Carson Wentz will lead the Vikings Sunday. Here’s a look at his most recent NFL starts

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Nearly a decade ago, Carson Wentz was in J.J. McCarthy’s shoes, the presumptive franchise quarterback of an NFL team in the early stages of his career.

Though the comparison isn’t exactly congruent considering Wentz played every game as a rookie, and McCarthy didn’t play at all, the situations are similar: The Philadelphia Eagles had lofty expectations at the time, much like the Vikings have lofty expectations for McCarthy.

The similarities reached another level this week when Wentz learned he would more than likely be starting in place of an injured McCarthy when the Vikings host the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday. You might remember that an injured Wentz was once replaced by a veteran journeyman named Nick Foles.

After leading the Eagles to an 11-2 record and looking like the MVP favorite, Wentz suffered a torn anterior cruciate ligament that thrust Foles into the spotlight. That set off a chain of events that concluded with Foles leading the Eagles to a win over the Vikings in the NFC Championship Game, then past the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LII at U.S. Bank Stadium.

That was the beginning of the end for Wentz.

After struggling to replicate his success with the Eagles over the next few seasons, Wentz was supplanted by Jalen Hurts and traded to the Indianapolis Colts. His stint with the Colts had its ups and downs and he was traded to the Washington Commanders.

That was the last time Wentz was a starter. He most recently served as the backup for the Los Angeles Rams and the Kansas City Chiefs before signing with the Vikings last month to fill the same role.

What can the Vikings expect when Wentz steps under center? Here’s a look at his most recent starts:

FILE – Washington Commanders quarterback Carson Wentz throws to a receiver in the first half of an NFL football game against the Cleveland Browns, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2023, in Landover, Md. The Los Angeles Rams are signing quarterback Carson Wentz, a person with knowledge of the deal tells The Associated Press. The source spoke on condition of anonymity Tuesday, Nov. 7, because Wentz needed to pass a physical before the deal could be announced. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)

Jan. 1, 2023

After starting for the Commanders early in the 2022 season, Wentz fractured a finger in his right hand, which landed him on injured reserve. That opened the door for Taylor Heinicke and he performed well enough to hold down the job even after Wentz was activated from injured reserve.

Still, Wentz ended up starting down the stretch, sliding under center when the Commanders needed a win over the Cleveland Browns. He struggled mightily in a 24-10 loss, completing 16 of 28 passes for 143 yards, no touchdowns and a trio of interceptions.

The loss eliminated the Commanders from postseason play and they opted to start young rookie named Sam Howell in the finale.

Jan. 7, 2024

After signing with the Rams midway through the 2023 season, Wentz spent most of his tenure as the backup to Matthew Stafford. The only time Wentz saw action came when the Rams had already locked up a playoff spot.

That provided Wentz an opportunity to against the San Francisco 49ers in the finale. He looked pretty good in a 21-20 win, completing 17 of 24 passes for 163 yards, a pair of touchdowns and an interception.

The starter for the 49ers in that game? Sam Darnold.

Jan. 5, 2025

After serving as a backup with the Chiefs throughout the 2024 season, Wentz got the nod in the finale with all of the starters getting rest ahead of the playoffs.

It couldn’t have gone much worse for Wentz against the Denver Broncos, a 38-0 loss. He completed 10 of 17 passes for 98 yards, no touchdowns and no interceptions. Though it wasn’t a banner performance, it’s worth noting that he didn’t have much help around him.

Carson Wentz #11 of the Kansas City Chiefs throws a pass in the third quarter against the Denver Broncos at Empower Field At Mile High on Jan. 05, 2025 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images)

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Suspect arrested in Atlanta auto break-in and theft of Beyoncé’s unreleased music, police say

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ATLANTA (AP) — A suspect has been arrested in a July auto break-in that a dancer and a choreographer touring with Beyoncé′ said resulted in the theft of the singer’s unreleased music, Atlanta police said Tuesday

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Police identified the suspect as Kelvin Evans and said he was booked into jail on charges of entering a vehicle with the intent to commit theft and a parole violation. Online jail records for metro Atlanta’s Fulton County did not list an attorney for Evans.

Beyoncé’s choreographer, Christopher Grant, and dancer Diandre Blue were traveling with the singer for concerts in Atlanta when they called police on July 8 to report the break-in. They said someone smashed a window in their rental vehicle and stole two suitcases while they were at a restaurant nearby.

Grant told police he had been “carrying some personal sensitive information” for Beyoncé. The police report said the stolen items included two Apple laptops and five thumb drives that included “unreleased music” along with other digital files related to Beyoncé’s tour.

