Chicago Sports

Could Amari Cooper be an option for the Chicago Bears in free agency?

Another target may have become available at the wide receiver position for the Chicago Bears.

On Friday, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported that the Dallas Cowboys are set to release wide receiver Amari Cooper ahead of the new league year. That will make the 27-year-old Cooper a free agent and able to sign with any team right away. Cooper was due $20M in fully guaranteed money and the Cowboys want to go a different direction with their receiver core.

But will the Bears be interested?

Cowboys are “likely” to release WR Amari Copper by the start of the new league year, per league sources.
Cooper is due $20 million in fully guaranteed money on the fifth day of the new league year, March 20.

It’s clear Chicago has a need at wide receiver and should be doing everything they can to surround Justin Fields with talent going into his second year. So yeah, they should be if the price is right.

This free agent receiving class is strong with Davante Adams and Chris Godwin leading the way at the top, but both are expect to return to their teams. That leaves guys like Allen Robinson, Mike Williams, Christian Kirk, DJ Chark and now Cooper available.

It will be interesting to see how Ryan Poles attacks this free agency, his first as general manager of the Bears, and if he wants to go out and spend big money. If he does, Cooper could fit in that mold.

Cooper had 865 yards on 68 receptions with eight touchdowns in 15 games played last season but really struggled to find a role in the Cowboys’ offense in the final few games.

Make sure to check out our Chicago Bears forum for the latest on the Monsters of the Midway.

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

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Chicago Cubs third baseman Patrick Wisdom Shares His Thoughts on the MLB Lockout

As MLB fans await what they hope is the end to the lock out and getting teams back on the field, players are expressing their frustrations as well with what’s going on.

The latest? Chicago Cubs third baseman Patrick Wisdom.

Wisdom went on air with 670 The Score to share his thoughts on the MLB lockout. Wisdom had an impressive rookie season with the Cubs in 2021.

“There’s no Opening Day because the league has not negotiated in good faith,” Wisdom said on the Parkins & Spiegel Show on Wednesday. “We’re fighting to make it fair on both sides. I understand it’s a business, and I understand both sides need to come together and communicate and negotiate to get something done. We can’t just keep having days where there’s nothing going and we can’t have 43 days before anybody talks. I think that’s another reason why we’re at where we’re at right now. If we would’ve had this week of negotiating 40 days ago, we’d be in a much better spot. But it is what it is now ….

Wisdom’s thoughts have been echoed by many players across the league. The notion that the league is not negotiating in good faith seems to be a common belief. Wisdom’s newest teammate, Marcus Stroman, has been outspoken against the commissioner and the progress of the CBA negotiations.

Other Cubs players have voiced their displeasure as well, but Wisdom brings an interesting perspective to the ordeal. Wisdom spent a large portion of his career in the minor leagues. Wisdom describes how playing professional baseball isn’t always the lavish lifestyle that some may think.

“I’ve spent time in the minor leagues, I was making maybe two-thousand dollars a month… and then I’m sleeping on an air mattress in an apartment with four other guys…”

Everybody has a different journey to the majors. After only his first year there, Wisdom finds himself in unchartered waters.

“That is fair – yeah, I’m conflicted,” Wisdom said. “Like you said, I spent a lot of time in the minor leagues – so not represented by the union – and I was able to go out and play, we didn’t really have these kinds of conflicts. So now that I’m in it, it’s new to me. And I understand it fully, I understand why we’re doing this and why the two sides need to come together and what they’re arguing about. I get it. But my old self is like, ‘Yeah, but we need to play. I need to play games and earn money and provide for my family and put food on the table.’”

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

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Hall of Fame basketball coach Nancy Fahey retires after five seasons at Illinois

CHAMPAIGN — Nancy Fahey, a Hall of Fame coach who won five national championships at the Division III level, is retiring from coaching after five seasons at Illinois.

Fahey’s announcement Friday came a day after the Illini finished a 7-20 season with a loss to Nebraska in the Big Ten women’s tournament.

“Her competitive fire is matched only by the standard of excellence she has set for herself and those around her — a combination that has produced one of the most decorated coaching careers in the history of college basketball,” athletic director Josh Whitman said. “Although we were not able to win as many games at Illinois as any of us had hoped, I will always be grateful to Nancy for providing a steady, experienced hand at a time when our program needed stability and integrity.”

Fahey replaced Matt Bollant, who was fired after one winning season in five years and was sued for allegedly racially abusing players. Bollant denied wrongdoing;. A university report said the claims were unfounded but paid a $375,000 settlement to be divided among the players.

Fahey had her greatest success coaching at Washington University in St. Louis and was inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in 2012. Fahey coached there for 31 seasons and reached the NCAA Division III tournament 29 times, including 10 runs to the Final Four. She won four straight national titles from 1998-2001 and another in 2010.

Over 36 years, Fahey’s teams posted 779 victories, ranking among the top 20 all-time in the NCAA record books, seventh among current NCAA Division I head coaches and ninth among all active NCAA head coaches.

After amassing a record of 737-133 at Washington, she was hired at Illinois in 2017 but never posted a winning season in Champaign. The Illini were 42-99 overall and 7-77 in Big Ten regular-season games, including 1-13 this season.

