Chicago Sports

Shots fired at Mariano’s in West Town, where man was killed 2 weeks earlier

Gunfire erupted Sunday in the parking lot of a Mariano’s in West Town, where a man was fatally shot about two weeks ago.

About 5:40 p.m., a 31-year-old man was loading items into his car in the grocery store’s parking lot in the 2000 block of West Chicago Avenue when someone drove up in a car and began shooting, Chicago police said.

The man was unharmed and no injuries were reported, police said, but his vehicle was damaged from the gunfire.

No one was in custody as Area Three detectives investigated.

On Dec. 19, Darian Neal was shot and killed while sitting in his car on the store’s rooftop parking lot, according to police and the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

Two men approached his car about 4:30 p.m. and opened fire, striking him in the head, police said.

Neal, 37, was taken to Stroger Hospital, where he died.

No arrests have been reported in that shooting.

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Blackhawks drop fourth straight, lose 5-2 to Sharks

For a brief moment Sunday night against the Sharks, it looked like the Blackhawks would start 2023 on a positive note.

That didn’t last too long.

Despite taking a two-goal second-period lead, the Hawks lost 5-2to the Sharks. The Hawks, who began a seven-game homestand, have lost four straight and stayed rooted to the bottom of the NHL.

The way things ended Sunday, the Hawks won’t be getting out of last place anytime soon.

After a first period when the Hawks were outshot 13-6 but managed to get to intermission scoreless thanks to goalie Petr Mrazek, they scored the first two goals of the second. The goals woke up a crowd of 19,047, which resorted to doing The Wave early in the middle period.

Patrick Kane made it 1-0 at the 6:40 mark of the period after Ian Mitchell kept the puck in the zone and found Kane, whose shot from the slot beat Kaapo Kahkonen. Then 13:30 into the second, Andreas Athanasiou streaked down the left wing and fired the puck near the crease, where a crashing Sam Lafferty tapped it past Kahkonen.

Then the game turned.

The Sharks scored three goals over the next 3:22 of the second to take the lead. Goals from Jonah Gadjovich, Marc-Edouard Vlasic and Alexander Barabanov put San Jose in front, and the Sharks padded their lead at the 3:52 mark of the third when Timo Meier jumped on a loose puck next to Mrazek and guided it into the net.

San Jose effectively clinched the game 12:55 into the third when Evgeny Svechnikov jumped on a loose puck in front of Mrazek and sent it in.

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Jared Goff stays hot vs. Bears, gives Lions outside shot at playoffs

DETROIT — Three takeaways from Sunday’s 41-10 loss to the Lions at Ford Field:

Goff deals

Lions quarterback Jared Goff finished with a 133.5 passer rating, the third-highest mark the Bears have allowed this season, by completing 21-of-29 passes for 255 yards and three touchdowns. Goff has been one of the NFL’s steadiest quarterbacks the last five weeks; he had a 109.3 passer rating in December.

“He’s extremely hot and he’s playing at a very high level,” Lions coach Dan Campbell said.

He’s got the Lions inching closer to the playoffs. To make the postseason, the Lions need to win in Green Bay in Week 18 and have the Seahawks lose to the Rams.

Big game coming

After losing at the Packers, the Vikings will travel to Soldier Field next week with a chance to become the No. 2 seed in the NFC playoffs. They’ll need help — the 49ers will get the spot if either they beat the Cardinals or the Vikings lose to the Bears.

The Vikings can’t reach the first seed or the fourth seed. The No. 2 slot would earn them home playoff games through the first two rounds. The third seed is guaranteed one home game.

The Vikings, then, figure to play their starters against the Bears.

RB totals

Bears running back Khalil Herbert’s eight-yard run the first time he touched the ball Sunday gave him more yards than he totaled all last week. He finished with only five carries for 31 yards, though, while David Montgomery had six for 24. The Bears ran for 200 yards and need 79 on Sunday to break the franchise’s record of 2,974, set in 1984.

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Bears podcast: Loss to Lions is a new low

After the Bears lost to the Lions — the Lions! — by 31 points, Patrick Finley and Jason Lieser break down a new low.

New episodes of “Halas Intrigue” will be published regularly with accompanying stories collected on the podcast’s hub page. You can also listen to “Halas Intrigue” wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Luminary, Spotify and Stitcher.

