Chicago Sports

CB Jaylon Johnson questionable, Kindle Vildor out for Bears

Jaylon Johnson was limited in practice for the second-straight day with an oblique injury and was ruled questionable for Sunday’s game against the Lions. Fellow Bears cornerback Kindle Vildor was ruled out after hurting his ankle on the second play of the Dolphins game.

Johnson, who is perhaps the Bears’ best remaining defensive player, said Thursday that his injury was a “battle wound” and didn’t sound concerned that it would prevent him from facing the Lions.

Starting defensive end Al-Quadin Muhammad, who hasn’t practiced all week because of a knee injury, is doubtful. He’s started all nine games this season but recorded only one sack.

Right guard Teven Jenkins, who was limited Thursday and Friday with a back injury, was called questionable.

Cornerback Josh Blackwell and Dane Cruikshank will both play Sunday at Soldier Field after being full participants Friday. They had a knee injury and an illness, respectively.

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Steady and smart, coach Matt Eberflus proves to be sensible choice for Bears

In typical Bears’ style, they went the quiet, restrained route when they rebooted their coaching staff in January rather than chase the flashiest candidate.

They didn’t go for the coveted upstarts Yale-educated Mike McDaniel or Belichick-groomed Josh McDaniels, and they didn’t make offers to Super Bowl winners Doug Pederson and Dan Quinn.

Instead, they chose Matt Eberflus. Hardly a household name, but sensible, experienced, organized, calm. No splash, just substance. He’s the coaching equivalent of a pair of khakis.

They liked that he had a thorough, long-range plan. They liked his three decades of coaching experience, regardless of him never having held the head job before. And they liked that he’d take a CEO-style approach to running the team.

So far, it’s working.

The Bears are 3-6, but something along those lines was expected all along with a stripped-down roster in the initial phase of their rebuild. Just like quarterback Justin Fields, it’s possible to evaluate Eberflus within the context of adverse conditions. He can show progress even as losses accumulate.

Surprisingly, the biggest indicator of Eberflus eventually succeeding with the Bears is the way he has handled Fields and the offense. Given that his entire career had been exclusively on defense, that was a significant concern when the Bears hired him.

His choice of Luke Getsy as offensive coordinator has proven prudent, and his oversight of Getsy reworking the offense after a dreadful first four games is further proof that he knows how to run a team.

The shift Eberflus and Getsy made during the Bears’ extended break between Weeks 6 and 7 was incredibly promising. It wasn’t just that their changes have worked, it was that they made changes at all.

Stubbornness is no virtue, as his predecessor Matt Nagy learned the hard way.

As the Bears’ offense cratered toward a 29th-place finish in 2020, he was pressed on whether he needed to consider significant changes to his scheme and said, “The big thing is just… not changing a whole lot.”

He added, “That’s a sign of weakness when you just come in and start changing everything, especially when you’ve seen something that’s worked before. It’s not broken.”

On the eve of last season, he was still unbending in his belief that his offense was finally about to click. The Bears finished 27th in scoring. Staying the course cost him his job and them a season.

Nagy’s inflexibility was exposed repeatedly, and Eberflus and Getsy have shown adaptability at every turn so far.

Nagy couldn’t make halftime adjustments; Eberflus seems like a master of them. Nagy tried to jam Fields into an offense suited for Andy Dalton’s skillset; Getsy embraced his elite running ability and made it the centerpiece.

Getsy, by the way, has more or less maintained that he didn’t make significant changes to an offense that produced just 16 points per game over the first four weeks and resulted in Fields being statistically the worst quarterback in the NFL. His view is that this has been a linear trajectory, boosted by players executing better.

That seems implausible, and besides, there’s nothing wrong with making changes. That’s a sign of strength. This offense was plummeting, but now it’s skyrocketing. Fields is making a strong case to be the Bears’ quarterback of the future. Reassessing and redirecting are not causes of embarrassment. Making that shift was impressive.

It’s reassuring to the Bears to know that Eberflus was involved in that. If things keep going well, Getsy will emerge as a head-coaching candidate for other teams, and the fact that Eberflus has his hand on the offense will enable him to identify a new offensive coordinator when needed.

It is starkly different from the Nagy era. Nagy wanted to micromanage the offense, retaking play calling going into last season after giving it up in 2020, and gave his defensive coordinator autonomy. When Vic Fangio left, Nagy effectively made Chuck Pagano, and subsequently Sean Desai, head coach of the defense. In that sense, Nagy was still just an offensive coordinator, only with a bigger paycheck.

