Tag Archives: sack

Calls to sack Braverman grow amid furore over pro-Palestine rallies remarks – Al Jazeera English

  1. Calls to sack Braverman grow amid furore over pro-Palestine rallies remarks Al Jazeera English
  2. U.K. Home Secretary’s Article in Times of London Stirs Political Storm The New York Times
  3. Sadiq Khan “astonished” at Suella Braverman’s clash with Metropolitan Police The Times and The Sunday Times
  4. The real reason Sunak and Braverman have criticised Mark Rowley? To boost their profiles | Simon Jenkins The Guardian
  5. The Guardian view on Suella Braverman: a home secretary who craves disorder The Guardian
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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After attending spring game Ohio State legacy sack machine says he will return for an OV – 247Sports

  1. After attending spring game Ohio State legacy sack machine says he will return for an OV 247Sports
  2. Throw-by-Throw Breakdown of Kyle McCord’s Performance in Ohio State’s 2023 Spring Game | Eleven Warriors Eleven Warriors
  3. Does Ohio State Have A Bad Offensive Line Or A Good Defensive Line? Sports Illustrated
  4. A healthy Denzel Burke could finally mean the return of ‘B.I.A.’ for Ohio State football: Stephen Means’ Obse cleveland.com
  5. Following up on Crystal Ball pick for Ohio State spring game visitor 247Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Bayern Munich sack Nagelsmann, to bring in Tuchel – sources – ESPN

  1. Bayern Munich sack Nagelsmann, to bring in Tuchel – sources ESPN
  2. Bayern Munich shakeup! This is a major blow to their management – Fjortoft | ESPN FC ESPN UK
  3. Breaking: Bayern Munich sack Julian Nagelsmann with immediate effect (Update #3: Nagelsmann found out through… Bavarian Football Works
  4. Thomas Tuchel will be Bayern Munich’s next manager and will look to repeat amazing Chelsea feat Goal.com
  5. Bayern Munich to hire Thomas Tuchel to replace fired manager Julian Nagelsmann; will face Dortmund in debut CBS Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Everton sack Frank Lampard – The Athletic

Frank Lampard has been sacked by Everton following their 2-0 loss at West Ham United.

Everton’s ownership made the decision to dispense with Lampard’s services on Monday.

Lampard’s side were beaten 2-1 by 20th-placed Southampton last weekend and their latest defeat prompted the board to act, with Everton only off the bottom of the table on goal difference.

The Merseyside club have only recorded three victories in 20 Premier League matches this season, with the last of those coming against Crystal Palace on October 22. No side has won fewer games so far in the division.

Before the Southampton match, Everton owner Farhad Moshiri had given his backing to Lampard, but after the West Ham loss, claimed sacking him was “not his decision”.

But defeat against West Ham, a fellow struggler this season, was one loss too many for Lampard.

Premier League relegation battle

Pos Team GP W D L GD Pts

13

20

5

6

9

-19

21

14

20

5

3

12

-7

18

15

19

4

6

9

-7

18

16

20

5

3

12

-8

18

17

20

4

5

11

-18

17

18

20

4

5

11

-23

17

19

20

3

6

11

-13

15

20

20

4

3

13

-18

15

Jarrod Bowen struck twice in the first half to put the game out of reach and only a late Ollie Watkins winner for Aston Villa against Southampton prevented Everton from ending the day bottom of the table.

Lampard took over at Everton in January 2022, following the departure of Rafa Benitez. Under Lampard, Everton avoided relegation last season and finished on 39 points.

After a summer which saw £84million spent on seven permanent signings, Everton began the 2022-23 campaign in decent form. They lost only two of their opening eight league matches and at the beginning of October, sat 11th in the Premier League.

This is the second time Lampard has been relieved of his duties at a Premier League side. In January 2021, he was sacked by Chelsea after a poor run of form which left his former club ninth.

Everton host top-of-the-table Arsenal in their next game on Saturday, February 4, before a Merseyside derby against Liverpool nine days later.

GO DEEPER

Everton: A broken football club

(Photo: Getty Images)



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Bolsonaro backers sack Brazil presidential palace, Congress, Supreme Court

BRASILIA, Jan 8 (Reuters) – Supporters of Brazil’s far-right former President Jair Bolsonaro invaded the country’s Congress, presidential palace and Supreme Court on Sunday, in a grim echo of the U.S. Capitol invasion two years ago by fans of former President Donald Trump.

Leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who defeated Bolsonaro in an October election, announced a federal security intervention in Brasilia lasting until Jan. 31 after capital security forces were initially overwhelmed by the invaders.

Lula, who was only inaugurated on Jan. 1, blamed Bolsonaro for inflaming his supporters after a campaign of baseless allegations about potential election fraud following the end of his rule marked by divisive nationalist populism.

The president’s allies also raised questions about how public security forces in the capital Brasilia were so unprepared and easily overwhelmed by rioters who had been planning on social media for days to gather for weekend demonstrations.

“These vandals, who we could call … fanatical fascists, did what has never been done in the history of this country,” said Lula in a press conference during an official trip to Sao Paulo state. “All these people who did this will be found and they will be punished.”

The capital invaders left a trail of destruction in their wake, throwing furniture through the smashed windows of the presidential palace, flooding parts of Congress with a sprinkler system and ransacking ceremonial rooms in the Supreme Court.

The sight of thousands of yellow-and-green clad protesters running riot in the capital capped months of tension following the Oct. 30 vote.

Bolsonaro, an acolyte of Trump’s who has yet to concede defeat, peddled the false claim that Brazil’s electronic voting system was prone to fraud, spawning a violent movement of election deniers.

“This genocidist … is encouraging this via social media from Miami,” Lula said, referring to Bolsonaro. “Everybody knows there are various speeches of the ex-president encouraging this.”

Bolsonaro was silent for nearly six hours about the chaos in Brasilia before posting on Twitter that he “repudiates” Lula’s accusations against him.

The former president, who has rarely spoken in public since losing the election, also said peaceful demonstrations are part of democracy but invading and damaging public buildings “crosses the line.” He flew to Florida 48 hours before the end of his mandate and was absent from Lula’s inauguration.

The violence in Brasilia could amplify the legal risks Bolsonaro faces. It also presents a headache for U.S authorities as they debate how to handle his stay in Florida. Prominent Democratic lawmakers said the United States could no longer grant Bolsonaro “refuge” in the country.

The Bolsonaro family lawyer, Frederick Wassef, did not respond to a request for comment.

By 6:30 p.m. local time (2130 GMT), some three hours after initial reports of the invasion, security forces had managed to retake the capital’s most iconic three buildings.

Brasilia Governor Ibaneis Rocha, a longtime Bolsonaro ally facing tough questions after Sunday’s security lapses, said on Twitter more than 400 people had been arrested and authorities were working to identify more.

The invasions were condemned by leaders around the world.

U.S. President Joe Biden called the events an “assault on democracy and on the peaceful transfer of power,” adding that Brazil’s democratic institutions had full U.S. support.

“Using violence to attack democratic institutions is always unacceptable,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken wrote on Twitter. “We join Lula in urging an immediate end to these actions.”

Far from the capital, Brazilian industries were on alert for a fresh round of unrest from Bolsonaro supporters, whose post-election highway blockades have disrupted grains shipments and meatpacking operations in recent months.

State-run oil company Petrobras stepped up security at its refineries, in a cautionary measure after attack threats against assets including Brazil’s biggest fuel plant, three company officials said, declining to be named as information is private.

Petroleo Brasileiro SA (PETR4.SA), as the company is formally known, said in a statement that all its assets and refineries are operating normally.

Analysts warned the unrest could trigger more volatility in Brazil’s financial markets, which have swung sharply in recent weeks on doubts about how Lula will reconcile big spending promises with stretched public finances.

JUDGES DENOUNCE “TERRORISTS”

The Supreme Court, whose crusading Justice Alexandre de Moraes has been a thorn in the side of Bolsonaro and his supporters, was ransacked by the invaders, according to images from social media showed protesters clubbing security cameras and shattering the windows of the modernist building.

Both Moraes and the court’s Chief Justice Rosa Weber vowed punishment for the “terrorists” who had attacked the country’s democratic institutions. The heads of both houses of Congress denounced the attacks publicly and moved up plans to fly back to the capital, according to people familiar with the matter.

