Chicago Sports

Why Cubs right-hander Jameson Taillon is developing a new sweeper slider

MESA, Ariz. — Right-hander Jameson Taillon had wanted to add a new slider for a couple years. But the past two offseasons, first coming off Tommy John surgery rehab into a pandemic-shortened spring training, then navigating the 2022 lockout, didn’t seem like the right time.

“It was hard to truly have an offseason to really lock that down and work on it,” Taillon said Thursday. “So, this year felt like a good time to try to add it. And so far, the results have been pretty promising. I’m excited to break it out in games and see how it fares, but metrically and stuff I’m pretty encouraged by it.”

Taillon’s new sweeper slider is still a work in progress as he enters his first spring training with the Cubs. He’s keeping his oldgyro slider in his back pocket for now, but his goal is to eventually have the new slider replace the old.

“I’ve had a few bullpens early on where it’s like, ‘I’ve already got this down, it feels great,’ and I’ve had a few bullpens where it’s taken a step back,” he said. “So it depends what day you catch me on right now. There’s some days where I’m like, ‘this is easy; this is going to be a weapon.’ And there’s other days where I’m like, ‘I’ve got to go fix this thing and figure it out.”

The process began in earnest after Taillon signed with the Cubs in December and had begun to build a rapport with the coaching staff. The team presented its vision for the new slider, showing Taillon the one-seam grip expected to work best for him.

A couple factors went into the Cubs recommending a sweeper slider. Taillon throws a curveball, an ability assistant pitching coach Daniel Moskos described as “usually a prerequisite” for throwing a sweeper slider.

“And his [strikeout] rate to right handed-batters is something where we saw an area to make an impact,” Moskos said in a conversation with the Sun-Times. “And we saw the sweepy slider as an option to help put those types of hitters away.”

Taillon knew he was interested even before that initial conversation.

“I know that my slider has underperformed for a little while,” he said.

It’s also become an important pitch in his arsenal. According to Statcast, Taillon threw his slider, which he debuted in 2018, more than any other secondary pitch last year (18.8% ).

The ghost of Taillon’s old slider will live on through his cutter, even after he retires the pitch. His old slider grip is similar to his cutter grip, so he has a feel for how to manipulate his cutter’s shape and speed.

All offseason, Taillon has been sending video and TrackMan data to the Cubs pitching coaches while working on his sweeper slider in bullpens.

“Fortunately enough, he took right to it,” Moskos said, “was able to accomplish the things we wanted to do in a very timely manner.”

Now that spring training has begun, the sweeper has already caught some of his teammates’ attention. Catcher Yan Gomes has caught one of Taillon’s bullpens since arriving in Arizona less than a week ago.

“I missed one of them,” Gomes told the Sun-times when asked about Taillon’s slider. “… It’s going to be a phenomenal tool, for sure. One of them that he threw definitely took off – not that I couldn’t catch it; it was out of my reach. But you could definitely see a lot of the movement.”

Taillon will get a chance to test out the pitch against hitters on Friday, when he’s scheduled to throw live batting practice.

“That’ll be a good opportunity for it to make its debut,” Moskos said. “We’ll see what we’ve got. Because you still have to execute it, you still have to be able to take it from the lab or from the bullpen over to the game mound.”

Read More

Why Cubs right-hander Jameson Taillon is developing a new sweeper slider Read More »

White Sox’ Liam Hendriks ‘grinding’ through treatment

GLENDALE, Ariz. — White Sox reliever Reynaldo Lopez was at church when he heard the news about Liam Hendriks. It felt like the right place to be for Lopez, who said a prayer for his bullpen mate who has Non-Hodgkins lymphoma.

“It’s a scary thing,” Lopez said.

The Sox opened spring training with pitchers and catchers reporting Wednesday, and absent was Hendriks’ big presence, Australian accent and signature bellows of disgust with himself after a bad bullpen pitch. Teammates caring about his well being first will worry about the void at the back end of the bullpen later, reliever Kendall Graveman said.

