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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

Soccer

Roma celebrates gift of Champions League victory as change looms ahead

The birthday gift that Jim Pallotta wanted most was delivered at the Stadio Olimpico just before 10 p.m. local time. Roma’s president, who turned 60 years old on Tuesday, was not there in person to receive it, but you can be sure he was following along somewhere as Edin Dzeko slipped behind the Shakhtar Donetsk defence, running onto a beautiful pass from Kevin Strootman, and dispatching it into the corner of the net.

This was the 500th goal that Roma had scored since Pallotta took charge in the summer of 2012, and undoubtedly one of the most significant. It gave the Giallorossi an aggregate advantage over Shakhtar Donetsk with fewer than 40 minutes left to play in their Champions League last-16 clash. It was enough to seal a 1-0 win on the night, and victory by away goals in the two-legged tie.

In purely monetary terms, this was a lavish birthday treat. Qualification to the quarter-finals will earn Roma upward of €10 million between prize money, broadcast revenue, and additional gate receipts. For a club that posted losses of more than €40 million on last season’s accounts, and which has been working to avoid further Financial Fair Play sanctions from UEFA, that is no small change.

Yet this triumph meant far more to Roma than could be explained by a mere balance sheet. The Giallorossi had not reached the quarter-finals of this competition for a decade. Indeed, they have only gone so far on three previous occasions in the entire 62-year history of the European Cup.

This is not a team suffering from any delusions about its standing in the continental pecking order. Ahead of last month’s first leg, club captain Daniele De Rossi observed that there were “two or three teams in this season’s Champions League against whom, in all probability, we would already be beaten before kick-off.”

Shakhtar, though, was not one of them. The Ukrainians had performed excellently in this year’s competition, eliminating a Napoli team that currently sits 14 points ahead of Roma in Serie A. Napoli had won three out of four previous head-to-heads with the Giallorossi in this competition, too. But they were not Barcelona, Manchester City, or Real Madrid. Roma knew that this was a team it was capable of beating.

And if not now, then when? How long might Roma have to wait before its next such amenable draw in the Champions League knock-out phase? Yes, the team had earned the right to play one of the group stage runners-up, by finishing top of its own pool. But so had Tottenham, Paris Saint-Germain, and Besiktas, who were rewarded with ties against powerhouses Juventus, Madrid, and Bayern Munich, respectively.

Even to get back this far next season is far from assured. Roma occupies third place in Serie A for now, but the competition is fierce with Lazio, AC Milan, and Internazionale all effectively fighting for two Champions League places behind Juventus and Napoli.

The reality is, furthermore, that even with the additional income generated by reaching the quarter-finals, Roma will likely have to sell at least one important member of its starting XI at the end of this season to balance the books. Last summer, Mohamed Salah and Antonio Rudiger both departed. Next could be Dzeko, or perhaps the goalkeeper Alisson.

It is up to the sporting director, Monchi, to ensure that such departures are offset by fresh talent coming in. But it is up to the players that Roma already has to deliver on their potential in such time as they have together.

They did so here, despite a cautious start and a nervy finish. Credit is due to the manager, Eusebio Di Francesco, for reassuring his team that there was no need to panic if the goal that it needed after losing the first leg 2-1 did not arrive right away.

Roma has built its Champions League run first and foremost on the reliability of its defending at home. The team is yet to concede a goal at the Olimpico in this year’s tournament, despite having hosted Atletico Madrid, Chelsea, and now this Shakhtar team overflowing with Brazilian attacking talent. Roma did not wobble here until the very end, allowing the visitor a pair of half-chances in injury time. Even then, Alisson never had to make a save.

There were times in the first half when Roma’s lack of attacking impetus felt frustrating. Di Francesco, though, was right to trust that Dzeko would find a way.

The Bosnian remains a peculiarly underappreciated player – the only man to have scored more than 50 goals in three of Europe’s top five leagues (Serie A, Premier League, and Bundesliga) and yet is never truly talked about as one of Europe’s elite forwards. Perhaps that is because he had never before gone beyond the last-16 of the continent’s elite competition.

He was nerveless when his opportunity arrived here, needing just one touch to beat Andriy Pyatov. Dzeko was a constant thorn in Shakhtar’s side for the rest of the game, too, almost adding a second from the edge of the box and then coaxing Ivan Ordets into a red card when he got goal-side of the defender with just over 10 minutes remaining.

His hold-up play, furthermore, helped Roma to keep the ball away from Shakhtar’s own frightening forwards. After serving Pallotta with such a generous birthday gift, he could not allow the occasion to be spoiled by some unwelcome party guest.

NFL

Proposal allows teams to hire coaches quicker

8:42 PM ET

  • Kevin SeifertNFL Nation

    Close

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

The NFL’s competition committee has proposed a policy change that would allow teams to formalize head coaching hires when the coach’s original team is playing in the postseason.

The change would relieve decision-makers from waiting weeks to formalize hires.

Set to be voted on next week during the NFL owners meeting, the proposal would help teams avoid the predicament faced by the Indianapolis Colts last month. The Colts had agreed to terms with New England Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels to replace Chuck Pagano in mid-January, but under current NFL rules, could not execute a signed contract until after the Patriots’ season ended. The Patriots continued playing through Super Bowl LII. Two days later, McDaniels informed the Colts that he planned to remain with the Patriots, forcing the Colts to scramble to hire Frank Reich instead.

Under the proposed change, the Colts would have been able to give McDaniels a contract to sign at the same time they agreed to terms. Had McDaniels declined to sign, the Colts could have moved more quickly to make another hire.

