Chicago Sports

New Year’s Eve in Chicago: City rings in 2023 with fireworks

Navy Pier was the place to be Saturday night as one of the city’s largest New Year’ Eve celebrations was happening inside the Aon Grand Ballroom and all along the pier.

A fireworks display lit up the nighttime sky along the lakefront as revelers welcomed 2023:

Fireworks light up the sky over the lake across from Navy Pier moments after midnight as Chicago welcomes the new year on Saturday.

Victor Hilitski/For the Sun-Times

Fireworks light up the sky over the lakefront in Chicago on New Year’s Eve.

Victor Hilitski/For the Sun-Times

Fireworks erupt in the sky over the Chicago lakefront on New Year’s Eve.

Victor Hilitski/For the Sun-Times

Chicago welcomes 2023 with a fireworks display over the lakefront on New Year’s Eve.

Victor Hilitski/For the Sun-Times

The Centennial Wheel at Navy Pier shares the spotlight with a midnight fireworks display in Chicago on New Year’s Eve.

Victor Hilitski/For the Sun-Time

And the celebration at the pier continues through Jan. 7 in what’s billed as “Chicagoland’s largest indoor lights extravaganza” courtesy of “Light Up the Lake.” An indoor ice rink, light sculptures, a free ride on the Centennial Wheel (one free with each paid admission) and Winter Wonderfest Forest are among the attractions. Navy Pier, Festival Hall, 600 E. Grand Ave. Purchase tickets at navypier.org.

“Light Up the Lake” at Navy Pier.

Courtesy of Navy Pier

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An embarrassment of epic proportions for the Bears in loss to Lions

Are we to believe that a high first-round draft pick and $122.2 million in salary cap space can cure what ailed the Bears on Sunday?

Those riches will have to take care of a terrible defense, a bad offense line, a thin receiving corps and whatever else I’m missing, which might be a lot because my hands are still covering my eyes. Tell me when it’s safe to look.

You’d have to be incredibly gullible to think things are looking up after the Bears’ 41-10 loss to a decent Detroit team. It’s one thing to buy into the future when your team is losing close games and Justin Fields is putting on a show. It’s another when your team gives up points at will and Fields looks ready to give up the ghost play after play, thanks to that bad offensive line.

There are so many holes to fill that improvements won’t come as quickly as most folks thought. That’s what Sunday showed.

You might look on it as one loss among many, the ninth in a row, a franchise record. I see a team that was out of its league against a .500 team. I see a team that looks worlds away from getting back to respectability.

For the entire season, Fields has been the antidote to any feelings of despair that Bears fans have had. The defense might be awful, but Fields’ amazing running ability overshadowed it. No receivers? Hey, who cares – Fields just faked another defender into a parallel universe. A rising inflation rate? Fields.

But the Lions beat him up Sunday, another reminder that an offense predicated on a quarterback running can’t work consistently in the NFL. There’s a price to pay, and it was on display in Detroit when staff helped him stretch on the sideline and when the medical observation tent was folded over him as he sat on a bench so a doctor could take a look at him.

And to think, more than a few prognosticators thought the Bears would do to the Lions what Carolina did to the Lions last week, rushing for 320 yards. For a while Sunday, that prediction looked good. Fields had 105 rushing yards in the first quarter. He finished with 132.

When is the last time a team was getting blown out and its quarterback ended up with just 75 passing yards. Crazy bad stuff.

Crazier was the sight of Fields still in the game in the fourth quarter. With this offensive line, he’s an injury waiting to happen.

“We kept Justin in there because we want to get the game experience,” Bears coach Matt Eberflus said. “You can’t get really get that anywhere else.”

Sure you can. As a stuntman.

The Lions were playing for something, a playoff spot. The Bears looked like they were playing for the season to end. In good news, it ends next week against the Vikings at Soldier Field. Detroit finished with 504 total yards. It was a big setback for Eberflus, whose reputation in his first season with the Bears has been built on his ability to get a bad team to play hard. On exhibit Sunday was a bad team that got out-hustled, outplayed and pretty much outed. It was an embarrassment.

