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Girl, 16, among two shot near Chicago Vocational High SchoolSun-Times Wireon November 4, 2021 at 9:32 pm

Two people were shot, including a teenage girl, Nov. 4, 2021, on the South Side. | Sun-Times file

The shooting happened about 4 p.m. in the 8600 block of South Jeffery Boulevard, according to Chicago fire officials.

A 16-year-old girl and another person were wounded in a shooting Thursday afternoon near Chicago Vocational Career Academy on the South Side.

The shooting happened about 4 p.m. in the 8600 block of South Jeffery Boulevard, according to Chicago fire officials.

The girl and the other person, a male, were taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center where their conditions were stabilized, officials said.

Chicago police didn’t immediately provide details.

This is a developing story.

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Girl, 16, among two shot near Chicago Vocational High SchoolSun-Times Wireon November 4, 2021 at 9:32 pm Read More »

Congressional committee on Jan. 6 has plenty to investigate, as Trump tries to run out the clockGene Lyonson November 4, 2021 at 9:00 pm

Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., speaks to reporters after the House voted to hold former White House Senior Adviser Steve Bannon in contempt of Congress on Oct. 21. | Andrew Harnik/AP

The former president wants to keep the evidence of his chicanery from being revealed before the 2022 midterm elections.

Here’s the thing about starting fights: You can always get your butt kicked. As drunk as any barroom brawler on Trumpist lies, many Americans appear to be fantasizing about political violence. According to a poll reported in the Washington Post, “a large number of Republicans — 3 in 10 — believe violence might be justified ‘to save our country.’ ”

That translates to about 12% of the American people, roughly 30 million. It’s almost as if Jan. 6 never happened. I fear the fever won’t break until there’s a real shootout and a bunch of people get killed. This is America, after all. Next time, the Proud Boys are apt to bring more guns.

Also next time, the authorities will be better prepared. It appears that the single biggest factor in police and military unreadiness last January was sheer disbelief. Nobody imagined that a MAGA mob would actually storm the Capitol, until they did it. Alternatively, Trump could exit the scene, one way or another. There appears to be nobody else in American politics with his peculiar mix of shamelessness and showmanship to keep the MAGA masses enthralled.

That’s why the work of the bipartisan congressional committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection is so important, and why Trump is so determined to run out the clock — filing nonsense lawsuits to keep the evidence of his chicanery from being revealed before the 2022 midterm elections. Seditious conspiracy is a serious crime, punishable by up to 20 years in prison. Not that anybody’s about to prosecute a former president. Actually, it’s more the cynicism and sheer incompetence of Trump and his inner circle that he needs to hide. Court filings showed him trying to prevent congressional investigators from examining more than 700 pages of evidence — including handwritten notes, call logs of Trump and former Vice President Mike Pence, White House visitor records and much more.

He doesn’t even want people knowing who was there, much less what they were talking about, before, during and after the storming of Congress. But we already know plenty.

“If you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore,” he told the crowd, vowing to march with them down Pennsylvania Avenue. A typically empty promise. He’s always preferred to lead from behind. Indeed, it’s doubtful Trump could actually walk that far in his girdle and elevator shoes. “Let’s you and him fight” is his favorite motto.

Steve Bannon had “substantial advance knowledge”

Nevertheless, Trump’s henchmen understood. As Rep. Liz Cheney has pointed out, “it appears that Mr. [Steve] Bannon had substantial advance knowledge of the plans for Jan. 6th and likely had an important role in formulating those plans. The day before this all occurred — on Jan. 5th — Mr. Bannon publicly professed knowledge that ‘All hell is going to break loose tomorrow.’ He forecast that the day would be ‘extraordinarily different’ than what most Americans expected.” Bannon’s podcast spoke of “revolution.” He urged listeners, “Let’s get ready. It’s all converging, and now we’re on the point of attack tomorrow.”

