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Agent’s Take: Derrick Henry’s historic workload and what it means moving forward for Titans’ superstar

The Titans seem intent on getting their money’s worth from running back Derrick Henry, who signed a four-year, $50 million contract (with an additional $1 million in incentives) last year. The volume has been turned up on Henry’s already heavy workload. In 2020, Henry became the NFL’s eighth player to rush for at least 2,000 yards in a season, rumbling for 2,027 on 378 carries — tied for 19th-most for a season.

The 2020 NFL Offensive Player of the Year easily leads the league with 142 carries and 640 rushing yards through five games this season. Saints running back Alvin Kamara, who is second in the NFL, has 48 fewer carries. Nick Chubb and Kareem Hunt form arguably the league’s best rushing tandem with the Browns. They have just three more carries combined at 145 than Henry does this season.

Only O.J Simpson has more rushing attempts through the first five games of a season. Simpson had 152 carries with the Bills in 1975. Nobody has ever had more touches (combined rushing attempts and receptions) than Henry’s 156 in the first five games.

Thanks to the addition of a 17th regular-season game, Henry is on track to obliterate the NFL single-season record for rushing attempts that Larry Johnson set with the Chiefs in 2006 when he had 416 carries. Henry’s current pace projects to an eye-popping 483 rushing attempts. At 28.4 carries each contest, Johnson’s record would fall in the 15th game of the season.

In the process, Henry would break Eric Dickerson’s record of 2,105 rushing yards in a season, which he set in 1984 with the Rams and Chris Johnson’s season mark of 2,509 yards from scrimmage (combined rushing and receiving yards) established in 2009 while playing for the Titans. Henry is on pace for 2,176 rushing yards and 2,601 yards from scrimmage. His 530 touches would also be 42 more than James Wilder’s record of 492, which came with the Buccaneers in 1984.

Henry sustaining his massive workload seems unfathomable considering his 2020 usage, the extra game and the NFL increasingly becoming pass happy over the last 10 years. Titans head coach Mike Vrabel addressed Henry’s extreme usage on Monday. “We just have to try to be as smart as we can with recovery and how it is going in the game and how he feels,” said Vrabel. “Then there’s a fine line there in knowing what he needs and the impact he has throughout the course of the game.”

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Ideally, Henry’s usage rate will mirror what happened with Simpson in 1975. He went from 30.4 carries per game over the first five contests to averaging 19.7 for the remaining nine games in the season.

That wasn’t the case for the two-time defending rushing champion in 2019 and 2020.

Henry’s workload peaked during the last quarter of the season. In the first three-quarters of these two years, Henry averaged 21 carries per game. The average jumped to 25.4 rushing attempts in the final four games of the two seasons.

Best thing for Henry would be the Titans, who are the lone team in the AFC South with a winning record at 3-2, clinching the division early. The Colts, who are 1-4, are the only team to pose a realistic threat to the Titans repeating as AFC South champions.

If those two seasons are any indication, Henry getting to 400 carries seems inevitable provided he remains healthy. Henry has been extremely durable when winning his rushing titles. His only missed game was in Week 16 of the 2019 season with a hamstring injury.

Henry will join rare company with a 400-carry season. It’s only been done five times in NFL history. The chart below summarizes the careers of the players before and after hitting the 400-carry mark.

Carries

1,000-yd seasons

Carries

1,000-yd seasons

Player

Year

Carries

Age

Weight

Before

Before

After

After

Larry Johnson

2006

416

27

235

476

1

535

0

Jamal Anderson

1998

410

26

237

563

2

356

1

James Wilder

1984

407

26

225

351

0

828

1

Eric Dickerson

1986

404

26

220

1061

3

1531

3

Eddie George

2000

403

27

235

1360

4

1102

2

Averages

408

26.4

230.4

762.2

2

870.4

1.4

Derrick Henry

2021

TBD

27

247

1182

3

TBD

TBD

Henry is in the same age range as the other running backs when they had the biggest workload of their careers. He is at the higher end of career mileage when the season happened.

None of these guys are small running backs. At 247 pounds, Henry is the heaviest of the bunch. His size may make him better equipped to handle the wear and tear accumulated playing running back.

The best-case scenario for the Titans, since Henry is under contract through the 2023 season with $12 million and $12.5 million salaries in 2022 and 2023, would be for him to be an outlier like Eric Dickerson. Dickerson was second in the NFL in rushing during a strike-shortened 1987 season. He won his last rushing title in 1988, the second year after his heaviest workload. Dickerson’s final 1,000-yard season was the following year in 1989.

Henry quickly declining in the future if his historical usage continues for the rest of this season wouldn’t be surprising since running backs have a shorter shelf life than other positions.

He’ll likely have to prove to be superhuman to get a contract of any consequence after his current deal expires.

It’s still early but Henry is averaging almost a yard less per rushing attempt this season at 4.5 than last year when his 5.4 average was fourth in the NFL among running backs. As the rushing champion in 2019 and 2020, Henry was third among running backs with 5.2 yards per carry (minimum 200 rushing attempts) during this span.

Henry facing stacked defensive fronts more often this season could be a contributing factor. According to the NFL’s Next Gen Stats, 41.55 percent of Henry’s carries are with eight or more defenders in the box. It was 27.78 percent last season and 35.64 percent in 2019.

However, Henry’s isn’t faring as well in some advanced running back metrics this season as before. For example, Henry is averaging a rather pedestrian (by his previous standards) 0.15 rush yards over expected per attempt, according to Next Gen Stats. He led the NFL in 2019 with 1.06 rushing yards over expected per attempt and improved last year to 1.11 yards while ranking fifth.

