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NFL Week 5: JJ Watt fractures leg, Odell Beckham Jr. ankle; VP Pence leaves Colts game

October 9, 2017 by  
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J.J. Watt is helped off the field after being injured in the first quarter against the Kansas City Chiefs. (Bob Levey/Getty Images)

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The Houston Texans entered Sunday night with a heap of momentum after a blowout win the following week, but faced a tough task in Alex Smith and the Kansas City Chiefs. Their task got heaps more difficult in the first quarter, as star defensive player J.J. Watt left the game after suffering what was later confirmed to be a fractured tibial plateau. Watt walked off the field with help but then was carted to the locker room for further evaluation.

Watt missed the final 13 games of last season with a back injury. The three-time NFL defensive player of the year played in 85 consecutive games for the Texans in his first five NFL seasons, but will not miss significant time in back-to-back years.

Sunday was a rough afternoon for the New York Giants, too. During the team’s 27-22 loss to the Chargers, which dropped the Giants’ record to 0-5 on the season, they lost four receivers to injury, including star wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr.

Beckham appeared to be sobbing as he was carted off the field during the fourth quarter of the loss, after suffering a gruesome injury in which his left foot and ankle were bent awkwardly and pinned under a tackling defender. The team tweeted after the game that Beckham had suffered a fractured ankle.

Brandon Marshall was carted off the field in the first half after suffering an apparent left ankle injury of his own. Fellow wide receiver Sterling Shepard had left the game just a few plays earlier, also with a left ankle injury. Both were ruled out for the rest of the game. Dwayne Harris was the fourth injured wide receiver, with a fractured foot, leaving Roger Lewis Jr. as the only healthy Giants wideout by the end of the game.

The Giants, who made the playoffs last season after an 11-5 campaign, are one of only three winless teams in the NFL. The 49ers fell to 0-5 after losing in overtime to the Colts, 26-23. The Browns fell to 0-5 Sunday after a 17-14 loss to the Jets, with rookie quarterback DeShone Kizer getting benched at halftime for Kevin Hogan. On the plus side, No. 1 overall pick Myles Garrett made his pro debut and recorded two sacks. But as The Post’s Mark Maske writes, the success of Carson Wentz with the Eagles — who improved to 4-1 and are the NFC East leaders following a 34-7 win over the Cardinals — provides a frustrating reminder for Cleveland fans of the QB they could have had with the No. 2 pick in the 2016 NFL Draft.

Ben Roethlisberger had a frustrating day of his own, throwing five interceptions — including a pair of pick-sixes — in the Steelers’ 30-9 loss to the Jaguars. After the game, Roethlisberger said: “Maybe I don’t have it anymore.” When asked to clarify, he said “I’m not playing well enough.” The Post’s Des Bieler has more on Roethlisberger here.

Jacksonville was one of the owners of the most impressive wins of the day, improving to 3-2 for the season, along with the Eagles (mentioned above) and Panthers, who are 4-1 following a 27-24 win over the Lions.

But the most impressive individual performance might have come courtesy of Aaron Rodgers, who led the Packers on a game-winning touchdown drive in the final minute to defeat the Cowboys, 35-31. Rodgers’ 18-yard scramble on third down help set up a 12-yard touchdown pass two plays later from Rodgers to Davante Adams with 11 seconds left. Rodgers’ heroics came after Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott gave Dallas a 31-28 lead on an 11-yard touchdown run with just over a minute to go in the game. Prescott threw for three touchdowns as well.

The win improves Green Bay’s record to 4-1, as the Packers lead the NFC North and are tied with the Eagles and Panthers for the best record in the conference.



Vice President Pence leaves Colts-49ers game after San Francisco players protest during anthem

Vice President Pence walked out on the Indianapolis Colts’ game against the San Francisco 49ers Sunday afternoon after a large number of the 49ers players took a knee during the playing of the national anthem.

Pence announced his departure via his Twitter account, writing: “I left today’s Colts game because @POTUS [President Trump] and I will not dignify any event that disrespects our soldiers, our Flag, or our National Anthem.”

According to NBC Sports reporter Matt Maiocco, 23 members of the 49ers knelt during the anthem.

The 49ers, the former team of Colin Kaepernick who began the kneeling anthem protests last season, have demonstrated throughout the 2017 season as well. Based upon initial reports via social media, most players appeared to stand for the anthem during the NFL’s 1 p.m. games, with the 49ers the notable exception.

Following the game, 49ers safety Eric Reid called Pence’s visit to the game and early exit a “PR stunt” in comments to reporters, adding “this is what systemic oppression looks like.”

