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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

What we learned (and didn't) in Week 6

NEW ORLEANS — Sean Payton was upset after his team’s win Sunday. Yes, upset after a win. The Saints had beaten the Lions 52-38 in a 1 p.m. ET game that took so long that former Saint Adrian Peterson already had rushed for 76 yards in the first quarter of a 4 p.m. ET game for his new Arizona Cardinals team by the time the New Orleans coach’s postgame news conference began.

  • Is there more left in the tank for Adrian Peterson? How will Green Bay cope with the loss of Aaron Rodgers? We look to the tape for answers to that and more from Week 6.

  • All of a sudden, the Cardinals have their three-headed offensive monster back — and it all starts with Adrian Peterson.

  • Blocking matters in fantasy football, and in Week 6 we saw a pair of running backs stand out with big fantasy point totals. Are their performances sustainable? KC Joyner explores that and more in his review of the matchups along the line of scrimmage.

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The Saints had built a 45-10 lead only to see it whittled down to seven in the fourth quarter. Payton was annoyed about the way his team struggled to finish. So when someone asked about what Peterson was doing in Arizona and whether it gave him pause about trading the old warhorse five days earlier, Payton wasn’t having any.

“That’s a dumb question,” Payton said. “We’re trying to win games, and I’d love to have that player. But it’s hard to have that many and get into a rhythm. I thought Mark [Ingram] and Alvin [Kamara] had some big plays, and I would hope we would have had that type of rushing output if Adrian was a part of it.”

Ingram and Kamara combined for 189 yards on 35 carries in the Saints’ win on Sunday. And while they couldn’t salt away the game by running it late, they won it by running it early and often, which makes you realize the Saints were loaded at running back and just couldn’t come up with anything for Peterson to do.

“I told you all, he’s still got the juice,” Ingram said after hearing what Peterson was doing to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in his first game as a Cardinal.

He does, or did on this one day, and who’s to say that at age 32 a player as freakishly dominant and resilient as Peterson can’t possibly resurrect his career and the Cardinals’ season at the same time? Arizona’s offensive line has had a rough year, but Peterson in his prime was one of those running backs the old coaches like to say “brings his own blocking.” This is no longer his prime, but what if he has enough motivation to muster three good months?

Adrian Peterson had 26 carries in his Cardinals debut. He had only 27 total carries in four games with the Saints. Photo by Joe Camporeale/USA TODAY Sports

Saints players with whom I spoke last week talked in near-reverential terms about Peterson and the impression he made on them in six months as their teammate.

“He’s a freak,” wide receiver Michael Thomas said. “He takes care of his body really well, that’s one thing I took from him, just the way he’s always doing his shakes, he’s always lifting, he’s always taking care of his body, always trying to find an edge, that’s just one thing I took from him. He’s just professional. No matter what happened, no matter how many times he didn’t get the ball, he really never brought that in here or, you know, pointed fingers or anything. He just put his head down and came to work the next day. So I appreciate that, and I have tons of respect for him.”

Saints players were loving the news of Peterson’s performance in Arizona, while also happy about what they still have at running back. This could be the kind of thing that works out well for everyone, if Peterson helps rescue the Cardinals and the Saints’ backs blossom in their opportunities. Hey, the NFC is wide-open, folks. Go run through that hole.

Some other stuff we learned in Week 6:


All is still not well with the Steelers, but it’s getting there

The truth on the Martavis Bryant story, regardless of what the player is saying publicly, is that Bryant and his agent have expressed unhappiness with the way he’s being used in the offense and, some weeks ago, told the Steelers that Bryant would prefer to be traded if his current role is all they have in mind. Multiple sources say Bryant’s agent has spoken with Steelers management since the season began to express these sentiments, and that Bryant himself spoke with coaches during the week leading up to Pittsburgh’s Week 5 game to ask about being a bigger part of the offense. That has not materialized, though Bryant isn’t exactly being ignored. He has played 71 percent of Pittsburgh’s offensive snaps, second among Steelers wide receivers to only the incredible Antonio Brown (93 percent) and slightly ahead of rookie JuJu Smith-Schuster (66 percent), though Smith-Schuster saw the field more in Week 6. Bryant has been targeted 34 times, which is third on the team behind Brown (74) and superstar running back Le’Veon Bell (39). Smith-Schuster has 24 targets.

I can see the reason for Bryant’s frustration. He views himself as a difference-making player whose size/speed combination is unique and who, if given the opportunity, can do serious damage downfield or in the red zone. He has worked extremely hard to come back clean, healthy and in better shape than ever following his one-year drug suspension. By all accounts, he looks incredible in practice. On a representative number of current NFL teams, he’d have a claim on the title of No. 1 wide receiver.