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Bears cite ‘experience’ for Fields staying in routon January 2, 2023 at 12:55 am

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Justin Fields and Cole Kmet connect for the 13-yard score (0:17)Justin Fields finds Cole Kmet to put the Bears on the board. (0:17)

DETROIT — Chicago Bears coach Matt Eberflus cited in-game experience as the reason he kept quarterback Justin Fields under center throughout the entirety of Chicago’s 41-10 loss to the Detroit Lions.

Fields completed seven of his 21 passes Sunday and finished with 30 net passing yards. The Bears were outgained 504-230 in net yards at Ford Field and did not score on their final 10 drives. Despite the matchup devolving into a blowout, Eberflus maintained that the only way for Fields and the offense to get Chicago’s passing attack on track comes from playing in games.

“It’s important for us to be able to do that going forward this last game,” Eberflus said. “That’s why late into the game we kept Justin in there because we want to get that live experience. You can’t really get that anywhere else, so that’s why we decided as a staff and we decided as working with Justin, he said, ‘I want to be in there.’ Credit to him, he was, ‘Coach, man, I’m still going out there. I want to be able to operate.’ With his toughness and grit, he wants to go out there and compete, and that’s what he did.”

Fields rushed for 105 yards in the first quarter, the most by a quarterback in a quarter since play-by-play tracking began in 1978. He finished the game with 132 rushing yards, which accounted for more than half of Chicago’s total yards.

Outside of Fields’ 10 rushes, the Bears struggled to move the ball. Chicago averaged 2.5 yards on 40 additional plays totaling 98 yards.

Injuries contributed to the offense’s struggles, especially along the line. After Teven Jenkins exited in the first quarter with a neck injury, backup Michael Schofield filled in at right guard but sustained a knee injury shortly thereafter and was ruled out. The Bears rode out the rest of the game with third-stringer Dieter Eiselen at right guard.

Pass protection was an issue throughout Chicago’s loss. The Lions generated pressure on 56% of Fields’ dropbacks and recorded seven sacks, their most in a game since 2014. Eberflus said the Bears considered the number of hits Fields took when weighing whether to keep him in the game, but ultimately the experience of being able to play through a rotation of personnel was deemed an invaluable learning experience.

“You can certainly look at it that way but like we said, Justin’s got to be back there and operate,” Eberflus said. “There’s going to be different people out at certain times, and he’s got to be able to operate, get rid of the ball when it’s not there and do a good job of having poise in the pocket.”

Fields said postgame that his hip “kind of got twisted up” on a rollout play in the first half that caused him to receive treatment on the sideline between series. The quarterback visited the medical tent briefly ahead of halftime but did not miss any game time.

“Anytime I get to play this game, I don’t take it for granted,” Fields said. “Anytime I get to play, I want to be out there, no matter who it’s with, and the fact that I know that my guys are fighting for me, and they know that I’m fighting for them, that’s all the motivation I need, so to be honest to you I don’t care what the scoreboard is. If I have the chance to go out there and play, I’d do it every time, and I’m going to play my hardest, so there was full desire to play.”

Chicago’s losing streak extended to nine games. The Bears host division rival Minnesota in the season finale in Week 18, a game Eberflus said Fields will play in, assuming he’s healthy.

“I just go back to what I just kind of tried to state is in-game experience, there’s nothing like it,” Eberflus said. “We’re not going to get that anywhere else. Again, that’s a good pass-rushing group, so I thought it was really good to get that experience. Now, did it turn out the way he wanted it to or the way we wanted it to? No, it didn’t, but you’ve got to work through adversity. You’ve got to work through it and figure it out as coaches, as players. We’ve got to do a better job.”

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End comes swiftly for beleaguered Bears defense

DETROIT — Bears defensive ends Trevis Gipson and Dominique Robinson were celebrating the end of an almost season-long sack drought after they combined to tackle Lions quarterback Jared Goff for a nine-yard loss on the third play of the third quarter Sunday at Ford Field.

Gipson was awarded the sack, but it didn’t matter to them who got the credit. It was Gipson’s first sack since Week 2 against the Packers. Robinson had not had one since the season opener.

“For a second, it was like, ‘Whoo!’ Relief. We finally got to him,” Gipson said. “Me and Dom talk all the time. We’ve been hunting down the quarterback — for three months now? And it’s been tough.

“So it didn’t matter who got the sack. I just know the quarterback was down and me and him were there. So I was happy. I celebrated. Dapped him up. Hugged him. Lining up for the next snap — ‘All right. Here we go. We broke the ice. Let’s get it going.'”

