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Injury sidelines Beckham, brings Giants to crossroads

October 9, 2017 by  
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Odell Beckham sat on a cart Sunday afternoon holding up his broken ankle with one hand, while his other hand covered his face with his jersey. This is why underpaid players hold out for new contracts.

This worst-case scenario of Beckham’s season — the Giants confirmed he had a fractured ankle while NFL Network’s Kimberley Jones said Beckham will undergo an MRI to look for ligament damage — mirrors the Giants’ franchise dive into 0-5 irrelevance following Sunday’s 27-22 loss to the Chargers. The conversation in New York will turn to coach Ben McAdoo’s job security and the possibility of earning the No. 1 overall draft pick next April. NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reported Sunday morning that McAdoo is not currently on the hot seat, “the Giants believe he is still a future very successful coach,” per Rapoport. For Beckham, it makes an uncertain future even cloudier.


Beckham has spoken about his desire to be the highest paid player in the NFL at any position, wanting to help “change the game” by getting superstar money in the same manner as the NBA’s biggest names. Beckham chose not to withhold his services during training camp this season despite his $1.839 million salary in 2017 placing him outside the top-60 highest paid players at his position. Team owner John Mara said this summer that the Giants were “going to pay” Beckham with a long-term deal more fitting of his talent. Mara allowed that it was a “possibility” Beckham could get that deal next offseason, although the aftermath of this injury will make it more complicated.

Beckham is under contract through 2018 after the Giants picked up the fifth-year option in his rookie deal, which should pay him in the range of $8.5 million. (That figure comes from averaging the third through 25th-highest paid receivers in football.) Beckham’s recovery timetable has yet to be established, but the team eventually will have to decide whether it wants to offer a top-of-the-market deal to a player coming off a serious injury. Giants brass might have to balance their significant leverage with what Beckham has clearly earned through his superlative play in his first three-plus seasons.

This was supposed to be the season that Beckham took his incredible star wattage to another level. Nike signed him to the highest-paid shoe contract in NFL history this summer, but this injury puts all his touchdown celebrations and brand building on hold. The same could be true for this Giants offense and its entire season.


When Beckham got to his knee Sunday to pump life into a football after scoring a 48-yard touchdown, it was easy to imagine a different type of Giants season. In this alternate universe, Beckham never suffered a high-ankle sprain in the preseason that handicapped the start to his season. The Giants season that so many imagined ending at the Super Bowl surely wouldn’t have included fellow starting wideouts Brandon Marshall and Sterling Shepard also getting sidelined Sunday with their own ankle injuries. It wouldn’t have the team’s vaunted defense ranked No. 28 in Football Outsiders’ metrics entering Week 5, before it gave up 10 fourth-quarter points Sunday to the Chargers.

Beckham carried this offense last season in a manner that few, if any, NFL receivers could. His Week 1 absence and limited health in September helped prove that point all over again. Now the weight of salvaging respect for this Giants season rests on the shoulders of McAdoo, who hasn’t always looked up to the task because of predictable play calling and questionable game management decisions. The Giants head to Denver next week and then host the Seahawks before what could be an extremely uncomfortable Week 8 bye without a victory.

Beckham’s contract will be put on the backburner while he recovers and his franchise attends to the pressing matter of this depressing 2017 season. While quarterback Eli Manning has hardly been the Giants’ biggest problem over the last three weeks, he and McAdoo will need to find a way to win some games before Beckham steps on the field again.

If not, the Giants could find themselves in position much like 2004: Drafting a new franchise quarterback for a brand-new head coach.

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Project Loon gets federal clearance to provide cell service to Puerto Rico

October 8, 2017 by  
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Puerto Rico Governor: Focused on getting resources

Giant floating balloons could help deliver internet and cell service to storm-ravaged Puerto Rico.

The Federal Communications Commission has issued an “experimental license” to X, the moonshot outfit owned by Google’s parent company, Alphabet (GOOG), to try and provide service to the ailing island.

The project — called Loon — could help restore some communications capabilities after Hurricane Maria wiped out Puerto Rico’s infrastructure.

More than two weeks after the storm, about 82% of the island is still without cell service, the FCC said Saturday.

“We need to take innovative approaches to help restore connectivity on the island. Project Loon is one such approach,” Chairman Ajit Pai said in a statement. “It could help provide the people of Puerto Rico with access to cellular service to connect with loved ones and access life-saving information.”

Related: Project Loon helps bring the internet to flooded Peru

The project, however, is not without its challenges.

Loon works like floating cell towers. Giant balloons are sent about 12 miles up into the Earth’s atmosphere. From there, they must work with an on-the-ground telecommunications system. For that to happen, X needs to partner with a telecom company that can provide that connectivity.

The system has been proven to work. Earlier this year, X said balloons over Peru were able to provide key coverage as the country was plagued by floods.

But the reason Loon was up-and-running so quickly in Peru was because X had already been working alongside Telefónica (TEF). Their systems were already integrated and tests were conducted in the months before Loon ramped up its internet coverage to help flooded areas.

In Puerto Rico, however, X essentially had to start at square one.

Spokesperson Libby Leahy said X is making “solid progress on this next step,” but the company declined to indicate a potential time frame for when the project could come online.

–CNN Tech’s Selena Larson contributed to this report.

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