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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

Top 10 stats on Patriots, Falcons heading into Super Bowl LI

In advance of Super Bowl LI, we take a look at the top 10 stats to know for the New England Patriots and Atlanta Falcons, and a few bonus stats involving both teams:

Patriots

1. The Patriots will be playing in their ninth Super Bowl, which will break a tie with the Broncos, Cowboys and Steelers for the most appearances.

2. If they were to lose, the Patriots (4-4) would tie the Broncos (3-5) for the most Super Bowl losses. If they win, they’d tie the Cowboys (5-3) and 49ers (5-1) for the second-most wins behind the Steelers (6-2).

3. Tom Brady is the all-time leader in Super Bowl completions (164), passing yards (1,605) and passing TDs (13). (More details on Brady’s accomplishments here.)

4. The Patriots have won all four meetings against the Falcons since Brady became the New England starting quarterback in 2001. The Falcons are one of seven teams Brady has not lost to as a starter.

5. At 39 years and 186 days on Feb. 5, Brady will be the second-oldest quarterback to start a Super Bowl, trailing only Peyton Manning last season. Brady could become the oldest Super Bowl MVP, and he could become the first four-time winner of the award.

6. Super Bowl LI will be Bill Belichick’s 36th postseason game, tying him with Tom Landry for the most among head coaches.

7. Belichick was the third-oldest coach to win a Super Bowl two years ago. If he wins again Sunday, he’ll be the second-oldest, behind only Tom Coughlin.

8. The Patriots led the NFL in scoring defense this season (15.6 PPG) for just the second time in franchise history. The other was in 2003, when they also won a Super Bowl played in Houston.

ESPN Stats & Information

9. The Patriots have not scored in the first quarter in any of their previous six Super Bowls during the Brady/Belichick era. The Patriots scored 130 points in the first quarter during the regular season, second only to the Falcons (139).

10. Dion Lewis has played 16 games in two seasons with the Patriots (including postseason), and New England has won them all.

Falcons

1. With the Falcons’ appearance, the NFC South has now sent all four teams to the Super Bowl, the only division to do so since division realignment in 2002.

2. The Falcons led the NFL in scoring for the first time in franchise history this season, scoring the eighth-most points in NFL history (540). No team to score that many points won the Super Bowl, however.

3. Atlanta ranked 27th in defensive scoring this season, allowing 25.4 points per game. That’s second-most ever by a team to reach the Super Bowl.

4. The Falcons have won their past six games, averaging 39.0 points per game in those contests. They have one giveaway and 13 takeaways in their past six games.

5. Atlanta scored a touchdown on its opening drive in eight straight games. No team in the last 15 seasons has had a streak longer than five straight games

6. By the time Super Bowl LI is played, Matt Ryan will have gone two full months without an interception. Ryan’s last interception came on Dec. 4 against the Chiefs. He’s thrown 212 passes since his last interception.

7. Ryan has thrown seven passing TDs and zero interceptions this postseason. Six quarterbacks threw more TDs with no picks in a single postseason, and all won the Super Bowl.

ESPN Stats & Information

8. The Patriots are one of two teams Ryan has never beaten (the other is the Steelers). Ryan is 0-2 in his career against the Patriots, with the last meeting occurring in Week 4 of 2013 (lost 30-23)

9. Ryan has thrown at least three passing touchdowns in four consecutive playoff games, the longest streak in NFL history.

10. Julio Jones is averaging 110 receiving yards per game in five career postseason games, the highest average since the merger among players who have appeared in more than two playoff games.

Bonus stats

1. This will be the sixth Super Bowl since the 1970 merger where the top-scoring offense (Falcons) meets the top-scoring defense (Patriots) from the regular season. The top-scoring defense has won four of the five previous meetings.

2. The Patriots and Falcons turned the ball over 11 times apiece during the regular season, tied for the fewest in the NFL. This will be just the second Super Bowl matching the two stingiest teams in terms of giveaways. The first was Super Bowl XVI when the 49ers defeated the Bengals.

3. With the over/under currently at 59 (Westgate), this would be the highest total in pro football championship history.

NFL

'Hurt' Ryan: Bills told me to get out, 'so I did'

Former Buffalo Bills coach Rex Ryan has no interest in becoming a defensive coordinator and plans on spending at least the upcoming season as a television analyst, he told the New York Daily News this week.