Nonetheless, Henry is on track to the defy the odds by becoming the first player who had a 2,000-yard rushing season to hit the 1,500-yard mark in the following year. Barry Sanders has the most with 1,491 rushing yards in 1998 before he abruptly retired after the season at 30. Whether Henry is the ultimate anomaly at running back remains to be seen.

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Films, people who made Amitabh Bachchan a superstar: The ‘angry young man’ who defined the 1970s

“Jab tak baithne ko na kaha jaye, sharafat se khade raho. Yeh Police Station hai, tumhare baap ka ghar nahi.”

When Amitabh Bachchan’s Vijay said these lines in Prakash Mehra’s Zanjeer, the audience saw the first glimpse of the character who would eventually be known as the ‘angry young man’. One film after another, Amitabh Bachchan became synonymous with his on-screen avatar of Vijay, and the audience cheered loudly for him. Even though he wasn’t the ‘traditional hero’ who knew right from wrong, he was a hero for the masses because he wasn’t apologetic and channelled their anger.

Unlike many stars before him like Rajesh Khanna, Dev Anand, Dilip Kumar, Amitabh’s Vijay wasn’t the romantic star but what he stood up for had a wider connection with the audience of that time. Vijay had certain angst that struck a chord with the masses and thus, the ‘angry young man’ became a phenomenon.

Over the years, the ‘angry young man’ has been analysed by scholars all across the world. The idea of the character came from a common man whose ideal picture of a morally upright life was starting to change because he had realised that the system was stacked against him. To finally take control of his life, he had to ignore law and order and walk a non-traditional path. His illusion of a happy, just society was starting to crumble and the anger  was reflected in the early 1970s cinema. Amitabh portrayed different shades of this character in films like Deewar, Trishul, Don, Muqaddar Ka Sikander, Kaala Patthar, Laawaris, Shakti, among a few others.

In a conversation with Syed Firdaus Ashraf in 1998, director Prakash Mehra had shared that when he selected Amitabh for Zanjeer, the actor was struggling with one flop after another. Mehra was the first director who brought ‘angry young man’ to the screen but the director revealed that this particular term for the character description was not given by writers Salim-Javed, it was a name that came from the press. “The name, ‘angry young man’ was given by the press,” he said. Unlike the later reflection of the character, Zanjeer’s Vijay is in a cop’s uniform but his frustration with the system is giving him sleepless nights. Since Mehra was the first person who brought this character to life, without any reference whatsoever, he explained the character’s anger. “If you see the film, you will find out that it is the inner conflict of a person who is suffocating and wants to fight against the system. And he cannot do it alone,” he told Ashraf.

Deewar gave Amitabh Bachchan the kind of success that catapulted him into stardom.

Most of the films of Amitabh’s ‘angry young man’ era were written by the writing duo of Salim-Javed (Salim Khan and Javed Akhtar). And while much has been written about the socio-economic makeup of Vijay, the writers have often said that at the time, they were not consciously imbibing those characteristics into their work but it certainly affected their mental makeup. At a session during the Jaipur Literature Festival in 2017, Javed spoke about the unstable political era of the 1970s and how it affected the common man’s psyche. “It was a politically unstable time, unconstitutional forces were appearing. Verdicts of high courts were being set aside. And that was the pre-emergency time where perhaps for the first time, we realised that the socialistic pattern of life (that we thought) will bring happiness, joy, prosperity (that) is on the next page of the calendar… nothing happened. So those dreams were shattered and somewhere an average Indian was losing faith in law and order and establishment. So it is no surprise that an angry young man came, who was so direct, so blunt,” he shared.

And Amitabh was the actor who became the face of that emotion of the masses. Javed added that Birju of Mother India (played by Sunil Dutt) and Gunga of Gunga Jumna (played by Dilip Kumar) were probably the earlier versions of the character that were perhaps not as relatable on a wide scale, but by the time the 1970s rolled around, the feeling of anger was starting to spread.

Kaala Patthar’s Vijay was brooding thinking about his failure on the sea.

The angst of the common man was translated differently in each of these portrayals by Amitabh. While the man in Deewar was angry because his father left the family and abandoned him with a tattoo that said “Mera Baap Chor Hai,” the man from Kaala Patthar was still overcoming the trauma of the ship he left behind. His anger in Trishul arose from the fact that his father left his pregnant mother for a rich woman, and they had to struggle for morsels. And his Vijay in Don became a victim of circumstances after his life is threatened, while he has to look after two young kids.

The effect of Vijay was such that a man who could have been seen as a villain in previous decades, was now the hero figure. Many of these films were multi-starrers and Vijay was often pitched against a traditional hero-figure, which made him even more desirable for the audience.

Salim-Javed introduced the angry young man with Zanjeer but as their and Amitabh’s journey proceeded, it became a symbiotic relationship. With Deewar, Sholay, Don, Kaala Patthar, they moved on to create many more masterpieces together. In fact, Amitabh wasn’t even the first choice for Deewar, it was Rajesh Khanna, who lost the role because Salim-Javed convinced director Yash Chopra that no one but Amitabh would fit the bill. In an interview with Lata Khubchandani in 2000, Salim Khan shared, “Amitabh is one of the finest actors that ever came on the Hindi film scene.
 His personality inspired the kind of films we wrote for him. We kept his personality, his talent, and his acting ability in mind and wrote films around these criteria.
These roles were not interchangeable. They were meant for him, written for him.” To his credit, Amitabh has often said that Salim-Javed’s writing was such that any actor who would have landed in Vijay’s shoes, would have become a star but in hindsight, one can say that Amitabh was destined to do these roles.

