Chicago Sports

Blackhawks’ Kirby Dach out with right shoulder sprain as challenging season nears end

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Kirby Dach’s challenging 2021-22 season may end on a sour note.

Dach suffered a right shoulder sprain during the second period Thursday against the Sharks when he was slightly tripped up by Nicolas Meloche behind the net, then fallen on by Sam Lafferty. He took one more shift in the third period before leaving for good.

“He just came back to the bench and he was going to try it again,” interim coach Derek King said Friday. “We had a timeout, he went on the ice, and then I pulled him off and put [Dylan] Strome’s line on for the faceoff in the offensive zone. [Dach] just got up and said, ‘I can’t go.’Hopefully it’s nothing serious.”

King added he hopes the Hawks won’t have to shut down Dach for the remainder of the season, but with less than two weeks left, that seems like a real possibility.

Dach unsurprisingly missed Saturday’s game against the Predators. Results from tests on his shoulder are expected to come back Monday.

As it stands now, Dach tallied only 26 points in 70 games this season while averaging 18:03 of ice time. Offensively, it was perhaps the worst of his three years so far: his points-per-60-minutes (at even strength) rate has gone from 1.49 as a rookie to 1.77 last season to 1.09 this season.

Defensively, Dach has been solid since the day he entered the NHL, and at age 21, he still has lots of time left for development. But this latest setback certainly doesn’t help matters.

Kane won’t explain

Patrick Kane celebrated his first-period goal Saturday by staring down and yelling at a bald man in a Predators jacket seated in the first row at Bridgestone Arena.

The incident set social media afire with curiosity. After the game, Kane first insisted there was “no real reason” behind it.

“I just saw it was a Nashville fan, so I just kinda caught him on it,” he said with a laugh.

When asked if the fan had said anything to him, though, he hesitated before saying he’d “just keep it at that.” Thus, the mystery lives on.

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Fire that destroyed Antioch Missionary Baptist Church in Englewood deemed accidental

A fire that destroyed legendary Antioch Missionary Baptist Church on the South Side Friday was caused by a propane torch and was accidental, officials announced Saturday.

The propane torch was being used on the roof as part of work being done on the structure at 63rd and Stewart, according to Chicago Fire Department investigators.

Meanwhile, the Englewood church announced on its Facebook page that its congregation “will continue to worship” and hold Easter services at Calahan Funeral Home, 7030 S. Halsted St. on Sunday.

“This church is an anchor in this community,” Pastor Gerald Dew told reporters at the scene Friday. “If we’ve got to lose something, losing it on Good Friday is the best time to lose it, because after Good Friday comes Resurrection Sunday.”

The fire appeared to begin in the upper rear area of the church, where crews who responded at 2:15 p.m. noticed heavy smoke, CFD spokesman Larry Langford said. No one was inside the church at the time.

Around 150 fire personnel and 50 engines, trucks and ambulances went to the scene, Langford said, adding that firefighters tried to battle the flames from above, but the truss roof made those efforts dangerous.

The fire was extinguished in about two hours, but not before the roof collapsed, officials said. A church wall along Stewart Avenue was unsupported and at risk of falling.

The South Side church is well-known for its political clout and community involvement, investing in several housing projects starting in the 1960s. The church claims to be the first church to take advantage of the National Housing Act to build senior housing with special government loans.

The church building, built in the Romanesque Revival style, was constructed in the 1880s, according to records from the Chicago Historic Resources Survey.

Contributing: David Struett, Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere

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Still feeling oblique discomfort, no timetable for Yoan Moncada’s 2022 White Sox debut

There is still no timetable for when third baseman Yoan Moncada will return to the White Sox lineup.

Before Saturday’s game, Sox manager Tony La Russa said Moncada is still feeling some discomfort when he makes certain moves in the field. Placed on the 10-day injured list with a right oblique strain, Moncada hasn’t played in a regular-season game this year.

And it’s unclear when he will, even if La Russa said Moncada is getting better.

“He’s going to have to be able to go full-bore with the swings, workouts and running before you can realistically say hey, how about X days from now,” La Russa said. “As long as he’s got discomfort, not even thinking about it.”

Without Moncada, the Sox had gone with Jake Burger (five starts) and Josh Harrison (two) at third before using Leury Garcia on Saturday. Burger, whom La Russa called “our hero” as he walked by the pregame media briefing, had a home run and run-scoring single in Friday’s 3-2 win.

Hitting sixth, Garcia entered Saturday 1 for 20, but 5 for 12 lifetime against Tampa Bay starter Corey Kluber.

“[Garcia] got off to a slow start last year, too,” La Russa said. “He’s got enough track record where you know what he’s going to do.”

Last April, Garcia hit .207 before ending the year at .267.

The best around
La Russa has only been around Tim Anderson for little over a season, but he has high praise for the Sox shortstop, whom he called a “spiritual leader” on the team.

“There is no better shortstop in baseball,” La Russa said before Friday’s game. “Not to be disrespectful. There are some you can put right next to him.”