Her final two seasons with the Illini were marred by several pauses caused by COVID-19.

“I want to thank all the coaches and staff members I’ve worked with for the past 40 years, from Johnsburg High School and Washington University to the University of Illinois,” Fahey said. “A special thanks to all my players who will always have a special place in my heart. I wish Illinois women’s basketball the very best in the future. I’m ready for the next chapter in my life.”

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2 Chicago police officers shot on the West Side after gunman drops weapon in front of them, then opens fire

Two Chicago police officers were shot early Friday on the West Side after a gunman accidentally dropped his weapon in front of them, picked it up and started firing, authorities said.

One of the officers was grazed in the face and the other wounded in the leg, police said. They went to Mount Sinai Hospital with injuries not considered life-threatening.

One officer was released within hours and was recovering at home, while the other officer was expected to be hospitalized for “a few days,” Police Supt. David Brown told reporters Friday morning.

The shooting happened around 3:30 a.m. at the Original Maxwell Street hot dog stand in the 3800 block of West Harrison Street as the gunman and one of the officers waited in line, Brown said.

“The offender had ordered his food and was in line in front of the officer,” Brown said. “The offender reached in his pocket to pay for his order, a gun fell out of the offender’s waistband.

“The officer noticed the gun falling out, but before they could take action, the offender grabbed the gun, picked it up and began immediately shooting at the officers,” Brown said.

One of the wounded officers radioed, “I got shot in the head, I got shot in the head. Dropped an extended clip right in front of me, picked it up, shot me, graze wound in the right side of my head and my partner was shot in the leg.”

The partner had been sitting in the squad car when the gunman fired at least three times into the car, Brown said. Neither officer returned fire.

The gunman ran off but was spotted by an undercover officer who had heard the shots. He and other officers chased the suspect through alleys and took someone into custody in the 100 block of South Pulaski Road, about half a mile away, police said.

“They (the wounded officers) were really ambushed,” Brown said. “When the offender dropped the gun, before they could react, he began shooting, so they had no time to react. They were wounded and the offender fled, and thank God for that undercover officer nearby and officers were running around after this offender before he could escape.”

Brown said a gun was found nearby. “We’ve retrieved a gun and detectives are on scene getting as much information, video and witness information as we can,” he said.

“May the good Lord bless the men and women of the Chicago Police Department. They work tirelessly to risk everything for all of our safety,” Brown added. “We should give them a real big ‘thank you’ this morning and please, prayers for them and their families as they go through this process.”

Police expected to charge the man with attempted murder of a police officer in the next 48 hours, Chief of Detectives Brendan Deenihan told reporters.

The officers will be placed on routine administrative duties for 30 days, officials said in a statement.

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High school basketball: 2022 All-Area team for the Chicago region

Darrin Ames, Kenwood

Allen Cunningham/For the Sun-Times

Darrin Ames, Kenwood, 6-0, G, Jr.

One of the top 50 players in the national Class of 2023, the First Team All-City selection lived up to the hype this season. The dynamic junior averaged 24 points, five assists and three steals and shot 51 percent (43 of 84) from three-point range. Teamed with Nevada recruit Trey Pettigrew to lead the Broncos to second place in the powerful Red-South/Central and more than 25 wins.

Xavier Amos, Young

Provided

Xavier Amos, Young, 6-8, F, Sr.

NIU recruit. First Team All-City. A game-changing rim protector, Amos is a strong presence in the post and a capable scorer on the wing. He averaged 18 points, 9 rebounds and 4 blocks to help lead the Dolphins to first place in the Red-North/West and the city championship.

Robbie Avila, Oak Forest

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Robbie Avila, Oak Forest, 6-8, C, Sr.

Indiana State. Avila is a unique player, adept at all facets of the game. He’s the best player and leading scorer in school history. Averaged 23.9 points, 10.6 rebounds, 3.1 assists, 2.1 steals and 2 blocks. He shot 72.1% on two-pointers, 41.9% on threes and 84.4% from the line while leading the Bengals to a 25-8 season.

AJ Casey, Young

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AJ Casey, Young, 6-8, F, Sr.

Miami recruit. First Team All-City and three-time All-Area selection that has been a varsity starter for four years. Averaged 19 points, 10 rebounds, four assists and three blocks to lead the Dolphins to the city title and first place in the Red-North/West.

Cameron Christie, Rolling Meadows

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Cameron Christie, Rolling Meadows, 6-3, G, Jr.

Led the Mustangs to their first regional title in more than 21 years and a first place finish in the Mid-Suburban East. Averaged 22 points, 4 rebounds and 3 assists. Shot 53% on two-pointers, 42% from three and 93% from the free-throw line.

DeAndre Craig, Mount Carmel

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DeAndre Craig, Mount Carmel, 6-2, G, Jr.

First Team All-City. MVP of the Buffalo Grove Thanksgiving Tournament and the Pekin Holiday Tournament. First Team All-Conference in the Catholic League. Averaging 21 points and has scored 30 or more in four games. Led the Caravan to a regional title and a 28-5 season.

