Chicago Sports

Lovie Smith does former team a favor as Chicago Bears clinch No. 1 pick

Lovie Smith helps gift the Bears the No. 1 overall pick in the 2023 NFL draft

Former Chicago Bears head coach Lovie Smith delivered a favor to Ryan Poles and Co. on Sunday afternoon.

With Houston’s 32-31 win over Indianapolis and the Bears losing to the Vikings, Chicago has now clinched the No. 1 overall pick for the 2023 NFL draft. The Bears finish the season at 3-14 while Houston is 3-13-1, as the tie hurt them.

That means the Bears have the No. 1 overall pick for the first time since 1947, and it comes at a good time.

Chicago enters this offseason with the No. 1 pick plus a projected $124M in cap space. They also have a quarterback in Justin Fields who the team believes in, meaning they can trade the pick or potentially address defense with someone like Will Anderson or Jalen Carter.

Smith coached 9 seasons in Chicago, going 81-63 and leading the team to the playoffs three times including two NFC Championship Game appearances, winning one of those. He was fired after the 2012 season despite going 10-6.

This is Smith’s first year in Houston but as the season winds down, rumors are swirling that he may not be back next year. And if that’s the case, he gives Chicago one last gift potentially.

The franchise now enters a very important offseason with Week 18 in the books, and it’s one where Poles must make the most of his resources. If he doesn’t, then it all could be a waste and the franchise could struggle once again next year, forcing them to rest one again.

Make sure to check back with ChiCitySports.com for the latest on the team and the upcoming offseason.

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(BREAKING) Chicago Bears break record in historical loss to Vikings in Week 18

The Chicago Bears broke some records this season

The Chicago Bears are finally done with the season. It was a pretty disastrous first-year campaign for general manager Ryan Poles and head coach Matt Eberflus in their first seasons in Chicago. While quarterback Justin Fields broke some positive records this season, the Bears earned a negative record following their loss to the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday.

Almost as if going by the national media’s preseason predictions, the Bears’ record fell to 3-14 in Week 18. With 14 losses, the 2022-23 Bears lost the most games in franchise history for a single season. The Bears have now lost ten straight games, also the most in franchise history. They also fell to 0-6 in NFC North play.

Eberflus campaign of finishing and trying to win never happened during the Bears’ Monday Night Football win over the New England Patriots. The Bears lost ten straight games, starting with their game against the Dallas Cowboys. The Bears have lost a lot of pride this season. They lost the record for the winningest team in NFL history to the Packers following a loss to Green Bay at Soldier Field.

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3 studs and duds from the Chicago Bears loss to the Vikings

The Chicago Bears tank is complete

The Chicago Bears were extremely shorthanded against the Minnesota Vikings in Week 18. The Bears lost 29-13 to the Vikings Sunday, earning them a new franchise record for most losses in a single season. The Bears weren’t expected to win this game. To their credit, at least in terms of draft position, they didn’t make it close.

The Bears used the game as a chance to evaluate the entire Week 18 active roster before the offseason. While the overall product on the field wasn’t good NFL football, the Bears did have good performances from several players. That was an improvement from overall terrible play in Weeks 16 and 17. Here are three studs and duds from the Bears’ loss to the Vikings in Week 18.

Studs

Velus Jones Jr.

Jones was in the Chicago Bears doghouse a few weeks ago. The Bears rookie has struggled with ball protection since the preseason. Jones has played much better over the past two weeks. He played extremely well against the Vikings. He caught a 28-yard reception and had a 42-yard rushing touchdown. Jones was also solid returning kicks. He’s showing that he has game-changing speed. If he can work on protecting the ball this offseason, Jones could have a breakout sophomore year as a 26-year-old.

V12 toes the line for the 42 yd touchdown ⚡️

📺: #MINvsCHI on FOX pic.twitter.com/EIQNOfdcQG

— Chicago Bears (@ChicagoBears) January 8, 2023

Cole Kmet

It wasn’t a breakout season in terms of yards, but Kmet had a successful overall season in his third season with the Chicago Bears. He scored a career-high seven touchdowns this season. On Sunday, Kmet caught another touchdown pass, this time from Nathan Peterman, who got the start at quarter with Justin Fields being ruled out. Kmet passed Darnell Mooney, who was placed on injured reserve, for the Bears’ most receiving yards this season. Take that stat for what it is; the Bears are the league’s worst passing team by a wide margin.

