首页 > 

game background

2025-01-23
FLORHAM PARK, N.J. (AP) — New York Jets kicker Greg Zuerlein will be activated from injured reserve and will play against the Buffalo Bills on Sunday. Interim coach Jeff Ulbrich announced Friday that Zuerlein is returning after missing seven games with a knee injury to his left, non-kicking leg. He had been shaky before the injury, but the Jets have since been unsettled at the position, with Riley Patterson, Spencer Shrader and Anders Carlson all filling in. “He came back, looked healthy, kicked the ball well this week,” Ulbrich said of Zuerlein. “So, he’ll be our guy going forward here.” Zuerlein is officially listed as questionable to play, but was a full participant the final two practices. Wide receiver Davante Adams is also questionable , but likely to play after participating on a limited basis Friday because of a hip ailment that held him out Thursday. Adams, acquired from Las Vegas in October, has 56 receptions for 719 yards and six touchdowns on 94 targets in nine games for the Jets. He’s 72 yards away from his fifth straight 1,000-yard season and sixth of his career. “I think at this point, it would be a crying shame to not be able to get that,” he said. Adams and Aaron Rodgers are also tied with Miami’s Dan Marino and Mark Clayton for the third-most TD connections (82), including playoffs, by a quarterback-wide receiver duo. Rodgers needs one touchdown pass to become the fifth player in NFL history to get 500 in the regular season — and Adams said he would “love” to be on the receiving end of the milestone. “I got 200, I got 400," he said of Rodgers' TD passes while they were teammates in Green Bay. “So it would be dope to get 500 as well. I think his 200th was my first, so we got some special connections in the past, so it'd be great.” Adams said he was injured early in the game against the Rams, but was still able to catch seven passes for 68 yards and a touchdown. He said he was optimistic about his chances of playing at Buffalo. “We’re still working on it,” Adams said. “We’re treating it, trying to get it right so we can hopefully be there and ready by game time.” Cornerback Sauce Gardner is also questionable with a hamstring injury that sidelined him in the second half of New York's loss to the Los Angeles Rams . Zuerlein, who re-signed with the Jets last offseason on a two-year deal, made just nine of 15 field goal attempts and missed one extra point in the first eight games this year. He had been one of the NFL's most consistently reliable kickers the previous two seasons with the Jets. Patterson kicked in one game after the Jets placed Zuerlein on IR. Shrader also kicked in one game before he was signed off the practice squad by Kansas City. Carlson had been the kicker the past five games, but missed a field goal and an extra point against the Rams and the Jets signed Greg Joseph to the practice squad to provide competition. Ulbrich said earlier in the week Zuerlein would also be in the mix after a long layoff. "I think sometimes that can be powerful, an opportunity just to take a deep breath, get his body healthy again and get a restart," Ulbrich said. “So I’m excited for him to do his thing these last two games and really demonstrate to everybody who he is as a kicker.” Defensive tackle Quinnen Williams could return after missing last week with a hamstring injury. He was listed as questionable and was limited at practice all week. Also questionable but expected to play are right tackle Morgan Moses (knee), safety Tony Adams (ankle), cornerback Michael Carter II (back), defensive end Haason Reddick (neck) and defensive lineman Braiden McGregor (ankle). Defensive tackle Leki Fotu was ruled out with a knee injury. AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/NFLST. CHARLES, La. (WTVF) — Louisiana authorities said this weekend they located a missing Tennessee teenage girl after they found her in a tent out in the woods. The 14-year-old girl was playing an online game when she met the suspected man Alexander Materne, who police have charged with one count of contributing to the delinquency of a juvenile, felony human trafficking, carnal knowledge and one count of aggravated kidnapping of a child. He reportedly took her from her home on Dec. 23. Police didn't say what part of Tennessee she was kidnapped. Police said Materne took the girl to his house in St. Rose, Louisiana, where the two engaged in sexual acts. Materne told police that is when she told him her age. Authorities said Materne and the teen left the location in St. Rose. He bought the girl a tent, food and water and dropped her off in a wooded area in Tangipahoa Parish. Police said Materne then went to Jennings, Louisiana, to celebrate Christmas with his family. The teen's family learned about Materne’s ties to Jennings and contacted Louisiana police to check for Materne and their child. Materne was located at a family member's residence in Jennings. When asked about the teenager, police said he agreed to show detectives where he dropped off the girl in Tangipahoa Parish. Detectives located her in the woods. She was transported to a hospital to be evaluated. Do you have more information about this story? You can email newsroom@newschannel5.com. Rebecca: https://ewscripps.brightspotcdn.com/a2/d9/fb69982545c59e9836fbe80fe431/rebecca-recommends.png Bree: https://ewscripps.brightspotcdn.com/74/78/507118fa415f9ad794a927fe43ca/screenshot-2024-12-09-at-5-09-02-am.png Carrie: https://ewscripps.brightspotcdn.com/2e/72/be0f23854c54a228c9d6138c9847/carrie-recommends-header.png Ben: https://ewscripps.brightspotcdn.com/df/c4/19fa7c504480938f39a431e3b276/ben-recommends-header.png Amy: https://ewscripps.brightspotcdn.com/b9/b6/1408516a4a91b97639b178fc1ba9/amy-recommends-header.png Rhori: https://ewscripps.brightspotcdn.com/5b/25/a224d13d47739165c92b94e643db/rhori-recommends-header.png Lelan: https://ewscripps.brightspotcdn.com/af/54/833bf879454097a398bd44f723de/lelan-recommends.png Another example of how one person can truly make a difference. And the best part - we all can help! As a nurse, Laura handles emergencies every day. But nothing could prepare her for the emergency that brought her hometown to its knees. From her current home in Tennessee, she's mobilizing aid and supplies for Helene survivors and is helping make their recovery easier and their holidays brighter. I hope you take a moment to watch her story - you might even feel inspired to lend a helping hand. -Rebecca Schleichergame background