Jaylen Drane, Simeon

Allen Cunningham/For the Sun-Times

Jaylen Drane, Simeon, 6-3, G, Sr.

Uncommitted. Second-Team All-City selection. Averaged 17.6 points, 2 assists and 4 rebounds. Teamed with Aviyon Morris, Jalen Griffith and Miles and Wes Rubin to lead the Wolverines to the Pontiac Holiday Tournament championship, first place in the Red-South Central and more than 26 wins.

Davontae Hall, Hyde Park

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Davontae Hall, Hyde Park, 6-2, G, Sr.

Uncommitted. First Team All-City selection. Averaged 19.4 points, 3.7 assists and 1.7 steals. Led the Thunderbirds to the championship of the prestigious Big Dipper Holiday Tournament and was named tournament MVP. Scored more than 30 points twice and more than 20 ten times. Led Hyde Park to regional title and more than 22 wins.

Ahmad Henderson, Brother Rice

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Ahmad Henderson, Brother Rice, 5-11, G, Jr.

First Team All-City selection and First Team All-Conference in the Catholic League. Averaged 15.4 points, 4.1 assists, 4.0 rebounds, 1.6 steals and shot 80% from the free-throw line. True point guard that helped lead a very young Crusaders team to a 24-7 season.

Braden Huff, Glenbard West

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Braden Huff, Glenbard West, 6-10, F, Sr.

Gonzaga recruit. Sun-Times Player of the Year. Two-time All-Area selection. Led Glenbard West to an incredible undefeated run against in-state opponents this season including the Jack Tosh Holiday Tournament and West Suburban conference titles. Averaged 16.8 points, 6 rebounds, 3 assists, 1.5 steals and 1.5 assists.

Nojus Indrusaities, Lemont

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Nojus Indrusaitis, Lemont, 6-4, G, So.

Followed up an impressive freshman season with a dominant sophomore campaign. A terrific shooter that is able to score in every way. Averaged 21.6 points and 6.3 rebounds while leading Lemont to a regional title and more than 25 wins.

Conrad Luczynski, Bartlett

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Conrad Luczynski, Bartlett, 7-3, C, Sr.

Uncommitted. Emerged from obscurity to become one of the state’s most dominant players. Averaged 18.4 points, 12.5 rebounds, 4.2 blocks and 3.2 assists. Posted multiple triple-doubles and one near quadruple-double. Led Hawks to a 25-7 season.

Nick Martinelli, Glenbrook South

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Nick Martinelli, Glenbrook South, 6-7, F, Sr.

Elon recruit. Two-time All-Area Selection. The state’s most unstoppable scorer. Averaged 22.5 points, 6.7 rebounds and 2.8 assists. Shot 67% from the field and 35% from three-point range. Teamed with senior guard Cooper Noard to lead the Titans to the Central Suburban League title, a regional championship and more than 31 wins.

Jackson Munro, New Trier

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Jackson Munro, New Trier, 6-8, C, Sr.

Dartmouth recruit. Two-time Central Suburban League All-Conference selection. First team All-Tournament at Pontiac. Averaged 17 points, 9 rebounds, 4 assists and 2 blocks while shooting 64% from the field. Led Trevians to more than 29 wins and a regional championship.

Caden Pierce, Glenbard West

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Caden Pierce, Glenbard West, 6-6, G, Sr.

Princeton recruit. Key component of the Hilltoppers’ dominant defense. Teamed with Braden Huff, Bobby Durkin, Paxton Warden and Ryan Renfro on an undefeated regular season against in-state opponents. Averaged 12.7 points, 5.3 rebounds, 3.9 assists, 3.2 steals and 4.5 deflections while shooting 52% from the field and 37% from three-point range and 73 percent from the free-throw line.

Ty Rodgers, Thornton

Quinn Harris/For the Sun-Times

Ty Rodgers, Thornton, 6-7, F, Sr.

Illinois recruit. A physically dominant player with court vision and superior leadership skills. Averaged 17.3 points, 15.4 rebounds, 8 assists, 3.3 steals and 3 blocks. Led the Wildcats to more than 22 wins and a regional championship. Led his Michigan team to a state title last season.

Jaden Schutt, Yorkville Christian

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Jaden Schutt, Yorkville Christian, 6-6, G, Sr.

Duke recruit. Two-time All-Area Selection. Scored more than 2,000 points in his career. School’s all-time leader in points, rebounds and three-pointers. Set the state record for threes in a game (17) in 2019. Averaged 27 points, 7 rebounds and 3 assists while shooting 65% on two-pointers, 40% on threes and 87% from the free-throw line.

Asa Thomas, Lake Forest

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Asa Thomas, Lake Forest, 6-7, G, Jr.

Set the school record for three-pointers in a season this year with 85 and has already scored more than 1,000 points in his career. Averaged 17 points, 6 rebounds and 3 assists. Shot 40% from three-point range and 83% from the free-throw line. Led the Scouts to the North Suburban conference title and more than 26 wins and a regional championship.

Ben VanderWal, Timothy Christian

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Ben VanderWal, Timothy Christian, 6-7, G, Sr.

