Chicago Sports

High school basketball: Brother Rice finds its offensive spark, beats Romeoville

Brother Rice has relied on star guard Ahmad Henderson to carry the load offensively this season. The Niagara recruit has regularly posted big scoring numbers.

That looks good in the highlights, but it was unrealistic to expect the No. 6 Crusaders to continue beating good teams with such a heavy weight on the shoulders of one player.

Brother Rice’s offense had a much different look on Tuesday against visiting Romeoville. Junior point guard Cale Cosme was inserted into the starting lineup and helped lead a more balanced scoring effort on the way to a 68-49 win.

Henderson and Cosme expertly picked apart Romeoville’s defense.

“Those two guards just ate us up,” Spartans coach Marc Howard said. “They were penetrating and making great decisions. They weren’t forcing shots. They were finding the open man, finding the slow rotations on our end and they just outplayed us.”

Henderson finished with 13 points. Senior Jimmy Navarrete also scored 13. Khalil Ross, a 6-7 senior, added 12 points, seven rebounds and four blocks for Brother Rice.

The Crusaders (10-1) took control with a 13-3 run in the second quarter and never looked back.

“They wanted it more than us,” Howard said. “And they were extremely unselfish.”

Junior Meyoh Swansey led Romeoville (7-3) with 19 points and senior Troy Cicero Jr. added 11 points and 11 rebounds.

Brother Rice had a challenging lead-up to the season. Bobby Frasor stepped down as basketball coach on July 30 and veteran coach Conte Stamas was hired a month later.

“I knew that because I took over so late that the offense would take awhile and it finally started clicking today,” Stamas said. “We started moving without the ball and Cosme was a spark.”

This is the season Brother Rice had been building toward for a couple of years, so new coach or not, expectations were high from the start.

“It hasn’t all been rainbows but we are learning every day in practice and getting to know Coach Stamas,” Henderson said. “He wants us to succeed and he knows what he’s talking about.”

The early returns are very good. The Crusaders’ only loss was a close game to St. Rita. They’ve knocked off Bloom and Curie.

“I’m happy all the boys stayed,” Henderson said. “Last year we had a team full of juniors and now we are seniors and ready to make a run.”

Romeoville opened the season in the Super 25 and was expected to be one of the better teams in the suburbs. While the Spartans haven’t had a disappointing start to the season, they haven’t managed to win any of their three big games, losing to the Crusaders, Joliet West and Lemont.

It’s a big week for Romeoville, which faces a good Plainfield East team on the road Friday and then takes on No. 21 Hyde Park at Triton on Saturday.

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High school basketball: Tuesday’s scores

Tuesday, December 13, 2022

BIG NORTHERN

Byron at Winnebago, 7:00

Rock Falls at Stillman Valley, 7:00

CATHOLIC LEAGUE – CROSSOVER

Fenwick at Providence, 7:00

Leo at Marmion, 7:15

Mount Carmel at Montini, 7:00

St. Ignatius at Providence-St. Mel, 7:00

St. Rita at St. Laurence, 7:00

DU KANE

Batavia at Glenbard North, 7:00

EAST SUBURBAN CATHOLIC

Benet at Notre Dame, 7:00

Carmel at Marist, 7:00

St. Patrick at Marian Catholic, 7:00

St. Viator at Nazareth, 7:00

ILLINOIS CENTRAL EIGHT

Coal City at Herscher, 6:45

Peotone at Lisle, 6:45

Streator at Manteno, 7:00

Wilmington at Reed-Custer, 6:45

INTERSTATE EIGHT

LaSalle-Peru at Sycamore, 7:00

LAKE SHORE ATHLETIC

Intrinsic-Downtown at British School, 6:30

Lycee Francais at Roycemore, 5:30

NOBLE LEAGUE – GOLD

Butler at Noble Academy, 5:30

Comer at Johnson, 5:30

ITW-Speer at Bulls Prep, 7:00

NORTH SUBURBAN

Lake Zurich at Libertyville, 7:00

NORTHEASTERN ATHLETIC

Christian Life at Alden-Hebron, 7:30

Mooseheart at Schaumburg Christian, 7:30

NORTHERN LAKE COUNTY

Round Lake at Lakes, 7:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE RED-SOUTH / CENTRAL

Brooks at Longwood, 6:30

Morgan Park at Kenwood, 5:00

Perspectives-Lead at Lindblom, 6:30

Phillips at Hyde Park, 6:30

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-CENTRAL

Bogan at Richards (Chgo), 5:00

Dunbar at King, 5:00

DuSable at Kennedy, 5:00

Englewood STEM at Catalyst-Maria, 5:00

Urban Prep-Englewood at Hubbard, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-SOUTH

