Chicago Sports

ECHL’s Solar Bears drop Avery days after signingon February 25, 2022 at 10:25 pm

Former NHL player Sean Avery was released Friday by the Orlando Solar Bears of the East Coast Hockey League — just two days after they signed the 41-year-old forward.

Avery last appeared in an NHL game on Dec. 10, 2011, while a member of the New York Rangers. He had been placed Wednesday on the Solar Bears’ reserve list, and the team announced on Friday that he was released from his standard player contract.

Avery played 580 games in the NHL with the Rangers, Detroit Red Wings, Los Angeles Kings and Dallas Stars, scoring 90 goals with 157 assists. The Rangers demoted him to the American Hockey League’s Connecticut Whale in the 2011-12 season, when he was a frequent healthy scratch. Avery announced his retirement from the NHL in March 2012 on Bravo’s “Watch What Happens Live!” and told host Andy Cohen that he had thrown his skates in the Hudson River.

Since December, Avery had been skating in a weekly hockey game at the Los Angeles Kings‘ practice rink in L.A.

The Solar Bears, an affiliate of the Tampa Bay Lightning, are in fourth place in the ECHL’s South Division with 53 points.

ESPN’s Greg Wyshynski contributed to this report.

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Report: Chicago White Sox expected to pursue Kris Bryant, Nick Castellanos

Major League baseball is quickly approaching its deadline to get a resolve and end the the labor stoppage before cancelling regular season games. With that deadline looming for Monday, many are hoping that they can get it figured out.

And when they do, expect the Chicago White Sox to be active in free agency especially with outfielders.

Per Jim Bowden, the White Sox are expected to be heavily involved Kris Bryant, Nick Castellanos, Michael Conforto, and Seiya Suzuki when the free agency period begins again:

When the lockout finally ends watch for the #Rockies #Mariners and #WhiteSox to be heavily involved in the free agent outfield market for: Kris Bryant, Nick Castellanos, Michael Conforto and Seiya Suzuki.

Those are all big name targets that are expected to gain interest from the White Sox, Colorado Rockies and Seattle Mariners, teams that all have a need in the outfield.

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

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Tom Brady to appear in, produce football-themed movie in his first post-retirement venture

Tom Brady is trading the gridiron for the big screen. Still, football will be part of his first post-retirement move.

The Hollywood Reporter was first to report Wednesday that Brady will produce and appear in a football-themed road trip movie called “80 for Brady.”

According to the THR story, the film is inspired by a true story, about four best friends/New England Patriots fans who travel to the 2017 Super Bowl to see their quarterback hero, Tom Brady. Chaos ensues that ensues as they navigate the wilds of the biggest sporting event in the country. Lily Tomlin, Jane Fonda, Rita Moreno and Sally Field star as the quartet.

The film will be directed by Kyle Marvin, who co-wrote the script with Michael Covino. Paramount Pictures and Endeavor Content are overseeing the project.

Brady, 44, retired from the NFL at the start of this month after an illustrious 22-season career that saw him set dozens of NFL records, some of which may never be broken. Brady walked away from the Tampa Bay Buccaneers one season after he won his seventh Super Bowl title, and fifth Super Bowl MVP. Brady still performed at an elite level in 2021, completing 67.5% of his passes for 5,316 yards and 43 passing touchdowns, both of which led the NFL. He finished second in the league’s MVP voting behind Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers.

Production on the movie is set to begin this spring, according to the Reporter.

Read more at usatoday.com

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Blackhawks’ GM finalists bring radically different backgrounds to franchise-altering decision

The Blackhawks will soon have a permanent general manager to initiate and shape their rebuild.

The team finished the interview phase of their GM search Thursday, announcing the advisory committee involved in the search had “concluded its evaluation” and “provided input to leadership” before “moving to the next step of the process.”

Just three finalists remain, per sources and numerous reports. They are current Hawks interim GM Kyle Davidson, Lightning director of hockey operations Mathieu Darche and Cubs assistant GM Jeff Greenberg.

