Chicago Sports

Chrissy Metz: With ‘This Is Us’ over, actor focuses on her musical side

For six years, Chrissy Metz has been a familiar face on TV screens, best known as the incredibly authentic, complicated, heart-tugging character Kate Pearson on the breakout NBC hit “This Is Us.” But what some may not know is — in a quirk she shares with Mandy Moore, who played her on-screen mom Rebecca — music was Metz’s first love before acting.

“I always loved [singing] but didn’t always feel comfortable doing it in front of people, so I’d make mixtapes and record songs in my bedroom,” she recalled during a recent conversation, adding that joining her middle school’s choir made her fall in love with music in a way she never thought possible. “Anyone who knows me knows that I believe everything is a song. I’m singing constantly. It’s probably obnoxious, but it comes from love.”

Of course, there have been hints of Metz’s talents during her run on “This Is Us,” where music was a big part of Kate and Rebecca’s mother-daughter relationship, like the time Kate sang an emotive version of “Landslide” during her first big break on stage as Rebecca sat in the crowd beaming, or when she sang “Time After Time” during Rebecca’s funeral toward the show’s end.

Though Metz’s talent manager didn’t really encourage the music side, wanting Metz to focus on acting, she doesn’t regret it. “I really I think being on ‘This Is Us’ and being able to be so vulnerable and exposed every single day helped me to realize I just want to sing and want to share myself and my experiences. It’s been a long journey for me, but it’s also been healing.”

With the award-winning series having wrapped in late May, Metz has time to focus on her real-life music endeavors and currently is on a seven-date run at City Winery venues across the country, including Chicago’s on Tuesday.

She’s preparing to release her debut country album for EMI Nashville. Though no formal release date has been announced, Metz has given tastes of the material with a few singles. There’s the singer-songwriter gold of “Girl Go,” about chasing after your dreams but remembering who you are, the pensive ballad “Talking to God” and the soul-pop-country mashup “Feel Good.”

Chrissy Metz appears with Justin Hartley (left) and Sterling K. Brown on the final episode of “This Is Us” in May.

Talking about her writing style on the album, Metz shared, “It’s definitely about love and loss and very introspective and reflective.” There’s some deep diving into her own relationships like that with her boyfriend, songwriter Bradley Collins, or the song “Daddy’s Girl,” which speaks to the complicated bond with her estranged father. When Metz was a child, he was in the Navy and stationed in Florida and Japan, which initially introduced Metz to a wide range of international music styles. She added that Motown and country were also often playing in her home.

“What I realized in the process of therapy and journaling was that I am more like my father than I’d care to admit. And it helped me to realize more of where he was coming from and to understand and forgive him more,” Metz said, getting emotional.

Her innate sense of storytelling and the lessons of processing her own chapters were also explored in her 2018 New York Times best-seller, “This Is Me,” that she has said takes readers on a journey of self-acceptance and becoming the people we are meant to be. In it, she talks of her divorce, her move to L.A. from Florida and the near heart attack she had on her 30th birthday that changed her life.

Metz also joked about another pivotal moment in her life: auditioning for “American Idol.” Though she did not make the cut, the actress knows her long journey back to music was meant to give her a stop along the way on “This Is Us,” as the show reaffirmed to her how healing art can be.

“I don’t think there’s a subject that we didn’t touch. And what we all have discovered in making the show, and during that particular time in our culture and society, is that we are so much more alike than we are different,” she said. “It doesn’t matter where you come from, who your parents are, your status, any of that. We are humans just trying to live life on life’s terms and there’s no handbook.”

Metz has been touched by the real-life stories she’s heard of that mirrored Kate Pearson’s character arc. “I never thought I’d meet a girl who told me she watched the Super Bowl with her father’s ashes like Kate did. … I also met a little boy on an airplane, he was 10 or 11 years old and he was heading to an eating disorder clinic. I could cry thinking of it,” she recalled. “He said, ‘You helped me realize that I’m worth saving and loving.’ It was then I knew this is so much more than an acting job and just trying to pay your bills. The show was much more special than I think anyone thought it was going to be.”

