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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

NFL road show to explain helmet contact rule

3:26 PM ET

  • Kevin SeifertNFL Nation

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    • ESPN.com national NFL writer
    • ESPN.com NFC North reporter, 2008-2013
    • Covered Vikings for Minneapolis Star Tribune, 1999-2008

ORLANDO, Fla. — NFL executives will fan out to all 32 teams during the next three months to explain an unexpected new rule that will at least penalize — and potentially eject — players who lower their helmets to initiate contact with an opponent.

Speaking Wednesday at the conclusion of an eventful owners meetings, commissioner Roger Goodell said the meetings would be “all hands on deck” to convey the gravity of efforts to reduce brain, neck and spinal injuries.

“Our focus is on how to take the head out of the game,” Goodell said, “and make sure we’re using the helmet as protection, and [that] it’s not being used as a weapon. And I think we’ve made a tremendous amount of progress on that this week.”

The rule is part of the league’s answer to a “call to action” from chief medical officer Dr. Allen Sills, a response to a season that included 291 concussions — the most on record — and a serious spinal injury to Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker Ryan Shazier. In addition, the NFL’s competition committee is preparing a stark mandate for coaches: Kickoffs will be eliminated in the near future if concussion rates don’t decrease dramatically.

Players have reacted with confusion and dismay to initial reports of the helmet rule change, which owners mandated Tuesday after the competition committee first planned to make it a simpler point of emphasis. Goodell said he hopes players will have different opinions once they are taught the rule.

“You’re jumping ahead to the players that have not had the opportunity to hear the discussion that we’ve had,” Goodell said. “So you’re reacting to players who have not yet heard that dialogue or heard the basis of why we came to where we came. And I understand that, but that’s why I mentioned early on that our intent is to make sure we go in, we go to each team, and we have tape and all of the analysis and work that was done in great coordination with our various teams to be able to communicate that to them. I’d give them an opportunity first to understand what the play is before we make a lot of adjustments about the ramifications.”

In fact, enforcement of the rule is still under development. Over the next two months, the NFL’s competition committee will work to determine how to administrate ejections — considered a necessary hammer to enforce the rule — and whether they will be subject to replay. The league hopes to finalize the wording during its May 21-23 meetings in Atlanta.

But Green Bay Packers president Mark Murphy, a member of the competition committee, downplayed concerns about the frequency of ejections and perhaps even the penalty itself. He waved off examples such as quarterback sneaks, where a quarterback technically lowers his head and initiates contact.

“We watched a lot of film this year,” Murphy said. “I would say there were probably five hits where you’d say, ‘These are ones where we would want ejections.’ Now, whether there will be more penalties than that? Probably. But the focus, I think, should be on are you using the helmet as a weapon.”

New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton, another member of the competition committee, said the rule was a “necessary step” and also stopped short of suggesting it represented a transformational moment for the game.

“I think we’ll see it have a great effect on one element of the helmet and how we want the game to be played,” Payton said. “I think you still see the physicality. This is the one posture that we’re removing.”

In other news as the meetings wrapped up:

• Goodell said there was “some” discussion about the league’s national anthem policy during the meetings. Owners arrived in Orlando starkly divided on whether the current policy — which says players “should” stand but does not require it — should be changed. “That’s something that the ownership and I will continue to discuss and focus on as it is needed,” Goodell said.

• Senior vice president of officiating Al Riveron said no NFL rules were changed prior to Super Bowl LII, in which he reviewed but declined to overturn a touchdown reception by Philadelphia Eagles running back Corey Clement. “In order for us to overturn a call,” Riveron said, “we have to see clearly indisputable evidence. There was some movement, but we did not see loss of control. We didn’t see indisputable evidence that he did not have possession of the football.”

Soccer

Manchester United dropped from Champions League by plucky Sevilla

Manchester – Manchester United crashed out of the Champions League as Wissam Ben Yedder struck twice in four second-half minutes to send Sevilla into the quarter-finals for the first time in 60 years with a stunning 2-1 win at Old Trafford on Tuesday.

The Spaniards progressed by the same score on aggregate after a goalless first-leg draw.

The visitors were deserving winners as they controlled the game throughout but had to wait for Ben Yedder’s introduction as a substitute to add a clinical finish.

Ben Yedder put Sevilla in front 16 minutes from time when he blasted into the bottom corner before heading in a second shortly after.

Romelu Lukaku reduced United’s arrears, but it was too little, too late with United boss Jose Mourinho’s decision to once again drop Paul Pogba certain to be scrutinised.

Mourinho sprang a surprise before kick-off by recalling Marouane Fellaini at the expense of Pogba, who had also been dropped for the first game.

Jesse Lingard also returned in place of Juan Mata in Mourinho’s only other change from the side that beat Liverpool 2-1 at the weekend.

And Lingard nearly had an instant impact as he teed up Lukaku on the edge of the box, but the Belgian’s effort drifted high and wide.

Sevilla dominated the vast majority of the first leg only to be denied by some stunning saves from David de Gea.

However, it was wayward finishing rather than the Spanish number one that prevented the visitors making the most of their ascendancy for most of the match.

Joaquin Correa headed just over from a corner before Luis Muriel and Franco Vazquez fired off target when well-positioned on the edge of the area.