Atlanta police spokesman Anthony Grant said in an email Tuesday that none of the items have been recovered.

Vikings signing quarterback Desmond Ridder to add depth

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After learning that young quarterback J.J. McCarthy has been diagnosed with a high ankle sprain, the Vikings added some depth by agreeing to terms with quarterback Desmond Ridder on Tuesday afternoon. A source confirmed the deal to the Pioneer Press.

The plan is still for the veteran quarterback Carson Wentz to start for the Vikings against the Cincinnati Bengals. It’s unclear if Ridder will supplant rookie quarterback Max Brosmer as the backup.

There could be some gamesmanship at play from the Vikings, too, considering Ridder spent training camp with the Bengals. Though it wasn’t the only reason the Vikings decided to make the move, the fact that Ridder has knowledge of the system certainly didn’t hurt.

In other news, a source confirmed to the Pioneer Press that the Vikings have placed running back Aaron Jones on injured reserve with a hamstring injury, and that they have signed fellow running back Cam Akers to the practice squad.

There has been no indication as of right now that the Vikings plan to place McCarthy on injured reserve.

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RFK Jr.’s vaccine panel expected to recommend delaying hepatitis B shot for children

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By Jackie Fortiér, KFF Health News

A key federal vaccine advisory panel whose members were recently replaced by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is expected to vote to recommend delaying until age 4 the hepatitis B vaccine that’s currently given to newborns, according to two former senior Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials.

“There is going to likely be a discussion about hepatitis B vaccine, very specifically trying to dislodge the birth dose of hepatitis B vaccine and to push it later in life,” said Demetre Daskalakis, former director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases. “Apparently this is a priority of the secretary’s.”

The vote is expected to take place during the next meeting of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, scheduled for Sept. 18-19.

For more than 30 years, the first of three shots of hepatitis B vaccine has been recommended for infants shortly after birth. In that time, the potentially fatal disease has been virtually eradicated among American children. Pediatricians warn that waiting four years for the vaccine opens the door to more children contracting the virus.

“Age 4 makes zero sense,” pediatrician Eric Ball said. “We recommend a universal approach to prevent those cases where a test might be incorrect or a mother might have unknowingly contracted hepatitis. It’s really the best way to keep our entire population healthy.”

In addition to the hepatitis B vaccine, the panel will also discuss and vote on recommendations for the combined measles, mumps, rubella, and varicella vaccine and covid-19 vaccines. Pediatricians worry changes to the schedules of these vaccines will limit access for many families, leaving them vulnerable to vaccine-preventable diseases.

Typically, ACIP would undertake an analysis of the data before recommending a change to vaccine guidelines. As of the end of August, this process had not begun for the hepatitis B vaccines, Daskalakis and another former official said.

“This is an atypical situation. There’s been no work group to discuss it,” Daskalakis said.

The second former senior official spoke to NPR and KFF Health News on the condition of anonymity.

In response to questions from KFF Health News, HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon wrote, “ACIP exists to ensure that vaccine policy is guided by the best available evidence and open scientific deliberation. Any updates to recommendations will be made transparently with gold standard science.”

The draft agenda for the upcoming ACIP meeting was released to the public less than a week before it is scheduled to begin.

At the last ACIP meeting, in June, Martin Kulldorff, the chair and one of seven new members handpicked by Kennedy, questioned the need to vaccinate every newborn, citing only two of the many ways the virus can spread. Kulldorff is a former Harvard Medical School professor who became known for opposing some public health measures during the pandemic.

“Unless the mother is hepatitis B positive, an argument could be made to delay the vaccine for this infection, which is primarily spread by sexual activity and intravenous drug use,” he said.

The virus spreads via direct exposure to an infected bodily fluid like blood or semen. The disease has no cure and can lead to serious conditions like cirrhosis and liver cancer later in life. The CDC advisory panel may maintain the recommendation to inoculate newborns whose mothers have hepatitis B or are considered at high risk of the disease, the former officials said.

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Protection from birth

In 1991, federal health officials determined it was advisable for newborns to receive their first dose of the hepatitis B vaccine within 24 hours of birth, which blocks the virus from taking hold if transmitted during delivery. While parents may opt out of the shots, many day care centers and school districts require proof of hepatitis B vaccination for enrollment.

The prospect of ACIP’s altering the recommendation has left some people living with the virus deeply unsettled.

“I am goddamn frustrated,” said Wendy Lo, who has lived with the liver disease, likely since birth. Years of navigating the psychological, monetary, medical, and social aspects of chronic hepatitis B has touched almost every aspect of her life.