His deep engrossment in the offense also limited his ability to see the big picture on game day. He mismanaged the setup for what would’ve been a game-winning field goal in 2019. His timeouts often were confounding. Game management was always an issue, whereas it hasn’t been with Eberflus.

Eberflus hasn’t been perfect in that department, but there hasn’t been anything outright laughable. And even in his debatable decisions, his logic was coherent.

The next step for him is to figure out his defense, which won’t be easy after an exodus of top-shelf players. Look at the departures since January: Khalil Mack, Robert Quinn, Roquan Smith, Akiem Hicks, Bilal Nichols. And that’s from a group that struggled last season anyway.

The Bears have gotten good play out of rookies Jaquan Brisker at safety and Kyler Gordon at cornerback, but it still has been a net loss in talent, and general manager Ryan Poles is going to need another offseason to shore it up.

But limited personnel can’t be an excuse for Eberflus. He has to reassess and redirect just like he did with the offense. No coach could transform this into a top-10 defense, but he needs to make it respectable. And based on his other moves, there’s optimism that he can.

There are no magic tricks with Eberflus. No wild, lofty declarations that he can’t possibly fulfill. He has simply been steady and smart, and if that’s how he continues to coach this team, the Bears picked the right guy.

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High school football: Payton Salomon posts remarkable stats, leads Lemont to consecutive deep playoff runs

Growing up, Payton Salomon cycled from sport to sport, going from football to wrestling to baseball.

The Lemont senior stopped playing baseball in seventh grade but remained a two-sport athlete into high school.

Like everyone else in Illinois, his rhythm was thrown off by the COVID pandemic. Football and wrestling overlapped as the IHSA tried to squeeze in at least a semblance of a season for every sport at the end of the 2020-21 school year.

Football was always No. 1 for Salomon, and that year it became the only one.

“I hurt my shoulder and I was like, ‘Yeah, I’m gonna back off now. Now it’s only football,'” he said.

The injury was to his right (throwing) shoulder.

“That’s why it spooked me a little bit,” he said. “You know, it’s like, what’s more important to me, football or wrestling? Obviously it’s football.”

The proof is in the numbers. The 6-foot, 175-pounder has put up some remarkable stats in his two seasons as Lemont’s starting quarterback. For last season’s 11-1 team that was eliminated by powerhouse East St. Louis in the Class 6A quarterfinals, Salomon completed 70% of his passes for 1,753 yards with 31 touchdowns and only one interception.

That team also featured Albert Kunickis, a powerful running back with an inspiring back story (he was born with a right arm that ends at the elbow). Opposing defenses no longer have to account for Kunickis, who is a preferred walk-on at Northwestern.

But with more of the focus on him this season, Salomon has been even better for 11-0 Lemont. His completion rate is up to 80% and he’s thrown for 2,416 yards and 36 touchdowns with one interception. Yes, over two seasons, he’s completed 75% of his passes for 4,169 yards, 67 TDs and two interceptions.

The important thing to note, according to Lemont coach Bret Kooi, is that Salomon isn’t just throwing five-yard quick hits.

“When you’re throwing the ball down the field a little bit more and he’s still able to maintain at that 80% [completion rate] ,.. that’s pretty astonishing, especially for a high school kid,” Kooi said.

Salomon’s leadership isn’t just limited to the stat sheet.

“He’s just full of energy non-stop,” Kooi said. “If you watch him during a game and somebody scores, whether it’s a running back, whether it’s a receiver, he’s the first one there [to celebrate]. Those are the things you want to see out of your quarterback — [he] wants everybody else on the field to be successful.”

Salomon has had some recruiting interest from FCS and Division II schools, but is focusing only on what’s in front of him: Saturday’s 6A quarterfinal at home against Kenwood.

“You can only control the controllables,” he said of recruiting. I gotta put myself in the best position to succeed and these guys” — he gestures to his teammates — “they helped me do that.”

Kooi envisions a bright future for his quarterback.

“Somebody’s gonna grab him and then see all the things I’ve been talking about,” Kooi said. “Especially the leadership aspect of it. He’s the same guy off the field. He’s the first guy in any type of drill you do, weight room-wise, speed-wise. And he’s not the fastest. not the strongest. But he’s the guy that’s getting it done all the time.”