Martavis Bryant has 17 catches for 231 yards and a touchdown this season after being suspended for all of the 2016 season. AP Photo/Alex Brandon

But the Steelers aren’t just any team. They have Brown and Bell, otherworldly talents who have established themselves as key cogs in the offense while Bryant has missed time on suspension during his four-year career. The Steelers would love to use Bryant to his full potential, score 60 points a game and dominate the NFL through sheer force of will and athleticism. But it’s not that simple, and there are many mouths to feed, including that of Smith-Schuster, the talented second-round pick whose opportunity has surprised Bryant. Something’s still off with the connection between Bryant and quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, and it seems that, plus Bryant’s anxious desire to make up for lost time, is creating an issue.

Bottom line, the Steelers aren’t going to trade Bryant, who still has more value to them as a member of their team than he does in trade. As brilliantly talented as he might be, he has yet to establish himself as an NFL dominator, and until he does, the Steelers aren’t likely to get a team to offer them sufficient return for his still-latent potential. There’s still likely a breakout coming, and when it does, the Steelers want to benefit from that with points and wins.

A victory Sunday over previously unbeaten Kansas City has the Steelers feeling better. And the production and opportunity Brown and Bell are getting has those guys placated for the moment at least. Bryant’s day will come, and while it’s easy to understand his impatience, the Steelers have no reason to act on it.

Ben McAdoo did some coaching this week

In this space last week, I laid out the case for the New York Giants moving on from Jerry Reese after this season. He has been general manager for 11 seasons and will have made the playoffs in only four of them — two of which were in his first two seasons. This is a large sample size.

But I also made the point that changing GMs doesn’t automatically mean changing coaches, and that two years on McAdoo would be too small a sample size. Week 6 proved my point. McAdoo was taking a lot of heat this time last week, and it got worse as the week went on because of the Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie discipline issue. But the proof is in the pudding, and the display the Giants put on Sunday night in dominating the Broncos in Denver shows that McAdoo pulled off an NFL head coach’s No. 1 job. He had his team completely ready to play in Sunday night’s upset at Denver.

The discipline of Rodgers-Cromartie was, Giants coaches believed, necessary to send a message that turning your back on teammates won’t be tolerated. The decision to hand over playcalling to offensive coordinator Mike Sullivan was a case of a head coach swallowing his pride and realizing his attention was needed for the bigger picture. Smart, responsible moves that paid off. At 1-5, this Giants season isn’t salvageable, but McAdoo will rightly be judged on how he navigates it now that it’s lost. The final score Sunday night indicates he’s on the right track.

But … did Vance Joseph?

There was a lot of focus on how surprisingly great a night that was for the Giants, but wasn’t it also just an inexcusably terrible loss for the Broncos? At home, coming off a bye against an 0-5 team that was down its top three wide receivers, its starting center, its best pass-rusher and one of its top two cornerbacks? And your top two division rivals had already lost, like, an hour before? How do you come out flat in a game like that? Should be a wake-up call for a Broncos team that has mainly played angry after missing the playoffs in 2016.

Brett Hundley was 18-of-33 passing for 157 yards with one touchdown and three interceptions in relief of Aaron Rodgers on Sunday. AP Photo/Bruce Kluckhohn

Mike McCarthy is betting on himself, and it could pay off

With Aaron Rodgers out, possibly for the season, due to a broken collarbone, Packers coach McCarthy has been adamant about going with third-year backup Brett Hundley and not looking for outside help. Hundley is well-regarded in some scouting circles, and part of the reason people around the league are intrigued by him is that they’d be intrigued by any quarterback who had spent three years in McCarthy’s program.

There’s no way Hundley has Rodgers’ gifts for accuracy, for manipulating the pocket, for game-winning throws on the run — no one does. But Hundley, who is signed on a cheap deal through 2018, has some talent, and McCarthy now gets more than half a season to figure out how to maximize that talent and minimize his weaknesses. If he succeeds, the Packers could have one of next offseason’s more compelling trade chips on their hands.

A fantasy note on the Cowboys’ running backs

This isn’t a “What We Learned” from this week, because the Cowboys were off, but I have spoken with people close to the situation about what the Cowboys would do at running back if they had to play without Ezekiel Elliott for a long period of time. And with Elliott apparently re-suspended for the next six games, it’s worth mentioning.

