Chicago Sports

Blackhawks’ Max Domi and his dog, Orion, share unique connection

On the ice, Blackhawks forward Max Domi plays like a fire simmers beneath him.

He’s always ready to explode into celebration after a goal. He’s also always ready to explode into anger if an opponent irritates him. Indeed, there’s rarely a calm moment during his shifts.

“That’s just Max,” Hawks coach Luke Richardson said recently. “He takes things into his own hands. He’s a physical guy, an emotional guy, [and] I can tell when he gets upset and he implements it into his game. He adds that extra gear.”

But once Domi drives home to his self-described “full zoo” of pets, his emotional personality manifests itself in a completely different way. There’s no more devoted animal lover on the Hawks.

“I try to live every day like it’s your last,” Domi said. “But everyone is going to go through tough spells, whether it’s with your work or relationships or family or you got cut off on the highway. But when you go back to the front door and see your dog, all that stuff doesn’t mean anything.

“I’m a huge proponent of having a dog. They’re like a human that unfortunately doesn’t talk. But it’s almost like you can have a full conversation with them. The dog and human connection is unbelievable.”

Since his 2015-16 NHL rookie season with the Coyotes, Domi hasn’t gone anywhere without his beloved yellow Lab, Orion. Last year, Domi added a bengal cat, Leo, to his family. And Domi’s girlfriend, Estelle, had a bunny who passed away last week; Domi dedicated his winning goal against the Red Wings to it.

Domi, the son of legendary NHL enforcer Tie Domi, grew up in Canada around plenty of dogs. But after his diagnosis at 12 with Type 1 diabetes, he needed a special dog — and that’s how he found Orion, who had been specially trained for diabetics by an organization in California.

“I would take cotton swabs of my mouth if [my blood sugar] was low or high,” Domi explained. “It gives off distinct smells for dogs; it’s totally different if it’s low or high in range. He was trained from the time he was a puppy, after he got all his obedience stuff done, to retrieve that scent. He would know something’s off. When he would get that scent, he would do something to alert me or whoever [was around].”

For a long time, Domi didn’t like the idea of having “too many gadgets” attached to his body, finding them bulky and uncomfortable underneath his hockey gear. That meant he truly needed Orion to keep an eye — or, more accurately, a nose — on him at all times. His health depended on it.

When Domi’s glucose levels deviated out of the normal range, Orion would grab a dog-toy-like roller attached to Domi’s belt, called a bringsel, to notify him. If Domi was asleep or oblivious, Orion would dial things up a notch by barking or jumping on him. During Domi’s first few NHL seasons, which he admits were “overwhelming” at times, having a literal watchdog was an invaluable resource.

“When I was at a dinner, at a movie, on a plane, wherever it may have been, and he was with me, he’d alert me,” he said. “I would know I was low, and I could treat it before I was in a major situation. What he could do was fascinating.”

Three years ago, he finally gave into technological advancement and began wearing a continuous glucose-monitoring device — a Dexcom G6 — on his triceps. He also wears an insulin pump on his glute, and both devices stay on even during games. Domi has encountered in-game complications before.

“Every day, you’re going to go through something,” he said. “You just have to take the punches as they go. You establish a good routine over the years: If this happens, I’ll do this, [or] if that happens, I’ll do that. There’s a lot of times where you have to fight through feeling not-so-hot. It makes you pretty mentally tough. It’s something that’s definitely shaped me into who I am.”

The decision to wear the Dexcom has changed his life, he said, and made Orion less essential for health purposes.

But it certainly hasn’t made Orion less essential otherwise because their bond is based on far more than logistical necessity.

“When he knows you better than anyone else does, it’s a pretty spectacular connection,” Domi said. “I love him more than anything on the planet.”

Domi has bounced around the league far more than most 27-year-old forwards, making stops in Arizona, Montreal, Columbus and Carolina before landing in Chicago this summer, and Orion has gone everywhere with him.

Given the Hawks’ rebuilding plans and Domi’s one-year contract, they’re a good bet to move again before the trade deadline in March. Domi has clicked immediately with the Hawks in the meantime, though, picking up seven points (including four goals) in his first seven games.

Back at home, Orion was joined by Leo in the spring of 2021 after Domi — who’d previously “never had any exposure to cats at all” — realized he loved them, too, thanks to a chance encounter on a Caribbean vacation in the Turks and Caicos.

“We were staying at this beautiful resort, and this cat was just part of the resort in the lobby,” Domi explained. “He kept coming up to me the whole trip. And I just thought, ‘Oh, I’m the cat whisperer! This is pretty cool. This cat’s awesome.’

“I joked about it with [Estelle] like, ‘Hey, I might get a cat.’ She was like, ‘No, you’re not.’ And, sure enough, I got a knock on the door, and my cat showed up. I love him just like I love my dog.”

And that’s saying a lot because Domi sure loves his dog.

“It’s unbelievable how smart dogs are, and I think my dog is the smartest dog out there,” he said with a grin. “I’m not biased at all.”

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As Bears face Cowboys franchise QB Dak Prescott, they’re still struggling to find their own

As the Bears press on in their seemingly endless search for a franchise quarterback, holding out hope that Justin Fields is their guy, they’re between opponents who found talent relatively easily in the middle and late rounds of the draft.

