Chicago Sports

BREAKING: NBA superstar Kevin Durant requests trade

Kevin Durant has requested a trade out of Brooklyn per multiple reports as the Nets seek to move the superstar

The NBA world is about to be shaken up once again just ahead of the start of the 2022 free agency period on Thursday.

Just minutes ago, news broke that superstar Kevin Durant has requested a trade out of Brooklyn and the Nets are working on moving him. Durant signed with the Nets three years ago in free agency, joining Kyrie Irving in Brooklyn to try and form a super team. But injuries, among other things held the Nets back as they didn’t reach the Eastern Conference Finals in any of those three seasons.

Brooklyn Nets GM Sean Marks is working with Kevin Durant and his business manager Rich Kleiman on finding a trade for the franchise star, Kleiman tells ESPN.

The report is early but already there are sources saying the Phoenix Suns are a preferred destination for Durant while the Miami Heat have also been mentioned.

As for odds, the Heat lead the way at +300 while the Suns and Grizzlies sit at +500. But what about the Chicago Bulls?  Their odds per FOX bet are +1500 as it’s a long shot to land Durant.

Either way, buckle up for a wild NBA free agency period…

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Chicago Bulls showing interest in Mo Bamba per report

Mo Bamba appears to be on the Chicago Bulls radar as free agency is set to begin on Thursday

The NBA’s free agency period begins on Thursday and one of the names being connected to the Chicago Bulls is center Mo Bamba. The 24-year-old has spent all four seasons of his career in Orlando so far but appears to be set on moving on and finding a new home.

And that home might be Chicago.

Jake Fischer of Bleacher Report wrote on the market for Bamba, naming the Bulls and Toronto Raptors among teams that will have interest in the center:

Mo Bamba appears to have interest from the Bulls and Raptors, among other teams in search of rim protection. After Paolo Banchero’s selection at No. 1, there’s also motivation on both sides for Bamba and the Magic to agree to terms on a new deal, sources said.

Then on Thursday morning, beat writer Joe Cowley reported that if it were Bamba’s choice, he’d sign with the Bulls. However, at the current asking value that feeling isn’t mutual, hinting that the Bulls may not want to pay that steep price to land the talented center.

Hearing if it was up to Mo Bamba he would be a Bull by tonight. Wanted to be a Bull on draft night ’18, and that hasn’t changed. Problem is feeling isn’t mutual at his current asking value. As reported by @KCJHoop, Danilo Gallinari is in play.

It’s clear the Bulls need some help with a true rim protector as Nikola Vucevic has struggled doing that so far in his time with the team. They do have some options out there and could very well look to find a bargain bin type player, which wouldn’t make sense for a team that thinks they are on the cusp of taking a step forward.

Bamba’s name is certainly one to watch moving forward on Thursday and let’s see if the two sides can come to a mutual agreement.

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Chicago Bears are Vegas’ most popular 2022 NFL bet but for wrong reason

Bettors don’t like the Chicago Bears to win many games this season

The Chicago Bears have been pummeled by analysts in the previous few months. Hot air coming from NFL prognosticators could power a balloon trip from ORD to LAS. Sports bettors are following suit in spades.

With talent depletion being seen at the wide receiver, offensive, and defensive line positions, the Chicago Bears have a long way to go to gain the public trust. Justin Fields will need to have a much better second year in order for the Bears to have a chance in most games. The challenge for Fields will be not having much help while learning a new offense under freshman NFL coordinator Luke Getsy.

Not a good formula for success this season. Bettors in Las Vegas are catching on and putting money where the public’s opinion is. Max Meyer wrote about the Chicago Bears betting position for Caesars Sportsbook:

Chicago’s win total opened at 6.5, with the over favored at -140 and the under at +120. While the Bears have remained at 6.5, the under now resides at -140 with the over at +120.

Not only have the Bears received the most under money among every NFL win total at Caesars Sportsbook, it’s by a rather large margin. Chicago’s under has nabbed 67% more money than the next-closest under, the Falcons (O/U 5). Besides the Falcons, the Bears have collected at least twice as much under money as any other team.

Among all Bears win total wagers, the under has attracted 79% of the total number of tickets and 95% of the total dollars wagered. There is nearly 18 times more under money than over money on Chicago’s win total. Along with drawing the most under money of any win total, the Bears’ under ranks second in tickets, only trailing the Jets’ under (5.5).