The three other candidates the Hawks interviewed — Hurricanes assistant GM Eric Tulsky, former Bruins and Oilers GM Peter Chiarelli and former Canadiens assistant GM Scott Mellanby — are out of the running. Teresa Resch, the Toronto Raptors’ vice president of basketball operations who was also reportedly considered for the job, never received an official interview.

A final decision is expected within the next week or so, giving the permanent GM time to settle in and ramp up conversations ahead of the March 21 trade deadline. CEO Danny Wirtz has said the GM will report directly to him, with no intermediary hockey operations president — so as to concentrate authority and accountability for all decisions — and it seems clear the GM will instantly be made a very powerful man.

The three finalists each offer fascinatingly different backgrounds and perspectives, presenting the Hawks with three potentially divergent long-term paths from which to choose.

Greenberg, whose previous experience as a sports executive has been entirely in baseball, is the wild-card candidate who has rapidly risen up the Hawks’ leaderboard.

After short previous stints with the Pirates, Diamondbacks and MLB office, he joined the Cubs in 2012 and emerged as a high-ranking decision-maker there in 2018. He’s a respected and well-liked figure in Cubs circles.

He does have a few hockey connections — he played college club hockey at Penn, and his father, Chuck, was previously involved with the Penguins’ and Hurricanes’ ownership groups — but it’d be rather unprecedented for him to jump straight into the Hawks’ GM role.

It’s a possibility the Hawks are seriously considering, though. Greenberg made a great impression during his interviews, prompting the Hawks to discuss how they might be able to make it work, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reported Thursday.

The Hawks and Cubs do have some close ties: ex-president John McDonough made a similar jump in 2007, current business president Jaime Faulkner’s husband Colin is a Cubs executive on the sales and marketing side and Cubs president Jed Hoyer was reportedly consulted during the December stage of the GM search.

If a fresh perspective is the Hawks’ greatest desire — and that would be on-brand for Faulkner — Greenberg would check that box in dark, bold ink.

Darche, as a former NHL player-turned executive, is the most conventional candidate of the three. He spent 12 years pro — playing in 250 NHL games (experiencing the most success with his hometown Canadiens), 552 AHL games and 52 German-league games — before retiring to a corporate job, then jumping back into hockey in 2019 as a Lightning executive.

The 45-year-old is a relatively well-known name in NHL circles — he also recently interviewed for the Canadiens’ and Canucks’ GM jobs — and he’d bring experience from arguably the league’s best-run front office.

The Hawks wouldn’t have to work hard to sell him to fans, either, since they already seem to like him: in a Twitter poll Friday asking fans which finalist they’d pick, Darche won with 55% of the vote.

Davidson, meanwhile, is the hybrid option on the experience-versus-freshness spectrum.

The Hawks have invested a lot of resources and time to groom him from an intern straight out of college in 2010 to an assistant GM by 2020 and an interim GM for the past four months. He, in turn, has developed familiarity and experience with many branches of the organization, from the salary cap — one of his biggest areas of expertise — to negotiations, analytics and scouting.

But Davidson would nonetheless bring a very different approach than his predecessor, Stan Bowman, did. And at 33, he’d also be the NHL’s youngest permanent GM.

He has laid low publicly this winter because of his interim status, but behind the scenes, he’s an open-minded yet bold thinker who made a point to mention in November he’s not “beholden to anything that’s happened in the past.” The Alex Nylander-for-Sam Lafferty trade in January helped prove that.

“My general approach is not necessarily [concentrated in] any one area, whether it be advanced statistics or old-school scouting methods,” he said in November. “My philosophy is to get the decision right.”

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Atlanta, the capital of failed Bears GMs, now has Ryan Pace and Phil Emery on staff

The Falcons just hired failed Bears general manager Ryan Pace, adding him to a personnel staff that already includes failed Bears general manager Phil Emery. That’s quite a declarative sentence. Somebody in Atlanta’s headquarters should have written it down before Pace’s hiring was announced, saw how it looked on paper and told the owner, “Either we have another failed Bears general manager currently in charge of recruitment or else we’ve completely lost our minds.”

