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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

It wasn't a fluke: Giants' offense wasn't ready for 2017

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — As he marched onto the MetLife Stadium field Monday night, Tom Coughlin did not come across like a man one day removed from losing a football game by three touchdowns. The overlord of the Jacksonville Jaguars had two good reasons to project the radiant, puffed-chest vibe of someone who had just won the Super Bowl:

1. He would hold the Lombardi Trophy in his hands during a halftime ceremony honoring the 10-year anniversary of his New York Giants’ epic victory over the 18-0 New England Patriots.

2. He would watch live as the former assistant who replaced him, Ben McAdoo, coached like a hopeless rookie at the start of his sophomore year.

  • The Giants were held to fewer than 20 points for the eighth consecutive game and seemed to struggle to make even the simplest plays.

  • Giants coach Ben McAdoo, asked what happened during a key fourth-and-goal play at the Lions’ 2-yard line in which New York took a delay of game penalty and had to kick a field goal, called it simply “sloppy quarterback play.”

1 Related

Coughlin isn’t enthusiastically rooting for McAdoo to lose the way the New York Giants coach lost the home opener to the Detroit Lions by a 24-10 count. But people who know the 71-year-old Jaguars executive say he was more devastated than he publicly let on when he was forced out after the 2015 season. Coughlin is human, and it’s perfectly human for a two-time Super Bowl champ separated from a job he adored to hope his successor reminds everyone why he was so valuable in the first place.

On that front, McAdoo is making Coughlin more popular with New Yorkers now than he was during his final four playoff-free seasons.

“Put this game on me,” the Giants coach told his players in the locker room.

“Put this game on me,” the Giants coach told the reporters in the interview room.

Actually, we’ll do McAdoo one better. We’ll put the entire 0-2 start on him, even though the hobbled Odell Beckham Jr. couldn’t go against the Dallas Cowboys in Week 1 and couldn’t rise even halfway to his otherworldly standards against the Lions on Monday night. The Giants have scored 13 points in eight quarters of play; they haven’t scored fewer points in their first two games since they managed seven points in the first two games of 1947, when you could buy a gallon of gas for 15 cents.

So far, McAdoo’s offense is worth less than that in 2017.

The coach asked for the blame Monday night, but then he placed full culpability for the fourth-and-goal, delay-of-game flag squarely on Eli Manning’s shoulder pads.

“Sloppy quarterback play,” McAdoo said of the penalty that turned a touchdown attempt into a field goal. Although Manning later admitted that the quarterback is always at fault on delay-of-game calls, McAdoo didn’t need to fire that spiral into the back of a two-time Super Bowl MVP who is usually among the league leaders in all accountability metrics.

Bottom line: McAdoo did not have his team ready to start the season. Cast as credible contenders, the Giants were outclassed by the Cowboys on the road last week and by the Lions at home on Monday. They have the same record as their tanking co-tenants, the New York Jets, and they’re the only team in the NFC East that isn’t 1-1.

“We talk about playing complete, complementary football,” McAdoo said. “By no stretch of the imagination did we get that done tonight.”

Giants head coach Ben McAdoo reacts after failing to convert a fourth down against the Lions during the fourth quarter of Monday night’s loss. Brad Penner/USA TODAY Sports

The Giants were an undisciplined, inefficient mess. They recovered a Matthew Stafford fumble in the second quarter and on the very next play handed the ball back to Detroit on a Manning interception. Brandon Marshall dropped a perfectly thrown deep ball down the sideline that helped kill a fourth-quarter possession, and two plays later, the Lions’ Jamal Agnew was taking a punt back 88 yards for a score.

Left tackle Ereck Flowers was regularly steamrollered by Ezekiel Ansah, who was responsible for three of Detroit’s five sacks. The Giants’ running backs managed a grand total of 62 yards after opening with 35 against Dallas, leaving them one fullback dive short of 100 for the year. Fans booed McAdoo’s decision to run the ball on third-and-13 on the Giants’ opening series and booed again throughout the night. The one time the coach and the crowd were in agreement — on McAdoo’s choice to go for it on fourth down at the 2 — Manning’s apparent preoccupation with a potential blitz pickup rained on the parade as the play clock bled to zero.

“I’ve got to call a timeout or get it snapped,” the quarterback said.

At 36 years old and trying to get by without a healthy Beckham, a productive running game and a functioning line, Manning has looked like a shadow of his former self. But until he plays a full season at this level, Manning has earned the benefit of the doubt. He did once win a championship after an 0-2 start, with the same 2007 Giants who were honored at halftime.

“The defense is playing tough,” Manning said. “The offense has got to do our part. We’ve got to make the plays, and we’ve got to handle our part of the equation to fix this.”

When asked earlier how the offense can be fixed, Manning said, “We’ve just got to figure out what’s our best personnel, what’s our best style, how we’re going to be able to move the ball.”