Agricultural Science at ACE Amandla, 5:00

Corliss at UC-Woodlawn, 5:00

Dyett at Urban Prep-Bronzeville, 5:00

Harlan at Vocational, 5:00

South Shore at Fenger, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-CENTRAL

ACERO-Soto at Horizon-Southwest, 5:00

Gage Park at ACERO-Garcia, 5:00

Hancock at Kelly, 5:00

Solorio at Excel-Englewood, 5:00

Tilden at Instituto Health, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-SOUTH

Air Force at Washington, 5:00

Chicago Military at EPIC, 5:00

Goode at Carver, 5:00

Hirsch at Excel-South Shore, 5:00

Julian at Bowen, 5:00

RIVER VALLEY

Beecher at St. Anne, 7:00

Tri-Point at Grace Christian, 7:00

SOUTH SUBURBAN – RED

Evergreen Park at Eisenhower, 6:30

SOUTH SUBURBAN – CROSSOVER

Argo at Hillcrest. 6:30

SOUTHWEST SUBURBAN – CROSSOVER

Andrew at Lincoln-Way East, 6:30

Lincoln-Way West at Sandburg, 6:00

UPSTATE EIGHT

East Aurora at Glenbard South, 7:00

Elgin at Bartlett, 7:00

Fenton at Larkin, 7:00

Streamwood at South Elgin, 7:00

West Chicago at Glenbard East, 7:00

NON CONFERENCE

Aurora Christian at Ridgewood, 5:30

Chicago Christian at Westmont, 7:30

Clemente at Ellison, 6:30

Comer at Bremen, 6:00

Downers Grove North at Hersey, 7:00

Elk Grove at Lake Park, 7:00

Geneva at Hoffman Estates, 7:00

Harvest Christian at Marian Central, 7:00

Henry-Senachwine at Annawan, 6:00

Hinsdale South at York, 7:00

IC Catholic at St. Edward, 7:00

IMSA at Yorkville, 6:30

Indian Creek at Marquette, 7:00

Keith at Westminster Christian, 7:00

LaMoille at Woodland, 5:30

Lowpoint-Washburn at DePue, 7:00

Maine West at Buffalo Grove, 7:00

Marengo at Rockford Christian, 7:00

McHenry at Richmond-Burton, 7:00

Metea Valley at Oswego East, 6:30

Midland at Princeville, 7:30

Morgan Park Academy at Illinois Lutheran, 6:00

Neuqua Valley at Yorkville Christian, 7:00

Niles West at Niles North, 7:00

Oregon at Polo, 7:00

Richards at Rich, 6:30

Roanoke-Benson at Peoria Heights, 7:00

Romeoville at Brother Rice, 7:00

Sandwich at Serena, 7:00

Schaumburg at St. Charles East, 7:00

Seneca at Gardner-So. Wilmington, 6:45

Somonauk at Putnam County, 7:00

Southland at Kankakee, 6:30

St. Francis at Elmwood Park, 7:00

St. Francis de Sales at Lincoln-Way Central, 6:30

Timothy Christian at McNamara, 7:30

Vernon Hills at Woodstock North, 7:00

Wheaton Academy at Aurora Central, 7:30

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Mike Leach: a true original who made college football more fun

Mike Leach was no football coach.

It was his life’s work, of course, and he did it far better than most, leading 19 teams to bowl seasons and completing the 2022 regular season as the major-college ranks’ fifth-winningest active coach. But Leach couldn’t really be put into any box. He was a Bigfoot expert with a law degree, a pirate aficionado who taught college courses on insurgent warfare, an outdoorsman who passed hours at a time with his nose in a book, and an occasionally irascible man who more often was incredibly patient, especially when being interviewed, which, delightfully often, would turn into holding court.

Leach died Monday at 61, three weeks before he was to lead his Mississippi State team onto the field against Illinois in the ReliaQuest Bowl. He was with the Bulldogs at a Saturday practice. On Sunday, he suffered a massive heart attack at home in Starkville and was airlifted to a hospital in Jackson. By the following night, he was gone.

Defensive coordinator Zach Arnett will lead the Bulldogs on an interim basis. Leach’s players led the decision to play on against the Illini in Tampa.

“Today is a sad day for college football,” Illini coach Bret Bielema said in a statement. “We lost a great coach, a great person and one of the legendary personalities in our sport. Mike and I built a long friendship after first meeting at the Alamo Bowl in the early 2000s. We shared so many memories over the years. Rest in peace, Mike.”

Leach was widely enjoyed, especially by the media, for his loquacious storytelling and his extemporaneous rumination on things — Halloween candy, wedding preparations, weather patterns — having utterly nothing to do with his football teams. He didn’t play football in college and didn’t give a rip if anybody thought less of him for it. He was sharp enough to have given the “Air Raid” offense its name and prolific enough to have coached eight quarterbacks to 10 of the top 50 passing-yardage seasons in FBS history.

