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Baltimore quarterback Lamar Jackson, the reigning NFL Most Valuable Player, leads fan balloting for the 2025 NFL Pro Bowl Games after one week of voting, the league announced on Monday. Ravens superstar Jackson set the overall pace with 44,681 votes followed by teammate Derrick Henry, the running back leader, in second overall at 40,729 votes. Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.I'm going to watch Thanksgiving Day sports on TV all day long – join me, here's my ultimate 24-hour streaming scheduleA video played for inmates at the Pima County jail suggests they use the new Transition Center to help them take the next steps and get help for needs such as housing, substance abuse treatment, transportation and phones. The phrase "lived experience" sounds redundant when you think about it. Of course, any experience you've had, you've lived. But really, in many cases, the phrase isn't so much redundant as it is missing a word — "hard," as in "hard-lived experience." That's what the people who staff the Transition Center outside the Pima County jail bring to their jobs — hard-lived experience. And they try to impart hard-won knowledge to the people who pass through, many of them fresh out of jail. The Transition Center has been operating since summer 2023, when Pima County opened it at 1204 W. Silverlake, just outside the Pima County Adult Detention Center — the jail. It's staffed now by five "justice navigators," with one position still open. They help whoever walks in to overcome the next obstacles they're facing. That might mean going to detox, getting a phone, exploring treatment options, resolving a warrant or finding a place to stay. Doyle Morrison, left, and Bruce Donahue, a justice navigator talk, sit inside Pima County's Transition Center, which opened in the summer of 2023 just outside the jail. Staffing the place, though, required "a shift from normal operating procedures," said Kate Vesely, the county's director of justice services. The hard-lived experiences of these staffers mean that many of them have been in and out of jail, most have felony convictions, some have substance use disorder or serious mental illness — not normally qualifications for a county job. "The whole purpose is to hire individuals with lived experience," said Doyle Morrison, 56, who manages the center. "That is what a peer is, someone with lived experience." This local experiment in peer support appears to be working. County Administrator Jan Lesher reported in November that among the more than 1,100 people served in the first year of the center, fewer than 10% were rearrested within 30 days. That compares to 27% in a control group. When the clients come in and find support from people who've been through it all, that's the "secret sauce," Morrison said. "Everybody in here is a peer," Morrison said. "It disarms them and makes them feel safe." Four of the people who staff the center told him how they try to use their experience to help people in troubled moments take positive steps. 'I take pride in what I do' Rosa Lamadrid has a pointed way of reaching the women she sees. "I tell them, I guarantee I've been arrested more times than you have," Lamadrid said. She estimates she's been released from the jail outside of which she now works hundreds of times. Rosa Lamadrid, a justice navigator at the Pima County Transition Center. "There's nothing these women have went through that I can't share something with them about," she said. Lamadrid, 42, grew up in South Tucson and started using drugs with her mother at age 14, she said. The next nearly 20 years were very rough, with a couple of periods of sobriety and management of her serious mental illness. "To be honest, I've OD'd multiple times," she said. "I've relapsed over and over." "It has been a very sad, traumatic, but also a very powerful experience that has made me who I am today," she said. Somehow, there came a time nine years ago when sobriety stuck. Most of all, Lamadrid said, "I was just tired" and "really, really ready." But also, she wanted to help her family through its struggles and simply support herself. She was fortunate that she had inherited her father's home on the Pascua Yaqui Reservation. Her first job was at a Dollar Tree, she said. In fact, some dollar stores have been good places to start for people with a felony record and a desire to move forward, she said. She went on to work at sober living homes and other places before ending up at the Crisis Response Center. She was recruited from there to join the Transition Center. "I take pride in what I do now, because an individual could come in, and the majority of the time, I think very, very rarely we're unable to place them in, like, a detox or rehab or something like that." The exception is housing — sometimes shelter space is scarce. Still, she said, for people in the situation she used to be in, "Now there are a lot more opportunities." 