So was Bannon present at the White House on Jan. 6? Were he and Trump in regular contact? They’d like to keep everybody from knowing. Out in the street, groups styling themselves as the “MAGA Militia” had established three checkpoints: “Cowboy,” “Minuteman” and “Rebel.”

Like a bunch of kids playing guns. Now those hombres are headed for the hoosegow, poor dopes. For two months, Trump had been bitching and boasting about the “stolen” election he lost by 7 million votes. On Nov. 21, he tweeted: “The proof pouring in is undeniable. Many more votes than needed. This was a LANDSLIDE!”

Meanwhile, his Rudy Giuliani-led team of bad lawyers filed 60 separate lawsuits charging electoral fraud. Because nothing says “Trump” like a bullsh*t lawsuit. In an astonishing display of incompetence, they lost all 60 for lack of evidence. Come January, Trump found yet another legal crank who persuaded him that Pence — a contestant in the election — had the constitutional authority to determine the winner. He told the mob outside the White House that everything depended upon Pence.

At 2:24 p.m., as the MAGA mob breached the Capitol, Trump tweeted: “Mike Pence didn’t have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution.” A chant went up in the crowd: “Hang Mike Pence.”

John Eastman, the crackpot lawyer, emailed Pence’s chief of staff, then hiding with his boss in the Capitol basement: “The ‘siege’ is because YOU and your boss did not do what was necessary.” Now he says he was just kidding — it was a purely academic exercise.

Trump followed the action on TV for another three hours. When House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy begged him to act, Trump refused. “You know what I see, Kevin? I see people who are more upset about the election than you are. They like Trump more than you do.”

Any questions?

Send letters to [email protected].

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Congressional committee on Jan. 6 has plenty to investigate, as Trump tries to run out the clockGene Lyonson November 4, 2021 at 9:00 pm Read More »

Trump critic Rep. Adam Kinzinger not ruling out 2024 presidential bidLynn Sweeton November 4, 2021 at 8:22 pm

Rep. Adam Kinzinger, D-Ill., said he is not ruling out a 2024 presidential bid. | Alex Wong/Getty Images

Kinzinger, an Illinois Republican, said when it comes to a White House run, he is “literally just not ruling it out, but there’s no grand plan right now.”

WASHINGTON — Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., one of the nation’s leading critics of former President Donald Trump, said Thursday he is considering a 2024 White House bid.

“I don’t rule it out,” he told me in an interview. For now, he said, “there is no grand plan” for what he does next.

Kinzinger last week announced that he would not seek reelection after state Democrats threw him in a district with another Republican in the new congressional map Gov. J. B. Pritzker still has to sign into law.

On Thursday, Kinzinger was in the Capitol being followed around by a documentary crew when I ran into him in the rotunda with his pregnant wife, Sofia. They are expecting their first child in January. He said the decision to move on from the House took a “weight off my shoulders.”

As to Kinzinger’s political future, he has already said starting in April he is considering a 2022 run for Illinois Senate or governor. I wrote in a Monday column I didn’t think Kinzinger would run statewide because it would distract against his crusade against Trumpism.

Now Kinzinger, one of two Republicans on the Jan. 6 investigation committee along with Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, is adding the presidential option.

The decision timeline for Kinzinger, 43, of Channahon, will be partly dictated by the Illinois election calendar. Petitions for Illinois statewide offices start circulating on Jan. 13 with filing in March. The Illinois primary is in June.

Kinzinger faces the same problem whether running in Illinois or for president: His crusade against Trump’s election denial, embrace of conspiracy theories and role in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol means it will be very hard for him to win a GOP primary. Trump is signaling he will run in 2024.

I caught up with Kinzinger again, outside the House chamber after CNN reported he would “definitely” be considering a presidential run as well as a statewide bid.

Here’s what Kinzinger told me:

On a White House run: “I don’t rule it out. It’s not what I’m seeking. It’s not the big plan. … I would be dishonest to rule it out.”

On whether he prefers a statewide run to a presidential run: “I don’t know the answer to any of that. I know that when it comes to statewide office, that’ll be a decision I have to make in the next few months.”

