Chicago Sports

Is trading for Jakob Poeltl an option for the Chicago Bulls?

Could Jakob Poeltl be on the Chicago Bulls radar as a trade target soon?

With the first few days for NBA free agency complete, the Chicago Bulls haven’t made a big splash yet as they’ve been pretty quiet so far. Chicago signed Andre Drummound and brought back Zach LaVine on a max contract but still have needs for perimeter shooting and a wing player. But one name out there could be a viable option and that’s San Antonio’s Jakob Poeltl.

The San Antonio Spurs are headed for a rebuild as evident by the trade that sent Dejounte Murray to Atlanta for a package of draft picks and players. Making the decision to go that route, it’s very likely that a player like Poeltl is available and the price may not be steep.

Poeltl is on an expiring contract but does offer value to a Bulls team that really needs a rim protector on defense. And already, one NBA analyst is connecting Chicago to Poeltl again:

Fischer mentions Chicago as a team looking for a rim protector when talking about possible Jakob Poeltl trade destinations.
Chicago checked in on Poeltl back at the deadline.

Chicago did inquire about Poeltl ahead of the trade deadline last season but nothing came to fruition.

This time around with the Bulls looking to move Coby White who has one year left on his deal, swapping expiring contracts might be Chicago’s best move here. They would get a legit defender and rebounder while allowing White to go to San Antonio and prove himself for a new deal. Poeltl will also have the chance to prove he’s worth a new deal in Chicago and find a long-term home.

There’s still plenty of time left in free agency and this offseason for Chicago to make some moves and this one just might make the most sense to address a big need for the franchise.

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Will this deserving Bears player make his first NFL Pro Bowl this year?

Roquan Smith has played at a Pro Bowl level before but will this finally be the year he gets it?

Roquan Smith has never made a Pro Bowl during his four years in the NFL. It’s kind of shocking to think about, as Smith has been all over the field making plays for the Chicago Bears defense. One analyst thinks Smith has the best shot on the Bears to make the Pro Bowl as a first-time inductee.

Smith has a whopping 524 combined tackles and 14 sacks in his career. Bobby Wagner and Micah Parsons were voted in over Smith at the inside linebacker position in the 2021 Pro Bowl. This came even as Smith had the fifth-best tackle total in the league.

This season might be Roquan Smith’s time to finally get the honor according to NFL writer Nick Shook. Shook named Smith in his article that listed “one potential first-time Pro Bowler from each NFC team.” Here’s what Shook wrote about Smith:

Smith has earned two second-team All-Pro selections, yet he hasn’t received a Pro Bowl nod to this point. Something is off with that. The Bears aren’t expected to be a serious contender this season, but if we have to pick a player with the best chance of reaching the Pro Bowl on Chicago’s roster, the obvious choice is Smith. I mean, the rest of the football world is going to get wise eventually, right?

Roquan Smith doesn’t get the credit he deserves

The football world might not get wise to Roquan Smith. That’s okay because he does just fine flying under the radar. Smith has been asked to play hard assignments for the Bears who have weathered injuries such as Khalil Mack during his time with the Bears.

There are a few things Smith needs to tidy up in order to impress Pro Bowl voters He could improve his pass rush and pass coverage. PFF, who just has an ax to grind with the Bears, grades Smith at 47.1 overall. It’s an insane grade because Smith is graded as the worst player on the Bears’ defense… He’s at the top leaderboard in tackles in the NFL.

The Bears are going to have a downer of a season all over the field. It would be great to at least see some positive things like Smith making his first Pro Bowl. Maybe he’ll be joined by Bears newcomers like Justin Fields in his second season. That would match the progress of where Mitchell Trubisky was in 2018.

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Reliever Mark Leiter Jr. comes up big in Cubs’ victory against Red Sox

Mark Leiter Jr. had no time to get comfortable in his bullpen chair Saturday.

Leiter was summoned after Cubs starter Alec Mills departed after only two batters because of tightness in his lower back, but he pitched with ease, limiting the Red Sox to three hits in 5 1/3 innings as the Cubs earned a 3-1 victory that extended their winning streak to four games.

”Big-time performance,” manager David Ross said after Leiter preserved most of the bullpen.

Leiter, who has shuttled between Triple-A Iowa and the Cubs this season, stranded Rafael Devers at second in the first and retired 13 of the first 15 batters he faced. He departed with two outs in the sixth after the Red Sox scored their lone run when Devers grounded into a double play.

”For him to give us that length was impressive,” Ross said.

Leiter admitted it was ”kind of a tough spot because [Mills’ injury] happened so fast,” but he praised the umpires for not rushing him while he was warming up.

Leiter, who was recalled from Iowa on June 21, hadn’t allowed a run in seven innings covering three appearances before Saturday. His previous seasonlong outing was four innings twice.