Trishul’s Vijay wants vengeance for his mother who was left alone by Sanjeev Kumar’s RK Gupta.

Amitabh’s turn with the angry young man became the ‘it factor’ of the day, and soon other filmmakers and writers also brought out shades of this character in films like – Muqaddar Ka Sikandar, Suhaag, Laawaris among others. Late actor-writer Kader Khan wrote dialogues for many of these Manmohan Desai and Prakash Mehra films. In a chat with Lata Khubchandani for Rediff, Khan shared that Amitabh’s charisma had a lot to do with his voice and writers made sure that they utilised it while writing for him. “Amitabh has this innate talent for speech, but he also trained himself. He is an actor who has put in effort in all aspects of acting. The potential existed in him and he refined it.
 Most people become complacent, but not Amitabh. He works hard and is sincere to his profession,” he said.

Bachchan himself explained the popularity and immediate connect of his roles, “In the minds and in the hearts of the youth of India there was some kind of suppressed anger, something that they desired and which was not being said and not coming out. And perhaps in these roles the way these were written and perhaps the way they were performed they found a hidden release for to say. There was a tremendous identification by the people, by the youth, with the characters that I was doing. And because of this identification, they became very popular.”

As the 1980s proceeded, the era of angry young man started declining and soon, it came to an end. As Javed Akhtar had said at the Lit Fest, “People cannot remain angry for a long time.” The persona of ‘angry young man’ did not disappear from cinema for a while and we still see splashes of it in mainstream films but the imagery of this character has always been associated with Amitabh Bachchan and will continue to remain a part of his legacy.

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Aryan Khan: Son of Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan in custody in drugs probe

Aryan Khan was arrested on Saturday night after police raided a ship off Mumbai and found narcotics, local media said. The court remanded Khan and two others in custody with the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB), the federal agency investigating the case.

A spokesperson for Shah Rukh Khan did not respond to requests for comment. Calls to the NCB went unanswered outside regular business hours.

“They have been accused of consumption, but there is no evidence for the same,” Advait Tamhankar, a lawyer who appeared for one of the other two accused, said outside the courtroom.

Television cameras showed a gaggle of reporters and police around Aryan Khan as he was ushered into a vehicle at the end of the hearing. He is scheduled to go before the court again on October 7.

Many high-profile Indian actors and TV personalities have been under scrutiny from narcotics officials since last year. In September 2020, several top female actors were questioned by the NCB, though it was unclear how the investigation progressed.

Some Bollywood personalities have defended Aryan Khan and criticized the media glare around his arrest.

“The slightest misdemeanor risks being wildly exaggerated,” film producer Pritish Nandy said on Twitter on Sunday. “Kids make mistakes. Punish him, by all means, if the tests confirm his guilt. But let’s not crucify him in the media.”

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Eagles News: Jordan Mailata was PFF’s “secret superstar” of Week 2

Let’s get to the Philadelphia Eagles links …

NFL Week 2 Team of the Week & Awards – PFF
Secret Superstar of the Week: T Jordan Mailata, Philadelphia Eagles. Mailata was one of the few standouts in the trenches in the 49ers-Eagles slugfest, opening up lanes in the run game and shutting down Nick Bosa, one of the best pass-rushers in the NFL. The former rugby player earned an elite 90.7 run-blocking grade and didn’t allow a single pressure to the Niners. Given Jalen Hurts’ tendency to hold onto the ball and that over half of his reps came against the 2019 No. 2 overall pick, that’s simply incredible.

Post-Snap Read: Javon Hargrave, Jordan Mailata highlight strong trench play – PE.com
Let’s go to the offensive side, where the big matchup going into the game pitted Jordan Mailata against Nick Bosa. We talked about it last week on the Eagle Eye in the Sky podcast, and this battle went about as we expected – both guys had their share of wins. Bosa is a great player. He’s not going to get shut out, but Mailata battled and had a ton of blocks when left one-on-one with the star rusher without any help.

Eagles vs. 49ers: 7 winners, 13 losers, and 2 IDKs – BGN
We all know it wasn’t all bad for Hurts. He hit Watkins on the money for the aforementioned 91-yard completion. He fit a ball in a very tight window to Dallas Goedert on the play right before he executed a QB sneak for Philly’s sole touchdown. He had an absolute dime to Jalen Reagor for a touchdown unfortunately wiped out by the receiver stepping out (more on that to come). But Hurts finished the day completing just 52.2% of his passes for zero touchdowns and a 80.0 passer rating. Outside the Watkins play, he logged just 4.5 yards per attempt. Hurts left a number of plays on the field. He was unable to connect with DeVonta Smith on a couple of deep shots. The first of those came on a play where Hurts rolled right and had an entirely clean pocket but ultimately threw short of the receiver, who had had a step on the defense.

At the Podium: Nick Sirianni confirms Brandon Grahams season-ending injury, provides updates on Brandon Brooks – BGN Radio
Nick Sirianni spoke with the Philly media on Monday afternoon and confirmed Brandon Graham season-ending injury to an Achilles tear, provided updates on Brandon Brooks and discussed holding the coaching staff accountable following the Eagles loss to the 49ers 17-11.

