Chicago Sports

Cubs reportedly add reliever Michael Fulmer

The Chicago Cubs have reportedly added right-handed reliever, Michael Fulmer.

The Chicago Cubs have made plenty of transactions this offseason. Roster moves have slowed down quite a bit as teams are beginning to ramp up for the 2023 season. Pitchers and catchers officially report to spring training on February 13th. According to Ken Rosenthal, the Cubs will have another pitcher joining them in Arizona.

On Friday afternoon, Ken Rosenthal reported that Michael Fulmer is signing with the Cubs, pending a physical.

While many expected the Cubs to prioritize adding a left-handed reliever, Fulmer is still a satisfying addition. Michael Fulmer posted a 3.39 ERA in 67 appearances with the Detroit Tigers and Minnesota Twins last season. The former Rookie of the Year and 1x All-Star will likely bump a reliever or a second baseman off the 40-man roster.

Michael Fulmer joins the Cubs just in time for spring training. The Chicago Cubs play their first spring training game on February 25th against the San Francisco Giants. With so many new faces, fans should have a lot to look forward to. There are sure to be plenty of storylines out of Cubs camp this spring.

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Report: Chicago Bears moving to close on Arlington Heights property?

The Chicago Bears are moving closer to the purchase of the Arlington Heights property

There are a lot of story lines surrounding the Chicago Bears’ franchise in the 2023 offseason, headlined by having the No. 1 overall pick in the 2023 NFL draft and a lot of cap space to work in free agency. But a story that shouldn’t be forgotten is the franchise’s pursuit of the Arlington Heights racetrack property.

The franchise has pushed for the property that was home to the Arlington racetrack and are hoping to build a brand new state of the art stadium on the land. The goal is to close by the end of quarter one in 2023 and on Friday a new report suggests that the process is starting to speed up.

David Kaplan is reporting that Arlington Park/Churchill Downs employees are being told they must have all of their possessions off of the property by close on Tuesday. Here is what Kaplan said:

“Folks, I confirmed this morning that Arlington Park/Churchill Downs employees, Churchill Downs is the parent company that currently owns the property that Arlington Park sits on, are being told that they must have all of their possessions off of property grounds by end of business on Tuesday. Because after that date, they will no longer have access to Arlington Park.”

Kaplan also reported that multiple sources with Arlington Park are saying the process will move forward more quickly than expected.

That’s great news for the Chicago Bears as they want to move forward with this purchase and get the process sped up. The franchise recently hired Kevin Warren to replace Ted Phillips as the new CEO/President of the franchise and he has experience with stadium development going back to his time with the Minnesota Vikings.

This is a significant development for the Chicago Bears franchise that will continued to be monitored in the coming days and weeks.

Watch the video below:

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Cubs agree to deal with reliever Michael Fulmer

Less than a week before pitchers and catchers report for spring training, the Cubs are adding to their bullpen.

The Cubs and free agent right-hander Michael Fulmer agreed to a contract, sources confirmed. The terms of the deal, which is pending a physical, were not immediately clear.

His addition gives the Cubs another option at the back end of the bullpen, an area left thin by trades at last year’s deadline.

“That’s just an area you never feel totally comfortable no matter what, just given the volatility of it,” Cubs president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer said last month at Cubs Convention. “Are we looking to add guys? Yes. But I do feel comfortable that we’re getting more and more arms; I think we have a lot of guys that can fill that role.”

Fulmer, 29, found success early in his career as a starter, winning American League Rookie of the Year in 2016 and becoming an All-Star the next year. But those accolades were tainted by injury, including a series of elbow operations.

In 2021, Fulmer’s first season as a reliever, he posted a career-best 2.97 ERA and 14 saves with the Tigers. Last season, which he split between Detroit and Minnesota, Fulmer regressed some, as his walk rate rose to 10.1%. Still, he entered free agency this winter among the higher rated non-closer relievers on the market.

