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Pied piper of Serie A coverage returns on BBC coverage

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Even during the core Gazzetta years, AC Milan and Juventus dominated the title race much in the same way the Old Firm have done in Scotland, but Richardson recalls the strength of Italian football at the time as adding to the general appeal.

“Between 1989 and 1998, nine of the 10 European Cup finals had an Italian side in them,” he says. “Four were won. It was the kind of dominance not seen since.”

It seemed that every club had a wealthy local “padrone” as Richardson calls them, each of whom had seemingly endless sums of lira to lavish on the world’s best.

“They would curry favour in their city, demonstrating their largesse by spending large sums of money on players that they didn’t always need,” he explains.

Arguably that sums up what made Italian football so compelling.

“AC Milan and Arrigo Sacchi drove what made Italian clubs so successful in that era,” Richardson suggests. “Sacchi’s story is incredible. They were far and away the best club in the world at the time.

“Some of the presidents were a bit mad and fans seemed to enjoy hearing stories of a successful season being rewarded by a certain padrone with the gift of a horse to their coach.”

His favourite interview? Roberto Baggio, perhaps the most famous Italian player of the 90s. The Divine Ponytail who had lit up Italia 90.

Combining grace with technique and a seeming moodiness, Baggio summed up the attraction of football in Italy.

In the pre-internet days, scarce access to these foreign stars made them even more interesting.

“There was something so special about him, he had a mystique,” Richardson recalls.

“I also loved Vialli, a thinker, incredibly nice guy, who came from a noble family in Italy and reached the top of the game. It remains quite unusual to have that kind of back story.”

Then there were the imports, Gabriel Batistuta, Ruud Gullit, George Weah, Zinedine Zidane, the original Ronaldo. World transfer records routinely broken, seemingly season on season. Goals from another planet weekend on weekend.

In Italy, the term is “Sprezzatura” – the art of making style look effortless. This was Serie A in the 90s and Richardson was there for all the big moments.

“I was in the San Siro for George Weah’s famous goal against Verona and Youri Djorkaeff’s volley against Roma,” he says. For younger readers, both are worth watching on YouTube.

“It was the era of the great number 10s, none more so than here in Naples and Diego Maradona, albeit he predated the Gazzetta days.

“There was a poetic beauty to that, even when a lot of the teams were set up defensively. The 10 was the one player who got free licence and, as such, they were venerated.”

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Steelers’ Chris Boswell matches Brandon Aubrey as NFL’s highest-paid kicker: Source

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Chris Boswell of the Pittsburgh Steelers celebrates a field goal against the Baltimore Ravens.

Chris Boswell went 27-for-32 on field goal attempts in 2025. Joe Sargent / Getty Images

Chris Boswell has been one of the NFL’s most consistent and clutch kickers. The Pittsburgh Steelers will now pay him like it.

On Monday, Boswell and the Steelers agreed to terms on a four-year, $28 million extension, a league source confirmed to The Athletic. The deal is nearly identical in length and total value to the one Dallas Cowboys kicker Brandon Aubrey signed less than a month ago. Boswell now matches Aubrey as the highest-paid kicker in NFL history.

Boswell, a two-time Pro Bowler and 2024 All-Pro, was entering the final year of the four-year, $20 million deal he signed in 2022. The new contract ties him to Pittsburgh through 2030.

Boswell, 35, joined the Steelers in 2015. Over his 11-year career, he’s connected on 87.7 percent of his field goal attempts and 95.7 percent of his extra points. He holds the franchise records for field goals in a season (41 in 2024), longest field goal (59 yards) and consecutive field goals made (25). It’s worth noting that the Steelers also play in a stadium that’s notoriously difficult for kickers.

Former coach Mike Tomlin affectionately referred to Boswell as a “serial killer” last year because of the kicker’s steady pulse in tense situations. Especially at the end of the Tomlin era, when the Steelers often got into tight, low-scoring games, having a nearly automatic kicker was especially valuable.

Boswell is in a position to solidify himself further as the greatest kicker in Steelers history. With 11 more field goals and 94 more points, he’ll pass Gary Anderson as the Steelers’ record-holder in both categories.

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Josh Manson penalized — but not ejected — for butt-end jab at Michael McCarron in Wild-Avs Game 4

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ST. PAUL, Minn. — Butt-ends were almost an epidemic in the NHL in the 1990s, but they’ve become largely extinct in today’s game.

On Monday night, we got a flashback. In Josh Manson’s return to the Colorado Avalanche’s lineup from injury, the veteran defenseman landed on the ice after Minnesota Wild forward Michael McCarron finished a check on him. Manson, who had a hold of McCarron’s head as they fell, then attempted to butt-end McCarron in the neck area.

