World Cup winner and playmaker extraordinaire Andrea Pirlo is ready to hang up his boots.
The 38-year-old said he plans to retire at the end of the Major League Soccer season, closing the curtain on a decorated career spanning two decades.
“You realise yourself that the time has come. Each day, you have physical problems and you can’t train as you would like because there’s always some niggle,” the former Inter, AC Milan, and Juventus midfielder told La Gazzetta dello Sport, courtesy of ESPN FC.
“At my age, it’s fine to say enough is enough. You don’t have to carry on until you are 50. I’ll do something else.”
Pirlo said he’ll return to Italy in December following two-and-a-half underwhelming seasons with New York City FC. He wouldn’t specify what he’ll do in retirement, although there’s a theory he’ll join Antonio Conte’s coaching staff at Chelsea.
He received much fanfare upon his arrival in the Big Apple, but slowly lost his role in Patrick Vieira’s starting XI. His contract with NYCFC expires Dec. 31, allowing him to leave without any issue.
During his heydey in Europe, the Flero native established himself as one of the most gifted midfielders and free-kick takers of his generation. He whipped in a joint-Serie A record 28 goals from dead-ball situations with Inter, Reggina, Brescia, Milan, and Juventus.
He struggled at first to find his true role, starting in a more advanced position behind the striker. The lightbulb went off when Carlo Ancelotti turned Pirlo into a deep-lying playmaker at the turn of the century with the Rossoneri. Playing in front of the defence allowed Pirlo – more of a visionary than an athletic specimen – to spot long and short passes.
He won the 2006 World Cup with Italy as part of a three-man midfield and claimed the Champions League title a year later with Milan, easing the heartbreak from Istanbul.
Pirlo admitted he came close to joining Chelsea and Barcelona, going so far as to meet with Pep Guardiola in his office.
In 2011, after a decade with Milan, an out-of-form Pirlo was practically pushed out the door. He joined Juventus on a free transfer – to date one of the shrewdest pieces of business in football history – and rediscovered himself.
Helping the Bianconeri become a juggernaut in Serie A, Pirlo won four league titles, one Coppa Italia, and two Supercoppe Italiane.
He remained a part of the Azzurri until 2015, just missing out on last year’s European Championship. His 116 appearances for his country rank fourth.
There were far fewer milestones to celebrate in the United States. Pirlo looked like a shell of himself in MLS, where his sauntering style of play didn’t work. He’s been an unused substitute on 13 occasions this season alone.
It started with Robert Griffin III. When the Heisman Trophy winner was at Baylor, the back of his jersey carried more than his last name. With it was an extra signifier.
On the field in college he was known as “Griffin III” and after being drafted by the Washington Redskins in 2012, he became the first NFL player to have a Roman numeral on his back according to UniWatch research. At the time, Griffin III seemed like he might be an outlier. He turned out to be a trend-setter.
NFL players have continued to add generational titles to the nameplates on the backs of their jerseys — an explosion of Sr., Jr., III, IV and V across the league. It seems like almost every team has at least one player with a suffix behind his given name on his jersey.
“I do think more guys are doing it,” said Detroit Lions wide receiver Golden Tate, who has the Roman numeral “III” on his jersey. “I think it looks better.”
Like many other players, Tate began his career, then with the Seahawks, as just Tate. Then, when he was allowed to make the change after Griffin’s jersey move in 2012, Tate eventually added the Roman numerals.
The meaning, though, is deeper than cosmetic. It’s a personal question, depending on the player.
“I don’t know,” Tate said. “Maybe so the world can know that they are not the first Golden Tate, there’s the second, third, fourth, fifth. It’s just another way. Ask someone else that.”
We did. And every nameplate has a story. A reason why the extra letters or numerals are put there.
Then he went to Detroit. And he decided he wanted to start fresh. Included in that was a name change. To honor his father and the relationship they have, he asked the Lions to make his nameplate “Jones Jr.”