He also could get himself into trouble, small and big. Some of his social commentary came off as crass or insensitive, or at least politically incorrect. He was outspoken and unapologetic in his support of Donald Trump, which he pointed out more than once — correctly — was damn well up to him.

Leach was fired by Texas Tech after the 2009 season, a former player having accused him of mistreatment after a concussion. The school called Leach “defiantly insubordinate.” Leach sued unsuccessfully for wrongful termination and was, for more than a year, tangled in this legal web, unhirable.

It was during this period that I went and found him lying low in Key West, Florida, sort of at his invitation, sort of not.

“Sure, I’ll talk to you,” he texted, “as long as you can find me.”

Everybody who covered one or more of Leach’s teams, specifically, or college football nationally, as I did at the time, has a story like this one or even better. Mine involves finding my way to a Civil War-era fort named for Zachary Taylor and, a photographer in tow, waiting — for how long? — as instructed by Leach, who could be laissez-faire about the time. Perhaps 90 minutes went by. Eventually, up a path he pedaled on his bicycle, looking surprisingly fit in cargo shorts and a T-shirt, a completely at ease dude with absolutely nowhere else to be. We spent hours talking about football and other things, some of them ridiculous, his voice bouncing off the limestone and granite when he got excited.

The bottom line was he wanted to fight for his good name and coach again. He did just that, willing Washington State back into relevance before moving on to Mississippi State and the brutally difficult SEC West. At Texas Tech, he took aim at Oklahoma and Texas. At Wazzu, it was Oregon and Stanford. At Mississippi State, it was Alabama and LSU. Be the best? Maybe not. Beat the best? Leach lived for the opportunities.

His final tweet was for Bulldogs supporters who might make the trip to the bowl game:

“Just got word that cowbells WILL be allowed at the ReliaQuest Bowl! Let’s fill Raymond James Stadium with Maroon and White! Hail State.”

The bells shall toll for him.

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2022-23 NHL MVP Ladder: Who are the Favorites to Take Home NHL’s Most Prestigious Individual Award?

We’re still some way to go in the 2022-23 NHL season, and one player is looking the most poised to take home the MVP honors. Edmonton Oilers Connor McDavid is the consensus favourite player to win the 2023 Hart Trophy. He has had a fantastic start to the season so far and going 2021-22 Hart Trophy winner Auston Matthews is a distant second, and could well land a second MVP award if he replicates his incredible form last season.

The MVP ladder includes a lot of known names, but which players have the best shot at winning the prestigious award? Here’s what the MVP ladder for the 2022-23 regular season looks like:

Connor McDavid (+125)

Jason Robertson (+500)

Auston Matthews (+1200)

Leon Draisaitl (+1400)

Kirill Kaprizov (+1500)

Jack Eichel (+1500)

Jack Hughes (+1500)

Nathan MacKinnon (+1500)

David Pastrnak (+2400)

Nikita Kucherov (+2500)

Sidney Crosby (+3000)

Matthew Tkachuk (+3000)

Cale Makar (+3500)

Elias Pettersson (+3500)

Mitchell Marner (+3500)

Mikko Rantanen (+4000)

Adam Fox (+4000)

Mika Zibanejad (+5000)

Artemi Panarin (+7500)

Jesper Bratt (+7500)

Steven Stamkos (+10000)

Kyle Connor (+10000)

Evgeni Malkin (+10000)

Igor Sheshterkin (+10000)

Alex Ovechkin (+10000)

Aleksander Barkov (+10000)

Jonathan Huberdeau (+12000)

Sam Reinhart (+12000)

Andrei Svechnikov (+12000)

Brad Marchand (+12000)

Mathew Barzal (+12000)

Mark Scheifele (+12000)

Roman Josi (+12000)

John Tavares (+12000)

Patrik Laine (+12000)

Chris Kreider (+12000)

Connor Hellebuyck (+12000)

Patrick Kane (+12000)

Filip Forsberg (+12000)

Brady Tkachuk (+12000)

Andrei Vasilevskiy (+12000)

Sebastian Aho (+12000)

Anze Kopitar (+12000)

Blake Wheeler (+20000)

Nazem Kadri (+20000)

Teuvo Teravainen (+20000)

Tage Thompson (+20000)

Shea Theodore (+20000)

Trevor Zegras (+20000)

Nicklas Backstrom (+20000)

Evander Kane (+20000)

Roope Hintz (+20000)

Nico Hischier (+20000)

Alex Pietrangelo (+20000)

Bo Horvat (+20000)

Alex Debrincat (+20000)

William Nylander (+20000)

Claude Giroux (+20000)

Brock Boeser (+20000)

Brayden Point (+20000)

Aaron Ekblad (+20000)

Patrice Bergeron (+20000)

Johnny Gaudreau (+20000)

Mark Stone (+20000)

Jake Guentzel (+20000)

Dougie Hamilton (+20000)

Victor Hedman (+20000)

From FanDuel’s NHL betting odds as of December 1, 2022.