Furman recruit. Put up astounding numbers despite being the focus of every opposing defense. Averaged 26.4 points, 10 rebounds, 2.3 blocks and 2.3 steals. Shot 66% from the field and 80% from the free-throw line and drew 25 charges.

Damari Wheeler-Thomas, Larkin

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Damari Wheeler-Thomas, Larkin, 6-0, G, Sr.

North Dakota State recruit. A dynamic scorer and standout defender. Averaged 19 points, 5 assists, 3 rebounds and three steals. Shot 53% from the field, 37% from three-point range and 88% from the free-throw line. Played his best in the biggest games and led the Royals to an undefeated title season in the Upstate Eight, a regional title and more than 29 wins.

Looking back:

2021 All-Area Team

2020 All-Area Team

2019 All-Area Team

2018 All-Area Team

2017 All-Area Team

2016 All-Area Team

2015 All-Area Team

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High School Basketball Player of the Year: Glenbard West’s Braden Huff

How did a kid from Glen Ellyn evolve from a complete unknown into the Sun-Times Player of the Year?

Why doesn’t the rest of the country appreciate how good Glenbard West’s Braden Huff is?

Those are the two biggest questions surrounding Huff. The first one can be answered. Huff has been working on his incredibly unique skill set for years, but the downtime and isolation provided by the COVID-19 pandemic took his work and the results to a higher level.

“He’s always been focused,” Alec Huff, Braden’s dad, said. “But it was great for him to have basketball as an outlet. He took full advantage of it. He needed to get stronger. He had a couple trainers and did whatever he had to do, Zoom workouts in the driveway. He drove the whole thing and wanted to get better.”

The second key factor was just down to genetics. Huff grew to 6-11.

“[Huff] is one of the most skilled kids I’ve ever had and we’ve had some talented guys,” Illinois Wolves club basketball coach Mike Mullins said. “It’s his skill set and vision and passing and shooting ability.”

Mullins was blown away by Huff’s first attempt at the Illinois Wolves’ typical practice drills. And at that point, Huff was just 6-9.

“I’d seen him go through middle school and he was long and lanky but had the good skill set,” Mullins said. “I liked him even at 6-4. He was so competitive.”

This season Huff and his teammates at Glenbard West took the area by storm. They lived up to all the preseason hype and became a sensation. The Hilltoppers are the hottest ticket in the area. They sold out Wintrust Arena for a regular-season game. The most recent playoff game sold out the Bartlett high school gym in under 30 minutes.

Even the local television stations have taken notice. A local photographer had Topps print up basketball cards of the five starters. Younger kids wait in line for autographs after games.

“That’s been cool,” Huff said. “Just kind of meeting people and so many people introducing themselves. It’s been crazy. I couldn’t even have imagined it a couple of years ago.”

It’s been a whirlwind four months for a group of friends that played together at Hadley Middle School. The game at Wintrust Arena against Sierra Canyon was the area’s biggest high school sports event in recent memory.

Alec Huff never imagined he’d watch his son go up against LeBron James’ son in an ESPN game. And outplay him.

“That was an unbelievable experience,” Alec Huff said. “For a high school with a bunch of kids that grew up together to get to that point was amazing.”

The Hilltoppers lost that game on a buzzer-beater three. It’s their only loss of the season but most observers think it was their best performance.

Huff didn’t want to hear anything about moral victories after the game. The Hilltoppers want to win. The Class 4A state championship is the focus.

“We’ve been thinking about it for a long time now,” Huff said. “It can be hard to not look ahead. We’re excited for the next few playoff games and ready for them. But if we are able to get there playing in Champaign would be a really cool experience.”

Glenbard West’s Braden Huff (34) shoots a three against Hillcrest.

Allen Cunningham/For the Sun-Times

Huff has signed with Gonzaga, so it is clear that one elite college program appreciates him. But the rest of the country isn’t on board yet. He’s ranked 95th by 247Sports and isn’t in ESPN’s top 100.

“He’s the most under recruited kid I’ve ever had,” Mullins said. “He outplayed all those kids ranked ahead of him.”

National rankings are ridiculous, and Huff hasn’t spent a second worrying about them. He’s been too busy working. He may be the best shooting big man in the history of Illinois high school basketball.

“Some guys struggle when that three-point line moves back a couple feet,” Mullins said. “That’s an easy release for him.”

Huff averaged just 16.8 points, six rebounds, and three assists this season. But he was immense in the crucial moments of the most important games. Glenbard West blew out the vast majority of its opponents, so he’s only averaging 25 minutes per game. Those numbers could be doubled if stats were the focus.

“Braden and his teammates are so professional and so mature,” Hilltoppers coach Jason Opoka said. “They aren’t worried about stats or all of this intense media stuff lately. When they step on the floor it is strictly business.”

