Tag Archives: win

Lions vs. Giants final score: Detroit’s winning streak moves to 3 with statement win over New York

It would’ve been easy to shrug off the Detroit Lions’ two-game winning streak going into Week 11. Not only did they barely get by in both games, but those wins came against the lowly Green Bay Packers and Chicago Bears.

However, on Sunday, the Lions made a huge statement. Heading into New York for a contest against the surprisingly 7-2 Giants, Detroit dominated every aspect of the game. On offense, the Lions tallied over 150 yards on the ground and found the end zone four times. On defense, they forced a normally-sound Giants offense into three turnovers.

In the end, the final score of 31-18 wasn’t very emblematic of the actual competitiveness of the game. Detroit carried an 18-point lead into the fourth quarter and it never really got much closer than that.

Detroit has now won three in a row and at 4-6, it’s close to socially acceptable to be talking about being in the playoff race. A big opportunity awaits against the Buffalo Bills on Thursday, but for now, enjoy the win.

Here’s how it all happened.

First quarter

The Lions won the toss and deferred, giving the Giants the ball first. Detroit’s defense got a quick opportunity to get off the field on third-and-7, and Alim McNeill burst through the middle of the line for the sack and quick three-and-out.

The Lions offense picked up a first down on the ground, and then moved the sticks on a roughing the passer after failing convert on third down. A Jared Goff sneak picked up the subsequent third down, pushing Detroit into field goal territory. Detroit got down inside the Giants’ 10-yard line, but on a fourth-and-2, Dan Campbell opted to kick a field goal. 3-0 Lions.

The Giants offense continued to move in no-huddle, and found themselves in a key fourth-and-1 at midfield. New York converted on a jet sweep, setting up a first down at Detroit’s 44-yard line.

On the next set of downs, Campbell made an interesting decision to decline a holding penalty, giving the Giants a third-and-8 rather than a second-and-19. New York ended up converting, and eventually moved it inside the Lions’ 10-yard line. A few plays later, Giants quarterback Daniel Jones danced into the end zone on a designed run, giving New York a 6-3 Giants lead after a missed extra point (deflected by John Cominsky).

Detroit’s offense looked like they were quickly going to go three-and-out after their first down quick screen was blown up for a 3-yard loss. But Kalif Raymond caught a third-and-long screen, got on his feet, and scampered for a first down. Lions starting right guard Evan Brown was injured on the play, with Dan Skipper replacing him. Brown was officially labeled as questionable to return with an ankle injury. In the second half, he was downgraded to OUT.

After Jared Goff misfired and a 1-yard run from Williams, Detroit faced a third-and-9 going into the second quarter.

Second quarter

Goff scrambled for a first down, but it was called back on a holding penalty on Penei Sewell. A personal foul on Jonah Jackson pushed the Lions even further back, eventually leading to a punt.

Detroit continued to bottle up Saquon Barkley—he had just 11 yards on his first eight carries—but Jones was proving to be the bigger threat, both with his legs and his arm. Jones picked up 9 yards on one run and another 7 on a third-and-3. He also nicely got the Giants out of a second-and-long with a completion to Kenny Golladay. Detroit eventually got a stop, though, after coverage forced a throwaway from Jones. The Giants punted with Raymond making a fair catch at his own 8-yard line.

On that drive, Jeff Okudah left the game with an injury, and was declared OUT shortly after his exit for the rest of the game as he entered concussion protocol.

Detroit’s offense answered with three-and-out due to a couple of critical errors from D’Andre Swift. On second down, he caught a pass and had enough yardage for a first down, but fumbled and lost an extra 2 yards even though he recovered. They gave him the ball on third-and-1 on a sweep play, but Swift took too long to cut upfield and came up 2 yards short.

But rookie Aidan Hutchinson got the Lions offense the ball back in a hurry with this impressive fingertip interception:

A few plays later, Jamaal Williams punched it in to give the Lions a 10-6 Lions lead.

Though New York was able to move the ball to midfield on the next drive, Jerry Jacobs picked up a nice third-and-5 stop with tight coverage. A shanked punt gave the ball back to Detroit at the 32-yard line with just over two minutes left.

A nice play-action shot found Amon-Ra St. Brown wide open for a 32-yard gain, and after a 15-yard run from Williams, the Lions were into the red zone. A block in the back on Sewell pushed them back, but St. Brown quickly picked up 15 yards back, and Brock Wright caught a clutch third-and-2 pass that got Detroit to the 1-yard line. Williams punched it in for his second of the game—and his 11th on the season to make it 17-6 Lions.

Cornerback Jerry Jacobs went down on the subsequent kick returned but walked off under his own power and would return in the second half.

With 44 seconds and no timeouts left, the Giants attempted to cut into Detroit’s lead. A big 19-yard pass play on third-and-10 gave them a chance, but they ultimately were sacked, ending the half.

Third quarter

Justin Jackson gave the Lions a nice start to the second half with a kick return all the way to the 44-yard line. Detroit missed on a big play after fullback Jason Cabinda dropped a pass that would’ve gone for at least 15 yards. But Goff converted a third-and-9 with a 13-yard pass to Tom Kennedy. Then, the Lions run game started to take over. Jackson picked up 10 yards and Swift followed it with 16 yards of his own. St. Brown got them down to the 1-yard line, and it was Jamaal Williams time yet again, for a big opening drive. 24-6 Lions.

The Giants offense tried to respond after completing a 24-yard pass to Darius Slayton on an early third-and-4. But New York went for it on a later fourth-and-5, and Jones threw it directly to Lions rookie safety Kerby Joseph, who picked it off and returned it to the Giants’ 41-yard line.