That 95% mark makes Chicago the most lopsided under by dollars as well for any win total. Only five win total sides are more lopsided overall, and they’re all overs—Commanders (7.5) at 99%, Colts (9.5) at 98%, Ravens (9.5) at 98%, Saints (8) at 97% and Lions (6) at 96%.

That’s a lot of faith that the Bears’ will be awful this season. Hopefully, the haters will have to pay up. Meyer would go on to add that the Bears account for 7 of the 12 largest bets at the Caesars Sportsbook. The Bears are catching a lot of attention but for the wrong reasons.

A sign of what’s to come for the Chicago Bears?

The Bears are likely in for a long season. Unless general manager Ryan Poles is willing to part with some cap space cash this summer the Bears simply won’t have the talent to win many games this season. Fields and company are probably just going to be learning a new system and getting ready to compete in 2023 and beyond.  Not looking good if you want to watch the Bears win seven games.

However, one of the earliest pieces of sports gambling advice I received was to bet against the public. Oddsmakers aren’t the kinds of folks you see on the streets asking for work or cash. The Bears have a favorable schedule. Seven wins in 17 games versus those opponents are within reach.

The Chicago Bears have a few months to tidy things up

Fortunately, the best news for the Chicago Bears is that the final roster isn’t complete. Poles and new head coach Matt Eberflus have a chance to build a better roster that can win more games. What positions they decide to focus on is anyone’s guess. There are too many holes to plug this year.

If the Bears can add a few pieces for Fields, either on the offensive line or at wide receiver, the Bears will have a chance to win enough games for rose-colored-glasses Bears fans to collect some of the public cash.

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Robber and concealed carry holder both wounded in exchange of gunfire in East Garfield Park

A robber and a man he was holding up were both wounded when they exchanged gunfire in East Garfield Park early Thursday.

The man, 28, was walking to his car in the 300 block of North Avers Street when a gunman approached and demanded his belongings, according to police.

The man, a concealed carry license, pulled out a gun and fired at the robber, who also began shooting, police said.

The man jumped into his car and discovered he had been hit in the abdomen.He drove to West Suburban Hospital, where he was listed in god condition.

The robber was shot in the left thigh and right hand and was taken by ambulance to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he was listed in good condition.

A gun was recovered, police said.

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Three people wounded when gunman opens fire outside South Side home, shooting at least 45 rounds

Three people were wounded when a gunman began shooting outside a home in Princeton Park on the South Side early Thursday, firing off at least 45 rounds.

The attack happened around 3 a.m. in the 9400 block of South Harvard Avenue, police said.

A 22-year-old man was hit in the chest as he was leaving out a back door of the home and was taken in critical condition to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn.

A man and a woman, 46 and 45, were inside the home and were grazed by bullets. They refused medical attention on the scene.

No one was in custody.

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Cubs’ Christopher Morel adjusting to a league that has taken notice of him

By now, all of Major League Baseball has access to information on the kind of damage Cubs rookie Christopher Morel can do with a fastball. And Morel knows even better.

“Sometimes he wants to hit 600-foot homers,” Cubs assistant coach Juan Cabreja told the Sun-Times, “instead of like 400-foot homers — that’s OK.”

What about 429-foot homers? That’s how far Morel launched a sixth-inning home run in the Cubs’ 8-3 win against the Reds on Wednesday at Wrigley Field.

Morel’s multi-hit game showed how effective he can be even as he’s adjusting at the plate to opposing pitchers’ shift in approach against him.

On Wednesday, Cubs manager David Ross moved Morel to No. 9 spot in the batting order as he adjusts. For over a month Morel had served as the Cubs’ leadoff hitter in every game he played, but he’d posted a sub-.200 batting average in the past two and a half weeks.

“That nine-hole can be a second leadoff guy at times,” Ross said. “And, one, just taking one of those at bats away in an area where he’s putting a lot of pressure on himself, swinging and missing. Try to get his timing back, let the game come to him a little bit more.”

Struggles are relative, and even before Wednesday, Morel had recorded hits in six of his last seven games. But the Cubs – and the rest of MlB – witnessed what Morel is capable of with a hot bat when he started his career on a 22-game on-base streak.

“This is just your typical guy getting into the big leagues, having some success, and especially at the top of the lineup, he’s on the radar,” Ross said last week.

The higher a hitter is on opposing teams’ radars, the more attention they’re paying to potential weaknesses.

“Especially on first pitch, people are a little bit more careful with him,” Cubs hitting coach Greg Brown said, “because they know he’s ready to hit right out of the box.”

So, they’re not challenging him with a fastball in the strike zone.

