Chicago Sports

NFL suspends Falcons WR Calvin Ridley for Gambling on NFL Games in 2021 Season

The NFL came down with swift punishment for Falcons WR Calvin Ridley by suspending him for at least the 2022 season. Calvin Ridley rumors to the Bears have circulated through out this off-season. It appears now that those rumors can be put to rest.

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell today suspended Calvin Ridley of the Atlanta Falcons indefinitely through at least the conclusion of the 2022 season for betting on NFL games in the 2021 season.

Calvin Ridley was supposed to emerge as the #1 for Atlanta and Matt Ryan but took a leave from the game to focus on his mental health. Apparently in his down time, that included gambling on NFL games. If you’re wondering why the name is so familiar (for those that live under a rock) Calvin, is the brother of former Chicago Bear WR, Riley Ridley who is no longer with the team.

Now Bear fans can focus on linking Cowboys WR  Amari Cooper to the Bears.  At least one good thing will come from this, mock drafts can now stop including the Bears sending their 2nd round draft pick to Atlanta for Calvin Ridley. His value has tanked but, I would still do the trade if it was for a 6th rounder and some FanDuel credits.

Make sure to check out our Bears forum for the latest on the team.

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Matt Nagy’s house is for sale and it’s a Bears fan’s dream

Former Bears coach Matt Nagy is moving back to Kansas City as he recently became the Chief’s senior assistant/quarterbacks coach, reuniting with Andy Reid.

Now that he’s moving out of the Chicago area, Nagy is putting his 9,000 square foot North Shore home on the market for over $6 million. (Though as of Monday afternoon, the listing was marked as “temporarily off market.) But based on the photos, Nagy’s home appears to be a Bears fan’s dream come true.

The six-bed, six-bath home was purchased by Nagy and his family in 2018 and they wasted little time in making it their own. The house, built in 2017, is sleek with incredible features such as a home gym, outdoor fire pit, basketball court, wet bar, heated floors, and more. But going through the staged photos of the house, one things is abundantly clear: Nagy and his family loved the Bears.

His children’s rooms still had Bears apparel up on the walls, including a Fathead of Khalil Mack. His basement featured the infamous playsheet wall that was on display during the 2020 NFL Draft. The home theater had movie posters that had Bears in them, his shower tile was orange and blue with the team logo on the wall, and he had orange lockers.

The most jaw-dropping feature, however, has to be his Bears-themed basketball court. Nagy had the court painted orange and blue with a Bears logo on the padding under the hoop, while also including an “N” insignia at the free-throw line, presumably for his last name. There’s even a blue and orange scoreboard on the side as well.

On one hand, the dedication to the Bears is admirable and it’s clear he and his family wanted to be a part of the organization for a very long time. On the other hand, you could say it was a bit much and argue some things should be kept separate, especially when a coach’s shelf life is fairly short.

But it’s clear he wanted to make the most out of this home that he probably knew he was going to have to sell beginning last fall. After all, the photos that are featured on the site look to be from the fall, suggesting Nagy knew he was going to be let go sooner rather than later.

Nagy may not have been a great coach but he sure knew how to live. And if you have $6 million lying around, this place can be yours next!

Read more at usatoday.com

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Bears figure to sit out franchise tag deadline day

The Bears are unlikely to hand out a franchise tag before Tuesday’s deadline.

Teams have until 3 p.m. Tuesday to give pending free agents the tag, which guarantees their return for one year at a set price — and gives the two sides a chance to negotiate a long-term deal before July 15.

The Bears have no such players for whom that makes sense.

General manager Ryan Poles was mum last week when asked whether it was safe to presume receiver Allen Robinson wasn’t getting tagged — but he’s unlikely to get one. Robinson was tagged last season and then put together a disappointing, injury-filled season, catching 38 balls for 410 yards. To tag him again would cost the Bears $21.5 million. That’s above market value for Robinson — and would set the starting point for a long-term deal too high for the Bears’ liking.

Guard James Daniels and defensive lineman Bilal Nichols are also pending free agents. To keep Daniels on the tag, the Bears would owe him $16.7 million for one year; Nichols would be owed $16.8 million. Both figures seem to be too high for the Bears to consider, either as a one-year play or a starting point for long-term negotiations.

