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Devastating tornadoes rip through southern Illinois, 3 other states; at least 70 feared dead in KentuckyBruce Schreiner | Associated Presson December 11, 2021 at 4:40 pm

A heavily damaged Amazon fulfillment center is seen Saturday, Dec. 11, 2021, in Edwardsville, Ill. | AP Photos

The powerful storm system killed at least one person at an Amazon facility in downstate Edwardsville.

MAYFIELD, Ky. — At least 70 people were feared dead in Kentucky after tornadoes and severe weather tore through multiple states — including southern Illinois — causing catastrophic damage.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said at a news conference Saturday that the death toll may exceed 100.

“This has been the most devastating tornado event in our state’s history,” Beshear said.

The storms hit a candle factory in Kentucky, an Amazon facility in Illinois and a nursing home in Arkansas. Beshear said about 110 people were in the Mayfield factory when the tornado hit.

Kentucky State Police Trooper Sarah Burgess said search and rescue teams were going through the rubble Saturday but didn’t yet have a number for how many have died.

“We just can’t confirm a number right now because we are still out there working, and we have so many agencies involved in helping us,” Burgess said.

She said rescue crews were using heavy equipment to move rubble at the candle factory in western Kentucky. Coroners were called to the scene and bodies were recovered, but she didn’t know how many. She said it could take a day and potentially longer to remove all of the rubble.

Getty
Martin Bolton (L) and shop owner Danny Wagner try to shut off a leaking gas meter after his automobile repair shop was destroyed by a tornado in Mayfield, Kentucky, on December 11, 2021.

President Joe Biden tweeted Saturday that he was briefed on the situation and pledged the affected states would “have what they need as the search for survivors and damage assessments continue.”

Kyana Parsons-Perez, an employee at the factory, was trapped under 5 feet of debris for at least two hours until rescuers managed to free her.

In an interview with “TODAY,” she said it was the “absolutely the most terrifying” event she had ever experienced. “I did not think I was going to make it at all.”

Just before the tornado struck, the building’s lights flickered. She felt a gust of wind, her ears started “popping” and then, “Boom. Everything came down on us.” People started screaming, and she heard Hispanic workers praying in Spanish.

Among those who helped rescue the trapped workers were inmates from the nearby Graves County Jail, she said.

“They could have used that moment to try to run away or anything, but they did not. They were there, helping us,” she said. Elsewhere in Graves County, the landscape was a scene of devastation with uprooted trees, downed utility poles, a store destroyed and homes severely damaged.

AP Photos
A large semi trailer is flipped over and pushed against a building in Bowling Green, Ky., on Saturday, Dec. 11, 2021.

At least one person died at an Amazon facility in Edwardsville, Illinois, Police Chief Mike Fillback told reporters Saturday morning. The roof of the building was ripped off and a wall about the length of a football field collapsed.

Two people at the facility were taken by helicopter to hospitals in St. Louis, Fillback said. The chief said he did not know their medical conditions. Edwardsville is about 25 miles east of St. Louis.

“My prayers are with the people of Edwardsville tonight, and I’ve reached out to the mayor to provide any needed state resources,” Gov. J.B. Pritzker tweeted late Friday, adding that state police and other staff “are both coordinating closely with local officials and I will continue to monitor the situation.”

It wasn’t immediately clear whether the damage was caused by straight-line storms or a tornado, but the National Weather Service office near St. Louis reported “radar-confirmed tornadoes” in the Edwardsville area around the time of the collapse.

About 30 people who were in the building were taken by bus to the police station in nearby Pontoon Beach for evaluation.

Early Saturday, rescue crews were still sorting through the rubble. Fillback said the process could take several more hours. Cranes and backhoes were brought in to help move debris.

“The safety and well-being of our employees and partners is our top priority right now,” Amazon spokesperson Richard Rocha said in a written statement Friday night. “We’re assessing the situation and will share additional information when it’s available.”

