Chicago Sports

Chicago Bears slide into endzone after win over 49ers

After beating the San Francisco 49ers 19-10 in a rain-soaked game at Soldier Field Sunday, the Bears celebrated by turning the endzone into a slip-and-slide.

Led by quarterback Justin Fields, Bears players slid head-first past the goalposts and into an absolutely soaked endzone in celebration.

Videos of the slide soon flooded social media, with fans delighting in the palpable joy of the Bears’ rainy day moves.

The victory capped the end of a hard-fought game played amid torrential downpour that saturated the field with water — and even prompted FOX to break out virtual hashes and numbers in its broadcast.

The game also marked a positive debut for new head coach Matt Eberflus and general manager Ryan Poles and had fans feeling optimistic about the future of second-year quarterback Fields.

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Tony La Russa ‘uncertain’ about when he’ll return to White Sox

OAKLAND, Calif. — Tony La Russa walked through the visitors clubhouse in Oakland, shaking hands with players. It was the first time around them since he was abruptly told by doctors not to manage the White Sox in a game Aug. 30 against the Royals at Guaranteed Rate Field.

“I had [a heart] issue in spring training, so when they had some information they needed to address, and make it serious enough to where [they said] ‘get out of uniform, you can’t watch the game,’ ” La Russa said Sunday. “So I watched the game at home.”

Since then, the Sox have enjoyed their best stretch of the season, losing that night after bench coach Miguel Cairo took over managerial duties but winning nine of the next 11. La Russa, who reportedly had a pacemaker inserted for his heart, was cleared by doctors to attend Dave Stewart’s uniform retirement ceremony in Oakland and fly to Chicago with the team Sunday night, but not to resume managing.

“Health is nothing to mess with,” said La Russa, who turns 78 in October.

“They fixed it, now it’s a question of regaining strength. So don’t mess with health.

“I’ve had my issue fixed, I’m mending.”

If and when La Russa returns to managing “will depend on the experts,” he said.

“Reading the situation, they ask me how I feel because I do a little more and how do you respond to a little more affects it, so, I think it’s uncertain,” he said. “In the meantime the club will be fun to watch and stay in contention.”

La Russa said “don’t mess with health” but he often says “don’t mess with the baseball gods,” and if the Sox lose Sunday after winning four in a row, he said he wouldn’t go on the plane with the team after seeing them play in person and being in the clubhouse briefly.

La Russa seemed to be kidding but he is serious about trends and jinxes.

“Didn’t I just tell you if we lose I won’t be on the plane?” he said. “You think I’m kidding? I have a car rented, I’m going to drive back slowly.”

While fans have overwhelmingly pushed for the Sox to carry on with Cairo at the helm, La Russa wants to get back in uniform. But “it all depends,” he said.

“I’m here today, fly back with them and off [day] tomorrow. I don’t plan to be in uniform until they say it’s time to be in uniform,” he said. “I don’t know if they [doctors] want me at the park or not. The most important thing for me is you don’t want to be a distraction. I don’t want to be a distraction. That’s why it’s best to let it run its course, and in the meantime they’re concentrating on the game they’re playing.

“If I think I’m being a distraction upstairs like today watching them then I won’t watch them. It’s so simple, it’s ridiculous. It’s not complicated.”

La Russa has watched every game and says he calls Cairo at least twice a day and stays in contact with pitching coach Ethan Katz.

“They’re united, they pick each other up. But exciting games, those two comeback games [Wednesday in Seattle and Saturday in Oakland]. They key is they’re having the fun of contending, so it’s from here to the end now. It’s been fun to watch.”

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Bears-49ers: Bears’ defense leads the way in 19-10 win to open season

The Bears pulled an upset in their season opener, winning Matt Eberflus’ debut as head coach 19-10 over the 49ers as rain-saturated Soldier Field.

While the defense was tenacious and the Bears beat a team that nearly went to the Super Bowl last season, there were still plenty of red flags on offense.

Quarterback Justin Fields finished 8 of 17 for 121 yards with two touchdown passes and an interception for an 85.7 passer rating. The Bears managed just 205 yards of total offense and benefited from a fumble recovery and an interception.