Detroit couldn’t capitalize on the ensuing possession, but a nice Jack Fox punt pinned the Giants at their own 7-yard line.

Jones dug the Giants out with an 18-yard pass to Slayton. But three straight incompletions at midfield forced another Giants punt, and the Lions would start the next drive at their own 9-yard line with three minutes left in the third quarter.

But Detroit, again, went three-and-out, giving the ball back to the Giants at their own 33-yard line with just over a minute remaining. The Lions had a chance to get an early dagger on fourth-and-1, but Jones picked up 15 yards on a QB keeper.

Fourth quarter

Jones quickly drove the Giants inside the 10-yard line with some throws over the middle and yet another QB keeper. And Matt Breida punched it in from the 3-yard line to make it 24-12 Lions just two minutes into the quarter. The extra point bounced off the upright.

Detroit avoided another three-and-out with a nice play-action pass to Kalif Raymond for 21 yards, getting the Lions to midfield. On the ensuing third-and-7, Goff scrambled and found St. Brown for an important 17-yard pickup. But Detroit’s offense stalled there, and instead of attempting a 52-yarder in the windy conditions, the Lions took a delay of game penalty and punted. Fox sent it through the end zone for a touchback.

The Giants, down 12, had 8:45 left to score twice and mount yet another comeback. And although Jones made a clutch conversion on third-and-15, Will Harris laid a huge hit on Isaiah Hodgins and jarred the ball loose, forcing a fumble that Hutchinson recovered on the Giants’ 33-yard line.

Jackson made sure the turnover didn’t go to waste as the Lions third-string back ripped off an impressive 27-yard run down to the Giants’ 2-yard line. Though Swift initially got stopped for a 2-yard loss, he punched it in on the next play from 4 yards out to make it 31-12 Lions with 6:10 left.

Jones quickly drove the Giants down the field with the Lions playing off coverage. Richie James scored, and New York went for two, but it was no good after a wide-open drop. The left the score 31-18 Lions with 4:20 left.

St. Brown recovered the Giants’ onside kick attempt. A couple of first downs from the Lions offense put the game away for good.

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Sixers vs. Bucks: After Tyrese Maxey suffers left foot injury, Joel Embiid leads Sixers to win

The Sixers lost Tyrese Maxey to injury but beat the Bucks on Friday night to move above .500 (8-7) for the first time this season.

After posting 24 points on 9-for-12 shooting and five assists, Maxey was ruled out at halftime with a left foot injury, per a Sixers official. (More on Maxey below.) 

The Sixers still pulled out a gutsy, 110-102 win at Wells Fargo Center. Joel Embiid led them with 32 points, 11 rebounds and eight assists. 

Tobias Harris (left hip soreness), James Harden (right foot tendon strain), Furkan Korkmaz (left knee effusion) and Jaden Springer (right quadriceps strain) were all out. 

Milwaukee was down Khris Middleton, Wesley Matthews, Pat Connaughton and Joe Ingles. 

The Sixers will finish their back-to-back Saturday night in Philadelphia against the Timberwolves. Here are observations on their victory over the Bucks:

Embiid, Antetokounmpo bring their best early 

With the Sixers playing after a four-day stretch between games, it wouldn’t have been surprising if Embiid took a while to rediscover the rhythm and brilliance of his 59-point performance Sunday. Fortunately for the Sixers, he looked exactly the same out of the gates. 

Antetokounmpo also had a very strong start, driving in for an emphatic dunk and putting the Bucks up 7-2 with a pull-up jumper. As for Embiid, the Sixers emphasized early touches against Brook Lopez in the middle of the floor. While Lopez guarded Embiid well when the Sixers lost in their home opener to Milwaukee, so much of Embiid’s success always seems to hinge on whether he makes comfortable shots.

 

On Friday, he recorded the Sixers’ first seven points, knotting the game at 7-all with a top-of-the-key three-pointer. He finally got a bit of scoring support from Maxey, whose wing three capped an 8-0 run. 

Embiid also kept the defensive highlights rolling in the first quarter. After Antetokounmpo found an angle to drive left on P.J. Tucker, Embiid shifted over to reject him at the rim. The Sixers capitalized with a Maxey layup in transition. Antetokounmpo is tremendous at placing constant pressure on the opposition and ripping away any potential momentum, though. He pulled up for a long-range jumper and sunk it, giving the Bucks a 15-12 edge.  

Ultimately, Antetokounmpo and Milwaukee managed to seize a 13-point advantage late in the first. Some of that boiled down to Embiid and Antetokounmpo’s respective production, but the Sixers’ initial struggles with the Greek Freak on the bench stood out. Sixers head coach Doc Rivers used a lineup with Embiid surrounded by Shake Milton, De’Anthony Melton, Matisse Thybulle and Georges Niang. Former Sixer George Hill made a three over Milton, who was called for traveling on the Sixers’ ensuing possession.

The Bucks began 12 for 18 from the floor and 5 for 9 from long distance, meaning the Sixers had to play from behind for their second straight meeting with Milwaukee. 

Milton (15 points, six assists) had another rough stretch with Embiid sitting early in the second period. After Hill stole the ball from him in the open floor, Milton dropped his head and the Bucks pounced on the fast-break chance, getting a Jrue Holiday layup to go ahead 39-28.

Harden’s absence has placed a spotlight on several of the Sixers’ weaker areas, and the team’s second-unit guard play has often been a concern the past couple of weeks. Maxey’s injury now puts even further pressure on Milton and Melton. Korkmaz did a light workout following the Sixers’ shootaround Friday morning and called himself “day-to-day.” 

Maxey hurt at end of tremendous half 

The Sixers’ defense had been a strength lately, but that certainly didn’t carry over into the first half. 

