Chicago Sports

2023 Cubs Convention weekend passes go on sale Thursday

LAS VEGAS — Weekend passes for the Cubs Convention will go on sale Thursday as the team gears up for its return after a two-year hiatus.

Passes will be available to the general public starting at noon Thursday, the Cubs announced, with a presale for season-ticket holders opening at 10 a.m. Hotel-room packages for the 36th convention — which will be held Friday,

Jan. 13, to Sunday, Jan. 15, at the Sheraton Grand Chicago — are already available and come with discounted weekend passes.

”The initial presale for the hotel-room packages went really well, and it’s showing us that there is very much an appetite for the convention to come back and that there’s fan enthusiasm for it,” said Jen Martindale, the Cubs’ senior vice president of marketing ”So we’re just hard at work now on giving them a great experience.”

All-access weekend passes will cost $120, plus convenience fees, with a limit of six per household. The presale passes for season-ticket holders will be discounted at $105, plus fees.

The Cubs canceled the event in 2021 and 2022 because of COVID-19 health-and-safety concerns. The convention was the first fan event of its kind in baseball when it started in 1986.

”The one thing that I think having the two-year break did do for us,” Martindale said, ”is it allowed us to really take a step back and evaluate what are the parts of the convention that are really important that we carry forward and also where are the places where we can enhance the fan experience and freshen it for them.”

The Cubs plan to bring back opening ceremonies with players and alumni on Jan. 13, followed by ”Off the Mound with Ryan Dempster.” Cubs bingo is scheduled for Jan. 14.

As for new programming, the Cubs will have dedicated spaces for pieces from the archive collection that have not been publicly viewed before, including jerseys, baseballs, trophies and awards.

The team also plans to introduce a youth baseball camp Jan. 15, where kids can learn fundamentals from Cubs players, alumni, coaches and possibly some outside experts. For the adult crowd, there will be late-night ”Harry Carayoke” on Jan. 13-14 at the hotel bar.

”Just on the informal side, we know that one of the things Cubs fans love most about the convention is the opportunity to connect with each other,” Martindale said. ”And that means giving them casual things that they can do after the official programming ends.”

The Cubs have yet to finalize the full schedule, but when asked whether fans would have the chance to question ownership and executives, Martindale said it’s one of the team’s goals to ”give as many fans as possible the opportunity to interact with leadership.”

”We’re really interrogating how it’s been done in the past and just thinking, ‘Are there places that we can improve it, so that more fans have that moment of interaction than we have been able to provide in the past?’ ” she said.

This will be Martindale’s first Cubs Convention. The Cubs hired her this past summer from the New Orleans Saints and Pelicans, where she served as their vice president of brand strategy.

”It’s a big responsibility to steward this event,” she said, ”but I have heard how much fun it is. I have heard to prepare myself to get very little sleep. And I have heard that I need to show up with an ice chest — preferably branded with a Cubs logo — possibly some cozy Cubs pajamas to settle in for a late night at the hotel and just experience all of it.”

Read More

2023 Cubs Convention weekend passes go on sale Thursday Read More »

Signing Day: The top 10 college basketball recruiting classes

The top recruting classes in the country.

1. Duke

Jon Scheyer is on fire in recruiting. He landed the top class last year after being named Coach K’s successor, and he backed it up with another No. 1 class this year. This group has a ridiculous amount of five-star prospects: 6-8 Mackenzie Mgbako, a top five player in the country, 6-8 Sean Stewart, guards Caleb Foster and Jared McCain, and 6-10 T.J. Power.

2. Kentucky

A mega-class with a trio of top 10 players in the country — and a combined four five-stars — includes point guard Robert Dillingham, 7-footer Aaron Bradshaw and 6-7 wing Justin Edwards, the No. 2 player in the class. Could the Wildcats add uncommitted superstar DJ Wagner, 247Sports’ top-ranked prospect?

3. Michigan State

Tom Izzo plucked Xavier Booker, Rivals.com’s No. 1 ranked player in the country, out of Indianapolis. The 6-11 Booker headlines a class with four top 100 recruits, including Joliet West point guard Jeremy Fears, Jr.

