Chicago Sports

High school football: How the Super 25 fared in Week 7

1. Mount Carmel (7-0)

Won 42-0 at St. Laurence

2. Loyola (7-0)

Won 34-22 at Providence

3. Lincoln-Way East (7-0)

Won 52-14 at No. 20 Homewood-Flossmoor

4. York (7-0)

Won 31-7 at Hinsdale Central

5. Simeon (6-0)

Saturday vs. Kenwood at Lane

6. Glenbard West (5-1)

Saturday vs. Downers Grove North

7. Hersey (7-0)

Won 49-0 at Wheeling

8. Lemont (7-0)

Won 68-30 vs. Richards

9. Prospect (6-1)

Won 55-27 vs. Buffalo Grove

10. Bolingbrook (4-3)

Lost 34-33 at Lockport

11. Marist (4-3)

Won 37-7 at Montini

12. St. Rita (5-2)

Won 52-19 vs. Marian Central

13. Warren (6-1)

Won 47-0 vs. Waukegan

14. Maine South (5-2)

Won 45-7 vs. Niles West

15. Crete-Monee (5-2)

Won 30-26 at Rich

16. Joliet Catholic (5-2)

Lost 31-24 (2 OT) vs. Brother Rice

17. Neuqua Valley (6-1)

Won 28-0 vs. Waubonsie Valley

18. Prairie Ridge (6-1)

Won 35-14 vs. Dundee-Crown

19. St. Charles North (6-1)

Won 38-7 vs. St. Charles East

20. Homewood-Flossmoor (4-3)

Lost 52-14 vs. No. 3 Lincoln-Way East

21. Wheaton North (6-1)

Won 8-7 vs. Wheaton-Warrenville South

22. Batavia (5-2)

Won 33-7 vs. Geneva

23. Kankakee (5-1)

Saturday at Bloom

24. Lake Zurich (6-1)

Won 14-6 at Lake Forest

25. Plainfield North (7-0)

Won 22-21 at Minooka

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High school football: Brother Rice beats Joliet Catholic in overtime on Owen Lyons’ diving grab

Brother Rice needed a defensive stand in the second overtime to hold on to a 31-27 in against No. 16 Joliet Catholic on Friday at Memorial Stadium in Joliet.

But the play that will be remembered was being recreated on the sidelines by young Crusaders fans just seconds after it occurred: Owen Lyons made an improbable, diving one-handed grab while sliding into the end zone to score for Brother Rice in the second overtime.

It came on third down after the Crusaders had been beaten back to the 26 after a sack.

“It was a little bit overthrown but I just pumped my arms and reached out and made the grab,” Lyons said. “I kinda blacked out for a second but I opened my eyes and I was in the end zone.”

It was a gutsy throw by junior quarterback Ryan Hartz, who was 9 of 15 passing for 140 yards with one touchdown and an interception. Lyons had five catches for 97 yards.

“It was one of those plays where when in doubt you just go to your best player,” Hartz said. “I have no doubts in calling on him.”

Joliet Catholic (5-2) led 14-3 at halftime after scoring on an 86-yard pass from TJ Schlageter to Justin Bonsu in the final minute of the second quarter.

The Crusaders (4-3) had moved the ball better in the first half, but the big play was the difference in the games.

Brother Rice’s comeback began under another quarterback, junior Jake Dugger. He found Owen Gorman in the end zone on a fourth down play from the 4 to pull the Crusaders within four points.

Brother Rice took the lead three minutes later on a one-yard run from Hartz. Joliet Catholic tied the game at the buzzer with a 27-yard field goal from Patrick Durkin.

The Hilltoppers were able to sustain some long drives with their run game but never broke open a big play.

“For as long as I’m here I will never allow a team to run down our throats,” Crusaders coach Casey Quedenfeld said. “It’s the most demoralizing thing.”

Teshon McGee had eight carries for 45 yards for Brother Rice and senior Martin O’Keeffe had five catches for 46 yards.

