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Red Stars advance to semifinals on goal from MVP finalist Mallory PughAnnie Costabileon November 8, 2021 at 3:27 am

Mallory Pugh celebrates after her goal in the 61st minute of Sunday’s quarterfinal match. | ISI Photos

The Red Stars will head to Providence Park to play the top-seeded Thorns next Sunday.

The Red Stars and Gotham FC played each other to two scoreless draws in the regular season. The teams also played to a scoreless first half of their quarterfinal match Sunday at SeatGeek Stadium.

Chances were there for the Red Stars, but they weren’t able to capitalize until the 61st minute. Sarah Woldmoe found Mallory Pugh, who put the ball in the top right corner of the goal on a shot from the left side of the box.

Gotham FC failed to answer. The Red Stars won 1-0 to return to the NWSL semifinals, where they’ll face the No. 1-seeded Thorns at 4:30 p.m. next Sunday in Portland, Oregon.

“The first half, it’s a playoff game, we were frantic,” said Sarah Gorden, who’s a finalist for defender of the year. “We were a little all over the place with our energy, so we came into the locker room and composed ourselves. We were on the front foot in the second half.”

When the Red Stars settled into the game, they connected on passes and excelled in transition. They finished with an overall passing accuracy of 58.5%.

The Red Stars took nine shots, three on goal. Pugh accounted for two of those shots on goal.

In the regular season, Pugh had four goals and four assists, earning her an MVP finalist nod. In her first NWSL playoff appearance, she proved again why she deserves to be among the top five nominees.

She nearly added a second goal in the 79th minute on a breakaway, but her attempt was saved by Gotham FC goalkeeper, Kailen Sheridan.

Pugh was substituted for Katie Johnson in the 86th minute and embraced by a roaring crowd of 7,027 fans. After the game, as the Red Stars walked around the field engaging with those fans, Pugh handed her jersey to one who proceeded to hold it up to her shoulders in disbelief.

“Mal’s finish was special,” coach Rory Dames said. “I’m not sure how much of that has to do with what’s gone on all year as opposed to having two really good plays in succession.

“How we defended as a group, we didn’t give away a lot of chances, we were able to keep them in front of us, the back four were outstanding. That has grown throughout the year, for sure.”

Carli Lloyd’s professional soccer career ended Sunday in Bridge-view. She shared hugs with her teammates and opponents before exiting the field to cheers from the fans.

Portland has not been an easy place to play for the Red Stars. They started the 2021 season at Providence Park and were handed a thorough 5-0 loss. At the end of September, the Red Stars beat the Thorns 2-1 at SeatGeek Stadium.

“It’s going to be an incredible challenge,” Gorden said. “This has been a year filled with adversity. This is the perfect next challenge, to go to Portland and make a statement after our last trip there.”

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Red Stars advance to semifinals on goal from MVP finalist Mallory PughAnnie Costabileon November 8, 2021 at 3:27 am Read More »

At Chicago International Children’s Film Festival, an animated message about climate change, refugee crisis hits homeMaudlyne Ihejirikaon November 8, 2021 at 2:51 am

Are we too late to save the climate? As the Climate Summit continues in Glasgow, a crisis unfolds in Madagascar, where 1 million are on the brink of the world’s first famine caused solely by climate change, and an animated short film at Chicago International Children’s Film Festival — set to a song by Sting, on the plight of two children orphaned by an earthquake — hits home. | Provided

As the Climate Summit continues in Glasgow, a crisis unfolds in Madagascar, where 1 million are on the brink of the world’s first famine caused solely by climate change, and an animated short film at the Chicago International Children’s Film Festival drums home both the climate and refugee crises.

Are we too late to save the climate?

World leaders negotiate over global warming at the 26th U.N. Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COPS26), while a crisis unfolds in Madagascar, where 1 million are on the brink of the world’s first famine caused solely by climate change.

Footage from Madagascar has triggered my own memories of starvation caused by a civil war that brought my family here as refugees in 1969.

And volunteering for the first time on the professional jury of the 38th Annual Chicago International Children’s Film Festival (CICFF), running thru Nov. 14, I came across a cool animated short film that poignantly drums home both the refugee and climate crises.