The most cutting insult to general manager Ryan Poles and Eberflus is to point out how familiar the offense looked. The last thing these guys want is to be even remotely reminiscent of the era that preceded them.

But the truth hurts. This grimy, mud bath of a game featured all the same problems that plagued the Bears’ offense before, including shaky quarterback play. Opening the season with a victory is nice, but it’s going to be difficult to keep winning unless Fields and the offense make major improvements.

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Chicago Bears slide into endzone after win over 49ers

After beating the San Francisco 49ers 19-10 in a rain-soaked game at Soldier Field Sunday, the Bears celebrated by turning the endzone into a slip-and-slide.

Led by quarterback Justin Fields, Bears players slid head-first past the goalposts and into an absolutely soaked endzone in celebration.

Videos of the slide soon flooded social media, with fans delighting in the palpable joy of the Bears’ rainy day moves.

The victory capped the end of a hard-fought game played amid torrential downpour that saturated the field with water — and even prompted FOX to break out virtual hashes and numbers in its broadcast.

The game also marked a positive debut for new head coach Matt Eberflus and general manager Ryan Poles and had fans feeling optimistic about the future of second-year quarterback Fields.

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Chicago Bears’ Offense starts season with abysmal first half

The Chicago Bears offense did nothing but struggle against the Niners’ defense

The Chicago Bears’ first half to start the 2022 season was just an abysmal showing on the offensive side of the ball.

While many experts spent the offseason criticizing the Bears’ offense going into this season, those criticisms seem justified to this point.

The Bears’ offense had just 68 total yards in their first half against the 49ers, and issues were apparent with every part of the offense. Quarterback Justin Fields has been under pressure every snap and the receivers have given him nowhere to throw. Fields also had an ugly interception that three different Niners’ defenders could have picked off. The young QB is currently 3-9 passing with just 19 yards through the air. No receiver or tight end currently has a reception as well.

The Bears did get into position to score points once, but a bizarre penalty by punter Trenton Gill for wiping the field took them out of field goal range.

Despite the Bears’ offensive struggles, they only trail the Niners 7-0 at halftime. The offense will need to make some major adjustments if the team wants to have a chance at winning this game.

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Nebraska fires coach Scott Frost after 1-2 start

LINCOLN, Neb. — Nebraska fired Scott Frost on Sunday, the situation so dire in the once-proud football program that athletic director Trev Alberts made the move only three weeks before the coach’s contract buyout would have been cut in half.

The Cornhuskers lost 45-42 to Georgia Southern as a three-touchdown favorite at home Saturday night, and the student section chanted “Fire Frost” at the end of the game.

Frost was 16-31 three games into his fifth season, and his .340 winning percentage was second-worst among Nebraska coaches who lasted more than four years.

Associate head coach Mickey Joseph was named interim coach for the rest of the season. The Huskers play No. 6 Oklahoma at home this week.

Joseph, 54, is the first Black head coach at Nebraska in any sport and among four new members of the staff this season. Like Frost, he is a former Nebraska quarterback, having played from 1988-91.

“Earlier today I met with Coach Frost and informed him we were making a change in the leadership of our football program, effective immediately,” Alberts said in a statement. “Scott has poured his heart and soul into the Nebraska football program both as a quarterback and a head coach, and I appreciate his work and dedication.

“After the disappointing start to our season, I decided the best path forward for our program was to make a change in our head coaching position.”

Joseph returned to Nebraska as wide receivers coach and passing game coordinator after coaching receivers at LSU from 2017-21. He also was LSU’s assistant head coach his last two seasons there.

Alberts made a surprising move last November when he announced he would bring back Frost after what turned out to be a 3-9 season. Frost fired four offensive assistants, had his pay cut from $5 million to $4 million and agreed to having his buyout drop from $15 million to $7.5 million on Oct. 1.

There was no immediate word of a negotiated settlement. Absent that, Nebraska is sacrificing millions of dollars to cut the cord now.