The Crusaders have lost to St. Rita, Loyola and Mount Carmel this season so their record doesn’t tell an accurate story. They gave the Caravan their toughest test of the season, losing 28-21.

“We just had the mentality of staying hungry,” Lyons said. “We’re not satisfied with losing to Mount Carmel. We built on that this week and luckily we came out on top today.”

Brother Rice hosts Marian Catholic next week and finishes up the regular season at home against Marist.

Schlageter led Joliet Catholic on a fast and furious drive in the final two minutes of the game but it stalled at the Brother Rice 10 and the Hilltoppers settled for the field goal as time expired. He was 6-for-16 passing for 171 yards and one touchdown.

Aaron Harvey had 12 carries for 40 yards for Joliet Catholic. Bonsu finished with 13 carries for 44 yards and a touchdown and three receptions for 126 yards and a touchdown.

“We’re seven games into the season now so we can’t really use inexperience as an excuse,” Hilltoppers coach Jake Jaworski said. “But we are still making mistakes as if we are inexperienced and that’s not good. Give credit to Brother Rice but we just left too many plays on the field.”

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Gastón Giménez pens new three year deal with Chicago Fire

Chicago Fire FC has opened a 2023 Designated Player roster slot as it signs Paraguay international, Gastón Giménez, to a new and improved contract.

Chicago Fire has announced the signing of midfielder, Gastón Giménez to a new contract, opening up a Designated Player slot on the roster ahead of the 2023 Major League Soccer campaign.

The 30-year-old’s new deal begins in January, extending his time at the club through the 2025 season.

The Paraguay international also received his U.S. Green Card earlier this year and will no longer occupy an international roster slot.

“Gaston is a talented player who is very important to the club,” Chicago sporting director Georg Heitz said in a release. “His decision to restructure his contract to provide the team with more roster flexibility speaks volumes about his character and desire to win titles with the Fire.”

✍️ New contract for Gastón!
🔥 2023 DP slot opens for #cf97!

Giménez originally joined Chicago from Argentine Primera side Vélez Sarsfield in February 2020. He has had a challenging start to his MLS career and managed a record of two goals and six assists across 65 games (59 starts), though is recovering from a right hamstring surgery in late August.

With Giménez no longer taking a Designated Player spot, Chicago will have Swiss international midfielder Xherdan Shaqiri and Mexican winger Jairo Torres occupying those tags for the 2023 season.

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Blackhawks trade Riley Stillman to Canucks for Jason Dickinson, 2nd-round pick

The Blackhawks converted some of their salary-cap flexibility into another upper-end draft pick Friday.

Depth defenseman Riley Stillman was traded to the Canucks for depth forward Jason Dickinson and a 2024 second-round selection.

The pick is the clear prize for the Hawks in the swap. They now own 12 picks in the first three rounds of the next two NHL drafts — two picks in each round of both drafts. As general manager Kyle Davidson continues the franchise’s rebuild with full steam ahead, those picks will provide a steady stream of high-upside prospects.

For the Canucks, the primary motivation is salary-cap savings. Stillman, 24, carries a $1.35 million cap hit for the next two seasons; Dickinson, 27, carries a $2.65 million cap hit for the next two seasons. The Hawks can easily absorb that $1.3 million difference, though, considering they still have roughly $7 million in cap space remaining for 2022-23 (per CapFriendly) and far more for 2023-24.

Stillman finishes his Hawks tenure with 13 points in 65 games since being acquired as part of ex-general manager Stan Bowman’s failed trade with the Panthers for Henrik Borgstrom in spring 2021.

He hadn’t particularly stood out during training camp or preseason this year, and his departure opens another roster spot for one of the Hawks’ NHL-ready prospect defensemen. Isaak Phillips was recalled from the AHL earlier Friday, joining Alec Regula, Alex Vlasic and Filip Roos in the battle for opening-day roster spots.