La Russa credited the Sox organization for developing Anderson and the scouts who recognized his talent despite his somewhat limited baseball experience prior to getting drafted in 2013. La Russa also said Anderson stresses the role third base coach Joe McEwing has played in his growth.

“I walked into that situation,” La Russa said. “I appreciate it and I enjoy it. I feel very fortunate to be a teammate of his for a year and a month.”

Good first impression
The Sox gave reliever Kendall Graveman a three-year, $24 million deal. So far, they have no buyer’s remorse, as Graveman entered Saturday’s game with 5 2/3 scoreless innings and a minuscule 0.35 WHIP.

La Russa said Graveman can face both right- and left-handed hitters, has three or four ways to get outs and has great command. The veteran Graveman, La Russa said, is smart about how his delivery needs to be and the pitches he has to attack opponents.

“Just a great addition,” La Russa said.

Busy times for Pollock
Sox outfielder AJ Pollock and his wife Kate welcomed their second child, and La Russa said the birth went “really, really” well. As for his baseball prognosis, La Russa said Pollock is up to 80 or 85% and should be headed to Triple-A Charlotte on a rehab assignment to regain his timing.

Pollock (strained right hamstring) was placed on the 10-day IL on April 12, retroactive to April 10.

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Could the Bulls’ ‘Big Three’ be one-and-done after this playoff series?

It’s been the Zach LaVine mantra for a few weeks now.

The Bulls guard sounded like he had come to the end of handing out excuses at some point in March. Or simply had run out of excuses to give.

“We’ve done enough talking,” LaVine said several times, as his team was preparing for its first playoff appearance since 2017. “It’s time to get it done now. Time to stop talking.”

Because while LaVine has never played in a postseason series, he’s been around long enough to know that words mean very little in the NBA’s “second season.” It’s claw and scratch for four wins, and then move on to the next series. If not? It’s call the travel agent and plan a vacation.

There’s no middle ground. Players living on moral victories in April and May are usually doing so on the backend of a banana boat in Turks and Caicos.

So while the Bulls players have spent the week saying all the right things about the first round meeting with the defending champions, it’s time for actions, not words.

The current make-up of this roster may depend on that.

Las Vegas has the Bulls going out against the Bucks. Heck, most prognosticators have the Bulls fearing the deer the next few weeks.

But there’s a bigger picture that’s at stake.

Executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas and general manager Marc Eversley didn’t build this roster for mediocrity. Even if the Bulls go out in the first round, how they look in doing so may carry weight as far as offseason decisions that have to be made by the front office.

What if this group – without Lonzo Ball (left knee) – upsets Milwaukee or even takes them to the brink with a Game 7? What if the series goes six hard-fought games, and the Bucks go on to repeat as champions?

Then the idea of calling “next” with the same players and running it back with a healthy Ball next season makes a bit more sense.

Some definite tweaks needed, but there’s a core intact that Karnisovas and Eversley can embrace, as well as sell to the fan base.

Then there’s the other side of what can happen.

What if this is a four-game sweep? Or what if the Bulls do grab one win at home, but are still hammered in the four other games and sent packing?

Considering this roster went 2-21 against opponents that finished the season with a winning percentage of .600 or higher, slipped from first at the All-Star Break to No. 6 in the East by the end, and then on top of all that are a punchline in the playoffs, there’s no sell-job Karnisovas can throw the way of the fans and not come off sounding like the Gar/Pax regime.

A crash ending to this season would mean everything and everyone would have to be on the table.

As it stands the Bulls have just over $100 million in guaranteed salary for next year. That does not include the big pay raise LaVine will be due in free agency.

With the supermax all but out the window, LaVine will be looking for the max – from either the Bulls or elsewhere.

With the Bulls it would be five years and $200 million, and elsewhere it would be four years and near the $160 million mark.

Do the Bulls do that knowing this roster fizzled out when it mattered most?

Then there’s Nikola Vucevic and his expiring contract after the 2022-23 season. Is he a moveable piece this summer? And don’t forget that Coby White and Ayo Dosunmu could each be extension possibilities.

So yes, this is just a first-round playoff series, but it could be much more for the outlook of this core.

Enough words, though. Actions will speak much louder.

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Bulls-Bucks matchups, who has the edge, and also a series prediction

Give Patrick Williams the pass.

After all, the Bulls forward is just 20 years old, and had just scored a career-high 35 points in the regular-season finale.

So of course there was a little bit of chest beating when asked about the upcoming playoff meeting with the defending champion Milwaukee Bucks.

“I don’t think that we see ourselves as underdogs,” Williams said confidently. “I think this team definitely can use that as fuel like we did early in the season when guys were saying this team wouldn’t be as good.

“I don’t think we’ll need it. I think we’re all ready for this opportunity, ready for this series.”

That’s great, but the head-to-head matchups say different:

Center

Nikola Vucevic vs. Brook Lopez

The last time the two bigs had a postseason showdown was in 2020, while Vucevic was still wearing his mouseketeer ears with the Orlando Magic.