The proposal was among a long list of potential rule changes the NFL will consider when the meetings open Sunday. Some were previously reported, including a significant change to the catch rule, a proposal from the New York Jets to make pass interference a 15-yard penalty unless it is “intentional and egregious” and the authority for the NFL’s centralized officiating office to eject players for non-football acts during games.

NFL executive vice president Troy Vincent said Wednesday that the Jets’ pass interference proposal had gained momentum during a week of competition committee meetings.

The full list of proposals, released publicly Thursday night, also includes:

  • Allowing coaches and players to view video on league-issued tablets on the sideline or the coaches’ booth during games. Currently, only photographs are allowed to be viewed — either printed or on tablets. Available video could significantly enhance the process of in-game adjustments and evaluations.

  • Eliminating the requirement that a winning touchdown at the end of regulation, or overtime, to kick an extra point.

  • Proposals, from the Los Angeles Chargers and Washington Redskins, to expand replay review to include personal fouls, including roughing the passer and hits to players in a defenseless posture. They are not endorsed by the competition committee and are unlikely to earn approval.

Soccer

Matic: 'No excuse' for Manchester United's Champions League shame

Nemanja Matic couldn’t offer any explanations for Manchester United’s disappointing Champions League exit on Tuesday, saying that Sevilla was deservedly heading into the tournament’s quarter-final stage.

Few players emerged with any credit from the 2-1 home defeat – Alexis Sanchez and Marouane Fellaini courted the most criticism for their performances – and the game contrasted sharply with the tactically astute display against Liverpool three days earlier.

“There is no excuse,” Matic said, according to PA Sport. “There is no excuse. We had a big game, as you know, against Liverpool. We won.

“With high confidence, we come to play this game, but today they played better than us and they deserved (to win).”

Despite abject showings throughout United’s lineup, Jose Mourinho faces the brunt of disapproval from critics and fans. The Red Devils were negative in the first leg, displaying minimum attacking intent in a tedious 0-0 draw. They didn’t fare much better in the second meeting, with the host’s press appearing a little reluctant while defensive work seemed to be the prime concern.

(Photo courtesy: Getty Images)

“Of course (it is difficult to take),” Matic continued. “… But this is football, we have to accept it and to focus on the next game, which is very important also for us, in the FA Cup.

“We focus also for the league, but we have to say congratulations to the team, Sevilla. They played really well, and they deserved to go through.”

Related – Mourinho: Champions League failure ‘nothing new’ for Manchester United

United is 16 points behind Manchester City in the Premier League table with eight matches to go, leaving the FA Cup as the club’s only realistic chance of major silverware this season. Mourinho’s side takes on Brighton & Hove Albion in the quarter-finals on Saturday.

NFL

Owner Jimmy Haslam among Browns contingent at Sam Darnold's pro day

Cleveland Browns owner Jimmy Haslam was among those viewing as Sam Darnold was slinging in the rain Wednesday at USC.

Haslam was one member of a large contingent present to evaluate the quarterback the Browns are pondering taking with the first overall pick in the NFL draft. In an unusual twist, Darnold chose to keep throwing after a heavy rain started a few minutes into his workout. He received generally favorable reviews from analysts for his footwork, arm strength and accuracy.

Those Browns in attendance for the workout included Haslam, general manager John Dorsey, coach Hue Jackson, offensive coordinator Todd Haley and quarterbacks coach Ken Zampese. Haslam sat with Darnold’s parents during part of the workout. On Tuesday night, the Browns took Darnold out to dinner. Haslam was not present to scout Darnold, but more to get to know him with the rest of the Browns staff.

“He’s a great guy,” Darnold said of Haslam on the NFL Network. “That whole staff is awesome. I was able to meet with the Giants as well [on Monday]. Just meeting with both of those organizations, like I said before, those people are at the top of the world right now and I’m trying to impress them but at the same time be myself. So there is a fine line between that, and I just tried to find that and do my best.”

When: April 26-28
Where: Arlington, Texas
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Part of the reason the Browns sent such a large contingent to Los Angeles is because Darnold did not throw at the scouting combine. Darnold, who will turn 21 in June, chose not to go inside when it started raining, in part because he wanted to show he could handle the elements, and because he did not think it was fair to his USC teammates to move the time of the workout. Another factor is that USC’s indoor facility is not large enough for deep passes, ESPN’s Keyshawn Johnson said during the workout.

Though there were several dropped passes, Darnold was praised for his accuracy and mobility. He also focused on showing that he had worked at holding onto the ball with two hands (he had 21 fumbles in two seasons at USC). He did not seem to do anything to hurt his draft standing, and might even have improved his cause.

“Just being aware of all those little things and then just coming out here and ripping it,” Darnold said. “I thought I did a pretty good job.”

Darnold said during an interview with ESPN that he’s eager to go to a team that wants him. He is well aware that the Browns traded for Tyrod Taylor to be the team’s starting quarterback.

“It’d be awesome to go No. 1, just because I think what the Browns are doing is really good right now and I think they have potential to be a really good team in the future,” Darnold said. “Just based on that, yeah, a part of me really wants to go 1. But at the same time, if they don’t want me and they don’t pick me, that’s the best situation. Because I don’t want to go to a team that doesn’t want me.”

This is a busy time for quarterback pre-draft workouts. Josh Rosen had his workout at UCLA on Tuesday. The Browns will visit and work out Oklahoma’s Baker Mayfield on Thursday. On Friday, it’s on to Wyoming, where Josh Allen will have his pro day. Allen is also viewed as a possibility for the Browns at No. 1.

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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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