'In the real thick of it' Todd Auge had been banging around Cochise County, getting high and getting in trouble, for years when his moment of truth came. He had planned to skip out on a ride to Tucson to go to treatment, he said, but instead, he walked a couple of miles to a friend's house and made it here, to the home of that friend's uncle. Once here, though, he went to the Salvation Army and dropped dirty — he had smoked meth too recently. The man at their intake told him, Auge recalled, "I want you to go home and drink water. I'll save your bed for a few days." Todd Auge, a justice navigator at the Pima County Transition Center. Amazingly, he did it. Auge didn't go out and get high — he stayed in and drank water, and after that, went to treatment at the Salvation Army. He's been sober more than eight years. Auge, now 53, got trained in peer support and ended up working in wind power before winding up back in jail — this time working for a social service agency inside. "I was working in the pit in there, so I got a real good crash course in short term case management," he said. "You know, helping folks out in the real thick of it — fresh." Auge made his way outside the jail, to the Transition Center, by applying to the city of Tucson, which funds two of the positions in the center. What he encounters most is what you'd expect — people addicted to fentanyl. Sometimes, what allows him to connect to the people he sees as simple as the tattoos on his arms. What "many people don't get is we don't give a (damn) about ourselves in here," Auge said, referring to people in jail and on drugs. "My big thing is getting them to the next place where they can care about themselves a little bit." Helping Indigenous population When Bruce Donahue grew up in the southern part of the Tohono O'odham Nation, moving drugs and people "was the only homegrown business we had," he said. "You know, it was the way that people were able to put food on the table." When he was finally arrested, Donahue recalled, the DEA considered him the biggest cocaine trafficker on the reservation. At the time, it was a source of pride. "When I got clean, it became a source of a lot of shame and a lot of guilt," Donahue said. "Working a 12-step program and really getting back into my culture helped me work out some of those things, and I continue to work on those things." Donahue, 48, is one of the original staffers who joined the Transition Center in summer 2023. "I like to believe that I am able to work with anybody, but I do have a special interest in working with the indigenous population," he said. He told of one 26-year-old who came through the Transition Center out of jail, got a phone and other help, but later relapsed. Donahue helped hook him up with a new 90-day stay in treatment, but he had also violated parole. The real challenge was going to be dealing with his parole officer. Donahue accompanied the young man to the parole appointment, helped get his warrant quashed and his parole reinstated. "We've really evolved in the time that we've been here to meeting individuals where they're at," he said. 'Attitudes are changing' You wouldn't be finding Morrison, the manager, in this modular building if it weren't for an FBI sting operation. Morrison, then a sergeant in the National Guard, was caught up in Operation Lively Green, the 2002-2004 operation in which undercover federal agents paid military service members, corrections officers and other public employees in Southern Arizona to move drug loads. He had been a well-respected and decorated non-commissioned officer who even participated in a counter-narcotics task force before he got caught playing a minor role in the operation. Morrison doesn't share the experiences of life on the streets that many of his coworkers have had. But he's got the bitter experience of losing the life he once had and working to recover the productive life he once lived. And now he, like the others at the Transition Center, is seeing more public openness to helping people despite their transgressions, or because of their afflictions. The public is more accepting of that hard-lived experience, if people will take a step to change. "Minds and attitudes are changing because this opioid epidemic crosses every boundary," Morrison said. "It touches everybody." Too bad it's taken that for attitudes to change, but a good thing the Transition Center, with its experienced staff, is one of the outcomes. Contact columnist Tim Steller at tsteller@tucson.com or ​520-807-7789. On Twitter: @timothysteller Subscribe to stay connected to Tucson. A subscription helps you access more of the local stories that keep you connected to the community. Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox! Columnist