Indeed, of Sevilla’s 10 efforts on goal in the first period only one weak Muriel effort forced De Gea into making a save.

Fellaini gamble backfires

Mourinho’s gamble on Fellaini appeared to have largely backfired as he failed to impose his physical presence on Sevilla’s ball players in midfield.

Yet, the Belgian nearly made the breakthrough with United’s best move of the opening period when he latched onto Alexis Sanchez’s layoff and his powerful effort was turned behind by Sergio Rico.

The second period began in the same vein as the first with Sevilla on the front foot, and only a brilliant last-ditch tackle by Eric Bailly denied Correa a clear sight of goal.

Chances kept coming for Sevilla as Muriel then turned a dangerous Pablo Sarabia cross inches wide.

Pogba, who cost United a then-world record £89 million ($116 million) in 2016, was eventually introduced just after the hour mark with Fellaini sacrificed.

However, even the Frenchman couldn’t kickstart the hosts and they were eventually made to pay.

Ben Yedder had only been on the pitch for two minutes after replacing Muriel, when he finally broke the deadlock in the tie with brilliant finish low into De Gea’s bottom left-hand corner.

Mourinho responded by throwing on Anthony Martial and Juan Mata, but their attacking edge was needed far earlier as Ben Yedder soon put the outcome beyond any doubt when he forced home a corner at the far post despite a despairing effort by De Gea.

Sevilla should even had added to their lead as Clement Lenglet and Correa came close.

Lukaku finally got United on the board six minutes from time when he swept home a corner.

But it was to little avail as United have now failed to reach the quarter-finals for five straight years.

NFL

Jerry Jones: No regrets with Elliott or Goodell

ORLANDO, Fla. — Dallas Cowboys owner and general manager Jerry Jones does not regret his decision to support Ezekiel Elliott’s appeal of his suspension last season or fight Roger Goodell’s extension, even if it cost him roughly $2 million in legal fees.

Citing a bylaw that had been around since 1997 that says if an owner participates in bringing litigation against other owners he must reimburse them for legal fees, Jones was ordered to reimburse the league. He had his appeal denied by Goodell at a hearing last month.

  • Owners on Tuesday unanimously approved a new catch rule and authorized senior vice president of officiating Al Riveron to eject players from games for egregious non-football acts.

  • Under an unexpected rule passed Tuesday, a player will be penalized 15 yards and potentially ejected any time he lowers his head to initiate and make contact with his helmet against an opponent.

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“When you get pretty supportive then you run or get a chance to pay the fiddler,” Jones said Tuesday from the NFL owners meetings in Orlando. “I have understood that. The commissioner has that power.”

The Cowboys filed a declaration of support for Elliott in his fight of a six-game suspension but offered no financial backing of their running back as he attempted to remain eligible through a series of appeals. Jones was vocal in his critique of the compensation committee regarding Goodell’s new contract and threatened legal action but never filed suit.

Jones laid out his concerns regarding the commissioner’s power and how the commissioner’s contract is negotiated in an “owners only” session at league meetings in Irving, Texas, in December. He said there was a similar meeting Monday in Orlando.

“It was very satisfactory and we will address more of it in May,” Jones said, alluding to the NFL meetings in Atlanta, “but I was very satisfied.”

Jones said the meetings in Orlando have had productive discussions regarding the NFL’s national anthem policy as well as social justice issues that have been a major cause for players across the league. Jones was outspoken in his belief that players should stand for the national anthem. Prior to a game against the Arizona Cardinals, Jones took a knee and locked arms with his players, as did other front-office executives and coaches, before the anthem.

“I’m going to let Roger speak to about here, what’s (been) discussed,” Jones said. “You know where I am on it. But where it is, is everybody’s going to think about it, talk back and forth on it a little bit and then we’ll be more definitive after the May meeting.”

Soccer

UEFA relaxes cup-tied restrictions in Champions League, Europa League

UEFA eased regulations Tuesday that prevent teams in the Champions League and Europa League knockout stages from fielding players who are “cup-tied” in the competitions.

Starting in the 2018-19 season, clubs will have the opportunity to register three players who suited up for other teams in either the Champions League or Europa League.

For example, the current rule prohibits Barcelona from playing mid-season arrival Philippe Coutinho in the Champions League because he participated in the group stage of the tournament with Liverpool.

Arsenal has also been forced to keep club-record signing Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang on the sidelines during its Europa League run because former outfit Borussia Dortmund dropped into the competition as a third-place finisher in the Champions League group stage.

In addition to abolishing the cup-tied rule, UEFA announced the following changes:

  • Teams that reach the finals of the Champions League and Europa League, as well as the UEFA Super Cup, will be able to carry a 23-man squad instead of the usual 18.
  • A fourth substitute will be available for use in extra time of any match in the knockout rounds.
  • Most matches from the Champions League play-offs and on will kick off at 3 p.m. ET (9:00 CET), with two group-stage fixtures on Tuesday and another pair on Wednesday kicking off at 12:55 p.m. ET (18:55 p.m. CET). All fixtures on the final matchday will be played at the same time.
  • Europa League matches up until the round of 16 will take place at 12:55 p.m. ET and 3 p.m. ET, with the quarter-finals, semi-finals, and final to be played at 3 p.m. ET.
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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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