The Falcons obviously have no idea of the industrial-strength mess they’ve gotten themselves into. I don’t think I’m being unfair by saying that Pace and Emery are two of the worst NFL general managers in recent memory — Pace for committing the cardinal sin of drafting Mitch Trubisky over Patrick Mahomes, and Emery for causing organizational chaos in Chicago in record time.

You have to be crazy or arrogant to hire men who were back-to-back debacles for the bumbling Bears and think you’ve hit the jackpot.

Let’s start with Pace because he’s freshest in our memory. The Bears axed him last month after a seven-year stint as GM that brought them not just Trubisky but a 48-65 record and two wild-card losses. The Falcons have hired him as a senior personnel executive, which is the same title Emery has. In what other industry can you be so bad and get rehired so quickly?

Let me stop you before you tell me that Pace will be a glorified scout in Atlanta. Wouldn’t you think, just for appearances’ sake, that there’d be a rule prohibiting any person who traded up to take Trubisky with the second overall pick in the 2017 draft from being hired for at least a year? One season of penance and self-reflection would seem to be the minimum punishment.

The connection – there’s always a connection in the NFL – is Falcons general manager Terry Fontenot, who worked with Pace for 13 years in New Orleans.

Pace’s defenders laud his organizational skills. That’s one of the problems in NFL front offices. It’s a business that rewards obsessiveness. It too often mistakes professional fastidiousness for the ability to identify talented football players. Keeping the stage spotless does not make you a Shakespearean actor. Pace did so much homework on Trubisky before the 2017 draft that he had Mitch anecdotes and measurables coming out of his ears. But he clearly didn’t have the analytical ability to see if Trubisky could play quarterback at a high level. That’s another way of saying, “Oops!”

Perhaps you heard Bills star Josh Allen gushing over Trubisky’s abilities the other day. Bears fans got four years of that from Mitch’s coaches and teammates, but some people on social media now seem to be putting stock in the rave reviews he’s receiving from his teammate.

“The dude is an athlete,” Allen said. “I don’t think people really understand that. You give him leeway in an offense to have that mindset of, ‘See it, do it, we trust you.’ He’s going to kill it.”

Please, please, please, people: Do not fall for this nonsense again, unless you enjoy the shame and self-loathing that will surely come your way if you get back onboard with Trubisky.

Sorry. Where was I before allowing myself to get Mitched? Oh, right, Pace and Emery, 10 years of Bears darkness and why in the world the Falcons would think this anemic duo is a good idea.

Why the rush to hire Pace? Was there anything about his stay here that screamed, “Hire this man immediately!”? He did have some success with the Bears. There were those two playoff appearances, though one was of the back-in variety with an 8-8 regular-season record. It’s interesting that even the big trade he was praised for — the 2018 deal that brought Khalil Mack to Chicago in exchange for two No. 1 picks — hasn’t looked good for two seasons.

Pace’s trade to get quarterback Justin Fields in last year’s draft? Maybe it’s good? Maybe it’s not? Nobody knows for sure if Pace was right or wrong, and I guess in Bears World, that’s considered a win.

Pace gifted Chicago with coach Matt Nagy. Emery gave us coach Marc Trestman. What did we do to deserve this?

In early 2014, Emery handed Jay Cutler a seven-year, $126 million contract extension.

“I see improvement in his ball security, distribution to his targets and a transformation in his demeanor as a leader,” Emery said at the time.

The Bears went on to get blown out by the Patriots and Packers that season, becoming the second team in NFL history to lose consecutive games by at least 50 points. In December, offensive coordinator Aaron Kromer admitted to the team that he was the club official who had anonymously told NFL Network that Cutler “absolutely killed” the Bears with his game management. All this turmoil, all of it overseen by Emery.

A month later, he and Trestman were gone. Cutler and his contract lasted another two seasons in Chicago.

Got all that? You can see why the idea of Pace and Emery together in another team’s front office might cause a grown man to lose his mind.