Rocha, the Brasilia governor, said he had fired his top security official, Anderson Torres, previously Bolsonaro’s justice minister. The solicitor general’s office said it had filed a request for the arrest of Torres.

Torres told website UOL he was with his family on holiday in the United States and had not met with Bolsonaro. UOL reported he was in Orlando, where Bolsonaro is now staying.

“Vandalism and ransacking will be combatted with the rigor of the law,” Anderson tweeted on Sunday afternoon, adding he had directed police in the capital to restore order urgently.

On Saturday, with rumors of a confrontation brewing in Brasilia, Justice Minister Flávio Dino authorized the deployment of the National Public Security Force. On Sunday, he wrote on Twitter, “this absurd attempt to impose the will by force will not prevail.”

In Washington in 2021, Trump supporters attacked police, broke through barricades and stormed the Capitol in a failed effort to prevent congressional certification of Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory.

Trump, who has announced a third bid for the presidency, in 2024, had pressured his vice president, Mike Pence, not to certify the vote, and he continues to claim falsely that the 2020 election was stolen from him through widespread fraud.

Reporting by Adriano Machado, Anthony Boadle, Lisandra Paraguassu, Ricardo Brito, Peter Frontini, Gabriel Araujo; Writing by Gabriel Stargardter; Editing by Brad Haynes, Daniel Wallis and Lincoln Feast.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Cleveland Browns sack Joe Burrow, Cincinnati Bengals

CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Browns rode a dominating defense and a pair of Nick Chubb touchdown runs to a 32-13 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals — who were without injured wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase — on “Monday Night Football” in Cleveland.

Cleveland Browns

On Halloween night, the Browns finally came alive.

Cleveland buried Cincinnati quarterback Joe Burrow on the way to a dominating victory, giving its moribund season a jolt headed into a bye week.

The Bengals entered “Monday Night Football” having scored in 41 consecutive halves. But a suddenly resurgent Browns defense snapped that streak, holding Cincinnati scoreless in the first half. The Bengals’ defense also had not allowed a touchdown in a second half all season. But Cleveland scored touchdowns on its first two drives out of halftime to put the game out of reach.

The Browns (3-5) still have work to do to claw their way back into the AFC playoff picture. But this victory means their season is far from dead.

Buy on a breakout performance: The Browns came into the week ranked 30th in defensive efficiency. But after a promising performance last weekend in the loss at Baltimore, Cleveland’s defense finally performed up to its preseason expectations. Talent has never been the issue. The Browns might have uncovered the chemistry and cohesiveness that had been missing.

Eye-popping Next Gen stat: Browns QB Jacoby Brissett was given an average of 3.24 seconds to throw per pass. As a result, he completed 17 of 22 passes for 278 yards, including 259 passing yards when given at least 2.5 seconds to throw.

Bold prediction for next week: After a week of trade rumors surrounding running back Kareem Hunt, the Browns won’t deal him before Tuesday’s trade deadline. A loss Monday might have prompted Cleveland to trade Hunt, who is in the last year of his deal, for a late-round pick. The way Cleveland’s offense clicked with Hunt manning a significant role in the win over the Bengals should be enough to convince the Browns to ride out the rest of the season with him. — Jake Trotter

Underrated statistic to know: With Myles Garrett’s first-half sack, he became the first Browns player with at least 65 sacks since the statistic became official in 1982.

Next game: at Dolphins (1 p.m. ET, Nov. 13)


Cincinnati Bengals

With the Bengals in a tight battle with the Baltimore Ravens in the race for the AFC North, losing to the Browns was going to hurt Cincinnati’s chances of repeating as division champs. Cincinnati (4-4) didn’t just lose, it was pummeled in a loss that didn’t feel nearly as close as the final score suggested.

Last season, the Bengals were 4-2 in AFC North play, sweeping Baltimore and Pittsburgh. A fifth straight loss to Cleveland in the series between the teams reduces Cincinnati’s margin for error the rest of the season.

Describe the game in two words: Brutal showing. Cincinnati’s night started poorly, unraveled throughout the game and the Bengals were never even competitive against a struggling Cleveland squad.