At one point late in the fourth quarter, Fields got sacked, even though two Bears were called for holding on the play. It’s hard to pull that off. The Lions sacked him seven times. Injuries played a role. The Bears lost two offensive linemen during the game, guards Teven Jenkins and Michael Schofield, but there was nothing about the tone of Sunday’s game that suggested their presence would have made a difference.

I’ve never seen a team go through this long of a losing streak with so many bouquets being thrown its way. Part of that is Fields’ promise, and part of it is fans’ overwhelming desire to believe. Most of it is beer.

The Lions scored 34 straight points Sunday. I don’t know how Fields’ rushing ability is going to help that sort of thing next year. The Bears’ defense had no idea how to stop Jamaal Williams, who finished with 144 yards on 22 carries. It was as if he were running through a tulip farm.

General manager Ryan Poles has to get Fields help on the line and at wide receiver, but there’s not enough money in cap space to do that and rebuild the defense. There will be improvement next year. It’s how the NFL is structured. When you’re as bad as the Bears – 3-13 bad – you get a high draft pick, maybe the first overall. When you trade Roquan Smith and Robert Quinn during the season to clear cap space, you’re going to have money to spend.

But all the riches in the Bears’ kingdom aren’t going to solve the issues in the horror show we saw Sunday.

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

The Chicago Bears didn’t have much fight Sunday

The Chicago Bears put up their worst showing of the season against the Detroit Lions. This was the type of game most fans and analysts thought most of this season would like as the Bears rebuild. The Bears started off with a quick 7-0 lead. They promptly folded after the first quarter to lose 41-10. Injuries didn’t help the Bears, but there was no excuse for how bad the results were on New Year’s Day.

There wasn’t much to take away positively for the Bears. The addition of Chase Claypool to the active roster didn’t move the needle for the offense at all. They lacked passion in Week 17, falling to 3-13 on the season. The only team that looked like it wanted to be on the field was the Lions, as they kept their playoff hopes alive Sunday with the win. Here are three studs and duds from the Bears’ loss to the Lions.

Chicago Bears Studs

Khalil Herbert

Herbert didn’t have a lot of carries for the Chicago Bears. That’s offensive coordinator Luke Getsy’s fault. But Herbert made the most of his carries. He finished with 31 yards on five carries, averaging 6.2 yards per rush.

Justin Fields rushing yards

The only stable part of the Chicago Bears offense is Fields legs. He continued to break records Sunday, as he passed Michael Vick’s single-season record. Fields finished with ten carries for 132 yards. He took a few nasty hits on the field at Ford Field. It was a dumb plan by the coaching staff to have Fields run Sunday, as the playing surface in Detroit is one of the worst in the league. Playing him as long as the Bears did in a blowout was pretty questionable.

Justin Fields has already surpassed 100 yards rushing. It’s still the first quarter. Here’s highlight-reel run. https://t.co/OQyCEWfU6G

Joe Thomas

Not every play, but somebody on the defense had to make tackles for the Bears at some point against the Lions. Thomas led the Bears in tackles with 13 total tackles and one for a loss. It was a terrible performance by the Bears’ defense overall. Thomas at least had something to show on the state sheet.

Chicago Bears Duds

Justin Fields’ passing game

Fields looked hungover, looking like he stayed up till the clock struck midnight watching the Ohio State Buckeyes blow their National Championship Semifinal game against the Georgia Bulldogs. He was absolutely awful as a passer against the Lions.

Fields didn’t get much help from his offensive coordinator or wide receivers, but he also made terrible decisions. His multiple turnovers were due to him forcing plays and not throwing the ball away. Fields needs to play smarter next week. Seventy-five yards and a 40.8 rating against the Lions in Week 17… Yikes.

Chicago Bears run defense

The Bears’ defense was pretty bad all around. But the run defense was terrible. The Bears surrendered 265 yards on the ground. They did so by giving up chunk plays of 58, 35, and 40 a pop. The Bears haven’t gotten better at defending the run than what they were doing in Week 2. The defensive line is probably the first thing general manager and the team will address this offseason.

