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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

Source: Saints to re-sign cornerback Moore

METAIRIE, La. — The New Orleans Saints are re-signing veteran cornerback Sterling Moore, a source confirmed.

  • Saints defensive end Alex Okafor suffered a season-ending torn Achilles in Sunday’s comeback victory over the Redskins, a source confirmed to ESPN.

The move suggests that the Saints want to be prepared in case their standout rookie cornerback, Marshon Lattimore, is unable to return from his ankle injury in time for Sunday’s game at the Los Angeles Rams.

The Saints’ plan to re-sign Moore was first reported by NOLA.com.

Lattimore — a leading candidate for defensive rookie of the year — was injured while breaking up a pass in the end zone on the opening series of Sunday’s 34-31 win over Washington. He tried to come back in the second half but quickly returned to the sideline.

Lattimore suggested on Twitter on Sunday evening that he’ll be fine. But both he and Saints head coach Sean Payton declined to offer any injury updates on Monday.

Im solid y’all, I’m gone shake back!

— Marshon Lattimore (@shonrp2) November 19, 2017

The Saints replaced Lattimore with third-year pro P.J. Williams in the starting lineup. And second-year pro De’Vante Harris served as the nickel back. But both of them struggled at times as the Saints allowed Kirk Cousins to throw for 322 yards and three touchdowns.

Moore, 27, was New Orleans’ best cornerback last year when he signed in Week 1 and wound up playing a major role as an injury replacement. He started 12 games, led the team with 13 passes defended and tied for the team lead with two interceptions.

The Saints deemed Moore expendable last month, however, after he appeared in only two games with three tackles. Starters Lattimore and Ken Crawley have both played at a high level.

Moore (5-foot-10, 202 pounds) has started a total of 31 games in seven years with the New England Patriots, Dallas Cowboys, Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Saints.

Soccer

Nolito: Liverpool will 'suffer' against Sevilla

Nolito isn’t sure who has the edge ahead of Tuesday’s Champions League contest, but the Sevilla winger has no doubts that Liverpool will “suffer.”

The two sides meet in the penultimate fixture of the group phase, with Liverpool enjoying a one-point advantage over the Spanish outfit.

Despite only managing a draw against a 10-man Liverpool side at Anfield in September, Nolito has promised that the Premier League club will have a difficult task when the two teams meet at the Ramon Sanchez Pizjuan stadium.

“We have a huge game coming up,” the former Manchester City winger told Cadena Ser, as translated by ESPN FC. “All the top teams are in the Champions League and Liverpool have a great side but so do we.

“Liverpool are Liverpool and I don’t know if they are going to win or lose against us but I can assure you they are going to suffer.”

Sevilla has yet to lose at home in the league or Champions League this season, and could book a place in the knockout round with a victory combined with Spartak Moscow dropping points against Maribor on Tuesday.

NFL

Patriots' week at Air Force Academy pays off with lopsided win

MEXICO CITY — The New England Patriots trained all week in the high altitude at the Air Force Academy, which was an experience they said wouldn’t mean as much if they didn’t finish with a victory over the Oakland Raiders.

They took care of that rather quickly Sunday with a 33-8 win at Estadio Azteca, where chants of “Brady! Brady! Brady!” filled the smoggy air.

The Patriots thumped the Raiders in a complete three-phase effort that reflects their place as one of the league’s best, while positioning themselves for a deep playoff run by playing their best football in the second half of the season. Meanwhile, at 40 years old, quarterback Tom Brady continues to make a strong case for MVP honors.

Tom Brady impressed fans in Mexico City, throwing for 339 yards and three touchdowns on Sunday. Buda Mendes/Getty Images

Brady wowed the Mexico crowd, which began chanting his name after the Raiders were stopped on third down on their initial drive. The anticipation of seeing Brady, who has now won an NFL game in three different countries (U.S., England, Mexico), created a rare environment that had a Super Bowl-type feel.

Brady rang up his 82nd career game with 300 yards passing, but if there was one moment that best captured how the Patriots are rolling as a complete team, it came late in the second quarter as the Raiders were threatening to score a touchdown.

Bill Belichick’s best teams have always had a knack for taking advantage of opponents’ miscues, and that’s what happened when Raiders receiver Seth Roberts inexplicably held the ball out in front of him after making a catch at the 3-yard line. Linebacker Marquis Flowers, a core special-teams player who has a niche role on defense by playing in passing situations, took off like a jet on the Air Force Academy runway and blasted it free.