.@ColeKmet battles his way into the end zone 😤

📺: #MINvsCHI on FOX pic.twitter.com/g20Rgb9tk3

— Chicago Bears (@ChicagoBears) January 8, 2023

The Chicago Bears’ draft position

The Bears came into Week 18 holding the number two overall pick in the 2023 draft. The Bears needed a loss, and a Houston Texans win to claim the number one pick. The Bears did their part to keep at least the number two pick.

The Texans had an early lead against the Indianapolis Colts, but they withered away in the second half. Fortunately for the Bears (at least this spring), the Texans would score a late touchdown and convert a two-point play to win 32-31. The Bears are officially the worst team in the NFL for the 2022-23 season.

Duds

Tim Boyle

The Chicago Bears used the Week 18 contest as a chance to evaluate whatever part of the roster was healthy enough to be put on an NFL field Sunday. Head coach Matt Eberflus should have found plenty of fat that needs to be cut before next season. Backup quarterback Boyle came in for a few series against the Vikings. He threw a terrible interception on his first drive. Nathan Peterman wasn’t great but he showed he was more serviceable than Boyle. Boyle finished with two interceptions.

David Montgomery

Montgomery didn’t have a great end to his contract season against the Vikings. The running back hinted in a social media post that Sunday might be his last game in a Bears uniform. And his effort Sunday won’t have many fans missing him if he does go. Montgomery finished with seven carries for 21 yards, just three yards per rush.

Let’s call it what it is at this point. Montgomery is an inconsistent running back that doesn’t average as many yards per carry as he should for an extension next season. He has weeks where he’s one of the best players on the field, other weeks, he looks like a backup. This week, Montgomery looked like he had been elevated from the practice squad for this game.

Equanimeous St. Brown

General manager Ryan Poles thought Equanimeous St. Brown deserved to be extended for next season based on his work with the Chicago Bears this season. He was useless against the Vikings just a few days after he inked his name to the new contract. St. Brown finished with one reception on one target for three yards.

 

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Bears get No. 1 pick in draft after loss to Vikings, Texans’ stunner vs. Colts

It was beautiful.

All the Bears needed in the final game of the season was to do what they do best: lose. Step by step, from offloading Khalil Mack in March to ruling out Justin Fields a few days ago, this is what they were designed to accomplish.

The Bears lost 29-13 to the Vikings on Sunday, and much like a preseason game, the details on how they reached that outcome are largely irrelevant. What matters is that it landed them the No. 1 pick in the draft for the first time since 1947.

They couldn’t have done it without former coach Lovie Smith, who guided the Texans to a stunning 32-31 win against the Colts. His team rallied for a touchdown in the final minute on a desperate fourth-down heave to the end zone and took the lead when Smith opted to go for a two-point conversion.

That left the Bears with the NFL’s worst record at 3-14, ending the season on a franchise-long 10-game losing streak, and the Texans a hair better at 3-13-1.

Those 10 consecutive losses, facilitated in part by the trades of Roquan Smith and Robert Quinn, were essential. After the Bears beat the Patriots in Week 7 — their highlight of the season — they were in line to pick 14th.

Bears general manager Ryan Poles can use the top pick any number of ways. He could take overwhelming Alabama pass rusher Will Anderson or Georgia star defensive tackle Jalen Carter. He could reboot the quarterback position by drafting Bryce Young from Alabama or C.J. Stroud from Ohio State, and make a corresponding move by trading Fields for more draft capital.

Even if he’s committed to Fields, it’d be prudent for Poles craft a public stand that shows support but still makes the rest of the league believe he’s considering Young and Stroud.

Preferably, though, he would parlay that pick into more picks. The Bears are a team with a million problems, and while whomever they took at No. 1 would instantly be a top-five player on their roster, they’d love a haul like the Dolphins got two years ago when they traded the No. 3 pick to the 49ers for the No. 12 pick and two future first-rounders.

