The wait is finally over — and Baltimore can breathe again.
After nearly a month on the sidelines, Lamar Jackson returned to the Ravens’ practice field this week for the first time since suffering a hamstring injury that had fans — and coaches — holding their breath.
It wasn’t just another practice. It was a statement: the heartbeat of the franchise is still alive.
A long three weeks without their leader

For 24 days, the Ravens had been searching for rhythm without their superstar quarterback.
Since Jackson limped off the field in Week 4, Baltimore’s offense had looked lost — averaging just 14.6 points per game and dropping three straight matchups.
In his absence, backup quarterback Tyler Huntley tried to keep the team afloat, but the chemistry, explosiveness, and unpredictability that define a Lamar Jackson offense simply weren’t there.
Fans began to wonder whether the Ravens’ season was slipping away before their eyes.
So when No. 8 jogged back onto the field at the Under Armour Performance Center, even the reporters fell silent for a moment.
“You could feel the energy change,” one team insider told The Baltimore Sun.
“It wasn’t just practice — it was a sigh of relief.”
Limited participation — but unlimited attention
According to the team’s official injury report, Jackson was listed as a “limited participant”, taking part in light throwing and controlled movement drills.
There was no sprinting, no deep drops — but there was presence, and that meant everything.
Head coach John Harbaugh, as usual, played it coy.
“We’re just taking it one day at a time,” Harbaugh said when asked about Jackson’s status for Sunday’s game against the Chicago Bears.
“He looked good, he’s in great spirits, but we’ll see where the week takes us.”
Harbaugh’s tone may have been cautious, but his eyes — as reporters noted — were optimistic.
The comeback Baltimore desperately needs
At 1-5, the Ravens are facing one of the toughest starts to a season in recent memory.
Their playoff odds have plummeted, fan frustration has grown louder, and national pundits are beginning to write them off.
But if there’s one player who can flip the script, it’s Lamar Jackson.
When healthy, he’s not just a quarterback — he’s an entire system unto himself.
Before the injury, Jackson accounted for 78% of Baltimore’s total offensive yards and ranked third in the league in rushing yards by a quarterback.
Now, the question is simple:
Can he save the season — again?
Inside the locker room: “When Lamar’s back, we all believe again”

Teammates didn’t hide their excitement.
Wide receiver Zay Flowers said after practice:
“When Lamar’s in the huddle, the whole vibe changes. You just feel… alive again.”
Running back Gus Edwards echoed the sentiment:
“It’s not just about what he does on the field. It’s how he leads, how he talks, how he brings us together.”
Even defensive players were smiling.
Cornerback Marlon Humphrey joked to reporters:
“Man, I saw him running a few steps and I was like, ‘Please, don’t overdo it!’ But it’s good to have him back. It feels like Ravens football again.”
Harbaugh’s dilemma: Risk or reward?
The Ravens’ next game against the Chicago Bears could decide whether they stay in the playoff picture or slip into irrelevance.
That puts Harbaugh in a difficult position:
Does he play Jackson at less than 100% — or hold him back one more week and risk another loss?
NFL insider Adam Schefter noted that team sources “aren’t ruling anything out,” suggesting the final decision could come down to game-day warmups.
Meanwhile, Ravens fans are holding their breath.
Social media flooded with clips of Jackson smiling and tossing passes at practice — a sight many called “the most beautiful thing we’ve seen all season.”
A familiar comeback story
This isn’t the first time Jackson has returned from adversity.
Last season, he missed five games with a PCL sprain but returned stronger, eventually earning MVP buzz early this year before his hamstring injury struck.
His resilience has become part of his legacy — the story of a player who refuses to stay down.
Former Raven Terrell Suggs summed it up perfectly on NFL Network:
“Lamar doesn’t just bring hope — he is hope. You can game-plan for speed and skill, but you can’t game-plan for heart.”
All eyes on Sunday
As the week progresses, all attention will be on Baltimore’s Friday injury report — the day Harbaugh typically gives the final practice update.
If Jackson moves from “limited” to “full,” it could send shockwaves through the league — and through the Bears’ defense.
Until then, one thing is certain:
Lamar Jackson’s return has reignited a team — and a city — that was starting to lose faith.
📰 “SHOCKWAVE: Baltimore Ravens Owner Sues D0n@ld Tr*mp for $500 Million — and Teases a ‘Secret Evidence’ That Could Change Everything”-hm
No one saw this coming — but Steve Bisciotti, the billionaire owner of the Baltimore Ravens, has just fired the first legal shot at D0n@ld Tr*mp, demanding $500 million in damages.
The reason? A viral AI-generated video that allegedly used the Ravens’ official team anthem without permission — mocking anti-Tr*mp protesters during the controversial “Day Without Kings” march.
But what’s sending shockwaves through both the NFL and Washington isn’t just the lawsuit…
It’s the “secret evidence” Bisciotti claims could “change everything.”
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From an AI video… to a political earthquake
According to federal filings in Maryland, the AI-generated video — shared on X (formerly Twitter) — included deepfaked voices of public figures and satirical clips mocking protesters.
The background music was none other than “Rise of the Ravens”, a copyrighted anthem used exclusively at M&T Bank Stadium during Ravens games.
The clip went viral with over 90 million views in 48 hours before being taken down.
Bisciotti’s legal team argues the video “unlawfully exploited the Ravens’ brand for political propaganda,” causing reputational harm to the team and misleading millions into thinking the organization supported Tr*mp’s campaign.
“I don’t care who you are — a politician, a businessman, or a former president — you don’t get to use our name or our music to divide this country,”
Bisciotti declared in a statement that immediately went viral.
“And yes — I have proof they knew exactly what they were doing.”
The internet erupts — sports and politics collide
Within hours, social media exploded.
Two sides quickly formed:
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Pro-Bisciotti users hailed him as “the first NFL owner brave enough to stand up to Trmp.”*
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Pro-Tr*mp supporters accused the league of staging “a liberal PR stunt dressed as a lawsuit.”
Hashtags #RavensVsTrump and #DayWithoutKings dominated trending charts worldwide, as speculation mounted about the mysterious “evidence” Bisciotti claimed to possess.
Adding to the chaos, an anonymous account posted, “There’s another version of the clip — and it’s worse.”
The mystery evidence — what does Bisciotti really have?

According to The Baltimore Sun, Bisciotti’s attorneys submitted a 47-minute internal recording believed to outline an AI media strategy allegedly commissioned by a pro-Tr*mp group.
A source close to the case revealed:
“If authenticated, that tape could prove they knowingly violated copyright — and even planned to spin it politically.”
The Tr*mp team, for its part, has stayed silent — issuing only a brief statement through a spokesperson:
“We’ll respond in court — where the truth will come out.”
The NFL watches — and the stakes skyrocket
A league spokesperson confirmed that the NFL is “closely monitoring the situation,” though declined further comment.
Several other team owners have quietly voiced support for Bisciotti, with one saying,
“This goes beyond politics — it’s about protecting the integrity of our sport and our brand.”
Experts warn this case could set a historic precedent for how sports organizations defend their intellectual property and public image in the age of AI manipulation.
When football and politics finally collide
What began as an AI parody video has spiraled into one of the most explosive clashes between sports and politics in modern U.S. history.
If Bisciotti wins, analysts say it could forever change how AI-generated media is handled — and how far political campaigns can go in the digital battlefield.
“If Bisciotti wins, every politician will think twice before touching a sports brand,” said media law expert Daniel Rosenthal.
“But if Tr*mp wins, it will send a chilling message — that in the AI era, no one truly controls their own image anymore.”