Getty
A warehouse lies damaged after it was hit by a tornado in Mayfield, Kentucky, on December 11, 2021.

Workers at a National Weather Service office had to take shelter as a tornado passed near their office in Weldon Spring, Missouri, about 30 miles west of St. Louis. One person died and two others were injured in building collapses near the towns of Defiance and New Melle, both just a few miles from the weather service office.

A tornado struck the Monette Manor nursing home in Arkansas on Friday night, killing one person and trapping 20 people inside as the building collapsed, Craighead County Judge Marvin Day told The Associated Press.

Five people had serious injuries, and a few others had minor ones, he said. The nursing home has 86 beds.

Three storm-related deaths were confirmed in Tennessee, said Dean Flener, spokesman for the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency. Two of the deaths occurred in Lake County, and the third was in Obion County — both in the northwestern corner of the state.

The storms swept through Bowling Green, Kentucky, near the Tennessee border, tearing off roofs of homes and flinging debris into roadways. The GM Corvette Assembly Plant and the nearby Corvette Museum sustained light damage. A semitrailer was overturned and pushed against a building just across the street.

Western Kentucky University’s president said on Twitter that one of its student who lived off-campus was killed. Timothy C. Caboni, the school’s president, offered condolences and asked all students to check in with loved ones. He said the school’s main structures were mostly spared of major damage and that workers were trying to restore power, campus networks and phone lines.

The school called off commencement ceremonies that were planned for Saturday because the campus was without power.

Ronnie Ward, a Bowling Green police spokesman, said in a telephone interview that rescue efforts in Bowling Green and elsewhere were hampered by debris strewn across roads. Ward said numerous apartment complexes in Bowling Green had major structural damage, and some factories had collapsed during the storms.

“Right now we’re focusing on the citizens, trying to get to everybody that needs us,” Ward said.

John Raby in Charleston, West Virginia, and Jeff McMurray in Chicago contributed to this report. Salter reported from O’Fallon, Missouri. Also contributing: Sun-Times staff.

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Devastating tornadoes rip through southern Illinois, 3 other states; at least 70 feared dead in KentuckyBruce Schreiner | Associated Presson December 11, 2021 at 4:40 pm Read More »

Saturday’s high school basketball scoresMichael O’Brienon December 11, 2021 at 4:42 pm

The student section in The Canyon at Yorkville Christian. | Allen Cunningham/For the Sun-Times

All the scores from around the area.

Please send scores and corrections to [email protected].