Last week they visited the Patriots, and Sunday it’ll be the Cowboys.

The Patriots famously landed future Hall of Famer Tom Brady in the sixth round of the 2000 draft but have yet another intriguing prospect in rookie Bailey Zappe. They picked him in the fourth round this year even though they already had a promising 2021 first-rounder in Mac Jones.

When the Cowboys needed a reboot at quarterback near the end of Tony Romo’s run, they took Dak Prescott in the fourth round in 2016. He was the eighth quarterback drafted that year, behind one player who never threw an NFL pass, then surpassed everyone in his class by becoming a star.

Prescott shined immediately, finishing sixth in MVP voting while leading the Cowboys to a 13-3 record as a rookie. His passer rating has been 96.9 or higher in all but one season. The Cowboys signed him to a four-year, $160 million contract last year, and, at 29, they’ll probably sign him to another one when it ends.

Other than Aaron Rodgers, Prescott probably will be the best quarterback the Bears have faced this season — depending on how much he has recovered from his broken thumb. In his first game back, he put up a modest line (by his standards) of 19-for-25, 207 yards and a touchdown for a 113.2 passer rating. The Bears expect to see the best version of him.

“I’m definitely more comfortable [this week] just having more practice reps,” Prescott said.

How can it be so easy for other teams to find guys like that, yet so arduous for the Bears?

Before Fields, the Bears paid a steep price to trade up one spot to pick Mitch Trubisky at No. 2. During the Jay Cutler years, the only quarterbacks the Bears drafted were Dan LeFevour (sixth round, 2010), Nathan Enderle (fifth round, 2011) and David Fales (sixth round, 2014).

Former Bears general manager Ryan Pace said when he took the job in 2015 that he thought it was smart to draft a quarterback every year, then didn’t. He only drafted Trubisky and Fields when the Bears had bottomed out at the position.

By the way, his successor skipped the position this year, too. In Ryan Poles’ first draft class, he had eight Day 3 picks and didn’t use any of them on a quarterback. The Bears also didn’t bring in any undrafted quarterbacks, instead proceeding with Trevor Siemian and Nathan Peterman.

Consider that while the Bears declined to use draft picks on quarterbacks while they had Cutler and Trubisky, the Patriots drafted 10 of them during the Brady years. Some of them, such as Matt Cassel and Jimmy Garoppolo, were valuable trade assets. There’s nothing wrong with having a surplus of quarterbacks.

The Cowboys know that. Even after hitting the jackpot with Prescott, they took Mike White in the fifth round two years later, brought on undrafted rookie Cooper Rush the next year and drafted Ben DiNucci in the seventh round in 2020. Rush was serviceable for them this season while Prescott rehabbed his thumb.

Consider what would happen this season if Fields was sidelined by an injury. Siemian would fill in for him, and those games wouldn’t mean much because there’s nothing to explore there. He’s 30 and won’t factor significantly into the Bears’ future. Same for Peterman.

Even if the Bears were sure about Fields, at least there would be some excitement about an up-and-comer if they needed him for a stint. They would be wise to add an intriguing late-rounder next year regardless of where they stand on Fields. The more chances they give themselves, the better their odds of getting it right.

For now, though, all they can do is hope Fields stays healthy and keeps progressing.

He was solid against the Patriots, completing 13 of 21 passes for 179 yards with a touchdown and an interception and running 14 times for 82 yards and a touchdown. That performance helped the Bears to a stunning 33-14 blowout against Bill Belichick’s Pats, but it takes more than that to be a franchise quarterback.

It set a viable template, and now Fields needs to follow it and add a little more of everything. His running ability is proven, but he needs more production as a passer.

Fourteen quarterbacks are averaging at least 250 passing yards per game. If Fields, who has averaged 149.7 this season and topped 250 only twice in his career, can ramp it up into that range and maintain his prowess as a rusher, that’s the total package the Bears have been seeking.

Every game for Fields needs to be a step toward doing that consistently. That’s when the Bears will know they have the biggest piece of their rebuild in place.

Prescott strung together impressive performances quickly. He threw for nearly 300 yards in his second start, and that was the beginning of a stretch of topping a 100 passer rating in 10 of 11 games.

Fields has had big games but hasn’t stacked them.

He looked good against the 49ers and Steelers in back-to-back games last season, then got hurt against the Ravens and didn’t play much down the stretch.

He had what looked like a breakout performance in the loss to the Vikings this month, then fell flat while losing to the Commanders before rebounding against the Patriots. He has to level out and be more reliable for the Bears to trust him the way the Cowboys have invested their future in Prescott.

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‘Surreal’ night for Bulls star DeMar DeRozan, who hits milestone in a loss

SAN ANTONIO — It was a midrange jumper, of course. It was only fitting that it would be.

With 5:43 left in the first quarter Friday against the Spurs, Bulls forward DeMar DeRozan pulled up for a 19-footer and drained it, becoming the 50th player in NBA history to score 20,000 points in his career.

He finished the game with 33 points, but the Bulls lost to the Spurs 129-124.

Still, while the Bulls (3-3) were unable to win their third consecutive game, the night was all DeRozan’s.

