Chicago Sports

Cubs’ Seiya Suzuki headed to Triple-A Iowa on rehab assignment

Cubs outfielder Seiya Suzuki got in one more sun-soaked Wrigley Field workout Wednesday afternoon, before heading to the airport.

Suzuki (strained left ring finger) was scheduled to begin a rehab assignment with Triple-A Iowa on Thursday, the Cubs announced.

Cubs manager David Ross didn’t reveal how many games the team expects Suzuki to need with the I-Cubs before returning from the 10-day IL, saying they’ll adjust based on daily feedback.

Suzuki has gone through two live batting practice sessions recently but hasn’t hit in a game for over a month. Ross said the swelling in Suzuki’s finger, which was a concern the last time he tried to build up his hitting to return, hasn’t come back.

“We’ve got a plan laid out,” Ross said of what the team will be monitoring. “Get some at-bats, his timing down. … Just getting back in playing shape I think is what’s important, trying to get his legs underneath him, run the bases, be able to react in the outfield.”

Until Suzuki returns, outfielders Rafael Ortega and Nelson Vel?zquez will likely continue to get a boost in playing time. Cubs outfielder Jason Heyward has been out of the lineup for the past four games, and the soreness in his right knee hasn’t improved, Ross said Wednesday.

“We’ll have to take a hard look at that here soon,” he added.

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Union rallies at Near West Side dispensary where workers claim they were fired for organizing efforts

A rally was held Wednesday outside a Near West Side cannabis dispensary by union leaders and elected officials a week after two employees claimed they were fired for their organizing efforts.

“This is an industry that promised great jobs and career opportunities when pushing to legalize marijuana and they aren’t living up to that promise,” said Jim Doane, one of the recently fired employees. “We are making what Wendy’s entry-level employees are making and we are just advocating for better money, better scheduling and better ways to be promoted.”

Doane, 48, left a career as a restaurant general manager to become a bud tender at Zen Leaf Dispensary, 1301 S. Western Ave. He said it was his dream job and he quickly became one of the dispensary’s best employees — receiving highly rated reviews online and being trusted to help establish other dispensaries in other newly legalized states.

He said poor wages, scheduling and advancement opportunities made him look toward Teamsters Local 777, who had just successfully helped another Zen Leaf dispensary in suburban Lombard unionize earlier this year — a move he believes cost him his job as he was an organizing leader.

Workers at the Zen Leaf Dispensary in the Medical District filed a petition to unionize with Teamsters Local 777 earlier this month. Employees will vote on whether to form a union in July.

“I worked 30 years of my life in management, so I was an ideal employee, I had ambitions to move up with Zen Leaf,” Doane said. “But I’m an old guy and I am tired of being bullied by the bosses. I showed up early, I received praise and I worked hard for them to just fire me.”

Doane said he was told by Zen Leaf that economic hardship at the company was the reason he was let go, but he believes they caught wind of his role in fighting for a union.

Zen Leaf, who’s parent company is Verano Holdings, has dispensaries across the country, including 10 in Illinois.

Grace Bondy, a spokeswoman for Verano Holdings, declined to comment on the two recently terminated employees but said “We respect our team members’ rights to choose whether they want to be represented by a union.”

Richard Perez, who said he was fired because he was leading a union organizing effort at his former dispensary, hugs an employee on Wednesday outside of Zen Leaf Dispensary at 1301 S. Western Ave.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Doane said Zen Leaf started offering product discounts to employees — except those at the company’s sole unionized shop — in hopes of discouraging any talks of other organizing efforts. Employees, he said, saw right through that.

About two dozen union officials attended the mid-week rally in support of the two recently terminated employees. Ald. Jason Ervin (28th) and state Rep. Lakesia Collins, D-Chicago, also appeared at the rally to show their support for the unionization efforts.

“Verano’s tactics are shameful and unlawful. The unity and resolve that these workers have demonstrated is inspiring,” Teamsters organizer Pasquale Gianni said. “This will serve as a rallying point for our union election next month, as well as our fight for a contract that wins gains in pay, benefits, and working conditions. Teamsters fight to ensure workers are respected, valued, and heard.”

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Blackhawks talking trades, looking for new role for Derek King

Derek King has been displaced from the Blackhawks’ head coaching role by Luke Richardson, but King may nonetheless remain with the organization moving forward.

