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PHILADELPHIA – The receiving line looked like that of a funeral, and it essentially was – with Washington Commanders minority owners Mark Ein and Mitchell Rales, followed by managing partner and owner Josh Harris and general manager Adam Peters – hugging every player and staffer as they entered the visitor’s locker room. Sometimes they offered a word of encouragement. In other instances, it was simply a look following the team’s 55-23 loss at the hands of the Philadelphia Eagles in the NFC championship game Sunday. 

“We’ll be back,” said wide receiver Terry McLaurin, who has experienced the franchise’s evolution from dysfunctional during ex-owner Dan Snyder’s reign to within one game of the Super Bowl. “We’ll be back. Most definitely.” 

But McLaurin and everybody else – from the owners to the coaches to his teammates – knows they have to clean it up to give themselves a chance on one of the game’s biggest stages. Washington turned the ball over four times and didn’t force one themselves, and the minus-four differential contributed to the 32-point defeat. 

“One hundred percent credit to them for capitalizing on the mistakes we had,” McLaurin said. “They were better than us.” 

All things Commanders: Latest Washington Commanders news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Part of the culture change head coach Dan Quinn instilled this season, his first in Washington, centered on the idea that “it’s always going to be about the ball,” McLaurin said. 

“We didn’t do a great job of protecting the football today,” he said, referencing Washington’s three fumbles. “And we didn’t create any turnovers.”

Equally destructive were a pair of personal-foul penalties at the end of the first half, as the Eagles extended their lead from 14-12 to 27-12 in 65 seconds between the two-minute warning and halftime. 

Following Jalen Hurts’ first of three rushing touchdowns, Washington cornerback Marshon Lattimore – two weeks removed from the latest chapter in his feud with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ Mike Evans – was going at it with Eagles wideout A.J. Brown. Officials hit him with an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty that allowed Philadelphia to try a two-point conversion (which was ultimately unsuccessful). The dust-up prompted members from both benches to enter the field in an attempt to prevent any escalation. 

In the locker room after the game, Lattimore wasn’t much interested in telling his side of what went down with Brown. 

“It is what it is,” he said, adding: “We know we got to keep our heads up. We went out there and gave it our all.” 

But Washington’s unraveling continued on the Eagles’ next drive. Jeremy McNichols fumbled the ensuing kickoff and the Eagles recovered at the Washington 24-yard line. A holding penalty backed Philadelphia up, however, and Hurts had to check down a third-down pass to Saquon Barkley. Rookie cornerback Mike Sainiristil was coming in hard, though, and decked Barkley as the running back stepped out of bounds – giving the Eagles another first down. 

“It’s the game of football. Split-decision call that the refs have to make, so they hit me with the unnecessary roughness,” Sainristil said. “I just gotta be smarter in the situation – third down, get off the field, can’t make that hit on the sideline.”

Three plays after Sainristil’s penalty, Hurts darted 9 yards for another touchdown.

Pre-snap penalties can be dealt with, linebacker Frankie Luvu said. Penalties that come after the snap are unacceptable. In all, Washington was flagged nine times for 47 yards.

“We can’t hurt ourselves. We kind of shot ourselves in the foot,” Luvu said. “Special games like this we just got to be poised, so we just came up short, and that was that.” 

Said defensive lineman Jonathan Allen: “In a game like this, everything affects it – turnovers, us not being able to get off the ball, not getting off the field on third down and fourth down. The penalties are just unfortunate on our part. So, we didn’t help ourselves.”

The Commanders’ first fumble came on their second offensive possession when receiver Dyami Brown, while fighting for extra yards, had the ball punched out by Eagles linebacker Zack Baun as cornerback Cooper DeJean held him up. Two minutes later, Barkley had his second rushing touchdown of the game, and the Eagles led 14-3 with just seven plays from scrimmage. 

“I mean, I’m gonna have to watch the film on that, but turnovers, can’t have that,” center Tyler Biadasz said. 

The offense wasn’t “quite firing on all cylinders” right tackle Andrew Wylie said. The turnovers were costly. 

“But that’s just ball,” he said. 

With the Commanders trailing by 11 points in the third quarter and driving again, quarterback Jayden Daniels found running back Austin Ekeler for a short pass. Ekeler went to the ground during the catch but rose before being touched, and when Eagles linebacker Oren Burks met him, he punched the ball out. Baun fell on it, and the Commanders had lost their third fumble of the game. 

McLaurin said the Commanders knew the Eagles thrived off turnovers. Giving the Eagles extra possessions is never a good idea, Daniels said. 