Some 30,000 are currently gathered in Glasgow, as an August report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change finds the Earth getting so hot that temperatures are predicted to surpass within a decade the level of warming world leaders have sought to prevent.

Maya Sanbar, director of the Oscar-qualifying animated short showing at the film fest, “Footsteps On The Wind,” hopes sharing that message through a children’s film will have greater impact.

“There’s a lot of levels of learning you can have with animation,” she said. “It allows you to depersonalize, to emotionally trigger and engage at a level that’s not political, because it’s not who is right and who is wrong. It’s just a story told from a child’s point of view.”

And trigger and engage the film does. It’s so short, that any more would be a spoiler.

The soundtrack of the film, about the plight of two children orphaned by an earthquake, is “Inshallah,” a song by 17-time Grammy Award-winning artist Sting, who has long been in the climate battle. He and his wife co-founded the nonprofit Rainforest Fund in 1989.

Photo by Ellie Kurttz
Maya Sanbar is director of “Footsteps On The Wind,” an animated short film entry — set to a song by Sting, on the plight of two children orphaned by an earthquake — that can be seen at the Chicago International Children’s Film Festival, running through Nov. 14.

In Arabic, “Inshallah” translates to: “If God is willing, then it shall come to pass.”

Sanbar, a Palestinian immigrant who now lives in London, was visiting the couple when Sting sought her feedback on the song he wrote about the Syrian refugee crisis, for his 2017 album, “57th & 9th.”

She fell in love with it. Born in Haifa, Israel, her family became refugees after fleeing to Lebanon in the Arab-Israeli War of 1948.

“I’ve been wanting to make a film about refugees for a while. When I heard Sting’s song, it was like a lightning bolt. I knew then it needed to be an animated film — and six minutes, just like the song. Animation allows you to shorthand the message,” she said of the film also screened before the thousands at COPS26 last week.

President Joe Biden left the summit touting historic agreements to cut methane emissions, a huge contributor to global warming, by 30 percent in the next decade; as well as preserve the world’s forests, desperately needed to remove carbon pollution; and invest in carbon-neutral technologies and clean energy.

Provided
As the Climate Summit continues in Glasgow, “Footsteps On The Wind,” an animated short film currently running at the Chicago International Children’s Film Festival, hits home. The film, on the plight of two children orphaned by an earthquake, won Oscar-qualifying awards at the Cinequest Film Festival and Flicker’s Rhode Island International Film Festival.

More importantly, Biden acknowledged the U.S. and wealthier nations bear responsibility for the crisis that manifests in erratic weather patterns devastating poorer nations, which pay the price while contributing little to global emissions. Poorer nations like Madagascar.

The United Nations World Food Program currently is sounding the global alarm on the plight of the world’s fourth largest island, on the verge of the first ever famine to be caused by climate change — rivers evaporated, farming decimated, widespread malnutrition impacting half a million children under age five.

I was frozen by the report by David Muir, the first American network journalist to travel there with the World Food Program. Footage of the children with distended bellies triggered flashbacks of the Nigerian Biafran Civil War.

None will forget the images beamed into living rooms across the globe of starving Igbo women and children suffering from a condition called kwashiorkor — where the stomach, without food, turns on itself, until there is no more than skin and bones.

More than 2 million of my tribe died. So I was floored to see kwashiorkor caused by climate change, not war, in a country that produces 0.01 percent of the world’s annual carbon emissions.

Provided
The Oscar-qualifying animated short film, “Footsteps On The Wind” — on the plight of two children orphaned by an earthquake — can be seen at the Chicago International Children’s Film Festival thru Nov. 14. Set to a Sting song, “Inshallah,” it is the first animated short film ever made to a song by the 17-time Grammy Award-winning artist.

And just as Sanbar hopes the plight of the children in her film moves audiences, I hope the same for the plight of the children in Madagascar.

The two weeks of talks by more than 100 world leaders may or may not bring breakthroughs on climate mitigation. But as the world’s second-biggest polluter, it is critical the U.S. lead efforts, after withdrawing from the 2015 Paris Agreement.

