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EDITOR PICKS

  • Watch: Carvajal's header delivers killer blow for Madrid in UCL final

  • An introduction to Top Soccer News on theScore ??

  • An introduction to Top Soccer News on theScore ??

  • Real Madrid beat Dortmund to win 15th European Cup

NFL

Guide to Titans-Chiefs, Packers-49ers: Picks, bold predictions, key matchups, more

The conference championships of the NFL playoffs have arrived, and we’re previewing Sunday’s pair of games: Titans-Chiefs in the AFC, and Packers-49ers in the NFC. Our NFL Nation reporters bring us the keys to every game, a bold prediction for each matchup and final score predictions.

Additionally, ESPN Stats & Information provides a stat to know for each game, and the Football Power Index (FPI) goes inside the numbers with a matchup rating (on a scale of 1 to 100) and a game projection. NFL analyst Matt Bowen identifies a key matchup to watch, ESPN Chalk’s Mackenzie Kraemer hands out helpful nuggets, and national NFL writer Kevin Seifert focuses in on each game’s officiating crew. It’s all here to help get you ready for an exciting weekend of NFL football.

Jump to: TEN-KC | GB-SF

AFC

3:05 p.m. ET | CBS
Matchup rating: 84.9 | Spread: KC -7.5 (53)

What to watch for: Titans running back Derrick Henry isn’t the only storyline in this game, but it sure seems like it after he ran for 188 yards against the Chiefs in Week 10. Doing much better this time is a big thing for the Chiefs, who are 9-0 when allowing the opponent to rush for 110 yards or fewer — but 4-4 when allowing more. — Adam Teicher

NFL PrimeTime continues this postseason with extended highlights and analysis following the conclusion of each day’s playoff games. Watch on ESPN+

Bold prediction: All of the focus on stopping Henry will make the Chiefs’ defense more vulnerable to the passing game. After totaling 160 yards in the previous two games, Tennessee quarterback Ryan Tannehill will capitalize on one-on-one coverage, throwing for 250 yards and two touchdowns. — Turron Davenport

Stat to know: According to NFL Next Gen Stats, Chiefs wide receivers had 13 plays with the ball carrier reaching 20-plus mph this season, the most in the NFL. Tyreek Hill and Mecole Hardman both have six such plays, tied for the most among receivers in 2019. In addition, the Chiefs’ wideouts have been open (3-plus yards of separation, per NFL Next Gen Stats) on 45.6% of their targets, the highest rate in the NFL.

Key matchup: Titans’ deep-ball play-action vs. the Chiefs’ secondary. Even if the Titans do control tempo with Henry, the Chiefs and quarterback Patrick Mahomes will still get eight or nine possessions. So the Titans need points in this one, and explosive-play opportunities off play-action offer an opportunity. Look for Tennessee to dial up some shot play throws for Tannehill here. Bring in your big-boy personnel, sell the run and push the ball over the top to Kalif Raymond or A.J. Brown. Read more.

2 Related

Betting nugget: Sunday will be the fifth time this season that Tennessee has been an underdog of at least four points. It won each of the first four outright, including beating Kansas City in Week 10. Tennessee is also the fifth team to win its wild-card and divisional-round games as underdogs of at least four points. But the previous four teams were 0-4 outright and 1-3 against the spread (ATS) in the conference title games. Read more.

Officiating nugget: Referee Tony Corrente will get another shot after an eventful wild-card game in Houston, where he had to be talked out of awarding a fraudulent touchdown to the Bills. Corrente’s regular-season crew threw an average of 17.1 flags per game, the fifth most in the NFL.