If Poles keeps it, he better nail it. Teams need Hall of Fame talent with a pick that high. If Anderson proves to be as good Myles Garrett, for example, that’ll be worth it.

That draft pick currently stands as a pillar of the Bears’ future. Poles can’t afford for it to crumble as it did when Ryan Pace picked Mitch Trubisky second in 2017.

Whatever course he chooses, Poles can use his many draft picks and league-high $118.1 million in salary-cap space to repair the worst roster in the NFL.

The Bears had the NFL’s most harmless defensive line with just 20 sacks in 17 games.

They allowed a league-high 27.2 points per game.

They were a bottom-10 offense and let Fields get sacked 55 times.

Tight end Cole Kmet, with four catches for 57 yards and a touchdown, was the only player to reach 500 yards receiving.

The Bears knew where they were headed.

That alone is a change from the Pace era. As the team sputtered to 8-8 records in 2019 and ’20 and bottomed out at 6-11 last season, Pace was going all out at the expense of future draft assets and salary-cap tables.

Poles took over a team that wasn’t good and didn’t have obvious solutions. The only option was to blow it up.

But this season is only tolerable if it actually leads to something.

It’s easy to swing the wrecking ball. Building something magnificent on this bulldozed site is the hard part.

As Poles approaches the one-year mark of landing this job, he has mostly done what anyone would’ve done after walking into Pace’s mess.

The only time he tried to make a splash was trading a second-round pick for wide receiver Chase Claypool, who had 14 catches for 140 yards in seven games since joining the team in November.

Poles and coach Matt Eberflus got plenty of margin this season because everyone knew what needed to happen. That’s why no one is running them out of town after steering the Bears to the second-worst record in their 103-year history.

The Bears got to the playoffs (sort of) under Matt Nagy at 8-8 in 2020, and the consensus is that this was a better season for the franchise. That was empty, whereas this one feels purposeful.

But Sunday was the last time Poles and Eberflus can point to the necessary demolition and talk about implementing “championship habits” as accomplishments. When next season starts, they’ll be evaluated on wins and losses.

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Bears clinch No. 1 pick with loss, Texans’ victoryon January 8, 2023 at 9:22 pm

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Jordan Akins hauls in the TD and 2-pt conversion to reclaim the lead (0:29)Jordan Akins comes away with both the touchdown and two-point conversion to put the Texans on top. (0:29)

CHICAGO — The Bears earned the No. 1 overall pick in the 2023 draft following an 29-13 loss to the Minnesota Vikings in the season finale.

Chicago, which held the No. 2 pick entering Week 18, jumped Houston in the draft order after the Houston Texans beat the Indianapolis Colts 32-31. The Bears needed to lose and have the Texans win in order to secure the top spot in the draft.

The Bears finished 3-14, their second three-win season since 2016. Quarterback Justin Fields did not play in the season finale due to a hip injury sustained last week at Detroit. Fields finished his second season 64 yards shy of the single-season quarterback rushing record. Chicago owned the league’s top rushing offense and were last in passing in 2023.

Bolstering the defensive and offensive lines are among Chicago’s top priorities this offseason. The Bears registered the fewest sacks per game (1.3) of all NFL teams and pressured opposing quarterbacks on 20.9% of dropbacks, which ranked 31st. In his latest mock draft, ESPN draft analyst Jordan Reid has Georgia defensive tackle Jalen Carter going No. 2 to Chicago, Alabama outside linebacker Will Anderson being selected third by Seattle and Texas Tech defensive end Tyree Wilson off the board at No. 4 to Arizona. All three players could be options to help fix Chicago’s pass rush.

The Bears also have pressing needs at wideout. Darnell Mooney, who sustained a season-ending injury in Week 11, finished as Chicago’s leading receiver with 493 yards and two touchdowns. Mooney, Equanimeous St. Brown, Chase Claypool and Velus Jones Jr. are the only Bears receivers currently under contract for the 2023 season. St. Brown signed a one-year extension with Chicago last week.