4. Connecticut

In this day and age of the transfer portal, UConn will bring in an old school class with five high school prospects. The best of the bunch is 6-6 combo guard Stephon Castle out of Georgia, a consensus top 25 talent.

5. Oregon

The combination of Kwame Evans, a 6-9 five-star recruit, and top 20 talent Mookie Cook gives the Ducks the best class in the Pac-12. Oregon prep star and top 50 talent Jackson Shelstad stayed home and is the point guard of the future.

6. Iowa State

Cyclones put together a class full of size, length and star talent. But Omaha Biliew, a power-packed 6-8 top 20 player in the country out of Waukee, Iowa, is clearly the centerpiece.

7. Ohio State

The Buckeyes secured three top 100 players in the country, led by 6-6 wing Scotty Middleton. Combo guard Taison Chatman and two local Ohio prep products, 6-7 forward Devin Royal and 6-9 big Austin Park round out the class.

8. Alabama

The resurgent Crimson Tide basketball program keeps it rolling with a second straight top 10 recruiting class. This year’s four-man class includes three top 100 players. The best of the bunch is 6-7 Mouhamed Dioubate and 6-8 Sam Walters.

9. Kansas

A trio of top 100 guards will bolster the perimeter attack as point guard Elmarko Jackson, shooter Jamari McDowell and combo guard Chris Johnson are all headed to Lawrence.

10. Tennessee

The tandem of 6-5 guard Freddie Dilione and 6-11 J.P. Estrella, both ranked among the top 50 players in the country, have star potential.

Read More

Signing Day: The top 10 college basketball recruiting classes Read More »

Signing Day: Local basketball recruits

When looking back 12 or 18 months ago, no one would have forecasted seven high-major players in the class, especially after top 100 national talent JJ Taylor left Kenwood for California following his sophomore year.

Also, no one would have predicted the number of Division I players would rise to 30-plus in the class. This week the state will have 29 players sign with another handful with either Division I offers or on the bubble of emerging as Division I prospects.

Here is the complete list of area players expected to sign with Division I schools during the early signing period, which runs from Nov. 9 to Nov. 16.

Player, High School, College

Darrin Ames, Kenwood, Kansas State

Darrion Baker, Hillcrest, Akron

Richard Barron, St. Ignatius, George Mason

Troy Cicero, Romeoville, Loyola Maryland

Cameron Christie, Rolling Meadows, Minnesota

Mekhi Cooper, Bolingbrook, Miami Ohio

DeAndre Craig, Mount Carmel, Denver

Dalen Davis, Young, Yale

Jeremy Fears Jr., Joliet West, Michigan State

Jake Fiegen, New Trier, Cornell

Ahmad Henderson, Brother Rice, Niagra

Quentin Jones, Marian Catholic, Cal Poly

Jackson Kotecki, St. Ignatius, Miami Ohio

Sam Lewis, Simeon, Toledo

Mekhi Lowery, Oswego East, Towson

Matthew Moore, Joliet West, UNC-Wilmington

Marcus Pigram, Young, The Citadel

Nik Polonowski, Lyons, Pennsylvania

Miles Rubin, Simeon, Loyola

Wesley Rubin, Simeon, Northern Iowa

Drew Scharnowski, Burlington Central, Belmont

Kaiden Space, Simeon, Stony Brook

Asa Thomas, Lake Forest, Clemson

Read More

Signing Day: Local basketball recruits Read More »

AJ Pollock Enters Free Agency; Declines White Sox Contract Option

AJ Pollock declines $13M player option with the White Sox to become free agent.

Outfielder AJ Pollock has declined his 2023 player option with the White Sox and is now a free agent.

According to Buster Olney, Pollock has declined his $13M player option for 2023 and will take a $5M buyout.

The White Sox acquired Pollock from the Dodgers in March in the Craig Kimbrel trade. The 34-year-old hit .245/.292/.389 with 14 home runs and 56 RBIs in 138 games.

A.J. Pollock is declining his $13m option for ’23 with the White Sox. He receives a $5 million buyout instead, and now becomes a free agent.

