Connect with us

Washington

‘He’s further along than you probably should be’: First impressions of Jayden Daniels in Washington

Published

on

‘He’s further along than you probably should be’: First impressions of Jayden Daniels in Washington


ASHBURN, Va., — One of Jayden Daniels’ worst throws this spring occurred in front of the largest crowd he has encountered since becoming a member of the Washington Commanders. And afterward, all he could do was smile.

Throwing out the first pitch at a Washington Nationals game earlier this month, the Commanders’ latest great hope at quarterback pulled his effort into the left-handed batter’s box.

It was not awful. But it was not a strike.

“It’s a good thing he’s throwing here and not down at the ballpark,” Commanders coach Dan Quinn said, smiling.

The errant pitch was one of the few times Daniels has left observers unimpressed this spring. Otherwise, the No. 2 pick in the 2024 draft has left a favorable early imprint on his teammates and coaches. They know more steps remain. He has yet to face a live pass rush, an opposing defense or anyone in pads. Teammates and coaches have pointed that out; they also acknowledge there will be both good and bad days ahead as Daniels develops. But after getting a first glimpse of the hours he puts in at the facility, his ability to call, make and direct plays on the field and his engaging personality — they cannot wait to see how he progresses.

“Dude can sling it man,” right tackle Andrew Wylie said. “He makes it look easy. Something about his game is just special.”

Before Daniels, Washington had drafted five other quarterbacks in the first round from 1994 to 2019: Heath Shuler, Patrick Ramsey, Jason Campbell, Robert Griffin III and Dwayne Haskins. They combined to go 51-86 as starters for Washington, with one Pro Bowl selection (Griffin). Only Campbell served as the primary starter for four years; he is also the only one who started 12 or more games in three different seasons.

Now comes Daniels, the Heisman Trophy winner who became a No. 2 pick — just like Griffin in 2012 – who the Commanders are hoping can finally bring stability to the position.

Advertisement

“He’s a rookie,” one member of the organization said of Daniels. “There’s still a lot to learn. At the same time, he’s on course.”


THIS SPRING, TEAMMATE after teammate mentioned how early Daniels arrived at the Commanders’ facility.

“He always beats me here, so I think that’s pretty cool,” said defensive tackle Jonathan Allen, who arrives at 6:45 a.m.

“You start to doubt yourself a little bit,” said guard Nick Allegretti, who arrives at 6:30 a.m. “You think you’re one of the early guys and then he looks like he’d been here for a minute. He is bright eyed. I’m dragging in at 6:30 so I’m going to work on it, maybe get here at six.”

Daniels clocks in around 5:45 a.m.

Advertisement

It is what he did at LSU, too. Rookie receiver Luke McCaffrey has been joining Daniels in Washington.

The two players watch film, then head to the practice bubble to walk through plays.

“I’m still learning the playbook and trying to grasp everything,” Daniels said. “So just being comfortable for a day and being ready to go out there and go out and compete.”

The result: A young quarterback who teammates and coaches say is ahead of schedule in learning the offense and particularly the protections.

“His football IQ is really high,” offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury said. “[With] protections, I’ve been really impressed by that. A lot of guys coming into the league, that’s not an area that they major in in college. They don’t have a lot of time. But he’s well-versed in protections and works at it.”

Advertisement

As a result, Daniels rarely makes mistakes when calling plays in the huddle and rarely needs coaches to repeat one, according to Quinn, who listens in on the headset.

“He’s further along than you probably should be,” Quinn said.

“He’s a student of [the game],” quarterbacks coach Tavita Pritchard said, “but he just loves it. He loves talking about it, loves watching it, loves playing it, loves practicing it.”


DANIELS HAS GOTTEN attention for his play on the field, too.

One play, Daniels scrambled outside of the pocket and lofted a perfect pass downfield, over the arms of a defender. On another, one team staffer recalled, when as a receiver was about to cross behind a linebacker, Daniels released the ball — anticipating his target getting open — for a completion.

Advertisement

“After the second or third crosser that he threw, I started telling receivers, ‘Hey, you got to get your head around,’” receiver Terry McLaurin said. “A lot of quarterbacks may like to see you cross the ball and get into that open zone. Or if it’s man [coverage] they like to see you get open for him. He can make those throws and give you a chance to catch and run.”

On another play, the defense tried to confuse him with pre-snap movement. Daniels paused, signaled to players on both sides of the formation; used a hard count to get the defense to reveal its intentions — one coach called it a veteran move — took the snap and connected with tight end Ben Sinnott on a quick hitch against a blitz.