Saturday, December 11, 2021

CHICAGO PREP

Ellison at Cristo Rey, 12:30

DU KANE

Geneva at St. Charles North, 7:15

Lake Park at Wheaton North, 7:15

Wheaton-Warr. South at St. Charles East, 7:15

METRO SUBURBAN – RED

McNamara at St. Edward, 7:00

NIC – 10

Belvidere at Guilford, 12:00

Boylan at Freeport, 7:00

NORTH SUBURBAN

Mundelein at Stevenson, 5:30

Warren at Lake Zurich, 5:30

Waukegan at Libertyville, 5:30

Zion-Benton at Lake Forest, 5:30

NORTHERN LAKE COUNTY

Antioch at Wauconda, 4:30

Grayslake North at Grayslake Central, 7:00

Lakes at Grant, 2:30

Round Lake at North Chicago, 7:00

SOUTHWEST PRAIRIE – EAST

Joliet Central at Joliet West, 12:00

WEST SUBURBAN – GOLD

Addison Trail at Leyden, 7:30

Downers Grove South at Hinsdale South, 7:30

Willowbrook at Morton, 7:00

WEST SUBURBAN – SILVER

Proviso West at Downers Grove North, 5:00

York at Lyons, 5:00

NON CONFERENCE

Amundsen at Maine South, 12:00

Annawan at Leland, 6:30

Aurora Central at Glenbard South, 3:30

Batavia at Quincy, 7:00

Chicago Christian at Northridge, 6:00

Clifton Central at La Salette, 3:30

Clinton (WI) at North Boone, 7:00

Cristo Rey-St. Martin at Cristo Rey-Milwaukee (WI

DeKalb at East Moline, 6:30

Evergreen Park at St. Laurence, 2:00

Fasman Yeshiva at Ida Crown, 9:00

Herscher at Beecher, 4:45

Highland Park at Glenbrook North, 5:30

Holy Trinity at Dunbar, 3:00

IC Catholic at Lisle, 1-8 PPD

Illinois Lutheran at Calumet Christian (IN), 1:15

Lincoln-Way Central at Bloomington, 3:00

Little Village at Payton, 1:00

Lockport at Mt. Vernon, 7:30

Lowpoint-Washburn at Decatur Christian, 1:00

Midland at ROWVA-Williamsfield, 4:30

Newark at Aurora Christian, 7:30

Phoenix at Rantoul, 1:00

Plainfield North at Normal West, 6:30

Prairie Central at St. Anne, 5:30

Richmond-Burton at McHenry, 3:30

Scales Mound at Indian Creek, 6:45

Streamwood at Barrington, 5:30

Streator at Ottawa, 7:30

West Chicago at Kaneland, 6:00

Westminster Christian at IMSA, 6:00

Wethersfield at Henry-Senachwine, 7:00

Wheaton Academy at Naperville North, 4:00

Wilmington at Morris, 5:30

Woodstock at Belvidere North, 2:30

BARTLETT (TN)

Simeon vs. Milwaukee Acad Science (WI), 2:15

Kenwood vs. Cane Ridge (TN), 3:30

CCL / ESCC

at Loyola

DePaul vs. Nazareth, 11:30

Fenwick vs. St. Patrick, 1:30

St. Ignatius vs. Notre Dame, 3:30

Loyola vs. Lincoln Park, 5:30

at Marist

Joliet Catholic vs. Providence, 12:30

Carmel vs. St. Rita, 2:00

Benet vs. Montini, 3:30

Marian Catholic vs. Brother Rice, 5:00

Marist vs. Mount Carmel, 6:30

HALL

Putnam County vs. Hall, 12:00

St. Bede vs. Fieldcrest, 1:30

Stillman Valley vs. Mendota, 3:00

Bureau Valley vs. Marquette, 4:30

Rock Falls vs. Pontiac, 6:00

Princeton vs. LaSalle-Peru, 7:30

MEMPHIS WOODDALE (TN)

Orr vs. Hamilton (TN), CNL

MOUNT CARMEL

Riverside-Brookfield vs. Romeoville, 11:00

Lane vs. Oak Forest, 12:30

Lincoln-Way East vs. North Lawndale, 2:00

Evanston vs. Bloom, 3:30

Hyde Park vs. Yorkville Christian, 5:00

Glenbard West vs. Hillcrest, 6:30

SOUTH ELGIN

Hampshire vs. Taft, 11:00

Auburn vs. Timothy Christian, 12:30

Buffalo Grove vs. Rockford Lutheran, 2:00

New Trier vs. Hinsdale Central, 4:00

Rolling Meadows vs. Burlington Central, 5:30

Sandburg vs. South Elgin, 7:00

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Saturday’s high school basketball scoresMichael O’Brienon December 11, 2021 at 4:42 pm Read More »

Here’s 4 good reasons to watch the Chicago Bears Sunday nightRyan Heckmanon December 11, 2021 at 4:00 pm

Sunday night, the Chicago Bears take on the Green Bay Packers for the second time this season. This matchup may be the most personal matchup we have seen between these two teams in recent memory. After Aaron Rodgers yelled his infamous line “I still own you” at the tail end of the last meeting, this […] Here’s 4 good reasons to watch the Chicago Bears Sunday night – Da Windy City – Da Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & MoreRead More

Here’s 4 good reasons to watch the Chicago Bears Sunday nightRyan Heckmanon December 11, 2021 at 4:00 pm Read More »

Polling Place: Is there a better word than ‘pathetic’ to describe Bears vs. Packers?Steve Greenbergon December 11, 2021 at 2:30 pm

Aaron Rodgers has had his way with the Bears. Perhaps you knew that already. | Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

Hint: No, there is not.