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Why David Ross pulled Adrian Sampson in the fourth inning of the Cubs’ loss to Brewers

MILWAUKEE – Cubs manager David Ross saw an opportunity to, as he put it, “go for the game early.” The move backfired in the Cubs’ 9-7 loss to the Brewers on Sunday at American Family Field.

“Sometimes that happens,” he said.

It happened in the fourth inning. Cubs starter Adrian Sampson had allowed one run in three frames, on Hunter Renfroe’s third-inning RBI double. Sampson had given up some hard contact, but he – and a strong defensive effort behind him – limited the damage. To open the fourth inning, Sampson induced a ground-out from Keston Hiura.

With the bottom of the lineup coming up, and the Cubs holding onto a 2-1 lead, Ross walked to the mound to make a pitching change.

“It was shorter than I would have liked it to be,” Sampson said. “But it doesn’t matter how long you’re out there, it’s just one pitch at a time until Rossy comes out there and takes the ball from you.”

He confirmed that he was surprised he didn’t get a longer leash.

“I would say that if I threw 150 pitches, though,” he said.

Asked about his thought process in that moment, Ross cited the hard contact, traffic on the bases – Sampson allowed five hits – and Sampson’s high pitch count each inning. He’d thrown 61 pitches by the time Ross pulled him

“It just looked like he was working really hard,” Ross said, “and I had both lefties down there ready to go in that heavy left-handed lineup. And if they would have pinch-hit for that, then we could have circled back to the right.”

Entering play Sunday, left-handed batters were hitting just .188 against Cubs left-hander Sean Newcomb this season. And Brewers lefty batter Jace Peterson was coming up to bat next.

Ross called for Newcomb with one out in the fourth, and put together his worst outing of the season.

“I didn’t expect it to go that way, for sure,” Ross said. “He’s been throwing the ball well.”

Newcomb gave up three straight singles, and a two-run home run to Christian Yelich, before recording an out. Then, he walked Rowdy Tellez and got out of the inning when catcher Yan Gomes threw out Tellez attempting to steal.

To open the fifth inning, Newcomb issued a walk and gave up a two-run homer to Kolten Wong. Newcomb gave up six runs, a season high, in one inning pitched.

“The fact that he’s been dominating lefties pretty good, and I don’t think he got one [lefty] out, we’ll just look at if there’s something that he’s giving away,” Ross said.

Ross didn’t mention it, but pulling Sampson before the end of the fourth inning also guaranteed the Cubs could get a second replacement player in Toronto.

The Cubs will put Sampson and Steele on the restricted list for the Blue Jays series due to Canada’s COVID-19 vaccine requirements for entry. Teams aren’t allowed replacement players for starters who go over the threshold in their previous start and aren’t lined up to start in the series.

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La Russa ‘angry’ after White Sox waste Cease effort, blow chance to win in 9th

After watching eight innings of two-hit ball by his ace wasted and the tying and winning runs stranded in the ninth inning, manager Tony La Russa was pushed to a new depth following the White Sox’ fourth consecutive loss that put their American League playoff chances in deeper jeopardy.

“No, I just get angry,” La Russa replied tersely Sunday after being asked if he was frustrated after the Diamondbacks forged a 3-2 win to complete a three-game sweep. “I don’t like frustration, discouragement. That’s losercrap. It just seeps energy out of your body. I just get angry and want to do something about it.”

There might not be much La Russa can do except pray that his team suddenly becomes healthy and productive with 34 games left. Following a five-game winning streak that put them five games above .500 and one game out of first place in the AL Central, the Sox (63-65) have lost nine of 11 to dip two games under .500.

“Baseball is a game of consistency, and realistically we haven’t been as consistent as we should,” Josh Harrison said.

Cease pitched a career-high eight innings, but the Diamondbacks made the most of their three hits. Stone Garrett hit his first major league home run off Cease in the second, Sergio Alcantara hit a game-tying homer off Cease in the eighth.

Jake McCarthy hit a tie-breaking double with two out in the ninth off reliever Kendall Graveman, who dug a hole by walking two to set up the game-winning hit.