The Cubs have gotten by without signing a bonafide closer in recent years, instead helping veterans bounce back into more prominent roles. During the club’s rebuild, it traded those veteran relievers on short-term contracts midseason for young players and prospects.

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Cheeseheads adore the Bears’ Justin Fields? In other news, up is down.

Wisconsinites do not refer to people from Illinois as “people from Illinois.” They refer to them as “F—— Illinois Bastards,” or FIBs for short. This has something to do with Chicagoans regarding America’s Dairyland as America’s Vacation Home.

We buy their land, we cannonball into their lakes when serious men are trying to fish and we think snowmobiles are race cars with skis attached. That’s our reputation at least, and if it weren’t for our gobs of discretionary income, there’d surely be a wall erected at the Illinois-Wisconsin border to keep us out. By the way, if anyone has some discretionary income that doesn’t know what to do with itself, I could keep it busy.

Wisconsinites’ last laugh is the Packers’ dominance over the Bears the past 30 years or so. I won’t go into the numbers because I don’t like to see adults cry. Just know that when Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers screamed “I still own you!” to Bears fans at Soldier Field in 2021, it wasn’t just adrenaline or machismo talking. It was the truth. Somewhere among his trophies and awards is a car title to the jalopy that is the Bears.

The surprise of all surprises, then, was the recent news that the player with the best-selling NFL jersey in Wisconsin this season wasn’t Rodgers, a four-time league MVP, or any other Packer. It was Justin Fields, the quarterback of this year’s 3-14 Bears. This wasn’t Italian beef beating bratwurst for the title of Wisconsin’s official artery hardener, but it was close.

Apparently, FIB stands for something else.

Fields Is Beloved (in Wisconsin).

OK, maybe “beloved” is going a bit far, but perhaps you share my shock at the Bears beating the Packers at anything. I thought there were laws against that sort of thing.

I’ve been trying to come up with explanations for how Fields’ jersey came to be the biggest seller in Illinois, Wisconsin and Indiana, according to sports retailer Lids. I’m not sure I have a definitive answer. After this news, I’m not sure of anything anymore.

Some possibilities:

A lot of Bears fans live in heavily populated southern Wisconsin. Like fourth-generation Irish-Americans who get misty eyed thinking about the Auld Sod, these members of the great Bears diaspora snap up apparel in support of a team miles away. Hence, Fields’ popularity in enemy territory.Every Packers fan in Wisconsin already has a closetful of Rodgers jerseys, opening the door for a virus like Fields to spread. Do they wear No. 12 to work and No. 1 to bed? Should they be seeing a professional about it?Packers fans are tired of Rodgers, who seems to enjoy keeping everyone in the dark about his playing status from year to year. Thus, it’s appropriate he’s going on a “darkness retreat” after the Super Bowl, with no communication with another human being for four days. It’s a time for self-reflection, he says. Out of disgust with Rodgers, perhaps some fans have switched their allegiance to Fields. They get football highlights instead of contrived drama.Young people love Fields. This one makes the most sense. Of course the Central Cheesehead Party continues to indoctrinate Packer Youth in the love of all things green and gold. But it’s hard for children to pay attention when something as splashy as Fields comes along. He single-handedly made a miserable Bear season fun. If a hip injury hadn’t sidelined him for the last game of the season, he likely would have broken Lamar Jackson’s single-season record for rushing yards by a quarterback.

If you’re a Packers fan who would rather bathe in a vat of boiling water than don a Bears jersey, you should be concerned about this strange incursion into your state. Fields will be in Chicago for a while. He’s not going anywhere, unless it’s on another 50-yard touchdown run. Nobody knows if he’ll turn into a good passer, but what those jersey sales seem to tell us is that nobody cares if he does or doesn’t. People like him for the blur he is.

Rodgers, meanwhile, might not be back in Green Bay next season. He might retire. He might be traded. He’ll let you know just as soon as he decides to let you know. But even if he does return to the Packers, it’s difficult to picture him being as fun to watch as he was during his back-to-back MVP seasons in 2020 and 2021. He wasn’t much fun in 2022.