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, who coached DeRozan for three seasons before the sign-and-trade deal that brought him to the Bulls, called a timeout right after the basket so that DeRozan could get a proper ovation from the crowd that used to cheer him nightly.

Included among those who were applauding when DeRozan popped up on the scoreboard was Popovich.

”A beautiful, wonderful human being,” Popovich said of DeRozan, referring to the relationship the two had as player and coach. ”One of the best that I’ve ever coached. I still stay in touch with him. He’s just a sweet man.”

And, at the same time, a lethal scorer. Afterward, DeRozan called the night ”surreal.”

”To be honest with you, it’s beyond surreal,” DeRozan said. ”Just being mentioned in scoring records, top 50 all-time, being able to get the respect from one of the greatest coaches of all time, having the honor to play here and these fans embrace me the way they did my three years [here], it’s just crazy how things come full circle.

”It didn’t feel real when it happened. I wish we would have gotten the win, but just to have that type of moment was definitely unforgettable.”

DeRozan entered the game seven points shy of the milestone. What made it even more impressive was that a lot of the work he did in reaching the plateau came from midrange jumpers and the free-throw line.

While the group of 20,000-point scorers might start to balloon with all the three-point shooters playing now, there was something old-school about DeRozan’s accomplishment.

”DeMar is incredibly humble,” Bulls coach Billy Donovan said. ”I think it’s a great reflection on the time and investment that he’s put into this throughout his career. He’s obviously always been a talented scorer, but he does it very, very efficiently.

”I think with this milestone, he’s in the top 50 players of all time. That’s pretty remarkable. I’m sure as a kid growing up, that’s not something he ever thought would happen, but he’s going to go down as one of the greatest scorers in this league.

”I do hope he can take some time and reflect on the journey to get to that point and do what he did.”

The Spurs didn’t give DeRozan much time to do that Friday, giving the Bulls all they could handle.

After spotting the Spurs an early 14-point lead, the Bulls were able to run them down but unable to pull away.

That became even more difficult when guard Ayo Dosunmu was forced into the locker room and checked for a concussion in the third quarter before returning in the fourth.

He returned to a nailbiter. The Spurs grabbed the lead with 4:31 left and kept it the rest of the way.

”It was just kind of a strange game,” DeRozan said. ”We’re still working through things on the defensive end, but this one was on us.”

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3 moves that give Chicago Cubs fans nightmares to this day

The Chicago Cubs have made some decisions in recent memory that are leaving a sour taste

With it being spooky season and all what better time to discuss some moves that the Chicago Cubs front office made that haunt Cubs fans worldwide? Now before we get into it, this is not a piece that is slamming the current regime and demanding change in lieu of these moves. Jed Hoyer and the rest of his team have actually been pretty solid all things considered especially given the fact that he has Theo Epstein-sized shoes to fill. Now that we cleared that up, here is the 1st frightening move that raises the hair on the back of Cubs fans’ necks.

The Andrew Chafin trade

The Chicago Cubs sent Andrew Chafin packing to Oakland back in 2021 for outfielder Greg Deichman and right-handed pitcher Daniel Palencia. Now I am not sure what is scarier, the return for Chafin or the fact that Chafin has kept rolling since he left Chicago. Greg Deichman was designated for assignment in August this year after hitting .214 in 78 games. Daniel Palencia had a 3.94 ERA and a solid 11.7 SO/9 in his first full professional season in Low and high A this year but is probably not part of the Chicago Cubs future anytime soon.

As for Andrew Chafin the mustached wonder has been phenomenal since leaving Chicago. With Oakland, he put up an unheard-of 1.53 ERA, and in 2022 with Detroit he pitched to the tune of a 2.83 ERA which is the 3rd best mark of his career in a full season. Chafin also saw a tick-up in his strikeout numbers in 2022 posting his highest SO/9 clip since 2020.

The Cubs are in win now mode and while the Cubs bullpen wasn’t horrendous this year having Chafin in it probably could have netted them a few more wins here and there. Now they can only hope to add a left-handed bullpen threat like Chafin through free agency.

Losing Anthony Rizzo

Trading Anthony Rizzo to the Yankees will probably go down as one of the most heartbreaking trades in Chicago Cubs history. Rizzo was a massive fan favorite and was truly one of a kind. Yes it was a good idea to trade him at the time in 2021 since contract negotiations went down the toilet and get some value instead of letting him walk for nothing but still, Rizzo will forever be etched into Chicago Cubs history.

The trade itself was actually a pretty good one for the Chicago Cubs. They got a top 100 prospect in Kevin Alcantara whom had a great season at low A this year and is truly looking the part as a top prospect. They also received pitching prospect Alexander Vizcaino who get this, did not show up this year. Yup, that’s right he literally did not show up to spring training this year. So essentially this trade was Rizzo for Alcantara straight up which is pretty good value for the Cubs even with Vizcaino being a non-factor.

This is the scary part Cubs fans. Chicago had a chance to absolutely fleece the Yankees. When the trade took place Rizzo was a rental for New York. Meaning the Cubs had a chance to gain a top 100 prospect for nothing if they brought back Rizzo in the offseason.

