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Dec. 7, 2025, 5:26 PM ESTBy Rohan NadkarniThe Baltimore Ravens lost 27-22 to the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday, and one controversial call in the fourth quarter played a major role in a game with significant consequences.Both the Ravens and the Steelers entered Sunday with 6-6 records, though they arrived at them in completely opposite ways. Pittsburgh started the season 4-1 before a 2-5 slide. Baltimore, meanwhile, started 1-5 before winning five straight, then lost to the Cincinnati Bengals last week.Both sides were desperate in a game that would give the winner the lead in the AFC North.With less than three minutes to go in the fourth quarter, the Ravens were driving when quarterback Lamar Jackson appeared to find tight end Isaiah Likely for a 13-yard touchdown in the middle of the end zone.Likely caught the ball in the end zone and took two steps before the ball was knocked out of his hands. Initially, the referees ruled the catch a touchdown. Upon replay review, however, Likely was determined not to have made a “football move” after his two steps, and the play was ruled an incomplete pass.“They made a call,” Likely told reporters after the game. “Gotta live with what the refs say at the end of the day.”The decision took the go-ahead touchdown off the board for Baltimore. Three plays later, the Ravens turned the ball over on downs after failing to convert a 4th and 5.Baltimore would possess the ball one more time, but with only one timeout and 74 yards needed to score, the Ravens fell short.The fallout from the non-touchdown is considerable.Instead of Baltimore getting a late lead, the Steelers held on for the win and moved to 7-6. Pittsburgh is now first place in the division and fourth in the AFC. The Ravens, on the other hand, fell from fourth all the way to 10th place, and are two games behind the Indianapolis Colts for the final playoff spot in the conference.To make matters worse for Baltimore, its final four games of the season won’t be easy.Three of the Ravens’ last four matchups are on the road. Their only home game in the last month of the season is against the currently 11-2 New England Patriots.Baltimore isn’t done, as it has a Week 18 matchup against Pittsburgh to exact revenge. But because the Ravens can no longer win the head-to-head tiebreaker against the Steelers, they will need some help to come back win the AFC North.Rohan NadkarniRohan Nadkarni is a sports reporter for NBC News. 

admin - Latest News - December 7, 2025
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The Baltimore Ravens lost 27-22 to the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday, and one controversial call in the fourth quarter played a major role in a game with significant consequences



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Sept. 27, 2025, 6:00 AM EDTBy Denise ChowA small city in South Texas is scrambling to find alternative sources of drinking water as severe drought grips the region and threatens to dry up its main supply.The city of Mathis typically pumps its drinking water from Lake Corpus Christi, but worsening drought conditions are expected to plunge water levels too low to safely extract usable water, according to Mathis City Manager Cedric Davis.“It’s not that we’re running out of water or we’re going to be completely dry,” Davis said. “It’s going to be difficult to pull clear water out of the lake because we’ll be pulling up mud with the water.”All that mud could damage the city’s filtration and water treatment systems, he added. Mathis has a population of around 4,300 people, according to 2020 data from the U.S. Census Bureau.The situation in Texas highlights a growing problem in drought-prone parts of the country — and the world — as climate change alters precipitation patterns, intensifies drought and saps the availability of safe drinking water.In 2023, the city of New Orleans faced a drinking water crisis after abnormally low levels in the drought-stricken Mississippi River caused salt water to encroach upriver into water intake facilities.Last year, persistent drought and years of low rainfall pushed reservoirs in Mexico City to historically low levels, triggering a severe water shortage in the most populous city in North America.South Texas has been in the grip of a yearslong dry spell, with much of the region in “moderate” or “severe” drought, as classified by the U.S. Drought Monitor, which releases weekly color-coded maps to show the extent and intensity of drought nationwide.The unusually dry conditions have caused Lake Corpus Christi’s water levels to fall.“We’ve not had enough rain to replenish the lakes and reservoirs of South Texas,” Davis said, adding that several cities and smaller communities in the area are now having to look for emergency solutions.Davis said current projections suggest that the lake’s levels could be too low by late December. As such, the city is attempting to dig two emergency wells to keep drinking water flowing into Mathis.The project hasn’t yet broken ground, but Davis said he is hoping to fast-track the permitting process and leasing agreement with the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department. If all goes according to plan, digging could begin by the end of October, he said.“If everything matches up and we can get the wells in by the end of December, we’re going to be fine,” Davis said.Still, city officials are considering other backup measures just in case, including costly desalination plants and the possibility of treating and reusing wastewater.“We’re leaving no stone unturned,” Davis said.Denise ChowDenise Chow is a science and space reporter for NBC News.
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