You probably haven’t noticed it, but lately the Packers have won more games against the Bears than the Bears have won against the Packers. Yes, it’s true. And by “lately” we mean going back to the dawn of time, or at least for nearly 30 years now.

Since 1993, in fact, the Bears are 13-43 against their supposed rivals. Is it really a rivalry when one side doesn’t have to get out of bed to go up two touchdowns on the other?

Anyway, what’s the best word for such sheer, unadulterated dominance? More to the point: How to put it from a Bear’s fan’s perspective?

Infuriating? Hilarious? Pathetic? Boring? That’s what we asked in this week’s “Polling Place,” your home for Sun-Times sports polls on Twitter.

“I love the Bears,” @gregory_neal1 commented, “but I am so tired of rooting for them.”

Un-fun but true: “pathetic” ruled the day. You can see the gory details for yourselves below. On to the polls:

Poll No. 1: Since 1993, the Bears are 13-43 against the Packers. Which word best sums it up?

Time again for our weekly “Polling Place” questions. Let us hear from you! Selected comments will appear in Saturday’s paper.

Q1: Since 1993, the Bears are 13-43 against the Packers. Which word best sums it up?

Chicago Sun-Times (@Suntimes) December 9, 2021

Upshot: We felt pretty good about the four words we chose until we read @matt_mcnult’s comment, which included a compelling alternative: ” ‘Insanity.’ It’s doing absolutely nothing a modern NFL team does and expecting to compete.” The lot of us surely could gather around a giant bar table and come up with a bottomless list of adjectives to be used at the Bears’ expense. Oh, well — anybody can have a bad quarter-century-plus, right?

Poll No. 2: The Bears are 12 1/2 -point underdogs heading into Sunday night’s game in Green Bay. Are you giving or taking the points?

Q2: The Bears are 12 1/2 -point underdogs heading into Sunday night’s game in Green Bay. Are you giving or taking the points?

— Chicago Sun-Times (@Suntimes) December 9, 2021

Upshot: So it has reached the point where Bears fans don’t even feel safe with a nearly two-touchdown cushion? Talk about pathetic! But, hey, not everyone has given up hope in the Monsters of the Midway. “Don’t need the points,” @JayBear29 commented. “We finna beat them heads up.” Wait, is that a parody account? But we kid our man Jay Bear.

Poll No. 3: Over the course of his Bears career, will Justin Fields have a winning record or a losing record against the Packers?

Q3: Over the course of his Bears career, will Justin Fields have a winning record or a losing record against the Packers?

— Chicago Sun-Times (@Suntimes) December 9, 2021

Upshot: You know, it’s possible that having a really excellent quarterback — or, say, two of them back-to-back — makes a difference in the arc of a rivalry. So here’s what Fields should do: be another Brett Favre or Aaron Rodgers. Yes! It’s so simple! “Man, we need to turn the tide,” @Chicagosports09 offered, “but it’s going to take more than Justin.” Dang it, we thought we had it all figured out there for a second.

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Polling Place: Is there a better word than ‘pathetic’ to describe Bears vs. Packers?Steve Greenbergon December 11, 2021 at 2:30 pm Read More »

Aaron spoiling productionRick Telanderon December 11, 2021 at 2:00 pm

Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers tried to fool everyone into thinking he had been vaccinated. | Stacy Revere/Getty Images

Packers QB Rodgers is a must-see NFL all-time great, but his anti-vax nonsense has been a real buzzkill.

There have been five NFL players I always had to watch, going all the way back to when I was a kid.

Gale Sayers, Dick Butkus and Walter Payton were three.

And it wasn’t just because they were Bears, though that was a nice touch. It was because they were so riveting. (In Butkus’ case, watching his savagery was something akin to voyeurism.)