Instead the Cubs front office passed up on this lucrative opportunity and Rizzo went ahead and hit 32 home runs for the Yankees, his most since 2017, to go along with his gold glove defense. A total that would have led all Cubs hitters this season. So long as the Cubs don’t have a consistent option at first base and Rizzo is still producing the way he is this trade will continue to make Cubs fans sleep with the lights on at night.

Look away Cubs fans this is the worst of the worst

The move that takes the cake as the most horryfing move the Chicago Cubs have made in recent memory is easily the Kyle Schwarber ordeal. After the 2020 season the Cubs decided to save some money by non-tendering slugger Kyle Schwarber and boy did he make them pay. Directly following this move Schwarber signed with the Washington Nationals and promptly notched his first all star appearance.

Since leaving the Chicago Cubs Schwarber has launched 78 home runs and that is even with spending a good chunk of time on the IL so that number should be even higher. This year Schwarber is a huge part of why the Phillies are currently in the World Series. He led the National League with 46 big flys and added 94 RBIs and made his second career all star appearance.

Once again the Cubs had a chance to reunite a fan favorite with the team this past offseason. After having a career year in 2021 Schwarber was a free agent and Jed Hoyer simply gawked at the opportunity to add him to the mix. Im sure watching highlights of Kyle absolutely punishing baseballs in Philly this year was just pure torture for Cubs fans.

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High school football: Maine South shuts down Bolingbrook’s high-powered aerial attack

Bolingbrook threw the football early and often and deep this season. Jonas Williams, the Raiders’ freshman phenom quarterback, posted huge numbers and slung long balls all over the field to I’Marion Stewart and Kyan Berry-Johnson, his two talented receivers.

Maine South was ready. The Hawks added a defensive package to focus on deep passes and coach Dave Inserra had the raw data: Bolingbrook passed the ball 80 percent of the time.

Suddenly, an offense that averaged 42 points against a challengig schedule couldn’t score. Maine South shut out the Raiders 24-0 in a Class 8A first-round playoff game Friday in Park Ridge.

“We knew they would be tough but I didn’t anticipate getting shut out,” Bolingbrook coach John Ivlow said. “I thought it would be a shootout. It’s just one of those things that happens. They do it right here.”

Williams was 15 of 29 passing for 113 yards with four interceptions.

“He was getting hit but still trying to throw the ball afterwards,” Maine South linebacker Brady Marques said. “We wanted to take advantage of that and ended up getting two pics off of it. The defensive line did a great job keeping the pressure on him.”

The Hawks played most of their season with starting quarterback Ryan Leyden. The senior was injured Sept. 2 against Warren. Junior Jack DeFilippis filled in admirably, but Maine South’s offense hit a different level with the experienced lefty under center.

Leyden played five drives in the Hawks’ Week 9 win against New Trier. That was his first appearance since the injury.

“He played outstanding,” Inserta said. “But he still has a long way to go in terms of getting both healthy and more sharp.”

Maine South (8-2) settled for field goal attempts on its first two drives. Michael Dellumo’s big second effort led to a three-yard touchdown early in the second quarter that put the Hawks up 10-0. Leyden connected with Sean Mullan on a 14-yard score later in the quarter and Leyden scored on a one-yard run midway through the third quarter.

Leyden was 18-for-36 passing for 222 yards with one interception.

“I’ve learned a lot the past four years,” Leyden said. “Last year I was on a state-runner up team. This week I had a lot of reps in practice and got used to the play calling. Our coaches put us in a position to be successful. I just had to execute.”

Dellumo, a sophomore, had 13 carries for 69 yards. Mullen caught four passes for 56 yards and Maurice Densmore had five receptions for 71 yards.

“[Bolingbrook] obviously posed some threats,” Inserra said. “We knew they were going to throw the ball and we had to take away the run and be able to focus on the passing game. The boys did a great job of getting pressure on him.”

Joshua Robinson had 13 carries for 57 yards for the Raiders (6-4). Stewart finished with eight catches for 54 yards.

Maine South will face undefeated South Elgin on the road in the second round next weekend.

“Our expectations haven’t changed since the summer,” Marques said. “It’s always the same here. The goal is a state title.”

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High school football: How the Super 25 fared in the first round