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As Steelers’ view of Chase Claypool dwindled, Bears saw limitless potential

Talented young players like wide receiver Chase Claypool usually aren’t available via trade, especially when they’ve already provided solid evidence that they’re going to be very good in the long run.

The Steelers were high enough on Claypool to take him in the second round of the 2020 draft, and it’s not like he was a bust. Over his first two seasons, he put up 1,845 yards of total offense and scored 13 touchdowns. High draft picks sometimes don’t work out, but that clearly wasn’t the case for Claypool.

Yet, even with all his promise, the Steelers were done despite the fact they’re rebuilding similarly to the Bears and could seemingly use exactly this type of player. They basically opted for a refund on Claypool when the Bears sent a 2023 second-round pick to get him.

And Claypool was eager for the fresh start — something players don’t usually need this early. But his best grasp of what happened in Pittsburgh was essentially that the organization saw a relatively low ceiling on his potential, whereas the Bears think he’ll be a star.

The sense that the Steelers didn’t value him was more than a feeling. He saw it in their game plans.

“At some point the perspective on me was like, ‘He’s not a red-zone threat,’ for some reason,” Claypool said. “Or, ‘He’s not a deep-ball threat,’ for some reason. I’m not sure when that happened, but I started getting ‘formation-ed’ away from those things.

“So it was super hard for me to make big plays, because anytime there was a big play drawn up, I was on the other side of it.”

The Bears sketched a much different outlook when Claypool arrived. Given the price to acquire him, there’s little doubt they intend to make him a pillar of their future. With one season left on his rookie contract after this, it’s highly likely they’ll sign him to an extension in the coming offseason.

Claypool is playing just his second game since the Nov. 1 trade, and while he’s picking the offense up quickly, he probably won’t be running at full capacity Sunday against the Lions. He caught two passes for 13 yards on six targets in his debut against the Dolphins, playing just 35% of the snaps.

It’ll probably be double that Sunday, and he hopes to have a thorough grasp of the playbook when the Bears visit the Falcons next week. Claypool is learning a different route tree after spending the first half of the season playing in the slot for the Steelers.

Nonetheless, it’s clear from what he’s heard since he walked into Halas Hall that he’s going to get major opportunities once everything settles.

“You’ll have four or five plays where you can get a good chunk of yards,” he said.

In Pittsburgh, conversely, he felt like the scenario was, “Hey, here’s your one play of the week. Make sure you make a play on this no matter what the coverage is.

At 24, Claypool is the youngest receiver on the Bears’ roster — he still has the most yardage (2,228) and touchdowns (14) in the group — and believes he is still ascending.

“Especially as the opportunities increase,” he said.

And they surely will, because both sides needed each other.

Darnell Mooney leads the team with 32 catches, which ranks 55th in the NFL. The next Bears wide receiver after him is Equanimeous St. Brown with 11.

Mooney, who also is due for an extension after this season, and Claypool give the Bears the best wide receiver combination they’ve had in almost a decade. But general manager Ryan Poles likely is looking for more than that.

It’d be ideal if the Bears picked up an elite receiver with their first-round pick and worked toward a scenario where Claypool and Mooney rounded out their top three instead of leading it. That would be a formidable trio to help quarterback Justin Fields.

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Can the Detroit Lions steal a win from the Bears on Sunday?

Can the Chicago Bears end their losing streak on Sunday? The Detroit Lions come to town for a NFC North showdown

The Chicago Bears (3-6) take on the Detroit Lions (2-6) at Solider Field on Sunday at Noon. The Bears will look to try to end their two game losing streak and get their first win versus a NFC North opponent. The Lions are coming into the game trying to continue their winning ways after beating the Green Bay Packers on Sunday. Here is a position by position breakdown of the Lions:

Quarterback: Jared Goff got off to a great start this season and after four games he had 11 touchdowns passes, 4 interceptions and averaging 282 passing yards per game. However since week 4, he has 3 touchdowns, 4 interceptions and averaging 228 passing yards per game. Goff’s record as the Lions starting quarterback is 5-16-1 and the Lions could trade or release Goff after the season with only a $10 million dollar salary cap hit. Currently, the Lions would have the 5th overall pick in the upcoming draft which is stocked with college quarterbacks that are thought of highly by NFL scouts.

Running Back: Coming into the season, the Lions had planned to rely on D’Andre Swift to be their breakout star on offense however the third year has only played five games this season due to ankle and shoulder injuries. When Swift has played, he has been great as he is averaging 7.3 yards per attempt. Swift is questionable for the game Sunday vs the Bears.