“I’m really kind of looking at this going, you know, obviously this is a bit of a change for me, you know, to not be running again, but I still have the fire at you know, a different kind of level. So how best does that fit? I don’t know the answer yet. But I won’t rule anything out.”

On whether Kinzinger could beat Trump or if a White House bid would be symbolic to elevate his issues: “We’d have to see, we’ll see if it would happen, what three years from now looks like. Like I said, just literally just not ruling it out, but there’s no grand plan right now.”

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Trump critic Rep. Adam Kinzinger not ruling out 2024 presidential bidLynn Sweeton November 4, 2021 at 8:22 pm Read More »

Shooting victim lunged toward Kyle Rittenhouse’s rifle: witnessAssociated Presson November 4, 2021 at 8:13 pm

Kyle Rittenhouse arrives in court behind defense attorney Corey Chirafisi before the start of Rittenhouse’s trial Thursday. | Mark Hertzberg/AP pool

Before testimony resumed Thursday, the judge dismissed a juror who had made a joke to a court security officer about the police shooting of Jacob Blake.

KENOSHA, Wis. — The first man shot by Kyle Rittenhouse on the streets of Kenosha during a night of turbulent protests lunged toward Rittenhouse’s rifle in an attempt to take it away just before Rittenhouse fired, a reporter who took video testified Thursday.

Richie McGinniss, who was recording on a cellphone for the conservative website The Daily Caller, took the stand at Rittenhouse’s murder trial and described watching as Joseph Rosenbaum chased down Rittenhouse in one of the most crucial and disputed moments of the night. It is one of the few moments not clearly captured on video.

“I think it was very clear to me that he was reaching specifically for the weapon,” said McGinniss, who had been called to the stand by the prosecution.

In an attempt to undo some of the damage done by his own witness, prosecutor Thomas Binger said McGinniss’ testimony about what Rosenbaum was intending to do was “complete guesswork.”

“Isn’t it?” he asked.

“Well,” McGinniss replied, “he said, `F— you.’ And then he reached for the weapon.”

But McGinnis also appeared to boost the prosecution’s case when he said he had a sense that something bad could happen that night because of all the guns in the area.

Rittenhouse, 18, is charged with shooting three men, two of them fatally, in the summer of 2020. The aspiring police officer, then 17, had gone to Kenosha with an AR-style semi-automatic rifle and a medical kit in what he said was an effort to safeguard property from violent protests that broke out over the police shooting of a Black man.

Prosecutors have portrayed Rittenhouse as the instigator of the bloodshed, while his lawyer has argued that he acted in self-defense, suggesting among other things that Rittenhouse had reason to fear his weapon would be taken away and used against him.

In his testimony, McGinniss said that as Rosenbaum lunged, Rittenhouse “kind of dodged around” with his weapon and then leveled the gun and fired.

Binger repeatedly tried to get McGinniss to say Rosenbaum was not “lunging” but “falling” when he was shot, as McGinniss said in a media interview days after the shooting.

But McGinniss said: “He was lunging, falling. I would use those as synonymous terms in this situation because basically, you know, he threw his momentum towards the weapon.”

As prosecutors played footage of Rosenbaum lying fatally wounded in a car lot, McGinniss struggled to keep his composure on the stand, rapidly inhaling and exhaling, then averting his eyes from a video monitor. The prosecutor apologized for playing it, saying he had to.

Across the room, Rittenhouse appeared to look away from his desktop monitor and cast his eyes downward as the video showed Rosenbaum bleeding from the head, groaning loudly.

The defense also has said that a shot fired by someone in the crowd moments before Rittenhouse began shooting made Rittenhouse believe he was under attack.

Kenosha Detective Martin Howard testified that video footage shows that a protester, Joshua Ziminski, had fired the first shot into the air. Howard said he used a stopwatch and timed five or six videos to determine that 2.5 seconds later, Rittenhouse began firing at Rosenbaum.