A butt-end is an “action whereby a player uses the shaft of the stick, above the upper hand, to check an opposing player in any manner or jabs or attempts to jab an opposing player with this part of the stick.” If it’s called, it’s a mandatory major penalty and game misconduct.

McCarron got up fuming and contended to both refs that he was butt-ended. Referees Jean Hebert and Trevor Hanson called a major so they could review.

After a long video review, the referees apparently couldn’t confirm that Manson actually landed the butt-end. They downgraded the major to a double minor. Rule 58.2 in the NHL’s official rules states that “a double-minor penalty will be imposed on a player who attempts to butt-end an opponent.”

In a text to The Athletic, former NHL referee and ESPN rules analyst Dave Jackson said, “There is a double minor for attempted butt-ending. If they cannot determine absolutely that the stick hit him but the attempt was made, then the double minor is the proper call.”

The Wild didn’t generate much on the first power play, but on the back half of the double minor, rookie Danila Yurov redirected Brock Faber’s shot for his first career playoff goal. The Wild carried that 1-0 lead into the first intermission.

Speaking on ESPN at the break, McCarron was asked about the play.

“He’s a dirty player,” he said. “Always has been.”

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Blue Jackets Monday Gathering: Making the case for Zach Werenski and the Norris Trophy

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COLUMBUS, Ohio — A collection of notes, insights, ruminations and did-you-knows gathered throughout the week that was for the Columbus Blue Jackets:

Item No. 1: The case for ‘Z’

There are no fewer than seven NHL defensemen this season who performed at a level worthy of winning the Norris Trophy, perhaps the best example yet of how dramatically that position has been transformed in just the past five seasons.

On Thursday, the NHL provided some clarity by announcing the three finalists for the award: Buffalo’s Rasmus Dahlin, Colorado’s Cale Makar and the Blue Jackets’ Zach Werenski. For many, this was the hardest vote among the postseason ballots.

It was a wild season on the blue line across the league, part of the evolution of the game that will likely be with us for a while. That’s how strong the offensive push has come from behind the play in today’s games.

From 2010-11 to 2020-21 — that’s 11 seasons — there were only five point-per-game seasons by NHL defensemen, and it took five different players to achieve: Kris Letang (2013), Erik Karlsson (2016), Brent Burns (2019), John Carlson (2020) and Makar (2021).

In the last five seasons, it’s been done 17 times by eight different defensemen, including four this season, with Edmonton’s Evan Bouchard (1.16 points per game) and Minnesota’s Quinn Hughes (1.03) joining Makar (1.05) and Werenski (1.08).

The biggest challenge for Norris voters just a few years ago was deciding how much emphasis to put on offensive production versus stellar defensive play. But there are so many candidates to sift through now that the aspect of who actually matches up against top opponents, kills penalties and plays late in games can be forgotten.

The definition of the award — “to the defense player who demonstrates throughout the season the greatest all-round ability in the position” — leaves plenty of room to consider a player’s offensive contributions, his ability to control play, possess the puck, etc.

And when we consider how Werenski performs so consistently high on both ends of the ice, it’s beginning to feel as if this might be his year to win his first major award.

There are three main arguments we’d make:

1. The numbers

Bouchard had 21-74-95 in 82 games for the Oilers, but he can be a wildly inconsistent defensive player, and all of his gaffes — under watchful eyes in Canada — end up on highlight/lowlight films, a major hit to his case.

Hughes had an incredible season in Vancouver and Minnesota, transforming the Wild and leading the entire league in ice time. But, incredibly, he rarely kills penalties, spending only 8 minutes, 17 seconds, on the ice all season shorthanded.

Those two are out of the running after the NHL announced its finalists this week, so let’s look specifically at Werenski versus Dahlin and Makar.

No need for fancy stats, just pull the big ones: among defensemen, Werenski ranked in the top four for ice time (26:37, second), goals (22, third), assists (59, fourth), points (81, second), points per game (1.08, second), even-strength goals (18, first), even-strength points (59, second) and shots on goal (260, 1st).

Dahlin and Makar hung brilliant numbers this season, but they’re chasing Werenski in all of those categories.

Further, Werenski took the ice on the fly for 50.8 percent of his shifts. When he took the ice following a stoppage, 32.3 percent were to start in the neutral or defensive zone, compared to just 16.9 percent in the attack zone.

In other words, Werenski was not force-fed offensive situations.

And get this: despite being on the ice for almost half the game, and going toe-to-toe with the opponent’s best players, Werenski was called for only 18 penalty minutes … and he drew 22 penalties.