“[I spent] a lot of time on the ice, working with [our] skills coach, to make plays coming out of my own end, tape-to-tape,” Stillman said earlier in camp. “[I’m] just trying to be clean that way and continue to expand my game.”

Dickinson tallied 11 points in 62 games for the Canucks last season. A first-round pick by the Stars in 2013, Dickinson is a consistent if unremarkable third- or fourth-line center with 74 points in 283 career NHL appearances.

He’ll join a Hawks roster loaded with bottom-six forwards that new coach Luke Richardson has shuffled through various line combinations at will during camp.

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Bulls tweak the starting lineup, and it pays off in win over Nuggets

If preseason games are the best time to experiment, Bulls coach Billy Donovan could have worn a white lab coat and goggles Friday night.

Always mum about his lineups, Donovan offered up his first real wrinkle ahead of the regular season, starting Javonte Green over Patrick Williams — the No. 4 overall pick of 2020 — in an eventual 131-113 win over the Nuggets at the United Center.

Although the staying power of Green in that spot remains to be seen with two preseason games left, it paid instant dividends. Green gave the starting group some much-needed energy and fit in with the flow of the offense, finishing with 15 points on 5-for-7 shooting with four rebounds.

“It doesn’t matter where I’m playing or how many minutes I’m playing, I’m just there to make the team better,” Green said.

As for Williams, the demotion didn’t noticeably change the way he played — still passive at times — but it sent a message.

“I thought overall we played better,” Donovan said. “Did I like it? Yeah. Javonte has played with that group in the past. I think it’s trying to find combinations that work together — right now, just trying to look at different combinations of guys. For me, it was, ‘OK, what does Patrick look like with that second unit?’ There were a lot of things we wanted to look at.

“It’s a preseason game. The last thing I would call it is a demotion.”

Semantics? Maybe. Williams was a hot topic at the Advocate Center after the Bulls’ loss to the Pelicans in the preseason opener, with the talk centering on his confidence and whether he’s in his own head too much.

“I think for Patrick, his focus and concentration needs to be totally from the shoulders up,” Donovan said Wednesday. “Sometimes Patrick can overthink . . . and then he gets to that point where he looks passive.”

Williams himself said he needed to continue working on “self-talking” his way out of those moments. He didn’t start off well in his new role Friday, scoring just two points as a reserve in the first half. But he showed a lot more life in the second half, scoring nine points, including a three-pointer.

“There’s not an issue at all there,” Donovan said.

Green-for-Williams wasn’t Donovan’s only experiment against the Nuggets. While hometown kid Ayo Dosunmu was still the starting point guard, Donovan wanted him to approach the job with more freedom than he did against the Pelicans. In that game, Donovan felt Dosunmu was looking over to the bench too much to determine what calls to make.

“One of the things we’ve been trying to work on is where he’s not feeling so compelled to [ask], ‘What should I call?’ or ‘What should I do?’ ” Donovan said. “We’ve got to allow him to where he can be aggressive, to attack, and to let him initiate things.”

There were moments, especially in the third quarter, when Dosunmu pushed the ball up the floor more aggressively while also looking for his own shot when it was warranted.

Donovan has yet to explictly say Dosunmu is the replacement for Lonzo Ball (recovering from surgery on his left knee), but there aren’t many other logical options right now.

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Max deal hasn’t changed Zach LaVine, according to Bulls’ Billy Donovan

Zach LaVine promised that the max contract he received in the offseason wouldn’t change him, and the Bulls guard wasn’t lying.

At least in the eyes of coach Billy Donovan he wasn’t.

“Just being around Zach for two years, he to me is a really grounded guy,” Donovan said on Friday, when asked about LaVine being in a new tax bracket and how he’s been dealing with it. “His family is very important. I have not seen a change in him as it relates to as a person. He always takes great responsibility to want to perform at a high level. He’s worked very hard to get to this point.”