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AP Top 25: South Carolina stays at No. 1 in women’s basketball poll

South Carolina remained No. 1 in The Associated Press women’s basketball poll Monday despite suffering its second loss of the season.

The Gamecocks (29-2) fell to Kentucky in the Southeastern Conference Tournament title game Sunday, but stayed atop the poll, edging No. 2 Stanford.

South Carolina received 17 first-place votes from the 30-member national media panel. Stanford, which won the Pac-12 tournament, got 11 first-place ballots. North Carolina State was No. 3 with two top votes. Baylor and Louisville rounded out the top five.

The Gamecocks’ loss snapped an 18-game winning streak for the team, which has gone 11-0 against ranked opponents this season.

“We’ve put ourselves in a really good position. Going into the NCAA Tournament it doesn’t feel good, but we’ve got a lot of feel-goods throughout the season that we’ll draw on,” South Carolina coach Dawn Staley said after the loss Sunday. “The ultimate goal is still very much in front of us, and we’ll buckle down and try not to be the sad faces that are in the locker room today in the next couple of weeks.”

It’s the second time this season that the Gamecocks still were No. 1 after losing a game.

Kentucky jumped into the poll at No. 16 after also beating then-No. 6 LSU and No. 18 Tennessee in the SEC tournament. Kentucky was ranked for the first 11 weeks of the season before falling out in the middle of January. The Wildcats have now won 10 straight games to get back in the AP Top 25.

UConn was sixth, with Texas, Iowa — jumping four spots from No. 12 — LSU and Iowa State rounding out the top 10. The Big 12 is the only Power Five conference yet to begin its tournament.

Central Florida earned its first ranking ever, coming into the poll at No. 25. UCF has won 10 straight games and is the top seed in the American Athletic Conference tournament that begins Tuesday.

Florida, Georgia and Georgia Tech all fell out of the Top 25.

The final poll of the season will be released next Monday, a day after the NCAA announces this season’s field of 68 teams.

EYE OF THE TIGER

Princeton entered the Top 25 for the first time this season at No. 24 after going undefeated in the Ivy League regular season. The Tigers are 22-4 and have won 15 straight games. Princeton was last ranked for the final five weeks of the 2019-20 season. The Ivy League didn’t play sports last year because of the pandemic.

“We’re very grateful to be playing this year and being back together,” Princeton coach Carla Berube said. “It was over 18 months we hadn’t been all together playing any kind of organized basketball. In November and December we were trying to figure things out and the team came to work every day and worked really, really hard.”

GAME OF THE WEEK

The Big 12 championship game will be played Sunday with Baylor looking to sweep the regular season and tournament crowns again this year.

THE TOP 25

1. South Carolina 29-2

2. Stanford 28-3

3. NC State 29-3

4. Baylor 25-5

5. Louisville 25-4

6. UConn 24-5

7. Texas 23-6

8. Iowa 23-7

9. LSU 25-5

10. Iowa St. 25-5

11. Indiana 22-8

12. Michigan 22-6

13. Maryland 21-8

14. Ohio St. 23-6

15. BYU 25-2

16. Kentucky 19-11

17. Virginia Tech 23-9

18. North Carolina 23-6

19. Tennessee 23-8

20. Arizona 20-7

21. Oklahoma 23-7

22. Notre Dame 22-8

23. Florida Gulf Coast 27-2

24. Princeton 22-4

25. UCF 22-3

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AP Top 25: Gonzaga, Arizona stay on top of men’s basketball poll

Gonzaga, Arizona and reigning national champion Baylor remained atop The Associated Press men’s college basketball poll Monday while Tennessee cracked the top 10 for the first time this year and North Carolina returned to the Top 25 for the first time since November.

Mark Few’s Bulldogs claimed 52 of 61 first-place votes to hold the No. 1 ranking for the fourth straight week and eighth time this season going back to the preseason poll. The Wildcats stayed at No. 2 for the third straight week under first-year coach Tommy Lloyd and claimed six first-place votes, while Scott Drew’s Bears – who held the top spot for five weeks earlier this season — took the other three.

Auburn and Kentucky rounded out the top five, followed by Kansas, Duke, Villanova, Purdue and Tennessee. The Boilermakers and Volunteers tied for the No. 9 spot, with Tennessee tying No. 13 UCLA and No. 16 Illinois with the week’s biggest jump of four spots.