Not only did Vucevic take Lopez out to that lunch, but made Lopez buy. Yes, Lopez’s Bucks team won the series in five games, but don’t blame Vucevic. He dominated Lopez, and whoever else Milwaukee threw his way, averaging 28 points and 11 rebounds per game, while shooting 50.4% from the field and 40.5 from three. Meanwhile, Lopez wasn’t awful at 13.4 points and 4.4 rebounds per game, but was outplayed in every way by “The Vooch.”

That’s great for the Bulls, but was also two years ago. Vuicevic is now a third option in this offense, doesn’t get the touches that he did in Orlando, and just let Lopez go 28 and seven in an April 5 meeting.

EDGE: Even

Forwards

Patrick Williams vs. Giannis Antetokounmpo

Forget Williams winning this matchup. It’s more about can he even survive it? Because of injuries, the two have only squared off really twice, and Antetokounmpo wasn’t in playoff mode.

If Williams is dominated early on, Bulls coach Billy Donovan can throw Javonte Green, Derrick Jones Jr. or even Alex Caruso at him, but there will be no real answer for one of the more dominant two-way players the NBA has going right now.

EDGE: Milwaukee

DeMar DeRozan vs. Khris Middleton

The luxury Milwaukee has is that Middleton is a solid enough defender and long enough to irk DeRozan somewhat, but if it’s not going the Bucks’ way, either Wesley Matthews or Jrue Holiday can switch over and make life very uncomfortable for the Bulls’ leading scorer.

Meanwhile, Middleton is an underrated late-game closer and no stranger to big shots. He seems to coast through the regular season, get his 20 a night, and then flip a switch come playoff time. Look no further than the 40 points he dropped on Phoenix in the Finals last year in Game 4. That should concern the Bulls.

EDGE: Milwaukee

Guards

Alex Caruso vs. Wesley Matthews

Matthews closed the regular season in the starting lineup for Milwaukee, giving them an elite defender next to Holiday, even at the age of 35. There’s a good chance that the Bucks could cross-match and put Middleton on Caruso because the Bulls guard was not a real offensive threat, but neither is Matthews.

Both Caruso and Matthews are in there for defensive purposes, and at this point in their careers Caruso is just a bit better and slightly more versatile on who he can guard.

EDGE: BULLS

Zach LaVine vs. Jrue Holiday

LaVine can fall out of bed and score 24 in an NBA game. The problem is that Holiday has one-on-one lock-down ability to put LaVine right back to sleep.

It doesn’t mean Holiday will be guarding LaVine for 35 minutes a game, however. Like they did in the last two regular-season meetings, Milwaukee will give DeRozan and LaVine each a healthy dose of Holiday at some point.

With all things equal, Holiday has played in a Finals spotlight and knows what it takes to win playoff games. This will be LaVine’s first career playoff appearance in Year 8 of his NBA journey.

EDGE: Milwaukee

Bench

This is where the series could be lost for the Bulls, especially from an experience standpoint. While the champs can throw Grayson Allen, George Hill, Pat Connaughton, Serge Ibaka, and of course former Bull Bobby Portis out there, Donovan has a rookie in Ayo Dosunmu, a streaky shooter in Coby White, and then undersized bodies like Green and Jones.

The only bench player with championship pedigree for the Bulls is backup center Tristan Thompson.

EDGE: Milwaukee

Series Prediction: The Bulls get Game 3 at home thanks to their “Big Three” getting hot, but the hope is short-lived. Milwaukee 4-1

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Bulls-Bucks, White Sox-Guardians, Cubs-Rays, spring football: This You Gotta See

On May 8, 2015, at precisely a time in the Chicago night that we cannot determine, or else we would for glorious effect, Derrick Rose lifted his body off the United Center floor and heaved a shot — over the outstretched arm of Cavaliers big man Tristan Thompson — toward the basket.

It banked in at the buzzer from outside the three-point line. The Bulls beat the Cavs 99-96 for a 2-1 series lead in the second round of the postseason on what was our team’s first game-winner in the final 10 seconds of a playoff game since Michael Jordan shot a shot — does anybody remember the shot? — over Utah’s Bryon Russell in 1998.

But then the Bulls lost the next three games. They haven’t won a playoff game at home ever since.

So they’ve got that going for them as they open a first-round series against the big, bad, defending NBA champion Bucks. The first two games will be in Milwaukee, where, if the Bulls lose twice, this series will be all kinds of over considering how thoroughly one team owns the other in this purported rivalry.

But the Bulls will get at least a couple of cracks at the Bucks on the West Side, right? Maybe, just maybe, that’s where the narrative will change. The Bulls are banking on DeMar DeRozan and Zach Lavine to behave like All-Stars. Fans are hoping to be surprised — in a good way — for the first time in what must feel like forever.

And here’s what’s happening:

SUN 17

Cubs at Rockies (2:10 p.m., Marquee)

The finale of a four-game series means another afternoon spent with Kris Bryant, one of the great recent Cubs up there with Anthony Rizzo, Jon Lester and Seiya Suzuki. Bryant and the Rox don’t come to Wrigley Field until mid-September.

Bulls at Bucks, Game 1 (5:30 p.m., TNT)

As the old NBA axiom goes: Game 1 is the easiest game to steal. Now that we’ve done all the heavy lifting by reminding the Bulls of that, the least they can do is take it from here.