2. Criteria shift

Incredibly, before Adam Fox of the New York Rangers won the Norris Trophy in 2021, no player had won the award without his club reaching the playoffs. That no longer seems to be such a hard-and-fast rule with voters.

In 2023, Karlsson won the award with the San Jose Sharks, who had the fourth-worst record in the NHL that season.

The Hart Trophy (MVP) is perhaps more complex because it’s clearly written to be the player “most valuable to his team.” But there’s nothing that says the best defenseman has to play for one of the league’s top teams.

The Blue Jackets were the talk of the NHL through much of March, charging back into a playoff spot under midseason coaching hire Rick Bowness, garnering plenty of attention for Werenski and co.

Further, Werenski’s play on the winning goal in Team USA’s Olympic win over Canada — out-battling Nathan MacKinnon for the puck, feeding Jack Hughes for the “golden goal” — is seared into memories after an endless loop of replays.

If Werenski’s 2024-25 season put him on the Norris map, his play this season only fortified that. After years of flying under the radar on a small-market franchise, Werenski has broken through across the league.

3. Game control

Former Blue Jackets coach John Tortorella spent the spring of 2016 watching AHL Cleveland run through the playoffs and win the Calder Cup. Werenski, playing on a player-tryout agreement after finishing his time at Michigan, caught his eye.

Tortorella saw how Werenski could carry the puck, skate through and around traffic and created a role just for his young defenseman: “the rover.”

Werenski’s game has come a long way since then. He’s a much more complete player. Watch closely, and you’ll marvel at how quickly, almost surgically, he uses his stick to disrupt plays or force turnovers.

The fact that Werenski had 44 more shot attempts and 38 more shots on goal than any other defenseman should tell you how often he controls the puck.

Bowness has watched Werenski from afar, of course. But he marveled at his ability to carry the puck and calm down play during harried moments this season.

Increasingly, that’s the job of an elite NHL blueliner: defend, create offense, control the pace of the game.

Item No. 2: Sir Mathieu

The invitation landed as the ultimate compliment.

Blue Jackets winger Mathieu Olivier, who (literally) fought his way into the NHL, was blown away last spring to be invited by Team USA to play in the IIHF World Championships, where fighting isn’t part of the equation.

It was recognition for Olivier that, after a breakout 2024-25 season with the Blue Jackets (18 goals), the hockey world could see not only his fists, but his heart, head and hands.

Regrettably, Olivier had to pass on the invitation because he needed a procedure done on his hand and wanted ample time to heal before training camp in Columbus last fall. But he made a personal vow to earn another invite this spring.

“It’s not like you get one invite and you’re going to get it every year,” Olivier said. “I had to earn it again, and I’m very fortunate.

“Fighting is a major part of what got me here. But it’s great with an invitation like this to showcase that it’s just part of my job. I’m a hockey player first and foremost, and I’m coming off two pretty good, pretty consistent seasons.”

On Sunday, Team USA named Olivier an alternate captain. As he has in Columbus for the past two seasons, he’s going to play a third-line role in the tournament and be asked to forecheck and go hard to the net.

Those are default settings, of course.

“Mathieu has a ton of passion for the game and for his teammates, and that’s obvious,” said USA coach Don Granato, who played, coached and was general manager of the ECHL’s Columbus Chill during the 1990s, before the NHL arrived.

“As a coach, you want that element in your room. It’s infectious. Frankly, guys like that are why I’m excited to go to events like this. You bring guys in from all over, you watch them grow together and compete and become a team.”

Olivier has spent most of his life in Canada, specifically in Quebec City. But he was born in Biloxi, Miss. — the only NHL player ever born in Mississippi — when his father played for the ECHL’s Mississippi Sea Wolves during the 1995-96 season.

He’s a dual citizen of the USA and Canada, but wearing the red, white and blue sweater, Olivier said, will be surreal.

The last time the jersey was seen in international play, of course, was the gold-medal win at the Olympics. And last spring in Sweden and Denmark, Team USA won gold at the World Championships for the first time since 1960.

“It’s a huge honor,” Olivier said. “Right now, the U.S. is the country to beat.

“I’m fortunate to have dual citizenship, but I was born in the U.S., and it’s an honor to represent the country I was born in, where my kids have been born … you know, my kids are most likely going to be USA hockey as well.”

Olivier scored an empty-net goal on Sunday in a 5-2 win over Germany, Team USA’s only tune-up game before the tournament begins this weekend. They open on Friday vs. host Switzerland at 2:20 p.m. ET (on NHL Network).