QB breakdown: Without Chase, Cincinnati’s offense resembled the unit that struggled early in the season. Unlike in last week’s game against the Atlanta Falcons, Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow was limited in downfield production. Fifteen of Burrow’s first 21 attempts were for 10 air yards or less, according to NFL Next Gen Stats. When the game was in balance, Burrow took a few downfield shots. But whether it was due to Chase’s absence or another reason, Burrow and the offense just didn’t have it.

Pivotal play: Once again, Garrett caused problems for Cincinnati. On the Bengals’ first drive of the game, things were promising until Garrett sagged off the line of scrimmage and batted a Burrow pass into the air. Browns cornerback A.J. Green III intercepted the deflection. From there, the Bengals were playing off the back foot and ultimately never recovered.

Hole in the game plan: For all the chatter about Cleveland’s rushing attack, it was backup quarterback Brissett who torched Cincinnati’s defense through the air. At one point, the Browns averaged 9.2 yards per pass attempt. Cincinnati’s efforts took a big blow when cornerback Chidobe Awuzie left the game at the end of the first half with a right knee injury. Rookie Cam Taylor-Britt, the team’s second-round pick this year, made his first NFL start opposite Awuzie. — Ben Baby

Underrated statistic to know: Burrow has thrown an interception on the opening drive in each of his past three starts against the Browns.

Next game: vs. Panthers (1 p.m. ET, Sunday)

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Chelsea sack Thomas Tuchel as manager after poor start to season

Chelsea’s new owners have sacked head coach Thomas Tuchel just three months after completing their takeover of the club.

Tuchel’s 100th and final game in charge of Chelsea was Tuesday’s 1-0 Champions League defeat at Dinamo Zagreb and sources have told ESPN that Tuchel, 49, was informed of the decision on Wednesday morning.

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A consortium led by L.A. Dodgers part-owner Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital acquired the club from Roman Abramovich at the end of May and oversaw a record-spend in a single window for Chelsea of more than £250 million on nine players.

However, sources have told ESPN that relations between Boehly and Tuchel became strained over the club’s transfer strategy, while further concerns over the team’s substandard start to the season prompted the ownership to act.

Members of the club’s backroom staff will take interim charge, possibly also for Saturday’s Premier League trip to Fulham, as the search begins for Tuchel’s replacement.

A club statement read: “On behalf of everyone at Chelsea FC, the club would like to place on record its gratitude to Thomas and his staff for all their efforts during their time with the club. Thomas will rightly have a place in Chelsea’s history after winning the Champions League, the Super Cup and Club World Cup in his time here.

“As the new ownership group reaches 100 days since taking over the club, and as it continues its hard work to take the club forward, the new owners believe it is the right time to make this transition.

“Chelsea’s coaching staff will take charge of the team for training and the preparation of our upcoming matches as the club moves swiftly to appoint a new head coach.

“There will be no further comment until a new head coach appointment is made.”

Tuchel was appointed as Frank Lampard’s successor in January 2021 and guided Chelsea to their second Champions League crown in May that year.

In February, he led Chelsea to the only trophy previously to elude Abramovich during his 19-year tenure, the Club World Cup, with victory over Palmeiras in Abu Dhabi.

However, Tuchel then came under intense pressure as the public face of the club as Abramovich was effectively forced into selling Chelsea after the U.K. government imposed sanctions relating to his alleged ties to Russia president Vladimir Putin.

Tuchel steered the club through a difficult period on the pitch as the Boehly/Clearlake consortium negotiated their purchase of the club.

However, disagreements emerged over the club’s transfer strategy and sources have suggested Boehly became concerned that Tuchel’s messages were not getting through to the players, many of whom had become frustrated at his approach.

Tuesday’s defeat in Zagreb was their third consecutive away loss, the first time that had happened under Tuchel, while the club lie sixth in the Premier League having won three of their opening six matches.

Speaking after losing in Zagreb, Tuchel said: “Of course I’m frustrated; there’s too much to analyse, I’m a part of it, and we are clearly not where we need to be. At the moment everything is missing.”