Own Worst Enemy – Iggles Blitz
Hurts ran well and led the team on one scoring drive. He gave the Eagles a chance. But he’s got to be a better pocket passer. The offense can’t be quick screens and QB runs. You must be able to sit in the pocket and complete intermediate passes on a consistent basis to move the ball. The Eagles love RAC yards and didn’t get many of them on Sunday. Give SF credit to be sure. Their back seven played well. Still, Hurts and the Eagles passing game have to be better. I would think that will be a point of emphasis for the coaches this week.

How 1 play was microcosm of the Eagles’ loss and a young career – NBCSP

The non-touchdown play to Reagor wasn’t just a microcosm of the Eagles’ loss. But it was also a good summary of Reagor’s career to this point. Obvious talent, but not much to show for it. It was such a good sign that Reagor was able to get in the end zone in the Eagles’ Week 1 win over the Falcons. And the thought of Reagor starting his second season with touchdowns in back-to-back games would be very encouraging, especially given how disappointing his rookie campaign was. Instead, Reagor finished with 2 catches on 5 targets for just 5 yards. A disappointing day in a disappointing loss that all might have changed if his feet landed a few inches to the left.

From the Ravens’ upset to Kyler Murray’s magic, 15 developments from Week 2 that will matter – The Athletic
14. We still don’t know what the Eagles want their offense to look like with Jalen Hurts. That’s because what they did in Week 2 in the loss to the 49ers was a lot different than what they did in Week 1. The opener was all about Hurts getting the ball out quickly on short passes and letting playmakers do work in space. Against San Francisco, though, Hurts’ average pass traveled a league-high 14.6 yards past the line of scrimmage. And 26.1 percent of his attempts were into tight windows, which was second to only Daniel Jones. Hurts’ expected completion percentage was 56.2, which was third-lowest among starters. Bottom line: He was attempting a lot of high degree-of-difficulty throws. The 49ers were playing with a banged-up secondary, and the Eagles tried to attack them downfield but were mostly held in check. Hurts completed just 12 passes but continued to use his legs to extend drives. Hurts had the highest EPA on scrambles of any quarterback in Week 2. Through two games, he ranks seventh in QBR. The Eagles will continue to work on figuring out an offensive identity as they prepare for a Monday night showdown against the Cowboys.

Week 2’s biggest decisions: Ravens’ fourth-down call pays off; Giants too cautious? – NFL.com
Under Pederson, the Eagles accounted for three of 11 “go for two when down eight” decisions made between the 2017 and 2020 seasons. Pederson’s successor, Nick Sirianni, continued the trend here. And while the benefit was marginal, according to the Next Gen Stats Decision Guide, the decision was nonetheless the overall right call, given that a successful 2-point conversion would have brought their win probability to 9 percent, compared to just 7 percent after a successful extra-point kick. Sirianni and the Eagles never got the ball back, as the 49ers converted a first down in three plays to set up three consecutive kneeldowns by Jimmy Garoppolo. But as many have explained before, the math behind the decision gave the Eagles the best opportunity to win. Having completed the 2-point conversion (46 percent probability), Philly would have been able to take the lead with an extra-point kick, should the team have gotten the ball back and scored a touchdown. Failing to convert the 2-point try would still have allowed for an opportunity to tie the game with another touchdown and a second 2-point attempt.

QR Week 2: King Henry Goes Once More Unto the Breech – Football Outsiders
QB22) Jalen Hurts. Hurts’ totals include -8 DYAR receiving for his only target, an incompletion. Hurts was kind of the anti-Baker Mayfield in that he threw a lot deeper this week. In Week 1, Hurts’ average pass traveled a league-low 3.8 yards beyond the line of scrimmage; in Week 2, that average was a league-high 14.2 yards. Mind you, there’s a difference between deep passes and deep completions. Hurts had eight of the former but only two of the latter, though those two completions did produce 117 yards.

What we learned from Eagles-49ers: Nick Sirianni will have rookie moments; Jalen Hurts a work in progress – Inquirer
Hurts can throw from the pocket. He can look off his first few reads and complete passes. It may not be a strength yet, but Sirianni has to give him opportunities. Yes, you want to win games, but Hurts will not develop if he’s asked to only execute RPOs and one-read shot plays. He has two more-than-competent tight ends. It shouldn’t have taken more than three quarters for Ertz and Dallas Goedert to be targeted. Sirianni went heavy with three-receiver sets (75%), up from 60% in Week 1. The Eagles will need to be explosive, but DeVonta Smith, Quez Watkins, and Jalen Reagor are still young and growing. Use them and push them, but not at the expense of your best talent. A tight end, as they say, can be a young quarterback’s best friend, particularly from the pocket.

Best available running backs on the Week 3 waiver wire – DraftKings Nation
Kenneth Gainwell, Philadelphia Eagles (28.1%). Next up —at Dallas Cowboys. Gainwell had a modest afternoon in the Eagles’ 17-11 loss to the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday, getting six carries for 14 yards and two receptions for 18 yards. The entire Philly offense struggled on Sunday, so there should be an uptick in production next Monday.

The Winners and Losers of NFL Week 2 – The Ringer
But it has a critical problem: There’s only one passing option on the play—the throw from the wide receiver on an end-around to the quarterback, who’s supposed to sneak into the end zone unnoticed. If the defense does notice that guy, there’s nowhere to go. Your quarterback isn’t skilled at getting open, and he’s going up against a starting defender used to guarding wide receivers. And your wide receiver isn’t used to fitting balls into tight windows. San Francisco noticed that guy. Jalen Hurts didn’t make much of an attempt to get open, and even though Greg Ward Jr. was a quarterback in college, he didn’t feel comfortable throwing the ball, and tossed it away. Unfortunately, it was a fourth down. The Philly Regular was a turning point. Just a few plays earlier, the Eagles had hit on a 91-yard pass play from Hurts to Quez Watkins. But Philly dicked around on the goal line, and wound up with zero points. The Eagles should’ve taken a 10-0 lead; instead they gave up 17 unanswered points, failing to score until the final minutes of the fourth quarter. The Eagles were like a band from the 1960s touring in 2021. (Like, say, the Eagles.) They tried playing the hits—but it’s less fun to hear the hits if none of the band members are the same and there’s a different voice singing the lyrics.