And the reward was a large one, as the Bulls gave LaVine a five-year, $215 million deal that includes a player option at $48.9 million in the final season.

He was asked about the pressures of that deal when he first signed it, and then again at the start of this training camp, and has been very consistent with his response.

“I put the highest expectations on myself more than anybody, and I keep developing my game like I have the last nine years of my career,” LaVine said recently. “I think I’ve gotten better each and every year. I’m going to continue to do that. I don’t think a contract is going to give me any extra motivation for that because I already have enough myself.”

That doesn’t mean the expectations haven’t changed.

Donovan said he has been very hands-off as far as mentioning the deal to LaVine. Instead, he’s taken the approach of, “you don’t pass too much judgement of just like jumping in and saying,’ Hey Zach, you got this contract … ‘ Let’s just see how he handles himself. He’s been really good in practice and his dialogue, his communication. I have not seen anything from him as far as any personality change or anything like that.”

But the coach admitted that there was still “a lot of room for [LaVine] to improve.”

According to Donovan, LaVine was really bothered last season when his left knee issue hampered him, especially on the defensive end, and was still wearing that coming into this season.

“There’s another level he needs to get to,” Donovan added.

Numbers game

Rookie Dalen Terry continued living by the motto of “I’ll do whatever the coaches need me to do.”

Where it will get interesting is will that attitude earn him a regular rotation spot when the Bulls open the regular season in Miami on Oct. 19?

Donovan said there will be in-depth conversations about that by the coaching staff and the front office when the preseason wraps up.

“I like him a lot from the standpoint of the make-up of him as a competitor, and his motor, and his energy, those types of things,” Donovan said of Terry. “That’s what is going to be the interesting part is the decisions that are made going into that first game in Miami. Because like I’ve said before, we’re not going to be able to play everybody. Someone is going to be out of the rotation.”

Terry’s versatility might help, as he’s shown that he can not only be a wing defender and play off the ball, but can also run the point if need be. What Donovan did insist was the 18th overall pick better be ready, either way.

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Bears top CB Jaylon Johnson (quad) takes ‘big step,’ but unlikely to play vs. Vikings

Top cornerback Jaylon Johnson is recovering well from the quad injury that kept him out of the last two games, but the Bears probably won’t have him against the Vikings on Sunday.

That’d be highly problematic for the defense, which is full of question marks at that position behind him.

And it’d be highly disappointing for Johnson, who has been eager for another shot at covering star wide receiver Justin Jefferson.

“That’s what I wake up and want to play this game for — those big-time matchups and just really being able to prove who I am to the world, to myself, to my team,” Johnson said.

He practiced Friday for the first time since hurting his quad in practice Sept. 22. Johnson said he did individual drills and a little bit of team reps, and Bears coach Matt Eberflus listed him as doubtful for the Vikings game. NFL coaches tend to be very liberal with the “questionable” game status, so any player designated doubtful is a long shot to play.

Still, it’s a plus for the Bears that he was back on the field. If he misses the game Sunday, there would still be optimism that he’d be ready by Thursday to face the Commanders.

Without him, the Bears would have to count on Kindle Vildor and rookie Kyler Gordon to handle Jefferson, Adam Thielen and K.J. Osborn.

Johnson is the Bears’ best corner by far and one of the top players on the team overall. In the first two games, he did not have a single pass thrown his way.

Working back from the quad injury has been “really a slow process” that necessitated a lot of rest. Johnson said he is itching to play, but didn’t answer when pressed on whether he felt he was ready to do so Sunday.

That said, his work Friday was promising.

“I can move pretty well,” he said. “I’m doing really good at improving my speed and my strength and stuff like that.

“It’s big just being able to move with the team and against other people. Just being able to see where I’m at, moving laterally, reacting and different things like that was a big step in the right direction.”

The Texans’ Davis Mills and the Giants’ Daniel Jones didn’t challenge the Bears’ secondary much in Johnson’s absence, in part because it has been much more advantageous to run against the Bears.