Item No. 3: Snacks

• There were reports this week that the Blue Jackets have indicated to defenseman Erik Gudbranson, a pending unrestricted free agent, that he won’t be back in Columbus next season. While that’s possible, it hasn’t been decided yet. GM Don Waddell and Gudbranson’s agent, Pat Morris, told The Athletic that no such conversation has taken place. The Blue Jackets are hoping to sign Gudbranson, along with free agent forwards Charlie Coyle, Mason Marchment and Boone Jenner, but Waddell has said that direct negotiations are not yet underway. They can all hit the market on July 1.

• Werenski shared on social media that he and his wife, Odette, became first-time parents last week. Hudson Charles Werenski was born May 6, just four days short of Mother’s Day. He’s eligible for the 2044 NHL Draft.

• AHL Cleveland clinched its first-round playoff series win over Syracuse on May 3 when Zach Aston-Reese scored in triple overtime for a 2-1 win. Incredibly, their second-round series doesn’t start until Thursday in Cleveland, when they host the Toronto Marlies in Rocket Arena. That’s a 12-day break in the middle of the playoffs. “There’s no framework or script for this,” Monsters coach Trent Vogelhuber said. “We gave them a two-day break after the triple overtime game because we had some forwards (Luca Del Bel Belluz and Mikael Pyyhtiä) up around 39 or 40 minutes. We’ve been practicing, we’ve been lifting … by now we know what it takes to get ready, and we’ll be ready. But, yeah, it’s been a bit of a break.” Vogelhuber said “about 95 percent” of the roster attended a Zach Bryan concert on Sunday in Huntington Bank Field, home of the Cleveland Browns. But it was back to work with practice Monday.

• The star of the playoffs so far for AHL Cleveland has been goaltender Zach Sawchenko, who was Jet Greaves’ back-up last season and expected to be Ivan Fedotov’s back-up this season, until he started earning the majority of the playing time down the stretch. Sawchenko, 27, is 3-0 with a .946 save percentage and 1.51 goals-against average in these playoffs, including a 46-save outing in the triple overtime win. “As we worked through the season, it had a little more swing toward even playing time,” Vogelhuber said. “Toward the end of the season, the pendulum shifts toward merit, and I think that earned him some more games. The guys love playing for him, which is so important at this time of the year. He’s always battling, and they respect that.”

• Sawchenko has bounced around a bit during his pro career, from the ECHL to four different stops in the AHL and a brief seven-game run with the San Jose Sharks during the 2021-22 season. Such is the life of an undrafted goaltender. “All you can really ask for is an opportunity,” Sawchenko said, “and I’ve been lucky enough this year with our coaching staff to get that opportunity, and I’ve been able to make the most of it. You never know when your number is going to be called, and you have to be ready, because you might not get another chance. I’m loving this opportunity. It’s a great team, really, and a great situation for me.”

• It wouldn’t be a surprise if we’ve seen the last of Fedotov as a member of the Blue Jackets organization. First off, he’s an unrestricted free agent, free to sign anywhere this summer, including back in Russia. He did not come to North America, of course, to play in the AHL, and he admitted earlier this season that playing in a league with so many gaps in the schedule is a challenge for goaltenders who like regular work. He went 23-16-6 but with an .887 save percentage. Vogelhuber started him in Game 2 of the first round, but he allowed four goals on six shots in only 13:15 and was pulled. Fedotov is still with the club, Vogelhuber said, but Sawchenko started the final two games in round one, with rookie Evan Gardner serving as his backup.

• Here’s Vogelhuber on Aston-Reese, who jumped right in with AHL Cleveland after he was sent to the minors by the Blue Jackets in late January. After 400-plus NHL games, a minor-league demotion can be a tough pill. “We met his first day here, and he was amazing,” Vogelhuber said. “He said, ‘This is a good opportunity. I’m not angry to be here, so just tell me what you need, and I’ll work my ass off for you.’ For me, that’s just … we’re going to get along fine.”

• More from Vogelhuber on Aston-Reese: “When guys who have that much NHL experience are willing to do whatever, what kind of message does that send to guys on their entry-level deals who are still trying to make it. That’s powerful. Zach has earned my respect, and I’d do anything for him just based on the three months he’s been here. We love having him.”

• Forward Oiva Keskinen, the Blue Jackets’ seventh-round pick (No. 194) in 2023, signed a two-year contract with Columbus last summer with the agreement that he’d return to Finland for another year if he didn’t make the NHL roster. He’s expected to play in North America next season — Columbus or Cleveland, we shall see — but he scored a huge goal last week in Finland, ending the longest playoff game in Liiga history. Keskinen’s Tappara Tempere won 3-2 at 9:54 of the fourth overtime. It was a tough-angle shot worth watching a few times.

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