If Nagy gets hired as an offensive coordinator anywhere in the next year or two, feel free to dig down six feet and give your favorite columnist a shove. It’ll be the end of me.

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Baseball labor negotiators continue to meet

JUPITER, Fla. — With just 3 1/2 days left until Major League Baseball’s deadline for a deal that would ensure a 162-game season, negotiators met for the fifth straight day during a week with no sign of significant progress.

Union head Tony Clark led a delegation of players into Roger Dean Stadium Friday, a group that included Max Scherzer, Andew Miller and Zack Britton from the union’s eight-man executive subcommittee.

On the 86th day of baseball’s ninth work stoppage, its first since 1995, the sides remained far apart on many key economic issues: luxury tax thresholds and rates, the minimum salary and the size of a bonus pool for pre-arbitration players.

The union offered a pair of new proposals Thursday, making small changes to its plan for a lottery to determine the first seven picks in the amateur draft and to its formula for top young players get credit for additional major league service. Teams say they will never agree to the additional service time, which could lead to earlier free agency.

The union wants to increase arbitration eligibility and to decrease revenue sharing, concepts management says it will never accept.

MLB maintains Monday is the last day to reach an agreement that would allow openers to take place as scheduled on March 31.

Players have not accepted Monday as a deadline and have suggested any missed games could be made up as part of doubleheaders, a method MLB said it will not agree to.

Once Monday passes, the length of the schedule would become yet another issue in the dispute along with possible lost pay and service time.

The union told MLB if games are missed and salaries are lost, clubs should not expect players to agree to management’s proposals to expand the postseason and to allow advertisements on uniforms and helmets.

Spring training workouts were to have started Feb. 16. Exhibition games were to have begin Saturday but already have been canceled through March 4.

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Ex-Bears coach Nagy back with K.C. as QB coachon February 25, 2022 at 7:19 pm

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Matt Nagy has reunited with Andy Reid, Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs.

Nagy, fired last month after four seasons as head coach of the Chicago Bears, returned to the Chiefs on Friday as senior assistant and quarterbacks coach.

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Nagy, 43, was with the Chiefs for five seasons from 2013 through 2017, finishing as offensive coordinator his final season, when Mahomes was a rookie and the backup quarterback to Alex Smith.

Nagy was co-offensive coordinator in 2016 and quarterbacks coach his first three seasons in Kansas City.

Nagy was 34-31 in the regular season for the Bears, including 6-11 last season. He was the NFL’s Coach of the Year in 2018 for leading the Bears to a 12-4 record and the NFC North championship. He took the Bears to the playoffs twice but failed to win a game either time.

Nagy replaces Mike Kafka, who left the Chiefs to become the offensive coordinator for the New York Giants.

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Ex-Bears coach Nagy back with K.C. as QB coachon February 25, 2022 at 7:19 pm Read More »

IOC asks sports organizations to cancel events in Russia, Belarus

GENEVA — The International Olympic Committee urged sports bodies Friday to cancel or move all events they plan to hold in Russia and Belarus, and stop using the countries’ flags and national anthems.

The request from the Olympic body came after UEFA moved the Champions League final from St. Petersburg to suburban Paris, and after the governing body of skiing and Formula One pulled upcoming races from Russia.

Volleyball, shooting and hockey all have world championships scheduled to be held in Russia. Hockey is a favorite sport of Russian President Vladimir Putin and his home city of St. Petersburg is scheduled to host the worlds in May 2023.

Russia breached the Olympic Truce by invading Ukraine on Thursday, only four days after the closing ceremony of the Winter Games in Beijing. Some of the Russian troops entered Ukraine from Belarus, Russia’s ally.

It was the third Russian breach of the Olympic Truce in the past 14 years. Russia invaded Georgia during the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing and annexed Crimea shortly after the end of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.

The IOC statement signaled a toughening of the Olympic body’s position on Russia. IOC president Thomas Bach has long been seen as forgiving of Russian doping scandals and too close to Putin.