Pence’s decision comes at a time when Kaepernick, a free agent since March, reiterated over the weekend that, should an NFL team sign him, he would stand for the anthem. Kaepernick said in March that he no longer wants his method of protest to detract from the positive change he believes has been created, sources told ESPN. He also said the amount of national discussion on social inequality — as well as support from other athletes nationwide, including NFL and NBA players — affirmed the message he was trying to deliver.

Despite the demonstration by the Niners and Pence’s early departure from the Colts game, protests were not nearly as prevalent during Week 5’s 1 p.m. games. That continued a trend that began in Week 4 when more teams instead stood, linking arms for the song and there was an acknowledgment that perhaps the message was being lost, co-opted by some groups who were claiming it was aimed at military members rather than police brutality. In Miami, three members of the Dolphins continued a protest they began last season, with Julius Thomas, Kenny Stills and Michael Thomas choosing not to take the field for the anthem. That came after owner Stephen Ross said before the game: “I think it’s incumbent upon the players today, because of how the public is looking at it, is to stand and salute the flag.”

After the Cowboys lost to the Packers, Jerry Jones told reporters, “If there is anything disrespecting the flag, then we will not play. Period.” Two of Jones’s players, Damontre Moore and David Irving, raised their fists while the national anthem played. In Week 3, Jones joined his players on the field and knelt with them before the anthem, then linked arms and stood for the playing of “The Star-Stangled Banner.”

“We’re going to respect the flag, and I’m going to create the perception of it,” Jones said Sunday. “And we have. … We as a team are very much on the page together. We have made our expression that we’re together.”

A number of players who previously knelt or sat during the anthem earlier this season took a new approach, in part because they were hearing boos from fans during the anthem. In Green Bay, players heard it loud and clear after asking fans to join them in linking arms.

“Beauty is, it’s a free country so they can choose to do it or not. The messaging toward this unfortunately needs to continue to be redirected, I think. It’s never been about the national anthem. It’s never been about the military.” quarterback Aaron Rodgers said. “We’re all patriotic in the locker room. We love our troops. This is about something bigger than that — an invitation to show unity in the face of some divisiveness from the top in this country and I’m proud of our guys.”

The message was muddled over the first month of the season, with President Trump calling for NFL owners to suspend or fire players who took a knee for the anthem, calling any who do a “son of a bitch.” A false, Photoshopped image of the Seattle Seahawks’ Michael Bennett burning a flag in the locker room became a widely shared meme designed to stir up passions. The Seahawks took the next step in their activism, announcing the creation of an educational fund.

“In an effort to create lasting change and build a more compassionate and inclusive society, we are launching the Seahawks Players Equality Justice for All Action Fund to support education and leadership programs addressing equality and justice,” the team tweeted Sept. 29. “We invite you to join us in donating and taking action.”

The efforts may not have led to results that are more conversational than nationally tangible, but the players pledge that their activism will not end and it’s likely to become an issue again if it shows up in the president’s Twitter feed. In a memo to Goodell, Bennett, Philadelphia Eagles Torrey Smith and Malcolm Jenkins and retired player Anquan Boldin requested that the NFL designate a month, as it does for Breast Cancer awareness in October, to highlight player activism and community engagement.

“To counter the vast amount of press attention being referred to as the ‘national anthem protests’ versus the large amount of grass roots work that many players around the league have invested their time and resources, we would like to request a league wide initiative that would include a month dedicated to a campaign initiative and related events,” the memo stated. “Similarly to what the league already implements for breast cancer awareness, honoring military, etc., we would like November to serve as a month of Unity for individual teams to engage and impact the community in their market.”

Their activism has taken root, down to the high school level and over to the NBA. Although Trump cited declining TV ratings for the NFL, those have improved as the games have and as areas in Texas and Florida have begun to recover from hurricane damage. Players are not backing down, even though the question has always been how to use their platform.

“I’ve heard people say that my colleagues and I are un-American and unpatriotic,” Jenkins wrote in a Washington Post essay. “Well, we want to make America great. We want to help make our country safe and prosperous. We want a land of justice and equality. True patriotism is loving your country and countrymen enough to want to make it better.”

The can’t miss game: It has to be Packers-Cowboys, at 4:25 p.m. EDT. Remember what happened when the teams met in a divisional playoff game in January? Rodgers hit Jared Cook with an impossibly angled pass that Cook hauled in as he tiptoed along the sideline. That led to Mason Crosby’s game-winner field goal, but the backstory on the pass play is fascinating. Although everyone assumed that Rodgers essentially drew it up in the dirt because of the way cameras caught him directing players in the huddle, he burst that illusion.