Leiter became the first Cubs reliever to earn a victory while pitching at least 5 1/3 innings and allowing one run or fewer since Glendon Rusch on July 15, 2004.

Mills felt discomfort while striking out leadoff man Jarren Duran, then knew he had to leave after his back tightened while backing up third on Devers’ double.

”It feels like a collection of the season came down to today,” said Mills, who has pitched only 17 2/3 innings because of back and quadriceps injuries.

Seiya in Milwaukee?

The long-awaited return of outfielder Seiya Suzuki might happen as soon as Monday against the Brewers in Milwaukee.

Ross acknowledged Suzuki is close to rejoining the Cubs, but how close is he?

”Monday,” Ross said. ”Maybe.”

Suzuki went on the 10-day injured list May 27 with a sprained left ring finger, and his recovery has moved slowly. He went 1-for-3 with an RBI double for Iowa on Saturday and is 4-for-9 with two doubles, a home run and three RBI in his rehab assignment.

Suzuki’s return also would strengthen the Cubs’ defense in right field.

o Second baseman Nick Madrigal (strained left groin) increased his baserunning work and might start a rehab assignment by the middle of the week.

Hot plate dining

Ross and TV play-by-play man Jon Sciambi spent Friday night with a couple who submitted the highest bid to dine with them behind home plate at Wrigley Field.

The proceeds went to funding awareness for ALS, a charity Sciambi is involved with. Former White Sox pitcher Jon Garland visited the foursome, Ross said.

”We had perfect weather and talked a lot of baseball,” Ross said. ”A nice couple donated to that. It was nice to be able to help a good cause.”

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Marcus Stroman looking forward to rejoining Cubs’ starting rotation

Marcus Stroman has three months to salvage an injury-plagued season that would be even gloomier if Keegan Thompson and Justin Steele hadn’t picked up the slack in the Cubs’ starting rotation.

”I’m looking forward to those next three months,” said Stroman, who will start a rehab assignment Sunday with Triple-A Iowa. ”The group of guys we have here is incredible.”

The Cubs might have their projected rotation together for the first time shortly before the trade deadline Aug. 2, but the damage has been done.

Stroman, 31, who signed a three-year, $71 million contract in November, has been limited to nine starts because of a bout with COVID-19 and inflammation in his right shoulder.

Drew Smyly, 33, who will make a rehab start Monday with High-A South Bend or Iowa, also has made only nine starts and is recovering from a strained right oblique.

And Wade Miley, 35, who has a 2.84 ERA, has made only four starts and has been on the 15-day injured list for the last three weeks because of a strained left shoulder.

The Cubs’ rotation depth became even more challenged when Alec Mills left after allowing a double to the Red Sox’ Rafael Devers with one out in the first inning Saturday. Mills was diagnosed with pain in his lower back.

Mills, 30, projected as a valuable swingman, has appeared in only seven games (two starts) because of a strained lower back and a strained left quadriceps.

The array of injuries might serve as a warning for Stroman to ease his way back into the Cubs’ rotation, but he thinks he might need only one rehab start before returning.

”I had the proper buildup now,” said Stroman, who thinks he returned too quickly after a 19-day layoff because of COVID.

Stroman threw five innings and 77 pitches in his return start May 19 against the Diamondbacks, but he said he never recovered after that start and finally went on the IL after allowing nine runs in four innings June 3 against the Cardinals.

”After this, I should be good to go,” said Stroman, who expects to throw three to four innings and 55 pitches Sunday. ”I would assume I’d be in there every fifth day and feel good the rest of the year.”

After signing with the Cubs, Stroman bonded quickly with fans and would show snippets of his mound sessions at Pepperdine University during the lockout.

”[But] even if you feel great, baseball is such a team sport,” Stroman said. ”It’s hard to shorten spring training when you don’t know how much of a buildup you need, especially as a pitcher going through a 162-game season.

”I feel that’s why you’re seeing a lot of guys hurt. It’s unfortunate, but hopefully next year we have a normal spring and fewer guys on the IL.”

Manager David Ross wasn’t so eager to declare Stroman ready to return until checking his health after his start Sunday.

”Depending on scheduling, how it falls into place, there are ways we can bring him back as long as things go well,” Ross said.

For now, Thompson, 27, and Steele, 26,have provided hope as they settle into starting roles. Thompson has struck out 24 batters in 18 1/3 innings in his last three starts, and Steele has allowed two earned runs or fewer in four of his last five starts.

”They’re amazing,” Stroman said. ”Those are my buddies. I think they’re going to be legit. They’re learning. They’ve both been dealing, and I think those guys are going to be hopefully household names in the next few years as they progress.”

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Bulls have improved this offseason, but they’re not alone in East

The Bulls have become a better team this offseason.That’s really not debatable.