A wealth of video has been played in court that captured the tumultuous demonstration and the series of shootings.

The defense has suggested that Rittenhouse was the victim of a “classic ambush” from Rosenbaum, who according to testimony came out from behind a car to meet Rittenhouse and chased him as Rittenhouse shouted, “Friendly! Friendly! Friendly!”

Rosenbaum, according to police testimony, was unarmed.

The shooting of Rosenbaum set in motion the bloodshed that followed moments later. Rittenhouse shot and killed Anthony Huber, 26, a protester from Silver Lake, Wisconsin, who was seen on bystander video hitting Rittenhouse with a skateboard.

Rittenhouse then wounded Gaige Grosskreutz, 27, a protester from West Allis, Wisconsin, who had a gun in his hand as he stepped toward Rittenhouse.

Before testimony resumed Thursday, the judge dismissed a juror who had made a joke to a court security officer about the police shooting of Jacob Blake, the Black man whose wounding triggered the Kenosha protests. The juror, a retired man, declined to repeat the joke for the judge.

“It is clear that the appearance of bias is present and it would seriously undermine the outcome of the case,” Circuit Judge Bruce Schroeder said.

Prosecutors also replayed widely seen video of the interview that The Daily Caller did with Rittenhouse before the shooting.

It began with Rittenhouse, a former police youth cadet, in front of a boarded-up building, where he said he and other men were there “to protect this business, and part of my job is there’s somebody hurt, I’m running into harm’s way.” He also said he was there to provide medical aid.

McGinniss testified that he also went to talk to four Black people in the crowd who seemed angry. He said one of them had two rocks or brick-like stones in his hands, and another had a rock and a strap.

McGinniss said he asked them why they were mad, and they said that they were jumping on vehicles and that Rittenhouse came up to them with his gun. One member of the group accused Rittenhouse of waving his gun around as if he were in a movie, the witness said.

Rittenhouse, who is white, could get life in prison if convicted in the politically and racially polarizing case that has stirred furious debate over self-defense, vigilantism, the right to bear arms and the racial unrest that erupted around the U.S. after the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis and other cases like it.

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Shooting victim lunged toward Kyle Rittenhouse’s rifle: witnessAssociated Presson November 4, 2021 at 8:13 pm Read More »

Afternoon Edition: Nov. 4, 2021Matt Mooreon November 4, 2021 at 8:00 pm

Don Ananias Ocampo with his paletero cart on 18th Street in Pilsen in 2019.

Today’s update is a 5-minute read that will brief you on the day’s biggest stories.

Good afternoon. Here’s the latest news you need to know in Chicago. It’s about a 5-minute read that will brief you on today’s biggest stories.

This afternoon will be partly sunny with a high near 47 degrees. Tonight will be mostly clear with a low around 33 degrees. Tomorrow will be sunny with a high near 51.

Top story

Pilsen residents launch GoFundMe to help longtime paletero

For the last seven years, Don Ananias Ocampo has become well-known in Pilsen, pushing his paletero cart along 18th Street.

But last week, the 77-year-old went into the hospital for knee surgery and his days of selling ice cream — his only source of income — likely are over.

“He’s worried and he’s sad,” said Hilda Burgos, a Pilsen resident, customer, and friend.

“He keeps asking me: ‘When will I be able to sell my ice cream again?’ And I really don’t think he will be able to again, because both knees are so damaged from all those years of pushing the heavy cart. I also think he will probably have to have surgery on the other knee once he recovers.”

Burgos and other Pilsen residents have looked after Ocampo for the past several years — helping him find a place to live, driving him to the doctor, inviting him over for family dinners.

Now they have started a GoFundMe effort for Ocampo to make sure he can pay his rent, and to help with what they fear will be crippling hospital bills.

Ocampo moved to Pilsen from Guerrero, Mexico, almost 35 years ago, Burgos said. That whole time, he had no medical insurance, due to his immigration status.

Then, in January, Illinois became the first state to extend its health coverage to undocumented seniors whose income was below the federal poverty level. Ocampo qualified, and since then, has seen many doctors who finally are tending to his health care needs.