He played all three outfield spots and brought a track record of success against left-handed pitching with him to the South Side. Pollock posted a .935 OPS against southpaws.

Pollock began his career with the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2012 and spent seven seasons with the franchise, earning his only All-Star selection in 2015 after slashing .315/.367/.498 with 20 home runs, 76 RBI and 39 stolen bases in 157 games. He also earned a Gold Glove that year.

The Pollock decision frees up an additional $8 million for general manager Rick Hahn as he looks to tweak the roster following a disappointing 2022 season.

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

Read More

AJ Pollock Enters Free Agency; Declines White Sox Contract Option Read More »

Bears fans react to the poor defense in loss to Dolphins

Tua Tagovailoa and the explosive Dolphins offense came to Soldier field and pulled out a close 35-32 win over the Bears

While Justin Fields and the Bears offense did everything they could and were even close to tying the game or winning in regulation the Dolphins hung on to take the win. The non pass interference call has caused plenty of pain with Bears fans but could the defense have done better on Sunday? Some Bears fans think so…

I wouldn’t be surprised if the Bears went heavy defense in the draft. These boys need help.

If only the Bears had a defense to match their stellar offense

A lot of people are acting surprised the #Bears defense looks like this.
They shouldn’t be.
There is zero star power in that front 7 and too much youth in the secondary.

Many were obviously displeased with the defense yesterday but it is fair to see that trading their veteran pass rusher and their best defensive player there would be a slip in defensive production. Other fans are looking on the bright side with the effort on Sunday as well as new draft capital and cap space from these moves.

This #Bears defense may be undermanned, but there is no quit in them!

This rebuild is going beautifully. Our QB is improving every single game. Our offense is dynamic and fun to watch. Our defense is struggling big time but hopefully that gets addressed in the offseason.
And the Bears draft position keeps on improving.

It is interesting to see only halfway through the season this team go from a struggling offense with a stout defense now into a struggling defense with an effective offense. Time will tell if Chicago’s defense can figure out how to manage games to allow the offense to dominate going forward. There are plenty of games left to go but like some of the above tweets the draft capital and cap space could be a saving grace for the defense in the future.

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

Read More

Bears fans react to the poor defense in loss to Dolphins Read More »

GM says prospect Oscar Colas could be White Sox’ right fielder in 2023

LAS VEGAS — Don’t sleep on top prospect Oscar Colas as a potential Opening Day starter in right field, general manager Rick Hahn said.

“I don’t think it’s necessarily too much of an ask,” Hahn said at baseball’s general managers meetings Tuesday.

And, reading between the lines, don’t be surprised if Andrew Vaughn is standing in Colas’ sight line at first base.

“Vaughn is a first baseman,” Hahn said.

As the Sox look this offseason to piece together the broken chunks strewn about the 2022 floor, Hahn said he expects their seventh-ranked payroll to be in the same vicinity as last season ($197 million), and he reiterated that trades over free agency are the most likely avenue for improving the roster.

“We’ll head to camp and see where we’re at,” Hahn said of the Cuban born Colas, 24 . “Obviously there will be offseason check-ins as well and see where the progress is at. But he impressed us last year and is on a real good trajectory to contribute in a meaningful way as soon as next year.”

Colas, who batted .314.371.524 with 23 homers and an .895 OPS in 117 games at three levels including seven at Triple-A Charlotte in 2022, would provide a left-handed bat for a right-hand heavy lineup. His posted his workouts on Instagram have captured some interest.

“That’s a good indicator,” Hahn said with a smile. “That’s the Luis Robert model. He’s working hard. The acclimation period is behind him now, now it’s just a matter of showing that he’s ready and belongs in the big leagues. We believe in this kid. We think a lot of Oscar Colas. Don’t lose sight of that.

“I don’t want him to get lost in your offseason analyses of where we are.”