A Breakdown of the 2022-23 MVP Favorites

Connor McDavid

Centers have won five of the last 10 Hart Trophy awards and Connor McDavid will be hoping to become the latest to land an MVP honors. He has been leading the MVP race since the offseason and has shown no sign of slowing down. 

McDavid is arguably the NHL’s most explosive offensive player, and the 2015 NHL Draft first-overall pick has yet to throw in the towel. He leads the league in points (47) and assists (26), and his 21 goals so far this season is the second most scored. 

ESPN projects McDavid to hit 69 goals and 85 assists for a total of 154 points in 80 games, which should be more than enough to land him the MVP honors.

Auston Matthews

The 2021-22 Hart Trophy winner will be hoping to land back-to-back honors, despite the Toronto Maple Leafs not being in top form at the start of the season. Toronto appears to be picking up again though with seven wins in their last ten games, including a five-game winning streak. The Buds are 2nd in the Atlantic Division and have the third-best record in the Eastern Conference with 15 wins, five losses, and six overtime losses.

Matthews isn’t having a bad season either, although his current form is a shadow of his MVP-winning season. The 24-year-old centre has 12 goals and 16 assists for 28 points in 26 games. ESPN projects Matthews to finish the season with 38 goals and 50 assists for 88 points, compared to the 60 goals and 40 assists he registered last season.

The Buds star man will hope to become the first player since Alexander Ovechkin (2008, 2009) to repeat as Hart Trophy winner. However, given his current form, his chances have continued to dip.

Jason Robertson (+500)

Jason Robertson leapfrogged Matthews to take the 2nd spot, and deservedly so. The Dallas Stars key man has turned it up a notch this season after a stellar 2021-22 campaign. Robertson tops the goal-scoring rankings with 23 goals and has provided 18 assists so far this season.

ESPN projects he could hit 75 goals and 59 assists for a combined 166 points at the end of the season, more points than his closest contenders for the MVP honors. He has seven goals and three assists in his last five games. The 23-year-old left-winger extended his point streak to 18 games on Sunday with a goal and an assist to his name.

 

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Breaking down the discontent among the Cubs’ fan base

The mood among the Chicago Cubs’ fan base is one of growing frustration owing to the decisions that are being made at the boardroom level. In short, the large majority of supporters have grown wary of the Cubs’ policy when it comes to recruitment. At least, that is the diplomatic description of the current situation with fans who adopt a more direct approach to the goings-on in the front office, in no doubt about the fact that they are being shortchanged by the Cubs’ management. 

Hoyer’s refusal to spend has earned him the wrath of Cubs fans 

In essence, the root of this discontent comes down to Cubs president Jed Hoyer’s refusal to hand out long-term contracts to players they are trying to sign. Ultimately, many fans feel that this is why the franchise is unable to snap up the targets at the top of its recruitment list. Instead, Hoyer has been open about his desire to spend intelligently as the Cubs look to carry out a comprehensive rebuild but with that said, it doesn’t take much imagination to understand why the exasperated voices are getting louder given that rebuilds often require substantial capital outlay.

Breaking: Cody Bellinger and the Chicago Cubs are in agreement on a one-year, $17.5 million contract, sources tell @JeffPassan. https://t.co/oRoKx76xq8

Put another way, rebuilding the Cubs’ team on a shoestring budget is unlikely to see the team win their first World Series since 2016 and the fans know as much.

Has the Cubs’ recruitment policy already cost them the chance to win the 2023 World Series?

To put the Cubs’ World Series chances into better context, the team is at extraordinary odds of +8000 to win the 2023 edition which goes without saying but even the most die-hard Cubs fans would battle to put a wager on them overcoming that price. However, this page which covers everything to do with Illinois sports betting, has listed the best online sportsbook welcome bonuses in the Prairie State which conveniently, will give fans a chance to place a risk-free bet on the Cubs doing the impossible and winning the 2023 World Series. 

Stranger things have, of course, happened but the reality is that confidence among the supporters is at an all-time low. This is why the spotlight will be turned on Hoyer’s signing policy this season after the Cubs ended the 2022 campaign with a record that read 74–88. Notably, it was the second season in a row that the Cubs missed out on the playoffs. There are no two ways about it, things have got to change.

There is a wave of scrutiny coming Hoyer’s way but there’s still time to get it right 

With these alarming stats in mind, it’s easy to see why patience has waned to the degree it has among the fan base. The long and short of it is that Hoyer’s strategy for the Cubs has to begin to bear fruit this season or else he faces a full-blown mutiny. 