Over the last two games, Gordon allowed an 89.5 passer rating and Vildor allowed a 103.6. The Bears also gave undrafted rookie Jaylon Jones extensive playing time with 57 snaps. He didn’t play at all when Johnson was healthy.

“We have bigger issues than the young guys in the secondary,” Johnson said of the defense. “We’ve gotta stop the run initially. We’ve all gotta do a better job of that at all three levels and really [force] a team to put the ball in the air for the DBs to make plays.

“All those [young cornerbacks] are doing their jobs. They’ve just gotta keep improving, keep working on the little things.”

It helped that neither the Texans nor Giants had the strength to expose them. The Vikings, meanwhile, have much more firepower in the passing game.

Jefferson has 25 catches for 393 yards and two touchdowns in four career games against the Bears. He caught 10 passes for 147 yards last week against the Saints while being covered primarily by four-time Pro Bowl cornerback Marshon Lattimore.

While the possibility of Johnson sitting and Jefferson putting up a huge game is scary, it’s not as terrifying for the Bears as Johnson being out long term. If he isn’t back to full speed, it’s better to give him more time than to rush him and risk a more significant injury.

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Chicago Fire Department’s first entrance exam since 2014 draws diverse pool, but rules have changed

More than 8,157 applicants — 57.7% of them Black and Hispanic, 15.7% women — have already applied to take Chicago’s first firefighters entrance exam since 2014.

Testifying Friday at City Council budget hearings, Human Resources Commissioner Chris Owen said another 12,638 people have started an application but not finished.

The exam will be only the fourth the department has administered in 44 years.

With additional recruiting events scheduled before the Oct. 17 application deadline, Owen said he’s “pretty sure we’re gonna get closer to the 20,000 number that we typically see” for a Chicago Fire Department entrance exam.

So far, the 8,157 applicants include: 6,747 males (82.7 percent); 1,281 females (15.7 percent) and 129 applicants who did not identify their gender.

The applicant breakdown so far: 2,677 (32.8%) are white; 2,077 are Black (25.4%); 2,632 are Hispanic (32.2%); 113 are Asian-Americans (1.3%).

Ald. Nicole Lee (11th), the first Chinese-American and second Asian American to serve on the council, said she was “really disturbed by the tiny number” of Asian Americans in the applicant pool.

“I’d like to see a bigger, more intentional plan around that. Clearly there are plans in other communities and this one’s obviously been overlooked at this point,” Lee said.

“Very disappointing because we have such a small number of firefighters within the department right now. And we need to be able to recruit new ones — especially with the language-access needs there are across the city.”

Last year, Annette Nance-Holt became the first woman to serve as fire commissioner in the 162-year history of the department.

She promptly vowed to diversify a department with a long, documented history of discrimination through “vigorous recruitment in communities of color,” outreach to high school students in “under-represented communities” and by scheduling an exam no later than early 2022.

Well, better late than never.

The entrance exam will be held in December, with plans for exams to be held every two years after that.

But Owen said the rules have changed to reduce the costs that made more frequent testing too expensive.

Instead of having all applicants take the test, the city will use a lottery to choose 4,500 exam-takers, with 80% of those spots reserved for Chicago residents.

If the lottery doesn’t produce an exam pool with enough city residents, “you start pulling people in and pushing people out who aren’t city residents,” Owen said.

Budget Chair Pat Dowell (3rd) asked what happens if “everybody is male” after the 4,500 test-takers are chosen.

“We’re not explicitly allowed under the law to take that into account,” Owen said. “However, the goal again is to get as much diversity in the applicant pool as we possibly can. And we are seeing better diversity numbers than we have in the past with the recruitment campaign.”

The new approach is expected to save the city $3.5 million, making the ambitious goal of holding a firefighters entrance exam every two years not only realistic, but achievable.