Ex-Eagles head coach Doug Pederson focused only on potential NFL opportunities, not college – CBS Sports
With one of the top college football head coaching job already available, and more inevitably to come, there has been buzz about former Super Bowl winning coach Doug Pederson perhaps being coveted by USC or others. However, Pederson is focused only on a return to the NFL at this point, according to league sources, and is putting his time and preparation into a return in 2022. Pederson is following the league closely and keeping tabs on what a potential NFL staff might look like as well, with interview opportunities undoubtedly to come in January. The Eagles parted ways with Pederson last year later than what is the norm, making him a free agent while many head coaching searches were already well underway.

Sam Darnold Has Much More Support Around Him on the Panthers – MAQB
It’s hard to blame a player for getting hurt, but Carson Wentz has long needed to be more judicious with how he plays. And while the hit on which he hurt his ankle(s) would’ve been tough to avoid (Aaron Donald ran him down from behind and bent him backwards), it was another snap where Wentz held the ball and gave the defense time to get to him. In other spots, he stuck his nose into places where he could’ve managed to save the damage on his body. And again, some of this is bad luck. But if this bid for a football rebirth in Indy is going to work, Wentz has to stay on the field, and based on how often he gets hurt, a big part of that should probably be an adjustment to his playing style. Ben Roethlisberger went through this nearly a decade ago, when Todd Haley arrived as his new OC in Pittsburgh. And now, very clearly, it’s Wentz’s turn to make the changes he needs to, just to give himself a chance.

Report: Colts QB Carson Wentz Suffered Sprains in Both Ankles During Sunday’s Loss – Stampede Blue
The two ankle injuries certainly cloud Wentz’s potential availability (or lack thereof) even more for a critical divisional clash against the Tennessee Titans (1-1) on the road this weekend, who remain the frontrunner to win the AFC South’s crown as reigning champions. Without Wentz, the Colts will have to turn to 2nd-year quarterback Jacob Eason, who’s essentially a rookie in experience, having not garnered any snaps during 2020 in either the regular season or preseason. (Although he did receive 1st-team offensive reps this past training camp and preseason as Wentz recovered from his late offseason foot surgery).

Ten lessons learned from the Cowboys win over the Chargers – Blogging The Boys
Sometimes it’s better to be lucky rather than good. The Cowboys played their hearts out in this one. Still, the Chargers could so easily have won it. Twice in the second half they had touchdowns wiped out by penalties. The first led to Damontae Kazee’s interception in the end zone. The second forced them to settle for three rather than six. Those were two flags that definitely had a huge impact on the eventual outcome. Outside of that, there were several other plays where the referees made calls that seemed to favor Dallas, including the sack awarded to Micah Parsons. And luck can be both some calls by the zebras that go in your favor, or the other team making a lot of errors to draw penalties. While the Cowboys had plenty of their own boneheaded plays, such as going for the block on the punt (which admittedly seemed to have a missed holding call by L.A.), they still came out ahead in penalties. Eight infractions for 76 yards is not good, but the Chargers’ 12 for 99 is worse.

J.J. Watt channels Ted Lasso and Lamar Jackson’s big night: What you might have missed in NFL Week 2 – ESPN
Before you say anything: Please understand that I am not saying they are the division favorite. I am saying it’s not an overreaction to say they’re the favorite, because it wouldn’t be an overreaction to say that about Washington or Philadelphia either. Maybe even the Giants, but it’s been so darn long since the Giants have been good that I struggle to extend them any benefit of the doubt. The point is, if you thought before the season that the Cowboys would win the division, and you’ve watched their first two games, you probably still think that. The DeMarcus Lawrence injury and the La’el Collins suspension are both damaging and likely will cost them games. But they didn’t cost them Sunday’s game, and the Cowboys are 1-0 without those guys. Tread water until they get back, steal another game here or there, beat the other teams in the division, and they could be in strong position for a big finish come December and January.

Giants’ Kenny Golladay: I was yelling at Jason Garrett – Big Blue View
When cameras caught New York Giants wide receiver Kenny Golladay blowing off steam near the end of Thursday’s loss to the Washington Football Team, it looked like his target was quarterback Daniel Jones. Turns out, his target was offensive coordinator Jason Garrett. “Pretty much just me talking to JG (offensive coordinator Jason Garrett) a little bit and that’s two competitive guys right there,” Golladay said. More so, just me wanting to do anything I can. Not so much, ‘Give me the ball more,’ though.”

Peyton Manning said he was paranoid the Patriots used to bug his locker – SB Nation
Here’s Peyton’s answer transcribed: “Every time I played against New England, I used to go talk to my receivers in the shower in the far corner, I’m like ‘don’t talk about a play next to my locker, because I know it’s bugged. I know it’s got a hot mic in there.’” The Patriots were famously at the center of “SpyGate” in 2007, a scandal that saw head coach Bill Belichick fined $500K and the team docked a first round pick after a league investigation showed New England videotaped signals from the Jets’ defensive coaches. The Patriots had another major scandal a few years later with DeflateGate.