Davenport’s pick: Titans 28, Chiefs 24
Teicher’s pick: Chiefs 28, Titans 17
FPI prediction: KC, 75.1% (by an average of 8.9 points)

Matchup must-reads: The first $40 million-a-year QB? NFL execs predict Mahomes’ potential payday … One of Andy Reid’s biggest wins — but is the best still yet to come? … Fortune favors the bold: QB wasn’t a need when Chiefs drafted Patrick Mahomes … Chiefs sound drained at mere prospect of facing Derrick Henry again … Damien Williams at long last establishes himself in Chiefs backfield … From Dolphins discard to Titans treasure, Ryan Tannehill had ‘to move on’ … How two trades helped catapult the Titans to the AFC title game … How the Titans pulled the stunner to beat Lamar Jackson, and what’s next … Lessons from baseball helped Titans’ A.J. Brown blossom at football

NFC

6:40 p.m. ET | Fox
Matchup rating: 74.4 | Spread: SF -7.5 (46.5)

What to watch for: While Niners coach Kyle Shanahan has expressed his team’s need to forget the 49ers’ 37-8 drubbing of the Packers in November, Packers coach Matt LaFleur has talked about needing to revisit and learn from it. The Niners are healthier than they were in that first meeting, but a regular-season drubbing guarantees nothing in the playoffs. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, this marks the 37th time in the Super Bowl era that two teams will meet in the playoffs after one beat the other by at least 25 points during the regular season. The team that won the first meeting is 22-14 in the ensuing matchup, but the team that best maintains focus on the task at hand will move on to the Super Bowl. — Nick Wagoner

What you need to know:
•
Full playoff schedule »
• First look at GB-SF, TEN-KC »
• Answering four big questions »
• Super Bowl LIV coverage »
More NFL coverage »

Bold prediction: Packers receiver Davante Adams will come close to the team playoff record of 160 yards receiving he set last week against the Seahawks. Quarterback Aaron Rodgers was 0-of-8 on throws 10-plus yards downfield against the San Francisco defense in the Week 12 loss — his most such passes in a game without a single completion, according to ESPN Stats & Information. Look for that to change Sunday as he and LaFleur devise different ways to attack the 49ers. — Rob Demovsky

Stat to know: Both teams added a pair of pass-rushers this offseason. The Packers’ Za’Darius Smith and Preston Smith were the only pair of teammates with 12.0 sacks each in the regular season, and they each had 2.0 in the divisional-round game. The 49ers, meanwhile, have recorded a sack on 17.3% of dropbacks with both Nick Bosa and Dee Ford on the field and just 5.7% with either or both off. The NFL average sack rate is 6.5%.

Key matchup: 49ers’ pass rush vs. the Packers’ offensive line. The 49ers are loaded on the defensive line with Bosa, Ford, Arik Armstead and DeForest Buckner. That’s the best nickel front in the NFL. Look for San Francisco defensive coordinator Robert Saleh to scheme pass-rush matchups with his personnel out of multiple fronts and alignments. That allows the 49ers to bump Bosa and Ford inside, or use twist stunts to open up rush lanes. The pressure here is on the Packers’ offensive line to protect Rodgers. Read more.

Betting nugget: Green Bay is the fourth team to win at least 13 games during the regular season and then be an underdog of at least seven points in its conference title game. Each of the previous three won the game outright. This is the fourth time Rodgers has been an underdog of at least seven points, and he is 0-3 outright — but 3-0 ATS — in the previous three games. Read more.

Officiating nugget: Referee John Hussey’s regular-season crew threw an average of 14.9 flags per game, fourth fewest in the NFL. His crew called the second-fewest penalties for offensive holding (38), one of the handful of fouls for which referees are responsible.

Demovsky’s pick: Packers 28, 49ers 27
Wagoner’s pick: 49ers 30, Packers 20
FPI prediction: SF, 71.9% (by an average of 7.6 points)

Matchup must-reads: How Jerry Rice yelling at Deion Sanders helped shape the 2019 49ers … Nick Bosa’s dominant rookie season not a surprise to the 49ers … Former surfer Raheem Mostert riding the wave as 49ers’ X factor … How the Packers overhauled everything to get back to the NFC Championship Game … Packers will take fine-tooth comb to loss vs. 49ers, Matt LaFleur says … Which LaFleur — Mike or Matt — will join their parents at the Super Bowl? … Davante Adams: Packers have ‘a better way to attack’ 49ers this time

Soccer

Report: Neymar's future at PSG could depend on Champions League results

Neymar’s future with Paris Saint-Germain could hinge on the capital city club’s progress in the Champions League.

