Peruggia, a former employee dressed in his old work uniform. No one noticed it was missing for over 24 hours. The painting was recovered two years later after Peruggia tried to sell it to another museum.

    In 1940, a portion of the Louvre’s collection was looted by occupying Nazis, though the museum’s director had already hidden most of its collection in a safe house off-site.

    There was the 1966 theft of antique jewelry, which was being transported back to France from a loan to a Virginia museum. Those jewels were recovered after being found in New York inside a grocery bag. A decade later, one group of thieves stole a Flemish painting, and months after that, another group stole French King Charles X’s jeweled sword. The sword is still missing.

    The most recent string of heists occurred in the 1990s. In 1990, thieves cut a Renoir painting from its frame in broad daylight and also took ancient Roman jewelry and other paintings. In 1995, two pieces — a painting and a battle ax from a 17th-century bronze sculpture — were stolen. Finally, in 1998, a Camille Corot painting was cut from its frame and taken. It hasn’t been recovered.

    What about in Philly? Any heists?

    Yep. Philly-area museums have seen their fair share of art thefts over the years.

    Dating back to the 1980s, several thefts or alleged thefts have occurred across the Philadelphia Art Museum, Rodin Museum, Penn Museum, and more, according to Inquirer archives.

    Various thefts include a gold saw from Iraq and a 19th-century Chinese crystal ball taken from the Penn Museum in 1981 and 1988, a painting taken during a Philadelphia Art Museum after-hours party in 1984, and a bronze sculpture from the Rodin Museum in 1988 during a gunpoint robbery. The sculpture was recovered shortly afterward, and the alleged robber was arrested and charged. The crystal ball was also recovered.

    There’s also Frank Waxman, the Philly-based doctor who authorities said secretly amassed the largest known private collection of stolen art: about 150 pieces worth more than $2 million. The FBI raided his Rittenhouse condo in 1982 to find Rodins, Picassos, and more. Due to the statute of limitations surrounding his thefts, he was only convicted of taking eight pieces and served eight months in prison.

    In 2003, the Barnes Foundation said hundreds of items were missing from its collection, including a piece by Henri Matisse, a Jean Renoir ceramic vase, a mahogany Steinway piano, and historic recordings. It’s unclear whether the items were stolen or simply unaccounted for. No formal large-scale investigation took place.

    There was also an incident in 2017 where Michael Rohana, who was attending an after-hours ugly sweater party at the Franklin Institute, broke the thumb off a life-size Chinese terracotta warrior statue.

    Rohana described the incident as a “drunken mistake” and returned the thumb, which he had taken home. Still, it caused international turmoil, with Chinese officials accusing the Franklin Institute of carelessness with the artifact. The statue, which is called “The Cavalryman,” is insured for $4.5 million. Rohana went to court in 2019, eventually pleading guilty to a misdemeanor charge in 2023. He was sentenced to five years’ probation, a $5,000 fine, and community service.

    In 2021, six Pennsylvania museums were reunited with an assortment of historic firearms stolen by one man almost 50 years earlier.

    Thomas Gavin admitted to targeting dozens of museums up and down the East Coast, taking valuable artifacts sometimes unnoticed for years. The Hershey Museum and Pennsylvania Farm Museum in Landis, Lancaster County, were among some of the museums impacted. Gavin’s crimes went cold for so long that the statute of limitations expired for many, leading him to only serve a day in prison for trying to sell a historic rifle.

    What does the jewel heist mean for museums’ futures?

    The latest Louvre heist comes amid a tense time for museums worldwide.

    Following the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, museums have been working to balance mass tourism, stretched-thin staff, and security upgrades.

    Locally, the Philadelphia Art Museum and its employees reached a settlement last year after a yearlong dispute over pay raises called for in their 2022 labor contract and a nearly three-week strike.

    At the Louvre, a June staff walkout over frustrations with overcrowding and chronic understaffing led to a delayed opening. Unions say mass tourism leaves too few eyes on too many rooms and creates pressure points where construction zones, freight routes, and visitor flows meet.

