Chicago Sports

5 Speedy receivers the Chicago Bears could land in the NFL Draft

Wan’Dale Robinson, Kentucky

Moving from one small and shifty receiver to another to wrap up our list as Robinson, a junior out of Kentucky, brings one of the more unique gadget skillsets in this class. Depending on who you ask, Robinson measures in somewhere between 5-foot-8 and 5-foot-11 with a lighter frame. Nevertheless, the former Wildcat made the most of his one year in Kentucky after transferring from Nebraska following the 2020 season. A second team All-SEC selection, Robinson set school records with 104 receptions and 1,334 receiving yards in 2021 while topping it off with Citrus Bowl MVP honors in Kentucky’s win over Iowa.

ESPN’s Todd McShay had this to say about the electric receiver when highlighting his best playmakers in space:

Robinson is a versatile slot receiver whose twitchiness and suddenness stand out on tape. He can reach top speed in a split-second after making a cut. It’s wild to watch. And every time he touches the ball, the game seems to speed up. He plucks the ball on the run as a receiver and transitions upfield smoothly. His quickness, burst, balance and vision stand out after the catch. In the vertical game, Robinson doesn’t have the size or length to dominate bigger, more physical cornerbacks, but he has the speed to run right past them.

Robinson also happens to be one of the more polarizing players when it comes to predicting where he may land in the draft. As we discussed with earlier entries, all it takes is for one team to fall in love with the speed Robinson brings to the table and we have ourselves a first-round pick, out of the Bears’ reach. Others however have the Kentucky receiver going as late as the third round.

Like we said from the start, this 2022 class of wide receivers may be one of the deepest we’ve seen in a long time, and they bring an extra dimension of speed with them. Poles is bound to snag at least one receiver among the three days in Vegas, it’s just anyone’s guess who the receiver(s) might be.

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Chicago Cubs starting pitching is off to great start

Getting good starting pitching is what organizations across the MLB wish happened all the time. And that’s exactly what the Chicago Cubs are getting early on in the 2022 season.

Through their first four games, the Cubs are 3-1 backed by some quality starting pitching from Kyle Hendricks, Justin Steele, Marcus Stroman and most recently, Drew Smyly. The starters are a combined 2-0 this season through four games with Hendricks and Stroman the two not getting a win or a loss.

It may be a small sample size, but all four starters have been great so far to start off the 2022 campaign.

The Cubs coaching staff, front office, and the fans have to be ecstatic about what they are seeing out of this starting rotation to kick off the season. Despite not getting the win, Hendricks got things going on Opening Day, pitching 5.1 innings while giving up just 1 earned run on 5 hits and striking out 7. Keeping the ball down and painting corners is so important for Hendricks’ game out there on the mound.

Justin Steele followed Hendricks in game two throwing five scoreless innings on Saturday in a 9-0 route of Milwaukee. Steele outperformed hard throwing right-hander Brandon Woodruff which was impressive for the young lefty who is only in his second season at the MLB level.

If Steele can take a step forward this year, he can be a solid No. 2 behind Hendricks.

justin steele was just a goddamn bulldog out there today. nothing else to say other than grit, talent & some good old alabama toughness https://t.co/v2dUxF5VBE

The long-awaited Cubs debut had to wait until Sunday afternoon for star pitcher Marcus Stroman. It did not disappoint as Stroman only allowed 2 hits, and struck out five at Wrigley Field while giving up just one earned run.

On Monday, Drew Smyly finally was able to actually pitch for the Cubs. Smyly was brought into the organization a few years back, but never got to actually pitch for the Cubs other than one minor league rehab outing. Drew Smyly went out there and did exactly what the Cubs envisioned when they signed him again this past offseason. The crafty left hander threw five scoreless innings, and only giving up three hits against the Pirates.

The Cubs starting pitching totals through four games is 20.1 innings pitched, 2 earned runs, 7 walks, and 16 strikeouts. Those are very impressive numbers. Again it is a small sample size, but as a fan you have to be thrilled for the staff. Wade Miley has not pitched yet due to being on the injured list, but the veteran pitcher should fit right in soon enough with this pitching staff to round out the starting five in the near future.

