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Ravens’ Lamar Jackson says he loves team, rips ‘false narrative’ about him leaving Baltimore

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Lamar Jackson is pushing again on the notion that he desires to depart the Baltimore Ravens.

The 2019 NFL MVP on Wednesday tweeted that he loves the crew and lashed out at a “false narrative” surrounding his enjoying future with the Ravens. 

“I really like my Ravens I do not know who the hell placing that false narrative out that I am having ideas about leaving cease tryna learn my thoughts,” Jackson wrote. 

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Lamar Jackson #8 of the Baltimore Ravens in motion throughout the sport towards the Pittsburgh Steelers at Heinz Discipline on December 5, 2021, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
(Joe Sargent/Getty Photos)

His feedback rapidly drew a response from Ravens’ All-Professional deal with Ronnie Stanley and not too long ago retired security Anthony Levine Sr., who spent 10 seasons with Baltimore. 

Whereas it is unclear what provoked Jackson’s feedback on social media, they got here a day after Ravens proprietor Steve Bisciotti mentioned negations concerning the quarterback’s contract on the NFL league conferences in Florida. 

Bisciotti reiterated that the crew was dedicated to signing its star quarterback to a long-term deal, regardless of Jackson reportedly being gradual to have interaction with basic supervisor Eric DeCosta in contract talks.

Bisciotti stated he did not count on Jackson to signal an extension earlier than this season until the quarterback “has a change of coronary heart.” He described Jackson’s resolution to attend as “distinctive as hell,” ESPN reported. 

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Head coach John Harbaugh of the Baltimore Ravens laughs with owner Steve Bisciotti during training camp at M&T Bank Stadium on July 31, 2021 in Baltimore, Maryland.

Head coach John Harbaugh of the Baltimore Ravens laughs with proprietor Steve Bisciotti throughout coaching camp at M&T Financial institution Stadium on July 31, 2021 in Baltimore, Maryland.
(Picture by Scott Taetsch/Getty Photos)

“It’s distinctive as hell as a result of everyone expects you to say, ‘I’ve received to get mine now,’” Bisciotti stated. “The child is so obsessive about profitable a Tremendous Bowl, that I believe deep down, he doesn’t assume he’s worthy. I believe he desires that to say, ‘Now, I need to be on high.’ Folks can speculate any method they need.”

DESHAUN WATSON’S ‘GROUNDBREAKING’ CONTRACT WITH BROWNS COULD IMPACT FUTURE QB DEALS, RAVENS OWNER SAYS

The Ravens may use the franchise tag to maintain Jackson within the fold if extension talks don’t result in a brand new contract by the following offseason. That might stop Jackson from turning into a free agent. 

Jackson, who’s within the closing 12 months of his rookie deal, will earn $23 million this season, with a brand new contract doubtless making him one of many NFL’s highest-paid gamers. 

Lamar Jackson #8 of the Baltimore Ravens reacts after losing to the Miami Dolphins 22-10 in the game at Hard Rock Stadium on November 11, 2021 in Miami Gardens, Florida.

Lamar Jackson #8 of the Baltimore Ravens reacts after dropping to the Miami Dolphins 22-10 within the sport at Onerous Rock Stadium on November 11, 2021 in Miami Gardens, Florida.
(Michael Reaves/Getty Photos)

“Nevertheless it’s like, Eric cannot hold calling him and say, ‘Hey Lamar, you actually need to get in right here and get this factor performed.’ That is not a GM’s job,” Bisciotti added. “Kirk Cousins did it that method. What if Lamar says that? ‘I will play on the fifth 12 months. I will play on the franchise. I will play on one other franchise, after which you’ll be able to signal me.’”

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Inexperienced Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers’ new deal averages $50 million per 12 months and Deshaun Watson, who’s dealing with 22 civil lawsuits over sexual assault allegations, landed a totally assured $230 million contract from the Cleveland Browns this month.

Buffalo Payments quarterback Josh Allen, who was chosen No. 7 total in Jackson’s 2018 draft class, signed a six-year, $258 million extension with the crew final summer season.

Jackson, 25, is among the greatest quarterbacks within the NFL. His 2021 season was reduce brief because of an harm suffered towards the Browns.

He completed final season with 2,882 passing yards, 16 landing passes and 13 interceptions in 12 video games for Baltimore — along with 767 speeding yards and two touchdowns on the bottom.

