Washington
Will Washington get its chance to hit Jalen Hurts like he’s a running back?
After being listed as a limited participant at Wednesday’s walkthrough, Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts was shown as a full participant at practice on Thursday and Friday on the NFL team’s injury report.
The Eagles advanced to Sunday’s NFC Championship Game against the Washington Commanders by beating the Los Angeles Rams 28-22 in the Divisional Round. The Rams sacked Hurts seven times, and the former Alabama QB is dealing with an undescribed injury to his left knee sustained in that contest.
On Friday, Hurts said he’s “been progressing” in his recovery from the injury, although he anticipated wearing a knee brace on Sunday.
JALEN HURTS: ‘I’VE SUBMITTED MYSELF TO DOING WHATEVER IT TAKES TO WIN’
Hurts’ mobility has been a facet of Philadelphia’s success since he became the Eagles’ No. 1 quarterback at the beginning of the 2021 season. In 15 regular-season and two playoff games in 2024, Hurts has run for 736 yards and 15 touchdowns on 163 carries.
In his first season as the Washington Commanders’ defensive coordinator, Joe Whitt Jr. is a former Auburn High School standout and Auburn wide receiver and student assistant. Whitt sounded something of a warning to the Eagles about using Hurts as a ball-carrier.
“If he’s going to run the ball and the coordinator makes the decision for him to run the ball, we’re going to treat him like a running back,” Whitt said on Thursday. “We’re going to hit him that way. That’s their decision if they want to get him hit the way he gets hit. If they don’t, they’ll keep him in the pocket.”
Washington pinned the only loss on Philadelphia since Sept. 29 when the Commanders came away with a 36-33 victory on Dec. 22. Hurts sustained a concussion while running with the football in the game, and the injury caused him to leave in the second quarter and miss the next two contests.
For Eagles coach Nick Sirianni, Whitt’s words were nothing a team with a mobile quarterback hadn’t heard before.
“We understand when he is carrying the football, they’re going to try to tackle him,” Sirianni said on Friday. “But nothing changes as far as we’re very cautious with what we do. I don’t think cautious is the right word actually. It’s more we’re very aware of everything. We try to put Jalen in safe situations. We want him to put himself in safe situations. And we understand that there’s a lot of things that Jalen does in the running game that help us run the football. As we go through it, we do whatever we got to do to win the game, but his safety is always at the forefront of our minds.”
If Hurts’ knee inhibits his ability to run, as he did against the Rams when he broke a 44-yarder for the first points of the game, then the hit-him-like-a-running-back directive won’t come into play.
“I think he’s had a good week of practice,” Sirianni said when asked about Hurts’ mobility, “and I think he’s done some really good things all week, and we’ll see.”
The Commanders and Eagles will square off at 2 p.m. CST Sunday at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia. FOX will televise the game.
The Eagles are seeking their second trip to the Super Bowl in three seasons. Washington hasn’t been to the NFL championship game since the 1991 season.
FOR MORE OF AL.COM’S COVERAGE OF THE NFL, GO TO OUR NFL PAGE
Mark Inabinett is a sports reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on X at @AMarkG1.
Washington
Community discusses installing locked gates at NYC’s Washington Square Park
Could one of New York City’s most iconic parks soon be surrounded by gates?
At a Wednesday night meeting of the local Community Board’s Parks Committee, tensions ran high over whether or not to install locked gates at Washington Square Park.
The historic Washington Square Arch welcomes visitors from near and far to the park, but when the clock strikes midnight, the police and Parks Department put up French barricades, cross-chained together, until 6 a.m.
Some residents, however, said the barricades aren’t aesthetically pleasing.
“Now it’s time to replace the unattractive police barricades with appropriate gates that really represent the history of that park,” landscape architect George Vellonakis said.
Others said the barricades aren’t effective at keeping people out. One resident shared a photo of a person sleeping overnight on a mattress in the park.
Opponents, however, argued gates aren’t the answer to that issue, and some longtime residents said they hoped the park would be open 24/7.