Their starting lineup was a solid defensive group on paper; Danuel House Jr. and Melton played alongside Embiid, Maxey and Tucker. However, the Bucks’ size and rebounding posed predictable issues. The 6-foot-11 Bobby Portis had two second-chance layups within the first six minutes. 

Tucker picked up his second foul on a moving screen with 1:26 left in the first quarter, though Rivers kept him in the game. While the Sixers didn’t string together many stops with Embiid out, Maxey did an excellent job confidently creating offense and scoring at all three levels. He made an impressive step-back jump shot over Antetokounmpo in the corner and reached 23 points late in the second on an open, after-timeout triple. When he’s aggressive and clear in his role, points tend to pile up fast for the 22-year-old. 

 

Maxey’s game concluded abruptly. He was fouled on a drive with 1:36 to go in the second quarter and came up limping. Though he tried to walk it off, taking a couple of steps into the crowd, it was immediately obvious that his pain wasn’t going to disappear. Maxey split his two free throws before subbing out.

ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski reported that X-rays were negative on Maxey’s foot and he’ll have an MRI on Saturday.

Despite Maxey’s fantastic play, the Sixers trailed by seven points at halftime in large part due to their sloppiness. There’s nothing wrong with a few turnovers related to pushing the pace, but the Sixers gave the ball away carelessly several times in the final few minutes before intermission. Melton committed one of the team’s 11 first-half giveaways on a long, ill-advised pass intended for House. 

Of course, once Maxey was ruled out, his status loomed as a matter larger than the game’s result. The Sixers know they can survive with an extremely Embiid-centric style of play, but they’d obviously prefer not to play without their starting backcourt for an extended stretch. 

Finding an (unusual) way down stretch

The Sixers started the third quarter well without Maxey and took a 69-67 lead on an Embiid mid-range jumper. 

The minutes when Embiid sat were more adventurous than ever; Rivers used Paul Reed-Embiid lineups in both the second and third quarters. With 2:37 left in the third, he went to a Reed-Montrezl Harrell frontcourt and asked Reed to guard Antetokounmpo. That decision yielded great results at first when Reed stopped the two-time MVP in isolation and pulled down the defensive board. Georges Niang (17 points) eventually drained a three-pointer to give the Sixers an 84-77 lead. A Milton runner and a buzzer-beating House jumper were other important baskets during that unconventional Embiid-less stint. 

The tricky calls on Rivers’ plate increased with Embiid out. He understandably removed Thybulle about a minute and a half after Reed entered in the third quarter; that’s not a duo that will generally be conducive to efficient offense. Thybulle, who missed the Sixers’ last two practices with an ankle injury, only received four minutes. 

Following a couple of Tucker-Harrell frontcourt minutes early in the fourth, the Sixers were up 92-90 and subbed Embiid back into the game. Antetokounmpo’s woes at the foul line were quite helpful in the Sixers having a lead at that stage. He went 4 for 15 in the game and the home crowd loved every miss (as well as the escalating “Bricken for Chicken” rewards).

Compared to Sunday night’s win over the Jazz, the Sixers’ supporting cast did a much better job of chipping in offense around Embiid in the fourth quarter.

On a key sequence, Melton skied for a defensive rebound and then threw the ball ahead to Milton. With Embiid noticeably wiped out, he didn’t cross half court until about 15 seconds remained on the shot clock. He swung the ball to Niang, who drove past Portis and made an and-one layup. Next time down, Embiid assisted a big corner three by Melton and the Sixers grabbed a 102-99 lead.

 

Embiid’s mid-range game is always a nice option down the stretch, too. He buried back-to-back jumpers to extend the Sixers’ lead to seven points. Then, with Milwaukee determined to make someone else beat them, he declined dribbling into a pull-up jumper and instead found Milton for a wide-open layup.

If there was any doubt that he’d turned in another MVP-level performance, Embiid nailed another jumper over Lopez.

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Fat Joe Says He Deserved To Win 2017 Grammy Over Chance The Rapper – VIBE.com

Fat Joe recently got candid about his 2017 Grammy loss to Chance the Rapper, making it known that he still believes he should’ve won. 

During an interview with GQ led by Elliott Wilson, Joey Crack revealed how he felt losing to Chance’s “No Problem” for the Best Rap Performance at the 2017 Grammy Awards, and disclosed why he felt “All the Way Up” was the clear victor. 

The Loyalty rapper claimed that the Academy wasn’t in touch with the culture and that he couldn’t even remember the name of the Chicago artist’s record that beat them.

“I should have won the Grammy for Best Rap Performance 2017. Chance is a cool guy. But the Grammy should have come my way. “All the Way Up” was bigger,” Fat Joe insisted. “Not only that, if people understood the culture, Remy and I were like Robin Hood and Cinderella. They could have done the ‘hood a favor and given “All the Way Up,” the f**kin’ Grammy. They gave it to Chance the Rapper—and for what? I’m not going to be disrespectful, but they gave it to him for a record I don’t even know no more.”

Joseph Antonio Cartagena continued, throwing the Black Eyed Peas into his argument, who beat him and Remy’s “Lean Back” with “Let’s Get It Started” at the 2005 Grammys. 

“This is my point. I don’t even know what he beat us with. Do you understand? Same thing happened to us with “Lean Back.” We lost Best Rap Performance By A Duo Or Group in 2005 to, what’s these guys? What’s the guy with the girl, Fergie?”

Joe’s memoir, The Book of Jose, was released on Tuesday (Nov. 15) and is the most profound examination of the emcee’s life thus far. 

The memoir shares stories about his close relationship with Big Pun, his intense beef with 50 Cent, a lost Jay-Z track, his time in jail, and more. The Book of Jose is available wherever books are sold. 