Another was Barry Sanders. The running back was like a BB on a paint shaker. No matter how terrible the Lions were, I had to watch the little guy.

And the fifth is Aaron Rodgers.

You’ve heard of him. Plays for the Packers. Quarterback.

What enthralls me about Rodgers is not just his mastery of the Bears (and most other teams, for that matter), but the way he instantly reads defenses, then flicks the ball to open receivers like a man playing darts or disposing of a cigarette butt in a distant beer can.

What goes on in that calculating brain, sifted through those cold gray eyes, simply mystifies me.

And because we instinctively ascribe heroic qualities to humans who are better at something than the rest of us, I find it disheartening that Rodgers hasn’t been quite the leader off the field, during these troubling times, that I’d hoped he would be.

When he fooled everyone into thinking he’d been vaccinated against the coronavirus by saying, sneakily, that he had been ”immunized,” it did some real damage.

No matter how uncertain some people may be of the benefits to all from getting vaccinated against this mutating disease, the benefit to the herd is unequivocal, indisputable.

If you don’t buy science and logic, you must at least accept that getting the vaccine — along with wearing a mask and social-distancing when proper — is the best solution we humans have come up with in our fight against this viral attack.

A lot of people listened to Rodgers and his reasons, all dubious if not plain wrong, for avoiding the vaccine. Packers fans saluted him wildly when he returned from a stay on the NFL’s reserve/COVID-19 list.

Rodgers taking advice from a podcast host rather than the leader of the United States Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Dr. Anthony Fauci, only emboldened the anti-vaxxers with their propaganda that hollers, in essence, ”Don’t tell us what to do — EVER!”

I was fascinated when Rodgers took last summer off from regular football stuff and seemed to ponder his career, his role in Green Bay, his inner self. I saw him as a kind of modern seeker, his brain too fast and nimble to focus only on zone blitzes and fade routes.

He was on to ”big stuff,” I felt, one step from being that monk in the mountain cave or a member of a future-world think tank. But, yeah, that was wishful thinking on my part. Who am I to project my hopes on anyone?

Still, the sense of loss I think many of us felt when he said that he was in the “crosshairs of the woke mob” because of his anti-vax stance — that was painful. Since when is it ”woke” to trust science over hoodoo?

I’d hoped Rodgers, who always has seemed so independently thoughtful and uncaring about criticism from others, would be a public-relations point man in the race to beat this outbreak. People listen to sports stars. People listen to Aaron Rodgers.

New York City announced a vaccine mandate will go into effect Dec. 27 for all private-sector workers. It already requires hospital and nursing-home workers, teachers, firefighters, police officers and other city employees to be vaccinated. Is New York woke or reasonable? In this case, it’s pretty obvious.

The Canadian government just announced that unvaccinated NBA players won’t be allowed into that country to play games in Toronto starting Jan. 15. Or unvaccinated players can quarantine in Canada for 14 days before their game. Ha!

So how hard is it, really, men, to get a COVID shot?

In 2018, Rodgers threw 597 passes and only two interceptions. That’s roughly one pick every 300 attempts. That’s hard.

The last two years, he has thrown for a combined 7,177 yards and 71 touchdowns with only nine picks. That’s quite hard.

I’m still mesmerized by Rodgers, the player. But, for now anyway, with his resistant ideology, not so much the person.

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Aaron spoiling productionRick Telanderon December 11, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

MLB players are locked out, but not our quizzesBill Chuckon December 11, 2021 at 2:00 pm

Justin Casterline/Getty Images

With baseball enduring labor pains, here’s a way to stay sharp with your knowledge.