Homebound seniors living alone often slip through health system’s cracksRadical Jaguar rebrand and new logo sparks ire online NEW YORK (AP) — A promotional video for a rebrand of British luxury car brand Jaguar is being criticized online for showing models in brightly colored outfits — and no car. The rebrand, which includes a new logo, is slated to launch Dec. 2 during Miami Art Week, when the company will unveil a new electric model. But Jaguar Land Rover, a unit of India’s Tata Motors Ltd., has been promoting it online. The Jaguar brand is in the middle of a transition to going all-electric. “Copy Nothing,” marketing materials read. “We’re here to delete the ordinary. To go bold. To copy nothing.” Trump has promised again to release the last JFK files. But experts say don’t expect big revelations DALLAS (AP) — The nation is set to mark 61 years since President John F. Kennedy was assassinated as his motorcade passed through downtown Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. Even after over six decades, conspiracy theories about what happened that day still swirl and the desire to follow every thread of information hasn’t waned. President-elect Donald Trump made promises over the summer that if reelected he would declassify the remaining records. At this point, only a few thousand of millions of pages of governmental records related to the assassination have yet to be fully released. And those who have studied what's been released so far say that the public shouldn’t anticipate any earth-shattering revelations even if the remaining files are declassified. Bitcoin is at the doorstep of $100,000 as post-election rally rolls on NEW YORK (AP) — Bitcoin is jumping again, rising above $98,000 for the first time Thursday. The cryptocurrency has been shattering records almost daily since the U.S. presidential election, and has rocketed more than 40% higher in just two weeks. It's now at the doorstep of $100,000. Cryptocurrencies and related investments like crypto exchange-traded funds have rallied because the incoming Trump administration is expected to be more “crypto-friendly.” Still, as with everything in the volatile cryptoverse, the future is hard to predict. And while some are bullish, other experts continue to warn of investment risks. NFL issues security alert to teams and the players' union following recent burglaries The NFL has issued a security alert to teams and the players’ union following recent burglaries involving the homes of Chiefs stars Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce. In a memo obtained by The Associated Press, the league says homes of professional athletes across multiple sports have become “increasingly targeted for burglaries by organized and skilled groups.” Law enforcement officials noted these groups target the homes on days the athletes have games. Players were told to take precautions and implement home security measures to reduce the risk of being targeted. Some of the burglary groups have conducted extensive surveillance on targets. Penn State wins trademark case over retailer's use of vintage logos, images PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Penn State has won a closely watched trademark fight over an online retailer’s use of its vintage logos and images. A Pennsylvania jury awarded Penn State $28,000 in damages earlier this week over products made and sold by the firms Vintage Brand and Sportswear Inc. Penn State accused them of selling “counterfeit” clothing and accessories. The defendants said their website makes clear they are not affiliated with Penn State. At least a dozen other schools have sued the defendants on similar grounds, but the Pennsylvania case was the first to go to trial. Has a waltz written by composer Frederic Chopin been discovered in an NYC museum? NEW YORK (AP) — A previously unknown musical work written by composer Frederic Chopin appears to have been found in a library in New York City. The Morgan Library & Museum says the untitled and unsigned piece is the first new manuscript of the Romantic era virtuoso to be discovered in nearly a century. Robinson McClellan, the museum’s curator, says he stumbled across the work in May while going through a collection brought to the Manhattan museum years earlier. He worked with outside experts to verify the document's authenticity. But there’s debate whether the waltz is an original Chopin work or merely one written in his hand. Volcano on Iceland's Reykjanes Peninsula erupts for the 7th time in a year GRINDAVIK, Iceland (AP) — A volcano on the Reykjanes Peninsula in southwestern Iceland is spewing lava from a fissure in its seventh eruption since December. Iceland's seismic monitors said the eruption started with little warning late Wednesday and created a long fissure but looked to be smaller than eruptions in August and May. Around 50 houses were evacuated after the Civil Protection agency issued the alert, along with guests at the famous Blue Lagoon resort, according to the national broadcaster. The repeated eruptions over the past year have caused damage to the town of Grindavík and forced people to relocate. Australian teen and British woman who drank tainted alcohol in Laos have died, bringing toll to 5 VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) — An Australian teenager and a British woman have died after drinking tainted alcohol in Laos in what Australia’s prime minister said was every parent’s nightmare. Officials earlier said an American and two Danish tourists also had died following reports that multiple people had been sickened in town popular with backpackers. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told Parliament that 19-year-old Bianca Jones had died after being evacuated from Vang Vieng, Laos, for treatment in a Thai hospital. Her friend, also 19, remains hospitalized in Thailand. Later Thursday, Britain said a British woman also died and the media in the U.K. identified her as 28-year-old Simone White. US ahead in AI innovation, easily surpassing China in Stanford's new ranking The U.S. leads the world in developing artificial intelligence technology, surpassing China in research and other important measures of AI innovation, according to a newly released Stanford University index. There’s no surefire way to rank global AI leadership but Stanford researchers have made an attempt by measuring the “vibrancy” of the AI industry across a variety of dimensions, from how much research and investment is happening to how responsibly the technology is being pursued to prevent harm. Following the U.S. and China were the United Kingdom, India and the United Arab Emirates. Pop star Ed Sheeran helps favorite soccer team sign player before getting on stage with Taylor Swift It turns out British pop star Ed Sheeran is also good at recruiting soccer players. Sheeran is a minority shareholder at English soccer team Ipswich Town and it needed his help over the summer to get a player to join the club. Ipswich CEO Mark Ashton tells a Soccerex industry event in Miami: “Ed jumped on a Zoom call with him at the training ground, just before he stepped on stage with Taylor Swift. Hopefully that was a key part in getting the player across the line.” Ashton didn’t disclose the player in question, saying only: “He’s certainly scoring a few goals.”

Trudeau told Trump Americans would also suffer if tariffs are imposed, a Canadian minister saysB.C. drummers help John Stamos perfect Beach Boys drum solo

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Trump threatened to impose a 25% tax on all products entering the U.S. from Canada and Mexico.The Swedish poet and artist Johanna Ekström died of cancer in 2022 at 51. She left behind 13 grey notebooks detailing the last years of her life: from October 2019 to X, the date on which she would die, even though she didn’t know exactly when that would be. It turned out to be 13 April and a week before she asked her oldest friend, the publisher and author Sigrid Rausing, to edit and finish the text. This book, part diary, part writer’s notes, part meditation on loss and vulnerability, is the result. The book is also an extended posthumous conversation. Beneath each chunk of Ekström’s words is a commentary by Rausing, who explains what was going on in her friend’s mind and life at the time. There are loves here and dreams – both benign and menacing – and there are single-sentence thoughts that are almost aphoristic. As the book progresses there also runs an account of the ebb and flow of the cancer that started in her eye. Some parts were clearly meant to be read by others and some are painfully intimate. Spliced undemonstratively by Rausing, they make for a poignant whole. By Michael Prodger Granta, 336pp, £16.99 . Buy the book There is something peculiar about Barrowbeck. Across centuries its residents are persistently haunted by an unease that is difficult to shift and eats into their sense of place. This fictional village on the Yorkshire Lancashire border is the setting for Barrowbeck , a series of 13 short stories – vignettes of folk horror ­– by Andrew Michael Hurley, which first appeared as short plays on BBC Radio Four. To read the stories is be transported to the darkest depths of this unwieldy valley. In the book’s opening fragment, we meet the first inhabitants, Celtic farmers who, after seeing some of their peers murdered by Anglo-Saxon raiders, have sought to settle on the land that will in time become Barrowbeck. But, seeking solace from the Gods, Barrowbeck’s new residents discover that this place is not, and will never be, their own. They are merely visitors. Through each of the book’s 13 scenes, Hurley proves adept at binding his narrative to place. The town is the only character that appears in all of the stories. To live in Barrowbeck is to live in a perpetual state of wild dread – an emotion that the author will likely provoke among his readers. By Megan Kenyon John Murray, 304pp, £16.99 . Buy the book When did dogs become man’s best friend? Chris Pearson, in this entertaining and wide-ranging history, traces the relationship back a good 15,000 years to the Upper Palaeolithic era, when certain wolves began to hang around human settlements, scavenging for food. 