People were surprised that Dallas went with Alfred Morris and not Darren McFadden as the backup to Elliott out of the gate in Week 1. Part of that was because Morris had an especially strong camp, but according to the coaches with whom I’ve spoken, the main reason was game plan-driven. They’d installed a game plan thinking they’d have Elliott, and that game plan is designed for one back to get the bulk of the carries. They believed Morris was better equipped to operate that game plan if something were to happen to Elliott during the game, so he was active and McFadden was not.

They do like McFadden better than Morris in some areas, however, including the passing game. So if they know they’re going to be without Elliott, expect a change in the way the Cowboys’ offensive coaches make a game plan and a lean toward a system in which Morris and McFadden (and maybe Rod Smith) split duties and carries in some way. That’s what I’ve been told to expect by folks in the know there, which is unfortunate for fantasy players who might have been hoping that Morris or McFadden would simply slide into Elliott’s spot and get his workload. Sorry to be the bearer of bad fantasy tidings.

Soccer

Combined XI: Real Madrid vs. Tottenham

Since the European Cup was rebranded with a new moniker in 1992, Real Madrid has won the Champions League on six occasions for a total of 12 top-tier continental triumphs.

During that same spell, Tottenham reached the tournament’s knockout phase just once before bowing out to the heavyweights from the Spanish capital in the quarter-finals of the 2010-11 installment.

Seven years on, Spurs supporters will look back at the 4-0 first-leg defeat at the Santiago Bernabeu in 2011 as a symbol of the rift in quality between the two sides. That divide has since narrowed, though, with the emergence of a talented Tottenham core in line for a European shock.

Considering both form and pedigree, here’s a look at a combined XI between the two squads ahead of Tuesday’s tilt in Madrid.

GK- Hugo Lloris: France’s No. 1 has been instrumental to Tottenham’s consecutive top-three finishes with 28 clean sheets over two seasons, giving Lloris the edge over Los Blancos shot-stopper Keylor Navas – who, to his credit, has been better than the routine chorus of whistles would imply.

RB – Dani Carvajal: Slick-passing Carvajal is indisputably first choice ahead of Spurs right-back duo Serge Aurier and Kieran Trippier. Despite a spell on the sidelines with a viral condition that will see him miss Tuesday’s visit, the Spaniard has quietly emerged as one of Europe’s best full-backs.

CB – Sergio Ramos: Given his incomparable experience in the tournament and his knack for timely goals on Europe’s biggest stage, three-time Champions League winner and reigning tournament Best Defender honouree Ramos is a an automatic pick ahead of Jan Vertonghen.

CB – Toby Alderweireld: A massive reason Tottenham’s spine is arguably the Premier League’s best, Belgium international ball-stopper Alderweireld could walk into any club’s starting XI. Hotspur habitues are hoping that soon doesn’t become the case with reports of a contract stalemate prompting exit talk.

LB – Marcelo: Marcelo is football’s preeminent full-back and the first name in this lineup. Even if Danny Rose was fit, the England international couldn’t hold his Brazilian counterpart’s boots if he was selling them at a High Street retailer.

MF – Luka Modric: With Modric and his midfield mate Toni Kroos manning deeper positions in support of a No. 10, a defensive midfielder a la Casemiro or Mousa Dembele would be persona non grata in this squad. And for good reason, with the former Spurs star providing the midfield metronome in a bountiful Los Blancos squad.

MF – Toni Kroos: If Modric has the keys to the engine room, Kroos does the little things to ensure the train runs on time, combining a characteristically German source of industry with a penchant for threading a perfectly weighted ball into cramped confines.

MF – Isco: Free from the shackles of injury-plagued Gareth Bale’s usual spot in Zidane’s starting XI, Isco has finally gotten his chance to shine in a central playmaking role. The Spaniard’s spot in this team pushes crafty Christian Eriksen out wide, relegating Dele Alli to the bench.

RW – Christian Eriksen: Making his case as the continent’s most underrated player, Eriksen is in the best form of his life. After being castigated as a crafty player who doesn’t score, the talismanic Dane has seven goals in his last 10 for club and country. His inclusion over Marco Asensio is a statement in itself.

FW – Harry Kane: Boosted by a varied skill set and deceptive acceleration, Kane has cornered the market on making the spectacular look unspectacular. The 24-year-old England No. 1 is the continent’s in-form striker courtesy of 36 goals in 31 matches in 2017 with six hat-tricks to boot.

LW – Cristiano Ronaldo: Even if the clock struck midnight and Ronaldo turned from football’s majestic stagecoach into an Emile Heskey-sized pumpkin, the Champions League record goal-scorer (109) gets into this starting XI based on his resume. The four-time winner has dominated the tournament over a decade and change.