Manny Ramos has more on how Pilsen residents are rallying around Ocampo here.

More news you need

Federal prosecutors want a former Schaumburg CEO who pleaded guilty to his role in the violent Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection to serve 45 days behind bars, telling a judge “there were signs of a violent riot everywhere, and he willingly joined it.” In August, Bradley Rukstales became the first known defendant from Illinois to plead guilty to his role in the breach.

Five more cases tied to disgraced former Chicago Police Sgt. Ronald Watts were dismissed by Cook County prosecutors during a brief hearing today. Another 83 people who claim they were framed by Watts are still seeking to have their convictions overturned, too.

A 24-year-old man claims in a lawsuit that New Lenox police officers left him in a parking lot amid a mental health crisis last year before he was hit by a car and suffered a traumatic brain injury. The lawsuit alleges the officers didn’t follow proper procedures, Madeline Kenney reports.

Amazon opened the latest edition of its Fresh store today in Westmont — featuring a design that lets customers skip the checkout line. You can scan your way in with Amazon’s app, load up your cart and leave, as the company leverages its ability to track visitors and market to them.

A recent craze among cryptocurrency traders over tungsten cubes — tiny, ultra-heavy metal boxes — has brought about a boom in business for a suburban factory that makes tungsten products. Sales of the curiously dense metal cubes have jumped from the hundreds to the thousands for Midwest Tungsten Service in Willowbrook, all thanks to a spike in online popularity.

A bright one

Local chef honors his roots with ‘very personal’ dish, new Logan Square restaurant

Bratwurst and sauerkraut were often on the menu at Sam Engelhardt’s house growing up. It was one of his mother’s many specialties.

Engelhardt moved to Chicago about 12 years ago and has worked in various kitchens across the city. En Passant, a new restaurant in Logan Square, is the first one he can call his own.

And of course, he had to incorporate his take on the old, classic dish his mother used to make.

Brian Rich/Sun-Times
Sam Engelhardt is the chef/owner of En Passant restaurant in Logan Square.

The choucroute garnie, a “very personal” menu item for Engelhardt, has been a crowd pleaser since En Passant opened in April.

Engelhardt’s version includes some ingredients and spices that shy away from the traditional choucroute garnie, including ones that he “bumped into throughout [his] life and kind of thought they could add to the dish.”

“I grew up in a German family and the dish we’re doing here is like Alsatian, which is … in France now [but] was once German,” he said. “So I guess that’s why [he added it to the menu], because it’s from my family. Reminds me of that.”

Madeline Kenney has more in her latest installment of our Dishin’ on the Dish series here.

From the press box

Matt Nagy will be back on the sideline when the Bears face the Steelers on “Monday Night Football” after clearing the NFL’s COVID-19 protocol. The coach was back at Halas Hall today after being away from the team for eight days.
Bears-Steelers predictions for the Week 9 matchup.
Michael Kopech will be “going to camp determined to make it as a starter” next spring, White Sox manager Tony La Russa told our Daryl Van Schouwen.
Kirby Dach’s less hesitant than before to pull the trigger firing shots on net. Now he just needs to find the accuracy to actually score, Ben Pope writes.

Your daily question ?

Where in the city do you think the Chicago casino should go?

Email us (please include your first name and where you live) and we might include your answer in the next Afternoon Edition.

Yesterday we asked you: What is the quintessential Chicago sandwich and best place to find it?