The same goes for players around the league. Graveman had requests from players around baseball, including Anthony Rizzo, for Hendriks’ number. While a Red Sox prospect in 2008, Rizzo was diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma and went through six months of chemotherapy.

“So during that moment I knew he was going to have a lot of people kind of saying ‘Hey, we’re thinking about you. If you need anything from us, from my family to yours, let us know,’ ” Graveman said. “And seeing him here and in good spirits … he’s going to continue to be Liam and put his work in. Our prayer from our family is that he has a speedy recovery and that he’s cancer free, first and foremost.”

Teammates are hopeful Hendriks pitches at some point this season.

“I talk to Liam a lot,” reliever Joe Kelly said. “We were playing catch multiple times [in the offseason] and when he came out and told the world what happened, he went to chemo and three days later we played catch again. He’s been grinding. He’s one of those guys that can do that kind of thing. He can switch what troubles he has off the field when he gets on the field and that’s very hard to do.”

Knowing Hendriks, who said he has pitched with a torn ACL during his career, Kelly said it won’t be long after treatment for the 33-year-old two-time American League Reliever of the Year to be pitching again.

“Since he’s been throwing it’s not going to be too far of a process for him to come back,” Kelly said.

Starter Dylan Cease said he was shocked and devastated when he heard about Hendriks’ illness on Jan. 8.

“But I’ve been surprised seeing him around the clubhouse,” Cease said Thursday. “He’s in a good mood. So, I definitely feel better about it now.”

In Hendriks’ absence, first-year manager Pedro Grifol figures to mix-and-match in the ninth inning. Graveman, Lopez, lefty Aaron Bummer and Kelly — who feels healthy for the first time in three spring camps — are possibilities.

“Regardless of whether Liam was available now or not, we’re going to need more than one,” Grifol said. “Once we get closer and we start setting up our gameplan for the day, we’re just going to leverage guys. And if a closer emerges and that’s what we do, then that’s what we do. But I’m a big leverage guy. That’s my mindset right now.”

In the meantime, a seat in the bullpen for Hendriks will be kept open. If it’s next to Kelly, it will feel like nothing has changed.

“My humor is kind of dark … I like mean comedy,” Kelly said. “So when Liam comes back it’s easy to talk crap a little bit, and he’s a guy who can take it and it picks him up a little bit. The way we can go about it is kind of making fun of it. It’s a serious thing and it’s a horrible thing, but for Liam and our relationship, it’s one of those things the minutes we have together in the locker room where I can do something like gets his mind off of that kind of thing.

“I think he seems great. He has his days where he will probably tell you he’s tired or that he doesn’t feel good, but he’s the same Liam to me.”

Read More

White Sox’ Liam Hendriks ‘grinding’ through treatment Read More »

The Chicago Blackhawks are gearing up for a very big trade deadline. How they handle the next few weeks is going to change the entire landscape of their rebuild. They could be bad enough to win the NHL’s lottery and they can also land some high-end assets for the future.

One team that they can model their rebuild after is the Toronto Maple Leafs. Obviously, the Leafs can’t get past the Tampa Bay Lightning or Boston Bruins in the first round but they at least have a chance in the playoffs pretty much every year.

They did that by building through the draft. William Nylander, Morgan Reilly, and Mitch Marner were all really high draft picks but things really started to change when they won the draft lottery in 2016. That gave them the right to select Auston Matthews with the first overall pick.

Since then, the Leafs have continued to build and build up to what they are right now. That is the team you saw destroy the Hawks on Wednesday night by a final score of 5-2. The Leafs got production from all of their big boys and were in a different league from this Hawks team.

The Chicago Blackhawks are nowhere near the Toronto Maple Leafs.

It took them nine seconds of the game clock to assert their dominance as William Nylander scored that quickly. The Hawks fought back to get it tied at one but there was no doubt that the Leafs were the tone-setters from that moment on. The Hawks have a long way to go before they are that good.

This loss is just another in a long list of them this season but it is one of those losses that show just how far away the Hawks are from being an elite team in this league. They need to play their cards right over the next few years in order to get back to that.