The planet careens forward. Temperatures rise. Sand in the hourglass fades. And more than 1 million starve in Madagascar, due to global warming.

But as Sanbar notes, we can all do our part, whether by decreasing your home’s carbon footprint or helping the World Food Program get water and food to Madagascar.

“We hope to raise awareness. We hope to touch people emotionally. We hope to remind people that people don’t choose to leave their homes,” Sanbar said. “We hope to make them curious about finding out more. And we hope to impact change in behavior.”

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At Chicago International Children’s Film Festival, an animated message about climate change, refugee crisis hits homeMaudlyne Ihejirikaon November 8, 2021 at 2:51 am Read More »

5 critically injured in van, pickup truck crash on South SideSun-Times Wireon November 8, 2021 at 3:47 am

Five people were critically injured in a crash Nov. 7, 2021, on the South Side. | Chicago Fire Department

The crash happened in the 7400 block of South Ashland Avenue. One of the vehicles ran a red light, Chicago fire officials said.

Five people were critically injured after a U-Haul van and a pickup truck collided Sunday night on the South Side.

The crash happened in the 7400 block of South Ashland Avenue, according to Chicago fire officials. One of the vehicles ran a red light, fire officials said.

EMS plan 1 major traffic crash. U haul van and pickup truck. Five critical transports. 74th Ashland. One vehicle said to have run the right light. pic.twitter.com/oZdOODy8x7

— Chicago Fire Media (@CFDMedia) November 8, 2021

Five people were hospitalized in critical condition, fire officials said.

Authorities have not released any additional information.

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5 critically injured in van, pickup truck crash on South SideSun-Times Wireon November 8, 2021 at 3:47 am Read More »

They blinded him with anti-scienceRick Telanderon November 8, 2021 at 2:21 am

Aaron Rodgers tested positive last week for COVID and must miss at least 10 days. He already missed the Packers’ game Sunday against the Chiefs. | Norm Hall/Getty Images

Aaron Rodgers’ early claim that he was vaccinated against COVID — ”immunized” was his crafty word choice — turned out to be false. Immunized? Sure, he did some holistic stuff and followed ”Doc” Joe Rogan’s advice.

So Aaron Rodgers gets his medical advice from podcast host Joe Rogan. Solid.

Rogan, the standup comic, UFC color commentator and self-described ”psychedelic adventurer,” told the Packers quarterback to go with ivermectin rather than the plain old Pfizer, Moderna or Johnson & Johnson vaccine for COVID-19 protection.

Ivermectin, for all you Rodgers wannabes and drug adventurers, is a substance usually taken to treat parasite infestations, most commonly in animals. Oh, and Rogan was once the host of the game show ”Fear Factor.” Make of that what you will.

The point here is that Rodgers, the three-time NFL most valuable player and current nemesis of the Bears, tested positive last week for COVID and must miss at least 10 days with the Packers. He already missed the game Sunday against the Chiefs.

That lost showdown with quarterback Patrick Mahomes would have been a dandy. Instead, we got to see Rodgers’ eventual replacement, the untested Jordan Love, show Packers fans what their Rodgers-less future might look like. Not terrible, not great.

Quite a few NFL players and coaches — including Bears coach Matt Nagy and players Jimmy Graham and Robert Quinn — have tested positive for COVID or been exposed to the virus and forced into NFL protocol quarantine. So that stuff happens.

But Rodgers’ early claim to reporters that he was vaccinated against COVID — ”immunized” was his crafty word choice — turned out to be false. He never got vaccinated.

Immunized? Well, sure, he did some holistic stuff and — with ”Doc” Rogan’s advice and reportedly a legitimate doctor’s prescription for the drug — loaded up on ivermectin. We see how well that worked.

The division-leading Packers are without their star quarterback because he brazenly broke NFL rules — collectively bargained rules, by the way, meaning they were agreed to by the NFL Players Association. The bottom line is Rodgers is not with his team, say what you will about the moral, scientific and ethical lines he crossed or ignored.

It’s even possible Rodgers could miss another game if he doesn’t test negative soon enough. Love would get another chance to prove something.