Jamaal Williams has stepped into the starters role and has provide some quality production. Williams has eight rushing touchdowns this season which is only behind the Titans Derrick Henry and Browns Nick Chubb. The Lions have rushed for over 100 yards in seven out of eight games this year. The Bears have the second-worst rush defense in the league and the Bears need to be prepared to deal with this successful rushing attack of the Lions.

Offensive Line: Despite some draft failings in the past, the Lions have done a great job of drafting and developing their offensive line. Four of the five starters that have played the most snaps this season were drafted by the team. This unit has allowed only 13 sacks which is the fourth fewest in the league. In addition, the Lions rank in the top ten in run block win rate this season and as mentioned before has only had one game that they rush for less than 100 yards.

The star of this group is center Frank Ragnow. Ragnow has only allowed one sack this season and only committed one penalty this season. He ranked in the top ten for highest run block for a center this past week. The Lions rushing attack starts up front and the Bears defensive line will need to be ready for this offensive line on Sunday.

Wide Receiver: The passing game of the Lions got off to a great start this season however in two out of the last three games the passing game has failed to surpass 200 passing yards. The leading receiver for the Lions is Amon-Ra St. Brown who also leads the teams in target, receptions and receiving touchdowns. Last season, St. Brown set the franchise rookie record for receiving yards and lead the Lions in receiving in 2021.

This season, he has had the only 100 yard receiving game for the Lions this season. The other two wide receivers Josh Reynolds and Kalif Raymond have lead the Lions in receiving in three and two games respectively this season. This group of wide receivers is nothing like the explosive group of wide receivers that the Bears faced last week vs the Dolphins.

Tight End: The Lions just traded TJ Hockenson to the Vikings at the NFL trade deadline. Hockenson was second on the team in receiving yards and led the team in yards per reception. Hockenson who was drafted 8th overall in the 2019 Draft had an inconsistent career with the Lions and was due to make more than $9 million dollars next season which played a factor in him being traded.

Tight End Brock Wright who started at times when Hockenson was injured made the start vs the Packers on Sunday. Wright got one target however his back up Shane Zylstra did catch a touchdown pass from Goff on Sunday. The Bears have held seven out of eight tight ends they have faced this season to less than 40 yards receiving this season and should have no problem with these two tight ends.

Defensive Line: The Lions have the second fewest sacks in the league and this defensive line has been dreadful and only has one player who has more than one sack and more than two tackles for loss. The star of this defensive line has been rookie Aidan Hutchinson. Hutchinson leads all rookies in the NFL in sacks, quarterback hits and pressures. He leads the Lions in all of those categories as well.

But the rookie defensive lineman has struggled with consistency after getting three sacks vs the Commanders in Week 2, Hutchinson has struggled to beat the double teams that he is seeing now as the only viable pass rusher the Lions have.

As I mentioned earlier, the Lions would have the 5th pick in this year’s draft and they could go after one of the highly regarded defensive lineman such as Alabama Will Anderson and Georgia defensive lineman Jalen Carter.

Linebackers: The Lions have second worst rush defense in the league and are giving up 148.8 rushing yards per game. The team had one of their best performances of the season versus the Packers giving up 108 yards rushing which is the second fewest rushing yards they have allowed all season. One of the best players in that game was linebacker Derrick Barnes. Barnes lead the tackles with 12 and added a sack as well. He was also graded the best run stopper by PFF from the game on Sunday.

The Lions linebackers have struggled with mobile quarterbacks this season giving up 90 rushing yards to Jalen Hurts in Week 1 and gave up over 40 rushing yards to Geno Smith and Aaron Rodgers. Lions Head Coach Dan Campbell has vowed to have a spy on Justin Fields on Sunday to decrease his rushing yards and opportunities.

Secondary: This unit, has underperformed as well with inability to get takeaways and cover any wide receivers. Even though the Lions got 3 takeaways on Sunday versus the Packers, they still gave up 283 yards passing to Aaron Rodgers. The secondary is giving up 8.1 yards per attempt which is the worst in the league and 268.5 yards per game.

Earlier this season, the Lions fired defensive backs coach and passing game coordinator Aubrey Pleasant after the loss to the Dolphins. The Bears should be able to move the ball through the air against this atrocious secondary.

