Owings Mills, Maryland — Trace McSorley, the Baltimore Ravens’ backup quarterback, will miss the remainder of the preseason with a back issue.
With McSorley out, Tyler Huntley is the leading candidate to take over as Lamar Jackson’s backup quarterback.
McSorley injured his back while picking up a box on Saturday, just hours before the Ravens’ preseason opener. He played through back spasms, completing 11 of 18 passes for 86 yards and one interception.”He wrenched it in some way,” Ravens coach John Harbaugh stated following Monday’s practice. “He will be out for a few weeks due to that scenario.”
McSorley, the sixth-round pick in the 2019 NFL draft, has thrown ten passes in three games. Huntley, who went undrafted last year, led a successful fourth-quarter drive in Saturday’s preseason opener.
During training camp, the Ravens signed quarterback Kenji Bahar as an additional arm.
Harrison Butker, a Kansas City Chiefs kicker, said he had no regrets about expressing his ideas in a recent commencement speech, noting that he has received both support and “a stunning level of hatred” from others.
Butker, 28, spoke at the Regina Caeli Academy Courage Under Fire gala in Nashville, Tennessee, on Friday night.
He made his first public remarks since his controversial recent commencement speech at Benedictine College in Atchison, Kansas, where he said most women receiving degrees were probably more excited about getting married and having kids; argued some Catholic leaders were “pushing dangerous gender ideologies onto the youth of America”; referred to a “deadly sin sort of pride that has a month dedicated to it” in an oblique reference to Pride month; and took aim at President
Harrison Butker, a Kansas City Chiefs kicker, said he had no regrets about expressing his ideas in a recent commencement speech, noting that he has received both support and “a stunning level of hatred” from others.
Butker, 28, spoke at the Regina Caeli Academy Courage Under Fire gala in Nashville, Tennessee, on Friday night.
He made his first public remarks since his controversial recent commencement speech at Benedictine College in Atchison, Kansas, where he said most women receiving degrees were probably more excited about getting married and having kids; argued some Catholic leaders were “pushing dangerous gender ideologies onto the youth of America”; referred to a “deadly sin sort of pride that has a month dedicated to it” in an oblique reference to Pride month; and took aim at President