Monday Football Monday #54: Lamar Jackson balls out, Titans pull together comeback win in Seattle + notable injuries – The SB Nation NFL Show
RJ Ochoa and Pete Sweeney discuss all of the Week 2 NFL storylines including the Titans OT victory over the Seahawks, the Bills dominating performance, Kyler Murray who had an unbelievable fourth down pass to Christian Kirk, Lamar Jackson who finally gets a victory over Patrick Mahomes and so much more.

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Lionel Messi PSG debut: Superstar comes off bench; Mbappe scores twice in Paris Saint-Germain win vs. Reims

REIMS — Lionel Messi finally made his PSG debut on Sunday, coming off the bench in the club’s 2-0 win away at Stade de Reims in Ligue 1. But it was Kylian Mbappe who stole the show with both goals in the win.

The France international scored once in each half as even the home crowd clamored for Messi (buy his new PSG jersey here) and was finally rewarded just after Mbappe hit the second. Mauricio Pochettino waited until the final 66th minute to unleash the legendary Argentine, who subbed in for Neymar. The switch means that we will have to wait to see if the Messi-Neymar-Mbappe trio ever sees the light of day at PSG.

As far as Messi and Mbappe went, the Frenchman was very clearly happy to be on the same pitch as his illustrious new teammate and immediately looked for him at times when he might not have with other more familiar teammates.

The 22-year-old Mbappe, heavily linked with Real Madrid as the transfer window approaches an end, underlined his importance to Les Parisiens once more with a clinical performance. Mbappe headed in from a Di Maria cross after a quarter of an hour and put the finishing touch to a lightning fast counter-attack after 63 minutes as his strong understanding with summer arrival Achraf Hakimi continues to develop.

Messi’s best chance was snuffed out 12 minutes from time after linking up with Mbappe, and the South American was introduced to Ligue 1’s customary heavy tackling as Reims lost their cool at times toward the end.

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Fraudulent data raise questions about superstar honesty researcher | Science

“I wish I had a good story,” says Duke University behavioral scientist Dan Ariely. “And I just don’t.”

LENGEMANN/WELT/ULLSTEIN BILD/GETTY IMAGES

Dan Ariely is a behavioral science superstar. His research on honesty, cheating, and irrationality is “extremely clever and extremely intuitive,” says behavioral scientist Eugen Dimant of the University of Pennsylvania—and it has had a huge impact on both the field and government policies. Ariely, who founded the Center for Advanced Hindsight at Duke University, has also written three New York Times bestsellers and is a TED Talks regular.

But some researchers are calling Ariely’s large body of work into question after a 17 August blog post revealed that fabricated data underlie part of a high-profile 2012 paper about dishonesty that he co-wrote. None of the five study authors disputes that fabrication occurred, but Ariely’s colleagues have washed their hands of responsibility for it. Ariely acknowledges that only he had handled the earliest known version of the data file, which contained the fabrications.

Ariely emphatically denies making up the data, however, and says he quickly brought the matter to the attention of Duke’s Office of Scientific Integrity. (The university declined to say whether it is investigating Ariely.) The data were collected by an insurance company, Ariely says, but he no longer has records of interactions with it that could reveal where things went awry. “I wish I had a good story,” Ariely told Science. “And I just don’t.”

Finding possible fraud in the work of such an influential scientist is jarring, Dimant says, especially for “the new generation of researchers who follow in his footsteps.” Behavioral scientists Leif Nelson and Joseph Simmons, who exposed the apparent fraud via their blog Data Colada together with their colleague Uri Simonsohn, say a thorough, transparent investigation is needed. But given other universities’ past reluctance to investigate their own researchers, they are skeptical that Duke will conduct one. That may leave Ariely’s supporters insisting he is innocent and detractors assuming he is guilty, Nelson says. “No one knows. And that’s terrible.”

The 2012 paper, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), reported a field study for which an unnamed insurance company purportedly randomized 13,488 customers to sign an honesty declaration at either the top or bottom of a form asking for an update to their odometer reading. Those who signed at the top were more honest, according to the study: They reported driving 2428 miles (3907 kilometers) more on average than those who signed at the bottom, which would result in a higher insurance premium. The paper also contained data from two lab experiments showing similar results from upfront honesty declarations.

The Obama administration’s Social and Behavioral Sciences Team recommended the intervention as a “nonfinancial incentive” to improve honesty, for instance on tax declarations, in its 2016 annual report. Lemonade, an insurance company, hired Ariely as its “chief behavioral officer.” But several other studies found that an upfront honesty declaration did not lead people to be more truthful; one even concluded it led to more false claims.

After discovering the result didn’t replicate in what he thought would be a “straightforward” extension study, one of the authors of the PNAS paper, Harvard Business School behavioral scientist Max Bazerman, asked the other authors to collaborate on a replication of one of their two lab experiments. This time, the team found no effects on honesty, it reported in 2020, again in PNAS.

While conducting the new lab study, Harvard Business School Ph.D. student Ariella Kristal found an odd detail in the original field study: Customers asked to sign at the top had significantly different baseline mileages—about 15,000 miles lower on average—than customers who signed at the bottom. The researchers reported this as a possible randomization failure in the 2020 paper, and also published the full data set.

Some time later, a group of anonymous researchers downloaded those data, according to last week’s post on Data Colada. A simple look at the participants’ mileage distribution revealed something very suspicious. Other data sets of people’s driving distances show a bell curve, with some people driving a lot, a few very little, and most somewhere in the middle. In the 2012 study, there was an unusually equal spread: Roughly the same number of people drove every distance between 0 and 50,000 miles. “I was flabbergasted,” says the researcher who made the discovery. (They spoke to Science on condition of anonymity because of fears for their career.)