Kicking: Kicker Coming into the season, Austin Seibert was the kicker however he was released from the team after missing two field goals versus the Vikings. Michael Badgley is the now the starter and has brought some stability and consistency to the position. Badgley has made all of his field goal and extra point attempts since becoming the starting kicker in week after 7 vs the Cowboys. Badgley was on the Bears roster earlier this season because of absence of Cairo Santos to deal with a personal issue and made four field goals for the Bears in the lost to the Giants in Week 4.

Punter Jack Fox is tenth in the league with 49.1 yards per punt and the Lions have given up 185 return yards which is the fifth worst in the league. The weather on Sunday is expected to be clear with a wind of 10 MPH so the kicking game should not be affected by the weather.

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Can the Detroit Lions steal a win from the Bears on Sunday?

Can the Chicago Bears end their losing streak on Sunday? The Detroit Lions come to town for a NFC North showdown

The Chicago Bears (3-6) take on the Detroit Lions (2-6) at Solider Field on Sunday at Noon. The Bears will look to try to end their two game losing streak and get their first win versus a NFC North opponent. The Lions are coming into the game trying to continue their winning ways after beating the Green Bay Packers on Sunday. Here is a position by position breakdown of the Lions:

Quarterback: Jared Goff got off to a great start this season and after four games he had 11 touchdowns passes, 4 interceptions and averaging 282 passing yards per game. However since week 4, he has 3 touchdowns, 4 interceptions and averaging 228 passing yards per game. Goff’s record as the Lions starting quarterback is 5-16-1 and the Lions could trade or release Goff after the season with only a $10 million dollar salary cap hit. Currently, the Lions would have the 5th overall pick in the upcoming draft which is stocked with college quarterbacks that are thought of highly by NFL scouts.

Running Back: Coming into the season, the Lions had planned to rely on D’Andre Swift to be their breakout star on offense however the third year has only played five games this season due to ankle and shoulder injuries. When Swift has played, he has been great as he is averaging 7.3 yards per attempt. Swift is questionable for the game Sunday vs the Bears.

Jamaal Williams has stepped into the starters role and has provide some quality production. Williams has eight rushing touchdowns this season which is only behind the Titans Derrick Henry and Browns Nick Chubb. The Lions have rushed for over 100 yards in seven out of eight games this year. The Bears have the second-worst rush defense in the league and the Bears need to be prepared to deal with this successful rushing attack of the Lions.

Offensive Line: Despite some draft failings in the past, the Lions have done a great job of drafting and developing their offensive line. Four of the five starters that have played the most snaps this season were drafted by the team. This unit has allowed only 13 sacks which is the fourth fewest in the league. In addition, the Lions rank in the top ten in run block win rate this season and as mentioned before has only had one game that they rush for less than 100 yards.

The star of this group is center Frank Ragnow. Ragnow has only allowed one sack this season and only committed one penalty this season. He ranked in the top ten for highest run block for a center this past week. The Lions rushing attack starts up front and the Bears defensive line will need to be ready for this offensive line on Sunday.

Wide Receiver: The passing game of the Lions got off to a great start this season however in two out of the last three games the passing game has failed to surpass 200 passing yards. The leading receiver for the Lions is Amon-Ra St. Brown who also leads the teams in target, receptions and receiving touchdowns. Last season, St. Brown set the franchise rookie record for receiving yards and lead the Lions in receiving in 2021.

This season, he has had the only 100 yard receiving game for the Lions this season. The other two wide receivers Josh Reynolds and Kalif Raymond have lead the Lions in receiving in three and two games respectively this season. This group of wide receivers is nothing like the explosive group of wide receivers that the Bears faced last week vs the Dolphins.

Tight End: The Lions just traded TJ Hockenson to the Vikings at the NFL trade deadline. Hockenson was second on the team in receiving yards and led the team in yards per reception. Hockenson who was drafted 8th overall in the 2019 Draft had an inconsistent career with the Lions and was due to make more than $9 million dollars next season which played a factor in him being traded.

Tight End Brock Wright who started at times when Hockenson was injured made the start vs the Packers on Sunday. Wright got one target however his back up Shane Zylstra did catch a touchdown pass from Goff on Sunday. The Bears have held seven out of eight tight ends they have faced this season to less than 40 yards receiving this season and should have no problem with these two tight ends.