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72-year-old baffled by his ‘whistling scrotum’ after discovering air was hissing out of his sack

The man with the… whistling scrotum? 72-year-old was baffled by the hissing noise coming from his genitals only to discover it was leaking out of an open wound

  • Elderly man came to A&E with the bizarre injury and with a shortness of breath
  • The air was coming from a hole in his scrotum left behind from previous surgery 
  • US medics found this was actually air escaping from the man’s collapsed lungs  

A man who heard a ‘hissing’ noise coming from his genitals has become the first person in the world to be diagnosed with ‘whistling scrotum’.

The unidentified 72-year-old went to an emergency department in Ohio, complaining about his bizarre malady.

At the same time, he also found himself short of breath and had a swollen face. 

Scans eventually revealed his lungs had collapsed and air was building up inside his body — a dangerous and potentially life-threatening condition. 

Doctors then discovered the source of the man’s scrotal whistling — an open wound on the left side of his scrotum.

The wound, leftover from testicle surgery to reduce swelling five months earlier, was allowing some trapped air to escape.  

Medics described the unusual case in the American Journal of Case Reports, saying they believe it to be the first of its kind.

A CT scan of the 72-year-old man’s chest. The black arrows point to the man’s collapsed lungs where as the white arrows point to air pockets (solid black areas) trapped between the internal space exterior of the lungs and inside the chest wall. Black areas throughout the man’s neck shoulders and arms also show air trapped inside the body

This CT scan of the man’s lower abdomen shows the amount of air (black areas) inside his thighs and scrotum. Medics who reported the case said an open wound in his scrotum acted as an ‘escape route’ for the trapped air  

Motorbike rider, 48, ruptured his TESTICLE after losing control and ploughing into a wall 

An American man was left with a ruptured testicle after he lost control of his motorbike and ploughed into a wall.

The 48-year-old, from New Jersey, went to hospital later that afternoon after his right testicle became so swollen he couldn’t sit down without suffering excruciating pain.

He told doctors that most of the impact from the motorbike crash ‘was to his scrotal region’.

Medics who examined the man’s right testicle found it was unusually hard and caused pain when touched. 

An ultrasound scan found the testicle had ruptured causing blood to pool inside the tissue from the artery that normally fed the reproductive organ. 

Surgeons managed to save his testicle by inserting a special gel-foam into the ruptured blood vessel, only the third time such a procedure has been performed. 

Medics from St. Joseph’s University Medical Center in Paterson reported the case in a medical journal.

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An X-ray of the man’s chest revealed he had ‘excessive’ amounts of air floating within his body which had caused his lungs to collapse. Left untreated, this can start to impact the function of the heart and lungs and become life threatening. 

The complication was also to blame his shortness of breath and swollen face. 

Two plastic tubes were inserted into his chest to help drain the excess air.

He was then transferred to another hospital for further treatment, Dr Brant Bickford and colleagues wrote. 

His condition then worsened, with the amount of air trapped between the lungs and the chest wall growing larger. It prompted medics to insert another chest tube.

But after three days in hospital his lungs had recovered. He was then discharged in a stable condition.

However, he still had air trapped in his scrotum and abdomen for another two years, which was described as an ‘abnormally long time’. Medics did not explain why this phenomenon occurred. 

Doctors were eventually forced to remove both his testicles before the problem was resolved, but it’s not clear why this was done. 

The medical term for air becoming trapped in the scrotum is pneumoscrotum, a rare condition. Just 60 cases have been described in medical literature.

Many of these were caused by penetrating injuries, which can lead to air becoming trapped.

None of the previously reported cases of pneumoscrotum had included a ready-made route for the air to escape. 

Normally this air needs medical intervention to escape as it cannot exit through the body’s orifices. 

Dr Bickford said it was unclear if this ‘escape route’ had actually helped improve the man’s condition or not. 

‘Whether the air escape attenuated the patient’s presentation and led to a more favorable outcome will never be known,’ he said. 

Yet another unusual aspect of the case was how long it took for the air build-up inside his scrotum, perineum and thighs to resolve. 

Medics said the man ‘adamantly denied’ self-injecting air into his scrotum during his recovery and that nothing in his behaviour over a three year follow-up led them to doubt this.

They also did not reveal when exactly the incident took place. 