One time through the rotation
Hendricks: 5.1 IP, 7 K, 1 ER
@J_Steele21: 5 IP, 5 K, 0 ER
@STR0: 5 IP, 3 K, 1 ER
Smyly: 5 IP, 1K, 0 ER
#ItsDifferentHere https://t.co/5ye2Y78Wk6

David Ross and pitching coach Tommy Hottovy are being extremely smart to start off the year with the starters. With a shortened spring training there is no need to overextend the starters right now. These four starters would love to be going deeper than five innings and they will eventually, but the first week of the season is not the time to be throwing any of these guys out there with a well rested bullpen. Nobody wants to see any of the starters go down with an injury by pushing the limits in early April.

Hopefully for the Cubs their great staring pitching can continue and they can really get off to a fast start in 2022 and maybe surprise a few people along the way.

Make sure to check out our Cubs forum for the latest on the team.

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Gresham: Person found dead in house fire

A man was found dead inside a house fire Wednesday morning in Gresham on the South Side.

About 12:45 a.m., the 49-year-old was found on the first floor of a residence that was on fire in the 7900 block of South Elizabeth Street, Chicago police said. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

There were no other reported injuries. The Chicago Fire Department are investigating the cause of the fire.

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Gresham: Person found dead in house fire

A man was found dead inside a house fire Wednesday morning in Gresham on the South Side.

About 12:45 a.m., the 49-year-old was found on the first floor of a residence that was on fire in the 7900 block of South Elizabeth Street, Chicago police said. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

There were no other reported injuries. The Chicago Fire Department are investigating the cause of the fire.

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Blackhawks unable to match Kings’ desperation in eighth straight loss

Shortly after beating the Blackhawks 5-2 on Tuesday, numerous Kings players and coaches huddled around a TV outside the United Center visitors’ locker room, watching a pivotal late game between the Golden Knights and Canucks.

That’s what the playoff race entails: a feeling that every game, every night, is crucial, because it just might be. That’s a feeling the Hawks wish was coursing through their own hearts and brains right now.

Instead, they’re mindlessly trudging through the most irrelevant, hopeless final month of a season the organization has endured in many years.

“That was a desperate hockey team that needs the points, and we got outworked at times,” Hawks interim coach Derek King said.

The Kings entered the day having lost three straight, slipping down onto the playoff bubble with the Knights bearing down. Kings coach Todd McLellan, hoping to save his rebuilt team’s pleasantly surprising season, demonstrated the urgency with his pregame comments.

“We’ve given up 26 goals in our last seven games,” McLellan said. “If we’re going to get where we all want to go, that can’t continue. It has to change. It has to go back to where it is.

“[It] may sound strange, because we’ve been chasing offense for years in our organization…but right now, we need trusting players to play situations the way they know how.”

The Kings did just that, sucking the already tepid life out of the Hawks with an impenetrable first 15 minutes that earned them a 2-0 lead and 13-1 shots-on-goal advantage.

The Hawks’ only moment of brief hope, sparked after Taylor Raddysh cut the deficit in half during the second period, was squashed by an answering Kings goal 33 seconds later.

“Mentally, we’re drained,” King said. “Physically, the bodies are drained, too. You throw on a losing streak like that, that doesn’t help either. … Trust me, there are some miserable guys in there. They know where we’re at. It’s just going to take a lot of hard work and a lot of competing to try to get out of this.”

Regula riding high

Alec Regula’s incredible goal Saturday with the Rockford IceHogs was almost as remarkable because of who he is –a 6-4, 218-pound defenseman — as because of how he did it.

The 21-year-old held off a Tucson forward while cutting horizontally across the neutral zone, then turned on the burners, sliced through the caught-off-guard defense and beat the goaltender with a trailing lofted backhand shot.

“I saw an opening and just made a move and went in,” Regula said Tuesday. “I was lucky to get it to go in there, [but] I have that kind of offense in my game.”

The former Red Wings draft pick has enjoyed a solid season with 25 points in 40 games for Rockford, which has gone 10-2-1 in their last 13 games. He was rewarded for the highlight-reel playwith an NHL call-up Monday.