THE TRIFECTA IS COMPLETE!
Tyler Allgeier, Taysom Hill AND Jamaal Williams have all scored touchdowns today! 🔥🔥🔥
Cougars are taking over the NFL! https://t.co/20NsR0bMfq

Matt Eberflus

The performance by the Bears on New Year’s Day was the worst under first-year head coach Eberflus. His “H.I.T.S” philosophy was not on display in Detroit. The Bears’ body language did not look good for most of the game Sunday. For a coach that’s really trying to win, his team didn’t seem to care they were getting their butts handed to them by “that team“. The Bears players looked like they wanted to be anywhere but playing football for the Bears during the holiday. That’s on Eberflus for losing the locker room in Week 17.

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

The Chicago Bears didn’t have much fight Sunday

The Chicago Bears put up their worst showing of the season against the Detroit Lions. This was the type of game most fans and analysts thought most of this season would like as the Bears rebuild. The Bears started off with a quick 7-0 lead. They promptly folded after the first quarter to lose 41-10. Injuries didn’t help the Bears, but there was no excuse for how bad the results were on New Year’s Day.

There wasn’t much to take away positively for the Bears. The addition of Chase Claypool to the active roster didn’t move the needle for the offense at all. They lacked passion in Week 17, falling to 3-13 on the season. The only team that looked like it wanted to be on the field was the Lions, as they kept their playoff hopes alive Sunday with the win. Here are three studs and duds from the Bears’ loss to the Lions.

Chicago Bears Studs

Khalil Herbert

Herbert didn’t have a lot of carries for the Chicago Bears. That’s offensive coordinator Luke Getsy’s fault. But Herbert made the most of his carries. He finished with 31 yards on five carries, averaging 6.2 yards per rush.

Justin Fields rushing yards

The only stable part of the Chicago Bears offense is Fields legs. He continued to break records Sunday, as he passed Michael Vick’s single-season record. Fields finished with ten carries for 132 yards. He took a few nasty hits on the field at Ford Field. It was a dumb plan by the coaching staff to have Fields run Sunday, as the playing surface in Detroit is one of the worst in the league. Playing him as long as the Bears did in a blowout was pretty questionable.

Justin Fields has already surpassed 100 yards rushing. It’s still the first quarter. Here’s highlight-reel run. https://t.co/OQyCEWfU6G

Joe Thomas

Not every play, but somebody on the defense had to make tackles for the Bears at some point against the Lions. Thomas led the Bears in tackles with 13 total tackles and one for a loss. It was a terrible performance by the Bears’ defense overall. Thomas at least had something to show on the state sheet.

Chicago Bears Duds

Justin Fields’ passing game

Fields looked hungover, looking like he stayed up till the clock struck midnight watching the Ohio State Buckeyes blow their National Championship Semifinal game against the Georgia Bulldogs. He was absolutely awful as a passer against the Lions.

Fields didn’t get much help from his offensive coordinator or wide receivers, but he also made terrible decisions. His multiple turnovers were due to him forcing plays and not throwing the ball away. Fields needs to play smarter next week. Seventy-five yards and a 40.8 rating against the Lions in Week 17… Yikes.

Chicago Bears run defense

The Bears’ defense was pretty bad all around. But the run defense was terrible. The Bears surrendered 265 yards on the ground. They did so by giving up chunk plays of 58, 35, and 40 a pop. The Bears haven’t gotten better at defending the run than what they were doing in Week 2. The defensive line is probably the first thing general manager and the team will address this offseason.

THE TRIFECTA IS COMPLETE!
Tyler Allgeier, Taysom Hill AND Jamaal Williams have all scored touchdowns today! 🔥🔥🔥
Cougars are taking over the NFL! https://t.co/20NsR0bMfq

Matt Eberflus

The performance by the Bears on New Year’s Day was the worst under first-year head coach Eberflus. His “H.I.T.S” philosophy was not on display in Detroit. The Bears’ body language did not look good for most of the game Sunday. For a coach that’s really trying to win, his team didn’t seem to care they were getting their butts handed to them by “that team“. The Bears players looked like they wanted to be anywhere but playing football for the Bears during the holiday. That’s on Eberflus for losing the locker room in Week 17.