They drafted a potential shutdown wing defender in Dalen Terry, who also will bring an edge to the locker room; they re-signed one of the top free agents in the 2022 class in guard Zach LaVine; and they helped their rebounding deficiency by adding veteran big man Andre Drummond.

Then factor in the improvement forward Patrick Williams and guard Ayo Dosunmu are expected to make this offseason (both were practicing with the Bulls’ Summer League team Saturday) and the guarded optimism surrounding the injured left knee that cost Lonzo Ball most of the second half of last season, and the Bulls’ front office has accomplished its mission of keeping the core in place while making a few tweaks.

But before those in the offices at the Advocate Center start patting themselves on the back, the issue isn’t so much whether the Bulls have improved as much as it is what the rest of the Eastern Conference did — specifically the five teams that finished ahead of them and those that finished right behind them.

1. Heat: The team that finished with the best regular-season record in the East lost P.J. Tucker, which is huge, but re-signed role players Victor Oladipo, who had some impressive moments late in the season, and Dewayne Dedmon.The Heat are one of Kevin Durant’s destinationteams, so stay tuned.GRADE: C+.

2. Celtics: Adding Malcolm Brogdon was a huge get for the team that represented the East in the NBA Finals. But the real slap in the face was shooter Danilo Gallinari deciding to play for theCeltics instead of the Bulls, who were offering about the same money.The Celtics aren’t going anywhere in 2022-23.GRADE: A.

3. Bucks: It took them five games to eliminate the Bulls in the first round of the playoffs. It likelywould be a sweep if they played now. Bobby Portis re-signed, as did Jevon Carter and Wesley Matthews. And adding sharpshooter Joe Ingles was huge. Fear the deer!GRADE: A-.

4. 76ers: A full season with James Harden might do wonders, and landing a veteran such as Tucker was a huge get. It doesn’t feel as though the 76ers are done, but it has been a solid few weeks for them so far.GRADE: B+.

5. Raptors: They kept Fred VanVleet, Thad Young and Chris Boucher and added former Bulls forward Otto Porter Jr. If Porter can stay healthy, it’s a sneaky-good move for a young roster. But it’s a big ”if.”GRADE: C+.

6. BULLS: It feels as though the same five guys who have been getting run off the playground keep insisting ”we got next,” but the front office preached continuity, and this is what continuity looks like.GRADE: C.

7. Nets: This is a wait-and-see until we learn what they get in return for Kyrie Irving and Durant.GRADE: Incomplete.

8. Hawks: The addition of Dejounte Murray allows Trae Young to take on more of the role that Warriors star Steph Curry takes on when he goes off the ball, but the Hawks aren’t done. They still have decisions to make about Clint Capela and John Collins.GRADE: A-.

9. Cavaliers: Health is the best offseason acquisition they can make, but keep an eye on what they do with trade candidate Collin Sexton.GRADE: C+.

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New month, more of same for Dylan Cease in White Sox victory over Giants

SAN FRANCISCO — Dylan Cease was named American League Pitcher of the Month at 2:38 p.m. CT Saturday.

At 3:13 p.m., Giants right fielder LaMonte Wade Jr. led off the first inning against the White Sox right-hander with a homer. Joc Pederson followed with a double.

Welcome to July.

And welcome back to the Cease of old, who got through five innings without allowing a run in the White Sox’ 5-3 victory over the Giants. The result positioned the Sox (37-39) for a possible sweep when they conclude their West Coast road trip Sunday. Lucas Giolito, the last Sox to win Pitcher of the Month honors in May 2019, will start for the Sox.

Cease went 2-1 with an 0.33 ERA, 45 strikeouts and a .192 opponents average over five starts in June. He made five consecutive starts without allowing an earned run from May 29 to June 26, joining Doc White in 1904 as the only starters in Sox history to accomplish that feat.

The victory over the Giants improved Cease to 7-3 and lowered his ERA to 2.51. The major league leading 13.44 strikeouts per nine innings dipped a bit — he fanned four Giants while walking three and allowing four hits. He needed 104 pitches to get through five innings.

Pederson misplayed Gavin Sheets’ liner to left field into a two-run double in the fourth against Giants righty Logan Webb, and Yoan Moncada (2-for-3) added an RBI single. Sheets is hitting .310 (9-for-29) with a homer and four doubles in nine games since getting recalled from Charlotte.

Leury Garcia, the hero in a 1-0 win Friday night, knocked in a run on a ground ball to first baseman Brandon Belt with the bases loaded in the sixth. A second run scored on shortstop Donovan Walton’s errant throw trying to complete a double play.

That made it 5-1, and Tanner Banks, the winning pitcher in relief Friday, pitched two perfect innings in relief of Cease. Joe Kelly, pitching on consecutive days for the first time this season, allowed an RBI double to Darin Ruf in the eighth to make it 5-2.