That sounds like McAdoo’s job, and nobody knows if he’s capable of doing it. He was never a head coach on any level — high school included — before taking over the Giants. Upon arriving in New York as offensive coordinator in 2014, McAdoo’s claim to fame was serving as Aaron Rodgers’ quarterbacks coach in Green Bay. Of course, being Aaron Rodgers’ quarterbacks coach would’ve been a little like being Luciano Pavarotti’s vocals coach. There are only so many ways to screw that up.

Right now, McAdoo is running a McAdon’t offense that is almost impossible to watch. The Giants have failed to score 20 points in eight consecutive games. They’ve failed to score 30 points in any game with McAdoo as head coach.

“The whole offense needs work,” he conceded. “We’re not in rhythm right now. … We have to analyze everything we’re doing. I mean, we can’t pull points out of a hat.”

McAdoo said he will consider personnel changes. Asked if he will consider surrendering his playcalling responsibilities, McAdoo said, “We’ll consider everything. Yep.”

His time for considering is up. McAdoo needs to come out from behind his ever-conspicuous chart, hand over the playcalling to offensive coordinator Mike Sullivan and focus on the big-picture issues weighing down his team. He needs to be less of a system operator and much more of a motivator and manager.

He has already compromised this year’s long-term goals of a deep playoff run and of perhaps winning a title for the first time since Coughlin won his second after the 2011 season. The Giants face three of their next four games on the road against Philadelphia, Tampa Bay and Denver. If McAdoo doesn’t grab hold of his team sooner rather than later, he won’t have to bother asking people to assign him the blame.

Soccer

'No Dutch fans will be welcome' for match between Napoli, Feyenoord

Feyenoord Rotterdam’s fans won’t be crossing Europe.

On Monday, Feyenoord received a copy of a document issued to SSC Napoli by the Prefetto della Provincia di Napoli, confirming “no Dutch fans will be welcome in Stadio San Paolo” for the Champions League game between the two clubs on Sept. 26.

“It is much to Feyenoord’s regret that coach Giovanni van Bronckhorst’s side will not benefit from the support of the club’s fans in the second Champions League Group F match,” Feyenoord said. “In response to the decision of the Italian authorities, the club has decided not to organise a trip for the Feyenoord Business Club. The squad will be accompanied by no more than a small group of officials.”

In 2015, before a Europa League match between Feyenoord and AS Roma in Rome, 23 of the Dutch club’s supporters – 6,500 of whom were thought to have descended upon Italy’s capital – were arrested, and 19 were charged. Drunk fans caused damage to buildings and hurled bottles at riot police. The return leg in the Netherlands was then overshadowed by crowd trouble and included an apparent incident of racism, as the game was suspended when an inflatable banana was thrown on the pitch.

NFL

Marshawn Lynch, Michael Crabtree key Raiders' laugher over Jets

OAKLAND — Marshawn Lynch got hyphy on the sideline, the Oakland native dancing and celebrating his homecoming and a big Raiders lead with more than 12 minutes to play Sunday. It only got better from there for the Raiders in a 45-20 victory over their old AFL rivals, the New York Jets, with Lynch scoring his first touchdown since 2015 and receiver Michael Crabtree tying a career best with three TD catches.

What it means: The Raiders are 2-0 for the first time since 2002, when they started out 4-0 en route to a Super Bowl appearance. They also served notice to the rest of the NFL that they are, indeed, a force to be reckoned with this season. Because, sure, Oakland was a two-touchdown favorite over the woebegone Jets, but the Raiders again excelled in all three phases of the game — Lynch, Crabtree, the offensive line and quarterback Derek Carr doing their thing, the defense stifling the Jets and gunner Johnny Holton forcing and recovering a muffed punt when the Raiders needed a spark.

What I liked: The Raiders brought the heat to Jets quarterback Josh McCown, sacking him four times. Mario Edwards Jr. had 1.5 sacks, giving him two in two games, and reigning NFL Defensive Player of the Year Khalil Mack had a devastating “full eclipse” sack in the third quarter, the All-Pro edge rusher seemingly stripping the ball from the Jets quarterback mid-sack. Alas, McCown was ruled down. The Raiders, who had a league-low 25 sacks last season without a single sack coming from a defensive back, also blitzed strong safety Karl Joseph, who recovered a fumble he caused. Denico Autry shared a sack with Edwards.

What I didn’t like: The preponderance of flags thrown at the Raiders, who had four personal fouls in the first half alone and finished with nine penalties for 79 yards. Bruce Irvin’s slam tackle of Matt Forte jump-started the Jets after the Raiders jumped to a 14-0 lead, and New York closed to within 14-10 shortly thereafter. The Raiders led the NFL in flags (181), penalties accepted against (155) and penalty yardage (1,310) last season. Still, they had only five penalties in the season opener last week at Tennessee.


