Washington
The Washington Commanders lose first preseason game to the New York Jets 20-17
The Washington Commanders traveled to New Jersey this week to practice with, and play against, the New York Jets. Jayden Daniels had his NFL debut today, and led the team on a scoring drive to open the game. He showed off his arm on a 42-yard sideline strike to Dyami Brown, and then showed off his legs on a 3-yard TD run. Marcus Mariota came in for the second drive, and the differences between the rookie and the veteran were obvious. Jeff Driskel and Sam Hartman finished out the day, with Driskel coming back in after a possible shoulder injury for Hartman.
The game was back and forth, with the Jets tying it up at halftime via a 56-yard Greg Zuerlein field goal. Both teams scored in the second half with their 3rd/4th stringers.
3rd Quarter
Sam Hartman time:
Sam Hartman is now in at QB
— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) August 10, 2024
Luke McCaffrey:
We have our first Luke McCaffrey reception to help further fill out your rookie bingo card.
It came on a quick out on the first play of the #Commanders‘ second half offensive work. Sam Hartman to Luke McCaffrey is what the second half of this day is all about. Buckle up!
— Grant Paulsen (@granthpaulsen) August 10, 2024
Luke McCaffrey makes his second grab of the day, this time gaining 19 yards.
2 targets, 2 catches, 25 yards for the rookie WR the Commanders took at pick No. 100. pic.twitter.com/5XbtcEc56Y
— Grant Paulsen (@granthpaulsen) August 10, 2024
Ben Sinnott:
Sinnott is a LOAD to bring down.
Multiple broken tackles today
He got off to a slow start in camp as a pass catcher
Last 3-4 practices he’s flashed in that area
Nice job blocking ofc
— Lynnell Willingham (@Nell_BTP) August 10, 2024
Brycen Tremayne:
Brycen Tremayne with a 16-yard gain from hartman. Third down coming
— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) August 10, 2024
Tress Way:
Jets start their drive pinned at their own 8-yard line. Tress Way: still good at punting
— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) August 10, 2024
Bo Bauer missed tackle:
Bo Bauer with a chance for an impact play TFL but cant make the tackle. Undrafted guys fighting for roster spots gotta make the tackle
— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) August 10, 2024
Anthony Pittman:
That was a heck of a series from Anthony Pittman on both 1st and 3rd down, forcin g the punt in space.
Pittman was with Detroit, so if he sticks, you can probably give a tip of cap to Asst. GM Lance Newmark.
— Chris Russell AKA the ! (@Russellmania621) August 10, 2024
Adrian Martinez 3rd down run vs Washington’s defense:
4th Quarter
Michael Wiley TD:
Braeden Daniels:
Nice kick out from Braeden Daniels on Wiley TD
I like him at RT
Good developmental guy
— Lynnell Willingham (@Nell_BTP) August 10, 2024
James Pierre beat for big gain:
What a catch by Brandon Smith. A 37-yard gain. Nice throw from Martinez, too. #Jets
— Connor Hughes (@Connor_J_Hughes) August 10, 2024
Javontae Jean-Baptiste:
Nice TFL from Jean-Baptiste, 7th rounder from ND/tOSU
— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) August 10, 2024
Jets tie it up:
The Jets tie it up at 17 with a two-yard run from Israel Abanikanda. 7:09 left to play
— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) August 10, 2024
Jeff Driskel’s back in at QB:
Driskell back in. Kinda weird. Trying to get update on Hartman
— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) August 10, 2024
A trainer tending to Sam Hartman on the sideline. Looks like he’s examining Hartman’s right shoulder.
— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) August 10, 2024
Kazmeir Allen:
Kaz Allen went his whole rookie season with no plays designed for him last year. He got two touches this game for him and converted both of them for first downs.
— Jamual (@LetMualTellit) August 10, 2024
Tress Way tackle:
Jets take the lead:
Jets take the lead with 21 seconds left, 20-17
— Zach Selby (@ZachSelbyWC) August 10, 2024
Washington’s final drive:
Jets take the lead w 24 seconds left. DQ called timeout to preserve time on the clock after the kick. I wonder if we see something funky on this kick return
— JP Finlay (@JPFinlayNBCS) August 10, 2024
Washington
Washington Commanders announce 2026 training camp schedule
ASHBURN, Va. – The Washington Commanders have released their 2026 Training Camp schedule, with eleven open practices between August 1 and August 19, including five open to all fans and six reserved for season ticket members.
For the fifth straight year, training camp will take place at the team’s football operations headquarters in Ashburn, Virginia.
Open practices for all fans are scheduled for August 1, August 7, August 8, August 18 and August 19.
Season ticket member practices will be held August 3, 4, 5, 10, 11 and 12.
All sessions begin at 8:30 a.m., with gates opening at 7:30 a.m.
Fans can claim free tickets beginning June 23 at 10 a.m. General admission fans may request up to six tickets and one parking pass for a single day of camp. Season ticket members can claim tickets for two member‑exclusive days in addition to one general admission day. All parking will be on site at the BigBear.ai Performance Center and requires a parking pass.
The team plans several themed events throughout camp, including Back Together Weekend on August 1, Military Appreciation Day on August 7 and Kids Day on August 8. Local youth football and community groups will also be hosted throughout the summer.
For more information visit the Washington Commanders online.
The Source: Information in this article comes from the Washington Commanders.
Washington
Algae-filled Washington pool to be drained for repairs after US$14.7 million renovation
The Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool on Washington’s National Mall is set to be drained again for repairs after algae and peeling paint appeared just weeks after a US$14.7 million renovation, while President Donald Trump threatened prison time for anyone caught damaging the pool.