1. Which member of the White Sox took the most called strikes last season?

a. Jose Abreu c. Yasmani Grandal

b. Yoan Moncada d. Andrew Vaughn

2. Major League Baseball’s first strike was in 1972. It lasted from April 1 to April 13. Each of the following players was born in 1972. Which one was born during the strike?

a. Manny Ramirez c. Chipper Jones

b. Tony Clark d. Jason Varitek

3. Which Cubs pitcher threw the most strikes while on the team in the 2021 season?

a. Zach Davies c. Alec Mills

b. Adbert Alzolay d. Kyle Hendricks

4. In 1980, a Major League Baseball strike lasted from April 1 to April 8, but a full season was played. Which pitchers won the Cy Young Award for their respective league?

a. Steve Carlton c. Steve Howe

b. Steve Stone d. Steve Trachsel

5. The 1981 baseball strike resulted in a bizarre split-season in which the two teams with the best overall records in the National League did not make the postseason. Who were those two teams?

a. Cubs c. Reds

b. Cardinals d. Pirates

6. LaMarr Hoyt died Nov. 29. In 1983, he had 24 wins for the American League West champion White Sox and won the Cy Young Award. That season, he was one of two 20-plus-game winners for the South Siders. Who was the other?

a. Richard Dotson c. Tom Seaver

b. Floyd Bannister d. Britt Burns

7. Let’s assume for a moment that the universal DH becomes part of baseball next season. That would mean the last Cubs pitcher to pick up a base hit was …

a. Adrian Sampson c. Cory Abbott

b. Alec Mills d. Justin Steele

ANSWERS

1. On 460 occasions in 2021, Yoan Moncada heard the ump say ”Steeerike!”

2. Former Red Sox catcher Jason Varitek was born April 11.

3. Kyle Hendricks threw 1,889 strikes.

4. Steve Carlton won the Cy Young Award with the world champion Phillies. Steve Stone won the American League award with the Orioles.

5. The Reds finished 66-42 overall, the best record in the National League West. The Cardinals finished 59-43-1, the best record in the NL East. Neither team made the postseason.

6. Richard Dotson won 22 games that season for the Sox and finished fourth in Cy Young voting.

7. Justin Steele singled Sept. 30, but Cory Abbott’s infield single in the third inning Oct. 1 gave him the honors.

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MLB players are locked out, but not our quizzesBill Chuckon December 11, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

It’s shun and games in sports bettingRob Miechon December 11, 2021 at 2:00 pm

DraftKings CEO and co-founder Jason Robins got himself in some hot water with some imprudent comments. | Getty Images for DraftKings

DraftKings CEO Jason Robins angers many in the industry with comments against for-profit players.

LAS VEGAS — When he first perused the sports-betting quotes from DraftKings CEO Jason Robins, Long Island handicapper Tom Barton giggled, believing he was reading something from the Onion.

“I thought, ‘That’s funny. That’s smart, tongue-in-cheek joking around.’ Like Yankees manager Aaron Boone saying, ‘We’re not going to win any games this season.’ Ha ha.”

The Robins lines, though, were authentic, from a Canaccord Genuity digital conference Nov. 30.

“This is an entertainment activity,” Robins said. “People who are doing this for profit are not the players we want. . . . We want people to win. We just don’t want professionals, which is what any sportsbook would say.”

DraftKings sportsbooks operate in 14 states, including Illinois.

“I couldn’t believe that he would slap everybody in the face like that,” Barton, 44, says. “It’s one thing to believe it; it’s another thing to outwardly say it, especially in such a competitive market. I thought he lost his mind.”

Barton searched for a twist out of context, maybe a misquote. Nothing. Robins had said what he meant, meant what he said.

“That’s like the head of Disney saying, ‘We’re not catering to kids anymore,’ ” Barton says.

SAME INDUSTRY, DIFFERENT BIZ

Robins became a social-media pinata, although it wasn’t all venomous.

Wow, a Twitter patron wrote, the CEO of a major sportsbook operation saying the quiet part out loud; I gotta respect the honesty and transparency. It’s DK’s right to have this approach, someone else wrote. And another, They’re also not forcing you to bet.

Most of the feedback, however, has been blowback.