The offense, which scored three runs or fewer for the 65th time, missed a chance to at least tie the game when pinch-hitter Leury Garcia and Romy Gonzalez struck out after Elvis Andrus hit a double and pinch-hitter Eloy Jim?nez walked.

Unlike Saturday’s 10-5 loss, in which the Sox received boos before pregame introductions and a “SELL THE TEAM” sign popped up around the stadium during various junctions, a crowd of 29,781 showed their appreciation after Gavin Sheets hit a sacrifice fly and AJ Pollock hit a go-ahead single in the sixth.

But a scattering of boos surfaced after Gonzalez struck out.

“The frustration, anger, it’s going to be different emotions for people,” Harrison said of his teammates’ mood. “Needless to say, we’re not in a good spot as a whole.”

The offense, without a healthy Luis Robert (hand bruise) or Jimenez (right hamstring soreness), has fizzled like a sparkler. They managed three hits in the first five innings against finesse maven Zach Davies, won his last game on May 13 against the Cubs.

Robert’s pinch-running appearance eliminated any chance of being backdated on the 10-day injured list after injuring his hand Thursday, but he could return to the lineup Tuesday when the Sox open a three-game home series against the Royals.

Catcher Yasmani Grandal is expected to return from his rehab assignment at Triple-A Charlotte this week, but it might not matter unless the offense provides enough support.

Cease’s ERA stayed at 2.27 as he retired 17 consecutive batters after allowing his only walk to Alcantara in the second.

But he had no margin for error, as evidenced by Alcantara’s game-tying homer on what he said was a perfectly placed pitch.

“Losing is always disappointing,” Cease said. “I think it would be an issue if there wasn’t some anger and some disappointment. Like I said, we’ve got a lot of professionals here.”

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Chicago Cubs outfielder Ian Happ is a gamer

It’s time to put some respect on Ian Happ’s name

Ian Happ is, and always has been, a gamer.  It’s not just an opinion at this point, his stats back it up.

Compiled stats on Baseball-Reference shows Ian Happ has compiled workman-like stats over his 6 years in the bigs with The Cubs. He has compiled a career .250 BA, and an .806 OPS. Anything over an .800 OPS puts a player in high level company, and at 28 years old it seems Happer is coming into his prime.  He has an All-Star game under his belt, and recently set an MLB record that I still can’t really put my head around.

It’s very rare that a player plays his whole career with one franchise, and I don’t expect him to be one of the players that do. There are plenty of opinions on the path the Cubs should go as well.  Simply put though, Ian Happ is a player you can win with, which outside of having another year of control, is a big reason the Cubs probably chose to keep him around.

The season is winding down, so let’s drink some beers for Happer, and show him some love!

Here’s Ian Happ on his two-homer day, and @wgnadal noting he’s the first Cubs batter to hit a leadoff, multi-run blast (thanks to the auto runner)… https://t.co/ASagV6yadd

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Notre Dame-Ohio State, Oregon-Georgia lead way as college football arrives in full force

Northwestern has its quarterback in Ryan Hilinski, not to mention an offensive line that’s going to knock some people around, a defense that has a little life to it, after all, and a coach in Pat Fitzgerald who’s looking mighty good again. Oh, and mojo — the Wildcats have all kinds of mojo.

We can say all that after their 31-28 upset of Nebraska in Dublin in Week 0 of the college football season.

The Wildcats — 3-9 last season — are pretty good again, and it sure beats the heck out of the alternative. Illinois, which smacked Wyoming around 38-6 in its opening game, might be pretty good, too. Anyone who watched our teams play Saturday had to be at least a bit impressed.

But now, we return to reality. The rest of the college football world has already forgotten about the Wildcats and the Illini because — just do the math, people — Week 1 is here. Defending national champion Georgia, ranked No. 3 heading in, has a stiff opening test against No. 11 Oregon. And that sexy matchup is almost an afterthought compared with No. 5 Notre Dame at No. 2 Ohio State. What did college football fans do to deserve such an extraordinary early-September gift?

Is it Ohio State’s turn to win the Big Ten again? Is it Alabama’s turn to win it all again? It says here the answer is “yes” on both.

Is it Northwestern’s and Illinois’ turns to recede into the background again? Yeah, you know how it goes. They do, too.