General manager Kyle Davidson said Wednesday at Richardson’s introductory news conference that he’d work with King, who went 27-33-10 as the Hawks’ incredibly popular, ego-less interim coach this past season, to find a suitable new role for him.

“It was a tough spot for Derek to step into in his first foray as an [NHL] head coach, so we thought he did excellent,” Davidson said. “Derek’s someone we really appreciate and we really value, so there’s going to be a process moving forward where we do try to keep Derek in the fold. Because we’re looking to bring high-character people into the organization, and Derek is that.”

It’s possible King could regain his old AHL coaching title. Rockford interim coach Anders Sorensen did well this past season but hasn’t had his interim tag (at least officially) removed yet, and King admitted he’d always seen himself in the past as best-suited to be a minor-league coach.

An assistant coaching role on Richardson’s staff or another job in the front office, development team or scouting department are all possibilities, too.

Hawks talking trades

Davidson emphasized again Wednesday he’s willing to entertain trade offers for every Hawks player other than the three –Patrick Kane, Jonathan Toews and Seth Jones — who hold no-trade clauses.

“It would be unwise to do anything but,” he said. “We’re not going to force anything. We’re not going to do something just to do something. But it’s incumbent on us to listen to what’s out there, what the interest is, and see if that can help us moving forward.

Approaching draft week next week in Montreal, Davidson admitted he has some “ideas” about potential trades to explore. Alex DeBrincat is almost certainly included in some of them, although Davidson shied away from naming him specifically.

One pertinent objective will be trying to acquire a first-round pick, as there are several — including the Devils’ No. 2 and the Senators’ No. 7 selections — that might be available. The Wild just Wednesday acquired the No. 19 pick from the Kings in a Kevin Fiala trade. Still, Davidson isn’t writing anything down in pen.

“If you’re trying to make something happen, that’s maybe where you get into trouble, you make a mistake,” he added. “We’ll see what’s there, and if we can get into the first round, absolutely we’d like to. But it just might not be available to us, so we’ll see what comes.”

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Firefighters raise L train car to rescue man underneath

Firefighters rescued a man from under a CTA Green Line train on the West Side Wednesday afternoon.

Firefighters were called to the train near the Laramie stop around 2:30 p.m. and used jacks to raise the car several inches and pull the man out, Chicago Fire Department spokesman Larry Langford said. It was unclear how he got there.

The man was talking and alert when paramedics brought him to Stroger Hospital. His condition wasn’t made available.

“He’s very lucky man,” Langford said.

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Blackhawks hiring affirms Luke Richardson’s self-belief in coaching abilities

New Blackhawks coach Luke Richardson had long believed he had the necessary skills to be an NHL head coach someday.

But amid the chaos of the 2021 playoffs, he received confirmation he truly did.

Entering Game 3 of the Canadiens’ Stanley Cup semifinal series against the Golden Knights –a matchup only made possible by COVID-19 and the restructured playoff format –then-Canadiens coach Dominique Ducharme fell ill and later tested positive for the virus, thrusting then-assistant Richardson into the interim head coach role for the series’ final four games.

Against the odds, Richardson navigated the underdog Canadiens to wins in Games 3, 5 and 6 to upset one of the league’s best teams and advance to the Stanley Cup Final.

“To have the confidence in myself at the most pressured time of the year, and to succeed, and have a good relationship with the players that allowed that to happen, it really resonated with me that I’m ready for a head coaching job,” Richardson said Wednesday at his introductory Hawks press conference.

“It starts with communication and trust and honesty with the players, and it resonates when you put your game plan around them. Making adjustments with them on the fly is huge, and there’s no quicker time you have to do that than at that time of the year. … I always wanted to do it, and I thought I could do it, but that solidified that I know I can.”

Richardson’s ability to relate to, adapt with and develop players will be tested to the max in his new job, as the Hawks’ roster will feature a revolving door of largely inexperienced young players in the coming years.

The 53-year-old Canadian, still muscular enough to pass as a veteran player himself, seemed to grasp that reality of this role while sitting side-by-side Wednesday with general manager Kyle Davidson, who has already spent hours discussing everything with his hand-picked coach.