The Patriots recovered at their 7, and instead of running out the clock to halftime with a 14-0 lead and 33 seconds on the clock, attacked and set up Stephen Gostkowski’s franchise-record 62-yard field goal at the halftime gun. Gostkowski was congratulated by seemingly every player on the team in a sequence that showed how the offense, defense and special teams are in championship sync.


• Statistics
• Scoreboard
• 2017 schedule, results
• Standings

So the Patriots, with passports in hand, head home after a week away with an 8-2 record and a great opportunity ahead of them.

They host the sputtering Miami Dolphins next Sunday, then face the faltering Buffalo Bills on the road after that, before a Monday night visit to meet the Dolphins again.

Then comes a Dec. 17 road game against the Pittsburgh Steelers, who are also 8-2 and currently the Patriots’ top competition in the AFC.

There’s a long way to go to get to that point, and Belichick preaches a one-game-at-a-time mentality, but it’s hard not to peek ahead and think that could be one of the most highly anticipated regular-season games in recent memory.

Soccer

Higuain's mid-season revival papering over Juventus' deep cracks

The good thing for Juventus is that Gonzalo Higuain is back to his best.

The bad thing is the rest of the team is at some of its worst.

The Bianconeri have yet to find their rhythm this season. When Paulo Dybala rediscovered his scoring touch at the beginning of the campaign, Higuain fell silent. The opposite was true Tuesday night against Sporting CP, as Higuain salvaged a crucial 1-1 draw in Lisbon despite a relatively anonymous performance by his countryman.

While Higuain’s return to form is something to celebrate – he has four goals in his past three matches after scoring just two in nine – the team’s overall attitude isn’t. Juventus’ once-vaunted defence is shaky, its midfielders encumbered, and its manager inconsistent. The six-time defending Serie A champion has never been more vulnerable to a coup d’etat in league play, and in the Champions League, the pace of continental foes has been overwhelming.

It was certainly important to take something from Tuesday’s match. Juventus is now second in Group D on seven points, three better than Sporting, who could’ve pulled level with the Italian side had it maintained its first-half lead.

But the problem is a lack of continuity. Juventus has depended heavily on pure individual brilliance to escape calamity, and because of the quality in the squad, the likes of Dybala and Higuain have become a crutch.

Neither of them is immune to a slump, and manager Massimiliano Allegri admitted after last week’s scrappy win over SPAL that his club risks turning matches into a “game of roulette.”

He added, “We cannot afford to have these ups and downs.”

Allegri himself is partly to blame. Flip-flopping between last year’s trusted starters and this summer’s recruits, the Italian has yet to use the same 11 players in consecutive matches this season. He’s insisted on playing Mario Mandzukic out of position despite the signing of excitable winger Douglas Costa, and kept on starting Juan Cuadrado despite the €40-million arrival of Federico Bernardeschi. In other words, he’s held back the evolution of this squad.

Allegri’s decision to drop Stephan Lichtsteiner from Juventus’ Champions League squad was arguably his biggest mistake. With Mattia De Sciglio either injured or underperforming, either Stefano Sturaro or Cuadrado have had to deputise as right-backs. Their limitations are obvious. Sturaro isn’t reliable in midfield, let alone in a defensive position, and Cuadrado is too attack-minded to anchor that role. Juventus has become much more predictable without overlapping runs on the right flank, and even Alex Sandro – one of the game’s best left-backs – has struggled to dominate on his side of the pitch.

The biggest worry, however, is in midfield. When Juventus have the ball, there’s little movement. It’s almost as if the players hit a wall. Teams have dealt with their hopeful crosses into the box. The overall build-up play is far too slow, allowing opposing defenders to collect themselves and find their shape.

Juventus’ lack of pace has also created an opening for rivals to exploit. Sporting’s counter-attack troubled Giorgio Chiellini and Co., with Gelson Martins offering a scintillating outlet in both matches against Juventus. Earlier this month, Lazio showed in Turin that speed can kill, swarming the host in a spell of second-half chaos to end a 57-match home unbeaten streak.

“Evidently this team needs to feel fear in order to perform,” Allegri said Tuesday, courtesy of Football Italia.

Juventus’ only saving grace is its scoring power. Only Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain have ruffled the back of the net more than Juventus in league play – and goals ultimately decide matches. The fear is that Allegri’s side is converting at an unsustainable rate.

Scoring six past Udinese while down to 10 men, for example, is a clear anomaly.

Unless Juventus finds some consistency, it cannot expect to have the same success it enjoyed in previous years. And maybe it’s time to embrace the fact that a transition is coming.

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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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