“The things that I do on the field, most of the time come with deep thought and contemplation — weeks, months before they actually happen,” Rodgers told the State Journal’s Jason Wilde last week. “Sometimes days, sometimes even hours. Sometimes I think of something before a game, and say, ‘Hey, we get this situation, I might check to this’ or ‘I’m thinking maybe this.’ But plays like that one last year, that is something I thought about for a few months.”

The hard part is getting it from his brain into his teammates’.

“I thought about it for a few months and how to call it and how to kind of put it in so guys would know what to do. And that’s how kind of my brain works at times. Things hit me in the moment and you learn to just … trust it.”

A Vegas presence: The Raiders’ helmet decal pays tribute to the victims of last week’s shooting in the city that will one day be their home.

Pity Nick Folk: The Bucs’ kicking situation is not improving. (Read more.)

The biggest surprises so far: Let’s separate illusion from reality. (Read more.)

Terrelle Pryor Sr. says he was called the n-word: The NFL is investigating the allegation by the Washington Redskins’ receiver. (Read more.)

What ails Christian McCaffrey? Really, not that much. (Read more.)

The Redskins like where they are: At 2-2 and with a Week 5 bye, the team believes it can do something special. (Read more.)

Where’s Tony?: Sadly, the Packers-Cowboys game is on Fox, which means no Tony Romo. In addition to learning again last week that he’s good at this TV thing, we discovered (courtesy of his wife, Candice) that he warms up by singing Cold Play.

Bye, bye: The first bye week of the season has arrived with the Atlanta Falcons, Denver Broncos, New Orleans Saints and Redskins all off. That’s fortuitous timing for the Saints, with Hurricane Nate expected in the region.


Injury News

The most intriguing injury update concerns Oakland Raiders quarterback Derek Carr, who suffered a fracture of his transverse process (the bony protuberances on vertebrae). Although the injury can take two-to-six weeks’ recovery time, he was listed Friday as “questionable” after being a limited participant in practice Thursday and Friday. (Tony Romo, for reference, missed only one game after suffering a similar injury a few years ago.) However, by Sunday morning, reports were counting him out. EJ Manuel started in his place.

Davante Adams, the Packers’ wide receiver, played Sunday and caught the game-winning touchdown. Adams was hospitalized overnight after being knocked out in the team’s victory Sept. 28. He has cleared concussion protocol and ESPN’s Rob Demovsky reports that he has cleared the concussion protocol and traveled with the team to Dallas.

Although the Tennessee Titans have listed Marcus Mariota as questionable, he is out Sunday after being limited all week with a hamstring injury. Matt Cassel is expected to start, with Brandon Weeden as his backup.

Myles Garrett, the defensive end who was the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft, made his debut for the Cleveland Browns after nursing an ankle injury since training camp and quickly got his wish for a “fat guy’s touchdown,” a sack, on his first play.

Here are the notable actives and inactives for 1 p.m., via ESPN’s Field Yates:

And the more comprehensive 1 p.m. list:

Inactive

WR Chester Rogers (questionable, hamstring)
WR Kenny Britt (doubtful, knee)
QB Marcus Mariota (questionable, hamstring)
RB Wendell Smallwood (questionable, knee)
CB Juston Burris (questionable, foot)
LB Jamie Collins Sr. (doubtful, concussion)
S Jarrod Wilson (questionable, shoulder)
DE Olivier Vernon (questionable, ankle)
CB E.J. Gaines (questionable, groin)
DT Jordan Phillips (questionable, ankle)
CB Byron Maxwell (questionable, hamstring)
DT Destiny Vaeao (questionable, wrist)
S Jaylen Watkins (questionable, hamstring)

Active

WR Marquise Goodwin (questionable, concussion)
WR Marqise Lee (questionable, ribs)
WR Tyrell Williams (questionable, neck)
WR John Brown (questionable, quadriceps)
WR J.J. Nelson (questionable, hamstring)
CB Rashaan Melvin (questionable, hamstring)
DE Muhammad Wilkerson (questionable, shoulder)
LB Jatavis Brown (questionable, ankle)
DE Jason Pierre-Paul (questionable, shoulder)
DE Avery Moss (questionable, shoulder)
CB Shareece Wright (questionable, back)
S Micah Hyde (questionable, knee)
LB Jordan Evans (questionable, hamstring)
DE Julius Peppers (questionable, shoulder)
DE Mario Addison (questionable, knee)
DT Haloti Ngata (questionable, shoulder)
DE Ezekiel Ansah (questionable, knee)
LB Tahir Whitehead (questionable, pectoral)
LB Jarrad Davis (questionable, neck)
LB Mike Hull (questionable, shoulder)
CB Xavien Howard (questionable, shoulder)
S Corey Graham (questionable, hamstring)