The Cubs’ series against the Cardinals this past weekend was an exaggerated example of how pitchers have adjusted to the rookie as he’s begun to establish himself in the majors. Over the course of three games, Morel saw 36 breaking balls, compared to 22 fastballs, according to Statcast.

With that approach, the Cardinals limited Morel to two hits over the three games, both singles. The first was off a fastball and the second a slider.

“They’re definitely focusing more on throwing breaking stuff early in counts against me,” Morel said through team interpreter Will Nadal. “I’ll keep working on that, just practicing, making sure that whenever they’re throwing breaking stuff at me that I’m able to identify, adjust, and make them pay.”

It’s not that Morel can’t hit breaking balls. Entering Wednesday, he was batting .207 on that pitch group, according to Statcast. But he’s done more damage on fastballs.

“The goal would be as he grows,” Brown said, “he’s going to recognize the sliders that he wants to hit versus the ones he doesn’t. Or what lane he wants the heater in. Those are just things that I think are going to come with time.”

Morel battled to get his pitch against Reds reliever Ross Detwiler in the sixth inning. Detwiler threw mostly cutters to Morel. And Morel, exercising patience, watched the first five pitches to get to a 3-2 count.

He fouled off another cutter to keep the at-bat going.

Then, Morel turned on a cutter low and inside to send a towering home run into the left field stands.

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Michael Kopech takes on Shohei Ohtani as White Sox go for series victory

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Right-hander Michael Kopech hasn’t backed down from big moments, and he had another when he matched up Wednesday against Angels two-way star Shohei Ohtani as the White Sox tried to get some momentum going in the rubber game of a series at Angel Stadium.

”He definitely has that quality,” manager Tony La Russa said before the game, noting Kopech’s one-hit starts May 22 against the Yankees on ”Sunday Night Baseball” and June 7 against the Dodgers, outings in which he pitched seven and six innings, respectively.

”This one is [to] win the series. It’s important for us going into the day off, going to San Francisco. One thing about him, he’s going to be ready to compete. And if he’s got it all working, we’ve got a great chance. If he doesn’t, he’s going to work his butt off to get it right.”

Kopech was forced to do the latter after the Angels scored two runs in the first, one of them when Kopech was charged with an error covering first base while attempting to complete a double play. Mike Trout, who had doubled home Taylor Ward (leadoff single), trotted home from third after shortstop Tim Anderson’s throw eluded Kopech, who was on the move.

Kopech rebounded from the first with three scoreless innings.

Having Kopech, Lance Lynn, Dylan Cease, Lucas Giolito and Johnny Cueto in regular rotation since Lynn came off the injured list ”is the most positive thing we’ve got going,” La Russa said. ”We’ve got legitimate starters. In San Francisco [this weekend], we have Lynn, Cease and Giolito. That’s where it starts.”

Closer Liam Hendriks (strained flexor in forearm) threw a bullpen session Wednesday, is slated for a simulated game Friday in San Francisco and might be able to return early next week.

”We get him back and we start swinging the bats, we can percolate,” La Russa said.

Anderson and Jose Abreu singled in the first, but Ohtani (6-4, 2.90 ERA going in) struck out Yoan Moncada, Luis Robert and Gavin Sheets in a 25-pitch inning.

Anderson flashing speed

Anderson took it easy when he first came off the IL after a strained groin, but he is blazing around the bases again.

”I’ve been feeling better in the last couple of games, able to move a lot more,” Anderson said. ”Overall, the body feels a lot better than it did.”

Anderson and other Sox players dealing with leg issues have been told to ”slow it down” when needed. It goes against Anderson’s instincts, but he gets it.

”My speed has always been a part of my game,” Anderson said. ”It’s just a matter of being smart, as well, after coming off the groin until I feel comfortable getting back rolling.”

Anderson said he wants to play every day but will rest when the training staff recommends it.

”I’m going to play every day I can,” he said. ”Whatever they say, goes. Just going to follow what they say.”

This and that

Outfielder/designated hitter Andrew Vaughn, who has been dealing with leg soreness, was rested to give him consecutive days off, including the Sox’ day off Thursday.

+ Outfielder Eloy Jimenez hit the first home run of his minor-league rehab, his first extra-base hit in 13 games. Jimenez has played only at DH and is 9-for-46 (.190).

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Fire topple Union 1-0, but challenges remain in season’s second half

The last thing the Fire needed was a potentially season-ending injury to one of their most important players. But defender Wyatt Omsberg tearing ligaments in his left foot is just the latest hurdle the team has faced.