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Nets win game of the year in Portland, 109-107

That’s better than anything I could do for an introduction. If Twitter is really down for the count, the Brooklyn Nets account is going out with a bang, posting deep-fried images of a guy who came into training camp without a guaranteed contract. But nothing else, certainly nothing else I could come up with, comes close to describing the feeling of the Nets’ 109-107, Thursday night win in Portland in the game of the year, thus far.

And I don’t mean game-of-the-year in a victorious sense. That was the best game the Nets have played this season, factoring in quality of play and entertainment factor. Portland came to play. They created advantages the way we thought they would, with Brooklyn struggling to contain the big body of Jusuf Nurkic. Their trove of wings created all sorts of havoc, with rookie Shaedon Sharpe scoring a career-high 20 points, Jerami Grant playing excellent defense on Kevin Durant (right down to the last possession), and Justise Winslow and Nassir Little leading Portland in plus-minus, through no coincidence. They even opened up an 11-point lead deep in the third quarter, after a see-saw contest up to that point.

It would have been understandable (if not easy to handle) if the Nets had laid down and died at that point. It was, after all, a vaunted final game of a West Coast road trip. Brooklyn was facing a team with a 10-4 record, tops in the Western Conference. The Nets had played so well in the first half, with so many positives, and are potentially looking forward to Kyrie Irving’s return in their next game. All that would have been enough to leave the Moda Center with their heads held high.

Instead, they ended the third quarter with a lead after a 14-0 run. Suddenly, the game became a must-win of sorts; the opportunity for such a life-injecting win was now firmly in their grasp, and letting it slip through would have hurt worse than quietly fading into the night. Brooklyn managed to take advantage of that opportunity.

How’d they do it?

There are a few performances that are responsible for this win. Some were collective, like the help defense, consistent offensive pace, and commitment to rebounding. But I’d like to highlight some individuals. I’d be hard-pressed to not mention Yuta Watanabe first, who went 5-of-7 from deep, and they weren’t all pressure-free practice shots either…

Watch closely: he catches that on the run, in semi-transition, hesitates, re-sets his feet, and drills the triple with a closeout coming. That is most certainly an added-value shot. But it wasn’t just the shooting (or cutting to the basket, which was largely responsible for his six free-throw attempts).

On defense, Watanabe was consistently making the lives of his teammates easier in help, while also snatching contested rebounds. He checked into the game and got the Damian Lillard assignment immediately. Yuta is here to stay, folks, and here to ball.

The second individual performance I want to mention was that of Ben Simmons. This was the first time he was a through-and-through positive on the court. He didn’t just have positive flashes, or moments to build on. He was very good.

Offensively, he attacked the rim fairly consistently, although his finishes are still all finesse, not power. But he and Joe Harris showed type of chemistry in the half-court that you hoped for right when Simmons became a Net. The type of chemistry he had with one J.J. Redick in Philly.

He also played a big hand in getting Brooklyn to push the pace and get into early offense, an offense which experienced much more success than their half-court counterpart. It wasn’t always this easy, and Ben is still wont to pick the ball up way too early, but kick-ahead passes like the below, were consistently resulting in the smooth offensive flow the Nets need:

Simmons was also active and engaged on defense, making timely rotations with the deflections we grew accustomed to seeing from him during his All-Star years. The type of defense that, combined with fellow large athletes in Watanabe, Claxton, and Durant, give Brooklyn an energy that not every team can match. It’s why the Toronto Raptors are hellacious to play, night in and night out. It’s hard to deal with a bunch of rangy 6’10” guys turning the tables around and attacking the offensive player. Aggressiveness doesn’t have to be a one-way street.

“For me, I love those moments,” Simmons said about the Blazers failed attempt at Hack-a-Ben. “I’m not going to shy away. That was their plan. Obviously, it didn’t work. It’s building. I like those moments.”

And finally, Royce O’Neale turned in his first-career triple-double. I wrote, in this game’s preview, that Portland’s tendency to give up many shots at the rim and corner threes should lead to more pick-and-roll or dribble handoffs for Brooklyn, vs. the many Durant post-ups we’ve seen recently. And while Durant did get fairly active in pick-and-roll, the real star of the game, in that regard, was Royce O’Neale:

Many of his 11 assists were of high-value, not merely the swing-swing type off of advantages that had already been created. And that’s before mentioning his game-winning tip-in, which saved Brooklyn from an overtime that they were desperately trying to avoid:

What a win. It’s the type of win that stirs up belief in what this season could become, despite a start that’s been buried under 50 feet of poop. Nothing about this game was a fluke. Damian Lillard’s 24 shots were absolutely all necessary for his 25 points; he wasn’t missing any open ones. Portland shot just two percent worse from deep. They certainly, at times, got the benefit of the whistle, shooting five more freebies than Brooklyn.

Seth Curry gave the Nets solid minutes, but couldn’t hit a shot, and Cam Thomas played seven brutal minutes. Kevin Durant, for all his mind-altering brilliance — 35 poins, had a disastrous final 200 seconds that nearly cost Brooklyn a win. Stuff happens. It is beyond a relief to see Brooklyn push through all of it all of it and come out the other side victorious.

“Without a doubt [this was huge]. We didn’t do everything perfect at the end of the game, and so for us to still stay together, didn’t panic and come through on the other side — that’s huge. A group grows that way,” Jacque Vaughn said after the win. “I’m still excited. … If a coach could draw up a game and ended up winning at the end, that was it.”

Indeed, Thursday night had all the makings of a momentum-building win. They did the hard part; now it’s on the Nets to just capitalize on it.

Chauncey Billups on Nets: It’s always somethin’

Before the game, Trailblazers coach Chauncey Billups remarked on how there is always something going on in Brooklyn … and he didn’t mean basketball.