Administering smaller and more frequent tests will also pave the way for the city to “align the size of the applicant pool” to the Chicago Fire Department’s “actual hiring needs,” giving test-takers “more realistic expectations” about if and when they can expect to be hired, Owen said.

“We want to go out as frequently has possible. But, people can say, `You still have thousands and thousands of people on that list.’ We really needed to change this. Getting to a model where we’re posting every two years to keep this list fresh — in order to get there, we needed to [be] testing fewer people,” he said.

But that lottery-first approach did not sit well with Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29th), chairman of the council’s Committee on Public Safety. He called it “disadvantageous to the Black community and the Latino community.”

“If they signed up for the test, they should be given an opportunity to take the test. Let it be determined whether or not they can be firefighters or EMT’s based on their merit — not based on the lottery,” Taliaferro said.

Otherwise, “that eight-year wait becomes another two years — if the city does follow through on testing in another two years. I even have doubt about that.”

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‘Tiger Style!’ review: Expectations and reality duke it out in thought-provoking and witty staging at Writers Theatre

At several points in “Tiger Style!,” playwright Mike Lew’s satirical portrait of a pair of frustrated, 30-something Chinese American siblings, we hear a particularly galling taunt: “Go back where you came from!”

For Albert Chen (Christopher Thomas Pow) and his older sister Jenny (Aurora Adachi-Winter), it’s a pretty nonsensical suggestion. They were born in Southern California, where Lew’s play is set and where Albert and Jenny’s parents also grew up after they emigrated from China as children. They already are where they came from.

Demographically speaking, the audience at a final preview performance of Lew’s play at Glencoe’s Writers Theatre didn’t include many who might have faced that particular provocation. But the crowd seemed to register the phrase when spoken by white characters, much as Albert does: as a perturbing microaggression that he sloughs off rather than make a scene.

‘Tiger Style!’

The jarring exception comes when it’s invoked by Albert’s work supervisor Melvin (Rammel Chan), who is also Asian American. This instance sent a ripple of gasps through the audience, which was repeated when a panicked Melvin explains that Albert was making him look bad in front of their clueless white coworker.

Lew’s somewhat shaggy script is inspired by these kinds of model-minority inconsistencies. As the play’s title suggests, “Tiger Style!” owes some credit to Amy Chua, the legal scholar and author who popularized the concept of the “tiger mom” a little over a decade ago.

As we meet Albert and Jenny, each is going through a minor identity crisis. Albert, a software developer who’s mostly content to coast through a mid-level career, finds a breaking point when Melvin gives a promotion to the devastatingly mediocre white guy (Garrett Lutz) whom Albert’s constantly covering for.

Jenny has gone the extreme overachiever route — she’s an accomplished doctor “on a highly detailed timetable of how I want to live my life” who nevertheless finds herself being dumped by a dud of a long-term boyfriend (Lutz again) who says she’s too intense and no fun.

Commiserating, Jenny and Albert recall their hyperscheduled childhoods, packed with academic drills and music lessons but low on socializing. Searching for an external force to blame for their current woes — and with systemic racism feeling too big to tackle on an individual level — Albert hits on the idea that their parents should take some flack for their kids’ inability to navigate the adult world.

When the siblings try to confront their parents, though, they find their mom (Deanna Myers) and dad (Chan) pretty unmoved. Did the parents push their kids to achieve tall heights in their youth? Sure, they admit. But that pressure applies only until they’re out of school — whether that’s undergrad or med school — and now, the parents genially insist, their kids’ lives are their own.

Director Brian Balcom is well-attuned to Lew’s heightened comic vibes; Balcom helmed a clever production of Lew’s “Teenage Dick,” a high-school resetting of Shakespeare’s “Richard III,” that was set to open at Theater Wit in March 2020 and wound up becoming an early streaming-theater success as the pandemic hit.

Balcom’s cast is admirably in tune for the most part. Pow is an able protagonist, and Chan and Myers do more than their duty in multiple roles. (Myers’s Upper Midwest accent in one scene as a therapist working with a resistant Adachi-Winter is priceless.)