CHICAGO SUN-TIMES PLAYERS OF THE YEAR

2021–Max Christie, Rolling Meadows

2020–DJ Steward, Young

2019–DaJuan Gordon, Curie

2018–Talen Horton-Tucker, Simeon

2017–Alonzo Verge, Thornton

2016–Charlie Moore, Morgan Park

2015–Jalen Brunson, Stevenson

2014–Cliff Alexander, Curie

2013–Jahlil Okafor, Young

2012–Jabari Parker, Simeon

2011–Wayne Blackshear, Morgan Park

2010–Jereme Richmond, Waukegan

2009–Jereme Richmond, Waukegan

2008–Kevin Dillard, Homewood-Flossmoor

2007–Derrick Rose, Simeon

2006–Jon Scheyer, Glenbrook North

2005–DeAndre Thomas, Westinghouse

2004-Calvin Brock, Simeon

2003–Shannon Brown, Proviso East

2002–Sean Dockery, Julian

2001–Eddy Curry, Thornwood

2000–Cedrick Banks, Westinghouse

1999–Leon Smith, King

1998–Quentin Richardson, Young

1997–Melvin Ely, Thornton

1996–Ronnie Fields, Farragut

1995–Kevin Garnett, Farragut

1994–Jerry Gee, St. Martin de Porres

1993–Rashard Griffith, King

1992–Chris Collins, Glenbrook North

1991–Sherell Ford, Proviso East

1990–Jamie Brandon, King

1989–Deon Thomas, Simeon

1988–Eric Anderson, de Sales

1987–Marcus Liberty, King

1986–Nick Anderson, Simeon

1985–Michael Ingram, Proviso West

1984–Hersey Hawkins, Westinghouse

1983–Len Bertolini, St. Patrick

1982–Bernard Jackson, Phillips

1981–Walter Downing, Providence

1980–Glenn Rivers, Proviso East

1979–Isiah Thomas, St. Joseph

1978–Mark Aguirre, Westinghouse

1977–Eddie Johnson, Westinghouse

1976–Glen Grunwald, East Leyden

1975–Pete Boesen, Maine South

1974–Audie Matthews, Bloom

1973–Mark Vitali, St. Charles

1972–Quinn Buckner, Thornridge

1971–Quinn Buckner, Thornridge

1970–Lloyd Batts, Thornton

1969–Jim Brewer, Proviso East

1968–Jeff Hickman, Lockport

1967–Rick Howat, Downers Grove

1966–Rich Bradshaw, Marshall

1965–Terry Hurley, Steinmetz

1964–Eugene Ford, Crane

1963–Joe Allen, Carver

1962–Cazzie Russell, Carver

1961–Bob Caress, Thornton

1960–George Wilson, Marshall

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2 Chicago police officers shot on the West Side after gunman drops weapon in front of them, then opens fire

Two Chicago police officers were shot early Friday on the West Side after a gunman accidentally dropped his weapon in front of them, picked it up and started firing, authorities said.

One of the officers was grazed in the face and the other wounded in the leg, police said. They went to Mount Sinai Hospital with injuries not considered life-threatening.

The shooting happened around 3:30 a.m. at the Original Maxwell Street hot dog stand in the 3800 block of West Harrison Street as the gunman and one of the officers waited in line, according to Police Supt. David Brown.

“The offender had ordered his food and was in line in front of the officer,” Brown said. “The offender reached in his pocket to pay for his order, a gun fell out of the offender’s waistband.

“The officer noticed the gun falling out, but before they could take action, the offender grabbed the gun, picked it up and began immediately shooting at the officers,” Brown said.

One of the wounded officers radioed, “I got shot in the head, I got shot in the head. Dropped an extended clip right in front of me, picked it up, shot me, graze wound in the right side of my head and my partner was shot in the leg.”

The partner had been sitting in the squad car when the gunman fired at least three times into the car, Brown said. Neither officer returned fire.

The gunman ran off but was spotted by an undercover officer who had heard the shots. He and other officers chased the suspect through alleys and took someone into custody in the 100 block of South Pulaski Road, about half a mile away, police said.

“They (the wounded officers) were really ambushed,” Brown said. “When the offender dropped the gun, before they could react, he began shooting, so they had no time to react. They were wounded and the offender fled, and thank God for that undercover officer nearby and officers were running around after this offender before he could escape.”

Brown said a gun was found nearby. “We’ve retrieved a gun and detectives are on scene getting as much information, video and witness information as we can,” he said.

“May the good Lord bless the men and women of the Chicago Police Department. They work tirelessly to risk everything for all of our safety,” Brown added. “We should give them a real big ‘thank you’ this morning and please, prayers for them and their families as they go through this process.”

The officers will be placed on routine administrative duties for 30 days, officials said in a statement.

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2 Chicago police officers shot on the West Side after gunman drops weapon in front of them, then opens fire

Two Chicago police officers were shot early Friday on the West Side, according to authorities said.

One of the officers was grazed in the face and the other wounded in the leg, police said. They went to Mount Sinai Hospital but their conditions were not known, according to police spokesman Tom Ahern.

The shooting happened around 3:30 a.m. near Maxwell Street and Independence Avenue.

“I got shot in the head, I got shot in the head,” one of the wounded officers radioed. “Dropped an extended clip right in front of me, picked it up, shot me, graze wound in the right side of my head and my partner was shot in the leg.”

This is a developing story, check back for details.

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Kyle Davidson brings down-to-earth assuredness to Blackhawks’ GM role

Kyle Davidson was restricted this week to typical general manager-speak about his short- and long-term plans for the Blackhawks. He didn’t — because he couldn’t — disclose many concrete details.