1. Mount Carmel (9-0)

7A: Saturday vs. Buffalo Grove

2. Loyola (8-1)

8A: Saturday vs. Plainfield South

3. Lincoln-Way East (10-0)

8A: Won 42-7 vs. Conant

4. York (10-0)

8A: Won 31-10 vs. Oswego East

5. Simeon (10-0)

6A: Won 48-8 vs. Oak Forest

6. Glenbard West (8-1)

8A: Saturday vs. Lockport

7. Hersey (10-0)

7A: Won 49-14 vs. Argo

8. Lemont (10-0)

6A: Won 55-14 vs. Eisenhower

9. Prospect (9-1)

7A: Won 62-13 vs. Reavis

10. Marist (7-3)

8A: Won 42-28 at No. 20 Naperville North

11. St. Rita (8-2)

7A: Won 27-14 vs. Geneva

12. Warren (9-1)

8A: Won 26-14 vs. Stevenson

13. Maine South (8-2)

8A: Won 24-0 vs. Bolingbrook

14. Crete-Monee (7-2)

6A: Saturday vs. Centennial

15. Prairie Ridge (8-1)

6A: Saturday vs. Crystal Lake South

16. St. Charles North (9-1)

7A: Won 47-10 vs. Maine West

17. Wheaton North (9-1)

7A: Won 35-14 vs. Willowbrook

18. Batavia (7-3)

7A: Won 42-0 at Guilford

19. Lake Zurich (9-1)

7A: Won 48-6 vs. Larkin

20. Naperville North (7-3)

8A: Lost 42-28 vs. No. 10 Marist

21. Plainfield North (10-0)

8A: Won 48-12 vs. Rich

22. Sycamore (9-0)

5A: Saturday vs. Westinghouse

23. Brother Rice (6-4)

7A: Won 27-0 at Jacobs

24. South Elgin (10-0)

8A: Won 28-20 vs. Belleville East

25. IC Catholic (9-1)

3A: Won 63-0 vs. King

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Chicago Bulls Guard DeMar DeRozan reaches 20,000 Career Points

DeMar DeRozan reaches a unique milestone Friday night in San Antonio

Chicago Bulls Guard DeMar DeRozan reached 20,000 career points Friday night against his old team, the San Antonio Spurs, in typical DeRozan fashion.

He becomes the 50th player in NBA history to reach the achievement.

Congratulations to DeMar DeRozan on scoring 20,000 career points in the NBA 👏 pic.twitter.com/ligImEnM4A

— ClutchPoints (@ClutchPointsApp) October 29, 2022

After hitting the mid-range jump shot, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich called a timeout, leading to congratulations and cheers from his current and former teammates and the fans in attendance.

Congrats DeMar!

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Bulls guard Zach LaVine misses Spurs game, as knee saga continues

SAN ANTONIO – It will likely never reach the soap-opera status that the Derrick Rose knee drama took on for the Bulls a decade ago.

But the Zach LaVine “left knee management” saga was starting to at least feel like the beginnings of a spin-off.

Listed as questionable leading up to the Spurs game on Friday, coach Billy Donovan made it official in his pre-game presser that LaVine would indeed miss the front-end of the back-to-back games, instead looking to play Saturday night when Philadelphia comes to the United Center.

It was the third game LaVine missed, and likely his norm for the time being when it comes to back-to-backs.

What Donovan did clear up was the Bulls medical team now seems to have a better grasp of the situation and how they want to handle it.

That was not necessarily the case last week, when LaVine missed the two road games to open the season in Miami and Washington, debuting last Saturday against Cleveland.

“I think there’s going to be a combination of the scheduling where [LaVine] may be able to get more rest on the front-end or back-end, what he’s come out of load-wise leading up to that point,” Donovan said. “I think there will be a lot of things that will go into it.

“Like I mentioned when the season started and he missed those two games, it was a lot of the medical guys had to get a grasp of how he was doing. But we just want to make sure that we’re managing him well and not putting him in situations that are preventing him from being on the floor when he can be.”

This weekend was the second of four back-to-backs the Bulls will play through the first three weeks of the regular season, with the next on Tuesday and Wednesday, playing in Brooklyn and then back home for Charlotte.

They do have a back-to-back, home-and-home with Toronto on Nov. 6-7, and then the schedule lightens up.

If the same schedule is kept intact, LaVine would likely continue sitting out the first game – which also happens to be all road games.

The unknown in all of this remained if this would be the way the entire season will be handled or just the first half?

LaVine couldn’t answer that when he was asked last week, and Donovan reiterated what his guard originally said.

The good news was that LaVine did get a light workout in during the Thursday practice, and also made the trip to be around his teammates.

Alex Caruso again started in his place.

Warming up?

It’s been baby steps, but Patrick Williams has shown a bit more life on the offensive end the past few games, and done it his way, which means not pressing the issue.

One thing the former No. 4 overall pick won’t do is shoot just to shoot, even if teammates are telling him to.

“They know I won’t,” Williams said of that idea. “Once I start to see, ‘OK, these are the spots I need to be aggressive,’ then I think it will be OK. Because then the coaching staff knows, and now the players know, ‘Hey, in these moments, Pat will be aggressive. Let’s use his skillset to help us.’ But as long as we keep winning, that’s what matters first and foremost.”

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High school football: IHSA state football playoff scores