Lew’s script falters a bit in its second act, which has Jenny and Albert attempting to de-immigrate (re-immigrate?) back to China. The playwright’s parallel critiques of his Chinese American characters and China’s wildly repressive government don’t quite add up to a whole argument.

But that’s the paradox of “go back to where you came from” — almost no one who would invoke such an insult actually has the standing to make it.

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‘A career, not a year’: How Cubs’ Brennen Davis hopes to use injury to improve hitting

DES MOINES, Iowa – Cubs prospect Brennen Davis was widely expected to make his major-league debut this year. Instead, after undergoing back surgery in June, he’s spent the last week of the MLB regular season in the Arizona Fall League, salvaging what he can from a mostly lost year of baseball.

“Kind of upset it happened this year because I had big goals,” Davis said in a conversation with the Sun-Times during the final weeks of the Triple-A season. “But it’s part of life. It’s part of the game. And how you overcome these obstacles is what dictates you as a player.”

Davis has had to shift his thinking on how he defines success. Limited by pain in the first month of the season and then sidelined for three months, Davis posted a .258 batting average in Triple-A, with 10 extra-base hits.

“I have these opportunities to get at-bats, and I’m really looking forward to trying to detach myself from results,” he said, “and really look at the bigger picture and work on what’s going to make me the best player moving forward, and the deficiencies I have as a player, and really put in the stepping stones to have a great offseason and be ready to succeed next year.”

Barring trades or signings, the Cubs have an opening at Davis’ position. Manager David Ross said this week that he’s told Cubs outfielders left and right field are accounted for by Ian Happ and Seiya Suzuki, but, “there’s an open spot, and it’s in centerfield.”

Could Davis claim that spot?

“It’s hard to go into spring training giving somebody a job with the adversity he’s been through,” Ross said.

But Ross didn’t rule out Davis playing himself into that role, perhaps after beginning the season in Triple-A.

The adversity Ross alluded to started last spring when Davis felt back discomfort after a lifting session. The outfield prospect brushed it off as normal soreness. But by the time he’d played a few weeks into the Triple-A season, the red-hot pain had traveled down his leg and was so intense that he’d start his day already limping around his hotel room.

“I started getting numbness in my foot,” he said, “and that’s when I was like, I should probably say something and shut it down.”

Doctors originally diagnosed Davis with a herniated disk, and before turning to surgery, they tried an epidural injection in May. It didn’t work, and his back operation in early June revealed why. A vascular malformationpushing on the sciatic nerve was the source of his pain.

“It’s a very relieving feeling because there was nothing wrong with my spine,” Davis said. “And that would have been a much longer rehab process, and it could have lingered down the road.”

The surgery immediately alleviated some of his pain. Since then, building back his strength and managing soreness has been a gradual process. Davis said doctors told him the sciatic nerve would take months to heal completely.

“After my first year, power was part of my game, and right now, it’s just not,” he said. “So, I think this is going to make me a better hitter having to grind for my hits. I can’t just go out there and muscle one out. I have to square baseballs up and hit them the right way, with true backspin and stuff like that, and pick pitches that I can do damage on.”

He expects to get back his old strength and power, and pair them with his new refined approach.

“It’s going to pay off for him in the long-run,” Triple-A Iowa hitting coach Desi Wilson said. “Why? Because in the big-leagues, that’s what all the good hitters do: They have a plan, they have an approach, every single at-bat – against the starters, relievers – and they don’t get away from that.”

Davis has already made a splash in the Arizona Fall League, launching a homer in the Mesa Solar Sox’s second game.

“It’s hard because you have expectations for yourself,” Davis said. “But at the end of the day, it’s about a career, not a year. And I’m happy. I was really happy watching all my friends get opportunities this year, and I wish I was there with them. But I’m sure I will be in the future.”

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