“I’m very confident that we’re moving in the right direction.” -David Ross
#WinterMeetings https://t.co/f15ilwylKU

Crucially, there is still time for the Cubs to leave their mark on the upcoming campaign but it will require a dramatic shift in policy for them to do that. However unlikely it is that the checkbook will be opened, the team’s management does deserve the benefit of the doubt over the offseason, even if fans won’t be holding their breath.

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Bulls coach Billy Donovan still trying to get a real look at new lineup

It was a sound plan at the time.

Billy Donovan had seen enough from the starting group he was using after an embarrassing showing in Phoenix two weeks ago, so the Bulls coach wanted a new look, a different energy.

As has been the case far too often the last few seasons, however, this has been a roster where sound plans go to die.

Right after he inserted Alex Caruso and Javonte Green in the starting lineup for Ayo Dosunmu and Patrick Williams, respectively, Green went down with a sore knee, and a few games later Caruso’s tailbone issue reared its ugly head once again.

As for that new-look lineup?

Donovan got to see it in action a whopping one game — a 119-111 loss at Golden State.

Hardly a good enough sample size to judge its effectiveness. That could change on Wednesday night, as the Bulls host Tom Thibodeau and the New York Knicks, and do so with a real possibility of that grouping being healthy again.

Well, maybe.

Green did return in Atlanta on Sunday, but did so with some minutes restrictions, being used off the bench for 14 minutes because of it. Caruso went through the Tuesday practice, giving the thumbs up on his return, but there was still uncertainty if Donovan would start either because of the injury concerns.

What Donovan has working on his side with this group? Besides the “Big Three” of Zach LaVine, Nikola Vucevic and DeMar DeRozan, the rest of the roster is very much ego-free. Green made that very clear.

“Starting, coming off the bench, no difference for me, man,” Green said. “I’m just trying to get better, but more importantly, make my teammates better. That’s the ultimate goal. Just win games, and that will take you to the end of where you want to go. That’s my mentality, just do whatever it takes to win games.”

That’s good, because what Donovan made very clear was that just because Green and Caruso were inserted in the starting lineup in late November, doesn’t mean this grouping will see January, or even late December.

“To be honest with you, we may put Javonte out there and then say, ‘You know what? We need to go back with Patrick.’ ” Donovan said. “It’s more about the combination of guys.”

Williams did get the start against the Hawks, scoring eight points in 25 minutes of work, and the former No. 4 overall draft pick has played better the last five games, scoring in double digits in three of those contests.

So what can Williams do to get back in starting good graces?

As long as the starting group of Green, Caruso, Vucevic, DeRozan and LaVine play well – once they actually get a few games under their belts – it might not matter what Williams does with the bench unit.

“I don’t think it’s necessarily anything Patrick has or hasn’t done as much as how do you kind of get combinations of players out there that are functioning really, really well?” Donovan said. “Clearly I think there’s been some inconsistencies on both units. The starters sometimes and obviously the second unit, so we’re just trying to switch things up and get more consistency from the first six minutes of the game to the last six minutes of the quarter, going to that second unit. We may end up getting to a situation where quite honestly it’s the best thing for our team to keep Patrick there. It’s not like, ‘Hey, he hasn’t played well, he doesn’t function well with that group.’ It’s just we were struggling with consistency at that time.

“When we put Javonte in there I wanted to see what it looked like.”

Maybe soon Donovan actually will.

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1st-and-10: Bears 2023 defense starts up front — with Jalen Carter?

Are the Bears making room for Jalen Carter already?

The 6-3, 300-pound Georgia first-team All-America defensive tackle might be the best defensive player in the 2023 draft and could be the 3-technique tackle that makes Matt Eberflus’ defense click — like Tommie Harris did for Lovie Smith’s defense in 2004-08.

Eberflus has made it clear that the 3-technique is the most critical position in his defense. The Bears’ biggest expense in free agency after Eberflus was hired was former Bengals defensive tackle Larry Ogunjobi to fill that 3-technique spot. When Ogunjobi couldn’t pass his physical, the Bears turned to former Chargers defensive tackle Justin Jones.

Jones has been an active and intermittently effective defender — and a team leader who was named a captain after linebacker Roquan Smith was traded. But he hasn’t provided the impact the Bears need at that position.

Eberflus already has indicated interest in upgrading the position. The Bears played Jones at left defensive end for a few snaps against the Packers in Week 13 — to boost the edge rush, Eberflus said. And when asked Monday about Jones’ effectiveness at the 3-technique, he immediately referenced Jones’ trial at end.

“Justin’s done great in there. He’s done a good job,” Eberflus said. “We’re looking at him at defensive end, which will be cool for him to be able to look at that, but also play inside. We do a lot of movements inside — that really enhances his skill set.”