Kendall Graveman pitched the ninth for his fifth save and second in two nights, but not before allowing a run and getting Mike Yastrzemski on a groundout to end the game. Yastrzemski represented the winning run at the plate.

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Ian Happ’s future with the Cubs is far from guaranteed

Should the Cubs trade OF Ian Happ at the trade deadline or keep him in their future plans?

The MLB trade deadline is approaching and there are several rumors surrounding the Chicago Cubs. The biggest name is catcher Willson Contreras who is going to be a hot commodity on the market. CP David Robertson is another name to keep on eye on as he has been lights out. There is another player on the Cubs who is quietly having a breakout season. 27-year old OF Ian Happ is batting .286 with eight homers and 37 RBIs. Not many reports have come out with his trade availability and it does pose a fair question. What’s going to happen with Happ?

Happ has been with the Cubs since he was drafted ninth overall in the 2015 draft. He broke out with 24 home runs in his rookie season back in 2017. He hasn’t shown that same pop the past few years but has amassed double-digit homers in every season. It’s hard to envision an effective Cubs lineup without him in the middle of it. Moreover, an outfield of Christopher Morel, Seiya Suzuki, and Ian Happ offers speed, power, defense, and excitement.

#MLB #ChicagoCubs #IanHapp Cubs OF Ian Happ is ‘numb’ to trade rumors with deadline approaching https://t.co/yVAzKXY0Zl

Chicago is 31-46 with no hopes of the playoffs this season and possibly for the next few seasons. Last season, we saw the core pieces all traded with a couple of hours. Could this season be more of the same? Kyle Hendricks, Willson Contreras, and Jason Heyward are the only remaining players from the championship team. Hendricks and Contreras will be central in trade talks. If one goes, many will follow and the Cubs will be in a deeper rebuild.

Happ’s contract will expire at the end of the season, so if the Cubs do not plan to re-sign him, trading him for prospects would be the smart business move. The New York Yankees are reportedly interesting in bolstering their outfield and Happ would be a massive help. The Cubs and Yankees have done business before (Anthony Rizzo and Aroldis Chapman for example) so keep on eye on those conversations over the next few weeks.

A desire to remain a Cub is Happ’s goal, and no doubt, he has proven to be a key offensive player. However, the Cubs appear to be on the verge of another deadline where they will be sellers. It’s going to be a tough pill to swallow if Contreras, Happ, Hendricks, and Robertson are all traded when the deadline passes. Only time will tell.

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Fire explain reason for keeping Arlo White

When Fire fans turn on the WGN broadcast of the match Sunday night at San Jose, they’ll be greeted by Arlo White.

White, the former voice of NBC’s Premier League coverage, will be on the call for the first time this season, despite his role as the lead play-by-play announcer for controversial LIV Golf, a Saudi-backed entity using the sport to soften a repressive regime’s worldwide image.

According to a team spokesperson, the Fire decided to keep White because they felt it wasn’t appropriate to judge where he chose to work outside the franchise. The spokesperson said the team didn’t think parting with White would’ve been a reasonable solution to the greater conversation, given his role as a commentator.

On the episode of the team-produced podcast released last Saturday, when he confirmed his 2022 Fire debut, White said his new job is an exciting opportunity and he enjoys calling golf. He compared it to the risk he took when he first moved to the United States to broadcast Seattle Sounders matches.

There was no mention of the baggage attached to LIV Golf.

In the eyes of many, White’s reputation has been stained. The good name he built from years of soccer broadcasting has been tarnished by taking money from the same government responsible for the grisly assassination of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, the mass execution of 81 people in March and the ongoing bloodshed in Yemen, among other crimes.

Beyond sportswashing with LIV Golf, the purchase of English soccer club Newcastle United last year and likely more investments in global sports, Saudi Arabia’s oil and wealth make the country a major player on the world stage.

Clearly, the Saudi influence is hard to escape. But keeping White — who’s under contract — seems to conflict with the Fire’s stated values and efforts to make impacts on the community.

After the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the franchise released strong messages on social media stating the team believes in “autonomy over one’s body and the right to choose” and followed up with links on how to vote and speak out. Through their P.L.A.Y.S. (Participate, Learn, Achieve, Youth, Soccer) program, the Fire have provided more than 250,000 hours of free soccer and social and emotional learning to over 4,000 kids, among other initiatives. During their match June 18, the club observed Juneteenth, and coach Ezra Hendrickson wore a Black Fires supporters group scarf.

“I just wanted to do that as a representation,” Hendrickson said last week. “This club, we like to embrace everyone, and I think me [at the] forefront, the head coach of the team, also being of African American descent, I thought it would be a good gesture.

“And along with the policy of the league and what they were trying to do last weekend with all the games and the numbers having Juneteenth showcased, I thought it would be a good thing to do, and I thought people accepted it and received it well.”