Is it possible that a 23-year-old quarterback has taken some Wisconsin market share from a quarterback 16 years his elder? It seems wrong, against the natural order. The Packers are supposed to be better than the Bears in all things. That’s been Chicago’s lot in life for so long, it seems written in permanent ink.

I feel wobbly. Everything seems in question now. If Fields tops Rodgers, even in just one category, who owns whom?

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Bulls have a point guard problem that could be solved in buyout market

CLEVELAND – By late Thursday evening, the only acquisition Arturas Karnisovas was interested in was sleep.

Two straight days of working the phones, but unable to get a deal done by the trade deadline left the Bulls’ executive vice president of basketball operations a bit worn down.

Not that there was much time for some R&R.

Next up for Karnisovas will be exploring the buyout market. That doesn’t mean they’ll find the right piece, but they’ll at least have to go shopping.

“We’ll look at it,” Karnisovas said, when asked about the buyout route to add some help. “First I have to look through every trade that actually happened and what kind of rosters each team has before we look at the buy-out market. So we’ll look at it for sure.”

The position they might want to explore first? Point guard, and the latest evidence of that hole was provided in the 116-105 loss to the undermanned Nets.

The Bulls were trailing by five with just under seven minutes left, allowing a Yuta Watanabe three-pointer. No problem for a veteran-led team like the Bulls, even with their point guard-by-committee offensive approach.

Wrong. Big problems.

A Zach LaVine turnover with 6:35 left, followed by another LaVine turnover with 6:12 left. Brooklyn was unable to capitalize either time, so no harm besides the lost possession.

DeMar DeRozan then shot a three-pointer and missed, LaVine fell short on a driving floater, and then after Spencer Dinwiddie split a pair of free throws, LaVine was called for travelling, leading to another Watanabe three-pointer with 4:23 left.

Five-straight empty possessions in just over two minutes, and the Bulls then found themselves down 12 points.

An all-too familiar ending for this team, and another hint of how difficult life without Lonzo Ball continued to be.

“I still think we can get into offense better, and I don’t feel like that’s Zach’s job or responsibility, or that’s on him,” coach Billy Donovan said, when asked about the late-game point guard issues. “That’s on everybody collectively together. Those plays you’re talking about, he was in the middle of, but there were also some other possessions, even going to start the third quarter, where maybe Ayo [Dosunmu] or Patrick [Williams], like we didn’t get off to a good start. To me it’s more of the five guys out there.

“We don’t have Chris Paul where it’s just like, ‘I got it, go down the floor,’ and he orchestrates and gets you into whatever he wants to get you into. We have to do it together, all five guys got to take the responsibility to flow into that better. Then we’ve got to screen, we’ve got to cut, and we’ve got to move better. At times we do a really good job of it, and then other times we don’t do a consistent job of it.”

That’s why the Bulls plan to keep an eye on the buyout market. Russell Westbrook, John Wall and Patrick Beverley are all candidates to be bought-out, so there could be options.

But are they good options?

Westbrook is a turnover machine, who would help with pacing and that’s about it. Wall is unreliable from an availability standpoint, which leaves the volatile Beverley. The Chicago native isn’t the best at conducting an offense, but he brings some much-needed attitude to a team of choir boys.

Could it be time for a homecoming? There’s not much to lose at this point, with the Bulls sitting at 26-29 and in the No. 9 hole of the Eastern Conference.

Either way, they need to get something done in that department, and sooner than later.

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The Chicago Blackhawks are going to be a very active team at the NHL trade deadline. One of the biggest things on the radar is the future destination of Patrick Kane. Of course, Kane has a full no-trade clause so he can somewhat control where he goes if they move him.

Kane is one of the greatest players in the history of the franchise so they are going to care about treating him well. However, he is in the middle of the final year of his big contract and he should be traded for the betterment of the team’s future.

It does seem like Kane at least somewhat cares about the team and what he can do to help them even beyond his years there. The assets he can get back in return can really help the franchise accelerate the rebuild.