But this isn’t how the baton is supposed to be passed from mentor to pupil.

It makes you wonder how corrupt the Packers’ organization is. Rodgers claims ”everybody” within knew about his stance. If true, that means the Packers covered up for fraud, broke league rules and put others at risk all so their star wouldn’t have to wear a mask or be chastised.

NFL, are you listening?

Talking Friday on ”The Pat McAfee Show,” Rodgers listed all the stuff he’s taking — ivermectin, zinc, vitamin C, vitamin B, hydroxychloroquine — and said, ”I feel pretty incredible.”

Glad he feels tip-top. But he lied about being vaccinated.

This isn’t about personal freedom and choice. This isn’t just about him, as he spouted, sounding like some martyred victim. It’s about teammates and the public. And agreed-upon rules.

“I realize I’m in the crosshairs of the woke mob right now,” Rodgers whined. ”For the media taking shots at me, you now know my story, so quit lying.”

Lying about what?

Science?

Rodgers says he’s not a vaccine-denier, but that’s exactly what he is.

He claims an NFL doctor falsely told him a vaccinated person can’t get or spread COVID. Responding to that, an NFL spokesman told Pro Football Talk, “No doctor from the league or the joint NFL-NFLPA infectious-disease consultants communicated with the player. If they had, they certainly would have never said anything like that.”

I’m reminded here of vaccine-denier Cole Beasley, the unvaxxed Bills wide receiver who stated last summer, ”I may die of COVID, but I’d rather die actually living.”

Yee-ha! Freedom or death!

Great place to make your stand.

Two hundred million Americans have gotten vaccinated. Three-quarter of a million Americans, most unvaccinated, have died of COVID.

Getting the shots is about the simplest, luckiest, most patriotic thing a citizen can do. Much of the impoverished world is crying out for the precious vaccine, yet dudes like Rodgers shun it.

I saw him on Twitter the other day, in a black suit and tie, relaxing with what looks like a glass of bourbon in his hand, promoting a bitcoin site, Cash App, saying, ”I’m giving away $1 million worth of bitcoin right now.” He tells his fans how to get some, then raises his glass and says, ”Cheers.”

The guy might be a football genius. Beyond that, he’s nuts.

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They blinded him with anti-scienceRick Telanderon November 8, 2021 at 2:21 am Read More »

3 hurt in South Shore shootingSun-Times Wireon November 8, 2021 at 2:14 am

Three people were wounded in a shooting Nov. 7, 2021, in South Shore. | Sun-Times file photo

The group was standing outside in the 7100 block of South Exchange Avenue when someone opened fire, Chicago police said.

Three men were wounded in a shooting Sunday evening in South Shore.

About 5:15 p.m., the group was standing outside in the 7100 block of South Exchange Avenue when someone opened fire, Chicago police said.

A 20-year-old man suffered gunshot wounds to the knees and a 30-year-old man was struck in the right leg, police said. Both went to the University of Chicago Medical Center where they were listed in good condition, police said.

The third man, 24, was shot multiple times about a block away in the 2400 block of East 72nd Street. He was taken to Stroger Hospital in good condition, police said,

There was no one in custody.

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3 hurt in South Shore shootingSun-Times Wireon November 8, 2021 at 2:14 am Read More »

Illinois to get at least $17 billion from the Biden infrastructure bill; could be moreLynn Sweeton November 8, 2021 at 2:06 am

(L-R) House Majority Whip Rep. James Clyburn (D-S.C.), Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and House Majority Leader Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) speak to reporters on their way to the House Chamber at the U.S. Capitol on Friday in Washington, D.C. Late Friday night, the House passed the $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill after months of negotiations. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images

If all goes as planned, broadband internet access in a few years will be accessible everywhere in Illinois, just like electricity.

WASHINGTON — The $1 trillion infrastructure bill, once signed into law by President Joe Biden, will pour an astounding $17 billion into Illinois for projects with the prospects of billions more from competitive grants.

“It’s easily the biggest infrastructure package in decades,” wrote Brookings Senior Fellow Adie Tomer.