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Fireworks injuries up dramatically, Consumer Product Safety Commission says, over the past 15 years

Before you set off any of your own Fourth of July fireworks, here are some figures to keep in mind:

Fireworks injuries in the United States are up 25% over the past 15 years. And at least nine people died nationwide and an estimated 11,500 were injured last year in accidents involving fireworks, according to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.

The number of fireworks injuries last year was down from 15,600 in 2020, when the coronavirus pandemic canceled many public fireworks shows and people resorted to setting off their own.

A new report from the federal consumer agency shows young adults — between 20 and 24 years old — have the highest fireworks injury rates.

According to the report, the parts of the body most often injured by fireworks last year were hands and fingers (31% of injuries) and head, face and ears (21% of injuries). About one-third of injuries involved burns.

The agency also selected and tested fireworks in 2021 and found that about 31% contained what they called noncompliant components, including problem fuses, prohibited chemicals or an overload of pyrotechnic materials.

Of the 353 fireworks-related violations the agency has issued over the past decade, three were to sellers in Illinois, 17 to sellers in Indiana and nine to sellers in Wisconsin. The violations included issues like illegal chemicals or having too short of a fuse burn time.

Illinois has some of the strictest fireworks regulations in the country, and fireworks are illegal for personal use in Chicago.

Safety tips for anyone outside the city planning to shoot off their own:

Never let young children play with or ignite fireworks, including sparklers. Sparklers look harmless but can burn at up to 2,000 degrees.Fireworks always should be lit one at a time without putting your body over them, and people should move quickly away.Never try to re-light or handle a malfunctioning firework. Soak it in water, and throw it away.Read More

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Ron Coomer, Cubs broadcaster, takes a sentimental journey

Where better to begin a morning of touring the old neighborhood than the outsized parking lot of a tiny … wait, is this a Chinese restaurant or isn’t it? Because 63rd Fried Rice, our arranged meeting spot, still has an old sign up top that says Parisse’s Drive-In and boasts of copious Italian meats. So which is it?

“Parisse’s,” Ron Coomer says after steering into the lot in a black BMW 750i. “It’ll always be Parisse’s.”

It’s not Parisse’s anymore, but his point is well taken because 63rd Street and Melvina on the Southwest Side might as well be known as Coom’s Corner. The Cubs’ radio analyst (since 2014), former Cubs player (in 2001) and lifelong Cubs fan is from this neighborhood — he calls it Garfield Ridge, though technically it’s Clearing — and Parisse’s, along with Vince’s Pizzeria directly across the street, often was its epicenter. A hungry kid couldn’t miss with a beef sandwich on one side of 63rd or a tavern-style pie on the other.

Coomer’s dad, Ron, was good pals with Parisse himself in the 1970s, and a few of Coomer’s cousins worked behind the counter. Two decades later, whenever Coomer’s Twins would swing through town for a series against the White Sox, the infielder would order 70 sandwiches to Comiskey Park for teammates and all the cops stationed there. A clubhouse attendant would wheel them through the room in a laundry cart to a hero’s welcome.

“Great memories,” says Coomer, 55.

But we haven’t even gotten started. We can see Kinzie Elementary, Wentworth Park, Minuteman Park and the other stomping grounds of a nascent ballplayer soon, but first we have to feel the dirt of Hale Park’s Field 4 under our feet.

From 8 to 12 years old, Coomer and his dad played baseball together hundreds of times. Ron Sr. would come home from a local truck-driving job out of Argo to find his only son, one of two children, wearing one mitt and holding another. To Hale — always Field 4 if it was open — they’d go. Coomer, a Clear Ridge Little Leaguer at the time, would grab his bat, hit a few baseballs, chase them down and do it all again for an hour or longer. Then he’d take his glove and run as deep into the outfield as his dad would let him before fielding fungos, and this would go on for every bit as long.

And could Dad ever send them soaring. After two years at Lindblom, Ron Sr. had given up on playing sports to work at a gas station on 63rd and Narragansett because he needed the money. But he later boxed in the Air Force and became a serious bodybuilder. He was only 5-9, but he was a powerhouse and some kind of an athlete.

“That’s a good way to teach a kid to not be afraid of the ball,” Coomer says.

His dad wouldn’t have allowed it. He was a hugger, but he could be hard and he expected his boy to drive the ball, to make the catch, to hit the glove with his throws and definitely not to make any excuses. Coomer never stopped wanting to impress him.

“He was a good coach,” Coomer says. “He was part psychologist, he was a tough guy and he wanted to make a tough kid in sports. My toughest competition until I was probably through high school was right here.”

Staring in at the batting cage from where third base would be, Coomer goes silent for a while and begins to cry. He hasn’t been on this field since he was a kid. Being here and talking about his dad — who was larger than life — is too much.

Ron Sr. died of a heart attack at 59 in 2003, Coomer’s final year in the big leagues. Coomer would give anything for one of those hugs, like the one he got the first time one of his dad’s pitches got away and found the boy’s knee. An ice cream at Parisse’s helped.