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The same morning, her pupils are told about the death of their classmate, Giovanna. Maddalena Vaglio Tanet’s debut novel, Untold Lessons , is a fictionalised retelling of a true incident and a heartbreaking story about individual choices and their consequences – some of which we don’t understand until it’s too late. Set in the 1970s Italian countryside, the novel has a cast of characters that are immersed in fear, guilt and past trauma. The reader begins to piece the story together through different perspectives as the plot unfolds in a non-linear fashion: at times the events are told as they happen, at others through retrospective reflections on the world wars and the political unrest under Mussolini. At its core, Untold Lessons is shaped by individual and often conflicting perspectives in a roman d’analyse style: each action is supported by an event of the past and the reasoning behind why each character behaves the way they do. Moody and enshrouded in a veil of obscurity, Untold Lessons subliminally explores the unconscious and how it allows us to process the world around us – be it to our detriment or not. By Zuzanna Lachendro Pushkin Press, 272pp, £16.99 . Buy the book [See also: From Jonathan Coe to Joan Smith: new books reviewed in short ] Related This article appears in the 27 Nov 2024 issue of the New Statesman, The Optimist’s Dilemma

The normally reliable centre-back passed the ball into his own net in the 26th minute after failing to spot goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel’s positioning. But a brilliant turn and finish on the hour mark from Daizen Maeda changed the game and ultimately earned the Scottish champions a 1-1 home draw. On the opener, Rodgers said: “Mistakes happen and it was just unfortunate. He’s played that pass a million times and it’s gone back and then we’ve been able to play forward. It was just one of those unfortunate moments in the game that happens. “But he’s a really, really tough character. He’s a great guy, he picked himself up. He was really strong and aggressive again in the game and got on with it and had a real bravery in the second half, because he was the one carrying the ball forward for us to start the attack.” Despite the gift, Brugge were worthy of their lead and Rodgers admitted his side were too passive in their pressing in the opening half. Some tactical tweaks – and the introduction of Paulo Bernardo – helped Celtic dominate after Maeda’s equaliser, although Brugge had a goal disallowed for a marginal offside. “I can only credit the players for the second half, because we had to fight,” Rodgers said. “And we’re still one of those teams that’s really pushing to try and make a mark at this level. So to make the comeback, score the goal, play with that courage, I was so pleased. “You want to win but I’ve been here enough times to have lost a game like that, but we didn’t. We showed a real strong mentality and we kept pushing right to the very end and the players did well. “I thought they showed great courage in the second half because we weren’t at our level in the first half. Sometimes a game like that can get away from you, but it didn’t. “We stayed with it, showed that determination, showed that mentality, never to quit, to keep going. And then we were much, much better, much freer in the second half. “So we’re on eight points, nine to play for. We’re still very much on course to get to where we want to get to and still three games to go.” Rodgers added: “It’s 20 games now and we’ve won 16 and drawn three and lost one, so it shows you the mentality is there, and especially at this level, you need to have that.”

DAVID Beckham paid a secret visit to Man United’s beloved receptionist Kath Phipps before she died. He was among a host of club legends to pay heartfelt tribute to Kath, 85 — an Old Trafford employee for 56 years. Alongside a photo of them holding hands, Becks, 49, wrote : “I moved up to Manchester at 15 and Kath made a promise to my mum and dad, ‘I’ll look after your boy for you, don’t you worry’. “And from that first day till the last day I spent with her, that’s exactly what she did.” Becks added on Instagram: “Old Trafford will never be the same without your smile as we walk through those doors. We love you.” Becks travelled to her home two weeks before she passed away. READ MORE DAVID BECKHAM A source told The Sun: “David made it his mission to go to see Kath at home. “It was an incredibly emotional moment.” In Netflix series Beckham, she said she found bullets in letters sent to him after his 1998 World Cup red card. After Kath’s death was announced on Thursday, ex-Old Trafford star Wayne Rooney called her the club’s “heart and soul” while his team-mate Rio Ferdinand said she was “incredibly selfless”. Most read in Football United fan Kath started out as a switchboard operator for the club in the 1960s. Latterly, she was receptionist at the Carrington training complex. She said last year: “I don’t think I’ve had one cross word with anybody in all the years I’ve been here. "I look forward to coming in and having a smile on my face every day.”