• Statistics
• Scoreboard
• 2017 schedule, results
• Standings

Fantasy fallout: If you started Crabtree as a receiver, you are grinning larger than maybe even he was after each of his three TD catches, from 2, 26 and 1 yards. It was the second time in his career he caught three touchdowns passes in a game; he also had three against the Baltimore Ravens on Oct. 2 last year.

Gareon Conley’s debut: The Raiders’ first-round pick did not start; he entered the game in Oakland’s nickel defense as the right outside cornerback as starter TJ Carrie slid inside. Conley showed some volleyball skills in breaking up a long ball down the left sideline, timing his leap perfectly and essentially spiking the ball toward an oncoming Reggie Nelson, but hit it too hard.

What’s next: The Raiders travel across the country for a Sunday night prime-time game at Washington. Oakland leads the all-time series 7-5, though Washington has won the past two meetings, both in Oakland. The Raiders won 16-13 at Washington in 2005, Norv Turner’s final win as Raiders coach.

Soccer

3 takeaways from Wednesday's Champions League action

Jason Cairnduff / Reuters

The good, the good, and the ugly.

Three Premier League clubs took the pitch as part of Wednesday’s Champions League agenda, and, while two of them manufactured strong performances, it was the same old story for the other.

Liverpool rues missed chances once again

Liverpool entered the interval with a 2-1 lead over Sevilla, but, as if something was in the air at Anfield, it just felt like one of those games where the Reds would succumb to an equaliser and regret squandering first-half opportunities.

Sure enough, Sevilla found an equaliser out of nothing. After nobody bothered to challenge Luis Muriel in the 72nd minute, the Colombian forward flicked the ball towards Joaquin Correa, who, unmarked, slotted it past Simon Mignolet. It was deja vu for Reds supporters, whose minds instantly hit rewind in order to reminisce over Roberto Firmino’s failure to convert a penalty kick.

But it would unfair to single out Firmino’s miss. Liverpool was lively in attack throughout the majority of the game and outshot Sevilla 11-2 in shots off target and 7-3 in shots on target. When your defence is about as stable as four drunk giraffes standing atop of one another, you can’t afford to be wasteful.

1 – Roberto Firmino is the 1st Liverpool player to miss a penalty in the Champions League since Steven Gerrard v Marseille (Dec 2007). Post.

— OptaJoe (@OptaJoe) September 13, 2017

Just like the first matchday of the Premier League, when Liverpool conceded a 93rd-minute equaliser at Watford, a combination of missed chances and awful defending cost the Reds two points. This time, however, it happened on home soil.

Manchester City can absolutely dream of European success

Don’t listen to Pep Guardiola. Before Manchester City’s invasion of Feyenoord Rotterdam, the Catalan manager said: “I don’t know now if we’re able to compete for the titles because we’re in the process of growing. We are not dreaming.” Perhaps he was being humble. Perhaps he was setting himself up for the possibility of failure. Either way, the Citizens can dream of conquering Europe.

City was nothing short of excellent at Feyenoord. The Citizens, who reportedly spent £220.5 million during the summer transfer window, showed what money can buy with a 4-0 victory. They required all of two minutes to open the scoring, as John Stones tallied his first of two goals, and, by the final whistle, they had equalled their biggest-ever win in the Champions League.

4 – Feyenoord’s 0-4 v Manchester City is their heaviest home defeat in all European competitions. Powerless.

— OptaJohan (@OptaJohan) September 13, 2017

The result will also do wonders for City’s confidence on the road. The Citizens had won none of their last six away games in the Champions League, allowing 14 goals in the process.

City will inevitably come across tougher obstacles, but, until that happens, its supporters can set the bar as high as they want.

Tottenham should feel good about playing at Wembley Stadium

Entering Tottenham Hotspur’s match versus Borussia Dortmund, Spurs had yet to tally three points at Wembley Stadium, falling to Chelsea and earning a draw against Burnley after a season in which they struggled to adjust to playing at the iconic ground. But any suggestions of a prolonged curse can be confined to the Premier League.

Tottenham was worth three points in its 3-1 triumph over Dortmund. Although Der BVB outplayed Spurs at certain times in the first half, the English club was ultimately the better team at Wembley and even had luck going in its favour, as the visitor had two goals disallowed – one by Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and another by Christian Pulisic.

Aubameyang has a perfectly good goal disallowed. Wembley is clearly Tottenham’s lucky ground.

— Gary Lineker (@GaryLineker) September 13, 2017

Harry Kane was as efficient as ever, scoring two goals with his left foot. In a group that also boasts Real Madrid, the English striker will be relied upon for advancing to the knockout phase.

(Photos courtesy: Action Images)

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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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