Back at the house, mom Linda asked her husband, “What did you do to him?”

“He’ll be all right,” was the answer.

No rocks were hit into Midway during the taking of this photograph.

Steve Greenberg/Sun-Times

WE ARE STANDING ON CENTRAL AVENUE where 59th Street would meet it if it weren’t cut off by Minuteman Park. Call it another of Coomer’s “corners,” because here he would stand as a boy, in the gravel at the park’s edge, and put the “fun” in “fungo” by hitting rocks into what then was a much smaller, less-busy Midway Airport. The usual target for battering was an empty hangar. At least, he thought it was empty.

It was a mostly pleasant childhood for Coomer, born in 1966, who last lived in the modest bungalow at 5734 S. Massasoit Ave. in 1980. Coomer and sister Gina had many friends and cousins around, and nobody loved sports more than the short, scrawny boy who would go on to play nine seasons with the Twins, Cubs, Yankees and Dodgers.

One of Ron Sr.’s friends worked at the nearby Tootsie Roll plant, and Coomer would grab a handful from the bag that was always in the house, chew them and spit brown streaks as he played baseball. (Today, he tosses them to fans from the radio booth at Wrigley Field during the seventh-inning stretch.) After the famous blizzard of 1979, the Coomers’ backyard was unusable for a month; the football and hockey in the street, though, were legendary. An uncle had a snow plow on his truck, and Coomer would ride along as they plowed church lots, Parisse’s, Vince’s and other spots, with Coomer scrambling out of the vehicle with a shovel to get the unreachable areas.

“Great memories,” he says again.

But Ron Sr. was beginning to struggle with mental illness that only would get worse, and life on Massasoit became uncomfortable for all. Ron Sr. turned to self-medicating.

“How do you treat that?” Coomer says. “Back then, you treated it at a bar and you’d drink, and that’s how he treated it. It was sad, you know?”

Coomer’s parents split up, got back together, split again and eventually divorced before Coomer finished high school. Coomer’s high school time was complicated; he went to St. Rita as a freshman, Lockport as a sophomore, St. Rita again as a junior and Lockport again as a senior. In the Lockport years, he lived with his maternal grandparents in Homer Township. By now, he was playing travel ball out of Homer and coming into his own as a player.

Ron Sr. was getting help — often with his son in tow — at a VA hospital, first for the drinking and eventually for a diagnosis of bipolar disorder. But he never took to the help, which is to say that he resisted it. When he felt better, he said everything was fine. The good times never lasted, and the bad ones persisted until the end.

“He wasn’t the type to see it,” Coomer says. “It wasn’t in his character. He would say, ‘Boom, I’m good,’ and then it would come back.”

Coomer never felt afraid of his father, but seeing the man he idolized fall apart was unnerving and traumatic. Coomer took it on stoically, rarely talking about it and, to this day, never seeking professional help himself. He admits he isn’t sure that was wise.

Coomer outside his childhood home.

Steve Greenberg/Sun-Times

“Here you have a good situation, a good family, and it just went south,” he says. “Somebody asks me how things are going? Great, because they had to be. I couldn’t let it break me down, because then what do I do?”

Asked if he pays enough attention to his own well-being, Coomer sits behind the wheel silently for a bit.

“You don’t want to fall into the same traps,” he says. “My family, we’ve all had that in some way, shape or form. I look at that and go, OK, you watch your drinking. I’ve never been into drugs in my life, never smoked marijuana. I was an athlete. I’m not saying that’s good or bad, but I just never did it. But always in the back of my mind, I’ve had some big weeks where I’ve had to calm down and make sure [I’m] OK. I would say there were times in my life I was a little over the top with my life, but then you get a wake-up call and back right off.

“For me, there’s always been something burning in me to want to do what I’m doing. I never wanted to do something that was going to jeopardize baseball or my life, going to the ballpark or how people viewed me. There’s got to be a line.”

COOMER WASN’T ON ONE OF THE CORNERS — third or first, which he played in equal measure as a big-leaguer — in his formative years of baseball. He was a shortstop, which Jeff Schultz learned the hard way when Coomer showed up to play travel ball in Homer. Schultz, who would go on to play at Illinois, got bumped over to third almost immediately by the spindly kid who would become his best friend for life.

They met in a parking lot at 13, when a coach asked which parents could drive the boys a few miles down the road for a game. Coomer, who’d pulled up in a black Cadillac — yes, he was behind the wheel — raised his hand. All these years later, Schultz insists Coomer was driving solo. Coomer says his old man must have been riding shotgun. Either way, Schultz got in.