MON 18

Jose Ramirez of the Guardians

Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images

White Sox at Guardians (5:10 p.m., NBCSCH)

Anyone else super excited for four days of inane debate about whether or not Guardians is a good name for a baseball team? It’s the first game ever, in a sense, between these old rivals.

“E60: The Paterno Legacy” (7 p.m., ESPN)

More than 10 years since Jerry Sandusky was indicted and Joe Paterno fired amid the darkness of a massive child sex-abuse scandal at Penn State, key figures — including the imprisoned Sandusky — speak to the facts, the horrors and a cover-up that better not ever be forgotten.

TUE 19

Rays at Cubs (6:40 p.m., Marquee)

It’s amazing how a big-league team can stay so relevant despite its puny payroll, meager revenues and so many other things stacked against it. And then there are the Rays.

“Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel” (9 p.m., HBO)

The show’s 300th episode profiles South Africa’s two-time Olympic gold medal-winning runner Caster Semenya, an intersex athlete long forced by track’s governing body to undergo hormone therapy. Also featured: American influencer Jake Paul, who is famous for being famous.

WED 20

Bulls at Bucks, Game 2 (8:30 p.m., TNT)

If we’re Billy Donovan, we draw up a game plan that has the Bulls staying close for three quarters before DeMar DeRozan takes over in the fourth. Again, we’ve done our part and you’re welcome.

THU 21

White Sox at Guardians (12:10 p.m., NBCSCH)

Another four-game set comes to a close, and that’s assuming cold, rainy Cleveland cooperated. If you’re in the habit of scouring weather.com, you understand that cold, rainy Cleveland may not have cooperated.

Illinois coach Bret Bielema

Photo by Michael Hickey/Getty Images

Illinois spring football game (6:30 p.m., BTN)

As seems to be the case almost yearly, the Illini have a new offensive coordinator. Can Barry Lunney Jr. make sense of this mess? And will Syracuse transfer Tommy DeVito Jr. be Lunney’s starting quarterback?

FRI 22

Pirates at Cubs (1:20 p.m., Marquee)

One can’t be sure it works out this way, but ex-Cub Jose Quintana is lined up for his first start at Wrigley since 2020, when he was still donning the blue pinstripes. But enough about Eloy Jimenez and Dylan Cease.

Bucks at Bulls, Game 3 (7:30 p.m., Ch. 7)

Up or down in the series, win or lose in this game — no matter what — the United Center will be rocking. Playoff basketball in Chicago is here again, and it’s grand.

SAT 23

Notre Dame spring football game (1 p.m., Peacock)

The quarterback battle between Tyler Buchner and Drew Pyne comes to a head, until, of course, it comes to a head all over again in training camp.

White Sox at Twins (3:05 p.m., NBCSCH, FS1)

The Twins made a bunch of offseason noise — hello, Carlos Correa — but are they a real threat to the Sox in the AL Central? And why are we thinking about last year’s playoffs against the Astros all over again?

Fire at Minnesota United (4 p.m., ESPN)

And speaking of Chicago-Minnesota sports rivalries, is this one of them? Look, some of us are still getting our feet wet re: the whole MLS thing.

Blackhawks at Sharks (7 p.m., NBCSCH)

Have we saved the best game for last? No, we very much have not. But we are contractually obligated to include the Hawks in this column, and now we’ve done it.

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Bulls or Bucks? Billy Donovan’s grade? NBA MVP? Your picks:

Aside from the pesky facts that the Bulls never beat the Bucks, aren’t nearly as good as the Bucks and seemingly match up with the Bucks about as well as a wall of tofu matches up with a charging rhinoceros, it’s hard to understand why everybody is being so negative around here.

Why the heck can’t the Bulls beat the NBA’s defending champions in a best-of-seven first-round series that starts Sunday night in Milwaukee?

In this week’s “Polling Place,” your home for Sun-Times sports polls on Twitter, we asked voters what’s about to happen. Let’s just say they weren’t all that psyched about the Bulls’ chances.

“There really is no chance without sudden, massive injuries to the Bucks,” @alexquigley commented.

“The only way the Bulls win even one game is if the Bucks just completely let go of the rope in a lackluster effort,” @vic_nardozza wrote. “This Bulls team is mentally week and poorly coached.”

Speaking of Billy Donovan, we also asked voters to grade him on his work this season. And finally we asked who should be the league’s MVP. On to the polls:

Poll No. 1: What’s your pick for the best-of-seven first-round playoff series between the Bulls and the Bucks?

Upshot: On the bright side, only 85% picked the Bucks to move on to Round 2. Wait, never mind, that’s a lot. Look, it’s going to take a confluence of events unforeseeable to most of us for this Bulls thing to happen. We know that. But, dang it, we’re going to be tuned in and watching just the same. As if we have anything better to do.

Poll No. 2: What grade would you give Bulls coach Billy Donovan this season?

Upshot: Top marks just for getting to the playoffs? Low ones for stinking all season against top opponents? No and no, it says here. We’re on board with a B. Take a long look at all the factors — a pretty good record, the Bulls winning pretty much all the games they were supposed to win, lots of injury trouble to withstand — and it seems absolutely fair.

