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Ravens' running game was crucial in a big win over the Chargers, especially on 4th down Older siblings everywhere could appreciate John Harbaugh's refusal to concede an inch against his younger brother Jim. Noah Trister, The Associated Press Nov 26, 2024 3:16 PM Nov 26, 2024 3:35 PM Share by Email Share on Facebook Share on X Share on LinkedIn Print Share via Text Message Baltimore Ravens running back Justice Hill (43) scores a rushing touchdown past Los Angeles Chargers cornerback Elijah Molden (22) during the second half of an NFL football game Monday, Nov. 25, 2024, in Inglewood, Calif. (AP Photo/Ryan Sun) Older siblings everywhere could appreciate John Harbaugh's refusal to concede an inch against his younger brother Jim. Even when his Baltimore Ravens faced fourth down at their 16-yard line in the second quarter, John wasn't giving up the ball without a fight. The Ravens converted that fourth down and two others on their way to a 30-23 victory over the Los Angeles Chargers on Monday night, giving their coach a third victory in three matchups against his brother. It was the first time they'd faced off since Baltimore beat San Francisco — then coached by Jim Harbaugh — in the Super Bowl at the end of the 2012 season. “We grew up in the same room and have always lived our life side by side, but that’s not what the game is about,” John Harbaugh said. “The game really is about the players, and the players are always going to win the game or lose the game or whatever.” On this night, it was Baltimore's players who shined. Specifically Derrick Henry, who rushed for 140 yards. Lamar Jackson threw a couple of touchdown passes, and the defense was solid, allowing touchdowns on the first and last Los Angeles drives but not much in between. “I’m proud of our guys,” John Harbaugh said. “I’m proud of the way they came out and responded after the first 10 points — we were down 10-0, and our guys stepped up.” After converting fourth-and-1 at their 16 late in the second quarter, the Ravens scored on a 40-yard pass from Jackson to Rashod Bateman, taking the lead for good at 14-10. Baltimore's other two fourth-and-1 conversions came on a 14-play touchdown drive that spanned the end of the third quarter and start of the fourth. “We’re just confident that we’ll end up converting on those fourth downs, and we did a great job blocking,” said Henry, who converted the last two of the fourth downs. "All we had to do was make a play, and we did.” What's working The Ravens got back to their identity a bit, rushing for 212 yards. And it wasn't just Henry and Jackson contributing. Justice Hill broke free for a 51-yard touchdown that made it 30-16 in the fourth. “Nobody wants to stand in front of (Derrick Henry) every single play, every single run,” Hill said. "You can do it one time, two times, three times, but when you have to do it 20 to 25 times, it starts to wear down. I’m glad we stuck with the run game this game, and it played out for us.” What needs help There were still too many penalties, with the Ravens flagged nine times for 102 yards. Baltimore played a pretty clean game until the fourth quarter, so several of those flags came after the Ravens had the game reasonably under control, but this is still an area of concern. Stock up With star linebacker Roquan Smith out because of a hamstring injury, Malik Harrison led the Ravens with a dozen tackles. “It’s a lot of people that doubted me coming into this game, so I’m happy I was able to ball out and show them that I can be in this league, and I can play at a high level,” Harrison said. Stock down There was a time when Isaiah Likely seemed as if he might be supplanting Mark Andrews as Baltimore's top tight end threat, but Likely went without a catch Monday. He did, however, recover the onside kick that effectively ended the game. Injuries Although Smith was out, DT Travis Jones (ankle) and C Tyler Linderbaum (back) were able to start. Key number Jackson has now thrown 22 touchdown passes with no interceptions on Monday nights, with a passer rating of 124.3. Next steps The Ravens have one more game before their open date, and it's a showdown this weekend against a Philadelphia team that has won seven in a row. Saquon Barkley (1,392) of the Eagles and Henry (1,325) have both surpassed 1,300 yards rushing already. Nobody else in the NFL has more than 1,000. ___ AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl Noah Trister, The Associated Press See a typo/mistake? Have a story/tip? This has been shared 0 times 0 Shares Share by Email Share on Facebook Share on X Share on LinkedIn Print Share via Text Message Get your daily Victoria news briefing Email Sign Up More Football (NFL) Saquon Barkley is the NFL's version of Shohei Ohtani: Analysis Nov 26, 2024 3:01 PM J.K. Dobbins' knee injury could be tough news for the Chargers offense Nov 26, 2024 2:31 PM Giants QB Tommy DeVito has a sore throwing arm after loss to Bucs Nov 26, 2024 2:19 PMMPT unveils groundbreaking Maryland Center for Media Literacy & Education