Class 8A

#32 Conant (5-4) at #1 Lincoln-Way East (9-0), Fri. 6

#17 Neuqua Valley (7-2) at #16 Lane (7-2), Fri. 6

#25 Stevenson (6-3) at #8 Warren (8-1), Fri. 7

#24 Andrew (6-3) at #9 Huntley (8-1), Fri. 7

#29 Belleville East (5-4) at #4 South Elgin (9-0), Fri. 6

#20 Bolingbrook (6-3) at #13 Maine South (7-2), Fri. 7

#28 Lockport (5-4) at #5 Glenbard West (8-1), Sat. 1

#21 Homewood-Flossmoor (6-3) at #12 Glenbrook South (8-1), Fri. 7:30

#31 Oswego East (5-4) at #2 York (9-0), Fri. 7

#18 Marist (6-3) at #15 Naperville North (7-2), Fri. 7

#26 Downers Grove South (6-3) at #7 Palatine (8-1), Fri. 7

#23 Minooka (6-3) at #10 Glenbard East (8-1), Fri. 7

#30 Rich (5-4) at #3 Plainfield North (9-0), Fri. 6

#19 Naperville Central (6-3) at #14 Lyons (7-2), Fri. 7

#27 Plainfield South (6-3) at #6 Loyola (8-1), Sat. 1

#22 Edwardsville (6-3) at #11 O’Fallon (8-1), Sat. 7

Class 7A

#32 Buffalo Grove (4-5) at #1 Mount Carmel (9-0), Sat. 1

#17 Downers Grove North (6-3) vs. #16 Lincoln Park (7-2) at Lane, Sat. noon

#25 Bradley-Bourbonnais (5-4) at #8 Collinsville (8-1), Fri. 6

#24 Brother Rice (5-4) at #9 Jacobs (8-1), Fri. 7

#29 Maine West (5-4) at #4 St. Charles North (8-1), Fri. 7:30

#20 Hoffman Estates (6-3) at #13 Elk Grove (7-2), Sat. 1

#28 Reavis (5-4) at #5 Prospect (8-1), Fri. 7

#21 Geneva (6-3) at #12 St. Rita (7-2), Fri. 7

#31 Argo (5-4) at #2 Hersey (9-0), Fri. 7

#18 Batavia (6-3) at #15 Guilford (7-2), Fri. 6:30

#26 Libertyville (5-4) at #7 Yorkville (8-1), Fri. 7

#23 DeKalb (6-3) at #10 Moline (8-1), Fri. 7

#30 Plainfield Central (5-4) at #3 Pekin (9-0), Fri. 7

#19 Normal (6-3) at #14 Hononegah (7-2), Fri. 7

#27 Willowbrook (5-4) at #6 Wheaton North (8-1), Fri. 7

#22 Larkin (6-3) at #11 Lake Zurich (8-1), Fri. 7

Class 6A

#16 Schurz (5-4) at #1 Wauconda (8-1), Fri. 7

#9 Antioch (6-3) at #8 Notre Dame (6-3), Fri. 7

#13 Deerfield (6-3) at #4 St. Ignatius (7-2), Fri. 7

#12 Grayslake Central (6-3) at #5 Belvidere North (7-2), Fri. 7

#15 Crystal Lake South (5-4) at #2 Prairie Ridge (8-1), Sat. 1

#10 Riverside-Brookfield (6-3) at #7 Kaneland (6-3), Fri. 7

#14 Senn (5-4) at #3 Grayslake North (8-1), Fri. 7

#11 Harlem (6-3) vs. #6 Amundsen (7-2) at Winnemac, Sat. 2

#16 Eisenhower (5-4) at #1 Lemont (9-0), Fri. 6:30

#9 Quincy (7-2) at #8 Glenwood (7-2), Fri. 7:30

#13 Kenwood (6-3) at #4 Perspectives (8-1), Sat. 1

#12 Washington (6-3) at #5 Bremen (8-1), Fri. 7

#15 Oak Forest (5-4) vs. #2 Simeon (9-0) at Gately, Fri. 7:15

#10 Champaign Centennial (7-2) at #7 Crete-Monee (7-2), Sat. 1

#14 Danville (6-3) at #3 Normal West (8-1), Sat. 1

#11 Richards (6-3) at #6 East St. Louis (7-2), Sat. 3

Class 5A

#16 Westinghouse (5-4) at #1 Sycamore (9-0), Sat. 7

#9 Carmel (6-3) vs. #8 Bulls Prep (7-2) at Lane, Sat. 3:30

#13 Pritzker (5-4) at #4 Goode (8-1), Sat. noon

#12 St. Viator (5-4) at #5 Sterling (7-2), Sat. 2

#15 Fenwick (5-4) vs. #2 Morgan Park (8-1) at Gately, Sat. 5

#10 ITW Speer (6-3) vs. #7 Payton (7-2) at Lane, Sat. 7:15

#14 Hillcrest (5-4) at #3 Boylan (8-1), Sat. 1

#11 Nazareth (5-4) at #6 Glenbard South (7-2), Fri. 7

#16 Ottawa (5-4) at #1 Mahomet-Seymour (9-0), Fri. 7

#9 Jacksonville (6-3) at #8 Metamora (6-3), Sat. 2

#13 LaSalle-Peru (5-4) at #4 Morris (7-2), Fri. 7

#12 Centralia (5-4) at #5 Triad (7-2), Sat. 2

#15 Dunlap (5-4) at #2 Highland (8-1), Fri. 7

#10 Marion (6-3) at #7 Mascoutah (6-3), Sat. 1:30

#14 MacArthur (5-4) at #3 Peoria (8-1), Sat. 1

#11 Mt. Vernon (5-4) at #6 Kankakee (7-2), Sat. 3

Class 4A

#16 Ridgewood (5-4) at #1 Richmond-Burton (9-0), Fri. 7

#9 Sullivan (6-3) vs. #8 UP-Bronzeville (6-3) at Hales, Fri. 7:15