That’s when NFL reality gave Gipson a cold, hard slap in the face. Before his excitement could dissipate, Gipson was in a state of despair and bewilderment. On that very next play — a third-and-18 from the Lions’ 17-yard line, running back D’Andre Swift spun out of a Robinson tackle at the 25-yard line for a 35-yard gain on a draw play.

Wide receiver Jameson Williams followed with a 40-yard gain on an end around to the Bears 8. Two plays later, Williams scored on a two-yard run. Less than three minutes after Gipson’s sack, the Lions led 31-10 and the rout was on.

“They got that big gain [the 35-yard run] and we were like, ‘Damn,'” Gipson said. “‘You can never take a deep breath — that’s when you swallow water. [Stuff] can get tough. After that turn of events, it was like, ‘You can never get too high. Never get too low, because as soon as you look away, that’s when you might get punched.”

It was that kind of day for the beleaguered Bears’ defense, which came in hoping to parlay its cherished hustle, intensity, culture and pride into a strong finish to the season, but instead reached a new low.

The Bears defense allowed 504 yards — 265 rushing and 239 passing. That’s the eighth-highest total in regulation in the NFL this season. And it’s the most yards allowed by a Bears defense in regulation since 2013, when they allowed 513 in a dreadful 54-11 loss to the Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field.

“I can speak for myself — I gotta play better,” veteran safety DeAndre Houston-Carson said. “If everyone does that and looks at themselves and gives an honest evaluation of how they played and enough people say they can play better … We just didn’t have it. We just didn’t play good enough to give ourselves a chance to win. I know I didn’t.”

Houston-Carson had his own moment of opportunity turned to dust. The Lions had a fourth-and-four at the Bears 35 in the first quarter with the Bears leading 7-0, when Goff underthrew a pop-up for DJ Chark in the end zone.

Chark was double-covered by Houston-Carson and cornerback Kyler Gordon. But instead of an interception or break-up that would have given the Bears possession, Gordon was called for pass interference. Two plays later Goff threw a two-yard touchdown pass to tight end Brock Wright to tie the game 7-7.

“He threw it up for grabs. It was right there,” Houston-Carson said. “I’ve got to find a way to intercept the ball and make something out of it and we didn’t. I don’t know who they called it on. But either way, we can’t allow the refs to even get involved. He threw me a punt. We can’t put it on anybody but ourselves.”

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Bears QB Justin Fields corrects WR Chase Claypool for venting on sideline

DETROIT — Everyone is growing impatient with wide receiver Chase Claypool’s slow start since joining the Bears. Even Claypool.

In the second half of the Bears’ 41-10 loss to the Lions on Sunday, with Claypool yet to have a single pass thrown his way, he vented his frustration on the sideline until quarterback Justin Fields interjected.

“[It’s] good to have emotion in a game, but you just have to know how to control it,” Fields said. “You can’t let it come out like that because … that’s not helping anybody. That’s not helping the team.

“We’re getting blown out … Everybody feels that way. But I [said], ‘That’s not going to do anything … That’s just spreading everybody apart. We need to be here for each other, stick with each other and fight.’ He’s passionate, but he just has to learn how to control those emotions.”

Claypool left the locker room just as the media was allowed in, so he didn’t address it. Fields added that he was receptive, recalling him saying, “Yeah, my fault. I’m just frustrated right now.”

In his return from missing two games with a knee injury, Claypool had one target and no catches. Coach Matt Eberflus said the Bears restricted his playing time as a precaution.

While trading for Claypool was a long-term move, he has underwhelmed in his first two months with the Bears and has just 12 catches for 111 yards in six games.

He and Fields have both missed practice time because of injuries, which hindered an already challenging acclimation.

“It’s hard to learn an offense like this in the middle of the season, and he’s done a good job,” Fields said. “By this time next year, we’re rolling.

“I just know his passion for the game and know his work ethic, and I know that he wants to be great, so we’re going to get together and work out and just be on the same page in the offseason.”

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‘Lot of mistakes’ on Bears’ chaotic final play before halftime vs. Lions

The Bears’ most awkward, poorly orchestrated play of the game — and that’s really saying something — was right before halftime.

After Velus Jones’ season-long 63-yard kick return got them to the Lions’ 45-yard line with seven seconds left and no timeouts, they were disorganized on a trick play that would’ve involved Fields throwing a pass and getting the ball back on a pitch in a last-ditch shot to cut into the Lions’ 24-10 lead.