For More Great Chicago Sports Content

Follow us on Twitter at @chicitysports23 for more great content. We appreciate you taking time to read our articles. To interact more with our community and keep up to date on the latest in Chicago sports news, JOIN OUR FREE FACEBOOK GROUP by CLICKING HERE

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Bears’ passing game fails in blowout loss to Lions

DETROIT — The Bears were outclassed by the Lions on Sunday, setting a franchise record with their ninth-straight loss and providing only one piece of optimism not named Justin Fields: that, mercifully, there’s only one more of these games left.

The Bears’ 41-10 loss at Ford Field felt like a new low. In a span of almost exactly two quarters — from the 6:48 mark of the first frame to the 6:44 mark of the third — the Lions scored 38 points. Receiver Chase Claypool, active for the first time in a month, played only a select few downs. By the end of the first quarter, injuries forced the Bears to use their third right guard of game.

Yuck. Ugly. All of it — especially when the Bears tried to pass.

Fields’ runs were dynamic Sunday, the way they’ve been all year. But the Bears’ passing attack — his passing attack — was not NFL quality. He went 7-for-20 for 75 yards — a number more suited for the Bears’ heyday of the 1940s — and was sacked seven times.

He did so against the worst defense in the NFL in terms of passing yards per play.

The same Lions defense gave up 317 passing yards and two passing touchdowns to Jets is-he-a-bust backup Zach Wilson and 250 yards and one touchdown to Jets castoff — and Panthers quarterback — Sam Darnold over the last two games. Earlier last month, the Vikings’ Kirk Cousins threw for 425 and two scores.

Entering Sunday, the Lions defense had allowed a 97 passer rating this season and a 103.6 passer rating in December. Both were fourth-worst in the NFL.

Fields’ passer rating Sunday was 40.8.

All that’s left now is to see whether Fields can chase down a record. Fields entered the game with 1,011 rushing yards — needing 196 rushing yards to pass Lamar Jackson’s single-season record of 1,206 rushing yards, set in 2019.

For a while Sunday, it looked like he could pass it in one game.

On third-and-one on the Bears’ first drive, tight end Cole Kmet went in motion and settled in under center, seemingly to take a direct snap. Rather than sneak, he pitched to Fields, serving as a tailback, for 31 yards. Two plays later, Fields threw a 13-yard touchdown to Kmet.

Fields scrambled for a 60-yard gain later in the first quarter, reaching 20.39 mph, but the Bears eventually had to settle for a field goal.

Fields ran 10 times for 132 yards and needs to 64 yards in the finale against the Vikings to pass Jackson.

The Bears remain a half-game behind the Texans, who lost Sunday, in the race to the bottom for the first overall draft selection. The Texans need to win their finale — and the Bears need to lose theirs — for the Bears to have the No. 1 pick.

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Future salary-cap space, draft picks of no help to Bears in 41-10 loss to Lions

DETROIT — It’s hard to discern anything the Bears are accomplishing other than quarterback Justin Fields making strides in what has been nearly a total loss of a season.

Beyond Fields, their great hope is a war chest of future salary-cap space. Those are still just numbers on a spreadsheet at this point. None of that cap space played Sunday as the Bears got thumped 41-10 by the Lions at Ford Field.

That matters, by the way. Sure, this season was never headed anywhere and it fell apart a long time ago, but the fact that the Lions are this far ahead of the Bears in their dueling rebuilds creates one more hurdle for an organization staring down what seems like an endless string of them.

Other than Fields, this season has been unwatchable. This loss was their ninth in a row, their longest losing streak ever. If they fall again next week to the Vikings, they’ll finish with their second-worst record all-time.