Eberflus doesn’t settle for anything less than stellar play at the 3-technique. When he was hired as defensive coordinator with the Colts in 2018, the Colts signed Denico Autry, who led the Colts with nine sacks in his first season.

When Autry’s effectiveness diminished in 2019, Colts general manager Chris Ballard made a bold move to get an upgrade — trading the No. 13 overall pick in the 2020 draft to the 49ers for DeForest Buckner (and moved Autry to defensive end). The Colts immediately gave Buckner a five-year, $105 million extension that made him the second-highest paid defensive tackle in the NFL behind Aaron Donald. That’s how important the 3-technique is to Matt Eberflus.

Eberflus moved Autry to end after acquiring Buckner. And he was enthusiastic about Jones having that same versatility.

“Absolutely,” Eberflus said. “That’s why we brought him here — because he can play all [defensive line] positions. The 5, the 9, the 6, [the] 3. He can play all those.”

The Bears (3-10), on pace for a top-3 spot in the 2023 draft, figure to have tempting trade-down options involving teams desperate for a quarterback. But Carter might be their best move, and he won’t last long.

And there’s the rub. Carter is projected to go No. 2 overall to the Seahawks (who have the Broncos’ first-round pick) in a mock draft by ESPN draft analyst Todd McShay — with the Bears taking Alabama’s Will Anderson at No. 3.

There’s a long way to go before everything shakes out in the 2023 draft. But there’s a possibility the Bears, who were one pick short of drafting Donald in 2014 (settling for cornerback Kyle Fuller), could be one pick short of getting Carter.

Whatever scenario ensues, it’ll be interesting to see if general manager Ryan Poles can maneuver the draft any better than predecessor Ryan Pace. No two drafts are a like, but the last time the Bears moved up from No. 3 to No. 2 in the draft to get their guy, it did not end well.

2a. The Bears (3-10) dropped one spot in the draft order over their bye week — from No. 2 to No. 3 after the Broncos (3-10) lost to the Chiefs.

If the Bears finish 3-14, they would be no lower than No. 3. If they finish 4-13, they would be no lower than No. 5.

2b. The Bears likely will lose all draft-order ties — strength-of-schedule — because they currently have the most difficult 17-game schedule in the NFL this season. Their opponents have a .572 winning percentage (125-93-3). The Packers are second at .561 (123-96-2).

3. Did You Know? If the Bears had beaten the Lions and Commanders, they’d have the 14th pick of the first round.

4. So much for the Robert Quinn reunion Sunday. Quinn, who was traded to the Eagles for a 2023 fourth-round draft pick, is on injured reserve after injuring his knee in practice.

The Eagles still are hoping Quinn can return for the playoffs, but he has not made a big impact since the trade — two tackles and two quarterback hits in five games (70 snaps).

5. But Sunday’s game will be a reunion for Eberflus and Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni, who was the Colts’ offensive coordinator when Eberflus was their defensive coordinator in 2018-20.

“His office was right next to mine for three years. We were really close,” Eberflus said. “We lived in the same neighborhood. Families hung out together. He’s got a great family. He’s a great family man. He comes from a football family — his dad was a coach, brothers were coaches. And he’s a really good person.

Eberflus and Sirianni have another thing in common — both gave up play-calling to put more focus on the job of being a head coach and managing a team. The Eagles have won 18 of their last 21 regular-season games after starting 3-6 under Sirianni.

6. Wide Receivers Matter Dept.: Let the record show that the Eagles improvement started with quarterback Jalen Hurts, who won five of his last six regular-season starts in 2021 — but accelerated and reached another level with the addition of wide receiver A.J. Brown, who has 65 receptions for 1,020 yards and 10 touchdowns this season. Good players teach you how to win.

7. This week’s web poll question: Which would be a better indicator that the Bears’ rebuild is on the right track: competitive losses to the Super Bowl-contending Eagles and Bills — or a victory over the surging Lions?

8. A Bears defense that has an NFL-low 16 sacks and 34 pressures could be in for a long day against an Eagles team that leads the NFL in scoring, including 40, 35 and 48 points in its last three games. But the return of rookie defensive backs Jaquan Brisker and Kyler Gordon — and a week off could give the Bears a fighting chance.

For what it’s worth, the Colts were 4-0 in the game following the bye in Eberflus’ four seasons as defensive coordinator. Last year the Colts had a Week 14 bye and beat the Patriots 27-17 in Week 15. Eberflus’ defense pitched a first-half shutout (23 plays, 103 yards) against a Patriots team that came in averaging 32.1 points in a seven-game winning streak (and also was coming off a bye).

Eberflus, in fact, has won eight of his last nine games coming off the bye, going back to his days coaching linebackers for the Cowboys.