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Vikings sack Zimmer, Spielman; replacement search starting now

In a sweeping set of moves unlike any they’ve made since they bought the team in 2005, Vikings owners Mark and Zygi Wilf fired coach Mike Zimmer and General Manager Rick Spielman on Monday, a day after the conclusion of consecutive losing seasons that had exhausted the Wilfs’ patience with both men.

Spielman, who had been with the team since 2006, hired Zimmer to replace Leslie Frazier in 2014. Both had two years remaining on the contract extensions they signed in 2020, but after the team finished 8-9 and missed the playoffs for the second year in a row, the Wilfs opted for a total reset.

“We’re very proud of the fact that we, as an ownership, try to think long-term,” Mark Wilf said at a Monday news conference. “We know we want to be consistent, but at the same time we evaluated where we’ve been. … We’re clearly disappointed in the football results this year, and over the past few weeks, this is something we’ve been thinking and deliberating quite a bit.”

Mark Wilf said the Vikings had already begun both searches, but would hire a GM first so the person could help pick the head coach.

The tenures of Spielman and Zimmer had strings of success. Zimmer finished his eight seasons with a 72-56-1 mark, trailing only Bud Grant and Dennis Green in games coached (129) and winning percentage (.562) among the Vikings’ nine head coaches. The Vikings were 131-123-2, with six playoff trips, in Spielman’s 16 years.

But their struggles often centered on the same position: Quarterback.

A disastrous 2010 season and three-win year in 2011 led the Wilfs to abandon the “triangle of authority” power structure that gave Spielman, the head coach and vice president of football operations Rob Brzezinski equal say over the roster. Ownership made Spielman the GM in 2012; he promised to build a contending roster with homegrown players, and stockpiled top-end talent, taking seven first-round picks from 2012-14. Six — Matt Kalil, Harrison Smith, Xavier Rhodes, Cordarrelle Patterson, Anthony Barr and Teddy Bridgewater — became Pro Bowlers.

But Spielman’s inability to solve the Vikings’ longstanding need at quarterback might have affected his tenure more than anything else.

He selected Christian Ponder 12th overall in 2011. Spielman talked about how Ponder’s early statistics compared favorably to passers such as Eli Manning and Drew Brees, and passed on Russell Wilson (whom the Vikings coaches loved after working with him at the Senior Bowl) in the third round of the 2012 draft. The Vikings went to the playoffs with Ponder in 2012, but the quarterback lost his starting job in 2013 and the Vikings went 5-10-1 during Frazier’s final season.

As the Vikings tried to solve their quarterback quandary before the 2014 draft, ranking Texas A&M’s Johnny Manziel slightly above Teddy Bridgewater on their draft board, they reasoned they could build a contending team around a developing passer.

Zimmer, the former Bengals defensive coordinator, arrived in Minnesota branding himself a “fixer” who would construct a commanding defense. His units ranked in the NFL’s top 10 in points allowed each year from 2015-19.

His best teams — most notably the 2017 team that went 13-3 with the NFL’s top defense — were brilliant on third downs, ranked among the least-penalized clubs in the NFL and pressured quarterbacks with Zimmer’s oft-imitated blitz disguises complementing a four-man rush that didn’t sacrifice run responsibilities on the way to the quarterback.

Players such as Everson Griffen, Danielle Hunter, Linval Joseph, Eric Kendricks, Barr, Rhodes and Smith became Pro Bowlers who earned lucrative second contracts from the team. Zimmer’s teams effectively battled Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers to a stalemate, earning hard-won respect from the three-time MVP, who often praised the coach’s system and the players’ skill in executing it.

Zimmer struggled in parts of his job beyond his defensive background.

He went through six offensive coordinators in his final six years with the team. While two (Pat Shurmur and Kevin Stefanski) left Minnesota for head coaching jobs, Norv Turner resigned midway through his third season, Zimmer fired John DeFilippo after 13 games in 2018 and offensive coaches privately aired frustrations about their working constraints, particularly with how much Zimmer wanted the Vikings to run the ball.

While players praised Zimmer’s candor, calling it refreshing to know where they stood, his brusque remarks didn’t sit well with some players. The coach became more sensitive to managing players’ workloads in his later years, but his penchant for strenuous practices wore down some Vikings teams in his earlier seasons, as players’ initial requests for changes went unmet. Wide receiver Stefon Diggs left the team for three days in 2019 and was traded after the season, following a period of discontent over his role in the offense.