Is Connor Bedard going to be as good as Auston Matthews? That is really hard to say but he is the first “generational talent” to come out since Matthews and Connor McDavid went in back-to-back drafts.

If he is and the Hawks get him, however, things will start to improve quickly. If you are skeptical about the rebuilding process, you don’t have to look much farther than the Leafs to understand why teams do it.

Read More

Read More »

Streaming can make sports broadcasts more immersive

I have seen the future of sports viewing, and it is immersive.

It will be delivered through a direct-to-consumer streaming service. It will be geared toward fans who are accustomed to busy screens and sensory overload. And it will be a one-stop shop for everything a viewer could want, from placing a bet to ordering a jersey.

“When I talk about direct-to-consumer in sports, that industry has done a fairly good job of turning the internet into cable, but that is not the point,” said Julie Souza, head of sports global professional services at Amazon Web Services. “You’ve got a platform that has so much interactivity and engagement, personalization capability, and it’s not being tapped.”

Why is AWS interested in tapping into that platform? Because it can play a significant role in enhancing it. AWS already works with teams, leagues and broadcasters worldwide. Think of Amazon Prime Video’s “Thursday Night Football.” Fans can watch with a Next Gen Stats overlay or listen to different commentators, but AWS could take that broadcast, and others, to another level.

“Bringing AWS artificial-intelligence and machine-learning expertise to content viewing helps us service content that’s going to be more relevant for people, personalized recommendations, things like that,” said Souza, who has held similar roles leading business development at ESPN, Sports Illustrated and CBS Sports Network.

Games broadcast on linear TV don’t allow for such specialization. It’s a one-to-many pipe with production that appeals to the masses. Streaming provides the opportunity for viewers to choose what they want to see.

Think about what might interest you during a game. If you’re into sports betting, the broadcast could prompt you to make a prop bet. If you play fantasy sports, the broadcast could follow your players. You could choose your audio feed and camera angle, buy tickets to a game and order a pizza for halftime.

AWS has made demos of “shoppable” video, which viewers can click to make a purchase. If you’re watching soccer and a goal is scored, that player’s jersey could pop up for a viewer to buy. Video-solutions provider Accedo, one of more than 100,000 AWS partners, is behind that technology.

Some of this already is available. AWS powers the Clippers’ CourtVision, which augments live video with play diagrams, shows real-time shot probability and tracks stats. There’s even a Mascot Mode geared toward kids with animations and special effects, such as the ball turning into Thor’s hammer on a dunk. Sports-tracking provider Second Spectrum built it and operates it on AWS infrastructure.

“When we were growing up, the raw data of sport was a box score,” Souza said. “Now the raw data is X, Y, Z coordinates, degrees of latitude and longitude, because we’re tracking either through cameras or sensors. Nobody can look at it at face value. That’s where machine learning and artificial intelligence come into play, to take that data and turn it into insights that are valuable to the sports ecosystem.”

All that data is housed in the cloud, which is efficient and malleable. AWS is working with content creators to move their production to the cloud, thus reducing the crew and equipment needed at sites.

“The secret sauce is the optimization,” Souza said. “If you’ve got a rack of servers in your data center, you’re limited to that. Whereas with AWS, we’ve got people who say, these workloads need to be running now, these I don’t care when they run. There’s that optimization of resources. I’m not saying it’s easy; it’s a complicated thing. But that’s what we do.”

Fans are more concerned with what they see, and by the sound of it, they could see a lot more during broadcasts in the not-too-distant future.

“We can use cloud-enabled technologies, AI, ML, to bring those sorts of experiences and capabilities to the broadcasters, distributors, streamers and ultimately the fans,” Souza said. “I love the thought of being able to produce your own live-game viewing experience with whatever interactivity you want. I think that’s the future of streaming sports.”

Remote patrol

Live sports will return to WGN TV next weekend, but perhaps not in the way you’d expect. “Chicago’s Very Own” will carry all 14 LIV Golf events this year, beginning with the season opener in Mexico.