Take that in for a moment. This franchise has been around more than a century and has had some dreadful seasons. This could be worse than all but one of them.

And going 3-14 would be fine if it proves to be a step toward something. If this is what it costs to eventually build a Super Bowl winner, no problem.

But what if it’s just another empty Bears season like so many others? An entire season — five months of mostly meaningless games — is a lot to give up.

Fields has grown into the franchise’s foundational piece — the first time that can be said confidently of a Bears quarterback in years — but this season has shown the cap of how far he can take the team without any blocking, receiving playmakers or defense.

The Bears have wasted the first two affordable seasons of his rookie contract.

The Bears aren’t going to stick with this roster, of course. Almost everyone playing Sunday was a placeholder for whoever general manager Ryan Poles signs with his NFL-high $122.2 million in cap space and drafts with full slate of picks that likely will begin with No. 1 or 2 overall. The Bears also will get wide receiver Darnell Mooney, safety Eddie Jackson and cornerback Jaylon Johnson back after season-ending injuries.

But nothing is guaranteed. Rebuilds have been misguided, money misspent and draftees misevaluated. Filling out the majority of the starting lineup is difficult even with an arsenal of resources, and as a first-time general manager, Poles has never done it. It takes a lot of faith to sit through another loss every week on the assumption that the Bears will get everything right in the coming offseason.

What if the upgrades end up bring more modest than magnificent?

It’d be easier to bet on the Bears’ future if they’d found more answers this season. That was supposed to be part of the process, not merely clearing out Ryan Pace’s bad contracts. Anyone could’ve burned the roster to the ground. Construction is hard part.

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Bears’ passing game fails in blowout loss to Lions

DETROIT — The Bears were outclassed by the Lions on Sunday, setting a franchise record with their ninth-straight loss and providing only one piece of optimism not named Justin Fields: that, mercifully, there’s only one more of these games left.

The Bears’ 41-10 loss at Ford Field felt like a new low. In a span of almost exactly two quarters — from the 6:48 mark of the first frame to the 6:44 mark of the third — the Lions scored 38 points. Receiver Chase Claypool, active for the first time in a month, played only a select few downs. By the end of the first quarter, injuries forced the Bears to use their third right guard of game.

Yuck. Ugly. All of it — especially when the Bears tried to pass.

Fields’ runs were dynamic Sunday, the way they’ve been all year. But the Bears’ passing attack — his passing attack — was not NFL quality. He went 7-for-20 for 75 yards — a number more suited for the Bears’ heyday of the 1940s — and was sacked seven times.

He did so against the worst defense in the NFL in terms of passing yards per play.

The same Lions defense gave up 317 passing yards and two passing touchdowns to Jets is-he-a-bust backup Zach Wilson and 250 yards and one touchdown to Jets castoff — and Panthers quarterback — Sam Darnold over the last two games. Earlier last month, the Vikings’ Kirk Cousins threw for 425 and two scores.

Entering Sunday, the Lions defense had allowed a 97 passer rating this season and a 103.6 passer rating in December. Both were fourth-worst in the NFL.

Fields’ passer rating Sunday was 40.8.

All that’s left now is to see whether Fields can chase down a record. Fields entered the game with 1,011 rushing yards — needing 196 rushing yards to pass Lamar Jackson’s single-season record of 1,206 rushing yards, set in 2019.

For a while Sunday, it looked like he could pass it in one game.

On third-and-one on the Bears’ first drive, tight end Cole Kmet went in motion and settled in under center, seemingly to take a direct snap. Rather than sneak, he pitched to Fields, serving as a tailback, for 31 yards. Two plays later, Fields threw a 13-yard touchdown to Kmet.

Fields scrambled for a 60-yard gain later in the first quarter, reaching 20.39 mph, but the Bears eventually had to settle for a field goal.

Fields ran 10 times for 132 yards and needs to 64 yards in the finale against the Vikings to pass Jackson.

The Bears remain a half-game behind the Texans, who lost Sunday, in the race to the bottom for the first overall draft selection. The Texans need to win their finale — and the Bears need to lose theirs — for the Bears to have the No. 1 pick.