“Not even thinking about me, when I think about my dad, I know he’s proud that he can say, ‘Hey, I’m Marvin Jones Sr. Like yeah, that’s my son. I raised him,'” Jones Jr. said. “Instead of being Marvin Jones, Marvin Jones. He’s like, ‘Yeah, I’m Senior. This is my son, Marvin Jones Jr.’
“That’s what he does. He did it one time when I was back home in San Diego. It’s cool.”
It’s also turned into a family tradition. Jones Jr.’s oldest son is also named Marvin Jones, and Marvin Jones III has already started playing football. His team has individual names on the back, and Jones Jr.’s kid already is carrying on the tradition with “Jones III.” And it’s translating beyond football, too.
“Yeah, he already has the signature, too,” Jones Jr. said. “It’s crazy. And it almost mimics mine and I was a good penman when I was his age. But literally, if he were to sign it, he could sign it on a football card.
“I was like, ‘Marvin, you better not get no report cards that I don’t get that you sign because you didn’t pass.’ “
— Michael Rothstein
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Melvin Gordon had the III suffix on his jersey his final two years in Wisconsin, but is still waiting for the NFL to allow him to wear it in the NFL. Dan Sanger/Icon SMI
Gordon said he had the III on his jersey at Wisconsin his final two years there, but did not have the suffix on his jersey in high school.
The Pro Bowler said he did not ask to get the III on his jersey his second season, but he and Melvin Ingram (who’s also a III) both tried to get it on the back of their jersey in time for the 2017 season. The league said they would add it, but it was too late for ’17 because of all the jerseys in inventory that had been produced. So both will have to wait until next year.
“It means a lot,” Gordon said about having the III on his jersey. “It’s mainly for my dad, that’s what you do it for, for your pops. When you see that III on there you know that I came from him. So that’s what it is, and why I’ll go for it — for my pops on game day.”
–- Eric D. Williams
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If Earl Thomas’ grandfather had his way, the Seattle Seahawks’ All-Pro free safety might have been doing something entirely different on Sundays. Earl Sr. was a pastor in Orange, Texas, and didn’t like the idea of his grandson playing football.
“He wanted me in church,” Thomas said. “He didn’t really believe in football like that, but he’s definitely dear to my heart and I definitely miss him.”
Earl Sr. passed away in 2010, during his grandson’s rookie season. Thomas decided in the 2013 season to add “III” to the nameplate on his jersey to honor his grandfather — “the rock of the whole family” — and also his dad, who introduced him to the game.
“He kind of turned me into this guy that just loves football with all his heart,” Thomas said of his father. “So I owe it to them. I definitely want to make that name proud.”
Thomas and his wife have a young daughter named Kaleigh Rose. He thought they’d name their son Earl if they ever had one, but now he isn’t sure.
“I might end it with me,” he said with a smile.
–- Brady Henderson
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Mark Ingram finally added the II to the back of his jersey this season — something the son of former NFL standout wide receiver Mark Ingram said he has always been interested in doing.
“Well, that’s my name, for one,” said Ingram, who has always kept a close relationship with his father and recently announced that he and his wife are expecting their first boy — whom they plan to name Mark Ingram III — in March.
Ingram said it had nothing to do with a growing trend of jersey suffixes around the NFL. It was simply a matter of finally deciding to do it — then waiting for NFL approval.
The league doesn’t immediately approve name or number switches, especially with high-profile players, because of the amount of jerseys that are produced and licensed for sale to the public. A player can speed up the process if he agrees to purchase the remaining inventory.
Ingram went through a similar process earlier in his career when he changed numbers, from 28 to 22.
— Mike Triplett
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Jaguars defensive end Dante Fowler Jr. first added his suffix on his nameplate before his sophomore year at Florida. Shanna Lockwood-USA TODAY Sports
“I’m a little version of him so just wanting to get Junior so people actually know who I am,” said the 6-foot-3, 255-pound Fowler. “It was just respect to my dad. Being able to have the junior on the back of my jersey meant a lot.