Bach implored countries to “give peace a chance” in his opening and closing ceremony speeches in Beijing as Putin — who went to China and attended the opening ceremony on Feb. 4 — sent troops and military hardware to the borders of Ukraine in Russia and Belarus.

The IOC has ultimate authority over the Olympics but recognizes the independence of the governing bodies of individual sports to organize their own events and pick hosts.

Those bodies, the IOC said Friday, “should take the breach of the Olympic Truce by the Russian and Belarussian governments into account and give the safety and security of the athletes absolute priority.”

Russia’s national soccer team is also scheduled to host a World Cup qualifying playoff match against Poland on March 24 in Moscow, with a second home game five days later if it wins. FIFA is still weighing if or where Russia can play, though UEFA said Friday the country’s teams could not host games in its competitions.

In May, Russia is scheduled to host a week-long conference of global sports officials in Ekaterinburg for one of their first in-person gatherings since the pandemic started. That event, known as Sportaccord, is likely to be canceled in the coming days.

The governing body of volleyball has pressed ahead with staging this year’s men’s world championships from Aug. 26-Sept. 11 in cities across Russia even though the tournament falls within the two-year period of sanctions in fallout from the country’s state-backed doping scandal.

Among the sanctions imposed by the Court of Arbitration for Sport in December 2020 in the doping scandal was that Russia should lose hosting rights to world championships. However, the sanction came with a loophole stating “unless it is legally or practically impossible to do so.”

Another sanction was the banning of Russia’s national identity — flag, anthem and country name for its athletes and teams — at Olympics and world championships. It does not apply to regional events such as European championships.

On Friday, the IOC said the flags and national anthems of Russia and Belarus should not be used at any international sports events.

“The IOC expresses its deep concerns about the safety of the members of the Olympic community in Ukraine and stands in full solidarity,” it said.

The IOC also gave “full support” to the International Paralympic Committee for the Winter Paralympics, which open next month in Beijing. Russian athletes are set to compete there, though the team name is banned like at the Olympics.

In its statement, the IOC gave no indication of its intentions regarding the Russian team for the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Bach has consistently opposed blanket bans for any nation, though the Olympic Charter, a book of rules which guides the IOC, states it is the “authority of last resort on any question concerning the Olympic Games.”

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Fired Baylor football coach Art Briles joins Grambling staff

GRAMBLING, La. — Grambling State football coach Hue Jackson has hired disgraced former Baylor coach Art Briles as offensive coordinator, the university confirmed Thursday.

Briles has not worked in college football since 2016, when he was fired by Baylor after an investigation concluded he and his staff took no action against players named in sexual assault allegations.

Grambling has not made a formal announcement, but made Briles available for an exclusive interview with KTAL-TV in Shreveport.

In his interview, Briles said “reporting policies and procedures were not as available as they should have been” during his time at Baylor because the university did not have “a Title IX person” until the fall of 2015.

“You report what you know. We did the best we felt at the time. Apparently, it wasn’t good enough — it wasn’t good enough,” Briles added. “I’m sorry for anybody that suffered any consequences because of it.”

At Grambling, Briles said he’ll do “exactly what I’m required to do and what they expect of me, which is to be a very solid citizen, to be a positive leader on a day-in and day-out basis, to do everything I can do to protect our students and our student-athletes on campus.”

Briles coached at Baylor from 2008-15, going 65-37. Boasting one of then more prolific spread offenses in college football, the Bears were regularly ranked in the AP Top 25 during his tenure and twice received bids to major “New Years Six” bowls. Baylor had four 10-win seasons in a five-year span from 2011-15, after only winning 10 games once before that.

Before his time at Baylor, Briles coached at Houston from 2003-2007.

At Grambling, Briles takes over for Ted White, who left to join the NFL’s Houston Texans.

Last summer, an NCAA panel cleared Briles of committing any rules violations, but also made it clear that it found Briles’ conduct at Baylor unethical.