    Officials say security updates are underway at the Louvre as part of an $800 million modernization plan. But critics say the measures are too little, too late.

    The Associated Press contributed to this article.

  • Rick Tocchet’s seeking ‘awareness’ from Flyers blueliner Egor Zamula

    Rick Tocchet’s seeking ‘awareness’ from Flyers blueliner Egor Zamula

    For now, Rick Tocchet is thinking the bottom pairing for the Flyers will be a rotation.

    After sitting for two games, with Adam Ginning slotting in, Egor Zamula will suit up for the second consecutive game Monday when the Flyers host the Seattle Kraken, who are 3-0-2 this season (7 p.m., NBCSP). The 25-year-old defenseman is expected to be paired again with Noah Juulsen.

    “I think he’s settled a little bit. … I think for him, I think it’s just keeping it simple,” Juulsen said. “You know, when you’re playing against third, fourth lines, it’s not always about being fancy and getting points and things like that. It’s more just doing your role every night and having success with that.”

    Zamula played 11 minutes, 14 seconds Saturday in the Flyers’ 2-1 overtime win against the Minnesota Wild. Tocchet thought Zamula played a “fairly clean” game. The pairing did not give up a goal while on the ice for three shot attempts for and 11 against at five-on-five, according to Natural Stat Trick.

    Flyers defenseman Egor Zamula played a “fairly clean” game Saturday vs. the Wild, according to head coach Rick Tocchet.

    “I’m up and down, but I think last game, I played with Juuls pretty well,” Zamula said. “But same time, it’s just [the] start … and I know I need to be ready to play every game in the regular season, because every point is important for us. So I mean, I try to do my best on the practice [ice] to help myself in the games.”

    The long-standing criticism, dating back to former coach John Tortorella, has been Zamula’s pace of play. Tocchet also wants to see Zamula move the puck more quickly.

    “I call it awareness,” Tocchet said. “You’re looking where to go instead of catch it, skate, and then have awareness. And I think if he can get that in his game … [because] for him, five feet is a big difference.

    “Like, skate five feet to open up options, because when you first get it, the options aren’t usually open — there’s a stick in your lane, there’s a player in your lane — but once you escape, the other team has to react off you and that means somebody should be open.”

    Before the Flyers’ season started, general manager Danny Brière said of Zamula, “He’s going to be in a battle to stay in the lineup, probably for most of the year, unless he steps up his game and plays the way he’s capable of.”

    Daily Faceoff reported recently that the Calgary Flames are looking for a left-shot young defenseman with size and have interest in the 6-foot-3, 200-pound defenseman, who played junior hockey for the Calgary Hitmen of the Western Hockey League.

    On Monday, Tocchet said he has seen Zamula work on things lately and put in a string of good practices. Sunday, after practice wrapped up, the blueliner worked on catching pucks at the blue line with assistant coach Todd Reirden, who is in charge of the defense, and then after doing it a few times, taking three quick steps.

    “I think [it] will be better,” Zamula said of his pace of play. When asked how he is working on it, he said, “Just reps, skate a lot, work on conditioning, pretty much. That’s it.”

    Flyers goaltender Dan Vladař is 2-1-0 with a .934 save percentage in three starts heading into Monday night.

    Staying with Vladař

    Heading into Game 6 of the season, there’s been a slight shift in the goalie rotation as Dan Vladař will start his second straight game.

    “I think now you’re in the situations where you start chunking some games together,” Tocchet said. ”It could happen for [Sam Ersson], too. So just we feel tonight, Vladdy deserves the net.”

    “I’m not sure if [there’s anything] to read into it,” Tocchet added.

    The Czech goalie made 15 saves on 16 shots against the Wild. Through three starts, he has a 2-1-0 record with a 1.65 goals-against average and a .934 save percentage.