Defensive Line: The Lions have the second fewest sacks in the league and this defensive line has been dreadful and only has one player who has more than one sack and more than two tackles for loss. The star of this defensive line has been rookie Aidan Hutchinson. Hutchinson leads all rookies in the NFL in sacks, quarterback hits and pressures. He leads the Lions in all of those categories as well.

But the rookie defensive lineman has struggled with consistency after getting three sacks vs the Commanders in Week 2, Hutchinson has struggled to beat the double teams that he is seeing now as the only viable pass rusher the Lions have.

As I mentioned earlier, the Lions would have the 5th pick in this year’s draft and they could go after one of the highly regarded defensive lineman such as Alabama Will Anderson and Georgia defensive lineman Jalen Carter.

Linebackers: The Lions have second worst rush defense in the league and are giving up 148.8 rushing yards per game. The team had one of their best performances of the season versus the Packers giving up 108 yards rushing which is the second fewest rushing yards they have allowed all season. One of the best players in that game was linebacker Derrick Barnes. Barnes lead the tackles with 12 and added a sack as well. He was also graded the best run stopper by PFF from the game on Sunday.

The Lions linebackers have struggled with mobile quarterbacks this season giving up 90 rushing yards to Jalen Hurts in Week 1 and gave up over 40 rushing yards to Geno Smith and Aaron Rodgers. Lions Head Coach Dan Campbell has vowed to have a spy on Justin Fields on Sunday to decrease his rushing yards and opportunities.

Secondary: This unit, has underperformed as well with inability to get takeaways and cover any wide receivers. Even though the Lions got 3 takeaways on Sunday versus the Packers, they still gave up 283 yards passing to Aaron Rodgers. The secondary is giving up 8.1 yards per attempt which is the worst in the league and 268.5 yards per game.

Earlier this season, the Lions fired defensive backs coach and passing game coordinator Aubrey Pleasant after the loss to the Dolphins. The Bears should be able to move the ball through the air against this atrocious secondary.

Kicking: Kicker Coming into the season, Austin Seibert was the kicker however he was released from the team after missing two field goals versus the Vikings. Michael Badgley is the now the starter and has brought some stability and consistency to the position. Badgley has made all of his field goal and extra point attempts since becoming the starting kicker in week after 7 vs the Cowboys. Badgley was on the Bears roster earlier this season because of absence of Cairo Santos to deal with a personal issue and made four field goals for the Bears in the lost to the Giants in Week 4.

Punter Jack Fox is tenth in the league with 49.1 yards per punt and the Lions have given up 185 return yards which is the fifth worst in the league. The weather on Sunday is expected to be clear with a wind of 10 MPH so the kicking game should not be affected by the weather.

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Chicago Bulls assign Dalen Terry down to G-League

Dalen Terry struggles to find playing time with the Bulls and he’s been assigned to the G-League

The Chicago Bulls made a move not many could see coming, moving their 18th overall selection in this past year’s draft to the Windy City Bulls, the team’s G-League affiliate. Considering the minutes that Terry had been receiving since the start of the season the move doesn’t come as too much of a surprise.

Dalen Terry appeared in just seven games for the Bulls so far this season, averaging just 3 minutes, and .6 points per game according to ESPN.  

Unfortunately for Dalen Terry, he joined a Bulls team this season that was already heavy in the guard department. The team has 6 guards that receive consistent playing time, not including the impending return of Lonzo Ball. With that many guards getting playing time it was hard for the rookie to find a spot in the rotation.

Did the Bulls make the right decision with Dalen Terry?

This does beg the question of whether the Bulls should have used such a high draft spot on a position they were already so heavy on. Instead of going in a different direction like drafting a front-court player like Jake LaRavia, a 6 foot 7 inch power forward who was drafted 19th overall in the 2022 NBA Draft. LaRavia could have helped stretch the floor with his three-point shooting, shooting 52% from behind the line this season.

Or if many remember the Bulls were heavily involved in rumors of acquiring Rudy Gobert, before he was eventually traded to the Minnesota Timberwolves.Considering the substantial package that Gobert was traded for, I don’t think it was necessary a bad decision not to trade for him.

However, it does make you wonder if there was another trade that could have been made like a Jerami Grant of the Portland Trailblazers for instance. Grant was traded from the Detroit Pistons for a future first round pick and three second rounders, a trade that the Bulls could have probably topped.

Only time will tell for the Bulls and Terry if the right selection was made, this isn’t the kiss of death for a player like Terry. Hopefully, he can get into a nice groove with the Windy City Bulls and be called back up whenever needed.