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Fox Information’ Ryan Gaydos contributed to this report

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Caitlin Clark lauds childhood idol Diana Taurasi ahead of first WNBA matchup: 'One of the greatest players'

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Caitlin Clark lauds childhood idol Diana Taurasi ahead of first WNBA matchup: 'One of the greatest players'

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Diana Taurasi is widely regarded as one of the greatest players in WNBA history. Meanwhile, rookie Caitlin Clark has helped bring an unprecedented amount of attention to women’s basketball.

Clark and the Indiana Fever will faceoff with Taurasi and the Phoenix Mercury on Sunday. The game will mark Clark’s first opportunity to compete against Taurasi in the WNBA.

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Clark was asked about her feelings leading up to the highly anticipated matchup with a player she grew up idolizing. 

Caitlin Clark #22 of the Indiana Fever warms up before the game /ah at Wintrust Arena on June 23, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. (Quinn Harris/Getty Images)

“It’s incredible,” Clark told reporters on Saturday about Taurasi’s two-decade run in the league. “I don’t think people realize how hard that is to do.”

WNBA COMMISSIONER SCOFFS AT NOTION CAITLIN CLARK IS BEING TARGETED BY WNBA PLAYERS

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Clark also said taking the court for a game against a player of Taurasi’s caliber was “a dream come true. You get to live out your dream while playing against the best.”

Diana Taurasi vs Aces

Diana Taurasi #3 of the Phoenix Mercury looks on during the game against the Las Vegas Aces on May 14, 2024 at Michelob ULTRA Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. (David Becker/NBAE via Getty Images)

Clark went on to describe Taurasi as one of the WNBA’s all-time greats. “Obviously, she’s one of the greatest players our game has ever seen, the greatest scorer our game has ever seen,” Clark said.

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Despite Clark’s latest praise, a budding rivalry between the two high-profile players could be on the horizon.

When Taurasi was asked to share her thoughts on facing Clark for the first time, she delivered a brief response. “Yeah, it’ll be fun,” she said.

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In April, Taurasi was asked about what incoming WNBA rookies could expect. She proceeded to suggest that a rude awakening was in store.

“Look, SVP, reality is coming,” Taurasi told ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt during an appearance on SportsCenter on April 6. “There’s levels to this thing. And that’s just life. We all went through it. You see it on the NBA side, and you’re going to see it on this side. You look superhuman playing against 18-year-olds, but you’re going to (be playing against) some grown women that have been playing professional basketball for a long time.” 

Caitlin Clark dribbles

Caitlin Clark #22 of the Indiana Fever looks on during the game against the Seattle Storm on June 27, 2024 at Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle, Washington.  (Mollie Handkins/NBAE via Getty Images)

While the comments were about the rookie class as a whole, some believed the remarks were a direct jab at Clark, who dominated at the college basketball level.

Nevertheless, Taurasi and Clark also share some similarities. Taurasi is the WNBA’s career scoring leader, while no one scored more points at the NCAA Division I level than Clark. Both point guards are also strong 3-point shooters.

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Taurasi is one of three players on the Mercury’s roster who will represent the US in Paris next month for the Olympics, joining Brittney Griner and guard Kahleah Copper. Team USA will be competing for a record eight consecutive Olympic gold medal.

The 2024 Olympic roster notably does not include any players who recently rose from the collegiate ranks. Clark’s exclusion from the roster sparked considerable debate. Her teammate and the league’s reigning rookie of the year, Aliyah Boston was also left off the roster.

The Fever and Mercury tipoff at 3:00 p.m. EST on June 30.

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Dodgers overcome Tyler Glasnow's struggles with 11th-inning scoring spree vs. Giants

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Dodgers overcome Tyler Glasnow's struggles with 11th-inning scoring spree vs. Giants

Saturday was a planned “bullpen game” for the San Francisco Giants, whose rotation sports just two healthy established starters in Logan Webb and Jordan Hicks and has five pitchers — Blake Snell, Kyle Harrison, Keaton Winn, Robbie Ray and Alex Cobb — on the injured list.

It turned into an impromptu bullpen game for Dodgers, which was both surprising and disappointing considering they had ace Tyler Glasnow, who was 8-5 with a 2.88 ERA and a National League-leading 135 strikeouts and had thrown five innings or more in each of his first 16 starts, on the mound.

Glasnow was rocked for five runs and seven hits in an abbreviated three-inning start, leaving Dodgers relievers to cover the final six innings.

Not only was the bullpen up to the task, it worked overtime and got contributions from every arm, with eight pitchers combining to limit the Giants to one earned run over the final eight innings of a wild 14-7, 11-inning victory in front of a crowd of 39,663 at Oracle Park.