    Breakaways

    Forwards Nikita Grebenkin and Jett Luchanko will slot back in while Nic Delsauriers and Rodrigo Ābols will be healthy scratches.

  • Eagles lucky they weren’t facing ‘a major league quarterback,’ Jalen Hurts balled out, and what else they’re saying

    Eagles lucky they weren’t facing ‘a major league quarterback,’ Jalen Hurts balled out, and what else they’re saying

    The Eagles got back in the win column Sunday, snapping a two-game losing skid with a 28-22 victory over Carson Wentz and the Vikings in Minnesota.

    After six weeks of inconsistency and discord on offense, the Eagles’ passing game finally showed what it’s capable of — but the rushing attack remained stagnant. Here’s what national media had to say about the win and what it means moving forward …

    A ‘definite step in the right direction’ but …

    While one former defensive end, Brandon Graham, mulls a comeback from retirement, another, Chris Long, is still hesitant about the Birds despite the win, even as an improved offense had to leg it out against backup quarterback Wentz.

    “This is a definite step in the right direction when it comes to the big-play ability of the offense,” Long said. “You’d love to see them play with more rhythm. I’m not sitting up here hating on a win on the road, but I would like to see a little bit more consistency. If you play like that against a major league quarterback, it might not go that way.”

    Wentz finished with 313 passing yards, a pair of interceptions, and another 28 yards on the ground.

    Despite the too-close-for-comfort win, the offensive line was “fantastic” and Jalen Hurts was “perfect,” so it was still a big improvement over the Birds’ two previous losses, Long said.

    Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts threw three touchdowns in Sunday’s win over the Vikings.

    A reminder from Hurts

    After an offseason full of discourse about where Hurts ranked among the best NFL quarterbacks and the offense’s inconsistency to start the year, Sunday was a reminder of Hurts’ passing ability.

    Hurts put up a perfect passer rating in Minnesota, throwing for 326 yards and three touchdowns and competing 19 of 23 pass attempts.

    “This is a sign not just for the fans, or the people that hate on us, but really for our coaching staff,” LeSean McCoy said. “I think he has to remind you that he can throw the ball. … Jalen Hurts has a really good deep ball, and when you threaten the defense that you’ll throw the deep ball, that’s what happens. Why would we have a guy like A.J. Brown, DeVonta Smith, if we’re not going to use him?

    “Jalen Hurts can play the quarterback position. It was time that we finally get to see him really play it.”

    Put ‘their foot on the gas’

    The Birds were aggressive with the deep ball, even on fourth down, taking advantage of their elite receivers and finding explosive plays that eluded them before Sunday.

    “The Eagles are so talented that it kind of makes them conservative,” former quarterback Alex Smith said Monday on ESPN’s Get Up. “That’s been the biggest complaint in the passing game and running game by the entire NFL world. Here we are, at Minnesota, against a Brian Flores defense, which is as exotic and aggressive as it gets, and you have to match that aggressiveness. … This team needs to play with their foot on the gas.”

  • Eagles open as heavy favorites vs. Giants despite recent blowout loss to New York; updated Super Bowl, MVP odds

    Eagles open as heavy favorites vs. Giants despite recent blowout loss to New York; updated Super Bowl, MVP odds

    The Eagles clawed their way back into the win column with a 28-22 victory over the Carson Wentz-led Minnesota Vikings on Sunday.

    The Birds continued to struggle in the running game as Saquon Barkley finished the day with 18 carries for 44 yards. But that didn’t seem to matter as Jalen Hurts sparked the offense, throwing for 326 yards and three touchdowns to earn a perfect passer rating. Meanwhile, it was a bend-don’t-break defense for the Birds, who allowed the Vikings to get into the red zone six times, holding them to five field goals and just one touchdown, including twice when touchdowns were negated either by replay review or a Minnesota penalty.

    So while the Eagles (5-2) came away with a win, it was another close one.