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High school basketball: Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 rankings for Jan. 1, 2023

Nearly every team plays three to five games during the holiday tournament week. It’s a full reboot of the season, so I start fresh with the rankings. It’s a blank sheet of paper with the numbers 1 through 25 running down the side and I go from there.

The full season resume counts of course, but I’m not worried about where anyone was ranked a week ago.

Bolingbrook, Perspectives-Leadership, Hinsdale Central and Libertyville all join the Super 25 today. Bolingbrook and Perspectives-Leadership began the season ranked. Both teams finally have all their key players and played well over the holidays.

Hinsdale Central and Libertyville won holiday tournaments and beat ranked teams in the championship games, so they were easy calls. Lemont, St. Patrick, Marist and Barrington drop out for now.

I was hoping to get Grayslake Central, the champions at Jacobs, into the rankings but there just wasn’t room. The Rams lost their first game of the season and have ripped off 13 consecutive wins.

Evanston nearly returned to the rankings after nice run at Centralia. The Wildkits lost to St. Louis Cardinal Ritter (a team that beat St. Rita and lost to Joliet West) in the championship game.

Super 25 for Jan. 1, 2023With record and last week’s ranking

1. Simeon (12-0) 1Pontiac champions

2. Young (12-4) 5Proviso West champs

3. Kenwood (12-2) 2Lost to Young

4. Benet (16-1) 7Fell short vs. Simeon

5. Rolling Meadows (16-1) 13York champions

6. Hillcrest (16-1) 8Big Dipper champs

7. Mount Carmel (15-1) 11Won Pekin

8. Joliet West (11-4) 3Faces Rolling Meadows Saturday

9. St. Rita (8-5) 4Fell short against Young

10. Brother Rice (14-2) 6Plays Bolingbrook Saturday

11. Lyons (11-1) 16Solid run at York

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

13. Bloom (9-3) 15Lost to Benet

14. Proviso East (10-2) 20Only losses are Benet, Kenwood

15. St. Ignatius (13-3) 9Fell short against Lyons

16. New Trier (14-3) 10Lost to Curie

17. Lincoln-Way East (14-1) 17Champs at Effingham

18. Bolingbrook (10-4) NRHealthy and dangerous

19. Downers Grove North (12-1) 24Very big week ahead

20. Hinsdale Central (12-3) NRHinsdale Central champions

21. Perspectives-Leadership (12-4) NRSecond place at the Big Dipper

22. Oswego East (13-3) 19Second place at Hinsdale Central

23. Hyde Park (14-2) 18Lost to Perspectives-Leadership

24. Libertyville (13-3) NRWon Wheeling

25. Glenbrook North (14-1) 14Lost to Libertyville

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Future salary-cap space, draft picks of no help to Bears in 41-10 loss to Lions

DETROIT — It’s hard to discern anything the Bears are accomplishing other than quarterback Justin Fields making strides in what has been nearly a total loss of a season.

Beyond Fields, their great hope is a war chest of future salary-cap space. Those are still just numbers on a spreadsheet at this point. None of that cap space played Sunday as the Bears got thumped 41-10 by the Lions at Ford Field.

That matters, by the way. Sure, this season was never headed anywhere and it fell apart a long time ago, but the fact that the Lions are this far ahead of the Bears in their dueling rebuilds creates one more hurdle for an organization staring down what seems like an endless string of them.

Other than Fields, this season has been unwatchable. This loss was their ninth in a row, their longest losing streak ever. If they fall again next week to the Vikings, they’ll finish with their second-worst record all-time.

Take that in for a moment. This franchise has been around more than a century and has had some dreadful seasons. This could be worse than all but one of them.

And going 3-14 would be fine if it proves to be a step toward something. If this is what it costs to eventually build a Super Bowl winner, no problem.

But what if it’s just another empty Bears season like so many others? An entire season — five months of mostly meaningless games — is a lot to give up.