The Bears find themselves in a high-leverage position should they decide to trade back from the No. 1 overall pick. Chicago is not currently among the quarterback-needy teams drafting early in the first round, which include Houston, Indianapolis, the Detroit Lions and Carolina Panthers. Alabama’s Bryce Young, Ohio State’s C.J. Stroud, Kentucky’s Will Levis and Florida’s Anthony Richardson are all off the board in Reid’s latest mock by the ninth overall pick.

Chicago has drafted first overall twice in franchise history, but it hasn’t happened since the 1940s.

In 1940, the Bears selected Michigan halfback and Heisman Trophy winner Tom Harmon No. 1 overall. Harmon never played for the Bears. After serving in the military during World War II, Harmon played two seasons for the Rams (1946-47).

Chicago also had the No. 1 overall selection in 1947 and drafted halfback Bob Fenimore from Oklahoma A&M (now Oklahoma State). Fenimore played one NFL season and appeared in 10 games for the Bears in 1947.

The NFL has several recent examples of teams falling out of the No.1 draft spot with wins in the season finale.

Entering the last week of the 2021 season, the Jaguars were 2-14 and the Lions were 2-13-1. Both teams won their Week 18 games, which led to Jacksonville earning the No. 1 pick and the Lions securing the second overall pick. In 2006, the Lions beat the Cowboys in the finale and fell to No. 2 in the draft, while the Raiders got the No. 1 pick. Oakland took JaMarcus Russell with the first pick, and Lions took Calvin Johnson. In 2003, the Chargers and Cardinals both entered Week 17 with 3-12 records and both walked away with wins. The Chargers still got the No. 1 pick and took Eli Manning before swapping him for Philip Rivers on draft day. The Cardinals would’ve gotten the No. 1 pick with a loss but fell to No. 3.

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Zach LaVine-Billy Donovan relationship remains strained but workable for Bulls

Zach LaVine is very forgiving.

The Bulls guard has shown that throughout his nine-year career, whether it’s been an organization that’s traded him, a front office that matched a contract offer rather than making one, or coaches that doubted him.

LaVine’s always moved on.

That doesn’t mean he forgets.

According to a source, while the LaVine-Billy Donovan player-coach relationship is still very workable it remains somewhat strained in the wake of a Nov. 18, late-game benching in which Donovan chose to ride out the final minutes against Orlando with LaVine out of the game.

LaVine expressed his displeasure with Donovan’s decision immediately after the game, stating “That’s Billy’s decision, he’s gotta lay with it. Do I agree with it? No. I think I can go out there and still be me even if I miss some shots. That’s his decision and he’s got to stand on it.”

The two spoke right after that benching and at were at least able to apply enough duct tape to make the bridge functional, but LaVine was obviously unhappy with the way he was called out by teammates at halftime in the embarrassing Dec. 18 loss in Minnesota, as well as Donovan’s late-game sets in which DeMar DeRozan has been option 1A and 1B.

While the locker room incident had little to do with Donovan, it wasn’t like the coach threw a life preserver to anyone involved, and as far as LaVine rarely getting a chance to win games late since DeRozan’s arrival, he did tell the Sun-Times last week, “I think we have to start figuring out how we can get some different actions in those situations.”

So how big of a deal should Donovan and LaVine’s relationship be in the long-range scope of things? Actually very little.

Donovan was locked into a contract extension in the fall, while LaVine signed a max contract in the summer that locked him up for the next five years, including the $48.9 million player option for the 2026-27 season.

Plus, there’s a precedent with LaVine not being on the same page as a head coach and still functioning at a high level.

The LaVine-Jim Boylen relationship was much more damaged than the current one the two-time All-Star has with Donovan, and it never affected LaVine’s on-the-court play.

LaVine is very good at compartmentalizing issues with teammates and coaches from what it takes to win games, and always has.

Evidence of that has been front-and center, with LaVine averaging 27.5 points per game over his last 10, as well as shooting a ridiculous 52.8% from the field and 51.4% from three-point range. The Bulls are 7-3 over that time, including wins over New York, Milwaukee and Brooklyn.