“I am an optimist and I want to go win every game — and I’m going to approach every game like that — but realistically, we have to take steps,” Richardson said. “We want to cut the lows to a shorter time, and our highs, we want to lengthen them out as far as we can. In doing that, we’re going to have to take those steps: One, two, three, four. We can’t go one [to] 10. We can’t skip anything.”

Blackhawks general manager Kyle Davidson (left) and new coach Luke Richardson first met during a 4.5-hour interview several weeks ago.

AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh

Richardson and Davidson first met during a 4.5-hour initial interview several weeks ago, bringing Richardson back to the city where he played his first of 1,417 career NHL games in 1987 — as Eddie Olczyk’s roommate on the Maple Leafs.

He flew back last week for another interview, during which he dived deeper into the topics he’d discussed the first time, then a casual dinner with Davidson, during which they watched a Stanley Cup Final game and dissected the Avalanche and Lightning’s tactics.

“It was great for them to see and have discussions about certain situations on the ice, what I thought and how [I’d] deal with it,” Richardson said. “Kyle said, ‘We’re going to meet one more time tomorrow morning.’ I walked back to the hotel thinking, ‘Well, that’s got to be good.’ Then I started overthinking and I [thought], ‘Maybe they’re going to call me in and say, ‘Thanks very much for coming; see you next time.’ But it worked out and Kyle presented [the job] to me in a way that I felt was the right fit.”

Added Davidson: “Nobody has a bad word to say about [Luke]. Everyone has had a great experience with him. So that was one of the first things that put him on our radar. Then once we got into the room with Luke, something intangible just felt like it clicked.”

Richardson hasn’t yet talked to Patrick Kane, Jonathan Toews or Seth Jones –he intriguingly didn’t mention Alex DeBrincat among those three –but called it his first priority to start building a rapport with those core guys.

As far as the rest of the lineup, he admitted he’ll just “have to work with what” he’s given, which might not be much.

Stories abound from Richardson’s previous coaching stops — particularly in the AHL with the Binghamton Senators –of him skating and participating in drills alongside his players. He might not do that quite as much in his new role, but his reputation as a calm, down-to-earth coach will likely hold true.

That unflappability could prove crucial to surviving the adversity that lies ahead.

“A calm demeanor on the bench leads to the players feeling calmness on the bench, but [also] awareness of their job and what they have to do,” he said. “[I’m] not tense or yelling and screaming at the ref. … That filters into the players in front of you, and they lose track of the game plan and get off track. If you have to make a point, you pick the time to make that point, and then you don’t lose the players.”

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Illinois launches statewide gun trace database to combat illegal firearm trafficking

Illinois law enforcement agencies will pool information on guns used in crimes across the state, building a database that will allow police to better track the trafficking of illegal guns, state Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced Wednesday at a news conference in Chicago.

Police departments can opt in the newly launched Crime Gun Connect platform developed by the Illinois State Police with help from Everytown for Gun Safety, a gun safety advocacy organization. So far, more than 200 law enforcement agencies in the state have agreed to upload information about weapons and ballistics evidence from crimes, including ownership information from state police and gun trace data from the federal Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco & Firearms’ eTrace system.

“These guns are coming from somewhere. There are people trafficking them,” Raoul said. “This shows that we are not only after the person who pulls the trigger, but the person who gets [them] the gun.”

By federal law, records in the eTrace system can’t be rendered in digital form — staff at the federal agency must search through paper records to perform a trace — so Illinois had to navigate a series of legal exceptions in order to build a database that includes information on more than 100,000 guns seized since 2010, Raoul said.

The Illinois database will flag suspicious patterns, like guns from a single shop turning up in crimes soon after they are purchased, to identify potential “straw purchasers” who buy guns legally to sell on the illegal market.

So far, 201 Illinois police departments have pledged to share information with the database, including the Chicago Police Department, which added information on some 87,000 guns.

The database also will make some of its information public, including information about what states are the largest sources of illegal weapons. Less than 39% of guns seized in connection with crimes in Illinois were purchased in the state, with the largest share of weapons coming from Indiana, according to the database.