Hahn also pointed to Eloy Jimenez’ success as a designated hitter, so it stands to reason that will be the primary spot for the slugger who batted .274/.343/ .500 with an .843 OPS with 11 homers in 50 games as a DH in 2022. AJ Pollock will not be part of the club, and should the Sox acquire a left fielder with sound defensive skill, they would field a significantly better outfield with Robert in center and the Colas in right.

Vaughn played out of position, Hahn acknowledged, and “his best defensive position is first base and perhaps getting him [settled] into that position you’re asking a lot less of him and perhaps that it even increases his offensive production as a result.”

Vaughn at first would again suggest star first basemanJose Abreu, a free agent who has played his entire career with the Sox, is allowed to walk. It seems to be where the Sox are headed.

“If he’s not with us next year he’ll be missed,” Hahn said. “It’s good that we’re insulated from a production standpoint against that departure. But certainly would never disrespect the importance he’s meant to this organization.”

Hahn is banking on improvement from players who underperformed or were not healthy or a combination of both, “to get back to accustomed levels.”

“A big part of our improvement will come from that area, we hope,” he said.

As for payroll, Hahn said it’s not set yet and that the budget process is still being processed internally. Colas in right and Vaughn at first would allow for more payroll flexibility elsewhere. A second baseman and starting pitching are two potential places to spend.

“My general expectations are that [payroll] will be somewhere in the vicinity of where it was in 2022 but I don’t have a firm number in hand just yet,” Hahn said. “If I did have a firm number I doubt I would declare it to the world so everyone knows ‘He’s got this left or he needs to get relief here to make a deal.’ ”

Read More

GM says prospect Oscar Colas could be White Sox’ right fielder in 2023 Read More »

Bears’ coaching staff has mastered the art of the steal

”Good artists copy. Great artists steal.”

This quote is attributed to Pablo Picasso. I don’t know whether he said it or not, but I’m going to embody the quote, be a great artist and steal it to make a point about the Bears’ coaching staff.

They’re thieves, dirty rotten scoundrels, and I love every minute of it!

Justin Fields is a unique talent. He’s a ridiculous combination of smarts, competitiveness, size, strength and speed. Unique talents deserve a unique approach to coaching.

There’s a history in the NFL of coaches, especially offensive coaches, being stubborn when it comes to change. If their precious scheme has birthed even a measure of success, they rise to ”guru” status and become pretty rigid about their system.

This doesn’t bode well for quarterbacks who don’t immediately take to the system that is being taught. There have been plenty of coaches who continued to try to keep pounding a square peg into a round hole, no matter the results.

Since the Bears’ loss to the Commanders, we’ve seen a much more interesting path: Theft! Matt Eberflus and his staff went to Fields, talked with him and figured some things out. Then Eberflus and offensive coordinator Luke Getsy got their team together, like Danny Ocean, and set their sights on pulling off the biggest heist in football history.

When you watch Fields and the Bears’ offense, there are clear elements from multiple teams around the league. It shows the Bears’ coaching artistry is pretty good and trending toward great.

From the Giants

Coach Brian Daboll put together an excellent game plan against the Bears for a 20-12 victory in Week 4. At the time, the Giants’ receiving corps was in tatters, so they put the onus on quarterback Daniel Jones to make plays with his feet. He threw only 13 passes for 71 yards, but he ran for 68 and scored two touchdowns on the ground. Jones put the Bears’ defense on skates. The Giants’ ability to use misdirection effectively helped put the game away.

The Bears have done plenty of this in the last three weeks with incredible success. Making the effort to add Fields to the running game has elevated the Bears’ offense into historic company. Since 1976, only the 2022 Bears have had four consecutive games of 225 rushing yards or more. They’ll strive for five Sunday against the Lions.

From the Chiefs

If you’re going to steal, why not steal from the best? Andy Reid is a master offensive designer. He’s also a terrific play-caller. During his time with the Chiefs, he has found unique ways to get the ball into tight end Travis Kelce’s hands. Passes, handoffs, direct snaps, it doesn’t matter.

On back-to-back plays in the first quarter Sunday, the Bears called an end-around for tight end Cole Kmet, then followed it up with a direct snap to him. Both plays netted positive yards. The direct snap converted a third down. The 15-play drive culminated in a 18-yard touchdown pass to Kmet. I promise you’ll see more of this going forward.

