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Cowboys win wild one vs. Commanders to halt five-game slide
Cooper Rush passed for two touchdowns, Dallas returned two kicks for scores and the visiting Cowboys held off the Washington Commanders in a wild fourth quarter for a 34-26 win. Dallas led 10-9 after three quarters. With Washington trailing 27-26, Jayden Daniels hit Terry McLaurin for an 86-yard touchdown pass with 21 seconds left, but Austin Seibert missed his second extra point of the game. Juanyeh Thomas of the Cowboys then returned the onside kick 43 yards for a touchdown. Rush completed 24 of 32 passes for 247 yards for Dallas (4-7), which snapped a five-game losing streak. Rico Dowdle ran 19 times for 86 yards and CeeDee Lamb had 10 catches for 67 yards. Jayden Daniels was 25-of-38 passing for 274 yards, two touchdowns and two interceptions for reeling Washington (7-5), which has lost three straight. He ran for 74 yards and one score. McLaurin had five catches for 102 yards. Trailing 20-9 late in the fourth quarter, Daniels drove Washington 69 yards in nine plays and hit Zach Ertz for a 4-yard touchdown. Daniels ran for two points and Washington trailed 20-17 with 3:02 remaining. KaVontae Turpin muffed the ensuing kickoff, picked it up at the one, and raced 99 yards for a touchdown to make it 27-17. Austin Seibert's 51-yard field goal pulled the Commanders within 27-20 with 1:40 left, With the score tied 3-3, Washington took the second half kick and went 60 yards in 10 plays. On third-and-three from the Dallas 17, Daniels faked a handoff, ran left and scored his first rushing touchdown since Week 4. Seibert missed the point after and Washington led 9-3. Dallas answered with an 80-yard drive. A 23-yard pass interference penalty gave the Cowboys a first-and-goal at the 4. Two plays later Rush found Jalen Tolbert in the end zone and the extra point made it 10-9. Brandon Aubrey's 48-yard field goal made it 13-9 with 8:11 remaining in the game. On the next play, Daniels hit John Bates for 14 yards, but Donovan Wilson forced a fumble and Dallas recovered at the Washington 44. Five plays later, Rush found Luke Schoonmaker down the middle for a 22-yard touchdown and Dallas led 20-9 with 5:16 left. The first quarter was all about field goals. Aubrey's field goal attempt was blocked on the opening drive and Michael Davis returned it to the Dallas 40. Washington later settled for Seibert's 41-yard field goal. On the next Dallas drive, Aubrey hit the right upright from 42 yards out, and then Seibert missed from 51 yards. With 14 seconds left in the half, Rush found Jalen Brooks for a 41-yard gain to the Washington 28. On the next play Aubrey connected from 46 yards to tie it. --Field Level MediaTrump gave Interior nominee one directive for a half-billion acres of US land: ‘Drill.’