Asked if he’s seen a team with as much drama as the Nets: “No, other than last time we played. It was different issues, different people. It’s always just something. Its just tough to get going in a situation like. I never played with that type of dysfunction.”

He added, “They’re going through a lot…It seems like they’re always going through a lot.”

If his comments were some sort of psych, it didn’t work.

Milestone Watch

As noted, Royce O’Neale’s triple double was the first of his career.

Kevin Durant added two more milestones: he became the 19th player all-time to score 26,000 points. And with his 35 points, KD has now recorded 25 or more points in 16 games to start the season, tying Michael Jordan’s best start in 1988-89. If he can do it again Sunday, he will be the first NBA player to hit 17 straight in 56 years, when Rick Barry had 25 straight. The NBA record is a long way away. Wilt Chamberlain had 80 in his his magical 1961-62 season.

Ben Simmons double-double was his first in regular season since March 17, 2021.

Kyrie Irving Watch

There is every indication that this game will be the last of Kyrie Irving’s indefinite suspension which turned out to be last eight games (at a loss of roughly $3.5 million.) With Adrian Wojnarowski and Shams Charania reporting it — and no one of the Nets trying to tamp down expectations — things seem set for him to be in uniform Sunday vs. the Grizzlies at Barclays Center.

“I think there’s been some positive synergy and progress towards him returning,” Jacque Vaughn said prior to the game. “It could be as soon as the Memphis game.”

“Just really excited,” Royce O’Neal said. “Just to get everybody back and keep building on what we have going on . . . I mean, just look at the type of player he is. An All-Star-caliber player.”

Irving was suspended by the Nets for a minimum of five games on November 3, a week after he promoted an antisemitic video on Twitter and Instagram. Under terms of the suspension, Irving was supposed to meet six requirements before he could return to court. Shams Charania and Adrian Wojnarowski report that the reinstatement “process” was nearing an end, with Shams reporting Irving had taken “ownership” of said process in recent days.

Irving is averaging 26.9 points, 5.1 rebounds, 5.1 assists, 2.6 threes, 1.4 steals and 1.1 blocks, with shooting splits of 45/28/93.

Next up

Yet another explosive point guard who Brooklyn is probably already sick of: Ja Morant and the Memphis Grizzlies come to Brooklyn on Sunday night. Tip is at 7:00 p.m. ET.

Further another perspective, head on over to Blazers Edge, our SB Nation sister site.

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GOP projected to retake control of the House in key win after Democrats held Senate

Republicans are projected to retake control of the House in the midterm elections, breaking Democrats’ unified control of the federal government, ABC News reports.

Despite other midterm disappointments, that marks a major victory for the party that’s been the chamber’s minority since 2019 — and will be a blow to President Joe Biden’s agenda in Congress.

Democrats already won control of the Senate, securing 50 seats with the opportunity to gain one more in the Georgia runoff next month between incumbent Sen. Raphael Warnock and his Republican opponent, Herschel Walker.

But Republicans, who will take over in the House in January, will now be able to block White House legislative priorities, decide what bills come to the chamber floor and have the opportunity to launch committee investigations into the Biden administration.

Several House Republicans have already said they intend to investigate Hunter Biden, the president’s son, and look into the administration’s policies on COVID-19 and the southern border.

The GOP House leader, California Rep. Kevin McCarthy, was nominated by his colleagues this week to be the next speaker, the chamber’s top position and second in line to the presidency.

“I’m proud to announce the era of one-party, Democrat rule in Washington is over,” McCarthy said after the intraparty leadership vote on Tuesday.

In a tweet on Wednesday night, he wrote, “Americans are ready for a new direction, and House Republicans are ready to deliver.”

Biden also released a statement on Wednesday that alluded to some Republican losses in the midterms but said: “I congratulate Leader McCarthy on Republicans winning the House majority, and am ready to work with House Republicans to deliver results for working families.”

House Minority Leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy speaks as Rep. Kelly Armstrong, Rep. Troy Nehls, Rep. Jim Banks, and House Republican Conference Chair Rep. Elise Stefanik listen during a news conference at the Capitol, June 9, 2022.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

McCarthy unveiled his party’s vision for Republican rule ahead of the midterms. Their “Commitment to America” plan focused on four key areas: creating an “economy that’s strong,” “a nation that’s safe,” “a future that’s built on freedom” and “a government that’s accountable.”

The pitch to voters largely avoided specific policy, instead focusing on criticisms of and contrast with Biden’s leadership — specifically on high inflation and anxiety surrounding crime.

McCarthy also vowed to bring down federal government spending and said Republicans are prepared to seek more congressional oversight for the billions in financial assistance to Ukraine as the nation defends itself from Russia’s invasion.

Republicans had been favored for months to win back control of the chamber, according to FiveThirtyEight’s forecast. Midterms have historically been a referendum on the president’s party.

Just twice in the past 19 midterm cycles — stretching back nearly 40 years — has the president’s party actually gained seats in the House.

But the anticipated “red wave” didn’t fully materialize, as Democrats kept the Senate and limited their losses in the House. Exit polling showed that voters, including independents, favored Democrats on key issues like abortion access despite the public’s disapproval of economic conditions.

“We know our job will not be easy,” McCarthy said on Tuesday. “We know the task. We’ve got a close majority. We’ll have to work together. We want to work with anyone who wants to make America stronger.”

Biden, meanwhile, has celebrated staving off historical headwinds after casting the elections as a choice between Democratic priorities and those of far-right “MAGA Republicans” rather than an appraisal of his first two years as commander-in-chief.