“Everybody knew who my dad was and stuff like that when I was growing up so they just called me DJ or Junior. So I just put the junior on the back [of my jersey].”
Fowler wishes he had better memories of his first game with it added to his jersey. The Gators lost 17-6 to LSU that day in 2013.
“I had a big hit on Jeremy Hill but it was a rough game,” he said. “A hard-nose, downhill football game. We didn’t win but it was alright.”
“I do that to represent my kids,” Wilson Sr. said. “Both of my kids, their last names are after me. Tavon Wilson Jr. and I’m Senior. I do it to represent both my boys on the field.”
It’s a change Wilson made before the 2016 season, when he made the move from the Patriots to the Lions. A lot was shifting for Wilson at that point. After primarily playing special teams in New England, he’d have a chance to compete for a starting job — a role he eventually won — in Detroit.
This was a way to signify that, too. New name on the back. New player on the field.
“I kind of wanted a fresh start,” Wilson Sr. said. “And give my career new meaning. And I wanted to play for my boys.”
— Michael Rothstein
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It started with a question from George Johnson’s son. Dad, he asked, “Why didn’t you put Jr.” on your jersey. George Johnson III is 5 years old. He already plays football. And on his back is “Johnson III.” But his dad had just gone by Johnson throughout his NFL career.
But the precocious question from his child started him thinking. Then another person asked him if he didn’t do it because he had a bad relationship with his father. He doesn’t, so it became another reason to go for it.
So this year, for the first time in his career, George Johnson now has “Johnson Jr.” on the back of his jersey.
“It’s a legacy being passed along, to see your name continue to be moving and see your name in greater spotlight,” Johnson Jr. said. “Things like that. That’s the biggest reason why.”
After Johnson’s first game back in Detroit in Week 3, his son came up to him. And in the way only a child can, he pointed out that his father was doing something different.
“He didn’t mention it to me. Well, he kind of did,” Johnson Jr. said. “He said, ‘You’ve got something on after Johnson like I have on mine.'”
Consider that a legacy passed up and down.
— Michael Rothstein
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Tramaine Brock flew solo for the first seven years of his NFL career.
When his son, Tramaine Jr., was born on Sept. 29, 2015, everything in his world changed. Including his game day get-up.
This season, the nameplate on the back of cornerback’s jersey changed from “Brock” to “Brock Sr.” The elder Brock spent the preseason with the Seattle Seahawks, where he debuted his new digs before being traded to the Vikings right before cuts day. He’s the only player on Minnesota’s roster with a suffix on his jersey. It’s a gesture he made in honor of his child, whom he hopes to share his memories of the game with when the littlest Brock grows up.
“It’s just something for the future for me and my son,” Brock said. “He can look up to me when he gets older, seeing my jersey with ‘Sr.’ on it, knowing his father was doing what he maybe wants to do when he gets older.”
Bayern Munich announced Friday the club has hired former manager Jupp Heynckes to replace the recently sacked Carlo Ancelotti, with the 72-year-old taking over on an interim basis until the end of the season.
The Bavarian outfit fired Ancelotti after a 3-0 loss to Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League, after which Heynckes emerged as a leading candidate. He now returns to work on the touchline of the Allianz Arena, where he’ll be joined by assistants Peter Hermann and Hermann Gerland, both of whom took on roles elsewhere after Heynckes’ last stint at the club ended.
“There’s a great mutual trust between Jupp Heynckes and FC Bayern,” club CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge said in a statement. “That showed itself again in the conversations that Uli Hoeness, Hasan Salihamidzic, and I have had with him. We’re very thankful to Jupp that he’s accepted the offer of head coach. He’s the ideal man for FC Bayern at this moment in time.”
Salihamidzic added: “Jupp Heynckes is a master of people management and tactics. We’re convinced he’s exactly the right man to get the team back on track and achieve our aims.”