And here’s what’s happening:

MON 29

Cubs at Blue Jays (6:07 p.m., Marquee)

Look at it this way: It can’t be any worse than the Cubs’ last trip to Toronto, in 2014, when they were swept in three games by a combined score of — wow, this is bad — 28-3.

Well, this is kind of awkward.

AP Photos

TUE 30

Royals at White Sox (7:10 p.m., NBCSCH)

It’s just another delightful night at Guaranteed Rate, where $10.75 will get you a 16-ounce beer and an extra quarter will get you your very own “Sell the team” sign.

WED 31

Sun at Sky, Game 2 (7 p.m., ESPN2)

The Sky lost Game 2 to Connecticut in last year’s WNBA semis, then went on to their first championship. It’s a tough call, but we think they’re better off winning this one.

Storm at Aces, Game 2 (9 p.m., ESPN2)

The Aces may be the favorites to win the title, but the Storm have championship experience coming out of their ear holes. Don’t worry, it’s more pleasant than it sounds.

THU 1

Royals at White Sox (1:10 p.m., YouTube)

We all know how much time a person can waste clicking around YouTube, but watching the cratering Sox on this app is taking it to a new level.

Penn State at Purdue (7 p.m., Fox-32)

A visit to West Lafayette isn’t the easy-in, easy-out it used to be. The Boilermakers were a nine-win team in 2021.

The Illini manhandled Wyoming.

Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images

FRI 2

Illinois at Indiana (7 p.m., FS1)

The Illini romped in their opener, but Indiana is a step up from Wyoming. Unless, that is, Indiana is a step down from Wyoming. Look, don’t act like it isn’t possible.

Twins at White Sox (7:10 p.m., NBCSCH)

After all those weeks when the Twins were in first place and we were just waiting for the Sox to run them down, this feels awfully anticlimactic.

SAT 3

Oregon at Georgia (2:30 p.m., Ch. 7)

They’re calling this non-conference opener at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta a neutral-site game, eh? Phil Knight’s backyard in Beaverton, Ore., would’ve been less neutral.

Fire at Columbus (4:30 p.m., Ch. 9)

Were we just being foolish a few weeks back for believing the Fire could make the playoffs? Don’t answer that.

Illinois State at Wisconsin (6 p.m., FS1)

A rare prime-time game against such a big-boy opponent ought to be a real treat for fans of the Redbirds. Until, you know, the game starts.

Notre Dame at Ohio State (6:30 p.m., Ch. 7)

Irish coach Marcus Freeman, an OSU alum, opens his first full season with merely the biggest September game in college football. Guess that’s why he’s making the big bucks, right?

SUN 4

Sky at Sun, Game 3 (noon, ESPN2)

One step closer to what the Sky hope will be a successful repeat. We don’t have enough banners flying around this town, do we?

Cubs at Cardinals (1:15 p.m., Marquee)

It’s the last game of the season between these old rivals, which means it’s also the Cubs’ last game against the great Albert Pujols. Put him in, Coach. He’s ready to play.

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High school football: Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 rankings for Week 2

The opening week is in the books and there was only really one difficult decision to make. Should Loyola be No. 1?

I had the rankings all set to go when I headed to Wilmette this morning to see the Ramblers against Cincinnati St. Xavier.

Loyola dominated. The Ramblers were rock solid and imposing on defense and their passing attack was incredibly precise for the first game of the season. And then the running game produced some highlight breakaways. It was something.

Loyola looked better than Mount Carmel. But it is only one game and I’m not sold on that Cincinnati team. So for now the Caravan sticks in the top spot. The Ramblers were bumped up to No. 2.

St. Ignatius, Willowbrook and Hinsdale Central all drop out after losing. The Wolfpack lost 19-14 to St. Patrick. That’s a really great first win for Luke Mertens, the Shamrocks new coach. It sets up an incredibly fun Week 2 matchup against rival Notre Dame, which blanked Willowbrook 28-0.

The Dons are a team that I seriously considered ranking in the preseason. I saw them late in the season last year and knew they would be worth keeping an eye on this season. The same with Nazareth, which joins the Super 25 after beating Kankakee 2-0 in LaGrange Park.