“People ask what differentiated Ron from a lot of guys,” Schultz says. “No. 1, it was his mental toughness. He had a lot going on off the field with his family situation, but once he got between the lines, he was the most mentally focused person I’ve ever met in my life. And No. 2, he could hit a ball like nobody’s business. When he hit it, it wouldn’t just go — it would keep going.”

Coomer (second from left) and Schultz (far left) with the Homer All-Stars.

Courtesy of Ron Coomer

Coached by Pete Fera, a kind man, Coomer took off, leading his teams to the Colt and Palomino World Series.

“He was good, and he knew it,” Fera says, “but he never put on fancy shows. He was too nice and thoughtful for that.”

Jim Hall, a former coach at Lockport who, through a connection, would help Coomer get to Taft (California) College, remembers Coomer’s leadership. As a senior, Coomer ran laps with a misbehaving teammate and, in that simple interaction, changed the kid’s trajectory. The Porters made it to the state quarterfinals, a rare feat for the program.

We’re at Lockport now, where Coomer’s name is on the outfield wall. A camp for incoming freshmen is underway, and coach Scott Malinowski asks Coomer to address the hopeful players.

“You never know who’s going to be the next big-league baseball player, and this is where it starts,” Coomer tells them before brandishing his 2016 World Series ring to their wide-eyed delight.

When Coomer got his driver’s license as a junior, he was 5-8 and 150 pounds. Less than a year later at his preseason physical, he checked in at 5-11, 185. A Royals scout started coming around, leading Coomer to believe he might have a chance at something big.

At Taft, Coomer — so athletic he could dunk a basketball — was the fastest player on a team that would see half a dozen players drafted. But he tore an anterior cruciate ligament and played his sophomore season in a brace, nevertheless bombing away and becoming a junior-college All-American. He never would get his speed back. The A’s drafted him in the 14th round in 1987, and a long minor-league journey began. Coomer didn’t get the knee repaired until after his second year of pro ball, still early in an odyssey during which he was traded twice and wouldn’t reach the majors until he was 28.

Coomer at the Lockport High School baseball field, where his name hangs on the outfield wall next to those of two of his coaches.

Steve Greenberg/Sun-Times

It turned out he could handle himself quite well at the top level, because once he went up, he never went back down. With the Twins in 1995, he hit his first home run off Randy Johnson.

“I didn’t look at him,” Coomer says. “I was like, ‘Hell, no, I’m not going to piss him off.’ “

It was one of a collection of storybook firsts. Later in 1995 — in his first of six seasons with the Twins — he hit his first Chicago homer off the Sox’ Kirk McCaskill, with more than 50 friends and family in the stands cheering him on. In 1999, he hit his first homer at Wrigley, off Terry Adams, a boyhood dream come true. In 2001, he bombed away at Wrigley for the first time as a Cub, the team he loved so much it occasionally moved him to tears. A year later — in his first at-bat as a Yankee — he went yard off the Rays’ Wilson Alvarez, the 86th of his 92 career homers.

Ron Sr. was a Yankees fan, but he wasn’t well enough to be in the Bronx that night. Linda and her husband, Bob, were there, along with some uncles and girlfriend Paula, whom Coomer would marry in 2003. Coomer called his dad, who’d watched the game from Florida, and for a while the two of them just laughed.

Coomer is tearing up now.

“My dad said, ‘You’re a Yankee now,’ ” he says. “I’ll never forget it.”

“COOM’S CORNER” WAS THE NAME of a radio show Coomer co-hosted in Minnesota during his time with the Twins, and he would work 10 years in media there after his retirement, doing all sorts of things. His favorite was a radio show on which he talked sports — not just baseball — and played records.

“I was a DJ!” he says, laughing at the sound of it.

But the real music to his ears came late in 2013, after he listened to a voicemail from Cubs radio play-by-play man Pat Hughes. Coomer was doing television work on Twins broadcasts, though not in the booth, at the time.

“You know the Cubs job is open, right?” Hughes said when Coomer called him on the ride home from the ballpark.

Coomer was flummoxed. He and Hughes had gotten to know each other in 2001, but it’s not like they were close friends. There had to be a line of ex-Cubs with longer histories with the team who hoped to replace Keith Moreland, and, in fact, there were a few already under consideration for the job. Why Ron Coomer?

“I’d like for you to be my partner,” Hughes said.

The next day, Coomer met with Cubs executives. The job was his if he wanted it.

“I needed a new partner,” Hughes says, “and, literally, he was the first person I thought of.”

Coomer and Pat Hughes in the booth at Wrigley Field.

Maddie Lee/Sun-Times

Hughes never had forgotten Coomer’s affable, earnest demeanor or his hard-working nature from that 2001 season. On buses and airplanes, Coomer had gravitated toward Hughes, and the men had talked baseball in a manner that just seemed easy and perfect. It continues to this day.