From Greg Roman

Roman is the offensive coordinator of the Ravens. He used to have the same job for the 49ers. In both places, he has designed offenses for ultra-athletic quarterbacks. Not so coincidentally, he has worked for Jim and John Harbaugh. During their 11 days off after their game against the Commanders, the Bears looked at the success of Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson as a template for what they can do with Fields.

On Sunday, Fields set a regular-season record for rushing yards by a quarterback with 178 against the Dolphins. The only quarterback to have more rushing yards in a game in NFL history is Colin Kaepernick, who had 181 rushing yards in an electrifying playoff performance against the Packers in 2013.

Guess who Kaepernick’s offensive coordinator was back then? Yep, it was Greg Roman.

Add it all up, and the results have been a masterpiece for Fields and the Bears’ offense. Picasso would be so proud.

Read More

Bears’ coaching staff has mastered the art of the steal Read More »

Blackhawks tweak power play, flipping Max Domi and Patrick Kane

On the surface, the Blackhawks’ power play seems effective this season. Entering Tuesday, it ranked 12th in the NHL with a 24.3% conversion rate.

But digging into the numbers reveals a much uglier picture. The Hawks’ power play entered Tuesday actually ranked 32nd (as in last) in shot attempts per minute. And 32nd in scoring chances per minute. And 32nd in expected goals per minute.

So while the tangible results have been more than acceptable so far, the Hawks have been getting very lucky to achieve them. Regression into the league basement feels somewhat inevitable.

Or maybe not. The Hawks spent the majority of a lengthy practice Tuesday working on special teams, learning lessons from Saturday’s debacle against the Jets. And they made a few small but substantial tweaks to their power-play approach.

“Our in-zone [play] has been good,” coach Luke Richardson said. “We’re moving the puck around well. It’s just [about] getting in the zone. It hasn’t been clean, and we haven’t had a chance to work on it with all the games. … We want to give different options [so] we don’t just do the same thing all the time.”

One notable change involved Max Domi and Patrick Kane flipping sides within the in-zone set-up, with Kane now manning the left and Domi the right side. Caleb Jones continued running the point while Jonathan Toews operated in the bumper role (roving the slot) and Taylor Raddysh held the net-front position.

Kane has historically spent most of his power-play ice time on the right side. He was deadly there last year, for example, as a left-handed passer feeding Alex DeBrincat — a right-handed shot on the left side — for one-timers.

Right now, however, the Hawks’ top unit (“PP1”) is loaded up with left-handed shots. Having Kane on the left side therefore creates three passing lanes — cross-ice to Domi, into the slot to Toews or up top to Jones — that all lead to one-timers.

“It’s pretty obvious when you look at our unit and see all the lefties,” Jones said. “When you have one of the best passers of all time, you probably want him over there where he has one-timers everywhere he’s looking.”

While entering the zone, Kane and Domi can flip-flop sides as they wish, and often they “figure it out between the two of us as we go,” Domi admitted. But Kane entering down the left wing could make that step easier, too, since he’ll be able to protect the puck better on his forehand.

Meanwhile for Jones, moving up from “PP2” to “PP1” in the wake of Seth Jones’ injury has required adjusting his individual approach.

The “PP2,” which Alec Regula quarterbacked Tuesday, focuses on being direct and focus on getting shots through on-goal, because they usually hit the ice during the waning seconds of penalties. On “PP1,” however, there’s much more time to work the puck around and patiently set up a grade-A chance, so Jones is still “trying to find the right time when to shoot and when to pass it.”

The Hawks would also like to draw more penalties in general. They’ve had 37 power plays and 49 penalty kills this season; that minus-12 differential ranked 31st in the league entering Tuesday. Over the past four games, they’ve enjoyed only eight total power plays — and scored just one power-play goal while conceding one shorthanded goal.

So there’s clearly plenty on which to improve. But the Hawks believe Tuesday will help significantly with that.