Poll No. 3: Who gets your MVP vote?

Upshot: Jokic is, indeed, the odds-on favorite to win the award, and it’s easy to make an argument on his behalf. In a nutshell: Without co-star Jamal Murray, he led the Nuggets in scoring, rebounding, assists and steals and absolutely carried a modestly talented group to 48 wins. Is Giannis a better player? Yep. Are the 76ers any good without Embiid? Nope. This one is not an easy call.

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Bulls-Bucks: It’s time to make the bully crumble

You probably haven’t heard, but the Bulls went 0-4 against the Bucks during the regular season.

No, really, it’s true.

But we kid, of course, because the utter one-sidedness of the season series is all anyone’s talking about as the teams near their head-to-head playoff opener Sunday in Milwaukee. Best of seven? Please. It might be an upset if this first-round series makes it to five games, let alone turns into something compelling.

That seems to be the common thinking, anyway.

These Bulls have been comically terrible against the NBA’s championship contenders, one-upping themselves with each cringeworthy display of capitulation and deference. They are 0-12 against the Heat, Bucks and 76ers and 2-21 against the top four seeds from both conferences. Who could’ve known a 10-point victory against the Mavericks in November would endure as a season highlight?

It’s the defending champs, however, whose dominance of the Bulls is most extreme. Cruel, almost, in its unrelenting thoroughness. We could talk about the 94-90, 118-112, 126-98 and 127-106 losses to the Bucks this season until we’re Good Land Green in the face, but this sordid story goes back much further than that.

Do you know when the last time was that the Bulls beat the Bucks with superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo on the court? Try December 2017. In case you’ve forgotten that magical night, close your eyes and imagine a starting lineup of Kris Dunn, Justin Holiday, Denzel Valentine, Robin Lopez and Lauri Markkanen. Or, better yet, don’t. Besides, it was Nikola Mirotic who stole the show off the bench, scoring 24 points. Benchmate Bobby Portis — now a Bucks fan favorite — had a decent night, too, and possibly still had some of Mirotic’s face imprinted on his right fist.

Oh, what fight those Bulls had! But we kid again; they were 55-loss punching bags. Here’s the point: The Bulls are 1-16 against the Bucks since then. And the only game they won was the regular-season finale in 2021, with Antetokounmpo and the rest of the Bucks’ starters luxuriating in street clothes. You really want to count that ”W”? Feel free.

In case you were wondering why the Bucks tanked their regular-season finale, sitting their starters to avoid the Nets and get the Bulls, you can stop wondering. Not that it’s likely you were.

So, is this hopeless for the Bulls?

The short answer is yes. Unless . . . what? A miracle? Lightning in a bottle? The injury bug? Bad sushi rolled by a Bucks chef?

No, it isn’t hopeless. Not entirely. How does the saying go? That’s why they play the games.

We’ve seen some decent-sized playoff upsets in recent years, haven’t we? The Bulls knocking off the champs wouldn’t be that much more surprising than the short-handed, fifth-seeded Hawks eliminating the top-seeded 76ers in the second round in 2021. In 2020, the fifth-seeded Heat handled the top-seeded Bucks in five games. A No. 6, the Pelicans, swept a No. 3, the Trail Blazers, in 2018.

It has been awhile, though, since we’ve seen a truly titanic sinking of a favorite few would’ve believed was even slightly at risk. As much as it pains us to bring it up — do you already know where we’re going with this? — the No. 1 Bulls being eliminated by the No. 8 76ers in 2012 was such an occasion, though it took a devastating injury to Derrick Rose for it to unfold. But only a year before that, the No. 1 Spurs had no such excuse for falling to the No. 8 Grizzlies. It was one of those all-too-rare series that takes on a life of its own, one preconceived notion flying out the window after another.

What happens when you stand up to a bully in the center of the schoolyard? Sports isn’t Hollywood; usually, you get knocked around all over again. Occasionally, however, the bully crumbles. Like the 61-victory Spurs of Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili did that one time. Like the last good Blackhawks team did, a No. 1 seed swept out of the first round by the out-of-nowhere Predators in 2017. Like the 2018 Bears did, a 12-4 team losing to the run-of-the-mill wild-card Eagles.

Can the Bulls do this? Is there any chance, any chance at all, the Bucks have a double-doink in them?

”We’re confident of who we are,” Bucks center Brook Lopez told reporters Thursday, ”not overconfident or cocky or anything, but we’re proud of the team and the players that we are. . . .

”I think it’s business as usual. I don’t know if you’re going to see a lot faze us.”

That’s pretty much how we’ve got it figured, too. Ah, well, there’s only one way to find out. Breathe in. Breathe out. To the center of the schoolyard we go.

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Baseball quiz: We have quite a quizsmith

Welcome to another fabulous day of 2022 baseball. The Sox are home against the Rays, and the Cubs are in Colorado. We have a fun quiz today in which you will need to know (and learn) baseball, as we discuss movies, TV and basketball. I brought cookies from Dinkel’s for you and our guest. So have fun and let me know how you do.