The Saudi-backed league has an agreement with Nexstar’s The CW Network to air its events, but they conflict with weekend programming commitments on the Chicago affiliate, CW26 (WCIU), which include IHSA basketball. That moves LIV to Nexstar’s WGN, which will air coverage from noon to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday for every event.

The CW app will carry the first round of events on Fridays and simulcast the weekend rounds. LIV returns its announcing team of Arlo White and analysts David Feherty and Jerry Foltz in the booth.

The Blackhawks have two exclusive, national appearances coming up. Their home game at 5 p.m. Sunday against the Maple Leafs will air on ESPN+ and Hulu. Mike Monaco, Kevin Weekes and Emily Kaplan have the call. The game at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in Dallas will air on TNT. Former Hawks goalie Darren Pang will be in studio, and Kenny Albert, Eddie Olczyk and Keith Jones will call the action.

Former Sun-Timesman Gordon Wittenmyer and ESPN 1000’s David Kaplan are launching the “Cubs REKAP Podcast.” The first show is expected to drop next week. It will be available on YouTube and wherever you get your podcasts.

Good news for Fire fans: MLS Season Pass will be available at bars and restaurants that are part of the DirecTV for Business network.

Read More

Streaming can make sports broadcasts more immersive Read More »

Tim McCarver, Major League Baseball catcher and broadcaster, dies at 81

NEW YORK — Tim McCarver, the All-Star catcher and Hall of Fame broadcaster who during 60 years in baseball won two World Series titles with the St. Louis Cardinals and had a long run as the one of the country’s most recognized, incisive and talkative television commentators, died Thursday. He was 81.

McCarver’s death was announced by baseball’s Hall of Fame, which said he died Thursday morning in Memphis, Tennessee, where he was with his family.

Among the few players to appear in major league games during four different decades, McCarver was a two-time All Star who worked closely with two future Hall of Fame pitchers: The tempestuous Bob Gibson, whom McCarver caught for St. Louis in the 1960s, and the introverted Steve Carlton, McCarver’s fellow Cardinal in the ’60s and a Philadelphia Phillies teammate in the 1970s. He switched to television soon after retiring in 1980 and became best known to national audiences for his 18-year partnership on Fox with play-by-play man Joe Buck.

“I think there is a natural bridge from being a catcher to talking about the view of the game and the view of the other players,” McCarver told the Hall in 2012, the year he and Buck were given the Ford C. Frick Award for excellence in broadcasting. “It is translating that for the viewers. One of the hard things about television is staying contemporary and keeping it simple for the viewers.”

Six feet tall and solidly built, McCarver was a policeman’s son from Memphis, who got into more than a few fights while growing up but was otherwise playing baseball and football and imitating popular broadcasters, notably the Cards’ Harry Caray. He was signed while still in high school by the Cardinals for $75,000, a generous offer for that time; just 17 when he debuted for them in 1959 and in his early 20s when he became the starting catcher.

McCarver attended segregated schools in Memphis and often spoke of the education he received as a newcomer in St. Louis. His teammates included Gibson and outfielder Curt Flood, Black players who did not hesitate to confront or tease McCarver. When McCarver used racist language against a Black child trying to jump a fence during spring training, Gibson would remember “getting right up in McCarver’s face.” McCarver liked to tell the story about drinking an orange soda during a hot day in spring training and Gibson asking him for some, then laughing when McCarver flinched.

“It was probably Gibby more than any other Black man who helped me to overcome whatever latent prejudices I may have had,” McCarver wrote in his 1987 memoir “Oh, Baby, I Love It!”

Few catchers were strong hitters during the ’60s, but McCarver batted .270 or higher for five consecutive seasons and was fast enough to become the first in his position to lead the league in triples. He had his best year in 1967 when he hit .295 with 14 home runs, finishing second for Most Valuable Player behind teammate Orlando Cepeda as the Cards won their second World Series in four years.