“It’s still early in the year, and we’re still trying to iron things out with some new personnel and guys that aren’t used to playing together,” Domi said. “We’re just bouncing [ideas] off each other, and that’s how you get results.

“We’re pretty confident what we have going right now is going to work.”

Read More

Blackhawks tweak power play, flipping Max Domi and Patrick Kane Read More »

AJ Pollock declines option with White Sox

LAS VEGAS — AJ Pollock declined his $13 million player option to return to the White Sox in 2023, a source confirmed Tuesday, making the outfielder a free agent.

Pollock will receive a $5 million buyout.

The Sox acquired Pollock from the Dodgers at the end of spring training in exchange for reliever Craig Kimbrel. He batted .245/.292/.389 with 14 homers in 138 games while posting a .935 OPS against lefthanders and was a 0.4 wins above replacement player, per Baseball Reference. Pollock, 35, achieved his 10th year of service time. He has earned $69.5 million during his career with the Diamondbacks, Dodgers and Sox.

Outfielders on the Sox’ 40-man roster include Luis Robert, Eloy Jimenez, Andrew Vaughn, Gavin Sheets, Adam Engel and Mark Payton.

Pollock was generally expected to exercise his option. He played three outfield positions and was one of the better fielders among a defensively weak outfield in 2022, however, and outfield defense is an area the Sox should address this offseason. Having Pollock’s salary off the books should create flexibility to address that need, if not others.

Read More

AJ Pollock declines option with White Sox Read More »

Bears 1st-and-10: The case for Justin Fields’ staying power

Jim Harbaugh went 21-9 in 30 starts in 1990 and 1991.

Erik Kramer set franchise records for yards and touchdowns in 1995.

Cade McNown threw for 301 yards and four touchdowns against the Lions in 1999.

Rex Grossman was an MVP candidate through six games in 2006.

Jay Cutler passed for two touchdowns, rushed for two touchdowns and had 317 yards of total offense in a playoff victory over the Seahawks that sent Bears into the NFC Championship Game in 2010.

Mitch Trubisky threw six touchdown passes against the Buccaneers in 2018.

All of those were promising moments for Bears quarterbacks in the franchise’s never-ending search for just the next Jim McMahon, let alone the next Sid Luckman. But none of them elicited the excitement that Justin Fields did on Sunday against the Dolphins.

It doesn’t take much get Bears fans excited about their quarterback. A completion on a seam route to the tight end or a wheel route to a running back is a revelation in this town. In Green Bay, they call it second down.

But Fields took it to another level with a scintillating performance against the Dolphins. Not only an NFL-record 178 rushing yards by a quarterback, including a 61-yard touchdown, but three touchdown passes — one on a perfect throw to Darnell Mooney and two on well-conceived, well-executed plays to tight end Cole Kmet. Even in Green Bay — and Kansas City and Buffalo for that matter — that performance had to open some eyes.

It was a little too run-heavy to signal Fields’ “arrival” as a franchise quarterback — he only threw for 123 yards (or 151 including a pass interference call on a pass to Chase Claypool). The league is still discovering the kind of threat he is and will respond accordingly.

But while there’s room for skepticism, there’s even more room for optimism that this might be the real deal. To wit:

Fields’ accuracy has improved significantly. He completed 54.8% of his passes in the Bears’ first six games. He’s completed 65.3% of his passes in the last three.Fields is not picking on only chumps. Fields has a 104.7 passer rating and is averaging 257.7 total yards in his last three games — the Dolphins came in ranked 22nd in points allowed, but the Patriots were tied for seventh and the Cowboys were second.Though Claypool obviously helps, Fields still is operating with a modest receiving corps and a makeshift offensive line. As Claypool gets acclimated and the line finds some semblance of continuity, Fields’ opportunity for growth figures to increase.And perhaps most of all, offensive coordinator Luke Getsy seems to be learning every week what he’s got in Fields. There’s still a long way to go, but already Getsy has generated a confidence in his players that the offensive coordinator knows what he’s doing.

“Sometimes you’re in the huddle and you’re like, ‘Oh, hell yeah –that’s a great time to call this,'” Kmet said. “He’s got a great feel for all that and all the players really are believing in that. That confidence has just been building and we’ve had it from the beginning. It’s just continuing to build as the weeks have gone on.”