“Literally, we have never had one bad moment between us,” Hughes says. “Not one. Good teams and bad — and the pinnacle of 2016 — he has been so easy to work with, so insightful. He can articulate things better than the guy who comes by it naturally, and I think that’s because he had to work and grind for everything he has.”

Says Coomer: “We’re friends, right? But we’re very different, and I think that’s a good thing. We’re complementary in the differences we have. And we’ve never had a cross word in nine years — nothing, zero.”

Paula — a native Minnesotan — didn’t love the idea of leaving, but she came around, and being home again has been one of the greatest joys of Coomer’s life. Never more so than on the night the Cubs beat the Dodgers to win the National League pennant in 2016, which sent Coomer and some of his oldest friends to the rooftop of Murphy’s Bleachers for cigars, beers and voluptuous pours of Tito’s vodka. It was Coomer’s favorite night in Cubs history.

Six seasons later, he is less than thrilled with where the Cubs are at. The team trading Yu Darvish and giving up on Kyle Schwarber put him on guard, but what came next — so long, Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant and Javy Baez — was a lot to swallow.

“I was a lifelong Cubs fan and a Cubs player, and we won a World Series with those guys — and it just gets blown up in a 48-hour period?” he says. “But I guess you knew it was coming because you don’t let Kyle and Darvish go before that, if not. It wasn’t a big shock, but it was rough.”

If the Cubs made one mistake, Coomer believes, it was signing all three of those core stars to contracts that expired simultaneously.

“I think if the Cubs had it to do over again, they certainly wouldn’t have done that,” he says. “That was a tough one, right? Your chips are all in, and then you pull them all out, right? I’m sure that wasn’t something they wanted to have happen.”

But complaining, he is not.

“I get to go to Wrigley Field every day,” he says. “I have the greatest job in the world.”

Coomer at the bar of his Lombard restaurant, Coom’s Corner.

Steve Greenberg/Sun-Times

THERE’S NOTHING FANCY ABOUT the Coom’s Call burger or Ron’s Chicken Sandwich at Coom’s Corner, guess-who’s restaurant in Lockport. But they’re big, they’re good and they damn sure get the job done. Sound familiar?

“I guess that’s me, isn’t it?” Coomer says, hunkering down over a plate served by one of his cousins. “What you see is what you get. I’m a Chicago kid.”

Speaking of which, there’s a game at Wrigley tonight, and Coomer has to shove off for the city soon. What else is there to discuss?

A lot, it turns out. In no particular order: many nights of Springsteen; 13 knee surgeries; a right knee replacement in 2015 and a left one coming up soon; years of trying unsuccessfully to start a family; teaching history and coaching baseball, which he would’ve done if he hadn’t made it as a player; getting back on the field and coaching, which he swears he’ll do before it’s too late; Rizzo’s friendship; Bryant’s kindness; Jon Lester’s quiet, unfailing generosity at restaurants; and changes in swing plane absolutely ruining hitters.

When it comes to launch angle, Schwarber just might be the one that got away.

“To me, with the right people around him coaching-wise keeping his swing on a level plane, Kyle might be one of the top three hitters in our league,” Coomer says. “I just think this new theory of hitting hasn’t done him any favors. I looked at him when he came to the Cubs, and I went, ‘Wow.’ Right up the middle, line drives to left, then they throw the ball inside, and he hits a bomb. But then everything starts with trying to elevate the ball, and a guy I thought would hit .300 is hitting .200.”

Here’s a late curveball for Coomer, who played in the heart of the steroid era: Did he or didn’t he?

“I didn’t, I can tell you that,” he says. “The way you know someone didn’t is now that we’re older, we age like everybody else. We get bigger and heavier, and your body hurts, and you can’t move around anymore and you’re getting knee replacements and things.

“But I don’t regret it. I could not justify putting something like that in my system, and believe me — I was tempted to the extreme of it. Because you saw it every day and knew it was going on, and you’re not competing equally; you’re just not.”

Coomer with his dad, Ron Sr., at age 10.

Courtesy of Ron Coomer

By the time Coomer was in his last season, a Dodger, he was unable to play two days in a row. Only after he hung it up did he find out he’d played in 2003 on another torn ACL. He’d squeezed every drop out of what he had, and that’s satisfying to this day.

” ‘Content’ is not the right word — I’m happy in what I’m doing,” he says. “I’m going to Wrigley Field, the place I grew up, the place I went to with my dad at 4 years old and ate a hot dog.”

Ron Sr. was correct all those years ago: His boy would be all right. And Ron Sr. would’ve been extremely proud. It wasn’t the tough man’s style to express such a thing to his son, but this is not up for debate.

“He told everybody else,” Coomer says. “He didn’t tell me, but that was OK. I knew.”

There are tears again.

“I think of him now, with me being here, back home, the Cubs winning the World Series, my job, you know?” he says. “I know this: If he were here and OK — if he could see all this — God, it would’ve been fun.”

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