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“It was all hands on deck, really,” veteran right-hander Daniel Hudson said after the grueling 3-hour, 45-minute game. “We had to go get that one once we tied it up and took the lead [in the fourth inning]. We were all just focused on getting to the next guy.”

The Dodgers blew the game open with a seven-run rally in the 11th, but they wouldn’t have gotten there if Hudson hadn’t escaped a bases-loaded, one-out jam in the 10th.

The Dodgers had scored in the 10th off 6-foot-11 right-hander Sean Hjelle when Jason Heyward grounded out to first base, advancing automatic runner Chris Taylor to third, and Miguel Rojas blooped an RBI single to shallow right-center for a 7-6 lead.

Hudson, who gave up a two-run homer to Matt Chapman in Friday night’s loss, got Nick Ahmed to ground out to shortstop to open the bottom of the 10th, with automatic runner Brett Wisely holding at second, but pinch-hitter David Villar ripped an RBI double off the left-field wall to tie the score 7-7.

LaMonte Wade Jr. was intentionally walked, and Heliot Ramos dribbled a grounder to third for an infield single — the Dodgers thought the ball hit Ramos’ foot and should have been ruled foul but were out of replay challenges — to load the bases with one out. The Dodgers brought Taylor in from center field for a five-man infield.

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“I don’t,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said, when asked if he could remember the last time he employed a five-man infield. “It has been that long. It’s not a strategy I love to pull out of my hat, but it just seemed like the right time given the situation.”

Will Smith hits a two-run double in the 11th inning during the Dodgers’ win over the Giants on Saturday.

(Godofredo A. Vásquez / Associated Press)

Hudson then escaped the jam by striking out Patrick Bailey with a nasty 88-mph slider and, with Taylor back in the outfield, getting Matt Chapman to pop out to catcher Will Smith, sending the game to the 11th.

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“That guy has done everything in this game,” closer Evan Phillips said of Hudson, who was on the mound when the Washington Nationals clinched their World Series title in 2019. “There’s just nobody better to handle that, no one we trust more in those situations, and I don’t think anyone batted an eye when he got out of it.”

The Dodgers, who scored seven runs in the ninth inning for an 11-9 come-from-behind win at Colorado on June 18, then broke out the heavy lumber in the top of the 11th.

Shohei Ohtani, who hit his NL-leading 26th home run to straight-away center field in the third, giving him nine homers in 12 games, was intentionally walked to open the inning, and Smith drove a two-run double to left-center field for a 9-7 lead.

Freddie Freeman followed with a bloop double to left to score Smith for a 10-7 lead. Teoscar Hernández blooped a single to right, moving Freeman to third, and Taylor grounded an RBI single to right for an 11-7 lead. Heyward roped a two-run triple into the right-field corner to make it 13-7, and Rojas hit a sacrifice fly to left to make it 14-7.

The seven runs in the 11th were the most by the Dodgers in an extra inning since they moved to Los Angeles in 1958, and, according to MLB researcher Sarah Langs, the seven-run win was baseball’s second-largest extra-inning win since 1901, behind the Milwaukee Braves’ 12-4, 11-inning win over the Brooklyn Dodgers on Aug. 29, 1954.

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“We needed every bit of that,” Roberts said of the seven-run outburst. “We were down to our last arm, and I was thinking about having Miggy Ro pitch that last inning. That’s kind of where we were at. Exhausting all of our arms feels a lot better when you win.”

Rojas, who also hit RBI singles in the second and fourth innings, was ready and willing to take the mound.

“I was telling Mark [Prior, Dodgers pitching coach] to give me the ball,” Rojas said. “I’ve been waiting to pitch this year, to be honest with you. We’ve been up by nine runs, but I think we need to be up by 10 to pitch in a game that we’re winning.”

Rojas might not have fared much worse than Glasnow, who limited opponents to a .179 average in his first 16 starts, the third-best mark in the league, but was tagged for seven hits in 14 at-bats on Saturday. The Giants batted around in the third, an inning in which Glasnow threw 37 pitches after throwing only 24 pitches in the first two innings.

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The inning began with Glasnow’s walk to No. 9 hitter Ahmed and Jorge Soler’s RBI double to right field. Soler tried to advance on Wade’s grounder to shortstop but was thrown out at third by Rojas.

Dodgers pitcher Tyler Glasnow walks to the dugout after the third inning Saturday against the Giants.

Dodgers pitcher Tyler Glasnow walks to the dugout after the third inning Saturday.