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Chicago Bears rookie projected by analyst to make 2022 defensive ‘All-Rookie’ squad

Chicago Bears rookie safety is turning heads already

The Chicago Bears are going to need young talent on their roster to step up in a big way this year. One rookie is grabbing the attention of the national media as someone who can make a big impact on the Bears. Jaquan Brisker will likely be a week one starter for the Bears at safety.

Brisker was taken in the second round of the 2022 NFL Draft at 48th overall. The Penn State product was already impressing new head coach Matt Eberflus during offseason workouts.

Bears coach Matt Eberflus said of rookie safety Jaquan Brisker: “We’re just so thrilled with his talent, with his mental makeup, just the person he is and where he is with his development.”

Chad Reuter, a draft analyst for the NFL, put Brisker on his projections for the 2022 defensive all-rookie team. Here’s what Reuter had to write about Brisker:

Chicago added Brisker to complement Eddie Jackson at safety, with Brisker primarily thriving in the box while allowing Jackson to excel as a center fielder and over the slot. The former Penn State Nittany Lion can play deep, as well, and cover tight ends adeptly, which should make him a reliable starter as a rookie.

Brisker’s addition will help to solidify the Chicago Bears’ secondary.

Brisker and his Chicago Bears second-round colleague cornerback Kyler Gordon, will improve a secondary that struggled last season at inopportune times last season. I’m thinking about the end of the Pittsburgh Steelers game specifically.

If Brisker is as good in the box as analysts think he will be, then Bears safety Eddie Jackson should be able to focus on his role and be a much better player this year. When Jackson is good, the Bears can get downright scary.

Brisker has had good practices in camps, per multiple reports.

Couple quick observations:
-Jaquan Brisker recorded an INT off a tipped pass, Jaylon Johnson also had an INT
-Rookie Braxton Jones still getting reps at 1st team left tackle; Larry Borom remains 1st team right tackle, Teven Jenkins at 2nd team RT

Rookie S Jaquan Brisker also had an impressive PBU – breaking on a play in the flat.

Chicago Bears LB Nicholas Morrow said rookie Kyler Gordon had 2 interceptions on his first day on the job. Rookie Jaquan Brisker forced a fumble in yesterday’s and today’s practice.
Morrow said both players have been doing a good job punching the football.
(Via Bears FB Live)

It’s been the highlight of camps so far. I’m excited to watch this new Chicago Bear this season. Let’s hope Brisker can continue to grow on this success and be a force in the Bears secondary come September. The Bears need it.

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High school basketball: June’s two breakout stars, Bolingbrook’s Mekhi Cooper and East St. Louis’ Macaleab Rich

In a nondescript back gym at Ridgewood last Saturday in Norridge, college coaches lined the baseline in chairs taking in one of 50 or so games played that day.

East St. Louis, which traveled 300 miles to the area for the second straight weekend during the “live” recruiting period, was facing Bolingbrook. Both teams featured emerging players who over two weeks — first at Riverside-Brookfield and then at Ridgewood — grabbed a lot of attention.

College coaches were in the gym watching the two players who, in the eyes of the City/Suburban Hoops Report, have raised their stock the most in June: Bolingbrook’s Mekhi Cooper and Macaleab Rich of East St. Louis.

Throw in another player who wasn’t even on the radar until this summer, 6-4 guard Antwan Robinson of East St. Louis, and the game was just what an evaluation period in June is supposed to be about.

Cooper has been on a tear for two weeks. Missouri State head coach Dana Ford took one look and offered the 6-0 guard after watching him at Riverside-Brookfield. With an offer from a Missouri Valley Conference school, word spread quickly.

Then he played well at Ridgewood, dazzling everyone in attendance with his performance against East St. Louis. He’s added a handful of low-major and mid-major offers with more surely to follow.

“I feel like I took advantage of the opportunity,” Cooper said of the two live period weekends. “It was time to step up.”

Cooper is still currently undervalued. He outperformed several players with bigger names and reputations over the past two weeks. His overall size and frame will be questions as college programs try to outthink themselves.

He plays with top-end basketball speed with the ball in his hands. That speed on the open floor sneaks up on defenders. Always a poised point guard with a nice feel for the position early in his career, Cooper’s game is now marked by a lethal capacity for scoring.

He does so off the dribble in transition with the ability to burst through an open seam. He does so with a pull-up game and range and a comfort level shooting the basketball, even beyond the three-point line.