“I feel I have that [NHL] ability,” he said. “It’s about having that confidence and believing in myself. I don’t think I’m going to be trying to make moves like that right off the bat, but [I’m working on] holding onto the puck a little bit longer, skating, getting a little bit more comfortable and believing in myself. I think there is a time where I’ll be able to make plays like that in the NHL.”

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Are the Chicago Cubs a playoff team in 2022?

Coming into 2022 a lot of teams expected the Chicago Cubs to be in full rebuild mode. Especially after the fire sale that went down last July with trading away star players in Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant, and Javier Baez. Cubs President Jed Hoyer mentioned multiple times that this would not be a full time rebuild like when Theo Epstein and Hoyer basically torn down the organization and started from scratch back in 2012.

The Cubs before the lockout were able to land a big time starting pitcher in Marcus Stroman to a three-year deal worth 71 million dollars. It does include an opt out after the second season, but still a major signing to show that the Cubs are not in a full time rebuild.

After the lockout ended the Chicago Cubs surprised a lot of people including myself by signing Japanese star outfielder Seiya Suzuki to a five-year deal worth 85 million dollars. Suzuki was a prioritized free agent by multiple teams, but the Cubs were able to bring him to the north side of Chicago for the foreseeable future.

Those were not the only major moves that the Chicago Cubs made this offseason bringing over a quality starter in Wade Miley from Cincinnati Reds, signing super utility man Jonathan Villar, and also getting a quality backup catcher in Yan Gomes. The bullpen also has new faces in it this year with the signings of David Robertson, Mychal Givens, Chris Martin, Jesse Chavez, and Daniel Norris to name a few.

When you add in the new faces with names like Kyle Hendricks, Willson Contreras, Ian Happ, Nico Hoerner, Nick Madrigal, Jason Heyward, and two players Frank Schwindel, and Patrick Wisdom who both played very well in their first season in a Cubs uniform. This sure seems like a team who can compete. They showed it this weekend against the Milwaukee Brewers.

It is a small sample size of three games, but the Chicago Cubs played well against a Brewers team that many have as a key contender in winning the NL Central this year. The Cubs were able to take two of three from the Brewers in the opening weekend.

The two games the Cubs were able to record victories in were started against the reigning NL CY Young winner in Corbin Burnes, and a very talented starter in Brandon Woodruff who has given the Cubs fits over the past few seasons. The Brewers were able to comeback on Sunday to avoid being swept at the Friendly Confines. There were a lot of positives this opening weekend for the Cubs.

Do I believe the Cubs can go out there and win the World Series this season? No, I personally do not. At the same time with 12 teams now making the playoffs it is not out of the question for this Cubs team to compete for a Wild Card spot in the National League in 2022.

The Cubs do have enough to compete for a playoff spot if they are able to stay healthy and get good quality pitching. Will they be able to stay healthy all season long and get quality pitching? Time will tell, but would not be surprised to see the Cubs fighting for a playoff spot deep into the summer months unlike last year in 2021.

Make sure to check out our Cubs forum for the latest on the team.

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Luis Robert puts on a show in White Sox home opener

Center fielder Luis Robert saved a run with a leaping catch and crash at the wall. He used his brute strength to give the White Sox the lead with a home run. And he laid off a full-count for a walk and used his speed to provide an insurance run in the eighth inning.

Every bit of it was needed in a 3-2 victory over the Mariners Tuesday.

Every bit of it was appreciated by a home-opener sellout crowd at Guaranteed Rate Field.

“What a talent,” manager Tony La Russa said.

“He showed a lot of why he’s so special,” shortstop Tim Anderson said.

“The craziest part was the home run wasn’t even hit as hard as the line drive to the shortstop [111.7 mph in the third inning],” closer Liam Hendriks said. “And that’s ridiculous. He’s got that much talent, it’s a joke.”

Robert homered to right center field against challenging rookie right-hander Matt Brash, a 110.4-mph rocket that gave the Sox a 2-1 lead in the sixth inning. Leading off the eighth, he laid off a low slider on a 3-2 pitch from Diego Sanchez, then stole second base and third before scoring when Eloy Jimenez beat out a double play.

“It feels good,” Robert said through translator Billy Russo said. “It’s just proof that I’m feeling very good physically,” Robert said through translator Billy Russo. “Doing that in the home opener is special, too. Hopefully, that’s something I can carry through the whole season.”

