ROME (AP) — Roma scored three times in a commanding first half on its way to a 4-0 win over Fiorentina that boosted its hopes of a top four finish and a Champions League place in Serie A on Monday.
The capital club moved into fifth place, just one point behind Juventus.
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Roma's Manu Kone challenges for the ball with Fiorentina's Marco Brescianini during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Roma and Fiorentina in Rome, Monday, May 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)
Fiorentina's Fabiano Parisi, right, challenges for the ball with Roma's Gianluca Mancini during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Roma and Fiorentina in Rome, Monday, May 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)
Roma's Niccolo Pisilli, left, celebrates after scoring his side's fourth goal during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Roma and Fiorentina in Rome, Monday, May 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)
Roma's Niccolo Pisilli, left, challenges for the ball with Fiorentina's Jacopo Fazzini during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Roma and Fiorentina in Rome, Monday, May 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)
Cremonese Alessio Zerbin shoots the ball during the Serie A soccer match between Cremonese and Lazio in Cremona, Italy, Monday, May 4, 2026. (Alberto Marianii/LaPresse via AP)
Gianluca Mancini headed home the opener from a corner kick after 13 minutes and Wesley added a second five minutes later to put Gian Piero Gasperini’s side in the driving seat.
Mario Hermoso added the third after great set up work by Manu Kone, and Niccolò Pisilli completed the scoring early in the second half.
It was the first league defeat for Fiorentina in eight games. La Viola still need a point to guarantee their Serie A survival and remain in 16th, nine points clear of the relegation zone.
Cremonese relinquished a first-half lead in losing at home to Lazio 2-1, missing a chance to grab crucial points in its fight to avoid relegation.
Cremonese has won only one of its last 21 league matches. It remained third from bottom, four points adrift of safe and 17th-placed Lecce with three games to play.
The home side took the lead in the first half when Federico Bonazzoli’s left-foot shot squirmed under the body of Lazio goalkeeper Edoardo Motta.
Gustav Isaksen brought Lazio level in the second half, and Tijjani Noslin curled in the winner two minutes into stoppage time.
Jamies Vardy made a substitute appearance for Cremonese after missing four games with a muscle strain but he made no difference.
Lazio moved into eighth, two points above Bologna and Sassuolo.
AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer
Roma's Manu Kone challenges for the ball with Fiorentina's Marco Brescianini during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Roma and Fiorentina in Rome, Monday, May 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)
Fiorentina's Fabiano Parisi, right, challenges for the ball with Roma's Gianluca Mancini during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Roma and Fiorentina in Rome, Monday, May 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)
Roma's Niccolo Pisilli, left, celebrates after scoring his side's fourth goal during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Roma and Fiorentina in Rome, Monday, May 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)
Roma's Niccolo Pisilli, left, challenges for the ball with Fiorentina's Jacopo Fazzini during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Roma and Fiorentina in Rome, Monday, May 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)
Cremonese Alessio Zerbin shoots the ball during the Serie A soccer match between Cremonese and Lazio in Cremona, Italy, Monday, May 4, 2026. (Alberto Marianii/LaPresse via AP)
NEW YORK (AP) — Pulitzer Prize officials awarded the fiction prize to an author with a history of experimenting with genres and with language itself: Daniel Kraus, cited for “Angel Down,” a World War I narrative with a celestial twist that unfolds over some 300 pages in one long sentence. “Liberation,” Bess Wohl's look back at the feminist consciousness-raising groups of the 1970s received the drama prize.
Winners announced Monday included two books rooted in the country's founding. Jill Lepore's “We the People: A History of the U.S. Constitution” won for history, and Amanda Vaill's “Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution” was the winner for biography. Yiyun Li’s “Things in Nature Merely Grow,” her blunt account of the suicides of her two sons, was cited for memoir-autobiography. Brian Goldstone's “There is No Place for Us: Working and Homeless in America” won for general nonfiction.
The poetry prize went to Juliana Spahr's “Ars Poeticas,” and the music award was given to Gabriela Lena Frank for “Picaflor: A Future Myth,” a symphonic work inspired by Andean legend and California wildfires.
The 50-year-old Kraus has had a diverse and prolific career quite unlike the average Pulitzer fiction winner. He has written horror, science fiction, graphic novels and books for kids. He has collaborated with filmmakers George Romero and Guillermo del Toro, whose Oscar-winning “The Shape of Water” was conceived with Kraus' help. He has received numerous prizes over the years, including the Bram Stoker Award for horror, but had never imagined he'd win a Pulitzer. When he began receiving texts Monday — that included such messages as “Wow!” — he worried that he had somehow gotten himself in trouble.
Pulitzer officials praised “Angel Down” as “a stylistic tour-de-force that blends such genres as allegory, magical realism, and science fiction into a cohesive whole, told in a single sentence.” Kraus says that he at first used a conventional narrative but found that abandoning traditional punctuation better suited a story of war that seemingly had no end.
“It's like you have the feeling of being locked into the book forever,” he told The Associated Press during a telephone interview.
Wohl’s memory play collects second-wave feminists from all walks of life as they tackle misogyny, internalized homophobia, domestic abuse and gender roles. The play navigates between past and present, and six of the actors disrobe for the Act 2 opening scene. The win comes a day before the Tony Award nominations, when “Liberation” is expected to be named in the best new play category.
Lepore is a New Yorker staff writer and Harvard University professor whose Pulitzer helps confirm her as one of the country's most prominent historians, her previous honors including the Bancroft Prize for “The Name of War” and the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award for “New York Burning.” In 2023, she contributed an introduction to Paul McCartney's book of Beatles photos, “1964: Eyes of the Storm.”
Entertainment Writer Mark Kennedy contributed.
FILE - Signage for The Pulitzer Prizes appear at Columbia University, May 28, 2019, in New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, File)
FILE - Bess Wohl attends the Glamour Women of the Year Awards at The Plaza Hotel on Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025, in New York. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File)