Alberts apparently had seen enough. The Huskers opened the season with a 31-28 loss to Northwestern in Ireland, struggled into the fourth quarter before putting away FCS North Dakota 38-17 and then allowed 642 yards while losing to a Sun Belt Conference team in Georgia Southern.

The 47-year-old coach’s spectacular failure was never envisioned when he left Central Florida as the hottest coach in America.

The storyline for his hiring was delicious, with Frost returning to his home state and the school he quarterbacked to a share of the 1997 national championship.

He had taken over a Central Florida program that went 0-12 in 2015, and two years later he led the Golden Knights to a 13-0 record and a Peach Bowl win over Auburn.

Frost, who grew up 90 minutes west of Lincoln in Wood River, was hailed as a savior of the program when former athletic director Bill Moos signed him to a seven-year, $35 million contract.

Moos boasted he had gotten “the pick of the litter” from the 2017-18 coaching cycle and that Big Ten powers would be “running scared” once Frost got the Huskers on track. Frost, when asked about having to possibly adjust his style to the Big Ten, shot back that he hoped the Big Ten would have to adjust to him instead.

What followed were four-plus seasons of underachieving and undisciplined play — and unhappiness among a loyal fan base desperately hoping for a return to a semblance of the program’s glory days.

There was never an indication that would happen under Frost. His Huskers were famous for losing close games — 22 of his 31 losses were decided by eight points or fewer — and for getting beat as double-digit favorites.

The Frost era was the worst at Nebraska since Bill Jennings was 15-34-1 (.310) in the five years before Hall of Fame coaches Bob Devaney and Tom Osborne reigned over four decades of sustained success that brought five national championships and 22 conference titles.

The Huskers have gone through five coaches since Osborne retired in 1997, and they are a shell of their former selves. They haven’t won a conference championship since 1999, and they haven’t won more than five games in a season since going 9-4 in 2016 under Mike Riley.

Frost was 10-26 in Big Ten games and, worse, 6-18 against West Division opponents. His teams never won more than three conference games in a season or finished higher than fifth place in the seven-team West.

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QB Justin Fields sputtering as Bears trail 49ers 7-0 at halftime

Justin Fields is off to a brutal start in his season debut against the 49ers, and the Bears are down 7-0 at halftime.

The wet field is no friend to the passing game and the Bears’ offensive line has struggled across the board, but Fields has contributed to the problems as well. He has completed 3 of 9 passes for 19 yards and rushed five times for 25 yards. His passer rating is 2.8.

The Bears have just 68 yards of total offense, averaging 2.3 per play. They have not gotten farther down the field than their own 35-yard line and have gone three-and-out three times.

They did not push past their own 35-yard line until late in the first half.

Fields threw an interception midway through the first quarter that set up the 49ers in Bears’ territory. He threw over the middle of the field for Darnell Mooney and did not appear to see 49ers safety Talanoa Hufanga drifting toward him to pick off the pass. Fields was under pressure and got hit after he released the ball, but this was clearly a case of misreading the defense.

He caught a break, however, when cornerback Jaylon Johnson ended the 49ers’ ensuing drive by punching a fumble out of the hands of 49ers receiver Deebo Samuel.

The running game isn’t doing much to help. Khalil Herbert has rushed five times for 27 yards, and David Montgomery has 13 yards on nine carries.

The Bears also threw away a chance at points just before halftime when they lined up for 46-yard field goal, but were hit with an unsportsmanlike-conduct penalty because holder Trenton Gill used a towel to dry up a spot on the grass before the kick. After the penalty, the Bears punted instead.

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Bears lose shot at FG because of … a towel

The Bears were set to line up for a 46-yard field goal to try to score for the first time this season when officials huddled on a soggy Soldier Field and threw a flag.

Rookie punter Trenton Gill, who was serving as the Bears’ holder in his first NFL game, had brought a towel out on the field to try to try to new sod before kicker Cairo Santos attempted his kick. He put the towel on the grass where he would have set the football down and tamped down on it. Santos stepped on the towel, too, to try to dry the grass. Gill then flung the towel behind him, where it landed on the grass.