There still isn’t a Public League team in the Super 25 but two teams are very close.

Simeon was impressive against Wheaton-Warrenville South on Saturday at Gately and easily could have slid in to one of the bottom slots. Morgan Park beat Richards 30-2.

Week 2’s Super 25With record and last week’s ranking

1. Mount Carmel (1-0) 1Saturday vs. Phillips at Gately

2. Loyola (1-0) 3Saturday vs. United

3. Lincoln-Way East (1-0) 2Friday vs. No. 4 Batavia

4. Batavia (1-0) 4Friday at No. 3 Lincoln-Way East

5. Bolingbrook (1-0) 5Saturday vs. Simeon at Gately

6. Glenbard West (1-0) 6Friday vs. Downers Grove South

7. Warren (1-0) 9Friday at No. 9 Maine South

8. Neuqua Valley (1-0) 11Friday vs. Wheaton-Warrenville South

9. Maine South (1-0) 13Friday vs. No. 7 Warren

10. Prairie Ridge (1-0) 8Friday at Burlington Central

11. Marist (1-0) 12Friday at Richards

12. St. Rita (1-0) 6Friday vs. Brother Rice

13. Naperville North (1-0) 14Friday at No. 16 Glenbard North

14. Prospect (1-0) 18Friday vs. Barrington

15. Lockport (1-0) 20Friday vs. Metea Valley

16. Glenbard North (1-0) 17Friday vs. No. 13 Naperville North

17. Nazareth (1-0) NRFriday vs. No. 24 Lemont

18. Cary-Grove (1-0) 21Friday vs. Crystal Lake South

19. Joliet Catholic (1-0) 22Friday vs. IC Catholic

20. Notre Dame (1-0) NRFriday vs. No. 25 St. Patrick

21. Kankakee (1-0) 10Friday vs. Washington, Ill.

22. Crete-Monee (0-1) 15Saturday at Andrean, Ind.

23. Jacobs (1-0) 24Friday vs. Crystal Lake Central

24. Lemont (1-0) 25Friday at No. 17 Nazareth

25. St. Patrick (1-0) NRFriday at No. 20 Notre Dame

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High school football: Loyola dominates Ohio power St. Xavier in nationally-televised showdown

There are 119 players on Loyola’s varsity roster. All the way at the bottom is number 99, Brooks Bahr. But the 6-6, 270-pound defensive lineman is the first player everyone notices when the Ramblers take the field.

It’s been that way for a few years. That kind of size blends in on a basketball court but on the high school football field 6-6 is uncommon.

The defense Bahr leads was uncommon and exceptional on Saturday in Wilmette. The Ramblers dominated Cincinnati St. Xavier 44-20. The Bombers didn’t score on Loyola’s starting defense.

“This feels amazing,” Bahr said. “It’s just the beginning of a long season but I feel like we’ve come together and put the world on notice. And we’re only going to get better from here.”

The Ramblers (1-0) returned a lot of starters on offense this season and it was thought that group would have to make up for an inexperienced defense for a couple of weeks. Loyola coach John Holecek excels at building defenses, so it wasn’t considered a long-term issue.

But the Loyola defense was ready from the first whistle, even in a nationally-televised game on ESPN against an opponent with multiple college recruits.

“All the guys rose to the occasion and delivered,” Bahr said. “I couldn’t be prouder.”

Colgate recruit Jake Stearney spearheaded an impressive passing attack for the Ramblers. He was 15-for-19 passing for 253 yards with four touchdowns and one interception.

Stearney connected with five different receivers, several of which made impressive grabs. Loyola has dependable wide receivers and a pair of massive, physical tight ends.

“That’s from the preparation we built up over a month,” Stearney said. “We’ve established trust and it is tremendous. It’s nice having reliable targets.”

Senior Spencer Leadbetter had five receptions for 86 yards and two touchdowns. Tight end Jack Parker caught a 15-yard touchdown pass. Declan Forde added four catches for 95 yards, including a 17-yard touchdown.