By ROB GILLIES, Associated Press TORONTO (AP) — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told Donald Trump that Americans would also suffer if the president-elect follows through on a plan to impose sweeping tariffs on Canadian products , a Canadian minister who attended their recent dinner said Monday. Trump threatened to impose tariffs on products from Canada and Mexico if they don’t stop what he called the flow of drugs and migrants across their borders with the United States. He said on social media last week that he would impose a 25% tax on all products entering the U.S. from Canada and Mexico as one of his first executive orders. Canadian Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc, whose responsibilities include border security, attended a dinner with Trump and Trudeau at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club on Friday. Trudeau requested the meeting in a bid to avoid the tariffs by convincing Trump that the northern border is nothing like the U.S. southern border with Mexico . “The prime minister of course spoke about the importance of protecting the Canadian economy and Canadian workers from tariffs, but we also discussed with our American friends the negative impact that those tariffs could have on their economy, on affordability in the United States as well,” LeBlanc said in Parliament. If Trump makes good on his threat to slap 25% tariffs on everything imported from Mexico and Canada, the price increases that could follow will collide with his campaign promise to give American families a break from inflation. Economists say companies would have little choice but to pass along the added costs, dramatically raising prices for food, clothing, automobiles, alcohol and other goods. The Produce Distributors Association, a Washington trade group, said last week that tariffs will raise prices for fresh fruit and vegetables and hurt U.S. farmers when the countries retaliate. Canada is already examining possible retaliatory tariffs on certain items from the U.S. should Trump follow through on the threat. After his dinner with Trump, Trudeau returned home without assurances the president-elect will back away from threatened tariffs on all products from the major American trading partner. Trump called the talks “productive” but signaled no retreat from a pledge that Canada says unfairly lumps it in with Mexico over the flow of drugs and migrants into the United States. “The idea that we came back empty handed is completely false,” LeBlanc said. “We had a very productive discussion with Mr. Trump and his future Cabinet secretaries. ... The commitment from Mr. Trump to continue to work with us was far from empty handed.” Joining Trump and Trudeau at dinner were Howard Lutnick, Trump’s nominee for commerce secretary, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, Trump’s pick to lead the Interior Department, and Mike Waltz, Trump’s choice to be his national security adviser. Canada’s ambassador to the U.S., Kirsten Hillman, told The Associated Press on Sunday that “the message that our border is so vastly different than the Mexican border was really understood.” Hillman, who sat at an adjacent table to Trudeau and Trump, said Canada is not the problem when it comes to drugs and migrants. On Monday, Mexico’s president rejected those comments. “Mexico must be respected, especially by its trading partners,” President Claudia Sheinbaum said. She said Canada had its own problems with fentanyl consumption and “could only wish they had the cultural riches Mexico has.” Flows of migrants and seizures of drugs at the two countries’ border are vastly different. U.S. customs agents seized 43 pounds of fentanyl at the Canadian border during the last fiscal year, compared with 21,100 pounds at the Mexican border. Most of the fentanyl reaching the U.S. — where it causes about 70,000 overdose deaths annually — is made by Mexican drug cartels using precursor chemicals smuggled from Asia. On immigration, the U.S. Border Patrol reported 1.53 million encounters with migrants at the southwest border with Mexico between October 2023 and September 2024. That compares to 23,721 encounters at the Canadian border during that time. Canada is the top export destination for 36 U.S. states. Nearly $3.6 billion Canadian (US$2.7 billion) worth of goods and services cross the border each day. About 60% of U.S. crude oil imports are from Canada, and 85% of U.S. electricity imports as well. Canada is also the largest foreign supplier of steel, aluminum and uranium to the U.S. and has 34 critical minerals and metals that the Pentagon is eager for and investing for national security.