On Thursday, there was a bit of NHL news that is clearly going to impact the Patrick Kane sweepstakes. The New York Rangers acquired Vladimir Tarasenko from the St. Louis Blues which fills the right-wing void that they needed to fill.

The Chicago Blackhawks may or may not trade Patrick Kane before the deadline.

That most likely takes them out of the running for Kane which doesn’t seem to sit well with Patrick Kane himself. He made it clear on Friday that the Rangers were a team that he was heavily considering if he was to move.

Patrick Kane said he and Pat Brisson haven’t outright told Kyle Davidson what he wants: “Obviously you want to do right by the franchise, and the organization here has been amazing to me and given me so much. So you definitely want what’s best for both sides.”

— Mark Lazerus (@MarkLazerus) February 10, 2023

These quotes from Kane are actually very surprising to hear. All we’ve heard up to this point is how he wants to stay in Chicago but this was a reality check. The Blackhawks are in fact looking to move Kane and he is willing to do so. Unfortunately for him, a team he wanted is out.

Why would Kane want the Rangers? Well, there are a couple of reasons. For one, it is much closer to his home of Buffalo. Second, he’d almost certainly be reunited on a line with Artemi Panarin.

He’d also get to play with some other studs in various situations like Mika Zibanejad, Adam Fox, and K’Andre Miller. It would be a great situation. It is also almost a lock that they’re getting to the playoffs.

To be honest, there are other good options for Kane though. Right there in the Metropolitan Division, the New Jersey Devils and Carolina Hurricanes would be great fits as well. There are also plenty of other elite teams that would make it work.

Kane might not be going to the Rangers but we know he is thinking things over. It will be the biggest Blackhawks storyline until it is resolved.

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Dick Butkus on Bears: ‘There’s no reason why they should be this bad’

PHOENIX — Dick Butkus watches the Bears as often as he can from his home in Malibu, Calif. He usually ends up frustrated — particularly last season, when the Bears had the NFL’s worst record.

“There’s no reason why they should be this bad … ” he told the Sun-Times on Friday. “I get a little disgusted …

“I really get hot watching them, especially with a lot of lack of effort things. I don’t get it. I really don’t.”

The Pro Football Hall of Fame linebacker said the Bears’ losing in recent years reminds him of when he challenged George S. Halas to find a winning head coach shortly after he fired Jim Dooley in 1971. Upon walking into his office at 173 W. Madison St., Butkus told Halas he didn’t think he wanted to win, and he thought the Bears founder might hit him.

“He got up and I thought he was going to take a poke at me,” Butkus said.

He didn’t. Butkus’ point was made, though: the Bears were the NFL’s founding franchise, and should act like it.

“Why have they been so bad?” he asked at Super Bowl radio row, where he was promoting NFL Alumni Association’s anti-obesity campaign. “Is it the scouting department? What’s the answer here? To tell you the truth, I don’t know …

“Look at the teams that are winning and look at their organization,” he said. “The ownership is the ones that hire. It starts from them too. They shouldn’t be void of any criticism.”

He doesn’t see Justin Fields as part of the problem,

Butkus said the quarterback “is going to be all right” — and then ripped the way he was handled by Matt Nagy and his staff as a rookie.

“That first year, I thought the coaching of him was terrible,” he said. “I said, ‘How is it that when he comes off the sideline and goes to the bench he takes his helmet off and puts on a baseball hat?’ If you watch Aaron Rodgers and Pat Mahomes and Tom Brady, when they get on the sidelines they’ve got the iPad and a coach right there.

“Where was that his rookie year? That group he was in there that rookie year, they didn’t coach him one iota, I don’t believe. So he’s moving along now.”

The coaching has improved under Matt Eberflus, he said. Now, he said, the Bears need to help Fields.

“Just like I told people when he first came in the league — the problem is, when he gets in, he’s gonna get hurt, because there’s nobody in front of him,” he said. “And that’s exactly what has happened. The kid’s running for his life.