“I think the biggest difference is I have improved my game and I’m being a lot more assertive,” Cooper said.

Brost never had a doubt. He knew what was coming and would tell anyone who would listen. But he also has seen the jump Cooper has made, saying his star point guard has “taken a humongous step over the past six months.” Now he loves what he’s seeing.

“Right now he feels and knows he is among the best guards in the state, and that’s showing with his play,” Brost said. “The difference is he’s now doing it over and over and over. He has a chance to be the most complete guard we’ve ever had. We’ll see whether or not that comes to fruition.”

Rich, meanwhile, showed off his talent at Riverside-Brookfield two weeks ago. He was even better at Ridgewood, including a performance against Bolingbrook that had heads turning throughout the gym.

East St. Louis coach Mark Chambers said Rich came into the program as a hot shot freshman who at 6-2 played with his back to the basket. He’s grown close to four inches since and made a concerted effort to improve his skill level.

“He has followed a process,” Chambers said. “We planned it out for him and he’s worked the plan. He has worked his butt off to become this player. People don’t realize how good of a passer he is and that he led us in three-point shooting in two of the last three years.”

It’s impossible to watch Rich, the sculpted, put-together 6-5 forward, and not be transfixed by his power and athleticism, specifically how he combines the two. He explodes off the floor and shakes the entire structure of the basket on dunks. He chases down opponents on drives to the basket and blocks their shots.

East St. Louis’ Macaleab Rich (2) controls the ball against Joliet West during the Riverside-Brookfield Shootout.

Kirsten Stickney/For the Sun-Times

A bull at the rim that defenders bounce off of as he finishes through contact, Rich even shows a workable three-point shot.

Rich is the player who can sometimes leave you in disbelief with his electrifying athletic exploits.

But what he revealed over the past two weeks is that for his size and age, he’s more than a physical and athletic freak of nature. Rich has a burgeoning skill level he continually showcased, using a crossover to break down defenders and whipping cross-court passes.

An up-tempo, open floor, less structured system at the next level will still be a benefit for Rich. But he’s a no-brainer mid-major prospect with double-digit offers who high-major programs — again, ones with the aforementioned style of play — should be diving into.

Missouri and first-year coach Dennis Gates extended an offer to Rich on Tuesday.

“Macaleab’s best basketball is still coming,” Chambers said.

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Bulls poised to make Zach LaVine a max player … history be damned

James Harden, Bradley Beal, Ben Simmons, Damian Lillard … the cautionary tales are many.

One-dimensional guards that have been given max contracts, eventually plunging their organizations into mediocrity or bad decision after bad decision to crawl out of it.

The Bulls are about to step into that threshold, looking to change that history.

With the NBA’s free agency gate bursting open at 5 p.m. on Thursday, the worst kept secret the past 10 months was the Bulls looking to offer LaVine the five-year, roughly $215 million max offer to make him the face of the franchise.

A face that would cost the organization $55 million more than what any other franchise can offer the unrestricted free agent.

And the Bulls are unabashedly all in.

When asked about LaVine last week, general manager Marc Eversley reiterated the same message from the end-of-the-season interviews that the organization had “every intention to bring him back.”

When pressed if that meant giving LaVine a max contract, Eversley responded, “I think we’re prepared to do what it will take to bring Zach back in the fold and be a Chicago Bull.”

Executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas has also been very public about keeping LaVine in Chicago.

“We’ve been very open that we hope Zach is here for a long time, and nothing has changed,” Karnisovas said. “And June 30, 6 p.m. Eastern Time, that’s when the conversations start.”

Conversations that LaVine and his agent, Rich Paul, intend to be thorough and with multiple clubs. While sources told the Sun-Times that LaVine’s close Bulls teammates expect the two-time All-Star to re-sign, LaVine also made it clear that he wanted to go through the process of being wined and dined, exploring all of his options to the fullest.

“I plan to enjoy free agency with what it is as a whole,” LaVine said in his exit interview with the media at the end of April. “I think you’re going to have to experience A-Z without making any fast decisions. I think that’s something that me and Rich get to go through and experience.”

Posturing 101.