A ceasefire deal that could end more than a year of cross-border fighting between Israel and Lebanon's Hezbollah militant group won backing from Israeli leaders Tuesday, raising hopes and renewing difficult questions in a region gripped by conflict. Hezbollah leaders also signaled tentative backing for the U.S.-brokered deal, which offers both sides an off-ramp from hostilities that have driven more than 1.2 million Lebanese and 50,000 Israelis from their homes. An intense bombing campaign by Israel has killed more than 3,700 people, many of them civilians, Lebanese officials say. But while the deal, set to take effect early Wednesday, could significantly calm the tensions that have inflamed the region, it does little directly to resolve the much deadlier war that has raged in Gaza since the Hamas attack on southern Israel in October 2023 that killed 1,200 people. Hezbollah, which began firing scores of rockets into Israel the following day in support of Hamas, has previously said it would keep fighting until there was a stop to the fighting in Gaza. Here’s what to know about the tentative ceasefire agreement and its potential implications: The agreement reportedly calls for a 60-day halt in fighting that would see Israeli troops retreat to their side of the border while requiring Hezbollah to end its armed presence in a broad swath of southern Lebanon. President Joe Biden said Tuesday that the deal is set to take effect at 4 a.m. local time on Wednesday (9 p.m. EST Tuesday). Under the deal, thousands of Lebanese troops and U.N. peacekeepers are to deploy to the region south of the Litani River. An international panel lead by the U.S. would monitor compliance by all sides. Biden said the deal “was designed to be a permanent cessation of hostilities.” Israel has demanded the right to act should Hezbollah violate its obligations. Lebanese officials have rejected writing that into the proposal. Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz insisted Tuesday that the military would strike Hezbollah if the U.N. peacekeeping force, known as UNIFIL , does not provide “effective enforcement” of the deal. A Hezbollah leader said the group's support for the deal hinged on clarity that Israel would not renew its attacks. “After reviewing the agreement signed by the enemy government, we will see if there is a match between what we stated and what was agreed upon by the Lebanese officials,” Mahmoud Qamati, deputy chair of Hezbollah’s political council, told the Qatari satellite news network Al Jazeera. “We want an end to the aggression, of course, but not at the expense of the sovereignty of the state” of Lebanon, he said. The European Union’s top diplomat, Josep Borrell, said Tuesday that Israel’s security concerns had been addressed in the deal also brokered by France. After months of cross-border bombings, Israel can claim major victories, including the killing of Hezbollah’s top leader, Hassan Nasrallah, most of his senior commanders and the destruction of extensive militant infrastructure. A complex attack in September involving the explosion of hundreds of walkie-talkies and pagers used by Hezbollah was widely attributed to Israel, signaling a remarkable penetration of the militant group. The damage inflicted on Hezbollah has come not only in its ranks, but to the reputation it built by fighting Israel to a stalemate in the 2006 war. Still, its fighters managed to put up heavy resistance on the ground, slowing Israel’s advance while continuing to fire scores of rockets, missiles and drones across the border each day. The ceasefire offers relief to both sides, giving Israel’s overstretched army a break and allowing Hezbollah leaders to tout the group’s effectiveness in holding their ground despite Israel’s massive advantage in weaponry. But the group is likely to face a reckoning, with many Lebanese accusing it of tying their country’s fate to Gaza’s at the service of key ally Iran, inflicting great damage on a Lebanese economy that was already in grave condition. Until now, Hezbollah has insisted that it would only halt its attacks on Israel when it agreed to stop fighting in Gaza. Some in the region are likely to view a deal between the Lebanon-based group and Israel as a capitulation. In Gaza, where officials say the war has killed more than 44,000 Palestinians, Israel’s attacks have inflicted a heavy toll on Hamas, including the killing of the group’s top leaders. But Hamas fighters continue to hold scores of Israeli hostages, giving the militant group a bargaining chip if indirect ceasefire negotiations resume. Hamas is likely to continue to demand a lasting truce and a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza in any such deal. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas offered a pointed reminder Tuesday of the intractability of the war, demanding urgent international intervention. “The only way to halt the dangerous escalation we are witnessing in the region, and maintain regional and international stability, security and peace, is to resolve the question of Palestine,” he said in a speech to the U.N. read by his ambassador.