“To put that new spending in perspective, it’s nearly enough to increase total federal infrastructure spending to the same average levels as during the New Deal. It’s safe to call this a generational investment,” concluded Tomer.

Spending from the ”Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act” will impact all of Illinois, from Chicago to Cairo.

If all goes as planned, broadband internet access in a few years will be accessible everywhere in Illinois, just like electricity.

There will be enough electric charging stations up and running to reduce or eliminate range anxiety, a major barrier to cleaner climate electric car sales.

Water quality will be improved with the removal of lead pipes, a particular problem in Chicago and Cook County.

The federal infrastructure funding will piggyback on Rebuild Illinois state programs and other infrastructure plans enacted by the Illinois General Assembly and Gov. J.B. Pritzker.

Pritzker said in a tweet, “Thanks to this historic investment, we will be able to widen the scope of our historic Rebuild Illinois capital program.”

The Biden White House has estimated that in In Illinois “there are 2,374 bridges and over 6,218 miles of highway in poor condition.”

According to analysis by the Illinois Democratic Senators, Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth and the Biden White House, the Illinois impact, over five years is:

$1.7 billion to “improve drinking and wastewater infrastructure throughout Illinois,” building on legislative proposals Duckworth has been leading.

$9.8 billion for federal highway projects.

$1.4 billion for bridge replacement and repairs. Plus the state could get more if successful in competitive grants.

About $4 billion “to improve public transportation options across the state.”

At least $100 million for broadband coverage across the state. At present, there are about including 228,000 Illinoisans who currently do not have broadband. About 2.9 million low income Illinoisans would get an internet access benefit.

Approximately $616 million for airport improvements.

Under a new Airport Terminal Improvement program, a $5 billion funding pool will be in place through Sept. 30, 2030, for the secretary of transportation to provide competitive grants for “projects that address the aging infrastructure of the nation’s airports.”

$149 million to fund the expansion of the electric charging network in Illinois. Plus, Illinois interests could compete for EV charging grants from a $2.5 billion pool.

$27 million to protect against wildfires

$22 million to protect against cyberattacks.

The infrastructure bill included a $1.7 billion competitive federal grant program pushed by Reps. Marie Newman, D-Ill., and Jesus “Chuy” Garcia, D-Ill., — both on the House Transportation Committee — to upgrade transit stations accessibility for the disabled, aimed at bolstering the CTA’s improvements for people with disabilities.

Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., was able to get in the bill vehicle safety provisions dealing with drunk driving prevention, collision warnings, automatic emergency braking and lane departure warnings. According to the bill, within three years, new motor vehicles must “be equipped with advanced drunk and impaired driving prevention technology.”

The measure also has provisions to combat distracted driving, drafted by Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Ill.

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Illinois to get at least $17 billion from the Biden infrastructure bill; could be moreLynn Sweeton November 8, 2021 at 2:06 am Read More »

Naperville high school grads among 8 killed in Astroworld crowd surgeCindy Hernandezon November 8, 2021 at 12:27 am

Jacob Jurinek (left) and Frank Patino were among the eight people killed in a crowd surge Friday night at the Astroworld festival in Houston, Texas. | Provided

Franco Patino and Jacob Jurinek played football together at Neuqua Valley High School. They were celebrating Jurinek’s birthday when they were killed in a crowd surge at the festival in Houston this weekend.

For the past year, Franco Patino and Jacob Jurinek had been looking forward to this weekend’s Astroworld festival in Houston.

Fellow graduates of Neuqua Valley High School in Naperville, Patino and Jurinek had moved onto separate colleges and planned to celebrate Jurinek’s 21st birthday there.

But the occasion quickly turned tragic Friday night, when the two promising students and six others were killed as the festival’s organizer Travis Scott performed. Hundreds more were hurt.

In an interview Sunday, Patino’s father, Julio, said his son’s enthusiasm was palpable when he spoke to him for the last time earlier in the day.

“He answered the phone right away, and he was happy,” said Julio Patino. “[He said,] ‘I’m having so much fun with my friend.'”

“I said, ‘Franco I love you. … Have fun, but be safe,” his father recalled. “He said, ‘No problem, Dad. I am fine. Everything’s gonna be OK.'”