 

Questionable, 4 p.m. and Sunday Night games

Offense

WR Jeremy Maclin (questionable, hand)
TE Benjamin Watson (questionable, calf)
QB Derek Carr (questionable, back)
RB DeAndre Washington (questionable, hamstring)
WR Davante Adams (questionable, concussion)
S Lardarius Webb (questionable, thigh)
CB Jimmy Smith (questionable, Achilles)
S Anthony Levine Sr. (questionable, thigh)
CB David Amerson (questionable, concussion)
CB Gareon Conley (questionable, shin)
LB Michael Wilhoite (questionable, hamstring)
DE Mike Daniels (questionable, hip)
LB Ahmad Brooks (questionable, back)
CB Davon House (questionable, quadriceps)
CB Quinten Rollins (questionable, ankle)
DT Stephen Paea (questionable, knee)
LB Sean Lee (questionable, hamstring)
CB Nolan Carroll II (questionable, concussion)
CB Anthony Brown (questionable, ankle)

Doubtful, 4 p.m. and Sunday Night games

RB C.J. Prosise (doubtful, ankle)
RB Ty Montgomery (doubtful, ribs)
CB Jeremy Lane (doubtful, groin)
S Lamarcus Joyner (doubtful, hamstring)

Notable players ruled out Sunday

Andrew Luck

Fletcher Cox

D.J. Humphries

John Ross

Tyler Eifert

Ryan Kalil

Mike Williams

Matt Forte

Kony Ealy

Johnathan Cyprien

 


Fantasy football advice

Trade advice: There are five moves you absolutely must make right now. (Read more.)

Fantasy scout: Here’s what you need to be watching this week. (Read more.)

Week 5 cheat sheet: Everything you need to know before you set your lineup. (Read more.)

Takeaways and tips: What we learned from Week 4. (Read more.)

The Fantasy Football Beat

The Post’s fantasy football experts tell you how to beat the waiver rush. (Listen.)


ATS Betting Tips/Picks

The top trends and insights from Las Vegas. (Read more.)

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Trump administration releases hard-line immigration principles, threatening deal on ‘dreamers’

October 9, 2017 by  
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The Trump administration released a list of hard-line immigration principles late Sunday that threaten to derail a deal in Congress to allow hundreds of thousands of younger undocumented immigrants to remain in the country legally.

The administration’s wish list includes the funding of a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, a crackdown on the influx of Central American minors and curbs on federal grants to “sanctuary cities,” according to a document distributed to Congress and obtained by The Washington Post.

The demands were quickly denounced by Democratic leaders in Congress who had hoped to forge a deal with President Trump to protect younger immigrants, known as “dreamers,” who were brought to the United States illegally as children. Trump announced plans last month to phase out the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, an Obama-era program that had provided two-year work permits to the dreamers that Trump called “unconstitutional.”

About 690,000 immigrants are enrolled in DACA, but their work permits are set to begin expiring in March. Trump had met last month with Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and agreed to try to strike a deal, worrying immigration hawks who feared that Trump would support a bill that would allow dreamers to gain full legal status without asking for significant border security measures in return.

The list released by the administration, however, would represent a major tightening of immigration laws. Cuts to legal immigration also are included. And, while Democrats have called for a path to citizenship for all dreamers, a group estimated at more than 1.5 million, a White House aide said Sunday night the administration is “not interested in granting a path to citizenship” in a deal to preserve the DACA program.


President Trump prepares to leave for Greensboro, N.C., on Saturday. (Yuri Gripas/Reuters)

“The administration can’t be serious about compromise or helping the Dreamers if they begin with a list that is anathema to the Dreamers, to the immigrant community and to the vast majority of Americans,” Schumer and Pelosi said in a joint statement Sunday evening. “We told the President at our meeting that we were open to reasonable border security measures … but this list goes so far beyond what is reasonable. This proposal fails to represent any attempt at compromise.”

In a conference call with reporters, White House aides described the proposals as necessary to protect public safety and jobs for American-born workers, which was a centerpiece of Trump’s campaign. The president has moved to tighten border security through executive orders, including curbs on immigration and refugees from some majority-Muslim nations and an increase in deportations.

The number of immigrants who have attempted to enter the country illegally across the Mexican border has decreased sharply since Trump took office.

Democrats had hoped that Trump, who had equivocated over the DACA program before deciding to terminate it in the face of a legal challenge from Texas, would be open to crafting a narrow legislative deal to protect the dreamers. But White House aides emphasized that they expect Congress to include the principles released Sunday in any package deal, a nonstarter for Democrats and some moderate Republicans.