But in more private settings or when he is discussing less closely guarded topics, the more open, friendly, personable side of Davidson’s personality shines.

Consider, as evidence, a story he told Wednesday about the moment CEO Danny Wirtz gave him the news of his promotion over a recent breakfast.

”I had no clue what was coming,” Davidson said. ”I didn’t know if this was the ‘good breakfast’ or the ‘bad breakfast.’ His process in telling me was walking me through different things they learned and how their understanding of the role of GM had changed throughout their interviews and their due diligence. I stopped listening and started thinking: ‘Is that good? Is that bad? Is that good? Is that bad?’

”All of a sudden, he’s like, ‘We’d like for you to be the 10th general manager in Blackhawks history.’ I had a big chill run through my body. I think I just said, ‘Uh, well, yeah!’ I tried to say something with great retrospect, some kind of pronouncement, [but] I think I said just some gibberish. There was nothing intelligible that came out of my mouth.”

Davidson’s predecessor, Stan Bowman, didn’t lack loquaciousness, either, but his formal, buttoned-up style prevented much emotion from seeping into his words. Talking with Bowman never quite felt like a person-to-person conversation.

Davidson, by contrast, isn’t nearly so buttoned up — even literally, as his long coat Wednesday covered only a casual blue sweater.

”He’s honest,” interim coach Derek King said. ”He doesn’t hold back. He tells it how it is. He knows what needs to be done. Sometimes you’re going to hear what you probably don’t want to hear, but it’s the truth. That’s the way he operates.

”There’s no phoniness or anything with Kyle. He’s got a pulse on everything, and he knows what to expect. And we know what we need to expect from him, what he wants us to do.”

In a Hawks organization dying for a modern-day makeover — needing to relate more to the everyday Chicagoans it must win back as fans — Davidson’s personality, not to mention his vision as GM, should make a positive difference.

Business president Jaime Faulkner would be wise to get her new permanent co-worker into the media and out in public as much as possible. Fans might or might not like the tear-it-down moves Davidson inevitably will initiate, but they almost certainly will like the moves more after Davidson explains them than they would otherwise.

As Wirtz said Tuesday: ”When I leave a meeting with Kyle, I feel better.”

Davidson exudes confidence in the right way, with no accompanying arrogance or stubbornness.

He’s comfortable listing both his self-identified strengths and weaknesses. The former category, for the record, includes his strategic planning, his eye for player talent — ”especially at the amateur level” — and his understanding of salary-cap nuances and the collective-bargaining agreement. He wants to diversify the sources of his information, too, by building out the Hawks’ analytics department.

The latter includes the fact he didn’t play high-level hockey himself, so he didn’t learn what exactly works and what doesn’t in the locker room. That explains why he brought former Hawks defenseman Brian Campbell — who is expected to assume a major front-office role — everywhere with him this winter.

And he insists he wants to be judged simply by his work and its results.

”I know what’s required [to be GM],” Davidson said. ”I know I’m qualified. And that assuredness in myself will prevail in the end. People will see that I am capable and that I am my own person with my own thoughts and ways of doing things. It’s going to be a body-of-work thing.”

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High school basketball: Previewing and predicting the top sectional finals

Brackets haven’t been blown to smithereens yet, so that leaves some highly-anticipated showdowns for high school basketball fans Friday night.

There are a whole bunch of No. 1 vs. No. 2 seeds squaring off in sectional championship games. Here are previews and picks of the very best in what will be a monster night of high school basketball in Illinois.

Class 4A Sectional title games

Glenbrook South: Glenbrook South (32-2) vs. New Trier (30-3)

The sectional final everyone expected and hoped would materialize is set.

These two Central Suburban League South foes split during the regular season with New Trier winning the last matchup on Glenbrook South’s floor. This will again be in the Titan Dome in what should be a pretty electric sectional atmosphere.

This one will mean a whole lot more than the previous two. The winner will be favored in next week’s supersectional and will arguably be the biggest threat remaining to Glenbard West in Class 4A.

While 6-8 big man Jackson Munro has become the go-to player down the stretch of the regular season, Noah Shannon showed Wednesday why New Trier is so dangerous. It’s a team filled with weapons, and in the win over Rolling Meadows it was Shannon who shined, pumping in 24 first half points in the blowout win.

Whether it’s Munro, Shannon, Karlo Colak, Jake Fiegen or Josh Kirkpatrick, the Trevians hit you with a steady diet of size, length, shooting and versatile scoring. Plus, point guard Peter Kanellos is the consummate point guard and an outstanding on-the-ball defender.

When New Trier gets in a flow, moves and shares the basketball, it can really score at a high level.

Glenbrook South’s Nick Martinelli is a difference-maker, a player who can carry a team on his back. He produces and finds any possible way to do so, especially at crunch time. His running-mate, senior guard Cooper Noard, was held in check until late in the game the last time these two met.

Can top-seed Glenbrook South make history and win the program’s first sectional championship in its home gym? Martinelli and Noard alone won’t be enough; New Trier is too big and too good. The supporting cast, led by Rodell Davis, Jr., must rise to the occasion.

Expect a down-to-the-wire finish with a little drama in the final minute.