Recently, I spoke at the launch in Delhi of Vikram Sampath’s new magnum opus, , a 900-page biography of this controversial figure. External affairs minister S. Jaishankar, who was the chief guest, spoke well, at a function hosted by Bhaswati Mukherjee, president, India Habitat Centre, in association with the Prabha Khaitan Foundation. The moderator was Lipika Bhushan. I simultaneously greatly admire Vikram Sampath and envy him. My admiration is based on his remarkable scholarship as a historian, his meticulous research, the quality of his prose, and his attempt at objectivity in spite of his own ideological inclinations often to the contrary. I envy him because of his prolificity, and the amazing speed with which he produces one voluminous book after another. As an author myself, I often joke with him that he gives me a severe inferiority complex! Vikram has also written a masterly biography of the legendary singer of the gramophone record era, Gauhar Jan, as also an excellent two-volume biography of the great freedom fighter, Veer Savarkar. I quoted from Sampath’s work on Savarkar in my book, While paying tribute to Savarkar’s courage and sacrifices for India’s freedom from British rule, Sampath has not written a panegyric or . To quote him: “As the intellectual fountainhead of the ideology of Hindutva, Savarkar is undoubtedly one of the most contentious political thinkers... Accounts of his long and stormy life have oscillated from glorifying hagiographies to reproachful demonisation. (Emphasis mine) I was slowly to discover that Savarkar was a bundle of contradictions and a historian’s enigma.” For someone, like Vikram, who is one of the few truly erudite Hindutva-leaning ideologues, to write this requires not only courage but honesty. Unfortunately, this kind of honesty is becoming rather rare. Those who blindly idolise Savarkar overlook the fact that he never joined the RSS, was a professed atheist, an uncompromising rationalist who opposed even cow worship and a strong advocate of reform within Hinduism, whose ills, including caste discrimination and gender disparity, he called the or Seven Fetters, that needed to be broken. Actually, Savarkar’s short tract on Hindutva, much quoted by his often-uninformed protagonists today, was written in a specific historical context of the times then, and later, he himself put in perspective what he had advocated. Unfortunately, his uncompromising struggle against bigoted Hindu orthodoxies is hardly ever highlighted. But Vikram in his majestic biography has the courage to do so. This same historical objectivity informs his book on Tipu Sultan. Tipu has been at the centre of acrimonious controversy in recent times. There are those, including the Congress Party, who see in him a staunch freedom fighter against British rule; others, especially in the BJP and large parts of southern India, see him only as a bigoted Muslim sultan who massacred thousands of Hindus. Both points of view are valid, because as Vikram is the first to admit, history cannot be seen only in black or white polarities. To argue that his anti-colonial credentials are diluted because he was willing to take the help of the French to fight the British, is silly, because there were many Hindu royal families then who also willingly colluded with the British, and it would be wrong to judge them, or their descendants, solely on this account. Similarly, it cannot be denied that Tipu, in terms of faith, was a bigot, who mercilessly converted and killed Hindus and Christians, and destroyed their places of worship. It is counter-productive and dishonest to gloss over this fact, because air-brushing history, ultimately — and legitimately — leads to a backlash. I have written about being truthful to history, in the context of the destruction of Hindu temples, the pillage, conversion, proselytisation and desecration of leading centres of Hindu learning, during the Turkic invasion of the 12th century, and thereafter, during Islamic rule in wide parts of India. In fact, in my book cited above, I quote the globally recognised chronicler of civilisations, Will Durant, who wrote: “The Mohammedan conquest of India is probably the bloodiest story in history...” Yet, I have always also maintained that endlessly excavating past atrocities, serves little purpose in our new quest, as a constitutional and secular republic, to build a cohesive and united country, unique for its proven ability to be a vibrant multi-religious, multicultural and multiethnic nation. Proof of this lies in the fact that much before the current controversies about temples and mosques gained momentum, India had already developed — not without occasional frictions — a syncretic culture, where Hindu and Muslim traditions had coalesced into a . The problem arises when we seek to assess the legacy and history of a historical personality solely through one or the other prism: Savage bigot or valiant opponent of the British. Historical memories of either of these labels cannot be erased or forgotten, but they become larger than life, and hence distorted, when political parties, for short-term electoral dividends begin to exclusively focus on only one or the other. Those who play the minority vote bank card valorise Tipu selectively, while those playing the Hindu majoritarian card demonise him wholly. This not only prevents the writing of objective history, but arouses visceral emotions, all happily grist to the myopic ambitions of politicians, where people’s emotions are manipulated and people themselves are used as cannon fodder to win elections. But Vikram Sampath, always the true historian, retains his objectivity. At the end of his book, he writes: “The jury is still out on Tipu Sultan, his legacy, his characterisation and his contributions...” To emphasise this point Sampath quotes the scholar Narasingha Sil’s assessment: “It is time we arrived at a reasonably realistic assessment of Tipu Sultan...” There is no irreconcilable contradiction in the fact that he fought the British valiantly, and was also an Islamic fanatic. History is full of greys. The problem is that those who know less, think they are always right. And those who do know, like Vikram, rarely have his conviction to try and be historically balanced.

Joshua Hall family ‘hanging on to hope’ as reward increased to $5,000Newcastle District Cricket Association: Mid-season review for 2024-2025Turkiye to allow pro-Kurdish party to visit jailed PKK founder

Kylian Mbappe’s spot-kick woe goes on as Real Madrid lose at Athletic BilbaoMiddle East latest: Israeli strikes kill a hospital director in Lebanon and wound 9 medics in Gaza

Previous: game 777
Next: game changer