Fields has grown into the franchise’s foundational piece — the first time that can be said confidently of a Bears quarterback in years — but this season has shown the cap of how far he can take the team without any blocking, receiving playmakers or defense.

The Bears have wasted the first two affordable seasons of his rookie contract.

The Bears aren’t going to stick with this roster, of course. Almost everyone playing Sunday was a placeholder for whoever general manager Ryan Poles signs with his NFL-high $122.2 million in cap space and drafts with full slate of picks that likely will begin with No. 1 or 2 overall. The Bears also will get wide receiver Darnell Mooney, safety Eddie Jackson and cornerback Jaylon Johnson back after season-ending injuries.

But nothing is guaranteed. Rebuilds have been misguided, money misspent and draftees misevaluated. Filling out the majority of the starting lineup is difficult even with an arsenal of resources, and as a first-time general manager, Poles has never done it. It takes a lot of faith to sit through another loss every week on the assumption that the Bears will get everything right in the coming offseason.

What if the upgrades end up bring more modest than magnificent?

It’d be easier to bet on the Bears’ future if they’d found more answers this season. That was supposed to be part of the process, not merely clearing out Ryan Pace’s bad contracts. Anyone could’ve burned the roster to the ground. Construction is hard part.

Read More

Future salary-cap space, draft picks of no help to Bears in 41-10 loss to Lions Read More »

High school basketball: Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 rankings for Jan. 1, 2023

Nearly every team plays three to five games during the holiday tournament week. It’s a full reboot of the season, so I start fresh with the rankings. It’s a blank sheet of paper with the numbers 1 through 25 running down the side and I go from there.

The full season resume counts of course, but I’m not worried about where anyone was ranked a week ago.

Bolingbrook, Perspectives-Leadership, Hinsdale Central and Libertyville all join the Super 25 today. Bolingbrook and Perspectives-Leadership began the season ranked. Both teams finally have all their key players and played well over the holidays.

Hinsdale Central and Libertyville won holiday tournaments and beat ranked teams in the championship games, so they were easy calls. Lemont, St. Patrick, Marist and Barrington drop out for now.

I was hoping to get Grayslake Central, the champions at Jacobs, into the rankings but there just wasn’t room. The Rams lost their first game of the season and have ripped off 13 consecutive wins.

Evanston nearly returned to the rankings after nice run at Centralia. The Wildkits lost to St. Louis Cardinal Ritter (a team that beat St. Rita and lost to Joliet West) in the championship game.

Super 25 for Jan. 1, 2023With record and last week’s ranking

1. Simeon (12-0) 1Pontiac champions

2. Young (12-4) 5Proviso West champs

3. Kenwood (12-2) 2Lost to Young

4. Benet (16-1) 7Fell short vs. Simeon

5. Rolling Meadows (16-1) 13York champions

6. Hillcrest (16-1) 8Big Dipper champs

7. Mount Carmel (15-1) 11Won Pekin

8. Joliet West (11-4) 3Faces Rolling Meadows Saturday

9. St. Rita (8-5) 4Fell short against Young

10. Brother Rice (14-2) 6Plays Bolingbrook Saturday

11. Lyons (11-1) 16Solid run at York

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

13. Bloom (9-3) 15Lost to Benet

14. Proviso East (10-2) 20Only losses are Benet, Kenwood

15. St. Ignatius (13-3) 9Fell short against Lyons

16. New Trier (14-3) 10Lost to Curie

17. Lincoln-Way East (14-1) 17Champs at Effingham

18. Bolingbrook (10-4) NRHealthy and dangerous

19. Downers Grove North (12-1) 24Very big week ahead

20. Hinsdale Central (12-3) NRHinsdale Central champions

21. Perspectives-Leadership (12-4) NRSecond place at the Big Dipper

22. Oswego East (13-3) 19Second place at Hinsdale Central

23. Hyde Park (14-2) 18Lost to Perspectives-Leadership

24. Libertyville (13-3) NRWon Wheeling

25. Glenbrook North (14-1) 14Lost to Libertyville

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