“Turnovers play a huge factor in a game,” said Daniels, who threw a late interception in the end zone with his team in desperation mode, “especially playing a good team like Philly.” 

The calling card of the Commanders during their seven-game winning streak that ended Sunday was complementary football – the offense elevating the defense and vice versa. That didn’t happen against Philadelphia, said Quinn, who credited Eagles defensive coordinator Vic Fangio for creating a plan that emphasized the ball. 

“You have to create some (turnovers) too,” head coach Dan Quinn said. “And so, we’ll give Philadelphia credit, you know, like, they caused them. It wasn’t like a fumbled snap or something that was reckless in that way. They caused them. 

“It was something we talked about a lot, winning the turnover margin in this game. Over seven weeks, we’ve been pretty complementary in that spot. And this was our first time not doing that.”

For the Commanders, it was also the wrong time.

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PHILADELPHIA – In the end, Jayden Daniels’ record-setting rookie campaign wasn’t historic in the way he wanted it to be. 

Still, no first-year quarterback has led his team to the Super Bowl, and now Daniels joins the list of those who lost in the conference title game, as the Washington Commanders fell to the Philadelphia Eagles 55-23 on Sunday in the NFC championship game.

Still, there is no denying that the Commanders have a chance at advancing this far in the postseason so long as Daniels is their quarterback.  

“Lot of blame to go around,” defensive lineman Jonathan Allen said after the loss, “but number five’s been special for us this year.”

The raw disappointment after a loss to a division rival with Super Bowl 59 one victory away had Daniels asking the media to excuse his (non-explicit) language.

All things Commanders: Latest Washington Commanders news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

“Man, it sucks. Man, it just sucks,” Daniels said. “Excuse my language, but I couldn’t be prouder of the guys in the locker room. You know, just year one, everybody not really knowing each other, rookies, the vets did a tremendous job of bringing us in and helping us out. And we all just meshed. And we got to this point, but at the end of the day, man, we lost. It sucks, but we’ll move on from this.”

The motivation of knowing what it feels like to lose the NFC title game has been earned in Year 1. 

“I don’t want to have a feeling like this again,” Daniels said. “But you have to deal with it, you know, move on from it.”

Daniels finished 29-for-48 with 255 passing yards, one touchdown through the air and another on the ground, along with one interception. He was sacked three times and spent much of the night on the run from Philadelphia’s four-man rush that consistently beat the banged-up Commanders offensive line trying their best to keep Daniels clean.  

“It’s just another game for me. That’s how I treated it. That’s how I treat every game,” Daniels said. “You have to go out there and earn it. You have to prove it. And even though tonight, we didn’t earn it.

“We believe that we belong here. Kudos to Philly and what they did. Heck of a team, and good luck to them.”

Playing deep in January won’t be new to Daniels and the Commanders the next time it happens. But nothing is given in the NFL. 

“Each year is different. It’s hard to look too far into the future,” wide receiver Terry McLaurin said. “What I will say is that it’s been an unbelievable ride. I’ve genuinely enjoyed this.” 

Washington was a team that was not simply happy to reach this stage, though, because the group fell short of its goal: lifting the Lombardi Trophy. McLaurin said it will take some time to put the turnaround the organization experienced during Daniels’ rookie campaign into context. 

“I’m excited with where things are heading,” he said. “It’s been fun, but to go out like this is tough.” 

Having veterans like McLaurin and linebacker Bobby Wagner – who’s taken on the role of “big brother” for Daniels in the locker room – to uplift his teammates is something Daniels appreciated. McLaurin will be back. Wagner and tight end Zach Ertz, who had 11 catches for 104 yards, among others, may not. 

“Obviously, it’s tough,” Daniels said. “Obviously taking this loss pretty hard.” 

As he did all season, Daniels displayed high-level decision-making and took care of the football (until the end, when Eagles rookie cornerback Quinyon Mitchell recorded an interception in the end zone). He was his typical playmaking self when he snaked for a 10-yard touchdown to bring the Commanders within 11 in the third quarter, and he once again stole points before the half by leading a field-goal drive with no timeouts on the clock to make it 27-12. 

“That kid can do it all,” Eagles linebacker Zack Baun said. “He can read defenses. He can use his legs to extend plays to throw or to run. He makes great decisions. It takes all 11 guys, in coverage and the rush, to corral him.” 

Daniels will almost surely take home Offensive Rookie of the Year honors in less than two weeks. 