“Our quarterbacks have a lot of freedom to get to things that they’re able to attack a defense based on what they’re seeing,” Pritchard said. “You’re seeing him applying those things that he’s learned in the meeting room.”

After misfires, Daniels often talks to one of his teammates. Tight end Zach Ertz usually can be seen with him after a series, motioning with his hands as if discussing a route. McLaurin and running back Austin Ekeler have said Daniels asked them to stay after practice so he can work on throwing to a particular route.

Advertisement

“I don’t think I’ve had a young quarterback that really has come in and within the first week he’s like, ‘Hey, can we get this rep after practice?’” said McLaurin, who has played with 10 different starting quarterbacks since joining the organization in 2019. “It makes the growth part a lot quicker.”

Not only his play, but Daniels’ patience and poise in the pocket has also stood out.

“A lot of guys panic and try to force the throw or just run but he’s comfortable back there and he’s looking to make a play down the field,” Allegretti said. “A lot of rookies just put their head down and run. That’s been the biggest thing that’s jumped out.”


DANIELS SMILES ALL the time when he is not taking snaps. Even when engaged in friendly trash talk with fellow rookie quarterback Sam Hartman during a pre-practice drill, the smile never left his face.

“He’s very charismatic,” McLaurin said. “He’s really personable when he walks into the building, very approachable.”

Advertisement

One staffer said he sees Daniels eating breakfast at a different table, with different players, nearly every day.

When Daniels met special teams standout/backup safety Jeremy Reaves for the first time, the rookie approached him and said, “Hey, what’s up Reavo?”

“That speaks volumes about the guy, that he’s taking the time to know everybody,” Reaves said.

“We’ve sat and talked, we’ve talked ball. On the first day [of practice] I had a pick against him, and I told [him], ‘Hey, if you leave this ball more behind him, it makes it harder for me out of the post to come make this play.’ He’s open to constructive criticism and that’s what you want. With franchise guys like that, what matters most is who they are off the field, how they are in the locker room with the guys.”

Daniels said he likes talking to as many teammates as possible, especially on the field, to help him learn.

Advertisement

“You’re trying to soak up as much as possible and you got guys like Bobby [Wagner] that’ve been playing at a high level for a very long time, so as much as I could be around them and pick their brain, I’m willing to do that,” Daniels said.


QUINN HAD A plan to divide first-team reps among his quarterbacks this spring. Before last week’s mandatory minicamp, Marcus Mariota took the majority of the first-team snaps. Once minicamp began, that share went to Daniels, along with snaps from projected starting center Tyler Biadasz during pre-practice drills.

That is why, Quinn said, no declaration has been made on if Daniels will enter training camp as the starter.

“There’s no doubt that Jayden’s making unbelievable progress here,” Quinn said. “It was really clear that he’s put in the work.

“He’s got a swagger to him. He really has a very firm handle on the things that we’re doing, but he also has the humility of a young player … knowing he has a lot to prove.”

Advertisement

But there is much more to learn and more situations for Daniels to endure. He still must face defenses designed to fool him; he still must prove he can consistently make the necessary tight-window throws, particularly in the red zone. And how will he handle an NFL pass rush once the pads go on?

During one hurry-up series last week, Daniels missed on multiple passes as the pocket tightened. He overthrew tight end Cole Turner down the field on a deep crosser. On the next play, Daniels attempted a checkdown to Ekeler, but the ball landed at his feet.

Daniels said he will work out this summer in Southern California with his quarterback coaches and possibly some of the Commanders’ receivers. He will continue to study the playbook and, as he said, “get ready for the season.”

He knows he still must prove what he can do in the fall. It is part of the growth process for any rookie quarterback, even those who have made such a strong first impression.

“I ain’t a star quarterback yet,” Daniels acknowledged last week. “I’ve got a long way to go.”

Advertisement

Ekeler, who played his first seven NFL seasons with the Chargers, has played with a longtime starting quarterback in Philip Rivers as well as a rookie in Justin Herbert. He knows that while the spring was a key step for Daniels, it is just one of many.

“It’s hard to tell anything until you get to the preseason to see how it’s playing out,” Ekeler said. “But I’m proud of the strides he’s made so far.”



Source link

Washington

Judge tosses Trump Media’s $3.8 billion defamation suit against The Washington Post | CNN Business

Published

on

Judge tosses Trump Media’s .8 billion defamation suit against The Washington Post | CNN Business


Another one of President Donald Trump’s lawsuits against a news organization has fizzled out.

