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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

As Ryan Fitzpatrick's contract voids, the Jets can reflect on a painful lesson

To say it’s the end of an era is a bit much, but it’s definitely the end of something.

Something that was wonderful for a year, but went horribly wrong after that.

Per the terms of his agreement with the New York Jets, Ryan Fitzpatrick’s contract automatically voids five days after the Super Bowl … and that means Friday. Fitzpatrick’s two-year run with the team is over and, as the quarterback acknowledged late in the season, there’s virtually no chance of him re-signing.

So what’s the major takeaway from Fitzpatrick’s time with the Jets? First and foremost, you’d like to think the team learned a hard lesson about negotiations and the importance of team-building in the offseason.

After a career season in 2015, Ryan Fitzpatrick never rediscovered that form in 2016 following a contract battle. William Hauser/USA TODAY Sports

The Jets weren’t wrong for wanting to re-sign Fitzpatrick, a free agent after the 2015 season. After all, he won 10 games in 2015 and set the franchise record with 31 touchdown passes in his first season with the team. No, their mistake was how they handled the negotiations.

Instead of drawing a line in the sand, giving him a take-it-or-leave-it offer, the Jets let it drag out through free agency … through the draft … through minicamp … all the way to the eve of training camp. It bordered on ridiculous because the Jets wanted him, he wanted them and there was no third-party threat — i.e., a team interested in Fitzpatrick or another quarterback that interested the Jets.

Fitzpatrick versus the Jets became a huge distraction, one of the biggest stories in the NFL. It swallowed up the team, causing unrest in the locker room. At one point, receivers Eric Decker and Brandon Marshall reportedly skipped a few voluntary workouts as a show of support for Fitzpatrick.

The offseason matters, even for an old pro like Fitzpatrick. It’s all about building chemistry in the locker room, in the weight room and on the field.

I remember something Bill Parcells said back in 1999. Vinny Testaverde was coming off after a brilliant year and was planning to spend the offseason at his home in Tampa, Florida, where he trained in a state-of-the-art fitness room on his property. Parcells demanded that he work out with the team, claiming it was important for the Jets’ leader to be among his teammates. The quarterback relented. As it turned out, Testaverde, the part-owner of an aviation company, used a private jet to commute twice a week to Long Island. But he participated with his teammates.

Fitzpatrick, unhappy with the Jets’ low-ball offer (three years, $24 million), stayed away. The Jets went through the entire offseason without their leader. They could’ve ended it in March by offering the same deal he wound up taking in July — one year, $12 million — but they let it turn into a battle of egos.

I think coach Todd Bowles, a big believer in team chemistry, underestimated the impact of not having Fitzpatrick around. (Full disclosure: I did, but I don’t get paid to run the team.) It also created an awkward dynamic. For five months, the Jets pretended Geno Smith was their starter, only to “demote” him the minute Fitzpatrick walked through the door on the eve of training camp. It was unfair to Smith.

The Jets let one player become bigger than the team. Do you think Parcells, or even Bill Belichick, would’ve allowed that to happen? No way. They would’ve told Fitzpatrick to take a hike in April, turning to Plan B. In this case, it might have been someone like Brian Hoyer.

Presumably, general manager Mike Maccagnan learned something from the drawn-out soap opera: Don’t let yourself be held hostage by a player.

Was the contract stalemate the reason for Fitzpatrick’s terrible season? It’s impossible to say, but it created a weird vibe around the team. When he started throwing interceptions, it put the team in a tough spot. A quick hook would’ve sent a mixed message, considering they held his spot for the entire offseason. As it turned out, he threw the Jets out of the season, with 17 interceptions in 11 starts.

Fitzpatrick finished with a 69.6 passer rating, 18 points below the NFL average. Based on that premise, it was the fourth-worst quarterback season in team history (post-merger). A diminished Joe Namath was 23.7 below the average in 1976; Kellen Clemens was 20 below in 2007; and Mark Sanchez was 18.2 below in 2009. Clemens and Sanchez had an excuse; they were first-time starters.

Fitzpatrick did a lot of good things. He galvanized the team in the aftermath of the Smith/IK Enemkpali fiasco; he energized the fan base in 2015 and provided more leadership than people outside the locker room can appreciate. But his legacy will be the contract dispute, which hurt him and his team.

NFL

Raiders reward Del Rio with new 4-year contract

ALAMEDA, Calif. — Jack Del Rio, who was hired by the Oakland Raiders as the 15th head coach in franchise history on Jan. 15, 2015, was rewarded with a new four-year contract on Friday.

Contract details were not made available, though team owner Mark Davis said in a release the Raiders had “torn up” Del Rio’s initial four-year deal.

“We are excited to continue building on the strong foundation that has been established,” Davis said in the release, “and this is a significant step in achieving that goal.”