He won’t be CEO for long . . . imagine if every casino posted this mission statement on their front door . . . this is bad, very bad . . . people play to win, not to donate to DK . . . makes me never want to play on DK again.

“Whatever happened,” veteran horse-racing scribe Richard Eng wrote on the thread, “to the [Vegas legend] Benny Binion philosophy — You want to make a bet? Bring it on!”

Circa Sports director Matthew Metcalf and operations manager Jeffrey Benson didn’t shy away, either.

“At Circa Sports, we only want players who are trying to profit,” Metcalf, 42, wrote on Twitter. “If you are trying to lose, go somewhere else; you sound like a weirdo.”

Benson tweeted that he was a “noted non-DK supporter,” but he credited Robins for his transparency.

“It is wild to be in the same industry as others, yet in vastly different businesses,” Benson, 32, wrote. “For-profit players are welcomed here at Circa Sports.”

Benson wrote WAGMI — We’re All Gonna Make It — to appease Robins, who retweeted the acronym.

Robins, 40, displayed a sense of humor last Saturday, when he trumpeted a colorful, cartoonish picture of a dapper, big-mouthed chimp, with an exaggerated dovetail haircut and narrow blue eyeglasses, as his new Twitter avatar.

“Changing things up,” he wrote, “after a tough past week.”

INSULTING

In a sportsbook business whose profit margin is notoriously razor-thin, Boston-based DraftKings has thrown hundreds of millions of dollars into marketing and promotions. It offers bonuses, as other books do, to lure customers.

It expanded its fantasy platform to making book on sporting events after the U.S. Supreme Court let states pursue their own sports-betting ambitions in May 2018.

On Sept. 9, DK stock on NASDAQ hit $63.67. Like most stocks in the sector, it has been swooning, dipping to $28.37 on Dec. 3. On Wednesday, it had eked up to $33.34.

In 2020, according to Forbes, DK registered a net loss of $844 million. That same year, Robins and co-founding partners Paul Liberman and Matthew Kalish took more than $600 million in stock awards, revealed in a March proxy statement.

The company’s latest evaluation, Robins says, is $13 billion. In March, Forbes estimated his net worth at $1.1 billion.

That is also when DraftKings purchased the Vegas Stats & Information Network (VSiN), which has a spiffy studio inside Circa’s sleek year-old property in downtown Vegas.

On a VSiN show Thursday, Robins compared sports betting to the stock market and disparaged legendary punter Billy Walters, “a Hall of Famer in every way,” Barton says. “Ridiculous. [Robins] is in no way a bookmaker.”

Several sources, marginally in DK’s orbit, declined to comment. A few bettors who do regular mid-four-figure DK business were loath to jeopardize those cozy relationships.

Dave Sharapan, a former oddsman at many Vegas books who now thrives dispensing expert industry insights, didn’t flinch when asked about Robins.

“Earn a customer’s business and get better at managing risk,” Sharapan, 51, says. “Take bets. Move numbers. Be fair. Otherwise, don’t say it out loud and insult the customer. That’s what that sounded like.”

THE CURTAIN

Barton has noticed a precipitous drop-off in DK television ads this NFL season. The Robins statements, he predicts, won’t help the sagging sector.

“It’s going to have a ripple effect,” he said. ”Overall, the whole industry is going to take a small knock here because of what I would only describe as idiotic comments.”

As part of the nationally syndicated SportsGarten sports-betting radio network, Barton uses opposing viewpoints to strengthen his positions. But Robins left him flummoxed.

“Everyone wants to win, to have that feeling of winning,” Barton says. “He just told you, ‘Don’t count on it. Don’t try it. We don’t want you to win. And at the end of the day, you’re not gonna win!’ That’s really what he said.

“He pulled back the curtain of his entire industry a little bit. And what he did was, he hurt everybody.”