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High school football: Breaking down the top state quarterfinals

Class 8A: No. 5 Glenbard West at No. 9 Maine South, 6 p.m. Saturday

Junior Julius Ellens has been a revelation for Glenbard West (10-1). Running behind a big, experienced line anchored by Wisconsin-bound tackle Chris Terek, he made a splash with 242 total yards and five touchdowns in a Week 1 victory at Marist. In a victory last week against Glenbrook South, Ellens ran for 312 yards and five more TDs. Maine South (9-2) has won seven in a row and has pitched playoff shutouts against Bolingbrook and South Elgin. The Hawks’ offense got a boost when quarterback Ryan Leyden returned from an injury layoff for the postseason.

8A: No. 8 Warren at No. 3 Lincoln-Way East, 1 p.m. Saturday

As usual, Warren (10-1) has a dominant defense, allowing less than 10 points per game. The Blue Devils also have a capable back in Charley Thompson and an effective quarterback in Adam Behrens. Thompson averaged 10 yards per carry and scored three TDs last week against Andrew. Behrens is an Arizona State baseball recruit who returned to the football team for his senior season. Lincoln-Way East (11-0) is in the quarterfinals for the ninth time in the last 10 postseasons, but it has a bigger goal: its third state title since 2017. Quarterback Braden Tischer and running back James Kwiecinski lead a diversified offense, and linebacker Jake Scianna and sophomore end Caden O’Rourke are playmakers on defense.

Class 7A: No. 15 Brother Rice at No. 1 Mount Carmel, 6 p.m. Saturday

It’s the second consecutive season these South Side and CCL/ESCC Blue teams will meet in the Class 7A quarterfinals. Rice won 41-28 last season, but most of the key pieces of that team — including quarterback and Sun-Times Player of the Year Jack Lausch — have graduated. But don’t underestimate these Crusaders (7-4), who lost 28-21 to Mount Carmel in Week 6. Mount Carmel (11-0) has one of the best big-game quarterbacks in the state in Blainey Dowling and a defense that has held eight opponents to single digits. Linemen Asher Tomaszewski and Danny Novickas are headliners on that unit.

7A: No. 6 St. Rita at No. 12 St. Charles North, 1 p.m. Saturday

St. Rita (9-2) has won eight in a row, and its only losses were to the top two teams in the area (Mount Carmel and Loyola). In coach Todd Kuska’s 25th and final season before retirement, the Mustangs are two victories away from their third consecutive trip to the state finals. Junior back DJ Stewart has emerged as a dependable leader for the offense. St. Charles North (10-1) won the DuKane, one of the deepest conferences in the state, and hasn’t lost since falling in Week 1 to Class 8A quarterfinalist Palatine. Two-way standout Drew Surges had more than 200 all-purpose yards, two TDs, an interception and a forced fumble last week against Hoffman Estates.

Class 5A: No. 23 Morgan Park at No. 24 Nazareth, 1 p.m. Saturday

Morgan Park (10-1), in the quarterfinals for the first time since 2007, has plenty of playmakers. Among them are two-way standout Tysean Griffin, quarterback Marcus Thaxton (1,656 yards, 21 TDs), receiver Chris Durr (11 TDs) and linebacker Jovan Clark (91 tackles, 12 tackles for loss). Nazareth (7-4) played one of the toughest schedules in the state and has gone 6-1 after a 1-3 start. Two-way star Justin Taylor, a Wisconsin recruit, and sophomore quarterback Logan Malachuk are players to watch.

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Blackhawks’ Colin Blackwell owns up to mistakes, returns to lineup with new mindset

LOS ANGELES — With a two-year contract in hand, Colin Blackwell entered the season with the Blackhawks poised to take the next step in his long, impressive journey to establish himself in the NHL.

So far, though, he hasn’t taken that next step. And he accepts that fact — and takes responsibility for the reasons behind it.

“I definitely haven’t gotten off to a start that I personally would’ve liked,” Blackwell said. “I have a lot more to give, and I take the onus for that. There’s a lot of ‘look in the mirror’ type of things that I can do better. I have to own up to some of the mistakes I made. But, at the same time, I have confidence in myself. I wouldn’t be here today if that wasn’t the case.”

Blackwell re-entered the Hawks’ lineup Thursday against the Kings — positioned on the fourth-line wing next to Reese Johnson and Boris Katchouk — for the first time in 11 days. He had been healthy-scratched by coach Luke Richardson for three consecutive games.