Julio Patino declined to comment on the circumstances of his son’s death or speculate on who may be to blame, but he said one thing is clear: “Something went wrong.”

Patino was a 21-year-old senior at the University of Dayton in Ohio, where he was majoring in mechanical engineering technology with a minor in human movement biomechanics, according to his father and the school.

He was the treasurer of Alpha Psi Lambda, which is a Hispanic-oriented fraternity, and he was also a member of the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers. He had been working in an engineering co-op program in Mason, Ohio.

Patino graduated in 2018 from Neuqua Valley, where he was a three-sport athlete. His father noted that he was a student mentor on the football team and helped coach Jurinek, who was a year younger.

In a statement, Patino’s family said he “was loved by so many because of the loyal, loving, selfless, protective, funny, and caring person he was.”

“We will miss the big heart Franco had and his passion for helping others,” his family wrote. “We’re glad Franco always tried to live life to the fullest and are glad to know he was the type of person that would put himself before others until the very end.”

Jurinek was studying art and media at Southern Illinois University-Carbondale and worked as a graphic arts and media intern for the athletic department. He was affectionately known as “Big Jake” by his younger cousins — a nickname his father, Ron Jurinek, said fit his “larger-than-life personality.”

“Jake was beloved by his family and by his seemingly countless number of friends for his contagious enthusiasm, his boundless energy, and his unwavering positive attitude,” the family said in a written statement.

An avid music fan and artist, Jurinek was especially close with his dad. The two became “inseparable” after Jurinek’s mother died in 2011 and often attended Blackhawks and White Sox games together. They also shared a love for professional wrestling.

“We are all devastated and are left with a huge hole in our lives,” Ron Jurinek said. “Right now, we ask for the time and space for our family to process this tragic news and begin to heal. We’re comforted by the fact that the hundreds of people Jake touched over the years will carry a piece [of] his spirit with them.”

Kim Rendfeld, an SIU spokeswoman, said the school community was “brokenhearted to lose a member of the Saluki family” in a statement offering condolences to Jurinek’s family and friends.

Investigators on Sunday were working to determine what went wrong during Scott’s performance. Preliminary reports indicate the tragedy happened when the crowd of thousands rushed to the stage, squeezing people so tightly they couldn’t breathe nor move their arms.

The youngest fatality was a 14-year-old high school student and the oldest was 27. Thirteen people remained hospitalized Sunday.

Some of Patino’s friends took to social media to specifically call out Scott, who previously held the annual festival in his native Houston two other years. The superstar rapper-producer’s shows are known for being chaotic, and he even pleaded guilty to reckless conduct charges tied to a 2015 incident at the Lollapalooza festival in Chicago.

“My friend is gone FOREVER because of Astroworld,” one friend wrote. “The anger I have over this is insane. Travis Scott is going to have to do a hell of a lot more than post a notes-app apology.”

My friend is gone FOREVER because of Astroworld. The anger I have over this is insane. Travis Scott is going to have to do a hell of a lot more than post a notes-app apology.

— Rachel (@rachlaferr) November 7, 2021

In a series of videos posted on Scott’s Instagram, he offered condolences and said he was working to connect with the victims’ families. “I’m honestly just devastated. I could never imagine anything like this just happening,” he said.

Rapper Roddy Ricch, who also performed Friday, has said he’s going to donate his earnings from Astroworld to the victims’ families.

Contributing: Associated Press

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Naperville high school grads among 8 killed in Astroworld crowd surgeCindy Hernandezon November 8, 2021 at 12:27 am Read More »

No bail for man charged with shooting Bensenville police officerSun-Times Wireon November 8, 2021 at 12:48 am

Bail was denied for a man accused of shooting a police officer Nov. 6, 2021, in suburban Bensenville. | Adobe Stock Photo

A Bensenville police officer was responding to a domestic incident early Saturday when he was shot eight times.

Bail was denied Sunday for a 21-year-old man accused of shooting a Bensenville police officer eight times over the weekend in the western suburb.