There were “MVP” chants from a sellout home opener crowd for Robert after the homer, and lots of cheering for a collection of six Sox pitchers who held the Mariners to a run on four hits. Vince Velasquez allowed Eugenio Saurez’ homer in four innings of work, and Bennett Sousa, Reynaldo Lopez, Aaron Bummer, Kendall Graveman and Liam Hendriks followed with five innings of scoreless work as the Sox improved to 3-1.

“A good, all-around team victory,” Velasquez said.

The Sox’ third in a row after a rough opener in Detroit in which Hendriks blew a save. Hendriks gave up a run on three hits by the Mariners but finished them by striking out cleanup man Mitch Haniger.

“Every time they put it in play, it ended up being a hit,” said Hendriks, who struck out three.

Josh Harrison walked in the second, went to third on catcher Reese McGuire’s single and scored on Anderson’s fielder’s choice. Anderson and Jimenez were a combined 0-for-8 but Anderson made two nice plays in the field and Jimenez made a leaping catch near the wall. Each got an RBI by putting balls in play.

A 3-1 start comes with injuries to Lucas Giolito and Lance Lynn at the top of their rotation, Garrett Crochet and Ryan Burr in the bullpen and Yoan Moncada and AJ Pollock in the lineup. Giolito appears to be progressing and Lynn, a week removed from knee surgery, took part in pregame ceremonies and moved around without a limp.

Before the game, general manager Rick Hahn shot down a report that Athletics right-hander Frankie Montas was coming to the Sox in a trade. Hahn is not trading Andrew Vaughn, a player he believes fits the long-term goal of winning on a regular bases, a player the A’s have asked for, in a swap for Montas — who finished sixth in Cy Young voting last season and has two years of contract control remaining.

He might be more likely to see if the Sox can weather this injury storm, hold their own in the standings and assess what their needs are closer to the trade deadline at midseason.

“Part of the reason I joke about the rumors from last night — we are not looking to rob Peter to pay Paul to make this team better,” Hahn said. “Guys we view as important in helping this team win [such as Vaughn] wouldn’t be the first ones out the door as we try to make this team better.”

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Illinois sports betting: March Madness handle tops $286 million

Illinoisans wagered a cool $286.2 million on March Madness, according to state revenue figures released Tuesday.

That includes $278.4 million wagered on about two and a half weeks’ worth of games in the men’s NCAA basketball tournament, and another $7.8 million bet on the women’s tourney, the Illinois Gaming Board reported. That’s the state agency that polices legal gambling in the state, including sports betting, which became a legitimate operation in Illinois two years ago.

The casino sportsbooks came out ahead by more than $14.3 million collectively on the college hoops action, but one saw its bracket bankroll go bust. The Hollywood Casino Aurora closed out the NCAA tourneys in the red by $6,795, Gaming Board records show.

But the overall casino win generated almost $2.2 million in Illinois tax revenue. Sportsbooks have to send 15% of their winnings to the state.

A tweak to state gambling law meant that this was the first time Illinois gamblers could legally wager on in-state college teams.

Officials say they didn’t track how much money was put on the Fighting Illini or Loyola Ramblers, but those bets on Illinois schools can only be placed in person at a casino. Almost $11.8 million was wagered in all at those so-called retail sportsbooks.

About $61 million was bet in Illinois on the Super Bowl, this year making $9.5 million for the books and $1.4 million for the state.

Illinois gamblers have now plunked down more than $10 billion on sports since the industry launched in March of 2020.

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Cubs’ Drew Smyly shuts down Pirates, Seiya Suzuki homers twice in win

PITTSBURGH – Cubs manager David Ross’ prediction last season that the pitching staff was going to “surprise some people,” never came true – at least in the way he meant it.

Four games into this season, however, the Cubs’ starting pitching has delivered a surprise in one turn through the rotation. In the Cubs’ 2-1 win against the Pirates Tuesday, lefty Drew Smyly completed the streak: Each of the Cubs’ starters threw at least five innings in their first starts of the season this week.

Smyly, in his Cubs debut, held the Pirates scoreless through five frames Tuesday, allowing just three hits. Then, outfielder Seiya Suzuki single-handedly powered the Cubs’ offense, mashing two solo homers for the Cubs’ only runs of the game.