9. Josh McCown Ex-Bears Player of the Week: Ravens linebacker Roquan Smith had a sack of Kenny Pickett and an interception of former Bears teammate Mitch Trubisky in a 16-14 road victory over the Steelers.

The Ravens (9-4) are 4-1 since acquiring Smith from the Bears for a second-round draft pick. Their defense is allowing 13.4 points per game in that span (second in the NFL), 276.2 yards (third) and 2.8 rushing yards per carry (first). The Ravens were 21st, 24th and 14th in those categories prior to trading for Smith.

10. Bear-ometer: 4-13 –vs. Eagles (L); vs. Bills (L); at Lions (L); vs. Vikings (W).

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Cubs agree to minor-league deal with ex-Cardinal Ben DeLuzio

Outfielder Ben DeLuzio wasn’t the statement signing that Cubs fans have been clamoring for since the winter meetings wrapped last week. But the Cubs will continue to add depth throughout the offseason — that isn’t a reason to panic.

DeLuzio agreed to terms on a minor-league contract with a spring training invite, a source confirmed. The 28-year-old outfielder made his major-league debut with the Cardinals in September. DeLuzio, a speedy defensive specialist, went 3-for-20 over the course of 22 major-league games. He hit .278 in Triple-A last year. The Cardinals non-tendered DeLuzio last month.

The Cubs remain active on the free agent market. As of Tuesday afternoon, shortstops Carlos Correa and Dansby Swanson remained available.

The Cubs also need to add catching depth, and the number of available catchers has begun to dwindle.

First, former Cubs star Willson Contreras signed with the Cardinals on a five-year, $87.5 million contract during the winter meetings. Since Monday, Christian V?zquez (three years, $30 million) has agreed to terms with the Twins, Mike Zunino has agreed to join the Guardians (one year, $6 million); and as part of a three-team trade, Sean Murphy has landed with the Braves and William Contreras with the Brewers.

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MLS, Fox Sports agree to new 4-year broadcast deal

Fox Sports will keep on broadcasting Major League Soccer games in the U.S. as part of a four-year agreement, ending the run of ESPN and ABC, which had carried matches since the league launched in 1996.

MLS also announced linear television agreements on Tuesday with TSN and RDS in Canada and TelevisaUnivision.

MLS went with only one television partner in the U.S. due to its 10-year partnership with Apple that begins next season.

The rights deal with Apple, first announced in July, allows fans to watch every game without local blackouts or restrictions.

Fox Sports will carry at least 34 regular-season, eight playoff matches and the MLS championship. At least 15 regular-season games will air on Fox, with the remainder on FS1. All Fox and FS1 matches will air in Spanish on Fox Deportes.

The agreement also includes 16 Leagues Cup matches on FS1 through the round of 16. Beginning next season, the Leagues Cup will be a summer competition between MLS teams and Liga MX clubs. TelevisaUnivision will air 21 Leagues Cup matches, including the final.

TSN and RDS will average two matches per week across the season’s 34 rounds, including one per round involving a Canadian team. It also includes eight playoff matches, the MLS championship and some Leagues Cup matches.

The linear deals complete the framework of MLS’ rights deals after the Apple announcement. MLS Season Pass will be available in over 100 countries exclusively through the Apple TV+ app beginning next year.

MLS Season Pass will launch on Feb. 1, while the 2023 season begins on Feb. 25 with a full slate of games., including defending champion Los Angeles FC facing the LA Galaxy at the Rose Bowl. LAFC beat Philadelphia on penalty kicks for its first MLS title.

The league will have a more streamlined schedule beginning next season, with most matches played on Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. local time and some on Wednesdays. MLS intends to announce its schedule this month.

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High school basketball: Ian Brown’s big game for New Trier, Lemont’s Castillo twins

The beauty of the shooting exhibition Ian Brown of New Trier displayed last Saturday in a win over Rolling Meadows is all the boxes it checked off in describing any monumental performance.

The attention-grabbing headline is this: Brown drained a ridiculous 12 three-pointers in one game.

But the circumstances surrounding the performance — and how he went about it — shined beyond just the made threes.

First, Brown never missed. Well, he did miss two. Even those were, literally, both in and out. But it wasn’t as if Brown fired up 20-plus three-point attempts to get his 12 makes.

Then you think about those numbers for a moment. Even if he had 20 or 24 attempts, he still would have been shooting above 50 percent from three. He finished an unheard-of 12 of 14 from beyond the arc.

And then you add this little nugget? Brown entered the game 4 of 20 from the three-point line on the season.

Second, Brown didn’t bury his 12 threes against some rag-tag, no-name team. This was an unbeaten, state-ranked Rolling Meadows team with size, length and arguably the best player in the state, Cameron Christie.