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CNN host Brianna Keilar asked Democratic Rep. Dan Goldman of New York Monday how he felt about past reassurances that President Joe Biden would not issue a pardon to his son Hunter Biden. Biden announced the pardon in a statement released by the White House Sunday night, alleging that Hunter had been “singled out” while alleging “political opponents” were seeking to “break” both him and his son in the courts. Keilar asked Goldman about what Biden said before playing the clip. (RELATED: ‘He Lied To Us For A Long Time’: Elie Honig Says Hunter Biden Pardon Will ‘Tarnish’ Joe Biden’s Legacy) “What does that feel like watching yourself back then reassuring people that Biden was not going to issue a pardon for his son?” Keilar asked Goldman, who had said he “did not think there was any chance” Biden would pardon his son. “I think that if that plea agreement and that plea deal had gone through there would be no pardon. That was a satisfactory outcome,” Goldman said, prompting Keilar to press him about the timeline. WATCH: The plea bargain Hunter Biden reached with special counsel David Weiss collapsed after United States District Judge Maryellen Noreika questioned the arrangement during a July 26, 2023 hearing. “I hear what you‘re saying about the Kash Patel appointment, but you know you took him at his word so what does that feel like, knowing that he’s gone back on it?” Keilar asked. “Well, as I said, I’m disappointed that after the plea fell through and it became clear about why it did, including Republican congressional intervention in this case, which made this case very unique and very different from any other case, I think that we all, I think I should have as well recognized that this is not the normal prosecution,” Goldman said. “I said many times that if Hunter Biden were not Hunter Biden, he would never be charged with these crimes and when you start to see what Donald Trump is planning to do with his Department of Justice and with his FBI and the degree to which Hunter Biden has already been shamelessly attacked as a private citizen by Republicans, I certainly understand why the president felt like this miscarriage of justice should not carry forward, and that he should not be at risk of retributive prosecution for political reasons, which is not the proper way to execute our rule of law.” A jury in Delaware convicted Hunter Biden in June on three felony gun charges in connection with the 2018 purchase of a Colt .38-caliber revolver. The president’s son entered a guilty plea on federal tax charges in September in a federal court in California. (RELATED: Here Are Times Biden, KJP Promised President Wouldn’t Pardon Hunter Before Breaking His Word) President-elect Donald Trump said during an Oct. 24 interview with Hugh Hewitt that he was open to pardoning Hunter Biden. All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org .From the Snakepit to Switzerland: the story of NSW's oldest basketballerTrudeau told Trump Americans would also suffer if tariffs are imposed, a Canadian minister says
Skydance ‘s $8 billion deal to merge with Paramount Global has been characterized in some corners of the industry as a rescue mission. But one Wall Street media veteran thinks it’s premature to say the worst is behind the company. “Secular trends” like cord-cutting and declining TV ratings are “not going to change just because they’re being bought by Skydance,” said Naveen Sarma, managing director at S&P Global Ratings and sector lead for the firm’s U.S. media and telecom group. “Maybe Skydance will have a strategy that addresses some of that, but over the next, call it, year or so, year and a half, we’re going to see a company that’s going to go through a lot of upheaval because of the transaction.” Sarma spoke at the UBS Media and Communications Conference on the event’s annual panel scrutinizing the credit outlook for media companies. Credit is distinct from a company’s overall financial condition and operating strength, but thriving with a poor rating from S&P or Moody’s is difficult because of how crucial it is for companies to fund their ambitions with low-interest corporate debt. Last March, S&P lowered Paramount’s credit rating to junk status, citing “downside ratings pressure” on its linear TV business. The winding path toward the Skydance deal began around the time of the UBS conference a year ago, when Sarma voiced concerns about Paramount’s credit uncertainty and looming obligations. Within days of his comments, reports emerged of a meeting between then-CEO Bob Bakish and Warner Bros. Discovery chief David Zaslav as well as word of initial discussions with Skydance CEO David Ellison. After the close of the merger, which is projected to come during the first half of 2025, Sarma went on, “The secular trends could accelerate. They may not be able to address it. That’s certainly a negative from a credit standpoint. Longer-term, I think the jury’s still out. We’ll have to see how the deal closes, what the strategy looks like.” While the merger partners have offered “a little bit of disclosure” about plans for their movie studio and linear TV businesses, “we certainly don’t know what their streaming strategy is,” Sarma maintained. “So, we’ll have to see how that develops and how, basically, they perform, how they’re able to implement that strategy and what kind of success do they have in this environment.” Any potential upward movement of the company’s credit rating, he added, “is certainly a couple of years down the road. Is it stable? It’s stable today, but all of those things could push our view of the credit either higher or lower.” Asked to compare and contrast Paramount’s situation with that faced by Warner Bros. Discovery, Sarma said the companies share many similarities in terms of their asset bases. Both stocks have lost significant value this year, and last August within a 24-hour span each announced multi-billion-dollar writedowns on the value of their cable networks. “The difference,” the analyst said, “is when you look at the quality of the assets, we like Warner’s assets better – bigger studio, global cable networks, and a streaming business, if you believe it, that’s going to get to $1 billion in EBITDA sometime next year.” S&P has given WBD financial targets to hit by the end of 2025 and will revisit their rating at that time, Sarma noted.Hugh Grant Has Always Played the Villain