2. Fields is running more but taking fewer hits. On third-and-10 on the Bears’ first possession, Fields scrambled out of bounds three yards short of the first-down marker and settled for a field goal instead of barreling through defenders to gut out the first down. That’s a prudent “live-for-another-day” play — especially that early in the game — that shows maturity in his game.

3. Timing is everything. With expectations soaring, Fields now faces the NFL’s two worst defenses — the Lions (32nd in points and yards) on Sunday at Soldier Field; and the Falcons (31st in points and yards) on Nov. 20 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

Presuming Fields’ passes those tests, the next showdown comes — believe it or not — against the Jets on Nov. 27 at the Meadowlands. The Jets’ defense has improved rapidly under Robert Saleh. The Jets are seventh in points allowed and eighth in yards, and held Lamar Jackson to six carries for 17 yards (2.8 average) in Week 1.

And over the last six weeks, the Jets have held opposing quarterbacks to a 60.9 passer rating (two touchdowns, nine interceptions). That’s the lowest in the NFL in that span.

4. With games against the Lions and Falcons up next, we might not be far from speculation that Getsy will be a prime head coaching candidate after this season — and the subsequent lament that Fields will have to start all over again with a new coordinator in 2023.

That’s the danger of hiring a defensive head coach with a quarterback prospect, but general manager Ryan Poles accounted for that when he hired Matt Eberflus, who laid out a plan beyond Getsy in the interview process.

“That’s where Matt separated himself,” Poles said when he was hired in January. “He had a Plan A, Plan B, Plan C –because we all know that things get shaken up all the time. You get a great coordinator and he’s [a] head coach quickly. Well, what happens after that?

“He had a nice plan … that made sense to sustain success for a long period of time. It wasn’t short-sighted, where we have success — we saw what happened with Atlanta with [Kyle] Shanahan leaving, and then it crashes. What’s the progression of it? He had that laid out … and that set himself apart.”

5. Stat of the Week: The Bears are improving in another key offensive statistic — third-down conversions. They converted 10-of-16 third-down plays against the Dolphins and have improved to 10th in the NFL (43.4%).

The Bears were 28th in the league in third-down conversions in the first five weeks of the season (36.1%). In the last four weeks, they are fourth (53.0%).

6. Never underestimate the mediocrity of the NFL.

7. If you’re into the idea that the Bears’ best plan in this rebuilding season is to develop Fields and lose games to get a high draft pick, Sunday was a near-perfect game.

Fields was magnificent and even though he failed in the end, both attempts were on-target throws –the disputed pass interference no-call on Claypool and a fourth-down drop by Equanimeous St. Brown, who is a long shot to be in the picture for 2023.

8. Did You Know? The Bears lead the NFL with 54 rushes of 10 or more yards. That’s as many as they had in 17 games last season and already more than they’ve had in all but four of 30 seasons since the end of the Ditka era — 2013 (60), 2017 (58), 2011 (58) and 2012 (57).

Fields has 22 rushes of 10 or more yards (fourth-most in the league) and running back Khalil Herbert has 17 (eighth).

9. Josh McCown Ex-Bears Player of the Week: Six days after being traded to the Ravens, linebacker Roquan Smith had five tackles –stopping Alvin Kamara for gains of two, one and one yard in the first half to set the tone — in a 27-13 victory over the Saints at Ceasars Superdome.

Besides his five tackles, Smith’s presence seemed to infuse the Ravens with a purpose. The Ravens came in ranked 24th in the NFL in yards allowed (364.3 per game), butheld the Saints, who came in fifth in total offense, to 243 yards — 151 below their season average of 394.4 yards.

10. Bear-ometer: 7-10 –vs. Lions (W); at Falcons (W); at NY Jets (L); vs. Packers (W); vs. Eagles (L); vs. Bills (L); at Lions (W); vs. Vikings (L).

Read More

Bears 1st-and-10: The case for Justin Fields’ staying power Read More »