Third, Brown did so in a game that mattered. This wasn’t some lopsided game where the threes didn’t even matter. Each of his threes was part of a major comeback in what was a dramatic, down-to-the-wire 65-64 win.

It was Brown who brought New Trier back from 15 points down. And it was Brown who gave the Trevians their first lead of the game with 1:30 to play — on a three-pointer, of course — which was his fifth three of the fourth quarter.

Brown admits he felt different on Saturday. He said he put pressure on himself the night before when the Trevians faced Glenbrook South. The night before he poured in 36 points he didn’t score a point.

He told himself coming into the Rolling Meadows game to just relax and go out and play.

“I had a different mindset for this game,” Brown said of the Rolling Meadows matchup. “I played relaxed and composed. And once a few went in … It became a different feeling. It felt like every single one was going to go in. I didn’t feel like I was going to miss.”

Brown also was quick to give credit where credit was due. He added there were several threes where he was wide open, thanks to his teammates.

“My teammates did a great job getting me the ball, setting the screens, getting me open,” Brown said. “A lot of those [threes] were with me pretty open.”

Without TV contracts, multiple stations and networks televising games, or ESPN to show the highlights, there are individual high school basketball games when you are fortunate to be in the gym. Otherwise, you wouldn’t see what and how it all transpired.

Last Saturday at South Elgin was one of those high school games.

Castillo twins elevating Lemont

It was a record-breaking season for Lemont a year ago. Coach Rick Runaas’ team set a school record for wins with 27, won the program’s first sectional championship in 46 years, and nearly took down Simeon in the supersectional.

Lemont basketball was one of the biggest stories of the 2021-22 high school basketball season.

With virtually every key piece returning, Lemont was destined to be a preseason top 10 team when this season began.

But the biggest name, Nojus Indrusaities, left this past summer. Following two seasons of big numbers, impressive win totals and a lofty status among college coaches, the 6-3 junior headed to St. Rita.

But anyone who followed Lemont closely knew what made Lemont tick. The heart and soul of this successful group are Matas and Rokas Castillo. It’s more than the fun flare these two play with; the twin brothers instill an infectious winning spirit in any team they play on.

“They lead by example every day through their incredible work ethic,” Runaas said. “It’s like nothing else I’ve ever experienced as a coach.”

Runaas says no matter the game, big or small, or the practice, light or intense, the Castillo brothers are “full go” all the time.

So it’s no wonder Lemont is keeping pace with last year’s team, even without Indrusaitis. Lemont is rolling, off to a 9-0 start behind the two veteran senior guards who are headed to Division II Wisconsin-Parkside next year.

Rokas Castillo is averaging 21 points while shooting over 40 percent from the three-point line. He chips in three assists and three steals. Matas Castillo is at 16 points, four assists and four steals.

With a win this Friday over TF South, Lemont will head to the Jack Tosh Holiday Tournament at York unbeaten, while the circle-the-date showdown with league heavyweight Hillcrest is on Jan. 17.

Sectional complaints

Come on, IHSA, why can’t we just tweak the sectional assignments a little bit from year to year? When it makes sense to do so, can’t we let common sense prevail?

Wishful thinking.

There are years when there are some wholesale changes to basketball sectional assignments. Then it remains status quo.

A case in point is the two sectionals in the north suburbs that feed into the Hoffman Estates Super. While there isn’t a sectional host named just yet for either sectional, from a team standpoint they remain the same.

Rolling Meadows, in the northwest suburbs and from the Mid-Suburban League, has once again been sent east to join the North Shore programs and perennial basketball stalwarts Evanston, New Trier, Loyola and Glenbrook South. Add ranked Glenbrook North and it’s another loaded sectional.

How easy it would have been to balance out these two sectionals. It makes sense geographically and from a basketball standpoint.

Don’t tell me it’s geography. I’m looking at an old IHSA map of school locations as I type. Waukegan, Zion-Benton and Warren, the Lake County schools that hug Lake Michigan, are sent west to play in a sectional with a whole mess of Mid-Suburban League teams.

Again, it’s an easy fix in tinkering with the obvious. There are no major geographical changes or massive travel involved, and we know what basketball teams are primed for big years. Do a tiny bit of homework as you prepare for the release of sectional assignments.

There is no harm in balancing out sectionals to some degree when geographically possible. And keeping Rolling Meadows, a loaded team in the northwest suburbs led by Big Ten recruit Cameron Christie, in the sectional it should have been in all along, would have done the trick.

The complaint will be — or the question that will be asked — is when and why to make arbitrary decisions that appear to be on a whim?

The answer: Who cares? Just do it. Each year. Here, there, wherever. Mix it up where you see fit. Do schools and coaches complain? So be it. They’re complaining now anyway.

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