Indeed, the season before Del Rio arrived, Oakland was 3-13 under Dennis Allen, who was fired after starting 0-4, and interim coach Tony Sparano. The Raiders improved to 7-9 in Del Rio’s first season and then broke through with a 12-4 regular-season record and the team’s first playoff appearance since 2002.

The Raiders were paced by NFL Defensive Player of the Year Khalil Mack and quarterback Derek Carr, who finished tied for third in NFL MVP voting even though he missed the regular-season finale — a loss at the Denver Broncos that cost Oakland the AFC West title — and the postseason defeat at the Houston Texans.

Del Rio, who grew up a Raiders fan in the shadow of the Oakland Coliseum in nearby Hayward, finished fourth in NFL Coach of the Year voting behind the Dallas Cowboys’ Jason Garrett, the New England Patriots’ Bill Belichick and the Miami Dolphins’ Adam Gase.

But with general manager Reggie McKenzie, Del Rio has hastened a culture change as he preached teaching the Raiders how to compete in 2015, and how to win in 2016.

After bringing back his entire staff in 2015, Del Rio allowed offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave to leave (he signed on with the Broncos to be their quarterbacks coach) in January and promoted Todd Downing from quarterbacks coach to offensive coordinator.

Defensive backs coach Marcus Robertson also was not retained (he went to Denver, too), and the Raiders hired former San Diego Chargers defensive coordinator John Pagano as assistant head coach/defense last month.

Jack Del Rio, in his second season at the helm, guided the Raiders to a 12-4 regular season record and the team’s first playoff appearance since 2002. Derick E. Hingle/USA TODAY Sports

Twice Del Rio took the Jacksonville Jaguars to the playoffs, most recently in 2007, and they have not been back since, winning no more than five games in any season since he was fired in 2011.

As the Broncos’ defensive coordinator, he helped set the stage for their Super Bowl run in 2015. But it is in Oakland, where he has pictures of the Raiders’ two Super Bowl-winning coaches in John Madden and Tom Flores hanging in his office for inspiration, where Del Rio has made an indelible mark.

The do-or-die two-point conversion attempt that proved successful in this past season opener at the New Orleans Saints set the stage for the Raiders, who had not experienced a winning season since 2002.

“Well, I agree with them,” Del Rio said with a laugh in November when asked about the perception he had changed the culture in Oakland. “That’s one of the things that we did. But it’s not me alone — it’s us, it’s what we have done. It’s what all the people in this building, everybody plays a part, you know? That’s what I believe in. It’s an inclusive kind of deal.

“I provided a vision, I provided that. But beyond that … we’re all in it. And I mean that sincerely. We’re all in it. We’re all in it and we all play a small part of it and together, collectively, we can do special things.”

Del Rio is seen as a player’s coach, having spent 11 seasons in the NFL as a linebacker with a Pro Bowl appearance on his resume.

“You could tell he was a heck of a ballplayer,” Mack said late in the season. “He played at a very high level, so he knows what it takes and he knows the attitude and he can see and feel the different things from his players. He just has a total awareness.”

Madden told the San Jose Mercury-News in November “the team just needed a man; they needed an adult running them.

“They [tried] the young guys, the new guys, the inexperienced guys, and that didn’t work. When Jack Del Rio walks into a room, a man just walked in the room.”

Carr said he and Mack, who were both drafted a year before Del Rio arrived in Oakland, instantly connected with the coach.

“When he showed up, it was like, ‘Man, this is awesome, because this is exactly the things we’ve been talking about,'” Carr said at the time of the pledge he and Mack made as rookies.

“Our whole class, we just wanted to go out and show people how to work and how to compete. We didn’t care how old we were … we didn’t care about any of that. We cared about winning and one day winning here.

“That was really important to us, and when coach Del Rio showed up, man, that spark kind of lit the fire.”

One the Raiders hope burns bright for at least the next four years.

NFL

NFL prospect Garrett makes playful plea to Dallas

Myles Garrett was in a “playful mood” two months ago when he made a plea to play for the Dallas Cowboys.

The ESPN video, released Friday, was taken during a relaxed interview session at the College Football Awards show Dec. 8.

Garrett attended the show at the College Football Hall of Fame in Atlanta and spoke to an ESPN social media producer, who asked whether there was a specific team he might want to join in the NFL. His answer was “100 percent supposed to be fun,” the producer said.

Garrett, a Texas A&M defensive end who hadn’t officially declared for the NFL draft at that time, addressed Jerry Jones, owner of his hometown Cowboys, and Dallas coach Jason Garrett.

“All right, I’m speaking to you, Jerry,” Myles Garrett said. “Mr. Garrett, make it happen. Dak Prescott is leading our team right now. I need you to take Tony Romo, take a couple picks, give them to Cleveland so you can pick me up. Please. I would love to play in Dallas. Just make it happen.”