Loyola wasn’t expected to have a breakout threat at running back this season. Throw that out the window. Sophomore Drew MacPherson ripped off a 53-yard touchdown run in the first quarter and junior Will Nimesheim opened the second half with a 70-yard touchdown run.

“That was incredible,” Holecek said. “I didn’t think those guys were going to run past too many people but they certainly looked the part today.”

Loyola’s Brooks Bahr (99) lines up for the next play as the Ramblers host St. Xavier.

Allen Cunningham/For the Sun-Times

The Ramblers led 41-7 early in the third quarter. St. Xavier’s massive crowd, including a band and student section, was reduced to chants about Joe Burrow with the game they were watching so far out of reach.

“All the people they brought here from Ohio was awesome,” Parker said. “It really made the energy higher and that was so cool.”

St. Xavier (0-2) lost its opener last week. The Bombers are traditionally one of the top programs in Ohio.

“I told the kids that I’ll own this one,” St. Xavier coach Steve Specht said. “We weren’t ready to play. But that’s a really good football team. They played hard, fast and physical. They’re gonna be a tough out this year.”

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Bears’ offense feels ‘normal’ to QB Justin Fields, and that’s a good start

It’s far too early to declare a breakthrough for quarterback Justin Fields and the Bears’ offense, but there’s no denying that things are getting better.

Forget that Fields put up fantastic numbers and delivered three touchdown passes in the preseason finale against the Browns. Take the results out of it and just pay attention to how it looked.

Even with poor protection, Fields seemed comfortable. In his NFL career, that’s new.

He rolled out often, making the most of his speed by drawing defenders’ eyes toward him and away from targets like tight end Cole Kmet. Fields doesn’t actually have to run; the threat is enough to put a defense on high alert.

He took the easy, short passes and was able to use play action because offensive coordinator Luke Getsy stayed committed to the run even when it was inching along.

It all looked drastically different from last season, when Fields made his starting debut in the same stadium and Matt Nagy had him stand in the pocket for the Browns to sack at will.

Those harrowing memories crept in when Fields walked out for warm-ups.

“For sure, I was thinking about that,” he said.

Then he laughed and added, “I’m glad that No. 95 wasn’t playing today.”

That’s the catch. Fields saw that number up close all day last September as all-pro defensive end Myles Garrett flattened him 4 1/2 times. Garrett and five other Browns starters sat out Saturday, which dilutes his stellar performance.

So how does anyone truly evaluate that?

“You just go with what you’ve got on tape,” coach Matt Eberflus said. “It’s just what you see on tape, what he’s executing… But this was a good step forward.”

Fields thought so, too, calling it “a turning point” rather than just another meaningless preseason outing. He believed it was a promising soft launch for his second season, which begins next weekend against the 49ers.

He has settled in with Getsy and an offense that finally fits, and his final play illustrated that more clearly than any other: a 24-yard touchdown pass to Kmet, wide open in the end zone.

Set aside the outcome, though, and focus on how everything unfolded.

On first-and-10, Fields faked a handoff to running back Khalil Herbert going left, then rolled right on a bootleg. As he turned, he had everything available to him. He could’ve hit fullback Khari Blasingame for a couple yards, he had tight end Ryan Griffin open for about eight and he probably would’ve gotten a short gain by tucking and running.

Any of those options would’ve kept the drive moving, but Fields processed it all rapidly and even had time to direct Kmet on the fly.

“I was just telling him to get a little bit wider because I didn’t want that corner to fall off and take away his route,” Fields said. “We have so many different route combinations with the [bootlegs], so you can manipulate them pretty good.”

And how did it feel running that offense compared to what he was thrust into last time he appeared in Cleveland?

“It just feels normal,” he said.

Only with the Bears does running a “normal” offense bring relief. He also could’ve used words like intuitive, sensible or functional, but no matter how he put it, it’s an upgrade from the Nagy offense.

Anything would’ve been.

A big piece of general manager Ryan Poles’ plan was to clear out everything that “clouded” his assessment of Fields. And regardless of it being a preseason game, there was hard evidence Saturday that he’s done that with the coaching staff and scheme.