In the biggest game yet of his career, Commanders head coach Dan Quinn saw the same quarterback he’s been watching all year. Smiling after taking a big hit. Never hanging his head when his teammates fumbled the ball, which happened three times. Staying consistent in the toughest of environments – and Lincoln Financial Field on Championship Sunday certainly qualifies. 

“It just doesn’t seem like there’s going to be (a game) that’s too big, honestly,” Quinn said. “He has rare competitiveness that makes him unique in a lot of ways.” 

On the Commanders’ final drive, with the outcome of the game already decided, Quinn pulled Daniels. 

“It hurt him to come out at the end,” Quinn said. “He wanted to stay in. I said that’s my call. But that’s the competitor (he is). Honestly, he’s just kind of wired in that way.”

And it’s why the Commanders will always have a chance of reaching this stage with Jayden Daniels. 

Follow Chris Bumbaca on X@BOOMbaca.

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Two of President Donald Trump’s most vulnerable administration picks will get back-to-back confirmation hearings in the Senate this week. 

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who Trump nominated to be Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), and former Democratic Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, whom he selected to be Director of National Intelligence (DNI), will have committee confirmation hearings on Wednesday and Thursday. 

On Wednesday, Kennedy will have his first hearing with the Senate Finance Committee, who will eventually vote on whether to advance his nomination to the full Senate. He will have an additional hearing on Thursday with the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP), but that committee will not have a vote on the nomination. 

Gabbard’s hearing with the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence will take place Thursday morning. 

The two Trump picks were some of the more controversial administration selections. Both Kennedy and Gabbard are former Democrats with histories of policy positions that clash with what many Republican senators believe. 

At issue for lawmakers on both sides is Kennedy’s history of significant criticism of vaccines and vaccination programs. For some Republicans whose states have a large farming constituency, his positions on further regulating agriculture and food production have been cause for concern. 

Gabbard’s past policy stances as they relate to national security have given bipartisan lawmakers some reason for pause, since the role she is nominated for is critical to the nation’s safety and defense. 

Both of the nominees have taken steps to moderate themselves amid the confirmation process. Kennedy has pushed back on suggestions that he is ‘anti-vaccine’ and explained, ‘If vaccines are working for somebody, I’m not going to take them away.’

‘People ought to have choice, and that choice ought to be informed by the best information,’ he said in an interview with NBC News. ‘So I’m going to make sure scientific safety studies and efficacy are out there, and people can make individual assessments about whether that product is going to be good for them.’

Gabbard recently made a remarkable reversal on a controversial intelligence tool used by the government. And her choice to change her position on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act’s (FISA) section 702 managed to win her the backing of a Republican senator on the intel committee that she will need to advance out of. 

Recently asked whether her change of heart on section 702 had earned his vote, Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., said, ‘Yeah, I am, and that was a very important piece for me.’

While both nominees have gotten some necessary Republican backing in the relevant committees, not everyone has said whether they will vote to advance the selections. And even if they are voted out of the committees, they could still face an uphill battle to be confirmed by the full Senate. 

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House Republicans are flying down to South Florida this week for their annual issues conference, where President Donald Trump is expected to speak with lawmakers hashing out the GOP agenda for the next two years.

It’s another sign of the House GOP conference’s push for unity with Trump that the conference is being held at Trump National Doral, his golf course and resort near Miami.

‘He’s going to come and address the Republicans there, and we’re looking forward to that,’ Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., confirmed to reporters last week.

Trump has made no secret of his intent to keep a close eye on the Republican majorities in the House and Senate this year, particularly as they discuss how to use their numbers to pass a massive conservative policy overhaul via the budget reconciliation process.

By reducing the threshold for Senate passage from 60 votes to a 51-seat simple majority, reconciliation allows a party in control of both congressional chambers to enact sweeping changes, provided they’re relevant to budgetary and fiscal policy.

Meanwhile, lawmakers are also contending with the debt ceiling being reinstated this month after it was temporarily suspended in a bipartisan deal during the Trump administration.

And coming on March 14 is the deadline to avert a partial government shutdown, which Congress has extended twice since the end of the previous fiscal year on Oct. 1.

‘I think obviously everyone is ready to get to work,’ Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., told Fox News Digital. ‘With President Trump’s inauguration behind us, now we’re focused on the task at hand – everything from the border to the tax package, energy and defense and national security, and our debt. What we need to do over the next two years to really fulfill the agenda that we laid out for the American people.’

Lawler said he anticipated reconciliation would be a key focus of Trump’s remarks.