Worrying that PNAS would not investigate the issue thoroughly, the whistleblower contacted the Data Colada bloggers instead, who conducted a follow-up review that convinced them the field study results were statistically impossible.

For example, a set of odometer readings provided by customers when they first signed up for insurance, apparently real, was duplicated to suggest the study had twice as many participants, with random numbers between one and 1000 added to the original mileages to disguise the deceit. In the spreadsheet, the original figures appeared in the font Calibri, but each had a close twin in another font, Cambria, with the same number of cars listed on the policy, and odometer readings within 1000 miles of the original. In 1 million simulated versions of the experiment, the same kind of similarity appeared not a single time, Simmons, Nelson, and Simonsohn found. “These data are not just excessively similar,” they write. “They are impossibly similar.”

Ariely calls the analysis “damning” and “clear beyond doubt.” He says he has requested a retraction, as have his co-authors, separately. “We are aware of the situation and are in communication with the authors,” PNAS Editorial Ethics Manager Yael Fitzpatrick said in a statement to Science.

Three of the authors say they were only involved in the two lab studies reported in the paper; a fourth, Boston University behavioral economist Nina Mazar, forwarded the Data Colada investigators a 16 February 2011 email from Ariely with an attached Excel file that contains the problems identified in the blog post. Its metadata suggest Ariely had created the file 3 days earlier.

Ariely tells Science he made a mistake in not checking the data he received from the insurance company, and that he no longer has the company’s original file. He says Duke’s integrity office told him the university’s IT department does not have email records from that long ago. His contacts at the insurance company no longer work there, Ariely adds, but he is seeking someone at the company who could find archived emails or files that could clear his name. His publication of the full data set last year showed he was unaware of any problems with it, he says: “I’m not an idiot. This is a very easy fraud to catch.”

Marc Ruef, an independent data forensics specialist, says Ariely could show as the “creator” of the Excel file even if the data did originate elsewhere, for instance because he created the spreadsheet and sent it to an insurance company to populate. But some behavioral scientists have asked on social media why a company would make up data about its clients’ behavior in a way that supported one of Ariely’s theories. (Ariely, citing Duke’s legal advice, declined to name the company or comment about its involvement in possible fraud.)

The timeline is also hazy: Ariely mentioned the study in a 2008 lecture and in a 2009 Harvard Business Review piece, years before the metadata indicates the Excel file was created. Ariely says he does not remember when the study was conducted.

The odometer study has resurfaced other worries about Ariely’s work. In July, an expression of concern was attached to a paper he published in 2004 in Psychological Science; in that case, statistical errors could not be resolved because Ariely was unable to produce the original data. In a 2010 NPR interview, Ariely referred to dental insurance data that the company involved later said did not exist, WBUR reported.

The Data Colada bloggers say they consider Ariely a friend. Finding his name as the creator of the field data file was “a very unpleasant moment,” Simmons says. “This whole thing has been incredibly stressful.”



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Har Mar Superstar issues apology after sexual assault accusations

Sean Tillman, performing as Har Mar Superstar in 2008.
Photo: Jim Dyson (Getty Images)

[Note: This article contains descriptions of sexual assault.]

In a piece published today by Minnesota’s Star Tribune, and in a social media statement penned by multiple “survivors and allies,” musician Sean Tillman—best known for performing as Har Mar Superstar—has been accused of sexually inappropriate behavior and comments. The Tribune piece also outlines several incidents of alleged assault, including one in which Tillman followed a woman into a bathroom and forcibly kissed her, another in which he exposed himself and shoved his penis into a woman’s face, and a third in which he shoved his hands into a woman’s pants. The majority of the women alleging these incidents have remained anonymous at this time, but the social media statement makes it clear that “The assaults experienced by 7 survivors that have shared thus far have ranged from pointed inappropriate sexual comments and grooming to physical sexual assault.”

Tillman has responded to the allegations, issuing a statement in which he denied the details of one specific incident—which, per the Tribune, took place in 2016 and sparked multiple other women coming forward—while issuing a blanket apology to the “brave women” who have been “coming forward to speak about how I treated them, including conduct that was harmful, abusive and selfish.” Although careful not to blame drugs and alcohol for his behavior, Tillman casts his struggles with substance abuse as a contributing factor to his behavior toward women in the period described. Outside the 2016 incident, which he says “just didn’t happen that way,” Tillman’s statement avoids directly addressing any of the other allegations against him.

The Minneapolis music community, where Tillman came up before achieving more global success, has already begun taking action in regards to the accusations against him. Per the Tribune, the city’s First Avenue nightclub has cut plans to sell tickets for an upcoming show by Tillman’s band Heart Bones, and local radio station 89.3 The Current has pulled his music from rotation.



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Har Mar Superstar Accused of Sexual Misconduct, Issues Response

Note: This article contains descriptions of alleged sexual misconduct.


Sean Tillman, the musician best known under the name Har Mar Superstar, has issued a statement tonight after multiple women have come forward with accusations of sexual misconduct and harassment, the Star Tribune reports. Tillman denies one woman’s allegations in his statement, but otherwise offers a blanket apology for his past behavior.

One woman told the Star Tribune that Tillman was a friend who she trusted “completely” until he allegedly exposed his penis and stuck it in her face at his home in 2016. Three people confirmed to the Star Tribune that she’d told them that story shortly after it allegedly occurred. 