The offense looks like it has the framework for Fields to succeed, and he gave a strong endorsement of his offensive line and receivers Saturday. There’s enough in this “normal” offense for Fields to play his game, and soon we’ll see if he can.

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Cubs to put Justin Steele, Adrian Sampson on restricted list for Toronto series

The Cubs will put Justin Steele and Adrian Sampson on the restricted list for their three-game series in Toronto, manager David Ross announced Sunday.

Because of Canada’s COVID-19 vaccine requirements for entry, visiting teams have been able to place unvaccinated players on the restricted list for games in Toronto and call up replacement players. Sampson is starting in Milwaukee on Sunday, so the Cubs are expected to get just one replacement player for the trip.

“Only two guys, we’d like it to be no one, but at the end of the day we trusted everybody to make the best decision for them,” manager David Ross said. “And it gives other guys opportunity as well. So, it is what it is. Everybody has to deal with it around the league.”

Right-hander Javier Assad, who debuted in the Cubs’ doubleheader against the Cardinals last week, is slated to start Monday in the series opener, followed by right-hander Marcus Stroman on Tuesday. The starter for Wednesday, when Steele was lined up to pitch next, remains listed as “TBD.”

Last season, the vaccine threshold for relaxed COVID-19 protocols was 85 percent of players and other on-field personnel. The Cubs never reached it.

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High school football schedule: Week 2

Please send corrections and additons to [email protected].