“These findings outline reforms that must be included as part of any legislation addressing the status of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) recipients,” Trump wrote in a letter to Congress. “Without these reforms, illegal immigration and chain migration, which severely and unfairly burden American workers and taxpayers, will continue without end.”

Immigration hard-liners expressed support for the administration’s immigration proposals. House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) praised the administration for “a serious proposal” and said that “we cannot fix the DACA problem without fixing all of the issues that led to the underlying problem of illegal immigration in the first place.”

Trump had said several times over the past month that he did not expect a DACA deal to include funding for a border wall, emphasizing that the money could be included in separate legislation. But ensuring funding for the wall, which is projected to cost more than $25 billion, is the top priority on the list. White House aides declined to specify during the call how much money the president would expect from Congress.

Despite the White House’s calls for the complete construction of a southern border wall and the support of some ardent conservatives in Congress, several GOP lawmakers from border states have expressed skepticism about such projects in the past. Sen. John Cornyn (R-Tex.), the second-ranking Republican, has introduced legislation that would fund only partial wall construction and mostly renovations of existing barriers.

Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.), a frequent sparring partner of Trump’s, has also cast doubt on building a wall, saying that such barriers would require accounting for the flow of rivers that run north and south across the two countries.

Others, including Rep. Will Hurd (R-Tex.), whose south Texas district includes more than 800 miles of border, has proposed using technology — not brick and mortar — to track the border for potentially illegal crossings.

In its principles, the Trump administration also is proposing changes aimed at reducing the flow of unaccompanied minors from Central America, tens of thousands of whom have entered the United States illegally in recent years. Immigrant rights groups have said the minors, as well as women and families, have fled gang violence and other dangers in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras.

Under current law, minors who arrive from noncontiguous nations are afforded greater protections than those from Mexico and Canada, but the Trump administration is proposing to treat them all the same in a bid to be able to deport the minors more quickly. Such proposals will probably face fierce resistance from Democrats and human rights groups.

The administration also has sought to increase pressure on sanctuary cities, which refuse, in some cases, to cooperate with federal immigration agents seeking personal information about undocumented immigrants who’ve committed other crimes in their jurisdictions. Under the immigration priorities released Sunday, the administration is proposing that Congress withhold federal grants to such jurisdictions and that it clarify the authority of state and local jurisdictions to honor detainers issued by Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

“There is no justification for releasing a public safety threat back into the public,” said Thomas Homan, the acting director of ICE. “We will not stop illegal immigration unless we stop the pull factors that are driving it. … Entering this country illegally is a crime but there are no consequences for sneaking past the border or overstaying visas.”

Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-Tex.), vice chairman of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, said that “Congress should reject this warped, anti-immigrant policy wish list. The White House wants to use dreamers as bargaining chips to achieve the administration’s deportation and detention goals.”

Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.), a longtime advocate for comprehensive immigration reform, in an interview called Trump’s proposals “an extension of the white supremacist agenda.” He said it is “fanciful thinking that you can sit down with a man who has based his presidential aspirations and has never wavered from his xenophobic positions. I never understood — I just never got it, how you go from Charlottesville and white supremacists to reaching an agreement with him.”

Gutierrez renewed calls for Democrats to withhold support for an upcoming bill that would raise the debt limit or extend government spending, saying that “if you want a budget with Democratic votes, then it’s got to have some Democratic priorities.”

Trump aides said the administration’s priorities are imperative because legalizing the dreamers without fixing other parts of the immigration system would allow the problem to continue. The last major legislative overhaul to the nation’s immigration laws came in 1986 and included a path to citizenship for millions of undocumented immigrants, but more than 11 million undocumented immigrants are living in the country now.

The White House’s list of immigration principles will move the debate over the fate of the dreamers toward the prospect of broader comprehensive reform. Efforts to forge a comprehensive bill failed under the past two presidents, Barack Obama and George W. Bush.

During his campaign, Trump had threatened to end DACA on his first day in office, but he equivocated for months, suggesting that the decision over the fate of the dreamers was among the most difficult he faced. After Texas and several other states announced plans to sue the administration over the program, Trump moved to end it but said he would hold off the most drastic measures for six months to give Congress time to find a legislative solution.

“We would expect Congress to include all the reforms in any package that addresses the status of the DACA recipients,” said one White House aide on the conference call who was not authorized to speak on the record. “Other views had their fair day in the democratic process.”

Noting that the Republicans swept the White House and both chambers of Congress in November, the aide added: “The American public voted for the reforms included in this package.”

Ed O’Keefe contributed to this report.

 

 

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