Where this could get interesting is where are the Bulls come Feb. 9 when the trade deadline hits the Association?

As well as he’s been playing since mid-December, LaVine’s trade value has not been higher at any point this season than it is now.

Does executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas believe enough in LaVine and this team to stay pat or even be a buyer? The next three weeks might go a long way in determining that, especially if the Bulls can stay hot over a soft part of the schedule.

LaVine made it very clear what he thinks they should do, but also that he’s staying out of it.

“Every year I get asked the same question [around the] trade deadline,” LaVine said. “Whoever is on our team, I fight with those guys, I play for them. I’m happy to be on this team, and I’m happy to say that whoever we play, I’m confident.

“Front office is going to do what they have to do because it’s their job and their livelihood. I do what I do on the court.”

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Velus Jones Jr. toes the line, scores for Bears TD from 42 yards outon January 8, 2023 at 7:57 pm

CHICAGO – As a franchise, the Chicago Bears won’t benefit from a potential win over the Minnesota Vikings, but rookie wide receiver Velus Jones Jr. is utilizing one final opportunity in Week 18 to prove his value.

Jones Jr. took a toss from quarterback Nathan Peterman on a misdirection play and went 42 yards down the Vikings’ sideline for the second touchdown of his career with 3:42 to play in the second quarter Sunday. The rookie’s first touchdown was also against the Vikings in Week 5.

Minnesota defenders believed Jones Jr. stepped out of bounds, but the receiver worked his way down the sideline before breaking away en route to the end zone. The Bears set the franchise record for the most rushing yards in a season on Jones Jr.’s touchdown.

The Vikings were offsides on Cairo Santos’ made point-after, a penalty which coach Matt Eberflus accepted. However, the Bears did not convert on their subsequent 2-point attempt when Peterman couldn’t connect with tight end Cole Kmet. Chicago ran off the field following Jones Jr.’s touchdown trailing 16-6.

Chicago currently holds the No. 2 pick in the draft. If the Bears lose to Minnesota and the Texans beat Indianapolis, Chicago will jump ahead of Houston in the draft order for the No. 1 pick.

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Velus Jones Jr. toes the line, scores for Bears TD from 42 yards outon January 8, 2023 at 7:57 pm Read More »

Perfect day for Bears as they trail Vikings 16-6 at halftime and Texans leads Colts

As the Bears hope to land the No. 1 pick in the draft, they control only half of the equation. They’re doing their part, though, with quarterbacks Nathan Peterman and Tim Boyle and are losing 16-6 to the Vikings at halftime.

As for the other part of this? The Texans are up 17-7 over the Colts at halftime of their game.

If both games continue heading that way, the Bears will get the No. 1 pick in the draft at 3-14. The Texans would finish 3-13-1.

As long as the Bears lose, they can pick no lower than No. 2. If they win, they could slip all the way to fourth.

They helped their chances by ruling out quarterback Justin Fields and starting Nathan Peterman in his place. Peterman completed 4 of 7 passes for 50 yards before the Bears pulled him in favor of Tim Boyle, a player they signed off the Lions’ practice squad in November.

Boyle threw an interception on his second pass and is 2 for 4 for 33 yards.

The Vikings appeared to go up 19-6 on a last-second field goal before halftime, but replay review showed they had 12 men on the field and the score was negated.

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Velus Jones Jr. toes the line, scores for Bears’ TD from 42 yards outon January 8, 2023 at 7:46 pm

CHICAGO – As a franchise, the Chicago Bears won’t benefit from a potential win over the Minnesota Vikings, but rookie wide receiver Velus Jones Jr. is utilizing one final opportunity in Week 18 to prove his value.

Jones Jr. took a toss from quarterback Nathan Peterman on a misdirection play and went 42 yards down the Vikings’ sideline for the second touchdown of his career with 3:42 to play in the second quarter Sunday. The rookie’s first touchdown was also against the Vikings in Week 5.

Minnesota defenders believed Jones Jr. stepped out of bounds, but the receiver worked his way down the sideline before breaking away en route to the end zone. The Bears set the franchise record for the most rushing yards in a season on Jones Jr.’s touchdown.