“With a number of draft choices, maybe we can get some offensive linemen.”

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high school basketball: Kenwood vs. Simeon for the city title: ‘We want to send Rob out too’

Simeon wants to send retiring coach Robert Smith out with a city championship.

Kenwood coach Mike Irvin smiled and agreed.

“We want to send Rob out too,” Irvin said.

There’s no animosity between the two coaches, it isn’t even a real rivalry between the schools. But this is a special moment for the Broncos, who have played in just one city championship game and never won a title.

“[Smith] has set the standards high for Chicago basketball,” Irvin said. “So this is a great way for Kenwood to get this championship. I wouldn’t want it any other way. We respect everything Simeon has done.”

The Broncos won 46-43 at Simeon in early January. Irvin celebrated wildly. It was the first time Kenwood (23-5) had ever beaten the Wolverines. That was the low point of Simeon’s season, losing at home in Smith’s final season, and it will provide some fire for the Wolverines.

“We’ve been talking about the city championship since day one,” Smith said. “This isn’t about me. It’s about the kids and their chance to win a city championship. I’ve won before, so it isn’t a big thing for me.”

Simeon (25-3) has won 10 city titles and played in 17 championship games. Smith has won seven.

“We know the history of Simeon,” Irvin said. “I played against Simeon. I’ve beaten them several times in my career, playing and coaching.”

Kansas State recruit Dai Dai Ames was excellent in the first matchup. He didn’t allow the Rubin Twins’ shot-blocking ability to alter his game, scoring 20 points.

The Broncos won that first game defensively, forcing Simeon into 17 turnovers. Ames had four steals.

The Wolverines haven’t tightened that part of their game up yet. They may be leaking the ball more now than they were back in early January.

Kenwood senior Solomon Mosley grew up playing against Simeon’s 6-10 Rubin twins, Miles and Wes, and was comfortable battling them in the post. That’s another mark in the Broncos’ favor. Jaden Smith, a 6-11 junior, wasn’t much of a factor for Kenwood in the first matchup but has been more assertive lately and could make an impact.

Simeon will be hoping to get more out of Toledo recruit Sam Lewis. He didn’t play much in the second half of the first matchup. His shooting ability and slashes to the basket could make a major dent in Kenwood’s zone defense.

Expect a good crowd at UIC’s Credit Union One Arena. The game is at 4 p.m. and will be televised live on CW26.

“The city needs to come out,” Irvin said. “This should excite the fanbase of Chicago basketball. It’s an up-and-coming heavyweight against the established champs. Get your popcorn.”

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When the Chicago Bears had a run to the Super Bowl in the 2005-06 season, a big reason for it was return-specialist Devin Hester. He was one of the most electric players on the Chicago Bears and in the NFL in general.

Hester went on to become the greatest kick and punt returner in the history of the sport. He was so good that they changed the rules of kickoffs because of him. Whenever rules are changed to nerf you, it is pretty clear that you were so good.

This man returned the opening kickoff of Super Bowl XLI after two weeks of the Indianapolis Colts publicly talking about whether or not they’d actually kick to him. They did and he burned them. Unfortunately for the Bears, however, the Colts still won the game.

Now, there is a wonder if the NFL’s all-time greatest return man should make it to the Hall of Fame. If you are the best at anything in your sport, you should be a Hall of Famer and Hester is the all-time greatest returner. How he played as a receiver or defensive back is irrelevant.

Devin Hester deserves to be in the Hall of Fame for his brilliant career.

Well, Hester was snubbed again as the class of 2023 was announced on Thursday night and he wasn’t in it. It just doesn’t seem right at all.

There are going to be a lot more chances for Hester to be put in but there shouldn’t really be much of a debate as to whether or not he deserves it. His being the best returner of all time is really non-negotiable.

Even on the returns that he didn’t run back to the end zone, he gave his team outstanding field position. There were plenty of games where he was the number one reason the Bears won. It was remarkable to watch.