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It’s shun and games in sports bettingRob Miechon December 11, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Sunday Night Football will be a disaster for the Chicago BearsVincent Pariseon December 11, 2021 at 2:00 pm

The Chicago Bears are a bad football team and always were going to be one in 2021. It was clear that this thing was a disaster during training camp when they were so committed to Andy Dalton as if he was Tom Brady. They moved up to draft Justin Fields in the first round of […] Sunday Night Football will be a disaster for the Chicago Bears – Da Windy City – Da Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & MoreRead More

Sunday Night Football will be a disaster for the Chicago BearsVincent Pariseon December 11, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

We must join in outrage, and call out violence at every turnLaura Washingtonon December 11, 2021 at 1:00 pm

William Tse, the son of Woom Sing Tse, speaks to reporters on Dec. 9 at the Leighton Criminal Courthouse after a bond hearing for the man charged with fatally shooting his 71-year-old father. | Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

The anti-snitching philosophy that prevails in too many communities cannot stand. Outsiders are not invading our communities. It’s us, and it’s on us to stop it, like Chinatown did.

It was a horrendous crime at a horrendous time for Chicago. Yet, a community has responded, bringing hope.

Woom Sing Tse, 71, was shot to death, execution-style, last Tuesday in the 200 block of West 23rd Place. He was gunned down near an elementary school in Chinatown, in the middle of the day.

Within an hour, the Chicago Police Department arrested Alphonso Joyner, 23, of Morgan Park. By Wednesday, Joyner had been charged with first-degree murder.

There is a model to champion.

Tse left home to go pick up a newspaper. As he walked, a car pulled up, and the driver, Joyner, shot at Tse several times, police Chief of Detectives Brendan Deenihan said at a news conference, according to Block Club Chicago.

Then the shooter got out, walked over to Tse and shot him several more times, then “casually” walked back to his car and drove away, Deenihan said. More than 20 shots were fired, prosecutors said.

Tse’s neighbors leapt into action. A community watch group called the police district commander within minutes, Police Supt. David Brown told the media. The Chinatown Chamber of Commerce “immediately turned over critical surveillance video to help detectives get the license plate for the car,” according to Block Club.

Officers tracked the car to the Kennedy Expressway, arrested Joyner, and found a gun equipped with an extended magazine in his car, police said.

The people of Chinatown “helped us bring this offender to justice,” Brown was quoted as saying.

“Though the family is grieving Mr. Tse’s tragic loss, we hope this arrest and charges that were brought bring them a measure of closure to know that the person responsible has been taken off the streets of Chicago.”

Closure, and a model to live by.

Tse, a grandfather of nine, immigrated to the U.S. from China 50 years ago, worked hard and eventually opened two restaurants in the Chicago suburbs, the Sun-Times reported.

Tse put three children through school and retired nine years ago. “My dad was the epitome of the immigrant coming to America and taking chances,” his son, William Tse, said.

The community’s lightning-fast work to bring justice for Tse should be celebrated and repeated. The eyes and ears of the community took action. Voices spoke up, loudly, to say these heinous crimes will not be tolerated, that their perpetrators would pay.

I want to hear those shout-outs in Chicago’s most crime-infested neighborhoods, from Englewood to Roseland to Austin.

The police can’t do it alone. We can’t wait for them. When violent brutality invades our communities, the police can’t always be there.

Over the last year, the police department had a 25% arrest rate for 738 homicides, according to the Cook County State’s Attorney’s latest annual report. For 3,516 shootings, the arrest rate was 10%.

The anti-snitching philosophy that prevails in too many communities on the South and West Sides cannot stand. It is rooted in fear of retaliation, and distrust of the police.

Like Chinatown, all our neighborhoods are our villages. We are those villages. Our elderly, teens, children and babies have been murdered and injured in the crime rampage of this violent year. Outsiders are not invading our communities to commit these atrocities. It’s us, and it’s on us.

We must join in outrage, to report, snitch and call out the violence at every turn. Point fingers, reach out and cooperate.

Chinatown has shown the way.

Follow Laura Washington on Twitter @mediadervish

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