#13 Providence (5-4) at #4 Wheaton Academy (8-2), Fri. 7:30

#12 Phillips (5-4) at #5 Joliet Catholic (7-2), Fri. 7

#15 Johnsburg (5-4) vs. #2 Hyde Park (9-0) at Gately, Sat. 1

#10 Dixon (6-3) at #7 Rochelle (7-2), Fri. 1

#14 Marengo (5-4) at #3 St. Francis (8-1), Fri. 7

#11 Comer (6-3) at #6 Evergreen Park (7-2), Fri. 6

#16 Geneseo (5-4) at #1 Carterville (9-0), Sat. 1

#9 East Alton-Wood River (6-3) at #8 Coal City (6-3), Sat. 2

#13 Effingham (5-4) at #4 Rochester (8-1), Sat. 1

#12 Mt. Zion (6-3) at #5 Breese Central (7-2), Sat. 1

#15 Hall (5-4) at #2 Sacred Heart-Griffin (9-0), Fri. 7

#10 Waterloo (6-3) at #7 Richland County (7-2), Sat. 2

#14 Quincy Notre Dame (5-4) at #3 Macomb (9-0), Sat. 7

#11 Columbia (6-3) at #6 Murphysboro, Fri. 7

Class 3A

#16 Peotone (5-4) at #1 Princeton (9-0), Fri. 6

#9 Elmwood-Brimfield (6-3) at #8 Genoa-Kingston (7-2), Sat. 1

#13 King (5-4) at #4 IC Catholic (8-1), Fri. 7

#12 Monmouth-Roseville (5-4) at #5 Stillman Valley (8-1), Fri. 7

#15 Carver (5-3) at #2 Reed-Custer (9-0), Sat. 2

#10 Catalyst Maria (6-3) at #7 Pecatonica (7-2), Sat. 1

#14 Winnebago (5-4) at #3 Seneca (9-0), Fri. 7

#11 Lisle (5-4) at #6 Byron (8-1), Fri. 7

#16 Paxton-Buckley-Loda (5-4) at #1 Prairie Central (9-0), Fri. 7

#9 Roxana (6-3) at #8 Hillsboro (6-3), Sat. 1:30

#13 Harrisburg (5-4) at #4 Tolono Unity (8-1), Sat. 2

#12 Monticello (5-4) at #5 Mt. Carmel, Ill. (8-1), Sat. 2:30

#15 Stanford Olympia (5-4) at #2 Benton (8-1), Sat. 3

#10 Robinson (6-3) at #7 St. Joseph-Ogden (6-3), Sat. 3

#14 Carlinville (5-4) at #3 Williamsville (8-1), Fri. 7

#11 Beardstown (5-4) at #6 Eureka (7-2), Fri. 7:30

Class 2A

#16 North Lawndale (5-4) at #1 Maroa-Forsyth (9-0), Sat. 2

#9 El Paso-GRidley (7-2) at #8 Farmington (7-2), Sat. 3

#13 Newman C.C. (5-4) at #4 Rockridge (8-1), Sat. 1

#12 Bloomington C.C. (6-3) at #5 Mercer County (7-2), Sat. 2

#15 Westville (5-4) at #2 Bismarck-Henning (9-0), Fri. 7

#10 Unity-Payson (6-3) at #7 Knoxville (7-2), Sat. 1

#14 Chicago Christian (5-4) at #3 Wilmington (8-1), Sat. 6

#11 Clifton Central (6-3) at #6 Tri-Valley (7-2), Sat. 2

#16 Chester (5-4) at #1 St. Teresa (9-0), Sat. 3

#9 Athens (7-2) at #8 Cami White (7-2), Sat. 2

#13 Auburn, Ill. (6-3) at #4 Pana (8-1), Fri. 7

#12 Fairfield (6-3) at #5 North Mac (8-1), Sat. 2

#15 Flora (5-4) at #2 Johnston City (9-0), Sat. 1

#10 Arthur-Lovington (7-2) at #7 Vandalia (7-2), Sat. 2

#14 Althoff (5-4) at #3 Shelbyville (8-1), Sat. 3

#11 Nashville (7-2) at #6 Red Bud (7-2), Sat. 1

Class 1A

#16 Chicago Richards (5-4) at #1 Lena-Winslow (9-0), Sat. 2

#9 Stark County (5-4) at #8 Oneida (5-4), Fri. 7

#13 Aurora Christian at #4 Fulton (7-2), Sat. 2

#12 Rockford Lutheran (5-4) at #5 Annawan-Wethersfield (7-2), Sat. 1

#15 Corliss (5-4) at #2 Hope Academy (9-0), Fri. 7

#10 Forreston (5-4) at #7 St. Bede (7-2), Sat. 2

#14 Morrison (5-4) at #3 Ottawa Marquette (8-1), Sat. 1

#11 Dakota (5-4) at #6 Iroquois West (7-2), Sat. 1:30

#16 Madison (5-3) #1 Ridgeview-Lexington (9-0), Fri. 7

#9 Salt Fork (6-3) at #8 Red Hill (7-2), Sat. 2

#13 Brown County (5-4) at #4 Tuscola (7-2), Sat. 2

#12 Villa Grove (6-3) at #5 Routt (7-2), Sat. 1

#15 Dupo (5-4) at #2 Camp Point Central (9-0), Sat. 1

#10 Central A&M (6-3) at #7 Sesser-Valier (7-2), Sat. 2

#14 Calhoun (5-4) at #3 Greenfield-NW (8-1), Sat. 2

#11 Rushville (6-3) at #6 Cumberland (7-2), Sat. 2

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College Football: 12 pm primetime games best bets 10/29

There are plenty of good matchups during week 9 of the college football season as we inch closer to conference championships and the playoffs.