Here’s what some of you said…

“The juicy steak sandwich on french bread and topped with simply a rounded yellow onion and a thick slice of tomato at Mr. D’s Shish Kabobs. Add their fresh-cut french fries and it’s burp good. A hearty sandwich at a Chicago joint with an old-time Chicago atmosphere where you can find lawyers and cops to mailmen and neighborhood kids digging in.” — Walter Brzeski

“Italian sub from The Original Nottoli & Son Deli on Belmont. The very best!” — Betty Jackson

“Ricobene’s Chicago Style Breaded Steak Sandwiches, hands down nothing close, not even Portillo’s.” — Robin Ellefsen

“Gyros, (so many places but I’ll go Athenian Room), definitely underrated as all the talk is usually about the beef.” — Alex Krupa

“Italian beef, from Novi’s.” — Jennifer Laws

“Manny’s pastrami sandwich. The best ever!” — Sheri Johnson

“Jimmy’s Red Hots! Grand & Pulaski.” — Rick Gandy

“Edzo’s Patty Melt hands down.” — Ionut Trestian

“I will have to go with the Italian beef with hot peppers and dipped. Quintessentially Chicago. Stepped out of Chicago and couldn’t find anything like it anywhere! Brought friends to Chicago and they fell in love with the combo which is the beef and a sausage link still dipped. I became a legend with my friends the very moment I introduced it to them!” — Vincent King

Thanks for reading the Chicago Sun-Times Afternoon Edition. Got a story you think we missed? Email us here.

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Afternoon Edition: Nov. 4, 2021Matt Mooreon November 4, 2021 at 8:00 pm Read More »

Suns owner Robert Sarver has history of racism, misogyny: reportDavid Brandt | APon November 4, 2021 at 8:31 pm

An ESPN report said Phoenix Suns owner Robert Sarver has a history of racist, misogynistic and hostile incidents during his 17-year tenure as the team’s owner. | Ross D. Franklin/AP

ESPN says it talked to dozens of current and former team employees for the story, including some who detailed inappropriate behavior by Sarver. Most of the allegations are from anonymous sources but a few are on the record.

PHOENIX — Phoenix Suns owner Robert Sarver has a history of racist, misogynistic and hostile incidents during his 17-year tenure as the team’s owner, according to a story published Thursday by ESPN.

ESPN says it talked to dozens of current and former team employees for the story, including some who detailed inappropriate behavior by Sarver. Most of the allegations are from anonymous sources but a few are on the record.

When contacted for comment Thursday by The Associated Press, Sarver referred a reporter to Suns chief marketing and communications officer Dean Stoyer. Stoyer said in an email that the team would respond to the report later Thursday.

The Suns had previously issued a preemptive statement on Oct. 22, calling any forthcoming allegations “completely baseless claims” and saying that “documentary evidence in our possession and eyewitness accounts directly contradict the (ESPN) reporter’s accusations, and we are preparing our response to his questions.”

Among the allegations: Former Suns coach Earl Watson said Sarver was upset that Golden State forward Draymond Green used the N-word during a game in 2016 and that the owner repeated the N-word several times when voicing his displeasure. Watson said he told Sarver that he can’t use that word.

Watson was the Suns’ coach for all or part of three seasons before being fired three games into the 2017-18 season.

The report also details a story about how Sarver passed around a picture of his wife in a Suns bikini to employees. The report says more than a dozen employees also said Sarver had a history of “making lewd comments in all-staff meetings.”

In ESPN’s report, Sarver denied or disputed most of the allegations through his legal team.

Sarver has owned the Suns since 2004. The 59-year-old Phoenix businessman also owns the WNBA’s Phoenix Mercury.

The Suns are coming off one of the most successful seasons in their history, making the NBA Finals with stars Devin Booker, Chris Paul and Deandre Ayton before losing in six games to the Milwaukee Bucks. The Suns have made the Finals three times, in 1976, 1993 and 2021, but have never won a championship.

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Suns owner Robert Sarver has history of racism, misogyny: reportDavid Brandt | APon November 4, 2021 at 8:31 pm Read More »

Navy’s triple-option disrupts Notre Dame’s game preparationJohn Fineran | APon November 4, 2021 at 7:33 pm

The Notre Dame defense will again face Navy’s unique triple-option. | Carlos Osorio/AP

“We didn’t see it last week and we won’t see it next week,” Fighting Irish coach Brian Kelly said. “So, you have to shift gears; you’re not doing things you normally do.”