That benching came after a stretch of game-altering errors. With the Hawks leading the Sabres in the third period Oct. 29, Blackwell had two opportunities to clear the puck out of the defensive zone along the right-side wall. He failed both times, Tage Thompson scored seconds later and the Sabres rallied to win in overtime.

The next night against the Wild was even worse. Blackwell was responsible for both first-period goals the Hawks conceded.

On the first play, he twice anticipated zone exits and cheated up the ice for breakout passes that never came, then lost track of Matt Boldy as he slipped behind the Hawks’ defense and scored. On the second play, he lost inside positioning on — and failed to keep pace with — Mason Shaw, who scored on an easy rebound tap-in.

“It’s just a mental breakdown,” Blackwell said. “It’s about falling into our team structure and trusting that some other things are going to happen so I can be that safety valve. I was trying to do a little too much, and that’s how those breakdowns happen. I didn’t think I did a great job, from a ‘layer’ perspective, of being there for other guys. Those are little things that happen throughout the course of the game, but I had a big one, and it cost us.”

The Sabres and Wild produced 16 scoring chances to the Hawks’ five during Blackwell’s five-on-five ice time that weekend. For the season overall, Blackwell’s 32.8% on-ice scoring-chance ratio ranked 400th among 408 forwards leaguewide entering Thursday.

“He’s just over-trying sometimes,” Richardson said. “[He’s] back-checking and trying so hard that you’re not really aware of what’s coming behind you. . . . We showed him all that. He’s a pro, and he knows that. But it’s good to see it and talk about it.”

One month doesn’t define a player, and Blackwell has two full years of stellar defensive results with the Rangers and Kraken to prove he can succeed in this role.

He’s also a good penalty-killer, speedy forechecker and eager shot-blocker — all positive traits that Richardson said the Hawks will “welcome back.” He simply needs to flush away October’s bad memories and start anew.

“It happens to everybody,” Richardson said. “And there will be a 10-game stretch [later on] when he’s feeling like the top of the world and everything is going right for him. We just want to get him in that right mindset to go out and play free and do his job right.”

Added Blackwell: “If I clean up some of those things and continue my general work ethic and stuff I was bringing to the table beforehand, good things will come.”

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Blackhawks buried in defensive zone during overtime loss to Kings

LOS ANGELES — The Blackhawks endured several ridiculously long shifts pinned in their defensive zone Thursday, including a remarkable four-minute marathon for defenseman Alec Regula at the end of the second period.

They somehow managed to avoid conceding any goals directly within those situations. But the resulting lack of offense still ultimately bit them in a 2-1 overtime loss to the Kings.

Kings forward Kevin Fiala scored with 1.4 seconds left in the extra session to avenge the Hawks’ overtime win in the two teams’ first meeting last week and deal the Hawks their sixth loss in seven games.

“[We need to] just try to do everything you can to not prolong those shifts before you get caught in our own zone,” Max Domi said. “Their team seemed to be generating a lot of momentum out of that. [We’ve] just got to work on closing plays a little quicker, both forwards and ‘D.’ Just a little more communication will solve that problem.”

In net, goaltender Petr Mrazek sparkled in his return from injury. His final stat line of 31 saves on 33 shots undersold his performance.

He repeatedly bailed out his exhausted teammates during those lengthy shifts, joking that he “needed new lungs” after Regula’s marathon. And he made a series of huge saves in the final minute of regulation (and first minute of overtime) to earn the Hawks one point.

“[After] the first few saves, especially the breakaway early in the first period, when you stop that, you feel even more confident, you feel better in there,” Mrazek said.

But the Hawks have scored just four goals in their last four games combined, largely due to the lopsided possession-time deficits they’ve faced each night. The Kings dominated scoring chances, 38-20, on Thursday; it marked the 11th time in 13 games this season the Hawks have been out-chanced.

Coach Luke Richardson said he’ll need to discuss how to reduce the turnovers that lead to those long defensive-zone shifts — and also how to conserve energy within those types of shifts.

“It [requires] that little bit of extra effort,” Richardson said. “[When] you’re not moving your feet and you turn the puck over in the neutral zone or at the blue line and it comes back in your zone, those little plays everywhere on the ice are important. Just little chips in the neutral zone to get guys off the ice. When we don’t do it…it’s going to be a shift spinning around in your ‘D’-zone. It’s not fun.”

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