“I’m incredibly pleased by the turnout,” Biden told reporters when Democrats were projected to win the Senate. “And I think it’s a reflection of the quality of our candidates.”

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Tom Brady makes history as Tampa Bay Buccaneers win first-ever regular season game in Germany



CNN
 — 

Tom Brady has become well-accustomed at making history over his long and illustrious NFL career. And on Sunday, the 45-year-old set more historic marks from all the way across the globe.

Brady’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers beat the Seattle Seahawks 21-16 at the Allianz Arena in Germany, the NFL’s first regular season game in the country.

With the victory, Brady became the first quarterback to win an NFL game in three different countries outside of the US.

As a New England Patriot, Brady won all three of the international games he played in, with two in London and one in Mexico City.

And now, he can add Germany to the list as the NFL’s most decorated player adds another accolade to his ever-expanding collection.

After the victory, Brady described the atmosphere in the Allianz Arena – the home of German football giants, Bayern Munich – as “pretty electric.”

“It was a great atmosphere,” he told the NFL Network. “It felt like a pretty hyped up game when we came out for warm-ups.

“It was pretty electric so I hope the German fans got what they wanted. Great win by our team, we needed it. Played against a great opponent, our defense played great and I’m glad we found a way to slug it out and win.”

Despite a tough season prior to Sunday, Brady looked much more like himself, throwing a 31-yard touchdown pass to Julio Jones and with Leonard Fournette running for another as the Buccaneers raced into a 14-0 second lead.

With the Bucs up 14-3 in the third quarter, the team attempted to pull out all the stops as Fournette attempted to throw to Brady though Brady slipped and Fournette was intercepted by Tariq Woolen.

And when Chris Godwin caught a four-yard touchdown pass from Brady early in the fourth quarter, the result looked wrapped up with the score at 21-3.

However, a late comeback from the Seahawks meant the German fans went home with their fair share of excitement.

Tyler Lockett’s touchdown with just over eight minutes narrowed the gap and Brady’s untimely interception to Cody Barton was capitalized on by Seattle as Marquise Goodwin caught a touchdown pass from Seattle quarterback Geno Smith to reduce the deficit to just five with under four minutes to play.

Smith finished the afternoon with 275 passing yards and two touchdown passes.

But, just when they needed it, Tampa Bay produced a time-killing drive to kill the game off behind the running ability of Rachaad White – who ran for a career-high 105 yards – and secure the team’s fifth victory of the season and second in a row.

The Bucs now head into their bye week atop the NFC South and looking much more like the team that was predicted to vie for a Super Bowl ring.

For the Seahawks, after a promising start to the season, they fall to 6-4, but head back to the West coast of the US with their heads held high after showing resolve late on.



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Anthony Davis leads Lakers to win after reassuring Darvin Ham, ‘I got your back’

LOS ANGELES — Feeling the pressure of a 2-10 start to his tenure as coach of the Los Angeles Lakers, Darvin Ham received some words of reassurance from All-Star big man Anthony Davis heading into Sunday’s game against the Brooklyn Nets.

“Had a real good conversation with [Davis] after our last game, our last loss,” Ham said following the Lakers’ 116-103 win over the Nets that snapped a five-game losing streak. “And he just said, ‘I got your back, Coach.’ And that was huge for me being a first-time head coach and having a player of that magnitude just constantly try and do everything you ask him to do.”

Davis had Ham’s back — and had Brooklyn’s number, filling up the stat sheet with season highs in both points (37) and rebounds (18).

Davis, who already was enjoying a bounce-back season after missing more than half of the Lakers’ games over the past two seasons because of injuries, had gone missing in the second half during several recent losses.

Before Sunday’s contest, Ham said it was on Davis to remedy the lack of touches on his own.

“Just him demanding the ball,” Ham said. “It starts with that.”

It actually started before the game for Davis. An avid Green Bay Packers fan, Davis said he was motivated by seeing Green Bay upset the Dallas Cowboys.

“I was watching the Packers game before … and Aaron Rodgers threw a slant to Allen Lazard, he ran for like 40 yards. And he started [screaming] and flexing and all that, and it got me some motivation before the game,” Davis said. “Just trying to dominate. Be dominant. Knowing that we had to get this win, knowing that a lot of guys — especially with [LeBron James] out — a lot of guys lean on me to try to get the job done.”

Davis went 15-for-25 from the field — with 23 of his attempts coming inside the paint — and 7-for-7 from the free throw line.

“I was trying to get to the paint and score inside, knowing that they had limited shot-blocking,” Davis said. “When you set the screen, our guards attack downhill, attack [Nic] Claxton or [Markieff] Morris and just put it on the rim. They miss, then I have a guard on me, so I have a chance for an opportunity for an offensive rebound and get a score there.”

Davis had more offensive rebounds individually (10) than the Nets had as a team (eight).

“AD played like a monster tonight,” Lakers point guard Patrick Beverley said. “And everyone played off of him.”

The Lakers hope to have everyone available for the first time all season in their next game against the Detroit Pistons at home on Friday.

James has missed the past two tilts with a left groin strain, and Dennis Schroder and Thomas Bryant have yet to make their season debut while they both recover from thumb surgery.

By virtue of a scheduling quirk, the Lakers will get four days off this week without a game to rest, rehab and prepare for the Pistons.

“We wanted to win tonight, for sure. Let us feel good going into this off week before Friday’s game,” Davis said. “It gives a chance for guys to kind of get away from the game for a couple days and reset and come back with a mentality that we got to run off some [wins] in a row.”

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49ers observations: Defense takes over in crucial 22-16 win over Chargers

SANTA CLARA — After a rough start on both sides of the ball, the 49ers got rolling in the second half against the Los Angeles Chargers.