“The one thing about [being on TV] is that you don’t lose,” Ryan told the newspaper in his first interview since being fired Dec. 27 by the Bills. “You’ll remember every damn loss. But the wins? You don’t necessarily remember. So, it takes a lot out of you. I’m tired of getting f—ed. Unless it’s a real situation [as a coach], there’s no sense of getting into it again.”

ESPN announced Monday that Ryan will join Sunday NFL Countdown this week to help break down Super Bowl LI. Sports Business Daily reported CBS, Fox and NFL Network have also reached out to Ryan to serve as an analyst following his firing in December. The Daily News reported Ryan has yet to choose which job will suit him best.

Ryan has three years remaining on the five-year, $27.5 million contract that he was given by the Bills in 2015.

“I’m really not that bitter [about being fired] and maybe that $15 million [remaining on the deal] is one of the reasons,” Ryan told the Daily News. “I’m not bitter, man. … Yeah, I’m hurt. I was hurt by it. There’s no question. But bitter ain’t how I feel. I’m like, ‘Shoot, if they never wanted me here, then fine. I ain’t here. I’m not your coach anymore. Fine and dandy.'”

Rex Ryan said he isn’t bitter about being fired by the Bills, but admits that he was hurt by the dismissal. “They told me, ‘Get out,’: Ryan said. “So I did.” Brett Carlsen/Getty Images

Bills owner Terry Pegula told the Associated Press earlier this month that he fired Ryan after the coach pressed ownership about his future prior to the regular-season finale.

“It wasn’t up to me to leave,” Ryan said. “That’s not the case. They told me, ‘Get out.’ So I did.”

Ryan, who went 15-16 in almost two seasons in Buffalo, stripped his pickup truck of its red-and-blue theme and replaced the Bills’ logo with Clemson decals.

“I stripped that damn truck the day I got fired,” Ryan told the newspaper. “F— you guys.

“I set the expectations too high. Like, boy, that’s a shock. In a way, I felt, why not us? I stepped in where the head coach [Doug Marrone] had quit [following the 2014 season], the defensive coordinator [Jim Schwartz] had quit and the quarterback [Kyle Orton] quit on them. So, I thought that it was important at the time to say, ‘You know what? Shoot, I believe in you. And I’m proud to be the coach here.’ Every bit of that was true. I put that truck around town. I was all-in. Even though those other three had quit, I wasn’t a quitter. I was ready. And I wanted to be there. and I wanted to win. And I thought I could win.”

Ryan cited injuries to star receiver Sammy Watkins as well as top 2016 draft picks Shaq Lawson and Reggie Ragland as reasons why he was not “real lucky” in Buffalo.

“At the end of the day,” Ryan said, “I’m responsible for the product on the field.

“I don’t wish them bad will. I don’t. But I don’t wish them luck, either. I’ll be honest: I don’t wish them good luck. I don’t wish them bad luck. I just don’t wish them luck. I wish the Jets luck.”

NFL

Court docs: Falcons wary of painkiller use in '10

A string of emails that began in 2010 with the Atlanta Falcons’ head trainer and reached all the way to owner Arthur Blank showed a franchise worried about its “excessive” reliance on painkillers to treat players and the potential embarrassment that could cause the team and the NFL.

One topic raised in the email chain concerned a review by an outside agency that found that the team spent $81,000 on medication prescriptions for players in 2009 — nearly three times the league average.

Almost every recipient on the email chain — including Blank, president Rich McKay, general manager Thomas Dimitroff and then-head athletic trainer Marty Lauzon — is still with the team, which plays the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LI on Sunday.

“That’s being litigated now. That’s not something we’re going discuss right now,” Dimitroff said Monday night when asked about the emails. “When the time is right, we’ll readdress that.”

The emails were entered into court record Thursday as part of a proposed class-action lawsuit by more than 1,800 former NFL players who claim they were encouraged by the medical and training staffs of NFL teams to abuse painkillers and continue playing without regard for their long-term health.