(Godofredo A. Vásquez / Associated Press)

But Ramos singled to center, Bailey hit an RBI single to right, and Dodgers third baseman Cavan Biggio couldn’t get the ball out of his glove after charging Chapman’s chopper, a play that was generously ruled an RBI infield single.

Michael Conforto walked to load the bases, and Luis Matos grounded into a run-scoring fielder’s choice for a 5-2 lead before Wisely flied to left to end the four-run inning.

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“The feel [for my pitches] was completely lost today from my warmups to the game,” Glasnow said. “It was just one of those days where I had no command of anything. … From pitch one, I’d think my release point was at one place, and it’s at another place. It was just kind of all over the place today.”

How does Glasnow cope with such an impediment?

“I didn’t today,” he said. “I think it’s more about just trying to eliminate thought and just go out there and compete. A lot of stuff got away from me, and I’m just glad the team could come back and win the game.”

The Dodgers answered San Francisco’s four-run third with four runs of their own in the top of the fourth, batting around against relievers Spencer Howard and Randy Rodriguez, a rally that Andy Pages sparked with a one-out walk.

Heyward singled to right, advancing Pages to third, and Rojas grounded an RBI infield single to the shortstop hole. Lux followed with an RBI single to right. Biggio popped out on a bunt attempt, but Ohtani walked to load the bases. Smith beat out a slow roller for an RBI single, and Freeman walked with the bases loaded for a 6-5 lead.

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San Francisco evened the score in the bottom of the fifth when Chapman hit a one-out single off right-hander Yohan Ramírez, Conforto walked against left-hander Alex Vesia, and Wisely, who won Friday night’s game with a walk-off two-run homer in the ninth, hit an RBI single to center for a 6-6 tie.

“That was a long one, a tough one, because of everything that happened, but the team effort was remarkable,” Rojas said. “I feel like that’s the team that we have. We’re always going to fight, and we’re always going to be in games.”

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Shohei Ohtani calls batboy who saved him from hard foul ball in dugout his 'hero'

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Shohei Ohtani calls batboy who saved him from hard foul ball in dugout his 'hero'

Shohei Ohtani had high praise for a bat boy after nearly being nailed with a foul ball.

Ohtani’s Los Angeles Dodgers were visiting the Chicago White Sox Wednesday night when a foul ball hit by Kiké Hernández was headed toward the MLB superstar as he walked inside the Dodgers’ dugout.

Batboy Javier Herrera came to the rescue — with his bare hands. 

Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Dodgers hits a home run during the first inning against the Chicago White Sox at Guaranteed Rate Field June 25, 2024, in Chicago.  (Nuccio DiNuzzo/Getty Images)

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As everyone ducked, the bat boy reacted quickly, snatching the ball out of the air. 

Realizing what he had done, he handed the ball in one motion to a fan seated near him behind the screen.

The moment went viral, and Herrera met with the media.

Dozens of reporters were surrounding him, and Ohtani snapped a photo of the media gaggle.

Ohtani posted the photo to his Instagram story with the caption, “MY HERO.”

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“I saw the pitch all the way through. It hit the bat, and the ball pretty much found me. I was able to grab it,” Herrera said. “I was just doing my job.”

Shohei Ohtani runs

Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Dodgers hits an RBI single during the fourth inning of a game against the Chicago White Sox at Guaranteed Rate Field June 25, 2024, in Chicago. (Nuccio DiNuzzo/Getty Images)

BLUE JAYS PITCHER AVOIDS SERIOUS INJURY AFTER GETTING HIT WITH 101.6-MPH AARON JUDGE COMEBACKER

“Yeah, he needs a contract extension, a raise,” manager Dave Roberts said. “I was obviously right next to him, but I didn’t appreciate how close it was, you know, going towards Shohei. And what a great play it was. So, very quick reaction from Javy and very grateful.”

There’s a reason MLB stadiums are always telling fans to keep their heads on a swivel, because you never know where a foul ball will land. 

For players, coaches and staff in dugouts, it’s especially true because foul balls can come flying toward them at any moment. 

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Shohei Ohtani vs Dodgers

Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani, right, talks with interpreter Ippei Mizuhara during the ninth inning of an opening day baseball game against the San Diego Padres at the Gocheok Sky Dome in Seoul, South Korea, March 20, 2024. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

Ohtani may have been wearing his helmet, but getting struck by a foul ball could’ve led to a serious injury. 

Ohtani played a big role in the Dodgers’ 4-0 victory over the White Sox, too, mashing his 25th home run of the season in a 1-for-2 performance with two walks and two runs scored. 

Fox News’ Scott Thompson contributed to this report.

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