  • Former Texas A&M defensive end Myles Garrett, one of the top prospects available in the 2017 NFL draft, says he won’t attend the April event in Philadelphia.

The social media producer said Myles Garrett’s comments were in the spirit of an upbeat event. All players in attendance went through a series of interviews before the event.

“He was definitely having fun and was in a playful mood,” the producer said. “One of the questions right before that was about his interest in dinosaurs. That’s what we do. We get fun little nuggets.

“It was 100 percent supposed to be fun. He was just having fun. He knew I worked for ESPN and that I was videoing him.”

In a separate video for KRIV-TV in Houston that was posted on Twitter on Thursday, Garrett said he would “definitely” like to play for the Browns.

“People might say, oh they’re this, they’re that, or I made a comment about cold weather and they kind of pointed toward Cleveland,” Garrett said. “It doesn’t matter to me. I’ll play wherever they put me. It’s about your mindset you go into it [with]. If you go in there with a mindset that you’re going to turn things around, you can make that contagious and people start to believe in it, then you can turn it into a winning program wherever you go.”

Garrett grew up in Arlington, where the Cowboys play. He is projected to be one of the top two or three picks in this draft, perhaps the first overall. The Browns have the first pick and need a quarterback, but it would be highly unlikely that a rebuilding Browns team would trade for Romo, who is 36.

It’s even more unlikely that the Browns would alter their draft plans based on a video like this one — especially given when it was taped.

Garrett attended the banquet because he was one of three nominees for the Chuck Bednarik Award, given to the defensive player of the year in college football. Defensive lineman Jonathan Allen of Alabama won the award.

NFL

McVay: LT Robinson still 'big part' of Rams' plans

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — Greg Robinson, the former No. 2 overall pick who has struggled at left tackle throughout his three-year career, remains “a big part” of the Los Angeles Rams’ plans moving forward, new coach Sean McVay said Friday.

McVay did not specify whether Robinson would remain at left tackle, but he did praise his talent.

“When you see some of the things he’s able to do, you see the athleticism in space when he’s pulling around and using some of those perimeter schemes that they did offensively last year,” McVay said during a news conference from the team facility, which followed a meet-and-greet with his new assistant coaches. “He’s a guy that we’re excited to get around. That’s why it’s frustrating that we have to wait so long to get these guys in the building, see them on the grass.”

Rams left tackle Greg Robinson, the No. 2 overall pick in the 2014 draft, leads the NFL with 31 total penalties over the past two years. G. Newman Lowrance/AP Photo

Robinson has committed an NFL-leading 31 total penalties over the past two years. In 2016, Pro Football Focus graded him 71st among 78 qualified tackles. He was benched on two separate occasions this past season, when the entire offensive line struggled to protect rookie quarterback Jared Goff and create space for running back Todd Gurley.

There was some thought the Rams might simply part ways with Robinson, who will cost about $6.8 million toward the salary cap in 2017, but it appears the new staff is not ready to do that.

New offensive line coach Aaron Kromer, who spent the past two years with the Buffalo Bills, said Robinson has shown “flashes of skills” to remain an NFL left tackle.

“Now, why it’s not consistent, I can’t answer that; I don’t know,” Kromer said. “When I can work with a player and get my hands on him and be outside and ask him to do something and ask him to do it again and ask him to adjust something, then I know what we can do with him, how we can fit him in the offense. But until then, on tape — I don’t know what he was told. I kind of know what he was supposed to do, but I don’t know what his mindset was. I don’t know it with any of them. So, I’m just looking for individual skills, like a scout.”

At 6-foot-5, 332 pounds, Robinson is surprisingly athletic and has the skills to play left tackle, something that was obvious when he came out of Auburn in 2014 but just hasn’t clicked yet in the NFL.

The Rams’ previous offensive line coach, Paul Boudreau, spoke during the season about Robinson’s inconsistent mechanics.

“He’s all over the place with his feet, he’s all over the place with his hands,” Boudreau said. “And when he gets in trouble, when he stops his feet, he grabs, and he gets those holding penalties that you really don’t need. So, he’s got to concentrate on focusing on the little things.”

The Rams could try moving Robinson to guard, where he can more freely utilize his power. But the best pending free agents are guards, a list that includes Kevin Zeitler, T.J. Lang and Larry Warford. Andrew Whitworth, a 35-year-old former second-round pick by the Cincinnati Bengals, is one of few notable left tackles eligible for free agency.

An in-house option at the position, besides Robinson, could be Rodger Saffold, who was perhaps the Rams’ best offensive lineman last year.

Asked about transitioning to guard shortly after the Rams concluded a 4-12 season, Robinson said: “It’s not really something that I’m just going to accept, because I’m so used to playing tackle. It would be hard to adjust. But if I have to adjust, that will be something that I will do.”

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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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