The Vikings were offsides on Cairo Santos’ made point-after, a penalty which coach Matt Eberflus accepted. However, the Bears did not convert on their subsequent 2-point attempt when Peterman couldn’t connect with tight end Cole Kmet. Chicago ran off the field following Jones Jr.’s touchdown trailing 16-6.

Chicago currently holds the No. 2 pick in the draft. If the Bears lose to Minnesota and the Texans beat Indianapolis, Chicago will jump ahead of Houston in the draft order for the No. 1 pick.

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Velus Jones Jr. toes the line, scores for Bears’ TD from 42 yards outon January 8, 2023 at 7:46 pm Read More »

High school basketball: Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 rankings for Jan. 8, 2023

It’s generally very difficult to remain in the rankings after losing three consecutive games. Somehow, two teams managed to pull it off this week.

St. Ignatius lost to Glenbrook North on Saturday. That’s the third defeat in a row for the Wolfpack after losses to Bolingbrook and Lyons. But those are three ranked teams and the loss to the Raiders was in a consolation game. The Wolfpack also has a quality win against New Trier way back in the first week of the season. Iggy needs a more recent win to hang its hat on, and soon. But they stick for now.

St. Rita lost to St. Louis Chaminade on Saturday. That was the third consecutive loss for the Mustangs, who were defeated by Young and Proviso East. Again, those are three excellent teams and the loss to the Pirates was a consolation game. Like St. Ignatius, St. Rita is sticking in the Super 25 primarily due to one big win. The Mustangs won at Brother Rice in early December.

Both teams pass the look test and should be playoff threats, but they will need resume building wins over the next few weeks to remain in the Super 25.

Downers Grove North and Perspectives-Leadership drop out this week. The Trojans lost to Lyons 39-38 and to Hinsdale Central 48-46 in three overtimes. So falling out is rough. Those defeats alone wouldn’t have knocked them out if their overall resume was stronger.

Perspectives-Leadership was absolutely destroyed by Lyons, losing 73-29 on Saturday. That kind of blowout defeat shouldn’t happen to a ranked team.

Glenbrook South and Grayslake Central join this week. The Titans looked very impressive in a win against Glenbrook North and have a solid overall track record this season.

Grayslake Central lost its first game of the season and has ripped off 15 consecutive wins, including knocking off Barrington and Crystal Lake South to win the Jacobs holiday tournament.

Super 25 for Jan. 8, 2023With record and last week’s ranking

1. Simeon (14-0) 1Won two on national stage

2. Young (12-4) 2Had the week off

3. Kenwood (13-2) 3At Simeon Tuesday

4. Benet (18-1) 4Handled Marist

5. Joliet West (14-4) 8Beat Rolling Meadows

6. Rolling Meadows (16-2) 5Mark Nikolich-Wilson impressed

7. Mount Carmel (16-1) 7Hosts De La Salle Tuesday

8. Brother Rice (15-2) 10Beat Bolingbrook

9. Lyons (13-1) 11Dominated Perspectives-Leadership

10. Hillcrest (15-2) 6Lost to Belleville East

11. Curie (11-4) 12At Kenwood Thursday

12. Bloom (10-4) 13Challenged Kenwood

13. Proviso East (12-2) 14Took down Morton, Thornwood

14. St. Rita (8-6) 9Three consecutive losses

15. New Trier (16-3) 16At Maine South Friday

16. Lincoln-Way East (14-1) 17Big test at Bloom Wednesday

17. Bolingbrook (12-5) 18Beat Romeoville, lost to Rice

18. Hinsdale Central (14-3) 20Survived Downers Grove North

19. St. Ignatius (13-4) 15Lost last three

20. Oswego East (15-3) 22Huge week ahead

21. Glenbrook South (14-4) NRKnocked off Glenbrook North

22. Libertyville (13-3) 24At Stevenson Saturday

23. Glenbrook North (15-2) 25Beat Bolingbrook, lost to GBS

24. Hyde Park (15-2) 23Hosts Simeon Thursday

25. Grayslake Central (15-1) NR15 consecutive wins

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