Thursday, September 1

NONCONFERENCE

Butler vs. Foreman at Lane, 4

Hansberry vs. Marshall at Lane, 7

King vs. Crane at Gately, 5

Leo at Marian Catholic, 7

Longwood vs. Juarez at Stagg, 4:15

Proviso West vs. Leyden at Triton, 6

Rowe-Clark at Reavis, 7

Thornridge at Eisenhower, 7

Tilden vs. Bowen at Eckersall, 4:15

Friday, September 2

FOX VALLEY

Crystal Lake Central at Jacobs, 7

Crystal Lake South at Cary-Grove, 7

Dundee-Crown at Hampshire, 7

McHenry at Huntley, 7

Prairie Ridge at Burlington Central, 7

ILLINOIS CENTRAL EIGHT

Lisle at Wilmington, 7

UPSTATE EIGHT

Elgin at East Aurora, 7

Glenbard East at South Elgin, 7

Glenbard South at Fenton, 7:30

Streamwood at Larkin, 7

West Chicago at Bartlett, 7

NONCONFERENCE

Ag. Science vs. Julian at Gately, 4:15

Barrington at Prospect, 7

Batavia at Lincoln-Way East, 7

Bishop McNamara at Coal City, 7

Bloom at Argo, 7

Bremen at Joliet Central, 6:30

Brooks at St. Laurence, 7

Brother Rice at St. Rita, 7:30

Chicago Christian at Ottawa Marquette, 7

Clark vs. St. Viator at Forest View, 7

Collins at Chicago Academy, 4:15

Curie at Solorio, 7:30

Deerfield at Glenbrook North, 7

DeKalb at Plainfield South, 7

DePaul Prep vs. Amundsen at Winnemac, 4:15

Downers Grove North at Willowbrook, 7:30

DuSable at Westmont, 7

East Peoria at Aurora Central, 7:30

Elk Grove at Hoffman Estates, 7:30

Evanston at Libertyville, 7

Evergreen Park vs. Carver at Gately, 7:15

Fremd at Hersey, 7

Geneseo at Grayslake Central, 7

Geneva at Kaneland, 7

Glenbard West at Downers Grove South, 7:30

Glenbrook South at Sandburg, 6

Golder at Back of the Yards, 4:15

Harvard at Woodstock North, 7

Hillcrest at Montini, 7:30

Hinsdale Central at Proviso East, 7:30

Hoopeston at Seneca, 7

IC Catholic at Joliet Catholic, 7:30

Johnsburg at Marian Central, 7:30

Joliet West at Minooka, 7

Kenwood at Bradley-Bourbonnais, 7:30

Lake Forest at Carmel, 7:30

Lake View at Marmion, 7:30

Lake Zurich at St. Charles North, 7:30

LaSalle-Peru at Metamora, 7:30

Lemont at Nazareth, 7:30

Limestone at Woodstock, 7:30

Lincoln-Way Central at Lake Park, 7:30

Lyons at Addison Trail, 6

Manteno at Plano, 7:15

Marengo at Canton, 7:30

Marine vs. Phoenix at Orr, 4

Marist at Richards, 6:30

Mather at Speer, 7:30

Metea Valley at Lockport, 7

Milwaukee King, Wis. at St. Ignatius, 7:30

Moline at Benet, 7

Morgan Park at Rich Township, 7:15

Morris at Antioch, 7

Mundelein at Grayslake North, 7

Naperville Central at Plainfield North, 7

Naperville North at Glenbard North, 7

New Trier at Stevenson, 7

Niles West at Niles North, 7

North Lawndale at De La Salle, 7

Oak Forest at Sycamore, 7

Oak Park-River Forest at Hinsdale South, 7:30

Oakwood at Iroquois West, 7

Oswego at Andrew, 7

Oswego East at Lincoln-Way West, 7:30

Ottawa at Streator, 7

Palatine at Buffalo Grove, 7

Peotone at Edgewood, Ind., 6

Plainfield Central at Yorkville, 7

Plainfield East at Shepard, 7

Reed-Custer at Arcola, 7

Richmond-Burton at Menominee, Wis., 7

Riverside-Brookfield at Wauconda, 7

Rochelle at Herscher, 7

Rolling Meadows at Schaumburg, 7

Round Lake at Maine East, 7

Salt Fork at Momence, 7

St. Charles East at Waubonsie Valley, 7

St. Patrick at Notre Dame, 7:30

Stagg at Oak Lawn, 7

Steinmetz at Ridgewood, 7:15

Sterling at St. Francis, 7:30

Sullivan at Perspectives, 7:30

Taft at Grant, 7:15

TF North at Hope Academy, 7

TF South at Lane, 7:15

Thornton at Galesburg, 7

Thornwood at Fenwick, 7:30

Tinley Park at Aurora Christian, 7

Vernon Hills at Lakes, 7:30

Vocational vs. Hyde Park at Eckersall, 4:15

Von Steuben vs. Payton at Lane, 4:15

Walther Christian at Elmwood Park, 6

Warren at Maine South, 7:30

Washington, Ill. at Kankakee, 7

Watseka at Westville, 7

Waukegan at Maine West, 6:30

West Aurora at Romeoville, 7

Wheaton Academy at Christ the King, 7:30

Wheaton North at Providence, 7:30

Wheaton-Warrenville South at Neuqua Valley, 7

Wheeling at Conant, 7:30

York at Morton, 7:30

Zion-Benton at North Chicago, 7

Saturday, September 3

NONCONFERENCE

Bogan vs. Little Village at Orr, 10 a.m.

Bolingbrook vs. Simeon at Gately, 3

Cahokia at Homewood-Flossmoor, 3

Chicago Military vs. Prosser at Westinghouse, 10 a.m.

Chicago Richards vs. Rauner at Lane, 7

Clifton Central at Georgetown, 1

Corliss at Orr, 1

Crete-Monee at Andrean, Ind., 3

Dwight at Bismarck-Henning, 2

East Moline at Loyola, 1:30

Englewood STEM vs. Senn at Lane, 1

Fenger vs. UP-Bronzeville at Eckersall, 4

Gage Park vs. Lincoln Park at Lane, 4

Harlan vs. South Shore at Eckersall, 1

Hubbard at Highland Park, 1

Johnson vs. Pritzker at Winnemac, 4

Kelly vs. Kennedy at Stagg, 10 a.m.

Mount Carmel vs. Phillips at Gately, 7

Raby at Westinghouse, 1

Roosevelt vs. Lindblom at Stagg, 1

Schurz vs. Catalyst-Maria at Stagg, 4

St. Edward at Taylorville, 1

Washington vs. Clemente at Lane, 10 a.m.

Young at Goode, 4

Sunday, September 4

NONCONFERENCE

Comer vs. UIC Prep at Lane, 10 a.m.

Dyett vs. Bulls Prep at Lane, 1

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