McCarver met Carlton when the left-hander was a rookie in 1965 “with an independent streak wider than the Grand Canyon,” McCarver later wrote. The two initially clashed, even arguing on the mound during games, but became close and were reunited in the 1970s after both were traded to Philadelphia. McCarver became Carlton’s designated catcher even though he admittedly had a below average throwing arm and overall didn’t compare defensively to the Phillies’ regular catcher, Gold Glover Bob Boone.

“Behind every successful pitcher, there has to be a very smart catcher, and Tim McCarver is that man,” Carlton said during his Hall of Fame induction speech in 1994. “Timmy forced me pitch inside. Early in my career I was reluctant to pitch inside. Timmy had a way to remedy this. He used to set up behind the hitter. There was just the umpire there; I couldn’t see him (McCarver), so I was forced to pitch inside.”

McCarver liked to joke that he and Carlton were so in synch in the field that when both were dead they would be buried 60 feet, six inches apart, the distance between the rubber on the pitching mound and home plate.

During a 21-year career, when he also played briefly for the Montreal Expos and Boston Red Sox, McCarver batted .271 overall and only twice struck out more than 40 times in a single season. In the postseason, he averaged .273 and had his best outing in the 1964 series, when the Cards defeated the New York Yankees in seven games. McCarver finished 11-for-23, with five walks, and his 3-run homer at Yankee Stadium in the 10th inning of Game 5 gave his team a 5-2 victory.

Younger baseball fans first knew him from his work in the broadcast booth, whether local games for the New York Mets and New York Yankees, as Jack Buck’s partner on CBS or with son Joe Buck for Fox from 1996-2013. McCarver won six Emmys and became enough of a brand name to be a punchline on “Family Guy”; write a handful of books, make cameos in “Naked Gun,” “Love Hurts” and other movies and even record an album, “Tim McCarver Sings Songs from the Great American Songbook.”

Knowledge was his trademark. In his spare time, he visited art museums, read books and could recite poetry from memory. At work, he was like a one-man scouting team, versed in the most granular details, and spent hours preparing before each game. At times, he seemed to have psychic powers. In Game 7 of the 2001 World Series, the score was tied at 2 between the Yankees and the Arizona Diamondbacks and the Yankees drew in their infield with the bases loaded and one out in the bottom of the 9th. Relief ace Mariano Rivera was facing Arizona’s Luis Rodriquez.

“Rivera throws inside to left-handers,” McCarver observed. “Lefthanders get a lot of broken-bat hits into shallow outfield, the shallow part of the outfield. That’s the danger of bringing the infield in with a guy like Rivera on the mound.”

Moments later, Gonzalez’s bloop to short center field drove in the winning run.

“When you the consider the pressure of the moment,” ESPN’s Keith Olbermann told The New York Times in 2002, “the time he had to say it and the accuracy, his call was the sports-announcing equivalent of Bill Mazeroski’s home run in the seventh inning to defeat the Yankees in 1960.”

Many found McCarver informative and entertaining. Others thought him infuriating. McCarver did not cut himself short whether explaining baseball strategy or taking on someone’s performance on the field. “When you ask him the time, (he) will tell you how a watch works,” Sports Illustrated’s Norm Chad wrote of him in 1992. The same year his criticism of Deion Sanders for playing two sports on the same day led to the Atlanta Braves outfielder/Atlanta Falcons defensive back’s dumping a bucket of water on his head. In 1999, he was fired by the Mets after 16 seasons on the air.

“Some broadcasters think that their responsibility is to the team and the team only,” McCarver told The New York Times soon after the Mets let him go. “I have never thought that. My No. 1 obligation is to the people who are watching the game. And I’ve always felt that praise without objective criticism ceases to be praise. To me, any intelligent person can figure that out.”

McCarver and his wife, Anne McDaniel, had homes in Sarasota, Florida, and Napa, California. In recent years, McCarver announced part-time for Fox Sports Midwest and worked the occasional Cards game before sitting out the 2020 season because of concerns about COVID-19. Besides the Frick award, he was inducted into the Cardinals Hall of Fame, in 2017.