The DC Water authority issued a permit to drain the 609-metre rectangular pool, it said on Monday, while the repair company said it would fix the pool as part of its warranty.
Peeling paint and algae growth have been visible in the pool since soon after Trump declared the renovation project complete on June 6. Critics have raised concerns about the no-bid contract to recoat the pool before the nation’s 250th anniversary celebrations next month, as well as for the ducks that use its water. Workers from the National Park Service earlier this week poured hydrogen peroxide into the pool to combat the algae.
Trump, without evidence, has blamed vandals for the state of the landmark. On Monday, he echoed a weekend threat by US Attorney Jeanine Pirro to prosecute people accused of attempting to destroy the pool.
“Please remember that there is a 10-year prison sentence for the destruction, or even the attempted destruction, of such things – Which will be fully enforced!” Trump earlier wrote in a social media post. Destruction of federal property can carry a maximum prison sentence of 10 years.
It was not immediately apparent what criminal or civil violation someone might commit reaching into the pool.
Washington
Trae Young, Washington Wizards agree to new 4-year, $212M contract: Source
Half a year can be an eternity in the NBA.
Seven months ago, as Trae Young and the Atlanta Hawks headed toward a divorce, Young’s value within the league had never been lower.
On Monday, Young and the Washington Wizards agreed to a new four-year, maximum-salary contract worth approximately $212.9 million, according to a league source. The fourth year of the contract will be a player option.
Young’s first-year salary is estimated to be $49.5 million, which amounts to 30 percent of the projected 2026-27 salary cap of $165 million. During the 2029-30 season, the final year of the contract, Young will earn $56.9 million if he accepts his player option.
Wizards officials would love it, of course, if Young can return to the form that made him an All-NBA Third Team player during the 2021-22 season. But at the very least, they place significant value on knowing that their team’s offense will start with him on most occasions, and that he will be around to shoulder a large portion of the scoring load while the team’s young players, who comprise the team’s long-term nucleus, continue to improve.
Wizards get the No. 1 draft pick. Will it make a difference?
David Aldridge
That Young will receive such large annual salaries no doubt will come as a shock to many observers, especially after Young’s reputation took a beating toward the end of his Hawks tenure. The NBA rumor mill, which is often inaccurate, predicted months ago that any new deal between Young and the Wizards would average no more than $40 million annually.
But in recent weeks, Wizards decision-makers became convinced that, with the NBA’s new anti-tanking measures compelling more teams to compete, Young was going to command maximum-salary contract offers from other franchises through either a straight free-agent signing or a sign-and-trade proposal.
Because the Wizards hold Young’s Bird rights, the Wizards had the latitude to offer Young up to a five-year contract with 8 percent annual raises. But Young’s new four-year deal instead features 5 percent year-over-year raises, the maximum year-over-year raise that any other team could have offered Young as a non-Bird free agent. For Washington, the difference between signing Young to 5 percent raises instead of 8 percent raises will amount to a total savings of $8.9 million over four years.
Wizards officials are not concerned that Young’s new contract will age poorly and prevent them from making future moves to improve their roster. Anthony Davis, who is due to earn $58.5 million in 2026-27, and Young are now Washington’s highest-paid players on its young roster, but the person with the third-largest salary is big man Alex Sarr, who will be paid the relatively small sum of $12.3 million this season. At the earliest, the Wizards do not expect to approach the dreaded first apron until the 2028-29 season, when any new rookie-scale contract extensions for Sarr and Kyshawn George would go into effect.
Plus, Wizards officials reason that Young, who will turn 28 years old in September, will remain in his prime years through the end of his contract. The onerous large contracts that age the worst — potentially Jimmy Butler’s current deal with the Golden State Warriors and Paul George’s current deal with the Philadelphia 76ers, for example — tend to be contracts in which players already are past their primes at the start of their contracts.
Young is by no means a perfect player. Undersized at 6 feet 1, and undeniably more focused on the offensive end of the floor, he tended to be a significant defensive liability throughout his Hawks tenure. That trend could worsen if he begins to lose a step (or two) over the next several years.
At the same time, though, Wizards officials have always known that their lineups would have to feature enough positional size and enough defensive-oriented players to compensate for Young’s shortcomings — in the same way that the defensive liabilities of LaMelo Ball, Jalen Brunson, Luka Dončić, Kyrie Irving and Donovan Mitchell (and others) are compensated for by their respective teams.
The Wizards’ decision-makers believe Davis and youngsters Bilal Coulibaly, Davis, George, Sarr and whomever they pick first overall in Tuesday night’s draft will develop into strong enough defenders to help Young.
Young appeared in only five games for Washington last season after his trade from Atlanta for CJ McCollum and Corey Kispert. That was a large enough sample size to demonstrate how his gravity and his passing skill could create open shots for his new teammates. George, Tre Johnson and others should receive more wide-open 3-point looks when Young directs the offense, and Sarr and Davis should feast on lobs from Young in pick-and-rolls.
Only 16 players in NBA history have averaged at least 20 points and 10 assists per game in the same season, according to Basketball Reference. Young is one of those players, and he has done it three times, during the 2022-23, 2023-24 and 2024-25 seasons. The only other players who have had at least three seasons of at least 20 points and 10 assists per game are James Harden (four times), Kevin Johnson (three times), Magic Johnson (three times), Oscar Robertson (five times), Isiah Thomas (four times) and Russell Westbrook (five times).
The franchise expects Young to make Washington’s offense more efficient and, because opponents will have to take the ball out of their net more often, give Washington’s defense more opportunities to set itself.
July 6 is the first day when new free-agent contracts may be signed and made official.
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