Kiante Tyler, of Bensenville, was charged with attempted first-degree murder, aggravated battery to a police officer and aggravated battery to a police officer with a firearm, according to the Dupage County state’s attorney office.

Just after midnight Saturday an officer responded to a call of a domestic disturbance in the 100 block of South York Road, the state’s attorney office said.

An officer was speaking with Tyler at the scene when Tyler allegedly opened fire, striking the officer eight times, the state’s attorney office said.

The injured officer was taken to Loyola University Medical Center where he underwent surgery for “extensive” injuries, according to the state’s attorney’s office and Bensenville police chief Daniel Schulze.

Tyler allegedly surrendered to another officer several minutes after the shooting. His next court appearance is scheduled for Dec. 6.

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No bail for man charged with shooting Bensenville police officerSun-Times Wireon November 8, 2021 at 12:48 am Read More »

Struggling Bears coach Matt Nagy faces all-time great in Steelers’ Mike TomlinJason Lieseron November 7, 2021 at 10:46 pm

Mike Tomlin’s .647 winning percentage ranks 12th all-time among coaches with at least 100 games. | Joe Robbins/Getty Images

Tomlin has excelled in his specialty (defense), while Nagy has sputtered in his (offense). By delivering what the Steelers hoped to get when they hired him, he has made them a perennial contender for 15 seasons.

The Bears like to think of themselves as an equal to the Steelers, but the similarities essentially end at the fact they’re two of the longest-standing franchises in the NFL. Beyond that prestige, the Steelers have been a model of everything the Bears wish they were.

In the last 50 years, the Steelers have won the most games in the NFL, captured six championships and had just three head coaches. The first two, Chuck Noll and Bill Cowher, are Hall of Famers. The third, current coach Mike Tomlin, has already made an overwhelming case to join them and he’s just 49.

“The way that he leads his organization is rare,” said Bears coach Matt Nagy, who has talked with Tomlin occasionally at offseason meetings, but mostly admired his work from afar. “I just really respect and love the way that he’s real with his coaches, he’s real with his players. He’s authentic.

“And he wins.”

Does he ever.

The Bears and dozens of other organizations can only dream of finding someone who checks every box in behind-the-scenes leadership and dominates on the field.

Now in Year 15, Tomlin has never had a losing season. He has made the playoffs nine times and is the youngest coach ever to win a Super Bowl, doing so at 36 in 2008.

If he beats the Bears on Monday, Tomlin will reach 150 career victories in fewer games than it took Cowher and move into sole possession of 20th place on the all-time wins list. He could reasonably pass Joe Gibbs for 18th by the end of the season.

In a century-plus of Bears football, only George Halas has won at least 150 games. In more recent history, the team has tried four coaches during Tomlin’s tenure — with Nagy at risk of opening the door for a fifth if he doesn’t show chairman George McCaskey he can get the offense on track.

And Tomlin has done it his way. He came from the outside as a defensive backs coach under Tony Dungy and Jon Gruden in Tampa Bay and a season as Vikings coach Brad Childress’ defensive coordinator, so he put his own touch on the organization.

“You feel it when you come in the building,” said Bears secondary coach Deshea Townsend, who played for Cowher and Tomlin with the Steelers from 1998 through 2009.

Tomlin exudes confidence as much or more than any coach in the NFL, and it resonates because of the on-field success. In the same way that Nagy’s nonstop optimism seems to fall flat amid the Bears’ mediocrity, Tomlin keeps strengthening his influence by stacking up wins.

“Every head coach has a certain style,” Nagy said. “His style is really good.”

Tomlin has been a constant in a league that’s always changing. He and his various offensive coordinators — from Bruce Arians in his first season to the current one, Matt Canada — have reshaped the Steelers’ offense as Ben Roethlisberger downshifted from powerhouse to barely hanging on.

His work on the other side of the ball, though, has been most vital to his longevity. Tomlin delivered exactly what the Steelers wanted when they hired him: a compelling leader at the front of their organization and a defensive mastermind.

They have been top-10 in fewest points allowed nine times under Tomlin and never been worse than 18th. Contrast that with how Nagy has done on his side of the ball with the Bears finishing ninth, 29th and 22nd in scoring, and currently sitting 31st.