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — New York state government agencies will have to conduct reviews and publish reports that detail how they're using artificial intelligence software, under a new law signed by Gov. Kathy Hochul. Hochul, a Democrat, signed the bill last week after it was passed by state lawmakers earlier this year. The law requires state agencies to perform assessments of any software that uses algorithms, computational models or AI techniques, and then submit those reviews to the governor and top legislative leaders along with posting them online. It also bars the use of AI in certain situations, such as an automated decision on whether someone receives unemployment benefits or child care assistance, unless the system is being consistently monitored by a human. State workers would also be shielded from having their hours or job duties limited because of AI under the law. State Sen. Kristen Gonzalez, a Democrat who sponsored the bill, called the law an important step in setting up some guardrails in how the emerging technology is used in state government.Ready or not, the Washington women’s basketball team’s first season in its new conference begins in earnest this weekend. Set aside for a second UW’s 73-62 loss at home to top-ranked UCLA on Dec. 8 in the first-ever Big Ten Conference game for the former Pac-12 rivals. The Huskies will make a little bit of history while literally venturing into unknown territories during their first Big Ten Conference road games to Northwestern and Illinois. Saturday’s 12 p.m. PT tipoff versus the Wildcats (7-5, 0-1) will be UW’s first game at Welsh-Ryan Arena, a 7,039-seat facility on Northwestern’s campus in Evanston, Ill. Three days later, UW takes on the Illini at 10 a.m. PT Tuesday for the first time at State Farm Center (capacity: 15,544). Here’s what you need to know about the Huskies (9-4, 0-1) as they embark on a 17-game trek through the Big Ten. Are they battle tested? Well, maybe? It’s difficult to know because UW has undergone several transformations over the past two months. Washington began the season on fire while ripping apart four overmatched opponents at home to start 4-0. At the time, UW averaged 88.3 points per game and allowed just 53.3 points. Then, the Huskies offense ran into a brick wall during an 82-68 defeat at Montana, and seemingly didn’t fully recover despite claiming narrow wins at home during their next two outings. Washington was at its best during a four-game stretch, but came up short in the final minutes against UCLA, No. 6 LSU and a stout Utah team that’s ranked 27 th in the NET. And finally, UW stemmed a two-game slide with blowout wins at home last week versus North Dakota State and Furman. “What gives you confidence is confidence,” coach Tina Langley said. “We want to really know who we are and what we run and how we do it and what pace we do it at and all those small details. “We could have been sharper in some details in preparation as a staff and preparation as a team. We started cleaning up that up toward the end and having more moments where we could see that execution. We want to execute for 40 minutes on both ends of the floor as high level as we can. That’s the goal going forward.” Until further notice, the Huskies are good enough to beat bad teams, but not quite ready for prime time. A star in the making Sophomore Sayvia Sellers, a 5-foot-7 point guard, is making a bid for All-Big Ten honors. She leads UW in scoring (15.5 points per game), assists (2.8), steals (1.9), field goal percentage (53.6%) and three-point percentage (44.4%). “I'm excited for her leadership to continue to develop because when you work the way she works and you're committed the way she's committed, and you're humble the way she's humble, you should have the ability to walk into a room and say ‘We need to do this better,’” Langley said. “She's really growing in that because she has earned that right and it's beautiful to see.” Sellers tallied a career-high 30 points in a 67-57 loss against Utah — the most points for a UW player since March 5, 2020. Keep an eye on Tayra Eke Eastern Michigan transfer Tayra Eke, a 6-3 senior forward, had been a difference maker at times in the low post. During a blowout win against Prairie View, she tallied a career-high eight blocks, which is the most for a UW player, and collected a personal-best 14 rebounds. She's tied for fourth in the Big Ten with 24 blocks and leads UW with 7.0 rebounds per game. Eke averages just 6.4 points, but she hasn't been often been prioritized offensively, considering she's attempted five or fewer shots in eight games despite shooting 46.9% on field goals. Can UW win with defense? There’s no evidence to suggest Washington’s offense, which ranks 15 th in the Big Ten in scoring at 71.5 points, will radically improve when conference play begins. However, the Huskies have a winning formula with their stingy defense that allows 57.5 points and ranks 10 th in the conference. Washington held LSU, the third highest scoring team in the country, to a season-low 68 points and lost by a point to the Tigers in the Bahamas last month. That performance gives UW confidence that it can go on the road and win games in the vaunted Big Ten. The Big Ten is loaded No. 1 UCLA, seven Big Ten teams are ranked in the Associated Press Top 25 poll, including USC (4), Maryland (8), Ohio State (10), Michigan State (19), Michigan (23) and Iowa (24). Currently, ESPN’s bracket guru Charlie Crème predicts 12 Big Ten teams will make the NCAA tournament — the most from any conference. In addition to the aforementioned ranked teams, Crème has Oregon, Indiana, Nebraska, Minnesota and Illinois advancing to the Big Dance. Seemingly, that leaves Purdue, Norhtwestern, Rutgers, Penn State, Wisconsin and UW, which is No. 76 in the NET, scrambling for a postseason berth. Keep in mind, 14 teams qualify for the Big Ten women’s basketball tournament.
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