Sounds cool, but it wasn’t.

Few Bears moved full speed on the snap, the Lions were in the perfect defense and Fields threw a pass to the right sideline that defensive end Aidan Hutchinson easily jumped for an interception.

“Timing was a little off, spacing was a little off,” tight end Cole Kmet said. “A lot of mistakes going on there.”

Bears center Sam Mustipher added, “When they drop into coverage, it kinda makes the play null and void. It’s just a dead play whenever they drop all those guys into coverage. Just a rough play. The read wasn’t there. There’s nothing you can do.”

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Blackhawks coach Luke Richardson wants Ian Mitchell to play to his strengths

A healthy scratch in the Blackhawks’ previous three games, defenseman Ian Mitchell drew back in Sunday against the Sharks.

Listed at just 5-11 and 193 pounds, Mitchell will never be confused with a big, rugged blueliner. Instead, coach Luke Richardson wants to see Mitchell play to his strengths rather than trying to battle with opponents who are considerably heavier.

“Really, you just have to be smarter and get them in a position where they cut back, get through their hands and get going,” Richardson said. “So that’s how he’s going to have to play defense and that works to his game. We’ve talked about it, and he’s just got to make sure that he tries to really put that into his game plan, that he’s not defending a lot. Not that he’s terrible, he competes, it’s just that his game is moving the puck and playing offense and shooting the puck, so that’s what we want to see.”

Learning how to play that way can be tough for young players, and figuring out that method might be a key for Mitchell. Richardson recalled how smaller defensemen like Kimmo Timonen and Tobias Enstr?m avoided physical confrontations they would lose because they were strong skaters adept at getting in good positions to go through an adversary’s hands.

“Sometimes that’s awkward for a bigger guy,” Richardson said. “A guy gets right underneath you and you can’t really do much. You can’t cross-check in this league anymore, so it actually works well for a smaller guy if you’re smart about it.”

Mitchell took the place of Caleb Jones and was expected to play on the Hawks’ second power-play unit.

Prospect pains

A pair of Hawks prospects suffered injuries that will keep them out of action for a while.

On Saturday, the IceHogs announced that goalie Arvid Soderblom was placed on injured reserve due to a groin injury, retroactive to Dec. 28. Rockford said Soderblom is expected to return in 2-3 weeks.

Meanwhile, playing for Canada against Sweden in the World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, forward Colton Dach took a hit along the boards during the Canadians’ game Saturday and left the game. On Sunday, Dach was removed from the Canada roster.

Currently with WHL Kelowna, Dach followed in his brother’s footsteps in getting hurt playing for the Canadian junior team. Kirby Dach needed right wrist surgery after a collision during a Dec. 2020 pre-World Junior tournament game against Russia.

If needed

Sunday was the start of a seven-game homestand — and the IceHogs aren’t on the road until Jan. 7 — and Richardson was asked if that could compel the Hawks to call players up to get a different look.

If there are players added, it won’t be for the sake of it.

“We have to make sure we don’t just call up someone for a call-up and he’s in the wrong position and the wrong opportunity,” Richardson said. “[Lukas] Reichel’s not going to come in and kill penalties and be on the fourth line, that’s an energy line. That’s kind of a waste for him and us, so we want to make sure that fits but if there’s an opportunity, I’m all ears with the management.”

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Chicago Bears plan to start Justin Fields in Week 18 finale

Justin Fields plans to play week 18 against the Minnesota Vikings

With only one week left in the season, there is nothing to be gained by playing Justin Fields. He deserves to have the Bears center their off-season construction around him. He needs to get better at passing, but with this roster, it won’t happen in Week 18. Only an injury might prevent him from starting the following season.

According to Patrick Finley “Coach, Matt Eberflus said the coaching staff discussed keeping Justin Fields out late in the game but decided that game experience was too valuable to sit him. He expects him to play Sunday as well”.

Matt Eberflus said Justin Fields will start Week 18, if healthy. There were discussions about taking him out, but Eberflus said getting the in-game experience was still valuable.

— Kevin Fishbain (@kfishbain) January 1, 2023

 

Justin Fields needs 64 yards to beat Lamar Jackson’s record for the most running yards by a quarterback in a single season in NFL history (1,206). Although it would be tempting to let him play out the season to break the record, the team shouldn’t even consider it. He had 10 carries for 132 yards on Sunday.

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