It’s the fourth time Heynckes has occupied the role of head coach at the Bavarian outfit, and his second stint as interim manager. He first took over at Bayern for the 1987-88 season, and departed in 1992, before returning to take over for the sacked Jurgen Klinsmann in the 2008-09 season.
He then replaced Louis van Gaal for the 2011-12 season, and stayed for the 2012-13 campaign, one that saw him guide Bayern to a clean sweep of titles in the Champions League, Bundesliga, DFB-Pokal, and DFL-Supercup. In total, Heynckes has three domestic titles with Bayern over eight seasons at the club.
Between 2011 and 2013, and over the course of 109 matches at the helm, Heynckes’ Bayern teams managed to recorded 83 victories, losing just 14 times and drawing 12 times. They combined to score 270 goals and conceded only 53, according to Squawka.
With those numbers and titles in mind, Heynckes had nothing left to prove to fans of Bayern, or to his peers, among whom he now stands as the eldest in Europe’s top five leagues. But in the end, he said Bayern is a special circumstance.
“I would not have returned to any other club in the world, but FC Bayern München is a labour of love for me.” pic.twitter.com/RF3hGAcrWa
TAMPA, Fla. — Here’s a storyline no one saw coming: The New England Patriots’ defense led the way in an ugly 19-14 victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Thursday night. That’s right, the defense.
Much maligned, and with good reason, the unit answered its critics on a penalty-flag-filled night that was anything but a good advertisement for quality NFL play.
The Patriots’ D might consider sending thank-you notes to inaccurate Buccaneers quarterback Jameis Winston (how many wide-open receivers can you miss?) and erratic kicker Nick Folk (it wouldn’t be a surprise if the pink slip was waiting for him in his locker after the game).
While Duron Harmon and the Patriots secondary benefited from an inaccurate Jameis Winston on Thursday, New England didn’t give up the big plays that had plagued it through four games. Roy K. Miller/Icon Sportswire
Nonetheless, they’ll take the win because the defense was markedly better than the way the Patriots had played in the first four weeks of the season. It is a performance from which they can build as they look ahead to their next game, Oct. 15 at the New York Jets.
Asked what the defense did better, coach Bill Belichick didn’t hesitate when he said, “Pretty much everything. You got a chance to win giving up 14 points. We couldn’t score much, but it was one of those games you got to do what you do to win.”
The big plays, which have been New England’s biggest problem, were limited (Winston helped, of course). Cornerback Stephon Gilmore, coming off a disastrous game in Week 4, matched up mostly against receiver Mike Evans and held him in check (five catches for 49 yards).
After the game, Gilmore said, “I think that’s when you get the best out of me, when I’m following a guy and studying that guy. ? I was out to prove something.”
With Gilmore on Evans, that meant fellow cornerback Malcolm Butler checked DeSean Jackson. The overall coverage was tighter. The communication was better. And there was more energy.
“You can build off this as a defense,” said safety Devin McCourty, one of the team’s captains. “You can’t build when you’re cutting guys loose, so today was obviously a step in the right way.”
Of Gilmore and Butler matching up against Evans and Jackson, McCourty said, “Those aren’t two easy guys to cover. I think that really helped settle the game plan down, knowing we have Steph on Evans and Malc on Jackson, and we know those two guys love that. They love to go out and compete, and be out there on islands one-on-one against guys. That helps the defense when we know those two guys are good.”
It was the turnaround the defense needed after it struggled against the Carolina Panthers on Sunday.
“You take adversity and it helps you bond as a team,” McCourty said. “We had to come together, we had to stick together through a rough Sunday and on a short week when we couldn’t practice hard and run around. We had to talk to each other, communicate through walk-throughs and trust each other. I thought that’s what helped us — depending on each other.”
Still, it was far from perfect overall, as evidenced by two bone-headed penalties for roughing the passer at the end of the second quarter that inexcusably gave the Buccaneers a chance at a 56-yard field goal. But Folk missed that one, and then was wide left on attempts of 49 and 31 yards in the fourth quarter.
The final miss bailed out the defense, which was tiring into the fourth quarter.