“By the time I was 26 I had played in three World Series and I thought, ‘Man this is great, almost a World Series every year,” he said during his acceptance speech. “Uh-uh. The game has a way of keeping you honest. I never played in another World Series.”

Read More

Tim McCarver, Major League Baseball catcher and broadcaster, dies at 81 Read More »

There are a lot of rumors surrounding Justin Fields and the Chicago Bears. They have the number one pick in the 2023 NFL Draft in addition to the most cap space in the league by far. As a result, their options are endless right now. Hopefully, they don’t mess this up.

Getting rid of Justin Fields is risky but it is no lock that he is good enough to win a Super Bowl with. They could trade him for a haul now but that might not be the case next year if he doesn’t have a good season. If they trade him now, they could also use that first pick on their new guy.

A lot of fans wouldn’t like it and that makes sense. There is no guarantee that anyone available in this draft is going to be as good or better than Fields. For that reason alone, it is a risk.

It is also a risk because you don’t know how Fields is going to progress as his NFL career goes on. If he became a star elsewhere, that would be a disaster for Chicago. However, if they do take this risk, there are a few teams that would be in the mix for him.

These are the 3 teams that would make the most sense for the Chicago Bears QB:

1. New York Jets

The New York Jets selected Zach Wilson second overall in the same year that the Bears landed Fields. However, it sounds as if they are done with him already.

They have been linked to guys like Derek Carr, Jimmy Garoppolo, and Aaron Rodgers. Well, Justin Fields makes sense for them as well if the Bears decided to move on.

2. Lamar Jackson

It sounds like the Baltimore Ravens, like the Chicago Bears, might be interested in trading their quarterback for lots of assets. If they do, landing Justin Fields might be someone that they are interested in replacing Lamar Jackson with.

You’d think that Fields would have a much better chance of succeeding in the NFL playing in a good organization like the Ravens. He’d be able to step in Jackson’s spot and be a really good player so it is something for everyone to consider.

3. San Francisco 49ers

The San Francisco 49ers have a lot of quarterbacks on the books but Trey Lance hasn’t proven that he’s the guy, Jimmy G is always hurt, and Brock Purdy has to prove that he can do it again if he even gets a chance.

This team has the best roster in the league but they weren’t able to get the quarterback play needed to beat the Eagles. If they went out and got Justin Fields, they’d become a Super Bowl favorite even more than they already are.

Again, we don’t know if the Bears will have what it takes in the front office to make this trade but it is something that people are talking about.

Read More

Read More »

‘Boulevard of Bold Dreams’ review: TimeLine Theatre’s world-premiere

Before Halle Berry or Sidney Poitier, there was Hattie McDaniel. Eighty-three years ago this month, on Feb. 29, 1940, she became the first Black actor to win an Oscar.

Nominated as best supporting actress for her role in “Gone With the Wind,” the blockbuster film of 1939, McDaniel made history. But it came at a tremendous personal cost. LaDarrion Williams’ “The Boulevard of Bold Dreams,” now receiving a powerhouse, world-premiere staging at TimeLine Theatre, imagines McDaniel at a pivotal moment in her life, just hours before the Oscars. As she stops at a cocktail lounge to collect her thoughts, she ponders the existential question that poet Langston Hughes would sear into a nation’s consciousness a decade later: What happens to a dream deferred?

‘Boulevard of Bold Dreams’

Williams and director Malkia Stampley respond by brilliantly evoking McDaniel’s legacy. As the play begins, they introduce an audio clip of Mo’Nique, best supporting actress winner 70 years later for “Precious,” as she declares: “I’d like to thank Miss Hattie McDaniel for enduring all that she had to so that I would not have to.”

Working in the lounge, part of L.A.’s famous Ambassador Hotel, are two friends, Arthur (Charles Andrew Gardner), a bartender, and Dottie (Mildred Marie Langford), a maid; they left rural Alabama to follow their own dreams in the entertainment industry. Hoping to become the next Oscar Micheaux, Arthur already has a name for his first film project: “The Boulevard of Bold Dreams.” A talented singer, Dottie yearns for her big break. But for now, they’re stuck in day jobs, mired in the subservient existence of most working-class Blacks in the ’40s.