To make something of their season, the Fire will have to overcome that adversity. And that’s just one of the places they’ve struggled in 2022.

Before Wednesday’s 1-0 win over the Philadelphia Union, the Fire were last in MLS at 0.88 points per match and tied for the fewest points with 14. They made some progress against the East-leading Union, going ahead on Federico Navarro’s 68th minute goal after clever work from attacker Chris Mueller.

The uphill climb, though, is just beginning for the Fire. And the loss of Omsberg is just the newest obstacle.

“As a part of the defense, as my teammate next to me, he’s really important for me and for the whole defense,” captain Rafael Czichos said last week. “I think he’s been [having] a really good season so far. Yeah, that he’s injured now, obviously is bad for us but I think we will find a good solution to replace him.”

The Fire do have some options to make up for Omsberg’s absence in Carlos Teran, Mauricio Pineda and Jonathan Bornstein. Figuring out how to get by without Omsberg, however, is one of many issues as the season reaches the halfway point.

Per American Soccer Analysis, the Fire’s expected point total entering Wednesday was 21, a number that would’ve placed them within two points of the Eastern Conference playoff line. Though that statistic isn’t ironclad, it shows that the Fire are capable of controlling play and creating chances.

One of the problems is converting those opportunities into goals. Perhaps the best example of the Fire’s deficiency in that area came May 28, when they outshot Toronto FC 33-5 but still managed to lose 3-2.

“I think the best game we’ve played so far was the game in Toronto,” Czichos said. “We had a lot of possession. We were really aggressive. We had a lot of chances, I think the most chances in the season so far but the problem was the result.”

The Fire defense, which was strong to begin the season, has turned error-prone. In their first game after Omsberg’s surgery, the Fire trailed 1-0 late in the first half at Houston when four players couldn’t deal with an innocent-looking cross before allowing the Dynamo’s Darwin Quintero to double their lead.

Nothing like that happened Wednesday, though Philadelphia might’ve had a legitimate argument for a stoppage-time penalty after a challenge by the Fire’s Jonathan Bornstein.

Facing one of the league’s best teams, the Fire generally had the upper hand but couldn’t convert until Navarro scored his first of the season. Before that, Philadelphia had a chance to take the lead in the 47th minute, but Fire goalie Gabriel Slonina repelled a close-range header from the Union’s Cory Burke. The Union, who had a day fewer of rest than the Fire, went down to 10 men in the 73rd minute when Jose Martinez received his second yellow card.

The Fire then killed off the remainder of the match, winning for the second time in three tries after a 10-game MLS winless streak.

NOTE: Andre Reynolds II made his first career MLS start, replacing Miguel Navarro (health and safety protocols). Like Navarro, Pinedais in the protocol.

Torres (left hip) was absent as well.

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Neighbors hold vigil to honor young brothers killed in West Humboldt Park fire: ‘These are my angels’

A day before a deadly fire in their home, four young brothers spent their last Saturday making mud pies and digging for spiders in a local community garden.

The blaze Sunday left the boys — 11-year-old Angel Rodriguez, 6-year-old Jayden Cruz, 5-year-old Aiden Cruz and 4-year-old Axel Cruz — stuck in their West Humboldt Park basement apartment with only one exit.

Following the fire, the boys were each pronounced dead, the Cook County medical examiner’s office said Wednesday. Two adults, one of which was the boys’ mother, were transported to area hospitals and treated for smoke inhalation and burns.

Neighbors and friends gathered — eyes brimming with tears — at the Children’s Garden of Hope down the street from the boys’ apartment Wednesday to mourn and remember them.

“It makes you love your kids a little more,” said Valerie Fernandez, a neighbor who attended the vigil and knew the boys through a local day care center. “Give them a kiss, and be happy that you’re all here together.”

Larry Walker lives two doors down from the apartment that burned Sunday. As the unit went up in flames, Walker opened a window and carried one of the boys out of the fire.

“[I was thinking] just save the kids, just save the kids,” Walker told the Sun-Times.

Walker said he’s had trouble sleeping since the fire.

“I heard the rest of the kids screaming, but I couldn’t get to them,” he said. “It was heartbreaking, I’ve never been through something like this.”

As of Tuesday, what set the fire hadn’t been determined, though investigators said it had been caused by an open flame in one of the back rooms. It’s unclear if the fire was accidental or not.

The Sun-Times asked the Chicago Fire Department if any new information on the fire could be released Wednesday, and the department did not immediately respond.