And finding a starting quarterback, particularly in the final six years of the Spielman/Zimmer regime, remained a problem that demanded considerable resources.

“While these decisions are not easy, we believe it is time for new leadership to elevate our team so we can consistently contend for championships. . . . We are determined to have sustained success and bring Vikings fans the Super Bowl championships they expect and deserve.”

Statement from Zygi and Mark Wilf

After a catastrophic knee injury in August 2016 derailed the Vikings’ plans to build around Bridgewater — with whom Zimmer became close after the Vikings drafted him 32nd overall in 2014 — Spielman traded a first- and fourth-round pick to Philadelphia for Sam Bradford, who started 15 games in 2016 but played only two because of his longstanding knee issues in 2017.

Even though Case Keenum won a key Monday night game in relief of the injured Bradford and went 11-3 as a starter that year before leading the Vikings to the NFC Championship Game on the “Minneapolis Miracle,” Zimmer never called Keenum his starter. Instead of conducting the starting QB’s customary Wednesday news conference, Keenum talked each week in a scrum near his locker.

Zimmer made his concerns with spending big money on a QB clear at the 2018 NFL combine, with Keenum, Bradford and Bridgewater due to become free agents. Zimmer said he’d told Spielman, “‘Look, we’ve had a good team; that’s why we’ve won 40 games [over the previous four seasons]. It’s not because we’ve had this one guy or that one guy. Let’s make sure we keep understanding the team is why we have done good things.'”

The Vikings gave Kirk Cousins a fully guaranteed three-year, $84 million deal weeks later, however, and the coach never seemed to click with the quarterback to whom he would be tied for the rest of his time in Minnesota. Sources described Zimmer’s relationship with Cousins as distant; the weekly meetings they held this year, at Cousins’ request, helped build some common ground between the two, but they never became close.

Counting two 2019 playoff games, the Vikings went 34-32-1 in four years after signing Cousins. The quarterback posted some of the best passing statistics in Vikings history, but like Bridgewater and Keenum before him, Cousins was one of the most-pressured passers in the NFL, as the Vikings tried in vain to solve their offensive line issues.

The team committed nearly $120 million to free agents in 2016 and 2017 before using six picks in the first three rounds of the draft on offensive linemen from 2017-21. Virginia Tech left tackle Christian Darrisaw, this year’s first-round pick, missed four games after groin surgery in August; Wyatt Davis, one of the Vikings’ four third-round picks, did not play a regular-season snap.

While Brzezinski, one of the league’s most skilled salary cap managers, figures to stay, the Vikings’ new GM and coach will have some work to do.

Minnesota deferred roughly $18 million of salary cap costs into 2022, trying to field a competitive roster that could save Spielman’s and Zimmer’s jobs while dealing with a lower cap because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The Vikings have only four picks in the first five rounds, after Spielman dealt a fourth-rounder for lightly-used tight end Chris Herndon, and will face a big decision on Cousins, who carries a $45 million cap charge in the final season of his fully-guaranteed deal.

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After Browns sack Justin Fields 9 times, Dan Orlovsky calls for Matt Nagy to be fired for the worst gameplan ‘I’ve ever seen in my life’

CLEVELAND, Ohio — After the Browns sacked Bears rookie quarterback Justin Fields nine times in their 26-6 victory on Sunday — including 4 1/2 by Myles Garrett — ESPN analyst and former NFL quarterback Dan Orlovsky called for Bears coach Matt Nagy’s head to roll immediately.

“The Chicago Bears should fire Matt Nagy today,’’ Orlovsky said on ESPN’s Get Up. “Because yesterday’s gameplan — which was the worst one I’ve ever seen in my life — was either negligence or intentional. It’s been 149 days since the Bears drafted Justin Fields. You had 149 days to start to build a gameplan around the skillset of this young man, and it was an embarrassment.

“Justin Fields threw the ball 20 times yesterday. Thirteen times they went with five-man protection with no help for their offensive line. Thirteen out of 20! Yesterday you showed us that you are either incapable of designing the proper gameplan, around a dynamic quarterback, or you showed us that it was intentional that you wanted him to fail, and you set him up to be a disaster.’’