Bench: Keylor Navas (Real Madrid), Jan Vertonghen (Tottenham), Serge Aurier (Tottenham), Mousa Dembele (Tottenham), Dele Alli (Tottenham), Marco Asensio (Real Madrid), Karim Benzema (Real Madrid)

(Photos courtesy: Action Images)

NFL

Officiating czar stands by call to nullify Jets TD

NFL senior vice president of officiating Al Riveron said Monday it was “clear and obvious” to overturn New York Jets tight end’s Austin Seferian-Jenkins’ touchdown catch in the fourth quarter Sunday against the New England Patriots.

  • The reversal of Austin Seferian-Jenkins’ apparent touchdown is one occasion where the final call didn’t match the eye test.

  • Following a replay review in the New York Jets’ 24-17 loss to the New England Patriots on Sunday at MetLife Stadium, the Jets were upset and baffled by an apparent touchdown that turned into a fumble and a touchback.

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Riveron, speaking on a media conference call, explained his controversial replay decision, which his predecessors disagreed with and drew criticism from the Jets.

Riveron said the ball was loose when Seferian-Jenkins went airborne and was contracted by a defender, making it a fumble. By rule, a player has to re-establish possession before he hits anything out of bounds, and the Jets tight end didn’t do so. The ball went out of bounds across the goal line and through the end zone.

Riveron said “clear and obvious” is the standard that is used to overturn any call and “this definitely met that criteria.”

Riveron said the competition committee this offseason likely will examine the rule that gives the defense the ball when the offense loses it out of the end zone, but that as the rule currently stands it was applied correctly.

“This has been something that has been brought forth to the competition committee on numerous occasions, and I’m sure we’ll talk about it again. We might not agree with the rule, but that is the rule, so the rule was enforced correctly,” he said.

Seferian-Jenkins’ overturned touchdown came with 8:24 remaining in the fourth quarter and the Jets trailing 24-14. Because the ball was ruled to be a fumble out of bounds, the play resulted in a touchback and the Jets losing possession. The Patriots won 24-17.

Former officiating czars Mike Pereira and Dean Blandino, who are both analysts for Fox Sports, said Sunday they would not have overturned the score.

Former VPs of NFL officiating @MikePereira & @DeanBlandino think that the Jets late TD against the Patriots should have stood as called. pic.twitter.com/aDP6IIGXvg

— FOX Sports: NFL (@NFLonFOX) October 15, 2017

“I really have no comment on that; that’s really just their judgment,” Riveron said, when asked to respond to their comments.

Riveron said he judged the call based on the same angles the audience of the CBS broadcast had access to.

“Anything that we get in the command center we get directly from the TV feed. That’s what we base our decision on,” he said.

Seferian-Jenkins acknowledged Sunday that he bobbled the ball, but said he still felt it should’ve counted as a touchdown.

“I feel like I scored,” he said. “But at the end of the day, that’s what the ref called. I’m going to go with what the ref said, and I have to have better ball security.”

play

0:33

Jets tight end Austin Seferian-Jenkins tells reporters that he let his team down by fumbling in the end zone.

Several of his Jets teammates weren’t as forgiving, however.

“I’m pretty sure everybody is going to look back and say that was a B.S. call,” wide receiver Jermaine Kearse said.

ESPN’s Rich Cimini contributed to this report.

Soccer

Guardiola dismisses report claiming Napoli will rest stars vs. Manchester City

Action Images via Reuters/Jason Cairnduff

Pep Guardiola isn’t buying into reports suggesting Napoli will rest its star players during Tuesday’s Champions League encounter with Manchester City.

The Manchester City boss claimed he even knows which players will line up opposite his squad at the Etihad Stadium.

Napoli’s president, Aurelio De Laurentiis, hinted that manager Maurizio Sarri could give the team’s regulars a breather during the mid-week tie in order to ensure they’re fit for a crucial Serie A clash with Inter this weekend.

Guardiola, however, wasn’t willing to take the bait

“Absolutely not,” Guardiola told reporters, according to Rory O’Callaghan of Sky Sports, when asked if he believed De Laurentiis.

“If he is travelling this afternoon with Maurizio Sarri in the same plane, or in a private jet, he can ask him what team he is going to play.

“I think in the last 10 games they have played the same lineup. I can announce to you which players are going to play for Napoli against us.”

Napoli’s previous Champions League match – a 3-1 win over Feyenoord last month – featured virtually the same squad that appeared in the starting XI this past weekend against Roma, with the exception of defender Nikola Maksimovic.

Napoli went on to beat Roma 1-0 on Sunday to maintain the team’s perfect start to the Serie A campaign through eight matches.

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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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