The reality for LaVine remained that unless there’s a sign-and-trade in the works, no team can currently offer LaVine more than the Bulls both financially and from a competitive standpoint. If winning really means as much as LaVine has insisted it does over the past few seasons, taking a four-year deal for less money to play in Portland or Detroit would be the ultimate contradiction.

Then there’s the Bulls side of this equation.

Maxing one-dimensional point guards seldom works out in the last decade. Maxing a one-dimensional scoring guard? It’s never worked out in the history of the league.

The Bulls are betting on the LaVine they saw last summer with Team USA and the first six weeks of the regular season, before the left knee began betraying him. If they get that smooth scorer, as well as the improving, willing defender LaVine showed he could be? Well, there is hope.

If they get the LaVine that had a history of far too often getting lost on the defensive end, especially late in possession, then the Bulls are about to sign up for five years of frustration.

That scenario was proposed to LaVine earlier this season in an exclusive Sun-Times interview.

“You’re assuming that I’m done,” LaVine said, when asked about his improving defensive mentality at the time. “How’s my defensive rating now? It’s better. What does that tell you?”

More importantly, what did it tell the Bulls?

It told them that LaVine – when healthy – was now max-offer worthy.

History be damned.

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National analyst has Chicago Bears taking elite WR in 2023 draft with second pick

Chicago Bears will need a wide receiver in next year’s draft

It’s no secret national analysts don’t think highly of the Chicago Bears’ prospects in the 2022 regular season.  One analyst has the Bears taking a wide receiver with the second pick of the 2023 draft. That would mean the Bears would be heading for a disaster on the field this season.

The Bears desperately need an elite wide receiver on their roster going forward. Currently, quarterback Justin Fields is tasked with throwing to a receiving unit PFF ranks as the worst in the NFL. Darnell Mooney is currently the Bears’ number one receiver, but he doesn’t make up for the lack of depth at the position.

Matt Miller, an NFL Draft analyst for ESPN, has the Bears taking Jaxon Smith-Njigba, wide receiver, Ohio State, with the second overall pick.

1. Jets – EDGE Will Anderson Jr.
2. Bears – WR Jaxon Smith-Njigba
3. Texans – DT Jalen Carter
.@nfldraftscout has released his way too early 2023 NFL mock draft. Predictions for all 32 first-round picks
https://t.co/UgeMYL1ajP

Chicago Bears picking Smith-Njigba at number two would be cooking most draft boards

Smith-Njigba being drafted to the Bears could be a great thing in the future. He is familiar with FIelds, as both are Ohio State products who spent time together on the field. Most Bears fans who want this compare this possibility to Joe Burrow and Ja’Marr Chase, who were teammates at LSU before being drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals.

Probably not though. Chase, in my opinion, is a much better receiver. Most draft boards rate Smith-Njigba as somewhere near the top ten but below the second pick. If the Bears want Smith-Njigba, they need to trade down and receive hefty compensation from teams looking to draft a quarterback or defensive lineman.

The Bears will also need a defensive lineman in next year’s draft. As I’ve written before, it makes more sense for the Bears to get a franchise-changing defensive lineman with the first-round pick. Smith-Njigba has great skills but lacks the size at 6-foot-0, 198-pounds to be a true “X” receiver, which is what the Bears need.

Draft Profile for Chicago Bears potential prospect Smith-Njigba

The NFL Draft Bible for Sports Illustrated recently wrote a draft bible for Smith-Njigba. Here’s what they wrote:

Though he was buried behind two 2022 first-round draft selections in the 2021 season, Jaxon Smith-Njigba showed excellent agility and route running to go with above-average lateral burst and work after the catch. While his overall speed, play strength, and hands do not move the needle, Ohio State’s new top receiver is a high-floor player who can start early in the NFL.

Agility and route running are two things the Bears will be lacking in 2022. But for the Bears to be competitive in 2023, they’ll need an experienced wide receiver who brings those tools and more to the Chicago Bears. Smith-Njigba probably won’t be the “Chase” Fields need to succeed next season.

But he can get fast:

My #1 WR prospect for the 2023 NFL Draft:
Ohio State WR Jaxon Smith-Njigba
6’0 197lbs 4.4 40
A polished route runner with serious after the catch playmaking ability.
Get this… 94 catches 1,606 yards as the #3 WR behind Olave and Wilson last year..
https://t.co/BtbVq3sgGN

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