“I would not want anyone to have to experience that if it can be prevented,” she said. Lo learned she had the disease due to a routine screening to study abroad in college.

Lo credits the vaccines with protecting her close family members from infection.

“I shared with my partner, ‘If you get vaccinated, we can be together,’” she said. He got the vaccine, which protects him from infection, “so I’m grateful for that,” she said.

The CDC estimates half of people with hepatitis B do not know they are infected. It can range from an acute, mild infection to a chronic infection, often with few to no symptoms. Most people with chronic hepatitis B were born outside of the U.S., and Asians and Pacific Islanders followed by Black people have the highest rates of newly reported chronic infections.

When her children were born, Lo was adamant that they receive the newborn dose, a decision she says prevented them from contracting the virus.

The earlier an infection occurs, the worse the consequences, according to the CDC. When contracted in infancy or early childhood, hepatitis B is far more likely to become a chronic infection, silently damaging the liver over decades.

Those who become chronic carriers can also unknowingly spread the virus to others and face an increased risk of long-term complications including cirrhosis and liver cancer, which may not become evident until much later in life.

“Now I’m in my 50s, one of my big concerns is liver cancer. The vaccine is safe and effective, it’s lifesaving, and it protects you against cancer. How many vaccines do that?” Lo said.

Thirty years of universal vaccination

Treatments like the antivirals Lo now takes weren’t available until the 1990s. Decades of the virus’s replicating unchecked damaged her liver. Every six months she gets scared of what her blood tests may reveal.

After a vaccine was approved in the 1980s, public health officials initially focused vaccination efforts on people thought to be at highest risk of infection.

“I, and every other doctor, had been trained in medical school to think of hepatitis B as an infection you acquired as an adult. It was the pimps, the prostitutes, the prisoners, and the health care practitioners who got hepatitis B infection. But we’ve learned so much more,” said William Schaffner, a professor of infectious diseases at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine and a former voting member of ACIP.

As hepatitis B rates remained stubbornly high in the 1980s, scientists realized an entire vulnerable group was missing from the vaccination regime — newborns. The virus is often transmitted from an infected mother to baby in late pregnancy or during birth.

“We may soon hear, ‘Let’s just do a blood test on all pregnant women.’ We tried that. That doesn’t work perfectly either,” Schaffner said.

Some doctors didn’t test, he said, and some pregnant women falsely tested negative while others acquired hepatitis B after they had been tested earlier in their pregnancies.

In 1991, Schaffner was a liaison representative to ACIP when it voted to advise universal vaccination for hepatitis B before an infant leaves the hospital.

“We want no babies infected. Therefore, we’ll just vaccinate every mom and every baby at birth. Problem solved. It has been brilliantly successful in virtually eliminating hepatitis B in children,” he said.

In 1990, there were 3.03 cases of hepatitis B per 100,000 people 19 years old or under in the U.S., according to the CDC.

Since the federal recommendation to vaccinate all infants, cases have dramatically decreased. CDC data shows that in 2022 the rate among those 19 or under was less than 0.1 per 100,000.

While hepatitis B is often associated with high-risk behaviors such as injection drug use or having multiple sexual partners, health experts note that it is possible for the virus to be transmitted in ordinary situations too, including among young children.

The virus can survive for up to seven days outside the body. During that time, even microscopic traces of infected blood on a school desk or playground equipment can pose a risk. If the virus comes into contact with an open wound or the mucous membranes of the eyes, an infection can occur. This means that unvaccinated children not considered at high risk can still be exposed in everyday environments.

Future access uncertain

If the CDC significantly alters its recommendation, health insurers would no longer be required to cover the cost of the shots. That could leave parents to pay out-of-pocket for a vaccine that has long been provided at no charge. Children who get immunizations through the federal Vaccines for Children program would lose free access to the shot as soon as any new ACIP recommendations get approved by the acting CDC director.

The two former CDC officials said that plans were underway to push back the official recommendation for the vaccine as of August, when they both left the agency, but may have changed.

Schaffner is still an alternate liaison member of ACIP, and hopes to express his support for universal newborn vaccination at the next meeting.

“The liaisons have now been excluded from the vaccine work groups. They are still permitted to attend the full meetings,” he said.

Schaffner is worried about the next generation of babies and the doctors who care for them.

“We’ll see cases of hepatitis B once again occur. We’ll see transmission into the next generation,” he said, “and the next generation of people who wear white coats will have to deal with hepatitis B, when we could have cut it off at the pass.”

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs of KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling and journalism.

©2025 KFF Health News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.