The 49ers completed the sweep of their three games against teams stationed in Southern California with a 22-16 victory over the Chargers on Sunday night at Levi’s Stadium.

Quarterback Justin Herbert led the Chargers on an easy game-opening touchdown drive. The 49ers’ defense kept them out of the end zone over the final 51 1/2 minutes of the game.

Talanoa Hufanga clinched the game with an interception with less than a minute to play.

The 49ers (5-4) now hit the road. The team will travel to practice in the elevation of Colorado Springs during the week to get acclimated for the Mexico City, where they will face the Arizona Cardinals next Monday night.

But, first, here’s a look at three takeaways from their game against the Chargers (5-4):

49ers turning into a second-half team

The 49ers gained a game on the Seattle Seahawks in the NFC West standing with the come-from-behind victory about 12 hours after the Seahawks lost to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Munich, Germany.

The Seahawks still lead the division with a 6-4 record, while the 49ers improved to 5-4 with their second victory in two games over a team from Los Angeles.

The 49ers turned to the running game, and Jimmy Garoppolo helped the team keep a couple of big drives along with third-down conversions.

The 49ers took their first lead of the game on Christian McCaffrey’s 2-yard touchdown midway through the fourth quarter for a 19-16 lead.

 

Garoppolo completed 19 of 28 pass attempts for 240 yards. He didn’t throw any touchdown passes and wasn’t intecepted.

But the 49ers, as expected, relied heavily on their run game.

The 49ers gained 158 yards on 40 rushing attempts. 

Elijah Mitchell returned after missing seven games with a knee sprain. He led the 49ers with 89 yards rushing on 18 carries.
McCaffrey added 38 yards and a touchdown on 14 carries.

Greenlaw ejected after hit deemed illegal

Linebacker Dre Greenlaw was penalized, but the Chargers might have received the bigger short-term penalty.

On a third-and-6 play from the 49ers’ 40-yard line, Herbert took off running. Greenlaw made a helmet-to-helmet hit on Herbert at the end of the 5-yard gain.

Greenlaw was penalized for unnecessary roughness, and he was ejected from the game because his hit on Herbert was judged to be flagrant.

While Greenlaw was forced to head to the locker room, Herbert was removed from the game in order to be evaluated for a possible head injury.

Backup quarterback Chase Daniel entered for the final three plays of the first half. He twice threw incomplete and was sacked by Jordan Willis on third down.

Cameron Dicker came on for a 40-yard field goal to give the Chargers a 16-10 lead at halftime.

Herbert was cleared and returned to action in the second half, but the Chargers settled for three points instead of the touchdown that had a better chance of happening with Herbert at quarterback.

Slow start coming off bye week

The 49ers played their best half of football heading into the bye week.

They did not carry over that momentum two Sundays later.

The 49ers’ offense has been a lot more about “potential” than it has been about “potent” — even with a long list of playmakers on that side of the football.

After steamrolling the Los Angeles Rams in the second half of a 31-14 victory in Week 8, all the talk was about the 49ers’ limitless number of offensive playmakers. The 49ers have yet to show that offensive explosiveness on a consistent basis.

The 49ers opened with a 14-play, 67-yard drive that netted them just three points.

Then, the rest of the first half was horrendous.

Brandon Aiyuk fumbled on the first play of the 49ers’ next drive after a 19-yard reception.

That was followed by consecutive three-and-out possessions. Mitch Wishnowsky’s punt was deflected, which set up the Chargers’ second field goal of the game and a 13-3 lead in the second quarter.

RELATED: Cardinals’ Ertz reportedly not expected to play vs. 49ers in Week 11

The 49ers finally got something going on their final drive of the first half.

Garoppolo hit George Kittle for 21 yards and Ray-Ray McCloud for 33 yards.

Garoppolo took it the final yard for his seventh rushing touchdown of his career.

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NFL Week 10 grades: Tom Brady’s Buccaneers earn an ‘A-‘ for win in Germany; Raiders get an ‘F’ for ugly loss

The Buccaneers might want to see if they can get all of their games moved to Germany.

With the team in an offensive rut, the trip to Munich seemed to fix nearly everything as Tampa Bay held off Seattle 21-16 in what was the NFL’s first regular-season game ever played in Germany. 

After struggling for most of the past seven weeks, the Buccaneers finally caught fire on the offensive side of the ball: They had their longest run of the season (29 yards), their longest touchdown play of the season (31 yards) and Tom Brady actually looked like Tom Brady. 

Although Brady did throw an interception late in the game, he was on point on nearly every other throw as he completed 22 of 29 passes for 258 yards and two touchdowns, marking just the second time this year he’s thrown for multiple touchdowns in a game. 

Brady’s first TD pass was a big one: On a third-and-10 in the second quarter, the Buccaneers were staring at the possibility of a field goal attempt, but then Brady found Julio Jones for a 31-yard TD. 

That touchdown gave the Buccaneers an early 7-0 lead and they never looked back. If you’re wondering how bad Tampa Bay’s offense had been this season, just consider this: Jones’ score was the longest touchdown of the year for the Bucs. Before that play, the Buccaneers’ longest TD came from just 28 yards out. Jones finished with three catches for 53 yards on a day where three different receivers went over the 50-yard mark. 

If you want a taste of how accurate Brady was, here’s a 25-yard pass he through to Cade Otton in the third quarter. 

Although Brady was huge, he wasn’t the only reason why Tampa Bay’s offense was so effective. The Buccaneers’ rushing attack finally showed up and it helped Tampa Bay control the game. 

Going into Week 10, the Bucs were on pace to be the worst rushing team in NFL history with an average of just 60.7 yards per game through the first nine weeks. In Germany, they had more than 2.5 times that total with a season-high 161 yards. 