The primetime games on Saturday are exciting and here are the best bets for the 12pm window

Ohio State vs. Penn State on FOX

100% the game of the day but we have to watch it at noon instead of having a “White Out” at Beaver Stadium. Ohio State won by 44 points last week and the spread was -30. It’s pretty impressive to win a game like that and by that much and have everybody say you played a bad game. I stated in the recap of last weeks best bets that it did feel weird they won by that much because Ohio State absolutely did not look sharp. They’re a dominant team though. When you get a chance just look at their offensive lineman they are monsters. The o-line has been good all year but to be fair to them they struggled to run the ball last week for the first time all year. Penn State has been slipping a little bit more in their run defense that started off so hot. To me Ohio State needs run the ball like they used to if they want to cover.

Penn State is home back to back weeks and the crowd is going to favor them heavily in this game at least for a little while. They looked good last week on both sides of the ball. Sean Clifford made some solid throws and their two headed rushing attack was brilliant. Michigan has a good defense and Penn State did not fair well against them.

They were away which is a fair argument but you can argue Ohio State has a better defense than Michigan led by Jim Knowles and Tommy Eichenberg. Sean Clifford like I’ve already said just isn’t that good of a college football QB and I think he’ll have some flashes in this game where he throws a couple single coverage sideline deep balls but consistently I don’t think he keeps them on the field. If Penn State can run the ball well then I think they cover easily to be honest. If the pressure can stay off Clifford and he’s not forced to throw often on 3rd down Penn State is in business.

The Bet: Stroud needs to bounce back after looking sluggish, Ohio State defense is legit and I don’t trust Sean Clifford. Ohio State -15.

TCU vs. West Virginia on ESPN

TCU comes into this game looking like a real contender. At least to everybody else. I was against TCU last week with Kansas State +3.5 and TCU yet again injured a QB and came back and won the game. Let’s look at the list of QB’s that have been hurt against them. Dillon Gabriel for OU, Jalon Daniels for Kansas, Spencer Sander for OK. St (he stayed in the game but he was not ok) and finally Adrian Martinez for Kansas State as well as the backup Will Howard. Now I like Max Duggan the TCU QB because he is tough as nails but he’s not a great QB.

I’ve seen plenty of his games to know he’s not very accurate and he doesn’t mind forcing passes over the middle. What I’m trying to say is TCU should not be undefeated. They have caught some breaks these past weeks and I while I think they are a good team I just feel like they will run out of gas soon enough.

West Virginia is in the type of year that a lot of Big 12 teams will find themselves in. They play well one week against a Big 12 opponent and then they get beat by another Big 12 opponent and so on. Just like the Pac-12, the Big 12 just beats each other up. Even when Oklahoma was dominant in college football they always had one random loss to someone in the Big 12 that’s just what the conference is. While they sit at 3-4 and their transfer QB JT Daniels has not been as advertised they play at home this week and the simple fact of it is that West Virginia at home vs. a ranked opponent is scary. If they can keep the ball on the ground with Tony Mathis and not force JT Daniels to throw too much West Virginia is in business.

The Bet: West Virginia at home is scary, TCU I feel is running out of gas. West Virginia +7.5.

Notre Dame vs. Syracuse on ABC

Notre Dame stinks this year there’s no other way to put it. I don’t understand how they didn’t go and try to find a better college football QB than Tyler Buchner to start the year. He is obviously hurt now but he is not the answer there. They currently have Drew Pyne as the QB and he’s been ok in his role. He certainly throws a lot to the best tight end in the country Michael Mayer as he should the guy is a beast. The defense hasn’t been stellar this year even with a defensive head coach and plenty of top recruits. It will be interesting to see how they attack the offense Syracuse runs with Shrader and Tucker both keen to run the ball.

Syracuse had a tough game to swallow last week when they lost to Clemson. It is fair to say though that the defense for Syracuse is good. They certainly will need to be good again as the one thing that Notre Dame has going for them is their size. We saw Syracuse fair well against a bigger team in Clemson as they have some monsters on the o-line and d-line.

Notre Dame is the same, as watching them this year when they play a team like BYU who just does not have the size on the line they got bullied. Shrader will need to be a little smarter this week and find ways to have consistent drives in the second half. Pressure was an issue late last week where I believed he could have taken off earlier, as he likes to run, instead of sticking in the pocket. Finally Syracuse needs to give the ball to Sean Tucker more as he barely touched it against Clemson and when he did he was very very good.

The Bet: Notre Dame’s size scares me as well as trusting Syracuse head coach Dino Babers but Syracuse is home and they have a shot to beat Notre Dame in college football which is massive for them. Syracuse -2.5.

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