This man even returned a missed field goal attempt against the New York Giants which was one of the most sensational things we’ve ever seen. It is a shame that the Bears weren’t able to win Super Bowl XLI for him but it is an even bigger shame that the Hall of Fame voters are dead wrong.

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Bears’ top front office brass came from Super Bowl teams

PHOENIX — Say this for the Bears: when they revamped their front office a year ago, they took from the best.

Ryan Poles had been employed by the Chiefs for 12 years — starting as a scouting assistant and working his way up –when the Bears named him their general manager. Poles quickly made his first hire: Ian Cunningham, who had spent the previous five years with the Eagles. Poles even created a new title to help lure him away: assistant general manager.

Poles had been to two Super Bowls with the Chiefs, and Cunningham one with the Eagles. Each man had contributed to solving the most pressing conundrum in the NFL — drafting a star quarterback. Patrick Mahomes is the best passer in the NFL, while Jalen Hurts reached the Pro Bowl in only his second full season as a starter.

Poles and Cunningham each had a hand in assembling rosters that were the most complete in the NFL this season. No team gained more yards than the Chiefs, or allowed fewer than the Eagles. Both parlayed their No. 1 playoff seeds into berths in this year’s Super Bowl.

Now the question becomes: can they do the same for the Bears?

With the worst record in the NFL, the Bears might be farthest away from the Super Bowl of any team in the sport. With the No. 1 overall pick and the most salary cap space available this offseason, the real work is just beginning for the Bears’ front office.

“[Poles] is going to do a great job,” Chiefs GM Brett Veach said this week. “I think he had a lot of young guys that stepped up and played well this year.”

Veach texted with Poles, with whom he first worked in 2013, often during the season.

“He’s a smart guy and has a really good staff around him,” he said. “He has a lot of picks and a lot of money — and a chance to do great things.”

Cunningham has been the most important member of that staff.

“I miss that guy tremendously,” Eagles general manager Howie Roseman said. “That guy’s a star. He’s a star evaluator. He has a great sense of how to build a team.”

Without making a move, Cunningham was still one of the standouts of this year’s hiring cycle. He was a finalist for GM openings with both the Cardinals and the Titans — he could have had the Arizona job if he wanted it, a source said — in the past month.

“In my humble opinion, the Bears are renting him — because he’s got a tremendous future,” Roseman said. “He’s inquisitive. He wants to know about everything, every part of it. He’s going to make a great GM.”

What the Bears do next will be an important line in Cunningham’s resume. If they make progress, Cunningham will only become that much more attractive to potential suitors.

Helping to build a consistent winner, after all, was part of what attracted the Bears to Poles last year. He worked in the front office when the Chiefs drafted Mahomes, all-world tight end Travis Kelce and defensive lineman Chris Jones.

From Poles’ arrival in 2009 through this season, the Chiefs have had 31 different players be named to the Pro Bowl a combined 76 times. They had staying power — the Bears, by contrast, had 27 different players combine for just 45 combined Pro Bowl appearances during the same timeframe.

Former Bears head coach Matt Nagy — now the Chiefs’ quarterbacks coach — first met Poles in 2013. While he said he was happy to see Poles get an opportunity to run a front office, he said it’s been hard to watch Poles tear down the Bears’ roster and not take it personally.

“Obviously it’s a little different because of the situation,” Nagy said. “[Former GM] Ryan Pace and myself poured a lot of blood, sweat and tears into that situation.”

Nagy gets it. But that doesn’t make it any less painful.

“You see guys getting traded or released,” he said. “You understand a lot of times when a new head coach and general manager comes in, a lot of times that’s what happened. It’s not unexpected. But there’s still that process of knowing that … It’s tough.

“You care for the person. Roquan Smith gets traded. That was my very first draft pick. I love Roquan like a son. It’s a part of the process.”

Now comes the hard part.

The Chiefs and Eagles are in the Super Bowl in part because of the contributions of Poles and Cunningham. To get the Bears there, they’ll have to do a lot more.

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