1. I realized the other day that I neglected to ask you any Academy Award-related questions. My bad, but please don’t slap me for my omission. While we are on that topic, there are two Will Smiths in the big leagues, a pitcher with the Braves and a catcher with the Dodgers. The two have faced each other three times in regular-season games. What are the results?

a. Will Smith the batter has gone 3-for-3

b. Will Smith the batter has gone 2-for-3

c. Will Smith the batter has gone 1-for-3

d. Will Smith the batter has gone 0-for-3

2. “CODA” is a magnificent movie about a deaf family of fishermen in Gloucester, Massachusetts. While there are a number of players in major-league history who have been deaf or suffered from profound hearing loss, can you tell me the name of the former outfielder who played in the majors for 11 seasons and since 2009 has been the head baseball coach at Gallaudet University, the country’s only liberal-arts college for the deaf?

a. Charley Pride

b. Curtis Pride

c. Curtis Granderson

d. Chone Figgins

3. Congrats to Kansas and South Carolina for winning the men’s and women’s NCAA basketball championships, respectively. It was UConn’s first loss in a national title game, men or women. The women had been 11-0 (all under Geno Auriemma), and the men are 4-0.Which of these MLB teams never have lost a World Series?

a. Mariners

b. Diamondbacks

c. Rays

d. Marlins

e. All of the above

4. Speaking of Kansas, which of the following Kansans played for a Chicago team (there might be more than one)?

a. Ron Schueler

b. Enos Cabell

c. Joe Tinker

d. Brian Duensing

5. Initially speaking, AJ Pollock has joined A.J. Pierzynski as an ”A.J.” in White Sox history. One is Anthony John, and one is Allen Lorenz (yes, I find that odd, as well). Which is which (choose two)?

a. Anthony John Pollock

b. Anthony John Pierzynski

c. Allen Lorenz Pollock

d. Allen Lorenz Pierzynski

6. In the five seasons from 2018 to 2022, which Chicago team has fared better on Opening Day?

a. Cubs

b. White Sox

c. The same

7. We have a guest this week: Bill Leff, known by me and many others as “Bill the Cartoon Curator” on “Toon in With Me,” seen at 6 a.m. weekdays on MeTV. Bill has hosted several radio shows in Chicago and was in the movie ”Major League.” While I’m a fan of both the Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote, Leff is a fan of both the Cubs and White Sox. Here’s his question: Bugs Bunny really swung for the fences, playing all nine positions in the 1946 Warner Brothers Looney Tunes classic “Baseball Bugs.” What was the name of his team?

a. The Hare Brains

b. The Tea Totallers

c. The Gashouse Gorillas

d. The Frizzy Frelengs

8. Catcher Yasmani Grandal has played for three teams in the postseason, the Dodgers, Brewers and White Sox. He has played against nine teams. Do they include any or all of the following?

a. Brewers

b. Cubs

c. Pirates

d. Cardinals

e. Reds

f. All of the above

g. None of the above

9. Closing time. “No one lives forever,” Norman Dinkel said about the decision to close Dinkel’s Bakery after 100 years on the city’s North Side. Dinkel’s opened in 1922. Which of these things happened in baseball in 1922?

a. The Cubs beat the Phillies 26-23

b. George Sisler hit .420

c. Babe Ruth hit .118 in the World Series

d. The White Sox’ Charlie Robertson tossed a perfect game

e. All of the above

ANSWERS

1. Will Smith the batter has gone 0-for-3, striking out twice.

2. Curtis Pride was born 95% deaf in each ear as a result of his mother having rubella, German measles, while she was pregnant.

3. In the Series, the D-backs are 1-0, the Marlins are 2-0 despite never winning their division and your tricky Quiz Master -included the Mariners, who never have played in the Series.

4. Ron Schueler (Catherine, Kansas) pitched for the White Sox in 1978 and 1979 and was their pitching coach and then their GM. HOF-er Joe Tinker (from Muscotah, Kansas) spent his entire career with the Cubs, making famous DPs. Brian Duensing (Marysville, Kansas) finished his career pitching for the Cubs in 2017-18. And Walter Johnson, from Humboldt, was the first Kansas native to receive a HOF vote.

5. Welcome, Allen Lorenz (AJ) Pollock IV to the White Sox. May I introduce you to Anthony John Pierzynski, who played eight seasons with the Sox and now is a successful broadcaster?

6. With their loss this season, the Sox have dropped four in a row and are 1-4. With their victory, the Cubs are 4-1.

7. Bugs played for the Tea Totallers against the Gashouse Gorillas in the film directed by Friz Freleng, and that’s my hare-brained answer.

8. In the postseason, Grandal has played against the Cubs, Brewers, Mets, Nationals, Diamondbacks, Astros and Red Sox.

9. Well, of course, they are all true.

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ADR in the NHL: How Tyler Johnson, Jack Eichel opened a ‘whole new world’ of hockey medicine

Tyler Johnson is playing professional hockey, healthy and unobstructed, with an artificial disc in his neck.

Jack Eichel is, too.