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How Trump's bet on voters electing him managed to silence some of his legal woes
For all their moral superiority, it turns out Democrats are every bit as willing to sacrifice democracy to their personal interests as are Republicans. President Joe Biden stood on high ground for the past year as his son, Hunter, moved his way through the courts on felony gun and tax-evasion charges. Asked repeatedly whether he’d pardon his son to spare him from prison, the president was adamant. He wouldn’t do it, he pledged. His allegiance was to the rule of law, he said, and the idea that no one is above it. He respected the legal process and would let the courts do their jobs, he vowed. But as the hour approached for Hunter to be sentenced and packed off to a prison cell, Biden changed his tune. Hunter is a victim of politics, he declared, prosecuted at the behest of the president’s political enemies. Hunter is a good guy, he claimed, who did bad things because of his past addiction to drugs. And so, Biden did what he promised not to do and signed a sweeping pardon sparing Hunter the legal consequences of his crimes. In putting his name on his son’s pardon, Biden laid waste to the foundational principle of our democracy that all Americans are equal under the law. Try to get the mother of a son rotting in prison because his love of crack led him astray to believe the justice her boy received was equal to that meted out to Hunter. The president’s son is now free to resume partying without paying off any of his debt to society. The pardon is the final smackdown to Democrats’ puffed-up claim to be all that stands between democracy and tyranny. That’s never been true, and certainly wasn’t in 2024, a year in which the Democratic Party abandoned democracy wholesale in its quest to hold onto power. Ironically, Biden was one of the main victims. Having won the primary votes necessary to claim the party’s nomination, the president was ousted from his reelection race in an intra-party coup orchestrated by the Democratic elite. The party politburo then abandoned the democratic nominating process and bestowed its nomination on Vice President Kamala Harris, who didn’t win a single primary vote. When it comes to assaults on democracy, however, that usurping of the electoral process pales in comparison with what Democrats did to the centrist No Labels movement. In a year in which a majority of Americans were unhappy with the major-party ballot choices, No Labels sought to offer a third choice selected from the political middle. Democrats declared war. Documents recently unsealed in a No Labels lawsuit against Democratic operatives reveal the length to which the party went to deny voters that option. Allegations raised in the lawsuit accuse party strategists of deploying an all-fronts offensive to intimidate both donors and potential candidates. They launched a false website that presented itself as the official No Labels site, espousing all sorts of extreme positions. Democrats also attempted to use the courts to block ballot access for No Labels and other third-party campaigns, including those of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Black activist Cornel West. Democrats will fight hard for your right to vote, as long as you vote for them. So spare us the smug Democratic claim to being the defenders of democracy. It’s a lie. But this is true: There are no righteous political parties.NDP won’t support Liberal $250 rebate plan unless eligibility expanded: SinghA former member of Donald Trump ’s administration has warned fellow Republicans not to “underestimate” Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez as the liberal congresswoman is touted as a possible contender to lead the Democratic party. Speaking on Fox News on Friday, Monica Crowley , a former public affairs official in the Treasury Department during the first Trump administration , said AOC had “real grassroots support” through her early adoption of social media. The Democratic congresswoman, 35, is known for her leftist stance on multiple issues . In the ongoing aftermath of the party’s historic defeat on November 5, many insiders have reportedly floated her name to lead the Democrats into 2028. Party members have been impressed with her ability to “cut through the BS and tell it like it is,” as one Democratic strategist told The Hill. Crowley said that, though she believed AOC to be “wrong on everything,” the New York congresswoman “was an early adopter of social media... so she’s connecting directly to voters.” “Just a word of warning to the Republicans, to my party: Do not underestimate AOC. She’s young, she’s vibrant, she’s attractive,” Crowley said. “I think she’s wrong on everything, but she does have real grassroots support. And all of the energy and activism in the Democrat party remains with the revolutionary left, of which she is a part.” However, not all agree with Crowley’s assessment, even with the Democratic party. Political analyst Doug Schoen – speaking on the same segment – said the choice of AOC as leader could be “a disaster.” “Most Democrats don’t want extreme left wing politics,” Schoen said. “I believe the Democratic Party needs to move to the center on cultural issues and on fiscal issues and be more fiscally disciplined. “AOC represents the opposite, and I think if she runs, it would be a disaster for the party, and I think her chance of getting nominated would be nil.”