As Hattie (Gabrielle Lott-Rogers) enters the Ambassador (where Robert F. Kennedy would be assassinated 28 years later), she’s resigned. When the film had its premiere in a whites-only theater in Atlanta, she wasn’t invited. Now the film’s studio has crafted an acceptance speech, not trusting her to speak her own truth. She suspects won’t be allowed to sit at the ceremony with the film’s white cast. Then comes the ultimate insult: She learns that she will have to sit by herself at a table in the back.

Good friends Dottie Hudson (Mildred Marie Langford) and Arthur Brooks (Charles Andrew Gardner) discover they have different ways of thinking about their life journeys in “Boulevard of Bold Dreams.”

Joel Maisonet

When Hattie announces that she has decided to skip the Oscars, Arthur’s aghast. He begs her to reconsider: “You’ve accomplished things that most Negro folk can’t even imagine.” Dottie, however, goads Hattie to strike back at the white establishment.

Negative reaction has worn Hattie down. Groups like the NAACP urged her to refuse the role, criticizing the part as “a disgrace to colored folks.” Meanwhile, a Chicago Defender critic called the film’s depiction of Civil War-era society “a weapon of terror against black America.”

A dreamer himself, Williams wrote this play, his first major project, while living in his car. His dramatic flair, evident throughout, explodes in a scene where Hattie explains to a critical Dottie that she “takes on these maid roles with pride and responsibility”; she sees them as an homage to the Black experience, especially the ordeals of her mother, a former slave, and her sacrifices. As Dottie continues to argue, Hattie silences her with the retort: “I’d rather be a maid in movies than a maid in real life.”

All three actors excel and build dramatic tension smoothly over the play’s 90-minute running time. Gardner expertly shifts between personas, first as a servile barkeep while on the phone with his hotel overlord, then as an impromptu confidant, hopeful yet hardened by life. As Langford skillfully peels back layers of her character, she reveals the pain and sorrow that fuel her cynicism. With her beautifully nuanced portrayal, Lott-Rogers does the real Hattie McDaniel proud. She embodies the grace and dignity that allowed McDaniel to rise above constant affronts and disrespect.

The design team also deserves accolades, especially for the lighting, costumes, hair/makeup and projections. With its lovely Art Deco accents, the set is a sight to behold.

As the play closes, a clip of Hattie McDaniel’s actual Oscar speech is projected on the mirror above the bar. When she declares, “I shall always hold it as a beacon for anything that I may be able to do in the future,” it’s clear her beacon still burns bright decades later.

Read More

‘Boulevard of Bold Dreams’ review: TimeLine Theatre’s world-premiere Read More »

The Chicago Cubs are a team coming into 2023 with mixed expectations. With some of the other teams that reside in the National League, it is hard to see them getting into the playoffs. On the other side of the coin, they were decent at times in 2022 and made some major upgrades.

A lot of the upgrades came on the offensive side of the game. Guys like Dansby Swanson, Cody Bellinger, and Eric Hosmer amongst others are going to try and make this team better with their bats in addition to playing some good defense.

This is also a team that is trying to be better in terms of pitching which is a realistic goal. Pitchers and catchers have reported to spring training now which is very exciting.

One notable missing face is that of Willson Contreras who reported to his first St. Louis Cardinals camp this week. Not having him around is a big blow to the lineup but they have to find a way to move on both offensively and in terms of playing the position of catcher.

They signed Tucker Barnhart this off-season who is a very good defensive catcher. With Yan Gomes, they should form a decent duo back there.

Pitchers and catchers have reported to spring training for the Chicago Cubs.

As for pitchers, Kyle Hendricks is the only remaining player from the 2016 World Series champions team. He is going to miss the start of the season recovering from his surgery but we should see him at some point this year.

Marcus Stroman is getting ready for year two with the team while Jameson Taillon is an off-season addition that a lot of people are excited about. Guys like Keegan Thompson, Hayden Wesneski, and Caleb Killian are looking to make an impact as well.