    Now, for the second time in less than three weeks, they will face off against the New York Giants, this time in a Sunday afternoon Week 8 matchup at Lincoln Financial Field. From the Birds’ chances of picking up a win before hitting their bye week to updates on the Super Bowl and year-end awards, here are the latest FanDuel and DraftKings odds for this game and beyond …

    Eagles vs. Giants odds

    The Birds were coming off their first loss of the season to the Denver Broncos when they faced the Giants in Week 6 at MetLife Stadium on short rest, resulting in a 34-17 loss on Thursday Night Football.

    The Giants posted their highest offensive output to that point under rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart, with the Eagles defense missing Jalen Carter and, for most of the night, Quinyon Mitchell. Now, not only do they have two of their best defenders back, but they’ll also have a full week to prepare.

    While the Eagles are coming off a win that saw Jalen Hurts earn a perfect passer rating and his two star receivers turn in fantastic performances, the Giants are coming off an embarrassing 33-32 loss to the Broncos after blowing a 19-0 lead heading into the fourth quarter.

    Ahead of the Week 8 matchup at the Linc, sportsbooks are favoring Philly, which opens as a touchdown favorite.

    FanDuel

    • Spread: Giants +7 (-112); Eagles -7 (-108)
    • Money line: Giants (+290); Eagles (-360)
    • Total: Over 43.5 (-105); Under 43.5 (-115)

    DraftKings

    • Spread: Giants +7 (-110); Eagles -7 (-110)
    • Money line: Giants (+280); Eagles (-335)
    • Total: Over 44.5 (-105); Under 44.5 (-115)
    The Eagles beat the Cowboys in their season opener and remain in first place in the NFC East.

    NFC East odds update

    Coming off a victory in Minnesota, the Eagles are still the favorites to win the NFC East.

    Meanwhile, the Dallas Cowboys’ odds of winning the division have continued to increase. They jumped over the Commanders at FanDuel after defeating Washington, 44-22, on Sunday. The Giants remain at the bottom of the list with +4000 odds after their loss to the Broncos.

    In the standings, the Eagles are two wins ahead of the Cowboys (3-3-1) and the Commanders (3-4).

    FanDuel

    DraftKings

    NFC odds update

    At FanDuel, the Eagles trail the Green Bay Packers and Detroit Lions as the favorites to win the conference. At DraftKings, the Eagles also fell behind the Los Angeles Rams.

    FanDuel

    DraftKings

    The Kansas City Chiefs are the favorites to win the Super Bowl after their 31-0 win over the Las Vegas Raiders.

    Super Bowl odds

    After Week 7, the Eagles remain among the top five Super Bowl favorites at FanDuel. However, at DraftKings, the Birds have fallen out of the top five, landing behind the Rams and surging Indianapolis Colts.

    FanDuel

    DraftKings

    MVP odds

    Jalen Hurts’ MVP odds have slightly improved after his perfect performance in the Eagles’ win over the Vikings. Josh Allen, Patrick Mahomes, and Baker Mayfield continue to battle for the top three spots at both sportsbooks.

    FanDuel

    DraftKings

    Indianapolis Colts running back Jonathan Taylor recorded three more touchdowns on Sunday.

    Offensive player of the year

    After another subpar statistical performance in Week 7, Saquon Barkley continues to fall out of the race for offensive player of the year. At this point, Colts running back Jonathan Taylor is the clear favorite to win the award.

    FanDuel

    DraftKings

  • New Jersey’s first Hispanic federal judge retires after 40 years on the bench

    New Jersey’s first Hispanic federal judge retires after 40 years on the bench

    After graduating law school in the 1950s, Joseph H. Rodriguez was told he wouldn’t go far and should consider changing his last name.

    He ignored that advice and went on to become New Jersey’s first Hispanic federal judge — and its longest serving. He recently retired after 40 years as a jurist.

    Rodriguez, 94, began his career as a community activist during a tumultuous time in Camden in the ‘60s and as a trial lawyer at a prominent law firm. He later was involved in landmark cases, including the Mount Laurel affordable housing decision before the state Supreme Court.