This time, it is a defamation lawsuit that the Trump Media and Technology Group brought against The Washington Post in 2023 over a story titled “Trust linked to porn-friendly bank could gain a stake in Trump’s Truth Social.”

A federal judge in Florida has thrown out the suit, saying that Trump Media “failed to present evidence that would allow a jury to find by clear and convincing evidence” that The Post “published the allegedly defamatory statements with actual malice.”

US District Judge Thomas Barber’s conclusion came during the summary judgment phase of the case, when a judge can evaluate evidence and make a determination before proceeding to trial.

Advertisement

The Post’s lawyers argued that Trump Media could not prove “actual malice,” the high legal standard that public figures must meet to prevail in a defamation case. It means that the defendant either knew a claim was false or displayed “reckless disregard of whether it was false or not.”

The Post’s reporter who wrote the story in question, Drew Harwell, “thoroughly investigated” the subject and “had confidence in the article’s accuracy at the time of publication,” the newspaper’s lawyers wrote.

In a summary docket entry last week, first reported by Reason magazine, Barber sided with the Post. He said he would issue a full opinion later.

The Post itself reported on the legal victory on Tuesday. “We are pleased with the court’s decision and look forward to reviewing its written order upon release,” a spokesperson told CNN.

A spokesperson for Trump Media did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment, but the company told The Post, “We believe a jury should decide whether these falsehoods were actionable and will evaluate whether to appeal last week’s ruling in due course. We will also continue to hold the media accountable.”

Advertisement

Trump Media positions itself as an opponent of, and an alternative to, traditional tech and media companies. It is best known for operating Truth Social, a relatively small social network favored by the president.

The publicly traded company has been losing money for years; it made less than $1 million in revenue in the first quarter of this year, according to public filings.

The company has repeatedly filed lawsuits over news coverage it deemed false. A defamation lawsuit against The Guardian and other defendants was thrown out by a different Florida judge last November. Trump Media initially filed an amended complaint, but then dropped the matter altogether in April.

Trump Media’s suit against the Post accused the newspaper of a “conspiracy” to harm the company and sought $3.8 billion in damages.

The lawsuit lawyers succeeded in narrowing the case considerably and asserted that Truth Media could not satisfy the “heavy burden” of the actual malice standard.

Advertisement

In May, while awaiting the judge’s ruling, The Post published a correction to the 2023 story stating that “discovery in the ongoing litigation has established” that two assertions in the story were incorrect. But the correction emphasized that the assertions were “based on The Post’s reporting at the time of publication.”

Trump and his businesses have a long history of getting publicity from lawsuits, only to see judges later throw them out.

In April, a federal judge dismissed Trump’s defamation lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal over its reporting on a lewd birthday letter to Jeffrey Epstein bearing his name. Trump refiled that suit in May. He also has pending litigation against the BBC, The New York Times and the Des Moines Register.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Washington

Washington records world’s worst air quality for a city after 850,000 Fourth of July fireworks

Published

on

Washington records world’s worst air quality for a city after 850,000 Fourth of July fireworks


Washington DC residents breathed in “unhealthy” air for hours after a 40-minute Independence Day fireworks show over the National Mall on Saturday night, with the country’s capital briefly recording the worst air quality of any major city in the world.

The highly emitting display, which the president called “spectacular”, came as the Trump administration rolls back an unprecedented number of pollution controls.

Hourly concentrations of particulate matter rose to 6.7 times their pre-fireworks levels, according to a Tuesday analysis from the company Clarity Movement based on its network of 26 air quality sensors throughout the city in partnership with the local department of energy and environment. Every one of those sensors reached air quality levels which the Environmental Protection Agency deems “unhealthy for sensitive groups” during the event, the researchers found, with some recording even worse levels of emissions.

Levels of particulate matter peaked at 4am on Sunday, approximately five hours after the display concluded, according to the new analysis. It remained elevated for approximately five hours after reaching its peak, the authors found, with city officials issuing a Code Red alert.

Advertisement
Smoke hangs in the air as the Independence Day fireworks launch over Washington. Photograph: Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc/Getty Images

“Outdoor air quality is unhealthy for seniors, kids, people with medical conditions,” the alert said. “General public may experience health issues. Limit time outside.”

The south-west region of DC experienced the highest pollution levels, the report’s authors found, probably because of its proximity to one of the fireworks launch sites in West Potomac park, as well as overnight meteorological conditions that trapped smoke over the area.