PSG are confident they can secure the long-term services of the Brazilian star despite his perpetual link with a return to Barcelona, but Neymar’s decision won’t come until April or May, reports ESPN FC’s Julien Laurens.

Neymar, 27, has two-and-a-half years left on his current deal, and it’s believed unofficial discussions between the player’s father and PSG sporting director Leonardo have already taken place. Neymar’s agent, Pini Zahavi, is also understood to be on good terms with Leonardo.

PSG will continue their pursuit of a Champions League title with a last-16, first-leg tie against Borussia Dortmund at the Signal Iduna Park on Feb. 18. The eight-time Ligue 1 champs have endured their fair share of heartbreak in Europe’s preeminent continental tournament, failing to progress beyond the quarterfinal round in each of the last seven tries, including three last-16 eliminations in the last three seasons.

Neymar has been in brilliant form for PSG since returning from injury, establishing a club record with goals in each of his last eight appearances in all competitions.

NFL

Pass-rushers wanted: Seahawks enter offseason needing more pressure

6:00 AM ET

  • • From Dolphins discard to Titans treasure
    • Chiefs’ fortune turned with Mahomes
    • Seahawks enter offseason needing pressure
    • Major changes coming for Eagles’ roster
    • Adams: Better way to attack 49ers this time

    It wasn’t solely because of their pass-rush that the Seahawks were a bottom-third defense by most measures. They missed too many tackles, struggled against the run and got suspect play out of some of their defensive backs.

    Then again, more heat on the opposing quarterback would have made life a lot easier for that group. The Seahawks had the third-lowest rate of pressure on opponents’ dropbacks, at 22.9%, per ESPN charting. They were 16th, at 42.8%, in ESPN’s Pass Rush Win Rate. That was with Clowney finishing fifth in individual PRWR, at 24.8%.

    Clowney was the only part of the Seahawks’ plan to replace Frank Clark that worked. They hardly got anything from Ezekiel Ansah (another pending free agent) and even less from L.J. Collier, whom they drafted with the extra first-round pick they acquired in the Clark trade.

    The Seahawks can’t tag Clowney and thus can’t keep him from reaching the open market, where his price could skyrocket, as he is one of the best available players at one of the most sought-after positions. It won’t be impossible to re-sign him, but it’ll be difficult.

    After pulling off a blockbuster trade to acquire Clowney last summer, Schneider might have to do something equally creative and drastic to replace him. Even if the Seahawks are able to keep Clowney, 2019 made it all too clear that they’ll need more around him.

    Here’s what else you need to know about Seattle’s offseason:

    The rest of the free agents

    Former sixth-round pick Joey Hunt replaced an injured Jusitn Britt at center and is a restricted free agent. Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire

    In addition to Clowney, Reed, Jefferson and Ansah, Seattle’s UFAs on defense are defensive tackle

  • March 10: The deadline to designate franchise or transition players. Since they can’t tag Clowney, Reed is the Seahawks’ only realistic candidate. OverTheCap.com projects the transition and franchise tenders for defensive tackles to cost $12.321 million and $15.5 million, respectively. The tag window opens Feb. 25.

  • March 18: The start of free agency and the deadline for teams to submit qualifying offers to restricted free agents in order to retain right of first refusal/compensation. Seattle’s RFAs, in addition to Hunt and Jackson, are tight end Jacob Hollister and wide receiver David Moore. Hunt replaced Justin Britt, who’s coming off a torn ACL and has a whopping $11.67 million cap charge for 2020 that makes him a candidate to be released or restructured. Hunt was a sixth-round pick, so the low tender would be worth $2.144 million (per OTC projections) and would entitle the Seahawks to a sixth-rounder if they decline to match another team’s offer. A second-round tender is projected at $3.278 million.

  • March 22: Linebacker K.J. Wright is due a $1 million roster bonus. Wright did everything he could to convince the Seahawks to bring him back for the second year of his contract, but that isn’t a certainty with his $10 million cap charge. If they’re going to move on, the Seahawks would have a $1 million incentive to do so before this date.