    He was among the first Hispanic lawyers in Camden, and New Jersey as a whole. He also served as the state’s public defender and advocate.

    Rodriguez mentored countless aspiring lawyers and judges, and as his stature rose nationally he never forgot his humble roots. Associates dubbed him “a gentle giant.”

    “He served with humility, grace, wisdom, and humor,” said Chief U.S. District Judge Renee M. Bumb, who met Rodriguez as a federal prosecutor. “We all looked up to him.”

    U.S. District Judge Joseph H. Rodriguez, 94, sits for an interview at his daughter’s law office in Cherry Hill, N.J. U.S. District Judge Joseph H. Rodriguez, 94, was the first Hispanic federal judge in New Jersey. His father, Mario Rodriguez, survived the 1918 sinking of the SS Carolina.

    Rodriguez became a senior judge in 1998, which reduced his workload, but he continued to preside over trials and write opinions, filing his last decision about three weeks before he retired.

    ‘I just wanted to slip into the shadows’

    Rodriguez decided last month to quietly retire. He left the Mitchell Cohen Courthouse in downtown Camden after an emotional send-off with fellow judges and friends.

    “I just wanted to slip into the shadows.” he said in a recent interview. “What I’ve done some people were in favor of it, some were not. It’s there as a public record. I stand by it.”

    Rodriguez was born in 1930 in Camden and grew up a few blocks from the courthouse where he would later preside.

    His father, Mario, a Cuban national raised in Puerto Rico, was aboard the passenger ship SS Carolina when it was torpedoed by a German U-boat off the coast of New Jersey in June 1918.

    The New York Times front page story about the sinking of the SS Carolina in 1918. U.S. District Judge Joseph H. Rodriguez has a copy of the paper because his father survived the sinking.

    The Germans targeted six ships on what was known as Black Sunday. The Carolina sunk, and Mario Rodriguez spent two days on a lifeboat before swimming ashore in Atlantic City.

    Rodriguez would later have a full circle moment, when scuba divers made a claim in federal court to salvage the vessel. He said he granted sole rights after the divers presented a brass “C” from the ship’s name on the stern and a china dinner plate with its logo.

    Mario raised four sons and a daughter in Camden with his wife, Carmen, and worked in a tobacco factory.

    The couple, among the first Hispanic families to settle in Camden, was highly respected in the community, and often served as interpreters and gave advice to other Hispanic residents.

    As a youngster, Rodriguez recalled hearing his father recite the U.S. Constitution to study to become a citizen, which he did in 1939 — in the same courtroom where his son later became a judge.

    The memory stuck with Rodriguez and became a guiding principle in his legal career. His parents and sister were killed in a car accident in 1973.

    Camden’s first Hispanic lawyer

    Rodriguez graduated from what is now La Salle University in 1955. After spending three years in the military, he obtained his law degree in 1958 from Rutgers Law School in Camden.

    When he landed his first job at a real estate firm, the agent urged Rodriguez to change his name to Joe Roddy.

    “I was told with that name I could never go far,” he recalled. “I would never change my name.”

    An undated Army photograph of Joseph H. Rodriguez, now 94, and his wedding photo.

    Rodriguez was hired as an attorney at Brown & Connery, one of the oldest law firms in South Jersey. He earned a reputation as a tough trial lawyer and specialized in medical malpractice. He later became the first Hispanic president of the New Jersey Bar Association.

    Rodriguez was pressed into action when unrest erupted in Camden in 1971, after a Hispanic man was killed while in police custody. The Hispanic community demanded an investigation. A protest turned into days of rioting in front of City Hall.

    Then the only known Hispanic lawyer in Camden, Rodriguez met with then-Mayor Joe Nardi to negotiate a settlement. The police officers were eventually indicted by a grand jury, but acquitted.