The pick: New Trier 62, Glenbrook South 60

Bartlett: Glenbard West (33-1) vs. Wheaton Warrenville South (32-2)

There is a lot to be excited about in this one, starting with it’s a battle between the top two seeds in the sectional.

There are also 65 wins between the two — the most you’ll find in any sectional title matchup — and both are ranked in the top 10. These are two stellar defensive teams that thrive with unique defensive schemes; Glenbard West with it’s dominating 1-3-1 and Wheaton Warrenville South with it’s frustrating ball press zone.

From a strategic perspective, there may not be a more interesting sectional championship game. Plus, each team is playing at the top of its game.

But let’s not forget what team we are talking about here. Glenbard West, the top-ranked team all season long, is a heavy favorite.

How Wheaton Warrenville South, which has very little size, contains versatile 6-11 Braden Huff will determine if it can make a run and stay in this thing to the very end.

Huff will demand attention, so look for Huff and the Hilltoppers to operate a little more in the post which should open things up for the likes of Bobby Durkin, Cade Pierce and Paxton Warden on the perimeter. But just how to guard that, specifically Huff, out of that ball press will be interesting to watch.

Coach Mike Healy has done a magnificent job with this team, one of the real big surprises — once again — this season. But simply put, the Tigers will have their hands full.

Wheaton Warrenville South will get beat on the boards, maybe even pounded with Huff, 6-8 Ryan Renfro and the athletic Pierce and Warden, so it must do the obvious: make shots.

Tyler Fawcett is Wheaton Warrenville South’s biggest weapon, but the extremely unselfish Tigers move the ball and take what teams give them. Can the likes of Rourke Robinson, Danny Healy and Braylen Meredith step up

This is the kind of role Wheaton Warrenville South will usually relish and take advantage of as the often scrappy, overlooked team. This group won’t back down from anyone. But Glenbard West isn’t looking past a 32-win team with the second sectional championship in school history on the line.

The pick: Glenbard West 58, Wheaton South 44

Proviso West: Young (23-9) vs. Lyons (26-5)

Young is the heavyweight with recent state titles and appearances. There are a pair of 6-8 Division I big men in AJ Casey and Xavier Amos, along with the physical 6-3 Marcus Pigram and talented junior point guard Dalen Davis.

Simply put, this is a No. 1 seed playing its best basketball of the season.

Lyons, meanwhile, has been a little bit of an afterthought even as the wins piled up this season. The sectional win over Curie, however, grabbed some people’s attention.

Lyons has shown it can take a punch. The Lions lost in lopsided fashion to top-ranked Glenbard West in the first two meetings — by a combined 69 points. Then coach Tom Sloan’s team held its own in a 62-50 loss to the mighty Hilltoppers in late January.

Now it’s feeling particularly good beating Curie, the No. 2 seed, in preparation for the top-seeded Dolphins.

A highly-productive night from Akron recruit Tavari Johnson will be a must. The senior point guard must be able to score the ball and create opportunities for others because Young has ramped up its defense. Unsung junior Nik Polonowski has emerged and become a legit threat while sectional semifinal hero Will Carroll is sky high following his game-winning three-pointer.

In its sectional semifinal win over Riverside-Brookfield, the size and length of Young gave R-B fits. And there were times in that win where the Dolphins were smothering defensively, contesting shots and making it difficult in the half court.

If coach Tyrone Slaughter’s team continues to do that for closer to 32 minutes than 18, 19 or 20 minutes, Young will be playing in a supersectional next Tuesday.

The pick: Young 63, Lyons 57

Thornwood: Kenwood (25-8) vs. St. Rita (23-11)

There will be plenty of youth playing in a high stakes game for the first time, so this might not be the cleanest looking game. But there won’t be a matchup in the state with more future Division I players on the floor together.

The senior backcourt of Nevada recruit Trey Pettigrew and unsung shooter Darius Robinson offer some seasoning for Kenwood. Both can score the basketball in different ways. But there is another wave of firepower with the junior duo of dynamic Darrin Ames in the backcourt and 6-7 Davius Loury and freshman Bryce Heard.

St. Rita counters with a pair of sophomore big men in 6-8 Morez Johnson, an Illinois commit, and 6-9 James Brown, the top two prospects in the Class of 2024. Junior guard Kaiden Space and freshman Melvin Bell are two more Division I prospects on the perimeter for the Mustangs.

These are two teams that entered the season with monster expectations without having really proven anything but are both still alive when it matters. St. Rita and Kenwood have matured as teams and may have reached this point as the best version of themselves.

While both had their highs and lows throughout the regular season, they are one win away from claiming the first sectional title in program history.

The pick: Kenwood 66, St. Rita 62

Oswego: Oswego East (33-1) vs. Bolingbrook (28-6)

The top two seeds will meet in the Oswego Sectional final where there will be a definitive home court feel for No. 1 seed Oswego East.

Bolingbrook and coach Rob Brost are accustomed to playing sectional basketball. Behind junior guard Mekhi Cooper (14 ppg) and blue-collar undersized big man Michael Osei-Bonsu (13 ppg), Bolingbrook is looking for its fourth sectional championship in the last eight years.