It was illegal. All of it.

He was called for a 15-yard unsportsmanlike penalty by referee Clay Martin because “he brought a towel out on the field in a dead-ball period to wipe the field down.” The Bears, pushed back, had to punt instead — and eventually went into the locker room at halftime down 7-0.

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Watch: Bears rookie Dominique Robinson’s first one-hand sack

The Chicago Bears found a guy who can sack in Dominique Robinson

Dominique Robinson made an impressive play in his first quarter of regular season action for the Chicago Bears Sunday. Robinson made a huge sack on third-and-seven that put the San Francisco 49ers out of field goal range on a sloppy turf at Soldier Field.

Robinson finished the sack with just one hand.

Robinson had an impressive preseason. His play caught the eyes of the national media. After this sack, he’ll catch opposing offensive coordinators’ eyes on their scouting sheet. He looks like he can be a suitable replacement for Khalil Mack in Week One. That’s an impressive play by the 2022 fifth-round draft pick.

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High school football: Four Downs, News and notes from Week 3

The area’s three best teams were identified in the preseason and nothing has changed after three weeks of football.

Mount Carmel, Loyola and Lincoln-Way East have dominated ranked teams at home and on the road.

The Ramblers and Griffins are both Class 8A schools and appear destined for a showdown in Champaign this November.

But which team is the top contender to face Mount Carmel in Class 7A?

Batavia seemed like the best bet in the preseason. The Bulldogs returned a ton from the squad that lost that controversial overtime game at Mount Carmel in the playoffs. But things did not go well for Batavia over the first three weeks.

The Bulldogs opened with a three-game road trip due to some construction on their home field. They dominated Phillips in the season opener and then lost 31-16 at Lincoln-Way East and 27-24 at Wheaton North.

Those are two high-quality losses. It’s likely Batavia rights the ship and becomes the top challenger to Mount Carmel in Class 7A. But there are chinks in the armor.

Wheaton North just proved it is a serious contender. Prospect and Jacobs are also off to nice starts.

St. Rita has played a horrifically difficult schedule early on but they’ve already been trounced by the Caravan so it is hard to get excited about a rematch.

Prairie Ridge rolling

The Fox Valley’s playoff pedigree has been firmly established over the last decade, so it is an easy call to put the favorite in the conference into the preseason top 10.

This season that was Prairie Ridge. The Wolves didn’t have a ton of success last season, but the program’s history and the amount of returning starters was enough to count on.

Prairie Ridge is 3-0 but started a little slowly. That’s over now. Quarterback Tyler Vasey was expected to become a big play threat and he’s delivering.

Vasey rushed for 226 yards in the win against Huntley in Week 3. He had touchdown runs of 45 and 71 yards and threw for a touchdown. Fullback Nathan Greetham added 166 yards.

All of Class 6A, even might East St. Louis, knows how dangerous a Fox Valley power is when its option offense is posting those rushing numbers.

The Wolves face No. 17 Jacobs on the road Friday.

Hero kicker

What a finish Friday night in Lake Zurich.

Danny Vuckovic nailed a 52-yard field goal to give the Bears a 13-10 win against Stevenson. The senior had a 50-yard attempt blocked earlier in the game.

Lake Zurich (2-1) has won the last six meetings against the Patriots.

Thursday night football

Public League football has generally been the only game in town on Thursdays. That changed this season after the Illinois High School Association requested that schools schedule more Thursday games due to the shortage of referees. But very few schools obliged.

Word is that the Southwest Prairie conference, which scheduled a fair amount of Thursday games this season, has voted to return to Friday and Saturday games only next year. That’s a shame, but understandable considering they saw that most of the other schools in the area decided not to make the sacrifice.

I’ve been at a suburban game each of the first three Thursdays and the crowds have been excellent. Joliet West, Round Lake and Marian Catholic all had packed stands and big student sections. It doesn’t appear that fans mind an occasional Thursday game. Perhaps the IHSA should require every school to play a Thursday game next season if the schools won’t figure it out themselves.

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