A GoFundMe page has been started to financially support the boys’ mother and sister as they recover.

At the vigil, people huddled together and shared tight hugs as speakers prayed and offered condolences. White roses and blue star-shaped balloons dotted the scene of the vigil.

A makeshift memorial fashioned out of stuffed animals, mylar balloons and tall, skinny candles adorned the rock in front of the Children’s Garden of Hope where the brothers spent much of their time, according to Maura Madden, who runs the garden.

Madden said the brothers were tight-knit, especially the younger three.

“They were three little peas in a pod,” she said. “All so petite, so cute, but so well-mannered.”

The garden serves as a community gathering spot, especially for neighborhood children. The boys specifically liked the wooden stage in the center of the garden and ran through streams of water whenever Madden or other volunteers sprayed the growing plants.

“These are my angels,” Madden said.

Alicia Escalante, 11, described herself as Angel Rodriguez’s girlfriend and classmate. Her eyes welled with tears as speakers echoed condolences for the family and prayed at the garden.

“She was so sad,” Escalante’s mom, Bianca Mena said. “I don’t know how to feel. We want to help with anything we can.”

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White Sox’ Josh Harrison singing a different tune in June

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Josh Harrison’s offense was so inept for the first two months of the season, his first with the White Sox, that people who follow the team wanted to see him shipped out.

“I’ll be honest, I don’t care what anybody says,” Harrison, a 10-year veteran infielder who turns 35 next month, said.

It’s probably a good thing Harrison, an All-Star for the Pirates in 2014 and 2017 who signed a one-year, $5.5 million deal to fill a void left at second base created by the trade of Nick Madrigal and declining to pick up Carlos Hernandez’ option after the season, tuned out the noise.

In June, Harrison was batting .346/.403/.509 with a .912 OPS going into Wednesday’s game against the Angels and Shohei Ohtani. He clubbed a two-run, tying homer in the Sox’ 11-4 victory over the Angels Tuesday.

“Been feeling pretty good at the plate, getting my rhythm and timing,” Harrison said. “Putting good swings on good pitches.”

Harrison is making the signing not look as awful as it first appeared when his batting line stood at .167/.248/.255 on June 2, his demeanor and veteran clubhouse presence notwithstanding.

“You don’t get to 10 years in this league by accident,” Harrison said. “I’ve been through every emotion possible. Anger, sad, upset, frustrated, excited. And I’ve dealt with adversity at the beginning of the season but it’s not anything I hadn’t gone through before. I know that’s what happens, you play the game and it can turn.”

It took a good turn when Harrison walked off the Blue Jays in a 7-6 victory in 12 innings Tuesday at Guaranteed Rate Field, a day after hitting a home run in an 8-7 win. He made big defensive plays in both games.

Harrison’s early season disappointment runs parallel to a team that was three games below .500 entering Wednesday’s rubber game of a series. The Sox are digging in and resisting the forces that threaten to keep them looking up at two teams in the weak AL Central.

“That’s just a testament of what we got going here, guys showing up every day and you go about your work,” he said. “You go to the right direction.”

Even as Harrison was playing better, when prospect Lenyn Sosa was called up from Double-A Birmingham Thursday after Danny Mendick tore his ACL in a collision with left fielder Adam Haseley, some fans were incensed that Harrison and not Sosa started at second base that day. Sosa had big numbers at Birmingham, and many thought he could provide a needed spark to a lagging offense.

Sosa did play in four games, starting three, and went 1-for-12 before being optioned to Triple-A Charlotte when Yoan Moncada came off the IL Tuesday.

“Teams kind of had an idea of how to pitch him, with the idea of this is how we need to execute against him,” assistant hitting coach Howie Clark said. “He had one hit but he hit a couple balls hard and for me he was very calm, he has great work ethic, he listens. I don’t think there is a lot that has to change.”

The Sox like Sosa’s makeup but feel the experience will serve him well as he gets the everyday at-bats he needs at Charlotte. Harrison, meanwhile, was an easy choice as far as manager Tony La Russa is concerned.

“Just watch every game that he plays,” La Russa said. “He could sit two or three days and he comes up there with vigor. He’s got a career of making plays and taking tough at-bats. He got off to a slow start and now he’s starting to be himself. But he’s never lost his positive frame of mind in the clubhouse. And if he’s not playing he’s there, ready.”

La Russa calls Harrison “a special pro.”

“He can’t be any better than he is professionally — personally as well,” he said.

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