That highly polluted air probably drifted into Arlington, Virginia, said David Lu, CEO and co-founder of Clarity Movement.

“Unfortunately, we don’t have sensors there to confirm it,” he said. “That’s exactly why expanding real-time air quality monitoring matters. Without comprehensive coverage, communities can be exposed to significant pollution events that go undetected.”

The air quality across the city could have been even worse in the aftermath of the display if it were not for thunderstorms that struck the city on Sunday evening.

Advertisement
Smoke hangs in the air as the Independence Day fireworks launch over Washington. Photograph: Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc/Getty Images

“Despite the scale of the fireworks display, the city’s air quality avoided a worst-case scenario thanks to favorable weather conditions and the timing of the event,” said Lu.

The Fourth of July fireworks show, organized by the Trump-backed non-profit Freedom 250, began at 11pm on Saturday evening. It involved more than 850,000 fireworks launched from 10 sites across the capital, the organizers said. (A typical Independence Day show in DC involves just 17,000 shells.)

Trump on social media called the show “the Most Spectacular Fireworks Show I have ever seen, and I’ve seen them all”.

The fanfare came as the region was baking under an extreme heatwave, which brought triple-digit temperatures to the city hours earlier. For a time after the fireworks show, the city recorded the worst air quality of any major city in the world, according to AirNow, the Environmental Protection Agency website that reports air quality measurements from its monitoring stations.

Asked to comment, a White House spokesperson, Taylor Rogers, said: “It was the largest and greatest firework display in the history of our country to properly celebrate America’s 250th birthday! Every year, fireworks on the Fourth of July cause short-term spikes in air quality across the United States, including Washington, DC. This was not unique to the 250th fireworks celebrations in our nation’s capital.”

Advertisement

The Guardian has contacted Freedom 250 for comment.

Americans shoot nearly 300m lb of fireworks into the atmosphere every year, according to the American Lung Association, letting off lung-harming gases such as sulfur dioxide, carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide.

The Trump administration has, since re-entering office, engaged in a wide-ranging assault on pollution controls, exempting polluting facilities from emissions regulations, boosting coal power, and halting the consideration of the value of lives saved when restricting fine particulate matter and ozone. On 4 July, the president also pardoned nine individuals convicted of violations related to the Clean Air Act, including people found to have tampered with emissions control equipment in cars or selling parts to bypass air pollution standards.





Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Washington

Question of the week: What does Santana Moss think of Washington’s WR depth?

Published

on

Question of the week: What does Santana Moss think of Washington’s WR depth?


The Washington Commanders are looking for a bounce back performance from their offense, and they’ll need their wide receivers to take a step up to do so.

Terry McLaurin is the clear No. 1 option at the position, but after him, there are several questions about how the rest of the room will shake out. The No. 2 spot is wide open, and there are several players who could fit the role and others in David Blough’s new scheme. Analysts Santana Moss, Logan Paulsen and Fred Smoot broke down the position on one of the most recent “Command Center” podcast episodes, and as one of the franchise’s all-time best receivers, Moss had a few thoughts on the group. Here’s his assessment on three wideouts and how they could fit into the offense.

“Knowing that he can play both outside and inside, I would think with some of the guys and their size and their experience, I would mainly probably see Antonio attack that middle. I think his route running ability is already to the level of some of these guys who have already played at this level. And just showing me that you don’t look like that this is new to you … He ain’t scared to go out and compete against these guys. To me — and we don’t know anything; we’re just sitting here speculating and assuming — I’d say he’s a slot guy out the gate.”

“I think if I had to just say if I look at that paper, and I asked any coach in this building by name how they think this guy played…if you tell me that Burks played well this offseason, he would be my No. 2 out the gate. He would be my No. 2 wide receiver because one: he brings size, he brings speed, he brings a gear at that size that a lot of people ain’t comfortable checking … You got a guy with size, leaping ability, the catch radius and can run.”

Advertisement

“They talk about how he was one of those guys from Day 1 that could play every position, and that’s stemming from him being a quarterback. Quarterbacks learn the game a little different from just a regular skill position guy. Luke came in here, and he knew X, he knew Z, he knew Gator. When you have those intangibles and you have that kind of mindset when it comes to playing that position, they can use him where they want to use him. That’s why I said he’s a great committee guy. He’s a guy that I know I’m gonna have on special teams as a returner, and guess what? If he’s not the starter, I’m okay with that because I know I’m going to ask more of him if somebody needs to take a breather.



Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending