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Meta’s head of artificial intelligence research announced Tuesday that she will be leaving the company. 

Joelle Pineau, the company’s vice president of AI research, announced her departure in a LinkedIn post, saying her last day at the social media company will be May 30. 

Her departure comes at a challenging time for Meta. CEO Mark Zuckerberg has made AI a top priority, investing billions of dollars in an effort to become the market leader ahead of rivals like OpenAI and Google.

Zuckerberg has said that it is his goal for Meta to build an AI assistant with more than 1 billion users and artificial general intelligence, which is a term used to describe computers that can think and take actions comparable to humans.

“As the world undergoes significant change, as the race for AI accelerates, and as Meta prepares for its next chapter, it is time to create space for others to pursue the work,” Pineau wrote. “I will be cheering from the sidelines, knowing that you have all the ingredients needed to build the best AI systems in the world, and to responsibly bring them into the lives of billions of people.”

Pineau was one of Meta’s top AI researchers and led the company’s fundamental AI research unit, or FAIR, since 2023. There, she oversaw the company’s cutting-edge computer science-related studies, some of which are eventually incorporated into the company’s core apps. 

She joined the company in 2017 to lead Meta’s Montreal AI research lab. Pineau is also a computer science professor at McGill University, where she is a co-director of its reasoning and learning lab.

Some of the projects Pineau helped oversee include Meta’s open-source Llama family of AI models and other technologies like the PyTorch software for AI developers.

Pineau’s departure announcement comes a few weeks ahead of Meta’s LlamaCon AI conference on April 29. There, the company is expected to detail its latest version of Llama. Meta Chief Product Officer Chris Cox, to whom Pineau reported to, said in March that Llama 4 will help power AI agents, the latest craze in generative AI. The company is also expected to announce a standalone app for its Meta AI chatbot, CNBC reported in February. 

“We thank Joelle for her leadership of FAIR,” a Meta spokesperson said in a statement. “She’s been an important voice for Open Source and helped push breakthroughs to advance our products and the science behind them.” 

Pineau did not reveal her next role but said she “will be taking some time to observe and to reflect, before jumping into a new adventure.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Alex Ovechkin scored another goal to pull closer to Wayne Gretzky’s record and helped the Washington Capitals end a three-game losing streak on Tuesday.

Ovechkin scored a power-play goal in the first period of the 4-3 victory against the Boston Bruins. It was the 891st goal of his career and he needs four in the Capitals’ final eight games to pass Gretzky’s record of 894 before the end of this season.

It was Ovechkin’s 322nd power-play goal, adding to his record. He also picked up a secondary assist on Tom Wilson’s eventual game-winner.

Tuesday’s game also marked the NHL debut of Capitals 2023 first-round pick Ryan Leonard, who signed Monday. Playing in Boston days after his Boston College career ended, the Hobey Baker finalist had three hits and a plus-1 rating in 14:14 of ice time.

The Capitals next play Wednesday night at the Carolina Hurricanes (7 p.m. ET, TNT, truTV).

Here are highlights from Tuesday’s Capitals-Bruins game:

Alex Ovechkin stats

Alex Ovechkin had a goal, his 891st, and an assist, plus two shots in 16:23 of ice time.

Final score: Capitals 4, Bruins 3

The Capitals hang on for a 4-3 victory that ends their three-game losing streak. Alex Ovechkin scores his 891st career goal and needs three to tie Wayne Gretzky and four to break his record. Washington’s next game is Wednesday night in North Carolina.

Bruins pull goalie

Alex Ovechkin is on the ice. He shoots wide of the open net.

Capitals-Bruins score: David Pastrnak scores again

David Pastrnak stickhandles to a better shooting position and rips a shot past Charlie Lindgren. Capitals 4, Bruins 3

Capitals-Bruins score: Tom Wilson adds to lead

Tom Wilson’s attempted pass hits a Bruins defender and deflects past Jeremy Swayman. Alex Ovechkin gets the secondary assist. Capitals 4, Bruins 2

Capitals-Bruins score: Dylan Strome gives Washington lead

Dylan Strome taps in a rebound of an Aliaksei Protas shot off the boards at 10:35. Rookie Ryan Leonard is on the ice for the goal. He doesn’t factor into the scoring but got the play started with a bank pass off the boards to Martin Fehervary. Capitals 3, Bruins 2

Capitals, Bruins still tied

Washington’s Charlie Lindgren and Boston’s Jeremy Swayman each make a big save. Twelve minutes left.

Third period underway

It’s 2-2.

TV schedule changes

TNT will broadcast Wednesday’s Capitals game at the Carolina Hurricanes. It already had been scheduled to broadcast Sunday’s game at the New York Islanders. Wednesday’s game is exclusive, but Washington station Monumental Sports Network will carry Sunday’s game.

TNT Sports will also produce an Ovechkin-focused alternative telecast of both Capitals games – The OviCast – featuring an isolated camera on Ovechkin for the duration of each contest on truTV and Max. The OviCast will display Ovechkin’s live stats, his historical numbers and on-ice audio from the NHL on TNT broadcast.

Alex Ovechkin stats

Alex Ovechkin has one goal and two shots through two periods. He has played 10:39.

End of second period: Capitals 2, Bruins 2

The Capitals dominated the first period. The Bruins dominated the second period, scoring twice. David Pastrnak makes up for two ill-timed penalties to tie the game.

Capitals-Bruins score: David Pastrnak ties it up

Jakob Chychrun is called for holding, and this time, the Bruins connect. David Pastrnak, who cut short two other power plays by taking penalties, deflects in a Morgan Geekie slap pass to tie the game. Capitals 2, Bruins 2

Capitals-Bruins fight: Dylan McIlrath vs. Jeffrey Viel

That was a long heavyweight bout. McIlrath is making his first appearance since Dec. 23. 5:21 left in the second period.

Capitals go on abbreviated power play

Alex Ovechkin is out there, naturally. Jeremy Swayman stops his one-timer and the Bruins kill off the penalty.

Bruins go on power play

Lars Eller is called for high-sticking Nikita Zadorov. But David Pastrnak interferes with Nic Dowd and it’s 4-on-4.

Capitals-Bruins score: Boston gets one back

Boston’s Vinni Lettieri cuts the Capitals’ lead to 2-1. If this holds, Alex Ovechkin would have the game-winning goal, giving him the NHL record in that category. He’s currently tied with Jaromir Jagr with 135. Capitals 2, Bruins 1

Second period underway

2-0 Capitals. Alex Ovechkin scored in the first period.

End of first period: Capitals 2, Bruins 0

The Capitals get the exact start they need as they try to end a three-game losing streak. Alex Ovechkin chips in a power-play goal to make it 2-0 after Nic Dowd scores short-handed. Ovechkin has one shot through one period. Ryan Leonard has three hits in his NHL debut.

Alex Ovechkin scores: Capitals 2, Bruins 0

Alex Ovechkin gets career goal No. 891 on the power play. He now needs four to break Wayne Gretzky’s record. Ovechkin is stationed in front of the net, takes a nice cross-crease pass from Dylan Strome and adds to his record with his 322nd power play goal.

Capitals-Bruins score: Washington scores short-handed goal

The Bruins go on the power play, but David Pastrnak can’t control a bouncing puck at the blue line. Brandon Duhaime feeds Nic Dowd, who scores a short-handed goal. Capitals 1, Bruins 0.

Capitals, Bruins scoreless

Twelve minutes left in first period. Ovechkin has two shifts, no shots.

Capitals-Bruins game underway

Ryan Leonard is out for the first shift of his NHL debut. Alex Ovechkin’s line is out second.

When is Alex Ovechkin’s next game? Capitals vs. Bruins start time

The Capitals play the Bruins at 7 p.m. ET Tuesday at TD Garden in Boston.

Where to watch Capitals vs. Bruins game

The game is not being aired on television nationally. It will be shown on NESN in Boston and on Monumental Sports Network in Washington. 

How to stream Capitals vs. Bruins game

The game can be streamed via ESPN+ outside of the local markets.

Alex Ovechkin vs. Jeremy Swayman

Ovechkin has scored only one career goal against Swayman, the Bruins goalie tonight.

Alex Ovechkin linemates

Newcomer Ryan Leonard is scheduled to skate with Dylan Strome and Aliaksei Protas to give him a taste of top-six action in his debut. Those are often Ovechkin’s linemates. He’ll skate with Pierre-Luc Dubois and Tom Wilson on Tuesday vs. Boston.

Capitals’ Ryan Leonard to make NHL debut

The focus of Tuesday’s Capitals-Bruins game will also be on the NHL debut of Ryan Leonard, the Boston College and U.S. world junior hockey championship star who signed an entry-level contract on Monday. Ovechkin called him a ‘tremendous player.’

‘Just play your game. Don’t try too much,’ Ovechkin told reporters about his advice for Leonard. ‘I’m pretty sure he’s going to have lots of energy. Probably, he’s going to be nervous. But I’m sure he’s going to be fine.’

Alex Ovechkin goals vs. Bruins

Ovechkin has 29 goals in 68 regular season games against the Bruins. He was held to no points on three shots in a December game against Boston.

How many seasons did Wayne Gretzky play?

Wayne Gretzky got his 894 goals in 20 seasons. Alex Ovechkin is in his 20th season.

When was Alex Ovechkin drafted?

Alex Ovechkin was drafted No. 1 overall by the Capitals in 2004. He didn’t make his NHL debut until 2005-06 because the 2004-05 season was canceled by a lockout.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin scored his 891st career goal Tuesday to pull closer to Wayne Gretzky’s goal record.

He needs four goals in the team’s final eight regular-season games to top Gretzky’s all-time mark of 894, starting Wednesday night in Carolina.

That’s a pace of 0.50 goals a game, and he has been clicking at a 0.58 rate since he returned on Dec. 28 from a fractured left fibula, putting him on pace to break the record in one of the final two games of the season. The Capitals will play five of their remaining eight games on the road, including the last two.

ESPN will present an OviCast on ESPN+ broadcasts on April 10, 12, 15 and 17. Each OviCast will feature an isolated camera on Ovechkin in one box with record-breaking information below, alongside the traditional game feed in a second box with his game stats. TNT will do the same on truTV for its April 2 and 6 broadcasts.

Here’s a look at Ovechkin’s remaining 2024-25 schedule, how he fared against those teams, which games are on national television and how to stream (broadcast info as of April 1):

Washington Capitals remaining schedule

All times Eastern

April 2 at Carolina Hurricanes, 7 p.m.

TV: TNT, truTV
Streaming: Sling | Max
Ovechkin career goals vs. Hurricanes: 51 goals in 91 games
Ovechkin season goals: vs. Hurricanes: One goal in one game

April 4 vs. Chicago Blackhawks, 7 p.m.

TV: NHL Network
Streaming: Fubo | Sling 
Ovechkin career goals vs. Blackhawks: 15 goals in 25 games
Ovechkin season goals vs. Blackhawks: Missed earlier game with injury

April 6 at New York Islanders, 12:30 p.m.

National TV: TNT, truTV
Streaming: Sling | Max
Ovechkin career goals vs. Islanders: 44 goals in 71 games
Ovechkin season goals vs. Islanders: Missed earlier game with injury

April 10 vs. Carolina Hurricanes, 7:30 p.m.

Streaming: ESPN+ | Disney+ | Hulu
Ovechkin career goals vs. Hurricanes: 51 goals in 91 games
Ovechkin season goals vs. Hurricanes: One goal in one game

April 12 at Columbus Blue Jackets, 6 p.m.

National TV: ABC
Streaming: Fubo | Sling | ESPN+
Ovechkin career goals vs. Blue Jackets: 26 goals in 49 games
Ovechkin season goals vs. Blue Jackets: One goal in one game
Note: Ovechkin scored twice in his NHL debut in 2005 against the Blue Jackets

April 13 vs. Columbus Blue Jackets, 8 p.m.

Streaming: ESPN+
Ovechkin career goals vs. Blue Jackets: 26 goals in 49 games
Ovechkin season goals vs. Blue Jackets: One goal in one game

April 15 at New York Islanders, 7 p.m.

National TV: ESPN
Streaming: Fubo | Sling
Ovechkin career goals vs. Islanders: 44 goals in 71 games
Ovechkin season goals vs. Islanders: Missed game with injury

April 17 at Pittsburgh Penguins, 7 p.m.

National TV: ESPN
Streaming: Fubo | Sling
Ovechkin career goals vs. Penguins: 42 goals in 79 games
Ovechkin season goals vs. Penguins: No goals in three games

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

As the Final Four of the men’s and women’s NCAA Tournaments take place later this week, it’s officially postseason award time.

On Tuesday, the Wooden Award announced the top five finalists for this year’s awards, which goes to the most outstanding player in men’s and women’s college basketball.

Headlining the men’s Wooden Award finalist list are Duke’s Cooper Flagg and Auburn’s Johni Broome, who sustained elbow and leg injuries in the Tigers’ Elite Eight win over Michigan State. Flagg is currently averaging 18.9 points per game this season and nearly averaging a double-double in his first NCAA Tournament for the Blue Devils. As for Broome, the 6-foot-10 forward is having a career year for Auburn and has been a force to be reckoned with inside the paint this season, a she is averaging 18.7 points and 10.9 rebounds per game.

On the women’s side, UConn’s Paige Bueckers and UCLA’s Lauren Betts headline the five finalists. Bueckers has come alive in the women’s NCAA Tournament for the Huskies, who are making their 24th Final Four appearance, as she has scored at least 30 points in each of the last three games. Betts has been the catalyst behind the Bruins’ historic season, as she is averaging 20 points and 9.6 rebounds per game.

Both the men’s Final Four and women’s Final Four will feature a combined seven players from the top five finalists for each award.

Here’s what you need to know about who were named finalists for the men’s and women’s Wooden Awards on Tuesday, including when the awards will be announced:

Men’s basketball Wooden Award finalists

Here’s a look at the top five finalists for the men’s Wooden Award:

Auburn’s Johni Broome,forward
Florida’s Walter Clayton Jr., guard
Houston’s L.J. Cryer, guard
Duke’s Cooper Flagg, guard/forward
Marquette’s Kam Jones, fuard

Creighton forward Ryan Kalkbrenner, Tennessee guard Chaz Lanier, Alabama guard Mark Sears, Purdue guard Braden Smith and Wisconsin guard John Tonje were all named top 10 finalists for the 2025 men’s Wooden Award All-American team.

Women’s basketball Wooden Award finalists

Here’s a look at the top five finalists for the women’s Wooden Award:

Kentucky’s Georgia Amoore, guard
UCLA’s Lauren Betts, center
Texas’ Madison Booker, forward
UConn’s Paige Bueckers, guard
Notre Dame’s Hannah Hidalgo, guard

Former Florida State guard Ta’Niya Latson, former Notre Dame guard Olivia Miles, LSU forward Aneesah Morrow, TCU’s Hailey Van Lith and USC’s JuJu Watkins were all named top 10 finalists for the 2025 women’s Wooden Award. All-American team.

When are the Wooden Award winners announced for men’s, women’s basketball?

Date: Friday, April 11
Time: 8 p.m. ET

The winners for the 2025 men’s and women’s Wooden Award will be announced on Friday, April 11 at 8 p.m. ET on ESPN+.

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., spoke out against President Donald Trump and Elon Musk on the Senate floor throughout the night after beginning his marathon speech at 7 p.m. Monday.

More than 24 hours later, at 7:20 p.m. on Tuesday, Booker had broken the record for the longest Senate floor speech, before finally calling it quits at 8:05 p.m.

In the lead up to breaking the speech record formerly held by former Sen. Strom Thurmond, D/R-S.C., nearly 70 years ago, Booker yielded to Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., so he could ask the New Jersey Senator a question.

‘Do you know you have just broken the record?’ Schumer asked. ‘Do you know how proud this caucus is of you? Do you know how proud America is of you?’

Everyone in the chamber, besides the press, gave Booker a standing ovation, including those in the gallery and senate pages.

Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minn., was seen wiping a tear from her face, while Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., was also seen standing and applauding.

Forty-five minutes later, Booker had concluded his speech.

Booker received some support from other Senate Democrats, whom he allowed to speak at times during his hours-long show of opposition against the Trump administration.

Booker said toward the beginning of his speech that Trump, in 71 days, ‘has inflicted so much harm on Americans’ safety, financial stability, the core foundations of our democracy, and even our aspirations as a people for, from our highest offices, a sense of common decency.’

The senator claimed that the Trump administration and congressional Republicans are targeting Medicaid and Medicare programs to fund tax cuts for billionaires and corporations.

He spent some of his time reading messages from people who wrote about various topics, including concerns about Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security.

Trump has previously indicated that he will not ‘touch’ Americans’ Social Security, Medicare, or Medicaid benefits, but wants to weed out fraud.

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., who said he planned to join Booker ‘for the entirety of his speech,’ noted that he was ‘returning the favor’ as Booker joined him when he ‘launched a filibuster to demand action on gun violence nine years ago.’

Murphy was among the Democrats who provided Booker with some relief by speaking at times to punctuate the marathon session.

In the social media video, Murphy described his colleague’s effort as ‘extraordinary.’

Booker said in a video before he began his demonstration that he plans to continue speaking as long as he is ‘physically able.’

After pontificating for 25 hours, Booker took a brief moment in his office before facing a group of reporters.

He told reporters that despite fasting for days and drinking water, his muscles started to cramp up during the marathon speech. He even said he was tired and sore.

‘There’s just a lot of tactics I was using to make sure that I could stand for that long,’ Booker said.

But when asked if he felt his speech moved the needle in any way and whether Democrats should employ the same tactic going forward to protest the Trump agenda, Booker said he had not had much time to digest and think about it.

‘There’s a lot of people out there asking Democrats to do more and to take risks and do things differently,’ he said. ‘This seemed like the right thing to do, and from what my staff is telling me…a lot of people watched. And so, we’ll see what it is. I just think a lot of us have to do a lot more, including myself.’

Booker said he was aware of Strom Thurmond’s record speech, but always felt it was a strange shadow to hang over in the Senate.

‘All the issues that have come up on noble causes that people have done, or the things it took to try to stop, I just found it strange that he had the record,’ he said. ‘I didn’t want to set expectations. [The] mission was really to elevate the voices of Americans to tell some of their really painful stories, very emotional stories, and to let them let go and let God do the rest.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

One of Maryland basketball’s biggest supporters isn’t holding back anymore, sharing his thoughts about the way Kevin Willard left the program for Villanova.

ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt ripped Willard on his ‘SVPod’ podcast on Tuesday for how the former Terrapins coach conducted himself with the Maryland athletic department and prominent boosters in recent weeks and suggested Willard knew he was leaving for Villanova before his team was eliminated from the 2025 NCAA Tournament.

‘Of course, Kevin Willard can go to Villanova. Of course, you can go back to your Big East roots. Of course, if it’s better for your family,’ Van Pelt said at the start of several minutes of comments regarding the situation at his alma mater. ‘But maybe you don’t take a giant (expletive) on the front steps of the house you’ve lived in the last three years. You don’t do damage to the university and the program you’ve been for three years.’

‘And you don’t take the efforts of the people behind-the-scenes, who’ve largely poured their hearts and souls into this for free, for you, to try to fill in the gaps and tell them that … ‘I just want this program to be the best it can be.’ Maybe you don’t tell those people that to their face repeatedly, when everyone in the industry is saying to me, ‘Scott, why are you guys wasting your time? This is done.’ Everyone in the business knows it. He’s gone.’

Villanova officially announced Willard as its new coach on Sunday. But Van Pelt said on his podcast he knew before Maryland tipped off in its Sweet 16 game against Florida last Thursday that Willard would be leaving and the program resurgence would not be sustainable in its current form. The podcast was released hours before Texas A&M coach Buzz Williams was announced as the new hire at Maryland.

Like many Terrapins fans, Van Pelt lamented how Willard’s decision to leave ‘sabotaged and hijacked’ the spotlight during the school’s best postseason run since 2016.

Willard had a 65-39 record and made the NCAA Tournament twice in three seasons at Maryland. He arrived after a 12-year stint at Seton Hall. But his unhappiness in the Big Ten became a national headline last month when he used a news conference before No. 4 seed Maryland began the 2025 NCAA Tournament to bemoan his program’s NIL situation and budget, among other grievances.

That Willard’s requests were ultimately not made in good faith is what had Van Pelt cursing mad on his podcast.

‘I was very vocal in saying I agreed with him, that he should get those things. One hundred percent, he was not wrong,’ Van Pelt said. ‘But what really troubles me is asking good and decent people that busted their (butt) on your behalf to jump through hoops to give you the things you want, knowing full well nothing they give you … ain’t gonna be enough because you’re gone. It’s the exact same script as when we got him from Seton Hall, almost to the same lines.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

What are the Atlanta Falcons going to do with quarterback Kirk Cousins?

It’s the conundrum the Falcons find themselves in this offseason after the team named Michael Penix Jr. their starting quarterback last December, just 14 games into Cousins’s four-year, $180 million contract.

The Falcons are moving forward with Penix as their starter. Meanwhile, Cousins has expressed his desire for a starting opportunity.

Will the Falcons trade, release or keep Cousins as the most expensive backup quarterback in football?

Falcons brass seem to want a resolution that’s best for both parties.

‘You want to see him go on to be the best version of himself,’ Falcons coach Raheem Morris told reporters at the NFL’s annual owners meeting, per the team’s official website. ‘This is not a thing where we’re holding you back. If the opportunity presents itself as something that’s good for both of us – it’s good for the Falcons and for Kirk Cousins – we’d certainly like to see that happen.’

Cousins has a no-trade clause but would presumably waive the no-trade clause for the right situation. However, trading Cousins will be difficult. The 36-year-old quarterback will make $27.5 million in 2025, and he has a $40 million cap hit. At this time, no trade is imminent as there haven’t been any substantial trade talks involving Cousins, a person familiar with the situation told USA TODAY Sports. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

If the Falcons cut Cousins, they would carry $40 million in dead money. Keeping him as a backup could create an unnecessary distraction while Penix goes through his sophomore campaign.

That’s the dilemma the Falcons find themselves in.

‘Kirk understands his situation. He understands our own situation,’ Falcons owner Arthur Blank said to reporters at the NFL annual owners meeting, via the team’s official website. ‘He understands we’ve committed a lot of funds to him. The aspirations from his standpoint and from our standpoint was that he was going to play for a couple years, if not longer. Things didn’t develop that way.’

Things “didn’t develop” the way neither the Falcons nor Cousins had planned. Now the two parties are stuck in a complicated relationship. And it seems to have an inevitable breakup which results in Cousins playing elsewhere. It’s just a matter of how he gets to his next destination.

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

PALM BEACH, Florida — The NFL has pushed the ‘tush push’ for another day.

The NFL decided Tuesday to delay a potential ban on the controversial play, made famous by the Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles, during its annual league meetings.

The NFL needs 24 of 32 team owners to support or deny a rule change, but it’s unclear how teams sided on the issue. It will be revisited again during another set of league meetings in May.

Among the layers to the tush push: The play is considered traditional in nature to the sport. However, the idea teammates can push one another on offense but are unable to push or raise another defensive player to block a kick is one-sided.

‘Health and safety’ were also touted as a concern to ban the play, but the NFL simply does not have enough data to definitively say which injuries could occur.

Zero injuries were reported from such plays last season, but it barely accounted for 1/5 of a percent of all the offensive plays in the NFL in 2024. ESPN reported just 101 of the 35,414 offensive plays in 2024 were tush-push plays, or 0.285%.

“We have very little data from it, but it’s beyond data. There’s also the mechanism of injury that we study, that type of thing that leads us to show the risk involved with a particular play or particular tackle,” Commissioner Roger Goodell said.

Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie vehemently endorsed the play his club specializes better than any other NFL team, following the announcement it would be revisited.

Lurie believes the ‘tush push’ is safer than the traditional quarterback sneak because the ball carrier is surrounded by more teammates instead of just lunging into a crowd of defenders by himself. Unless the data supports a health and safety issue, the play should stand.

“I want to know what data there is. I don’t think there is any. If you want to say that it could be [dangerous], it’s hard to make rules on could-bes and should-bes,” Lurie told Eagles reporters Tuesday afternoon.

‘One of the reasons we like using the Tush Push is we think it’s a safer play than the quarterback sneak. The quarterback sneak, if you talk to quarterbacks about it, there’s more spearing going on. They’re less protected by players around them. And one of the reasons we got motivated to develop an expertise in this play is it was more protective to the quarterback.

‘So, it’s ironic that people would bring up health and safety. We’re at the top of the game in terms of wanting health and safety on every play. We voted for hip-drop tackle and a defenseless receiver.

“We will always, always support what is safer for the players. It’s a no-brainer. If this is proven to be less safe for the players, we will be against the Tush Push.

“But until that’s the case, to me, there would be no reason to ban this play.”

Rich McKay, CEO of the Atlanta Falcons CEO and co-chairman of the NFL’s competition committee, said the NFL teams discussed the play for about 30-40 minutes on Tuesday.

McKay said the tush-push play is essentially fruit from a previous rule change: In 2004, the NFL allowed players to push and pull because it became difficult to judge downfield pass plays.

The proposal to ban the play was initiated this offseason by the Green Bay Packers, who coincidentally lost twice to the Eagles last season. Green Bay asked to re-introduce 2004 language when the proposal is tabled again in May, McKay said.

“I would definitely say there are some people that have health and safety concerns, but there’s just as many people that have football concerns,” McKay added. “It was much more about the play, the aesthetics of the play. Is it what football has been traditionally or is it more of a rugby play?”

The Eagles effectively found a play to game the NFL system. The Eagles use it when they’re typically within 2 yards of a first down on any spot on the field, and it’s become notorious when they are near the goal line for easy touchdown runs. 

The play goes like this: Quarterback Jalen Hurts, known for being able to squat 600 pounds, lines up behind his center and the rest of Philly’s offensive line. When Hurts gets the snap, he waits for his linemen to make the first push while he pushes into them with a head-first dive. Often times, the Eagles have a player like running back Saquon Barkley and others push behind Hurts to effectively win short-yardage situations. 

The Eagles converted ‘tush push’ plays for first downs or touchdowns in 39 of 48 times (81.3%) they ran last season. Philadelphia and the Buffalo Bills are the only teams that used it for more than five plays in 2024.

The Eagles have used the play under coach Nick Sirianni since 2022, and played in two of the last three Super Bowls — beating the Kansas City Chiefs in the most recent. Hurts scored on the play during the first touchdown in the 40-22 rout on Feb. 9 in New Orleans. 

“We’ve been really successful at it,” Sirianni said Tuesday.

Sirianni, a former offensive coordinator with the Indianapolis Colts, started employing the play with backup quarterback Jacoby Brissett coming on the field for oft-injured former starter Andrew Luck in 2018, when Brissett was a starter in 2019, and Phillip Rivers’ lone season with the club in 2020.

The Eagles didn’t run the play much during his first season as an NFL head coach in 2021, but he employed tight end Dallas Goedert in motion as a pusher in the backfield. But the play began to gain attention after the Eagles used a tush push on 4th and 1 to end a game against the Detroit Lions during the 2022 season.

“That was a pretty important quarterback sneak that happened, let’s make sure we get them in,” Sirianni said about practicing the play more at the time.

“They kind of evolved from there with different formations, different pushers. Then we turned it into two pushers. And just a cool evolution. And then what happened was all the compliments that come off of it, and all the cool things that you can do off it.”

However, the Packers cited player safety as a main reason for opposition. Players are crouched over and dive head-first into the line. The play puts NFL players in an unsafe position, critics of the play say.

McKay did not want to divulge into what possible injuries could occur or what the league could prevent, citing the lack of data.

“I think from a health and safety standpoint, a lot of people are concerned with what may be, not opposed to what has been,” McKay said.

Added Sirianni: “I think we were healthy on the play. I believe that whole entire NFL was healthy on the play … You have to trust the doctors and stuff like that in those scenarios, but you always want to do what’s best for the players first and foremost.”

Steelers coach Mike Tomlin was in favor of keeping the tush-push play, which could be gone before next season if the league decides to ban it in May.

“You hate to be against it because when people are innovative, you want to respect that. And so, there’s certainly been some teams that have been more innovative than the rest of us in that regard. And you hate to penalize them for that,” Tomlin said Monday.

This story has been updated with new information.

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The NBA on Tuesday suspended five players for their roles in an altercation in a game between the Detroit Pistons and Minnesota Timberwolves on Sunday.

Detroit’s Isaiah Stewart received a two-game suspension without pay, and Detroit’s Ron Holland II and Marcus Sasser and Minnesota’s Donte DiVincenzo and Naz Reid were each suspended one game without pay. The incident happened with 8:36 left in the second quarter of Minnesota’s 123-104 victory.

Stewart received two games ‘for escalating an on-court altercation’ and ‘in part on his repeated history of unsportsmanlike acts.’

Holland II and Reid exchanged words after Holland fouled Reid. Minnesota’s DiVincenzo tussled with Holland as the altercation escalated along the baseline and into the courtside seats and involved more players. Five players (Detroit’s Holland, Isaiah Stewart and Marcus Sasser and Minnesota’s Reid and DiVincenzo) and two coaches (Pistons head coach J.B. Bickerstaff and Timberwolves assistant coach Pablo Prigioni) were ejected.

Reid and DiVincenzo will serve their suspensions Tuesday when the Timberwolves play the Denver Nuggets. Stewart will start his two-game suspension Wednesday when the Pistons play the Oklahoma City Thunder. Holland II and Sasser will also serve suspensions Wednesday against the Thunder.

The NBA suspended Stewart one game without pay earlier this season for accruing his sixth flagrant foul point, three games last season for punching and shoving an opponent and two games in 2021 for repeatedly and aggressively pursuing an opponent during an on-court altercation.

The coaches were ejected for jawing at each other and were not directly related to the altercation or escalating the altercation.

This story has been updated to include new details.

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Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., spoke out against President Donald Trump and Elon Musk on the Senate floor throughout the night after beginning his marathon speech at 7 p.m. Monday.

The senator was still speaking on the floor as of Tuesday afternoon, more than 18 hours after he had begun.

Over 24 hours later, at 7:20 p.m. on Tuesday, Booker had broken the record for the longest Senate floor speech.

Booker yielded to Sen. Chuck Schumer so he could ask the New Jersey Senator a question.

‘Do you know you have just broken the record?’ Schumer asked. ‘Do you know how proud this caucus is of you? Do you know how proud America is of you?’

Everyone in the chamber, besides the press, gave Booker a standing ovation, including those in the gallery and senate pages.

Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minn., was seen wiping a tear from her face, while Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., was also seen standing and applauding.

Booker received some support from other Senate Democrats, whom he allowed to speak at times during his hourslong show of opposition against the Trump administration.

Booker said toward the beginning of his speech that Trump, in 71 days, ‘has inflicted so much harm on Americans’ safety, financial stability, the core foundations of our democracy, and even our aspirations as a people for, from our highest offices, a sense of common decency.’

The senator claimed that the Trump administration and congressional Republicans are targeting Medicaid and Medicare programs to fund tax cuts for billionaires and corporations.

He spent some of his time reading messages from people who wrote about various topics, including concerns about Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security.

Trump has previously indicated that he will not ‘touch’ Americans’ Social Security, Medicare, or Medicaid benefits, but wants to weed out fraud.

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., who said he planned to join Booker ‘for the entirety of his speech,’ noted that he was ‘returning the favor’ as Booker joined him when he ‘launched a filibuster to demand action on gun violence nine years ago.’

Murphy was among the Democrats who provided Booker with some relief by speaking at times to punctuate the marathon session.

In the social media video, Murphy described his colleague’s effort as ‘extraordinary.’

Booker said in a video before he began his demonstration that he plans to continue speaking as long as he is ‘physically able.’

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