The NCAA infractions panel stated that Briles “failed to meet even the most basic expectations of how a person should react to the kind of conduct at issue in this case. Furthermore, as a campus leader, the head coach is held to an even higher standard. He completely failed to meet this standard.”

Baylor paid Briles more than $15 million after firing him. He later acknowledged making mistakes and apologized for “some bad things” that happened under his watch.

Briles coached briefly in Italy and then at a Texas high school in Mount Vernon.

Briles said he expects to face some backlash at Grambling and figures there’s nothing he can say now to avoid that, but hopes he can show over time that he can be trusted to do what’s expected of him.

“The only way you can gain trust is how you perform on a daily basis, how you interact with people on a daily basis. And then you have the opportunity to gain some trust,” Briles said in his TV interview. “There’s not a magic wand you can say it and then all of a sudden somebody is going to trust you. You have to earn that trust and that’s certainly what I’ll do.”

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‘Death, Taxes, and DeRozan’ as the Bulls veteran continues his takeover

Veteran big man Tristan Thompson calls him the “Smooth Criminal.”

The organization’s social media department labeled him “King in the Fourth.”

His teammates simply call DeMar DeRozan “Deebo.”

The list of nicknames for the Bulls’ veteran continued to grow, as did his legend, after he hit yet another game-winning clutch basket in Thursday’s victory over Atlanta.

Down three with 46.9 seconds left, DeRozan closed it to one with — of course — the mid-range jumper. Then after a stop, the ball was placed in DeRozan’s hands with 23 seconds left, and even with the double-team leaving Zach LaVine wide open, it was once again DeRozan, this time hitting a 14-footer and drawing the foul with 15.1 seconds left.

When the dust settled it was a 37-point game for DeRozan, and again done on a head-shaking efficiency of 15-for-21 from the field.

Death, taxes, DeRozan.

To get a perspective on what the 32-year-old has done in this streak just look at the company he joined. DeRozan is one of seven players in NBA history with eight-straight 35-plus-point games, but dig deeper in the numbers.

Take Michael Jordan’s 10-game streak of 35-plus-points back in the 1986-87 season. Jordan averaged 41.1 points per game in that run, hitting 15.3 shots per game and taking 32.1 per game for 48%. That included one game in which Jordan took 43 shots.

DeRozan has averaged 38.4 points per game, but was averaging only 24.2 shots per game and hitting at 62% from the field. Only once did he hit the 30-shot mark.

Bigger picture?

The Bulls went 3-7 in Jordan’s shooting binge, while the Bulls were 6-2 since the DeRozan takeover began.

That’s why the newest Bull was pushing for “Death and Taxes” to be the MVP.

“Like I said in the interview [on Wednesday], in my eyes he’s the MVP of our league,” Thompson said of DeRozan. “He’s playing at an MVP level. People need to give him his credit and give him his flowers because of what he’s able to do with this team. When things are getting stagnant and we need a big bucket or a big time shot, that’s what big-time players do.”

And DeRozan has been big time, leading the NBA with 455 fourth-quarter points, with Giannis Antetokounmpo second at 400 points. Antetokounmpo has a slightly better shooting percentage than DeRozan in that final stanza — 57.1% to 55.8% — but DeRozan had more assists than the “Greek Freak” and a ridiculous plus-121 in plus/minus in the fourth.

“You love it and you hate it,” DeRozan said of having to win games late. “Of course, you don’t want to be down and have the pressure on yourself to try to pull out a game. But when you’re in those moments, you’ve got to take it on. I love the moments. I love the challenge. I love the opportunity. It’s fun to me.”

That’s MVP-type talk and action, and Thompson would know, running with the likes of LeBron James and Kyrie Irving back in the day.

“I’ve played with some big time players,” Thompson said. “When it’s money time, you give them the ball and they make something happen. That’s what [DeRozan’s] been doing night in and night out. [Thursday] we were down four with under two minutes left and Javonte [Green] getting the rebound and making those free throws and DeMar with the and-one. That’s what the MVP of the league does. We’re going to do our best to keep riding that horse. It’s a blessing to be watching greatness.”

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