It would also be nice to see guys like Codi Heuer and Adbert Alzolay come in and find some health this year so that we can see what they are made of. This is a big year for these guys as they can earn themselves a spot in the long term. We’ve seen flashes in the past from both of them.

The Cubs are going to be able to pitch this year. Coming in with big goals will help them become a better team as a whole. Based on everything said, they feel that way in the clubhouse as well.

They have to try and get the most offense that they can in order to take advantage of it. They need everyone playing at their best at the same time to go somewhere this season which is certainly possible. It is only the first week but there is a lot to be excited about.

Read More

Read More »

Last offseason, Chicago Bears general manager Ryan Poles used his first year with the team sparingly. It was not an offseason which Poles was going to go out and make big commitments.

Instead, he signed many guys to shorter deals and wanted to evaluate who he had inherited (and chose to keep) on the initial roster.

One of those short-term deals came when the team signed linebacker Nicholas Morrow, formerly of the Las Vegas Raiders. Now a free agent come March, Morrow is an option for the Bears to bring back.

The question is, will they bring him back for 2023? Even better question: is he worth re-signing?

Should the Chicago Bears re-sign free agent linebacker Nicholas Morrow?

The linebacker position is one spot the Bears are going to likely need a major overhaul at, with the only surefire starter returning in Jack Sanborn. At least, most would assume Sanborn to be the only one who should be locked and loaded as a starter.

Looking at Morrow’s line from a year ago, it does seem productive at first glance.

He finished with a career-high 116 total tackles, with 83 being solo. Morrow compiled 11 tackles for loss, two passes defensed and an interception. Overall, it would appear as a solid season.

However, looking further, Morrow was actually a liability in some areas, specifically against the run. In many cases, Morrow was chasing from behind rather than making a good initial read. There were a few missed tackles, but mostly Morrow being caught out of position and not making the correct read from the jump.

Pro Football Focus gave him a miserable 46.8 grade against the run for the entirety of the 2022 season, and that’s an area the Bears have to get better against. They cannot afford to be as bad as they were last season against the run.

If the front four gets significantly better this offseason, then Morrow might not be a bad re-signing. However, he cannot be counted on to be one of the main points of contact in the run game. It has to start up front.

Should there be an opportunity to upgrade Morrow’s spot, then Poles should take it, whether it be in the draft or via free agency.

Read More

Read More »

Last year, the Chicago Bears made a trade to acquire a former first-round wide receiver in N’Keal Harry, bringing him over from the New England Patriots.

It was a low-risk trade, for only a seventh-round pick, and fans couldn’t be mad at that. In fact, there was a bit of optimism that Harry might be able to break out after a fresh start. After all, he was a first-round talent not too long ago.

Unfortunately, the optimism did not last too long. The Bears only used him on 40 percent of offensive snaps in the games he was active for. That actually sounds like a decent amount of playing time, but out of the 176 brief snaps he played, Harry was only targeted nine times.

Of those nine targets, he caught seven of them for 116 yards and one touchdown. That’s not exactly an inspiring season total for a guy you traded for. It would have been a heck of a single game, but a full season? Woof.

It would be shocking to see the Chicago Bears re-sign wide receiver N’Keal Harry in free agency

This will likely get chalked up as a loss for general manager Ryan Poles, who has to address the wide receiver position in a big way this offseason.

Now, when Harry was on the field and targeted, he looked the part. It was actually a mystery as to why he was rarely used. That was a big question fans had at the end of the season. Why trade for a guy like that if you’re not going to use him?

There has to be more underlying issues, there, that we don’t know as fans.

Regardless, the Bears probably won’t bring him back. Knowing they have Chase Claypool, Darnell Mooney, Velus Jones Jr. and the already re-signed Equanimeous St. Brown, that’s four spots locked up without a true number one.

Now, it’s up to Poles to go out and get a true number one option at wide receiver, and that’s simply not Harry. As much as Bears fans would have loved it to be true, the team clearly wasn’t going that direction when it was all said and done.

Read More

Read More »