Indeed, Fields was sacked on almost 50% of his 20 attempts, and completed only six for 68 yards. The Bears finished with an astonishing 1 net yard passing, and 47 net yards overall. The mobile Fields rushed only three times for 12 yards, with a long gain of 7. According to ESPN Stats and Info, in 30 dropbabacks, the Bears used pre-snap motion four times, max protection twice, designed rollouts twice, and designed QB runs twice.

“You moved the pocket once in the first half?’’ Orlovsky said. “One time (in the middle of the second quarter). One time. You don’t design routes…you ran the same third-down situation, third and 5, third and 6, third and 8 and third and 7. You ran the same play twice. The same play twice. You’re getting paid for that? That’s what you build with the gameplan that you have 149 days?….From the moment you drafted Justin Fields, you should’ve been designing all of these gameplans, so when he gets on the field, you unleash him.

“And it’s a Colin Kaepernick-type situation. ….But you’re dropping back and you’re going ‘we can block this defense with five-man protection?’ Don’t tell me he’s not ready. It’s your freaking job to get him ready to play and figure out the things he can do.’’

Garrett, coming off constant chipping by the Texans and a smart gameplan that left him sackless in last week’s 31-21 victory, was almost never chipped or doubled by the Bears, and he teed off to set the Browns single-game sack record and take over the NFL lead with 5.5.

Not only did they not put extra bodies on him, their 39-year-old left tackle Jason Peters — although a nine-time Pro Bowler from his glory days — was no match for Garrett whatsoever. Heading into the season, the Bears’ offensive line was ranked 28th by Pro Football Focus, and it lived up the ranking. It was a recipe for disaster for Fields in his first NFL start, and a formula for wild success for the hungry Browns, who had only three sacks coming in and were taking heat for it.

In fact, Browns coach Kevin Stefanski believes it might be the most dominant defensive performance he’s been a part of.

“Without checking, I’d say yes,’’ he said. “You guys saw it. They were dominant from the jump. They gave up some points on the first drive, but they kept us in the ballgame. It was a tight ballgame into the fourth quarter and our defense kept us in it and they did a great job. In terms of their performance, can you repeat that every single week? I hope so. But the big takeaway for me is that they practice like that last week and you can take the practice field to the game field is really my reflection on it.’’

Of course, if smart offenses go back to chipping and doubling Garrett, he might not get home more than four times every game, but it was certainly the breakout performance the Browns needed from him.

“Myles was outstanding,’’ said Stefanski said. “Really, the entire defense was outstanding, but if you point at an individual, it would certainly be Myles in that effort yesterday. He’s our best player. He knows that. We know that. And the other teams know that, so he’s going to get a lot of attention, we’re going to move him around, we’re going to do different things with him and we need him to play great, and again it’s no secret to anybody.’’

Garrett’s teammates also responded to his challenge to make plays, with Jadeveon Clowney notching his first two sacks since the 2019 season, safety Ronnie Harrison getting one, and Takk McKinley, Malik Jackson and Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah each getting a half.

“JD was great yesterday,’’ Stefanski said of Clowney. “He was locked in at practice last week. He works really hard. He fits what we want to do. He’a great teammates. He’s affecting the game, and he has the ability to affect the game in the run and the pass.’’

Overall, it was the type of performance expected from this formidable defensive front, with its two No. 1 overall picks on the edges. The Browns’ nine sacks tied for their most since a game against the 49ers on Dec. 13, 2015, and fell two short of the club record.

“Anytime you can have that type of production from your defensive line from a sack standpoint, it’s pretty rare,’’ Stefanski said. “The pressure has been there as we’ve talked about. Those sacks seem to come in bunches, but those are three explosive, long athletes (Garrett, Clowney and McKinley) that we need to continue to better. That really has to be our mentality as a defense, as an attacking defense whether we’re bringing four, five six, it doesn’t matter. We’ve got to attack and I thought the guys did a nice job yesterday.’’

It was so gratifying from field level that cornerback Troy Hill has an idea for Garrett.

“Man, pay the man again,’’ Hill said. “Give him some more money. That’s dominance at its finest.’’

And arguably Bears gameplanning at its worst.

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