Ray Rice Fallout Lingers on, Off the Field

The Baltimore Ravens took the field amid latest accusations.

The broadcast was originally supposed to include a track of Jay-Z’s “Run This Town” featuring Rihanna, along with a comedic segment, CBS Sports Chairman Sean McManus said. The changes were made to give the game coverage a more “subdued” tone and journalistic approach, McManus said.

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Tension from the controversy also spilled into the Baltimore stadium parking lot, with some fans wearing Rice jerseys facing backlash from other fans.

“I still support Ray Rice,” fan Christina Burke told ESPN. “I just don’t believe one action or mistake should define a person.”

Other fans covered Rice's name with tape, offering suggestions and messages amid the controversy.

“We had a tough family situation this week,” Harbaugh said. “I thought our guys handled it tremendously, with class, with character. They responded.”

Rice was initially suspended for two games because of the Feb. 15 attack. But after video emerged this week showing Rice punching his then-fiancée Janay Palmer, he was released by the Ravens and indefinitely suspended by the league.

Thursday’s game followed an ESPN report that Rice told NFL commissioner Roger Goodell during a June 16 meeting that he punched Palmer, sources said, an assertion that contradicts Goodell’s statement in an interview earlier this week that “it was ambiguous about what actually happened” in the elevator attack.

Neither the NFL nor Rice’s lawyer has commented on the ESPN report.

Additionally, 16 female U.S. senators penned a letter to Goodell demanding a zero-tolerance policy to domestic violence, writing, “If you violently assault a woman, you shouldn’t get a second chance to play football in the NFL.”