Tillman “categorically” denied the woman’s claims in a statement tonight, which otherwise featured a blanket apology: “I take these claims extremely seriously. I am deeply sorry to anyone who feels I’ve hurt them.” He admitted to “conduct that was harmful, abusive, and selfish.” Two other women spoke to the Star Tribune alleging instances of misconduct between 2014 to 2017. 

“Several years ago, I started a process of being honest with myself about how, fueled by a toxic mixture of alcohol, drugs, and cavalier sexuality, I was harming people around me and failing them and myself,” he wrote. “I am profoundly and sincerely sorry for the harm that I have caused.” Find his full statement below.

The allegations against Tillman led the venue First Avenue to cancel a planned concert from Tillman’s band Heart Bones. “Once we became aware of the allegations, we felt it was the best decision to take the show down until there is accountability,” the venue said in a statement. “First Avenue takes all accusations of harassment and assault seriously.” The radio station 89.3 the Current has stopped playing his music. 

Pitchfork has reached out to Har Mar Superstar’s representatives for further comment.


If you or someone you know has been affected by sexual assault, we encourage you to reach out for support:

RAINN National Sexual Assault Hotline
http://www.rainn.org
1 800 656 HOPE (4673)

Crisis Text Line
http://www.facebook.com/crisistextline (chat support)
SMS: Text “HERE” to 741-741

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Dak Prescott: Dallas Cowboys and superstar quarterback agree to mega deal

After almost two years of on-off negotiations, Dak Prescott has agreed terms on a mega deal that will extend his time with the Dallas Cowboys, a team that Forbes valued as worth $5.7 billion in September.
The Cowboys confirmed the contract on Monday and although the official terms of the deal have not been disclosed, multiple outlets have reported that it’s a four-year deal worth at least $160 million that includes over $120 million guaranteed.
According to the reports, Prescott’s deal averages to $42 million a year over the first three seasons with $75 million in the first season and a $66 million signing bonus.
Prescott’s brother Tad took to Twitter to congratulate his sibling. “When your little brother gets the call. Let’s go Dak time to win the Dallas Cowboys a Super Bowl,” he said. The Cowboys last won the Super Bowl in 1995.

Compound ankle fracture and dislocation

Prescott, who was drafted by the Cowboys in 2016 in the fourth round, became eligible for a new contract in 2019 but played on a one-year contract last year while his representatives and the Cowboys couldn’t agree on a long-term deal.

He set career highs in 2019 — his 4,902 passing yards one yard short of Tony Romo’s single-season franchise record — and he reached 30 touchdown passes for the first time ever.

While playing on this one-year, $31.4 million franchise tag in 2020, the quarterback suffered a compound ankle fracture and dislocation which ended his season after five games.

Subsequently the Cowboys’ 2020 season nosedived, finishing 6-10 for the season with a rotating carousel of quarterbacks attempting to fill Prescott’s sizeable shoes.

However, with question marks beginning to surface about whether the 27-year-old Prescott might be on his way out of Dallas, the Cowboys tied him down to another four-years with the team.

Long-time Cowboys wide receiver Dez Bryant compared Prescott’s situation to another from his time with the team.

“The Dak situation started to remind me whenever we let Demarco [Murray] walk in [20]15 … me personally I knew our chances of having a chance to win the super bowl was gone.. it wasn’t the catch it was Demarco leaving the team which made me feel hopeless Smart decision,” he said on Twitter.
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Regular Pro-Bowl cornerback Jalen Ramsey said Prescott “earned” the pay rise, while former NFL wide receiver Chad Johnson joked:

“Congrats & McDonald’s on you don’t ignore my dm, diet is important‼️”



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Former baseball superstar Alex Rodriguez files to form $575 million SPAC as IPO craze continues

  • The former baseball superstar Alex Rodriguez is joining the SPAC craze and launching one of his own.
  • Rodriguez is set to lead Slam Corp., which is seeking to raise $575 million in its public debut.
  • Slam will seek to acquire a firm in sectors including sports, media, and wellness, a filing said.
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The former baseball superstar Alex Rodriguez is the latest high-profile name to throw his hat in the SPAC ring by launching a “blank check” company called Slam Corp., a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission said.

SPACs – special-purpose acquisition companies – are investment vehicles that raise funds from investors that are then used to acquire a private company and take it public.

The filing said that Rodriguez would lead Slam as its CEO and that it would seek an acquisition within the “sports, media, entertainment, health and wellness and consumer technology sectors.”

“We will seek to acquire a multibillion-dollar asset with a leading market position in an attractive industry,” the filing said.

Unlike Billy Beane’s Redball Acquisition Corp., Slam is not seeking to acquire a professional sports team, the filing said. Redball recently failed in an attempt to take the parent company of the Boston Red Sox public.

According to the filing, Slam is seeking to raise up to $575 million with the sale of stock and warrants at $10 per share.

SPACs have been all the rage since last year as the COVID-19 pandemic upended the traditional IPO roadshow. According to data from SPAC Insider, 248 blank-check companies raised $83 billion in 2020, while 118 SPACs had raised $35 billion so far in 2021.

Even former Trump administration officials are launching one: Wilbur Ross, the former commerce secretary, is heading a new SPAC with Larry Kudlow as a director.

Slam will trade on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol SLAM once the deal is completed, the filing said.

Read more: Investors are flocking to trade Dogecoin and other hot digital tokens on Voyager, a platform with no Robinhood-style restrictions. Its CEO says Bitcoin will hit $100,000 this year – and shares 3 other cryptocurrencies to watch.

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