Washington
Washington Commanders vs Tampa Bay Buccaneers Prop Bets
The Washington Commanders start their 2024 season with a road game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Washington opened the week as a 3.5 point road underdog. Washington has a lot of new across the franchise this season, and it will be interesting to see how it all comes together in Week 1. Jayden Daniels was drafted No. 2 overall, and was named the starter. He has some weapons that are new to Washington like RB Austin Ekeler and WRs Olamide Zaccheaus and Luke McCaffrey. Daniels looked good in limited action in the preseason, and now its time for the games to count.
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We’ve got some prop bets from FanDuel Sportsbook for tomorrow’s game that will be fun to follow.
First TD scorer
Jayden Daniels +220
Terry McLaurin +230
Brian Robinson Jr. +250
Austin Ekeler +260
Zach Ertz +470
Dyami Brown +550
Noah Brown +560
Ben Sinnott +750
Olamide Zaccheaus +750
Luke McCaffrey +750
Washington D/ST +750
Jamison Crowder +900
John Bates +1800
Jeremy McNichol +1800
Colson Yankoff +1800
Bet: Austin Ekeler is going to get a lot of action in the passing game, and I’m taking him to score vs the Bucs
Jayden Daniels TD passes thrown
Over 1.5 +165
Under 1.5 -220
Bet: Going over for the rookies debut
Rushing Yards
Brian Robinson Jr
Over 42.5 -113
Under 42.5 -113
Austin Ekeler
Over 27.5 -113
Under 27.5 -113
Jayden Daniels
Over 39.5 -120
Under 39.5 -106
Bet: Over, Under, Under
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Washington
Mavericks’ P.J. Washington in concussion protocol, set to miss meeting with Celtics
The Mavericks will be without P.J. Washington for their Tuesday meeting with the Boston Celtics.
Dallas officially listed Washington as out for Tuesday’s game. According to the team’s injury report, Washington is in concussion protocol.
#Mavs forward PJ Washington is in concussion protocol and is out for tomorrow’s game against the #Celtics.
Brandon Williams is questionable due to a right lower leg contusion.
Two-ways Ryan Nembhard and Miles Kelly are probable, but Moussa Cisse is questionable.
— Mike Curtis (@MikeACurtis2) February 2, 2026
Washington left Saturday’s game against the Houston Rockets in the fourth quarter after taking an elbow to the head from teammate Naji Marshall. The veteran forward sat on the bench for a brief period, but was rubbing his forehead before he walked back to the locker room.
Guard Brandon Williams, who also left Saturday’s game early, was listed as questionable on the injury report with a right lower leg contusion.
Two-way players Ryan Nembhard and Miles Kelly are listed as probable, while Moussa Cisse is questionable. Tip-off for Tuesday’s Mavericks-Celtics game is scheduled for 7 p.m. at American Airlines Center.
Find more Mavericks coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.
Washington
Ukraine peace talks pushed back as Washington juggles Iran crisis
The three sides last convened a week ago, and the Ukrainian leader stressed that he remains “ready to work in all formats” to pursue a breakthrough toward ending the war.
Meanwhile, U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff held what he described as “productive and constructive” discussions in Florida with Kremlin representative Kirill Dmitriev.
Witkoff said the fate of Donbas remains a central sticking point, with Kyiv continuing to reject Moscow’s demands that it relinquish control of the territory.
Ukrainian officials, meanwhile, were restoring electricity to capital and other areas of the country after emergency power outages on Saturday swept across several Ukrainian cities as well as neighboring Moldova, officials said. Ukraine’s Energy Minister Denys Shmyhal said the outages were due to a technical malfunction affecting power lines linking Ukraine and Moldova.
The failure “caused a cascading outage in Ukraine’s power grid,” triggering automatic protection systems, Shmyhal said.
Washington
Only a ‘macho man’ makes it big in Trump’s Washington
I was sitting in the waiting room of the hospital reading the newspaper while my wife, Marianne, was having a routine outpatient procedure.
When a nurse finally came in to tell me the procedure was over and that we would soon be free to leave, she smiled and added, “Nice purse you have there.”
The purse was turquoise with dark blue, swirly images of palm trees, which was, I admit, appealing.
She, of course, was proffering a well-worn joke about a man and a purse, which, by custom in our country, is exclusive to women. It was Marianne’s, and I didn’t give a thought to holding it for her, a fact the nurse likely registered from my equanimous smile.
I have no anxiety about manhood or how I am perceived based on superficial manifestations, whether it’s a colorful purse or a pink suitcase, which I do happen to use since pink was the American Tourister selection discounted 40% on Amazon.
I also must confess to having taken pleasure, in my 20s, in upsetting stereotypes held by friends on the right about liberal, socially conscious English teachers, when I bested them in football and softball, and then afterward in the sports bar at arm wrestling.
I wasn’t always so confident. At 16, I practiced wearing an intimidating scowl in the bedroom mirror, rolled up my sleeves to accentuate my budding biceps, and suffered frostbite rather than wear the mittens my mother bought me for Christmas.
If any of that seems familiar, it’s similar to what Donald Trump, Pete Hegseth, Josh Hawley, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and other Republican males have been doing to burnish their MAGA credentials. Hegseth, in particular, has been criticized for sophomoric bravado, though his arrogance more often comes off as whining.
Hypermasculinity is all the rage
Of course, these are not 16-year-old boys insecure about their testosterone levels. Instead, this is an administration trying to compensate for mistakes and an absence of vision and of policy successes with appeals of hypermasculinity.
Can’t come up with a health care plan, a peace deal for Ukraine, or a defense for endangering American troops by divulging classified information to your relatives? Let’s do pushups on TV, announce plans to build the biggest warships in history, and blow up 35 boats in the Caribbean and Pacific that may or may not have been carrying drugs.
Can’t fix rising prices at home or bury incriminating Epstein files? Instead, let’s unleash swarms of armed, masked enforcers into American cities and launch a massive invasion of hapless Venezuela.
The GOP saw that the macho man appeal worked in getting 55% of male voters to elect Trump over female candidate Kamala Harris in 2024, including double the percentage of Black males who voted for him in 2020, and 54% of Hispanic men.
But Trump’s blatant bait and switch, promising peace and affordability on Day 1, but then goosing prices even higher with tariffs, and starting a needless war, is less likely to fool them twice.
When I became an adult, I learned that using common sense and being true to your principles are more important and less embarrassing than trying to mimic synthetic standards of manliness cooked up by Hollywood, Marvel Comics, or professional wrestling. I credit my perspective to my father, whose life-navigating ease I admired.
Charles McGrath Sr. was an accomplished and athletic Army captain during World War II. Later, when he became a father, he would not have been mistaken for a macho man with his “dad bod” and hobby jeans. But he impressed upon me and my brothers that respecting his wife and our mother, caring about other people, especially those less fortunate, and solving problems with listening and logic and compromise, instead of tough talk, intransigence and violence, were the gold standards of manhood and leadership.
Rather than preach those truths, he taught by example, one of which I wrote about in 2023, when he showed how intellect and empathy inspire more confidence than machismo and braggadocio.
So, when President Trump has talked tough, threatened allies, belittled women, mocked the disabled, denigrated minorities and “s- – -hole countries,” and boasted about his power and cognitive tests, was he demonstrating authentic manhood? Or was he, instead, throwing up a smoke screen to occlude his broken promises, past and present failures, and future fears and insecurities?
I’d be less inclined to complain, were he not doing so at the expense of our country’s soldiers and the American taxpayer.
David McGrath is an emeritus English professor at College of DuPage and author of “Far Enough Away,” a collection of Chicago area stories.
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