With razor-thin margins in the House and Senate, Republicans can afford few dissenters if they are going to get to the finish line. 

Lawler is one of several Republicans who have drawn red lines in the discussions, vowing not to vote for a reconciliation bill that does not lift state and local tax (SALT) deduction caps – limits that have put a strain on suburban districts outside major cities.

He was realistic about setting expectations for their short Florida trip but was optimistic Republicans would eventually come together.

‘I think we’re in the middle of the process and, you know, this is obviously not going to be resolved over these three days,’ Lawler said. ‘But this is, I think, an important opportunity for everyone to really sit down and spend their time going through a lot of these issues.’

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The Houston Astros have reached a tentative agreement to trade reliever Ryan Pressly to the Chicago Cubs on Sunday after Pressly officially waived his no-trade clause, clearing the way for free-agent third baseman Alex Bregman to return to the Astros.

The Astros needed to clear payroll by trading Pressly, two high-ranking executives told USA TODAY Sports, if they were going to bring Bregman back.

Pressly is scheduled to earn $14 million in 2025 in the final year of his contract, and the Cubs will pay $8.5 million of the contract and send only a Class A pitcher Juan Bello to Houston, with the savings used to sign back Bregman.

The Astros offered Bregman a six-year, $156 million contract in October trying to keep him, but he instead chose to hit the free-agent market, trying to see if a team was willing to meet his $200 million price tag. The Toronto Blue Jays, Boston Red Sox and Detroit Tigers all made offers, with at least two teams proposing deals of at least five years, but no one was willing to give him $200 million.

The Astros, according to the two executives, reached out to Scott Boras, Bregman’s agent, on Wednesday to determine if Bregman still had interest in returning. Bregman informed the Astros he still had strong interest in coming back, but needed a resolution quickly since he already had teams willing to give him multi-year deals.

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The Astros opened serious talks with the Cubs on Thursday and were on the verge of reaching a tentative deal, two high-ranking executives told USA TODAY Sports, and then finalized an agreement on Friday that was contingent on Pressly waiving his no-trade clause.

Pressly, who lives in the Dallas area with his young family was reluctant to waive it, but finally agreed when informed that he would be the Cubs’ full-time closer and only a late-inning reliever for the Astros. Pressly will receive an assignment bonus to cover the difference in taxes, a person with direct knowledge of the negotiations said, and will retain his no-trade clause.

The intriguing aspect of Bregman’s likely return, after spending his first nine years with the organization, is that All-Star second baseman Jose Altuve will now move to left field, two officials said, with Isaac Paredes moving from third base to second base, where he has played 53 games. Bregman is a two-time All-Star who won the Gold Glove last season.

“I love watching Bregman play third base, so I can’t imagine putting Bregman or having [manager] Joe [Espada] put Bregman in any other position other than third base,’’ Astros GM Dana Brown said Saturday at the Astros Fanfest. “That’s his home. He puts on clinics when he’s playing third base, and he’s just as special as anybody, Gold Glove there and so I can’t picture him playing anywhere else.”

The potential return of Bregman appeared highly unlikely a month ago when the Astros, who grew tired of waiting for Bregman’s decision, traded for Cubs third baseman Isaac Paredes and signed first baseman Christian Walker to a three-year, $60 million contract extension. The Astros assumed he’d sign a free-agent contract with another team, but on Wednesday, decided to re-ignite negotiations.

Altuve, who also assumed that Bregman was gone, informed the Astros that he’d be willing to leave second base after 14 years and move to left field only if it meant brining back Bregman.

“For Alex, I’ll do whatever,” Altuve, 34, said Saturday. “He’s one of the best players in the whole league and he’s definitely one of the best players on the team. We want him to stay so whatever I have to do for him to stay, I’m willing to do it.”

Espada, knowing that Altuve has played all but six innings of his career at second base, says he has no doubt that Altuve can handle the position switch.

“Yes, because he’s so athletic and he can do some things on the baseball field that not a lot of people can do,” Espada said Saturday. “If we get there, we’ll have that conversation with him, but his willingness to do whatever it takes to win, it’s important to us. He’s a cornerstone of this team, he’s the heart of this organization, so he understands that.’’

Altuve also understands that if the Astros are going to keep their streak of eight consecutive postseason appearances intact, which included four pennants and two World Series titles, they need Bregman back.

“I’d be willing to do everything if he stays,’’ Altuve said, “I want to win. He’s a guy who’s going to make this team better. We have a better chance to win a championship with him. …

“It’s not up to me, but if it was up to me, I’d pay him whatever and bring him back. I just want him to be back.’’