    The Courier-Post edition pictures a riot at Roosevelt Plaza at Camden City Hall Aug. 20, 1971.

    “He was the calm in the eye of the storm,” said Gualberto “Gil” Medina, who organized a student protest at the time. “He made it clear that the cause was just but the means had to be tempered.”

    Rodriguez eventually left Camden for the suburbs but remained connected to the city. He was one of the original organizers of Camden’s San Juan Bautista Parade.

    “He became the respected patriarch of the Hispanic community,” said Medina.

    `A public conscience’

    Rodriguez advocated in many precedent-setting cases for New Jersey’s disenfranchised residents. They include a landmark product liability case that resulted in the state Supreme Court ruling in 1965 that a mass builder could be held liable for a defective hot water system that severely scalded a child.

    As chairman of Camden Legal Services, he brought a lawsuit that resulted in a requirement for municipal judges to appoint a lawyer to represent defendants facing possible jail time. Another case established tenant rights.

    Then-Gov. William T. Cahill named Rodriguez chairman of the State Board of Higher Education in 1972, and later chairman of the State Commission of Investigation, where he investigated organized crime.

    Although Rodriguez was a Democrat, former Republican Gov. Thomas Kean appointed him as the state’s Public Advocate in 1982.

    In that role, Rodriguez filed the complaint that lead to Mount Laurel doctrine, through which the New Jersey Supreme Court outlawed local discriminatory zoning regulations and required municipalities to provide affordable housing.

    “He always had a public conscience,” said Carl D. Poplar, a lawyer and longtime friend.

    Judge Joseph H. Rodriguez, 94, posed for a portrait with his daughter Lisa Rodriguez at her law office in Cherry Hill this month.

    Rodriguez also was involved in the landmark right-to-die case of Karen Ann Quinlan, whose parents waged a fight to have her removed from a respirator.

    “We didn’t go around looking for trouble. If it had to be done and people had to be helped, you help them,” Rodriguez said.

    President Ronald Reagan appointed Rodriguez to the federal bench in 1985.

    Rodriguez was known as an easygoing and fair judge. U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist dispatched Rodriguez to Montgomery, Ala., in 1999 to preside over a desegregation case.

    “It was like going to heaven working for him,” said Carl Nami, his court reporter for 18 years. “I don’t how I was so fortunate.”

    Nicknamed “Joe Rod,” Rodriguez was a role model for other judges, said retired U.S. Magistrate Joel B. Rosen. He could always be counted on for jokes and bad puns at their weekly lunch gatherings, he said.

    “He’s always been a gentleman and what in my view what a judge should be: knowledgeable and fair,” Rosen said.

    Said Robert Kugler, another retired federal judge: “He kept the courthouse going.” The jury room was named in honor of Rodriguez.

    “His judicial demeanor and temperament are unrivaled,” said civil rights attorney Stanley O. King. “The likes of him I don’t know if can ever be replaced or replicated.”

    U.S. District Judge Joseph H. Rodriguez performed the marriage ceremony of his granddaughter Taylor Jacobs to Cole Sutliff. It was held in the same courtroom where Rodriguez presided in federal court in Camden for years.

    Before stepping down, Rodriguez performed a final act as a sitting judge. He performed the wedding ceremony for a granddaughter, Taylor, in his courtroom. He also recently married a grandson, Quinn, in a beach ceremony.

    Rodriguez said he plans to spend more time with his wife of 71 years, Barbara, and his four daughters, 10 grandchildren, and seven great-children. He enjoys cooking for them, especially paella, his specialty dish.

    U.S. District Judge Joseph H. Rodriguez performed the marriage ceremony of his grandson Quinn Jacobs and Brittany Peters at the Jersey Shore.

    Asked what he would like his legacy to be, Rodriguez choked back tears. His daughter, Lisa Rodriguez, an attorney with Dilworth Paxson, passed him a tissue.

    “You can’t do it all, but you should never stop trying,” he said. “If everyone backs away you’re just giving up.”