A year ago, no NHL player had ever received an artificial disc replacement. ADR, as it’s commonly known, was at the time largely considered — in hockey circles — a taboo alternative to fusion.

Now, two NHL players have proved its effectiveness and safety, opening the door for generations of future players to consider it a viable option.

Eichel, the Sabres-turned-Golden Knights forward whose adamance forced the door open inch by inch, and Johnson, the Blackhawks forward whose open mind ensured the door will never close again, deserve immense credit.

So do dozens of others — from Dr. Chad Prusmack, who performed Eichel’s ADR, to Dr. Robert Bray, who performed Johnson’s ADR, to Pat Brisson, the agent who represented Eichel and Johnson through the process — who played roles in hockey’s biggest medical drama in decades.

This is the inside story of how the drama unfolded, where it led and what legacy it’ll leave behind.

What is ADR?

Between every vertebrae in the human spine lies a disc. If a disc herniates or collapses, the vertebrae can ride against each other and affect nearby nerves, causing pain and weakness and often requiring surgery.

Fusion surgeries, which require patients to spend months afterward wearing a collar and to wait a year or more before returning to normal activity, are the most common.

But since their introduction in the U.S. in 2000, ADR surgeries have emerged as appealing and safe alternatives in specific herniated-disc cases. The artificial disc — made of either metal, plastic or a combination of the two — functions like a normal disc, preserving a greater range of motion and necessitating a much shorter recovery time.

“It had been done in European hockey players,” Bray said. “It had been done in rugby and wrestling. I’ve put them in a whole pile of people that are doing all types of extreme sports. … But [NHL] hockey had not yet jumped that barrier.”

Tyler Johnson suffered a catastrophic injury in October that required surgery.

Richard A. Whittaker/Getty Images

That was partially because disc injuries are surprisingly rare in hockey, partially because athletes often shy away from surgeries and partially because ADR is only an option when several criteria are met. The patient can’t have any ligament instability surrounding their herniated disc — which would allow the artificial disc to move too much — or any fractures or injuries to the surrounding vertebrae themselves, Bray said.

The faster recovery time and greater range of motion are ADR’s biggest benefits, but it also avoids “adjacent-level syndrome” — a common issue after fusions in which the discs above and below suffer wear and tear over time, Bray said.

And if an ADR doesn’t work, a patient can then get a fusion. But the patient can’t go in the opposite direction.

Eichel pioneers

Eichel had been stuck in limbo for five months already — after suffering his initial neck injury in early March 2021 — when he switched agents to Brisson last August.

At that point, the ADR debate and the -Sabres’ staunch opposition to the procedure — which prompted Eichel to request a trade that hadn’t come to fruition over the summer — had been generating plenty of headlines and gossip for months.

“I was skeptical, like most people when they first look at [ADR],” Brisson said. “But once I started diving in and finding out other opinions around the world, I said, ‘Wait a minute, if it works for a skydiver, or a fighter pilot, or a motocross [rider], or a surfer, this could work in hockey, as well.’ “

Behind the scenes, gears were turning. Eichel and his father had met with Dr. Frank Cammisa, who heads the spine service at New York’s Hospital for Special Surgery and who helped bring ADR to the U.S.

Cammisa then talked to the Sabres’ doctors and began working with the NHL Players’ Association, led by newly named chief medical consultant Scott Delaney.

“We went back to some of the original work we did, in terms of the mechanics and results and what kinds of athletes have gotten it over the years,” Cammisa said. “It hadn’t been done [before], but I came to the conclusion with that data that it was reasonable in a hockey player to do a disc replacement. I spoke to the league about the reasons why, and I wrote a report.”

Jack Eichel was traded from the Sabres to Golden Knights due to political controversy surrounding his ADR decision.

AP Photo/Elaine Thompson

Eichel had also met with Prusmack, Bray, Dr. Mark Lindsay — a renowned soft-tissue specialist in North Carolina with whom Eichel eventually spent his recovery months — and other “highly recommended” doctors, Brisson said.

“Pat Brisson, he went to bat,” Bray said. “I can’t tell you how many phone calls I had with the two of them over months. Probably 40 hours of phone calls and dozens of letters.”

Mounting pressure around the league eventually forced the Sabres to trade Eichel in early November to the Golden Knights. The Knights supported the surgery and allowed Eichel to undergo it promptly with Prusmack, who inserted a “Secure-C” type of artificial disc on Nov. 12 in Colorado.

“There were doctors that were against it, but we felt comfortable with the right doctors who were in favor and were very comfortable with the process and the type of surgery,” Brisson said. “I give Jack Eichel a lot of credit. He was pretty stubborn about, ‘This is the only way I’m going to get this done. I’m not getting the fusion.'”

Johnson’s journey

Neck pain had been part of Johnson’s life since 2017 or 2018, when an injury while playing for the Lightning likely first aggravated the disc that eventually needed to be replaced. The pain was only present sometimes, and he convinced himself it wasn’t important.

During one of his three preseason games for the Hawks in October, a hit from behind aggravated the injury again, and his “whole arm went numb for about a day,” he said.