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Tom Brady holds no ill will toward Nick Foles. Just a little envy.

Fox’s broadcast showed the former Philadelphia Eagles quarterback and Super Bowl 52 MVP in a suite at Lincoln Financial Field watching Philadelphia take on the Washington Commanders in the NFC championship game. Brady, who lost to Foles with the New England Patriots in that Super Bowl, was on the call for the game as Fox’s color commentator, and he chimed in when the former Eagle showed up on screen.

‘Nick, I don’t hate you. I’m jealous of you! You caught it, I didn’t,’ Brady quipped.

Brady is referring to a couple of plays from Super Bowl 52: One that went well for Foles and the Eagles, and another that went poorly for the Patriots and their former quarterback.

Early in the second quarter of the 2018 Super Bowl, New England ran a trick play that featured a pass attempt by wide receiver Danny Amendola to Brady, who ran something of a wheel route out of the pocket after handing the ball off. Amendola put some touch on the pass to his quarterback, but Brady dropped the ball on the third down play.

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Later in that same quarter, the Eagles ran the ‘Philly Special’ play that has gone down in Super Bowl history.

Before the play, Foles pretended to communicate to his offensive linemen. While he was away from the backfield, center Jason Kelce snapped the ball directly to running back Corey Clement, who tossed the ball to tight end Trey Burton. Burton rolled to his right and threw a pass to Foles, who had run a drag route after the ball was snapped. Foles caught the pass for a touchdown, extending Philadelphia’s lead.

Foles and the Eagles went on to beat Brady and the Patriots, 41-33, in Super Bowl 52, and Foles won the game’s MVP award.

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The Super Bowl is one of the biggest events of the year and the money reflects that.

Whether it’s the players making millions on the field, owners making billions, fans spending a fortune on tickets, companies spending millions on commercials or spectators betting on the action, the Super Bowl might as well bring in enough money to finance a small country.

That doesn’t even include the groceries and decorations involved to throw a party or the cost of going to a restaurant or bar.

Regardless, there is a group of people that will be happy waking up on Monday morning after the big game and others that will want to stay in bed.

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To make sure you don’t fall into the latter, we’re tracking the odds movement throughout the two week leadup to the festivities in New Orleans.

Here’s a look at the odds for Super Bowl 59 after championship Sunday.

Super Bowl 59 odds

Odds from BetMGM as of Sunday evening.

Kansas City (-125) vs. Philadelphia (+105)

KC (-1.5); O/U: 49.5

It’s always important to follow the money. Sometimes that’s even better than the potential analysis. Sharp bettors and big money will roll in before the game kicks off, moving the lines and swinging past key numbers. Depending on your bet, it might make sense to jump in before the odds change.

When is Super Bowl 2025?

The Super Bowl in 2025 will be played on Feb. 9.

The first 35 Super Bowls were all played in January before transitioning to a February event. It had become a mainstay on the first full weekend in February after that, but has moved deeper into the month in recent years thanks to the expanded NFL regular season.

What time is the Super Bowl 2025?

The Super Bowl in 2025 is slated for a 6:30 p.m. ET kickoff.

All the pregame festivities take place throughout the day, meaning you’ll want to tune in earlier to catch things like the national anthem, team introductions and more.

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Secretary of State Marco Rubio paused all U.S. foreign assistance funded by or through the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) to allow the Trump administration to review if the money puts ‘America First.’

On Sunday, the State Department released a statement about falling in step with President Donald Trump’s executive order to reevaluate and realign foreign aid from the U.S.

‘Consistent with President Trump’s Executive Order on Reevaluating and Realigning United States Foreign Aid, Secretary [Marco] Rubio has paused all U.S. foreign assistance funded by or through the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) for review,’ the statement read. ‘He is initiating a review of all foreign assistance programs to ensure they are efficient and consistent with U.S. foreign policy under the America First agenda. President Trump stated clearly that the United States is no longer going to blindly dole out money with no return for the American people.’

The statement continued, saying the review and alignment of foreign assistance on behalf of taxpayers is a ‘moral imperative,’ adding that Rubio is proud to protect America’s investment ‘with a deliberate and judicious review’ of how the money is spent on aiding foreign countries overseas.

‘The implementation of this Executive Order and the Secretary’s direction furthers that mission,’ the statement read. ‘As Secretary of State Marco Rubio has said, ‘Every dollar we spend, every program we fund, and every policy we pursue must be justified with the answer to three simple questions: Does it make America safer? Does it make America stronger? Does it make America more prosperous?’’

The announcement comes after the Trump administration ordered staffers with USAID to stop providing foreign aid worldwide or face ‘disciplinary action’ for not complying.

Reuters reported that the Trump administration sent a sharply-worded memo to more than 10,000 staff members at USAID on Saturday, offering a ‘stop-work’ directive from Friday that put a freeze on U.S. foreign aid around the world.

The wire service reviewed the memo and said it laid out expectations for the workforce on how to achieve Trump’s goals to put ‘America First.’

‘We have a responsibility to support the President in achieving his vision,’ Ken Jackson, assistant to the administrator for management and resources wrote in the internal memo, titled ‘Message and Expectation to the Workforce.’

‘The President has given us a tremendous opportunity to transform the way we approach foreign assistance for decades to come,’ the memo added. Reuters reported that it confirmed the authenticity of the memo with several sources.

Trump ordered a 90-day pause in foreign aid just hours after taking office, to review if the funding was in line with his foreign policy priorities.

On Friday, the State Department issued a pause on aid worldwide.

The U.S. is the largest donor of aid globally. During fiscal year 2023, the U.S. dispersed $72 billion in assistance. It also provided 42% of all humanitarian aid tracked by the United Nations in 2024.

Fox News Digital has reached out to USAID for comment.

Reuters contributed to this report.

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The Buffalo Bills opened the fourth quarter of their AFC championship game matchup with the Kansas City Chiefs by converting a ‘Tush Push’ play on fourth down.

Just a few plays later, they couldn’t do the same.

Facing another fourth-and-inches, this time over midfield, the Bills once again put the ball in Josh Allen’s hands. Initially, it appeared Allen was able to bull forward for a first down.

However, the officials ruled Allen was just short of the line to gain despite one crew member appearing to give Allen the first down. The play was reviewed, but it ended up standing as it was called. That meant there was insufficient video evidence to overturn the call.

Indeed, the camera angles showed on the CBS broadcast didn’t show anything definitive. Too many players were blocking the line to gain, making it impossible to see whether Allen had made it.

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Even so, CBS’s rules analyst Gene Steratore believed Allen had made the line to gain, though he acknowledged it was impossible to tell.

‘I felt like he gained it by a third of the football,’ Steratore said of the ‘tough call.’

The decision proved consequential. The Chiefs were able to turn the stop into a quick touchdown drive that culminated in a 10-yard touchdown run by Patrick Mahomes. He then found Justin Watson for a 2-point conversion to give Kansas City a 29-22 lead with 10:14 left in the fourth quarter.

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The Philadelphia Eagles and Washington Commanders met for the third time this season in the NFC championship game. The NFC East foes split their season series with one team winning a game each.

At the end of three quarters, the Commanders had cut the Eagles’ lead to 34-23. Philadelphia drove 50 yards at the start of the fourth quarter to near the goal line for another touchdown.

As they had multiple times, Philadelphia lined up in the formation for its infamous ‘Tush Push’ play with quarterback Jalen Hurts set to run it in behind the offensive line with help from players lined up in the backfield.

But Washington linebacker Frankie Luvu jumped over the line multiple times to disrupt the play for back-to-back encroachment penalties. Commanders lineman Jonathan Allen was also flagged for encroachment on the next attempt, leading referee Shawn Hochuli to announce a warning.

“Washington has been advised that at some point the referees can award a score if this type of behavior happens again,’ Hochuli said. ‘For now, it’s a replay of second down.’

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The Commanders did not move early on the next attempt and Hurts scored on a run up the middle.

Hochuli provided more details about his warning after the game, via a pool report.

‘Simply put, a team can’t commit multiple fouls in an effort to prevent the score,’ Hochuli said. ‘So, No. 4 (Luvu) jumped the ball a couple of times, that was when the warning came in. Again, if it’s meant to prevent a score, we can essentially award the score.’

Hochuli was also asked whether the Eagles utilizing a hard count would have an impact on the play. He implied that it didn’t, as Philadelphia could only try the hard count so many times before the play clock expires.

‘There’s a play clock that prevents them from doing that too many times,’ Hochuli explained. ‘With the defense, since we deem it as an effort to prevent the score – a repeated act – that’s where the potential for awarding the score comes in.”

Hochuli’s assessment is backed by rule 11, section 2, article 1.5 of the NFL rule book regarding scoring plays. That article states a touchdown can be scored when ‘the Referee awards a touchdown to a team that has been denied one by a palpably unfair act.’

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