Southern California had the biggest fall of the week, tumbling five spots to No. 21 after losses to Arizona and UCLA last week. No. 18 Houston fell four spots.

No. 23 Colorado State joined the 25th-ranked Tar Heels as the poll’s new additions, bumping Ohio State and Alabama from last week’s rankings. The Rams spent four weeks in December and January in the poll, peaking at No. 20.

The Tar Heels opened the year at No. 19 but fell out of the rankings by Thanksgiving — part of the Atlantic Coast Conference having just one ranked team in the Blue Devils for most of the season.

They hadn’t received any votes in the past six polls, but jumped back in Monday after winning at Duke on Saturday in retiring Hall of Famer Mike Krzyzewski’s final game at Cameron Indoor Stadium.

THE TOP 25

1. Gonzaga 24-3

2. Arizona 28-3

3. Baylor 26-5

4. Auburn 27-4

5. Kentucky 25-6

6. Kansas 25-6

7. Duke 26-5

8. Villanova 23-7

9. Purdue 25-6

9. Tennessee 23-7

11. Providence 24-4

12. Wisconsin 24-6

13. UCLA 23-6

14. Texas Tech 23-8

15. Arkansas 24-7

16. Illinois 22-8

17. Saint Mary’s (Cal) 24-6

18. Houston 26-5

19. Murray St. 30-2

20. UConn 22-8

21. Southern Cal 25-6

22. Texas 21-10

23. Colorado St. 24-4

24. Iowa 22-9

25. North Carolina 23-8

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Illinois State hires Ohio State assistant Ryan Pedon as new men’s basketball coach

NORMAL — Illinois State University has named Ohio State assistant Ryan Pedon its new men’s basketball coach. He replaces Dan Muller, who was fired Feb. 13 in his 10th season at ISU.

“Ryan has worked at respected programs and has been mentored by some tremendous coaches,” Redbirds Athletic Director Kyle Brennan said. “His recruiting ties to Illinois and the Midwest will be a great asset to him moving forward.”

ISU will be Pedon’s first head coaching job. He followed Chris Holtmann from Butler and is in his fifth season with the Buckeyes.

Pedon previously was assistant coach at Illinois under John Groce. He also spent three years at Toledo as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator and was director of basketball operations at Kent State from 2002-2005 and was a graduate assistant at Miami (Ohio).

Pedon said his family and he were seeking the “right fit” and “Illinois State checks every one of our boxes: Great people, strong academics, a highly competitive environment, a proud alumni base, and a campus (and) community that will allow us to recruit at a high level.”

Pedon played college basketball at Division III Wooster and helped the Fighting Scots to three NCAA Tournaments and three championships of the North Coast Athletic Conference.

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Blackhawks unravel in 7-minute span, lose to Lightning

Take out a span of just over seven minutes, including the end of the second period and beginning of the third, and the Blackhawks played a very strong game Sunday against the Lightning.

All seven-minute spans count, though, and the five goals the Lightning scored during that time — including three goals in 32 seconds to set a franchise record — rendered the Hawks’ otherwise good effort irrelevant.

The end result was a 6-3 Lightning win that gave the Hawks their 14th loss in their last 19 games.

“That’s what they do,” interim coach Derek King said. “They strike, and they strike fast. It was just, ‘Bang, bang, bang.’ [It’s] tough for us to climb out of that. We don’t have that depth of firepower.”

The Hawks easily could’ve led 3-0 instead of 1-0 after the first period, with Kirby Dach hitting Lightning goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy’s stick handle on an open net and Connor Murphy and Alex DeBrincat ringing consecutive shots off the post. And the Hawks easily could’ve taken a 3-1 lead during a second-period power play in which Vasilevskiy twice robbed DeBrincat moving post-to-post.

But the Hawks didn’t — Patrick Kane later rightly called that squandered power play the game’s turning point — and the Lightning went to work, claiming a 3-2 lead before the second intermission and blowing the game out soon after the break.

“It started snowballing,” Riley Stillman said. “We’ve got to do a better job of parking things once they’re over. Once one or two go in, you’ve got to find a way to regroup.”

Kane, DeBrincat and Dylan Strome did each score, but Vasilevskiy was the main reason the Hawks’ 9-7 advantage in high-danger scoring chances didn’t translate onto the scoreboard.