  • March 30: Kendricks’ sentencing date in his insider trading case. It has been moved back several times and could be moved again, but either way, Kendricks’ legal future won’t be known until well after the start of free agency. Carroll volunteered that he wants Kendricks back.

What their draft capital looks like

What you need to know:
•
First-round draft order: Picks 1-28 »
• McShay’s 2020 NFL Mock Draft 1.0 »
• Kiper’s Big Board » | McShay’s Top 32 »
• First Draft podcast » | 32 draft nuggets »
• Full draft rankings from Scouts Inc. »
More NFL draft coverage »

The Seahawks have the 27th overall pick. OTC projects them to receive three compensatory picks, which would give them eight selections in all. The round-by-round breakdown: one first, two seconds, one third, two fourths, one fifth and one sixth.

Eight selections would be double what the Seahawks had at the start of last offseason, so they might not have the same urgency to trade back in the first round, but their history suggests it’s still a strong possibility.

How much cap space?

ESPN’s Roster Management System has the Seahawks at more than $61 million in available 2020 cap space. That could grow with veteran cuts or restructures. Releasing tight end Ed Dickson would clear $3.4 million, for instance.

However, tagging Reed would cut into a good chunk of that $61 million. Cornerback Shaquill Griffin and running back Chris Carson are eligible for extensions that would increase their cap numbers, considering that they’re playing on inexpensive rookie contracts. Teams need to set aside some of their available cap space for their draft pool and in-season emergency fund.

That $61 million could dwindle in a hurry. But as the Packers showed, it might be enough to do something about Seattle’s pass-rushing need.

Soccer

Report: UEFA altered Team of the Year formation to include Ronaldo

European football’s governing body, UEFA, changed the formation of its 2019 Team of the Year to create a spot for Juventus star Cristiano Ronaldo.

An unorthodox 4-2-4 was selected by UEFA’s brass in an effort to include Ronaldo in an attack-heavy frontline alongside Lionel Messi, Sadio Mane, and Robert Lewandowski, according to a report from ESPN FC’s Samuel Marsden.

The Portuguese international’s inclusion came at the expense of Chelsea fan favorite N’Golo Kante, who was initially part of the XI in a three-man midfield with Barcelona’s Frenkie de Jong and Manchester City’s Kevin de Bruyne.

Ronaldo currently sits joint-second in Serie A for goals with 14 in his second campaign with the eight-time reigning Italian champs. Juventus teammate Matthijs de Ligt was also named to UEFA’s 2019 team.

Five members of Jurgen Klopp’s Champions League winners Liverpool got the nod. Joining Mane are defenders Trent Alexander-Arnold, Virgil van Dijk, and Andrew Robertson, and ‘keeper Alisson.

The Team of the Year, which was unveiled Wednesday, was determined by a vote on UEFA’s website.

Goalkeeper: Alisson (Liverpool)

Defenders: Trent Alexander-Arnold (Liverpool), Matthijs de Ligt (Juventus), Virgil van Dijk (Liverpool), Andrew Robertson (Liverpool)

Midfielders: Frenkie de Jong (Barcelona), Kevin de Bruyne (Manchester City)

Forwards: Lionel Messi (Barcelona), Sadio Mane (Liverpool), Robert Lewandowski (Bayern Munich), Cristiano Ronaldo (Juventus)

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Soccer

  • Watch: Carvajal's header delivers killer blow for Madrid in UCL final

  • An introduction to Top Soccer News on theScore ??

  • An introduction to Top Soccer News on theScore ??

  • Real Madrid beat Dortmund to win 15th European Cup

  • Police arrest dozens of ticket-less fans at Wembley final

  • Dortmund boss Terzic lauds 'brilliant' Sancho after UCL defeat

  • Modric, Kroos among Madrid stars to make history with latest UCL triumph

  • Madrid's inevitability is a superpower no rival can match

  • Transfer window preview: 50 players who could move this summer

  • Vinicius Jr. named Champions League Player of the Season

“If you think about it, I've never held a job in my life. I went from being an NFL player to a coach to a broadcaster. I haven't worked a day in my life.”
-John Madden


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