Rachaad White, who hadn’t rushed for more than 27 yards in any game this season, shocked everyone with a 105-yard performance. The rookie even had one of the most electrifying plays of the game when he stiff-armed Quandre Diggs out of the stadium on a 29-yard run, which was the longest running play of the season for the Buccaneers. 

White also iced the game with 34 rushing yards on Tampa Bay’s game-sealing drive. 

The Buccaneers haven’t looked like one of the top teams in the NFC through the first 10 weeks, but they still have Brady and they still have a talented roster. With their win over the NFC West’s first-place team, the Buccaneers are proving they could be a dangerous team down the stretch. In 2020, the Bucs had five losses heading into their bye before eventually winning the Super Bowl and with Sunday’s win in Germany moving them to 5-5, that’s exactly where they are heading into this year’s bye. 

Alright, let’s get to the grades for every game from Week 10. If you’re looking for a deeper dive on the Panthers’ win over the Falcons that was played Thursday, be sure to click here.

Tampa Bay 21-16 over Seattle in Germany

Seahawks-Buccaneers grades by John Breech (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

Minnesota 33-30 over Buffalo (OT)

Vikings-Bills grades by John Breech (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

Detroit 31-30 over Chicago

Lions-Bears grades by John Breech (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

Kansas City 27-17 over Jacksonville

Jaguars-Chiefs grades by John Breech (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

Miami 39-17 over Cleveland

Browns-Dolphins grades by John Breech (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

N.Y. Giants 24-16 over Houston

Texans-Giants grades by John Breech (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

Pittsburgh 20-10 over New Orleans

Saints-Steelers grades by Bryan DeArdo (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

Tennessee 17-10 over Denver

Broncos-Titans grades by Jordan Dajani (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

Indianapolis 25-20 over Las Vegas

Colts-Raiders grades by John Breech (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

Green Bay 31-28 over Dallas (OT)

Cowboys-Packers grades by Cody Benjamin (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let him know on Twitter.)

Arizona 27-17 over L.A. Rams

Cardinals-Rams grades by Shanna McCarriston (Love the grades? Hate the grades? Let her know on Twitter.)

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Tennessee vs. Missouri score, takeaways: No. 5 Volunteers dominate second half in bounce-back win over Tigers

No. 5 Tennessee put the disappointment of its first loss behind it in emphatic fashion as the Volunteers cruised to a 66-24 win over Missouri at Neyland Stadium. The SEC East showdown carried major postseason implications for both teams, and while the Tigers pushed Tennessee at times in the game, they ultimately had no answer for the Vols’ explosive offense.

Redshirt senior quarterback Hendon Hooker reignited his Heisman Trophy hopes with over 400 yards of total offense and four touchdowns as the Volunteers racked up a program-record 724 yards and set a school record for most points scored in an SEC game. When Missouri drew within 28-24 early in the third quarter, the Volunteers ticked off three straight touchdowns drives of 67 yards or longer to retake control of the game. Ultimately, they scored the game’s final 38 points and didn’t slow down even when backup quarterback Joe Milton entered late.

After finishing with just 289 total yards in a 27-13 loss at Georgia last week, Tennessee accumulated 365 yards in the first half alone. While Missouri quarterback Brady Cook gave the Volunteers defense fits with his scrambling ability at times, Tennessee came up with seven three-and-outs in the game as a sellout crowd offered support on the program’s Senior Day.

With the win, Tennessee finishes the home portion of its schedule unbeaten for the first time since 2007 as the Volunteers hit the road for games against South Carolina and Vanderbilt to close the regular season. At 9-1, Tennessee has now matched its best season win total since that ’07 season with at least three games still remaining.

College Football Playoff implications

With Georgia set to clinch the SEC East with a win in either of its next two games, Tennessee will likely need to earn a College Football Playoff berth as a one-loss squad that did not play in its conference championship game. That has only happened twice before in the eight years of the CFP’s existence. But Saturday marked a start toward redemption for Tennessee after the disappointing showing against the Bulldogs knocked the Vols from the No. 1 spot. 

The Volunteers could not afford another slip up, and they probably need some style points to help their case. That might explain why second-year coach Josh Heupel kept airing it out with the game out of reach and Milton in the game. Things got chippy when Tennessee scored its final touchdown with just 36 seconds on the clock, but if the goal was to make a statement with a dominant victory, then the extra pair of touchdowns in the final minutes helped accomplish that goal.

Hooker’s highlights

The Heisman Trophy race is still wide open, but Hooker needed a big game to revitalize his hopes after Georgia’s defense stymied Tennessee’s offense last week. The redshirt senior delivered through the air and on the ground to keep his name firmly in the race. He finished 25-of-35 passing for 355 yards with three touchdowns while also running for 54 yards and a score. 

Hooker has now thrown for 24 touchdowns and just two interceptions with another five scores on the ground. The Virginia Tech transfer positioned himself to surpass 3,000 yards passing for the season next week against South Carolina.

Running back depth

While Tennessee’s aerial attack was on display with Bru McCoy and Jalin Hyatt each surpassing 100 yards receiving, its rushing game was on point against Missouri as well. Hooker, Jabari Small, Jaylen Wright and Dylan Sampson each rattled off runs of 19 yards or more as the Vols averaged 7.1 yards per rush attempt. Sampson’s performance was particularly noteworthy as the true freshman ran eight times for 98 yards and a score.

The workload marked his largest in a conference game this season, and the former three-star prospect made a compelling case to be a larger part of the running back rotation moving forward. With Tennessee leading just 35-24 in the third quarter, Sampson rattled off runs of 42 yards and 15 yards on consecutive plays to set up a 2-yard touchdown strike from Hooker to Princeton Fant.

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