That pair of home runs brought Suzuki’s total to three in his young Major League Baseball career, all in the past two games. Going 2-for-4 Tuesday, Suzuki improved his batting average to .417 in the first four games of his Cubs tenure.

This story will be updated.

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White Sox’ Dallas Keuchel ‘fully expecting’ to bounce back in 2022

You think White Sox fans are the only ones who have wondered ruefully if Dallas Keuchel will ever bounce all the way back?

Imagine being the team’s highest-paid pitcher — a former Cy Young winner — and trying to process come playoff time that there’s simply no use for you. That as far as trying to bring a championship back to the South Side is concerned, you’re yesterday’s news. That the team you signed with for three years and $55 million, stamping its rebuilding effort as legit, was essentially telling you: Stand in the corner with the rest of the taxi-squad members; we’ll take it from here.

That’ll mess a guy up.

“Mentally, it was tough at the end of [last] year,” Keuchel said. “Especially being left off the playoff roster.”

Keuchel is scheduled to take the ball Wednesday as the Sox’ fifth starter of the season. Whether or not he’s actually their No. 5 starter is partly a matter of semantics. Lance Lynn is out for a prolonged period after knee surgery. Lucas Giolito went on the injured list after his first start. No doubt, Keuchel’s services are badly needed in the rotation as it stands at present. In that sense, chaos is his friend.

But there’s a big perception gap separating Keuchel and young Dylan Cease, whom general manager Rick Hahn called “a joy to watch” and “evolving before our very eyes into a premier starter” before the Sox’ home opener against the Mariners on Tuesday. And everybody remains super excited about young Michael Kopech, who, like Cease, has tantalizing physical tools. Keuchel, on the other hand, is 34. He’s a soft-tossing lefty who doesn’t strike people out and whose signature precision eluded him last season. Is he the weakest link?

By the sounds of them, fans are even less enthused about Keuchel than they were after he let the Sox down with a poor start in Game 2 of the 2020 postseason series against the A’s. From the cheating scandal he took part in with the Astros to that 2020 dud in Oakland to last year’s 5.28 ERA and predictable postseason snub from manager Tony La Russa, there has been some bitter indignity for Keuchel to swallow since he was on top of the world as a 2015 Cy Young winner and a 2017 world champion in Houston.

Back trouble dogged Keuchel last season, when he struggled with shaping his slider and commanding his fastball. That’ll mess a guy up, too.

“If I pressed the gas pedal, it was like my stuff went in reverse,” he said. “Where we’re at now is back to normal, and it took me a little while to figure that out and go into reverse mode, putting the brights on and taking that more extended view of the road.”

As long as we’re heaving automotive metaphors around, let’s just say that it wasn’t the first time Keuchel felt as though he’d backed into a ditch.

“There were multiple times where I thought it was the end of the [road], in my upper 20s,” he said. “Then I thought I found the fountain of youth, lower 30s.”

Let’s not forget, he was fifth in American League Cy Young voting in 2020, when he was 6-2 with a 1.99 ERA in his first season — albeit a miniature one — with the Sox. But now he’s sort of stuck in neutral, in the last guaranteed year of his contract (unless he can pitch 160 innings and pass an end-of-season physical, triggering a vesting option for 2023) and already having been bumped back a day behind newcomer Vince Velasquez, who got the start on Tuesday.

But there’s an obvious way to get unstuck, isn’t there? After going from ace-like stature when he arrived on the South Side to the outskirts of the rotation at the beginning of Year 3, Keuchel just has to pitch better. A whole lot better. He believes he can do that.

“I fully expect myself to be back and producing and helping come playoff time,” he said.

The Sox aren’t about to fight him on it.

“I feel like he’s going to have a good year for us,” La Russa said.

What a game-changer it would be for an already shorthanded squad with high hopes and serious expectations.

“Every career ends at some point,” Hahn said. “Every star eventually doesn’t shine as brightly. But guys who have been stars like Dallas have that reserve and confidence to pull back on, and I think that’s going to serve him really well going forward. We are entering this season viewing him as part of what’s going to help us win.”

And so the bounce-back begins? Here comes Keuchel, out of the corner and back under the spotlight.

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