“He made some saves [where] I had my arms up in the air, pretty much, and all of a sudden, this big leg appears or the glove hand comes up,” King said. “This game could’ve easily went the other way. Obviously it didn’t, but we’ll look at the video and we’ll probably realize we didn’t play as bad as we thought we did. We just gave them a little too much at certain times and they took advantage of it.”

Olympians honored

Six members of the U.S. women’s hockey team that won silver at the 2022 Olympics were honored pregame Sunday on International Women’s day.

Oak Lawn native and Hawks development coach Kendall Coyne Schofield headlined the group that also included Abbey Murphy (Evergreen Park), Megan Bozek (Buffalo Grove), Jesse Compher (Northbrook), Savannah Harmon (Downers Grove) and Alex Cavallini (Delafield, Wisconsin).

“Our team has so much to be proud of, regardless of the result,” Coyne Schofield said, referring to the 3-2 gold-medal game loss to Canada. “[Despite] what we overcame to get to the Olympics, and the adversity we faced, losing one of our best players 10 minutes into the tournament, there wasn’t one person who said, ‘We can’t win this thing.'”

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Cubs’ Kohl Franklin throws 99 mph in first live session of minicamp

MESA, Ariz. – A crowd formed around Field 5 at the Cubs’ Sloan Park spring training facilities, where Kohl Franklin was facing batters for the first time this year, a big step in his recovery from an oblique injury.

His was the last simulated game of the day, so his teammates filled the bleachers. Behind the backstop, coaches gathered pitch data. Cubs vice president of pitching Craig Breslow and major-league pitching coach Tommy Hottovy looked on.

Franklin’s final pitch cracked in the catcher’s mitt, and the sea of blue dispersed, buzzing.

“Well, Kohl looks pretty good,” one prospect said to another. “Kohl looks pretty good.”

Franklin hasn’t thrown in a game in two years. The COVID-19 pandemic wiped out the 2020 minor-league season, and then a left oblique injury sidelined Franklin in 2021. But he’s on track to return this season. On Saturday, the last day of prospect minicamp before minor league camp officially opened, he faced three batters in a one-inning sim game. His fastball touched 99 mph twice.

“It’s unbelievable,” he said after walking off the field, grinning. “I can’t wait to tell my parents.”

Cubs coordinator of pitching development Casey Jacobson said he couldn’t find words to describe how impressive Franklin’s performance had been.

“He’s lost two years, and you look back, and the frustration – I can’t ever imagine it, never never going through that myself,” Jacobson said the next day. “But he’s responded incredibly well. He’s been very mature. He’s gone about the process and done the tedious day-to-day stuff at a really high level that got him to the position where he was yesterday.”

Franklin was playing long toss a few months before 2021 spring training when he felt a pain like he’d been hit in the back with a golf club. The stiffness wouldn’t subside, and his left side began to swell.

An MRI later revealed a torn oblique. The injury also took off a piece of a rib, Franklin said.

“I think I cried to my mom, honestly,” he said. “I’d worked so hard to get back to where I was, and then feeling like it’s reset. It was super tough.”

Months passed before Franklin could start easing back into activity. He received two platelet-rich plasma injections as part of his treatment. Over the summer, he dealt with another flair up.

“It was a grueling process,” he said.

Franklin didn’t go through it alone. Veteran right-hander Jonathan Holder was on the injured list all last season with what the Cubs described as a right shoulder strain.

When Kohl started rehab exercises, Holder encouraged Kohl to take his time. Rushing through steps wouldn’t help speed up recovery for that kind of injury. After rehab sessions together, Holder would take Franklin to dinner to catch up.

“It was awesome having somebody with experience like that to be able to talk to,” Franklin said.

Franklin estimates he threw six or seven bullpens in August and September and then shut down for a regular offseason so he would be fresh entering this spring.

He was relieved when he reported to Mesa and his physical exam pointed to a successful recovery. As Franklin built back up for the spring, Jacobson noticed a difference in how the pitcher carried himself.

“He knew all the work has really paid off,” Jacobson said.

Franklin had trouble sleeping Friday night, with a 15-pitch live session scheduled the next day. Afterward, Franklin, as Jacobson put it, “floated” off the mound.

“I’m so ecstatic,” Franklin said. “I’m so happy to be here right now.”

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