“I think that the barricades have to go. I think they’re really, really ugly,” one person said. “They’re really hard for the Parks Department and the police to handle, and they don’t work.”
“Particularly Millennials and Gen Z will have these changes for the rest of their lives,” another person said. “I enjoy traveling other similar parks in Europe where you can walk at all hours of the night.”
Back in 2005, the Parks Department considered installing gates but canceled the plan after fierce opposition from the community. A Community Board member said the idea to install gates resurfaced during COVID when overnight gatherings in the park got out of hand.
“We are not anti-gate. We do believe that they should find more effective ways to support the NYPD,” Washington Square Association President Erica Sumner said.
The committee voted on a resolution to formally ask the Parks Department for its recommendations.
Washington
Washington Nationals recall Zak Kent
Kent, 28, joins the Nationals after he was claimed off waivers from the Minnesota Twins on
Washington
Why is the protester still on top the Frederick Douglass Bridge in DC?
Protester scales Washington DC bridge, stays for days
A demonstrator protesting the war in Iran and the use of artificial intelligence climbed Frederick Douglass Bridge, and stayed for days.
Despite saying he would “soon” come down, a protester has remained on top of the Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge in Washington, DC since May 1, impacting traffic and extending a dayslong standoff with police.
Guido Reichstadter climbed the 168-foot bridge Friday, then draped a black banner and set up a tent while making the bridge his home for the past four days.
Here’s what to know about Reichstadter’s protest and how it is affecting locals in the nation’s capital.
Why is there a man on top of the Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge?
After Reichstadter climbed the bridge Friday, he identified himself as a protester, writing on X that he was “calling on the people of the United States to bring an immediate end to the Trump regime’s illegal war on Iran and the removal of the regime power through mass nonviolent direct action and non-cooperation.”
He has posted on X throughout his protest, reminding his followers of his cause as he thwarts attempts from the DC police to bring him down.
“The Trump regime occupying the office of the US executive is prosecuting a criminal war of aggression against the nation of Iran, enabled by the refusal of Congress to assert its constitutional power, and by the continued submission of the majority of the US population to this intolerable state of affairs without effective civil resistance,” he wrote on X, saying it’s the public’s responsibility to nonviolently put an end to Trump’s presidency.
Reichstadter said May 4 he hasn’t eaten for days, but previously told NewsNation he went on a 30-day hunger strike while protesting AI outside the Anthropic headquarters.
He has run out of water, however.
“I’ve got the stamina to stay up here a bit longer,” he told WTOP Monday.
What impact is the protest having in Washington, DC?
Reichstadter’s protest has caused lanes to shut down on the Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge, but lanes had reopened for traffic late Monday morning.
Tuesday morning, all lanes were open for traffic, but the pedestrian walkway was closed, according to the Metropolitan Area Transportation Operations Coordination (MATOC) Program.
If he stays on top of the bridge into Tuesday night, it’s unclear how his protest could impact people traveling nearby to the Washington Nationals game.
“My efforts here have had impacts on the local community and its people, and it is my desire not to harm but to work in communication, to lift up and to contribute what strength I can to the ongoing struggle for rights and freedom which this community has been engaged in for years,” Reichstadter said Sunday.
Police said Monday that their negotiators will remain on the scene.
Mike Stunson is the DC Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network.
-
Politics19 seconds agoVideo: Tennessee Republicans Aim to Break Up State’s Lone Democratic District
-
Business6 minutes agoWhy Stocks and Bonds Are Responding Differently to the Iran War
-
Science12 minutes agoThe Longevity Secrets Helping Athletes Blow Past the Limits of Age
-
Health18 minutes agoHantavirus Response Shows How Trump Cuts Have Compromised U.S. Preparedness
-
Culture30 minutes agoIn Her New Memoir, Siri Hustvedt Captures Life With, And Without, Paul Auster
-
Lifestyle36 minutes agoA Fashion Revolution at the Met
-
Education42 minutes agoToday, In Short
-
Technology48 minutes agoLive updates from Elon Musk and Sam Altman’s court battle over the future of OpenAI