Saquon Barkley and the Philadelphia Eagles make their second-to-last road trip of the regular season Sunday to face Derrick Henry and the Baltimore Ravens. The NFC East-leading Eagles (9-2) have won seven in a row and play four of their final six games in Philadelphia, traveling only about 125 miles to visit the Ravens (8-4) this weekend and the Washington Commanders in Week 16. Sunday's game features the NFL's two leading rushers. Barkley (1,392 yards) and Henry (1,325) are far ahead of Green Bay's Josh Jacobs (944) in third place. Henry leads the league with 13 rushing touchdowns. Barkley (10) is tied for fourth and Philadelphia quarterback Jalen Hurts (11) tied for second. The matchup also features two of the top candidates for Most Valuable Player honors entering Week 13 in Barkley and Baltimore quarterback Lamar Jackson, who won his second MVP award last season. Their competition includes quarterbacks Josh Allen of Buffalo and Jared Goff of Detroit, with Allen widely considered the favorite. "Lamar Jackson and Derrick Henry are phenomenal football players that help their team win football games, and Jalen Hurts and Saquon Barkley are phenomenal football players that help their team win football games," Eagles coach Nick Sirianni said. "Excited about the opportunity this week because it's our next one. It will be a really good opponent, really well coached, good players, good atmosphere that will be there. Excited about the opportunity this week. And we're going to have to be on it against a really good team." The showdown at M&T Bank Stadium also pits Baltimore's No. 1 offense (426.7 yards per game) and No. 2 scoring offense (30.3 points per game) against Philadelphia's No. 1 defense (274.6) and No. 6 scoring defense (18.1). The Eagles have held seven consecutive opponents to under 300 total yards, while the Ravens have gained at least 329 yards of offense in all 11 games. Philadelphia is coming off a 37-20 road win over the Los Angeles Rams on Sunday night in which Barkley smashed the franchise record with 255 rushing yards. Baltimore also earned a prime-time win in Los Angeles, defeating the Chargers 30-23 in the "Harbaugh Bowl" on Monday night behind Jackson's three touchdowns (two passing, one rushing). Jackson said he's looking forward to the Barkley and Henry show. "I've known Saquon from high school. We were in the all-star game together and he jumped over somebody's head," Jackson recalled Wednesday. "So I've pretty much seen him before I even got to the league, college, anything. I've been knowing about Saquon, but Derrick Henry -- King Henry -- I'm with him every day and I'm seeing what he's capable of, so it's going to be a great matchup." Ravens linebacker Roquan Smith practiced Wednesday after sitting out Monday with a hamstring issue. Nose tackle Michael Pierce (calf) was designated to return from injured reserve. Tight end Charlie Kolar (broken arm) is out for several weeks and cornerback Arthur Maulet (calf) did not practice. The Eagles lost veteran defensive end Brandon Graham to a season-ending triceps injury Sunday. Wideout DeVonta Smith (hamstring) missed the win over the Rams and did not practice Wednesday. Neither did cornerbacks Darius Slay (concussion) or Kelee Ringo (calf). Philadelphia is 5-1 away from home this season -- 6-1 if you count their season-opening "home" victory against the Packers in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Baltimore is 4-1 at home. The Ravens hold a 3-2-1 lead in the series with the Eagles. They haven't met since Baltimore's 30-28 win in Week 6 at Philadelphia in 2020. --Field Level MediaTulsi Gabbard's Ties to India's Modi and His Hindu Nationalist Movement

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