The combination of the right head coach and quarterback has kept the Steelers at or near the top of the league for almost two decades. The Bears hope they’ve finally found the right quarterback in Justin Fields, but Nagy’s performance so far has been unconvincing.

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Struggling Bears coach Matt Nagy faces all-time great in Steelers’ Mike TomlinJason Lieseron November 7, 2021 at 10:46 pm Read More »

Struggling Bears coach Matt Nagy faces all-time great in Steelers’ Mike TomlinJason Lieseron November 7, 2021 at 10:46 pm

Tomlin’s .647 winning percentage ranks 12th all-time among coaches with at least 100 games. | Getty

Tomlin has excelled in his specialty (defense), while Nagy has sputtered in his (offense). By delivering what the Steelers hoped to get when they hired him, he has made them a perennial contender for 15 seasons.

The Bears like to think of themselves as an equal to the Steelers, but the similarities essentially end at the fact they’re two of the longest-standing franchises in the NFL. Beyond that prestige, the Steelers have been a model of everything the Bears wish they were.

In the last 50 years, the Steelers have won the most games in the NFL, captured six championships and had just three head coaches. The first two, Chuck Noll and Bill Cowher, are Hall of Famers. The third, current coach Mike Tomlin, has already made an overwhelming case to join them and he’s just 49.

“The way that he leads his organization is rare,” said Bears coach Matt Nagy, who has talked with Tomlin occasionally at offseason meetings, but mostly admired his work from afar. “I just really respect and love the way that he’s real with his coaches, he’s real with his players. He’s authentic.

“And he wins.”

Does he ever.

The Bears and dozens of other organizations can only dream of finding someone who checks every box in behind-the-scenes leadership and dominates on the field.

Now in Year 15, Tomlin has never had a losing season. He has made the playoffs nine times and is the youngest coach ever to win a Super Bowl, doing so at 36 in 2008.

If he beats the Bears on Monday, Tomlin will reach 150 career victories in fewer games than it took Cowher and move into sole possession of 20th place on the all-time wins list. He could reasonably pass Joe Gibbs for 18th by the end of the season.

In a century-plus of Bears football, only George Halas has won at least 150 games. In more recent history, the team has tried four coaches during Tomlin’s tenure — with Nagy at risk of opening the door for a fifth if he doesn’t show chairman George McCaskey he can get the offense on track.

And Tomlin has done it his way. He came from the outside as a defensive backs coach under Tony Dungy and Jon Gruden in Tampa Bay and a season as Vikings coach Brad Childress’ defensive coordinator, so he put his own touch on the organization.

“You feel it when you come in the building,” said Bears secondary coach Deshea Townsend, who played for Cowher and Tomlin with the Steelers from 1998 through 2009.

Tomlin exudes confidence as much or more than any coach in the NFL, and it resonates because of the on-field success. In the same way that Nagy’s nonstop optimism seems to fall flat amid the Bears’ mediocrity, Tomlin keeps strengthening his influence by stacking up wins.

“Every head coach has a certain style,” Nagy said. “His style is really good.”

Tomlin has been a constant in a league that’s always changing. He and his various offensive coordinators — from Bruce Arians in his first season to the current one, Matt Canada — have reshaped the Steelers’ offense as Ben Roethlisberger downshifted from powerhouse to barely hanging on.

His work on the other side of the ball, though, has been most vital to his longevity. Tomlin delivered exactly what the Steelers wanted when they hired him: a compelling leader at the front of their organization and a defensive mastermind.

They have been top-10 in fewest points allowed nine times under Tomlin and never been worse than 18th. Contrast that with how Nagy has done on his side of the ball with the Bears finishing ninth, 29th and 22nd in scoring, and currently sitting 31st.

The combination of the right head coach and quarterback has kept the Steelers at or near the top of the league for almost two decades. The Bears hope they’ve finally found the right quarterback in Justin Fields, but Nagy’s performance so far has been unconvincing.

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Struggling Bears coach Matt Nagy faces all-time great in Steelers’ Mike TomlinJason Lieseron November 7, 2021 at 10:46 pm Read More »