The case is being heard in the Northern District of California by U.S. District Court Judge William Alsup. The same allegations were originally filed in a 2014 class-action lawsuit that is currently before the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

The email chain was presented to the court as an example of thousands of similar documents gathered during discovery that the ex-players’ lawyers want entered into the record. It was coincidental that the Falcons chain was released before the Super Bowl.

Lauzon was not with the team at the time of the critical review. He became the Falcons’ head trainer in January 2010 and currently serves as the team’s director of sports medicine and performance.

He first wrote to Dimitroff in May 2010 to note the conclusions contained in the review by SportPharm, an outside agency brought in by the NFL to look at how teams purchased, dispensed and tracked medications, including powerful painkillers and prescription drugs. Among the problems Lauzon highlighted from SportPharm’s review was the Falcons’ “excessive dispensation” of narcotics and other medications, which risked creating a “culture of dependency.”

“Within the first days on the job, I was informed that we barely missed a DEA [Drug Enforcement Agency] investigation because of improper billing issues,” Lauzon told Dimitroff.

A central contention of the painkiller lawsuit is that teams did not properly keep records about prescriptions and which players were getting drugs.

Falcons owner Arthur Blank was on an email chain evaluating Atlanta’s use of painkillers for players, according to documents entered into the court record Thursday. Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

Dimitroff forwarded the email to the owner just hours later.

“I thought it quite important for you to be aware of a rather sensitive subject and one we need to discuss before we include others on this topic matter,” Dimitroff wrote to Blank.

“Agree — we should talk about this together with Rich [McKay],” Blank replied.

It’s not clear which practices changed as part of the discussion, and there is no evidence the Falcons violated league rules. What’s clear is that Lauzon was warning team executives that practices uncovered during the review could embarrass the team and raise compliance issues with the NFL.

Lauzon’s first email to Dimitroff also copied in Jeff Fish, who was Atlanta’s strength coach at the time and was released by the club in January 2013. The trainer expressed concerns that “players at the end of their careers going through medical issues” would seek media attention and “say they abused or are now addicted” to drugs as a result of the club’s practices.

Dimitroff subsequently forwarded the emails to McKay, who remains team president and also serves as chairman of the NFL Competition Committee, making him one of the more influential executives in the league.

McKay reached out the next day to Dr. Elliot Pellman, a rheumatologist who controversially led the NFL’s committee on brain injury at the time and later became a league medical adviser.

He asked Pellman whether Mary-Ann Fleming, who was then the director of player benefits in the league office, had recommended the Falcons replace their doctors in the wake of the same critical review and if she was aware who actually administered the club’s day-to-day medical regimen.

“I need to know — is this really true and does she realize the on-site trainer is really in control???” McKay wrote, then added, “I need to keep this confidential …”

Lauzon noted that Fleming had seen the SportPharm review and recommended the Falcons “start clean on all levels” — a new team doctor, head trainer and even a new pharmacy account number.

The proposed class-action lawsuit alleges that NFL trainers distributed drugs improperly and that teams failed to properly store and keep accurate records of the drugs, violating federal laws.

NFL

Reporter accidentally takes Shanahan's playbook

HOUSTON — Not much has gone wrong lately for Kyle Shanahan. But after his Super Bowl media night session wound up Monday, the Atlanta Falcons offensive coordinator and presumptive San Francisco 49ers head coach had reason to be worried.

  • Kyle Shanahan’s future may be in San Francisco, but his sole focus right now is preparing the Falcons for the Patriots.

“I’m stressed out right now,” Shanahan said. “Somebody took my bag, and it had everything in it.”

Shanahan’s backpack, which contained a copy of the Falcons’ Super Bowl playbook, Super Bowl tickets and other personal effects, had gone missing at some point during his 45-minute session with reporters in the stands at Minute Maid Park.

Shanahan spent about 15 minutes looking for the backpack after the Falcons’ media session ended and before the New England Patriots’ session began.

Fortunately for the Falcons, the mystery was solved quickly by USA Today writer and ESPN contributor Jarrett Bell, who discovered that San Francisco Examiner columnist Art Spander had mistakenly picked up Shanahan’s bag instead of his own.

The bag was returned to Shanahan with all of the contents still inside.

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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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