Oswego East is a scary, resilient group because it consistently wins close games — and an impressive, school record 33 wins on the year. The trio of rugged Patrick Robinson, 6-5 versatile Mekhi Lowery (12 points, 7.4 rebounds, 2.8 assists) and guard DeVon Oregon (12 points) provide the edge for a team that’s in search of its first sectional title in program history.

It took some time for Bolingbrook to discard spunky Andrew in the sectional semifinal win Wednesday . The Raiders will need to avoid that slow of a start if it intends to survive this one.

The pick: Oswego East 68, Bolingbrook 63

Barrington: Barrington (26-4) vs. Libertyville (27-7)

The North Suburban Conference faces the Mid-Suburban League in another 1 vs. 2 sectional championship.

The postseason has been pretty bleak for Libertyville over the past 25 years with just three regional titles — the last being in 2018 — and only one sectional victory. A win here would give the Wildcats their first sectional championship since the Matt Heldman-led team reached Champaign and the Elite Eight in 1994.

Libertyville won a thriller over rival Stevenson in the regional championship game, thanks to a huge three-pointer from junior Jack Huber in the final minute. Huber finished with four threes and 14 points.

The Wildcats aren’t going to wow anyone. There is some size, some shooting and can do a little inside and outside. And a school record for wins certainly has them feeling good.

Between Huber, Chase Bonder, John Graham, Cole Bonder, Will Buchert and Aidyn Boone, a whole bunch of different players have stepped up at different moments all season long.

Barrington is dialed in and playing with a ton of confidence. The Broncos have won 13 consecutive games, including an upset win over Rolling Meadows to win the MSL to close out the regular season. They’ve been dominating in three postseason wins. In two regional wins and one sectional victory, Barrington’s average victory margin has been 25 points.

And no player in the sectional has been hotter than 6-5 senior Will Grudzinski, though senior guard Daniel Hong has played an integral part in this year’s success and had a whopper of a performance in the sectional semifinal win.

While Grudzinski is averaging 24 points a game in the last 10 wins, Hong stepped up with 32 points in the sectional semifinal win over Fremd. When you add 6-10 Nate Boldt, who scored a season-high 14 against Fremd, Barrington is in a great spot to claim the first sectional title in 20 years.

Barrington will be on its home floor and seems to be humming along the way sectional champions do.

The pick: Barrington 58, Libertyville 49

Class 3A Sectional title games

Marian Catholic: Lemont (26-7) vs. Thornton (23-5)

The biggest question going into this one is just what does Lemont do to try and contain Thornton’s Ty Rodgers?

The 6-5 do-it-all fills the stat sheet, makes those around him better and brings both a physicality and winning mentality that is tough to match or replicate. The athletic Illinois-bound senior is a matchup nightmare for Lemont.

In addition, big man Mark Williams and guard Vincent Rainey have provided ample support for Rodgers over the second half of the season.

Forget about the whole this is a year-too-soon stuff for Lemont, a fun team of young players that seems to now be playing with house money.

And forget those regular-season losses to the likes of Hillcrest, Oak Forest, Rolling Meadows, Romeoville and Batavia. Lemont is now brimming with confidence after beating Marian Catholic in the regional final and coming from behind to knock off top-seed Hillcrest in the sectional semifinals.

Lemont, the No. 4 seed, is built around its three-headed guard monster of sophomore Nojus Indrusaitis and juniors Rokas Castillo and Matas Castillo. These three together can quietly crush it on the offensive end of the floor.

But Thornton is red-hot, winning 13 consecutive games, and has the best player on the floor.

The pick: Thornton 57, Lemont 52

Hinsdale South: Simeon (26-5) vs. Hyde Park (23-7)

Forget about the lopsided game from two months ago where Simeon obliterated Hyde Park 79-49. That may have been right around the time Simeon was playing its best basketball, while Hyde Park is a much-improved team since then.

This will undoubtedly be a better, more competitive game between these two South Side Public League programs.

Simeon is trying to regain a little bit of its mojo. The Wolverines lost to Curie in the city playoffs, were drilled by Glenbard West in the regular-season finale and escaped St. Laurence in the regional final. There are times where the Wolverines can appear to be a bit anemic offensively. A favorable state tournament road has allowed coach Robert Smith’s team some leniency up to this point.

Still, this is Simeon.

The backcourt trio of Jaylen Drane, Jalen Griffith and Aviyon Morris have been the backbone for the better part of three seasons for Simeon. All three are double-figure scorers with Morris the heartbeat of this team.

But the presence of twin brothers Miles and Wesley Rubin, a pair of 6-8 juniors, are what make the Wolverines a legitimate state title contender in Class 3A. Those two combine to average 29 points and 14 rebounds while providing some rim protection.

Hyde Park guard Davontae Hall is an electric guard who is in the midst of a stellar senior season. He’s a go-to player for the Thunderbirds. His matchup with the Simeon guards will be a tasty one but rough one as Morris is a defensive menace.

Thus, the supporting cast, featuring junior guard Camron Williord and junior Damarion Morris, will have to step up as it did in the sectional semifinal win over Mount Carmel.

The pick: Simeon 65, Hyde Park 58

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