Then came the Hawks-Hurricanes game on Oct. 29, Johnson’s eighth appearance of the regular season. A cross-check from Vincent Trocheck during the second period — which left Johnson hustling to the locker room in intense pain — collapsed the disc for good.

His arm was numb for days. Even once the numbness subsided, his arm strength was gone. Conservative treatments, like epidural shots and physical therapy, proved futile.

“I haven’t felt that before where I literally couldn’t move it at all,” Johnson said. “It was pretty messed up. … I was skating a little bit because I was just trying to get back, and I remember I couldn’t even stickhandle because my arm hurt so bad.”

The options became clear: He could consider either a fusion, an ADR or a cervical foraminotomy, an operation to relieve spinal nerve pressure that Peyton Manning had tried (and failed with) before undergoing a fusion in 2011.

Fortunately, Johnson is represented by J.P. Barry, a CAA Sports colleague of Brisson’s. That connection allowed Johnson to quickly link up with Brisson and then Eichel.

“Originally, the doctor here [in Chicago] did tell me he thought a fusion would be best, just because he didn’t really like the ADR,” Johnson said. “Once I talked to my agent, he said, ‘Hey, I want you to talk to Jack. Jack has gone through this.’ So [Jack] called me. We talked a little bit and texted a few times, here and there, up until I made the decision.”

Added Brisson: “Long story short, Tyler felt comfortable with it because Jack also felt comfortable with it.”

While Eichel had chosen Prusmack for his operation, Johnson felt most comfortable with Bray — who had actually performed a different surgery on Brisson years before — after gathering the necessary range of medical opinions. Johnson credited Bray for making the options easy to understand, with no “mumbo-jumbo” included.

The Hawks fully supported Johnson’s decision, too, to everyone’s relief.

“Credit to them, [the Hawks] were very open and very understanding,” Bray said. “They asked me to communicate with the team doctor and team therapist, which I did, but they were 100% supportive. There was no argument on their part. They just said, ‘We want to see him better.'”

Tyler Johnson’s neck pain, which had plagued him for years, has dissipated for good since his surgery.

AP Photo/Chris O’Meara

The surgery was scheduled for Dec. 3 in California to insert an M6-C type of artificial disc, a different type than Eichel received. Once Bray opened up Johnson’s neck, he was even more relieved he’d chosen ADR.

“It was riding bone-to-bone and creating an inflammatory reaction,” Bray said. “Even between the time the studies were done and when I saw him, [the disc] had been collapsing more and more, and he was having more pain and losing more function.

“As is not uncommon in discs, when they give up, they give up. That disc was gone. There was no chance for it on his own. He needed it done just for his own protection.”

After the operation, the recovery process went so swiftly and smoothly that even Johnson was amazed.

He was up and walking — or a least “waddling around,” as he described it — 15 minutes after waking up. He went out to dinner with his dad the day after surgery. He flew three days after surgery. He didn’t need the prescribed painkillers, only some of the muscle relaxers.

“I started riding a bike about five days after surgery,” Johnson said. “You couldn’t lift anything for two weeks or something, so I was just riding the bike, doing little things. It was a week or nine days after surgery I started skating, [which was] pretty crazy. And then after that, I ramped things up. Right about seven weeks, I was pretty much doing full-tempo stuff.”

By Feb. 8, barely two months post-surgery, Johnson resumed full participation in Hawks practices. And on March 3, exactly three months after the surgery, he returned to game action, playing 11:10 in the Hawks’ overtime win against the Oilers.

Legacy

Even after his successful ADR recovery, Johnson’s spring with the Hawks hasn’t been what he hoped it would be. Rusty on the ice, unfamiliar with his teammates and plagued by a concussion that cost him another two-plus weeks of action, he has recorded zero points in 10 appearances since returning.

But at least he’s playing hockey. At least he’s living a normal life. Without ADR, neither of those would’ve been fathomable.

“You’ve got to weigh all the pros and cons,” he said. “But if any player ever asked me, ‘Are you happy with the surgery?’ [I’d say], ‘I’m 100% happy.’ I can’t even imagine if I [went with the] fusion. I’d still be … unable to do nearly what I’m doing. So it’s really nice.”

Looking at the big picture, Bray and Cammisa emphasize the breakthrough shouldn’t be overdramatized. The operation still entails some risks and still remains viable for only a limited range of injuries.

“Now there’s a precedent,” Cammisa said. “Hopefully they’ll continue to have great careers. But any reasonable surgeon will tell any player that comes in, ‘Listen, it’s not designed for everybody.’ “

Nonetheless, Eichel and Johnson’s bravery and resilience — putting their careers and future earnings on the line to push back against the grain — has permanently changed the way the NHL views ADR.

In the future, whenever a player suffers an injury that falls within that limited range, he’ll be free to consider disc replacement without fear of controversy.

“We’ve got to have Mother Nature, time and other players [cooperate], but right now we’re batting 1.000 on artificial discs,” Bray said. “It has opened up a whole new world for these athletes who get injured. [They] have the potential to go back within three months.

“The important thing is it allows the player the choice. And that’s the way it should be. It’s their body.”

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