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Sometimes you must switch gears to get to the finish line. No. 8 Notre Dame will need to do that Saturday when it renews its rivalry with Navy (2:30 p.m. NBC-5, 780-AM).

A week after holding off North Carolina, the Fighting Irish (8-1, No. 10 CFP) host a Navy team (2-6) that has provided its share of scares.

Just ask No. 2 Cincinnati, which escaped Annapolis with a 27-20 victory over coach Ken Niumatalolo’s crew. Yes, the same Bearcats who three weeks earlier ended Notre Dame’s 26-game home winning streak.

Kelly is 8-2 coaching against Navy, but preparing for its triple-option offense is always a hassle.

“We didn’t see it last week and we won’t see it next week,” Kelly said. “So, you have to shift gears; you’re not doing things you normally do. So, it’s really getting out of a comfort zone more than anything else. And that’s difficult because you’re so used to getting into routines. Navy gets you out of that routine.”

Navy, which is 103-73 with 11 bowl appearances under Niumatalolo, has struggled with injuries on its offensive line and in the secondary. But the Midshipmen have shown up and competed, losing close games against Houston and SMU, which are now both ranked. They rallied last week to win 20-17 at Tulsa.

“I’ve never been around a group like this that, in spite of their record, they come to work every week,” Niumatalolo said.

Navy didn’t complete a pass against Tulsa — sophomore Tai Lavatai only attempted three — but rushed for 302 yards behind Carlinos Acie (3 carries, 80 yards) and Chance Warren (10-70), Lavatai (18-64) and fullback Isaac Ruoss (13-49). The Midshipmen had the ball for 37:18.

Niumatalolo knows his defense, led by linebackers Diego Fagot and Johnny Hodges, will be challenged by the Irish offense led by Kyren Williams, who piled up a career-best 191 rushing yards and 261 overall against the Tar Heels.

“They’re good, a really good football team like they always are,” he said. “In 2019, with one of our better teams (7-1 and ranked No. 23) we went in there and they crushed us (52-20).”

MIDDIE IMPERSONATOR

Walk-on Chase Ketterer, a former option quarterback at New Prairie High School 25 miles west of Notre Dame, tried to replicate Lavatai in practices this week. Ketterer came to Kelly’s attention in 2019 when he played against the coach’s son, Kenzel, a defensive end at South Bend St. Joseph. Ketterer rushed for 2,496 yards and accounted for 43 touchdowns that season.

“It’s been a busy week,” Ketterer said Tuesday. “Practice doesn’t start until 4. We were out here at 3 o’clock doing walk-throughs and watching film. It’s definitely been a busy week.”

NAVY ON THEIR MINDS

Preparing for Navy is not a one-week thing. Kelly makes sure practice time is given to Navy during the spring and preseason, and the players also work on things during summer workouts.

“We understand we won’t be able to replicate the speed at which they run the triple (option),” said linebacker JD Bertrand, Notre Dame’s leading tackler with 71.

“Playing Navy, you’ve just got to do your job,” added defensive Jayson Ademilola, who has 32 tackles, 4.5 for losses. “It’s all 11 guys knowing what their assignment is.”

But what about the unexpected?

“There’s going to be a double pass, and there’s going to be something that we haven’t seen before, a formation,” said Kelly, who has kept a book on Navy since 2010. “There’s always something different.”

SERIES RENEWAL

Notre Dame and Navy had played every season since 1927 until the pandemic disrupted the schedule last year. When Notre Dame chose to play an ACC-laden schedule, one of the stipulations was that the one non-conference game only could be played in the state of an ACC team. Maryland is not one.

That meant the “longest uninterrupted intersectional rivalry in college football” — the Irish lead 79-13-1 — was interrupted for a season. The 2022 game will be played in Baltimore and the series is currently set to run through 2032.

“It’s a rivalry that goes way, way back,” Navy senior cornerback Michael McMorris said. “It’s very exciting because it’s a great atmosphere and it’s fun going up against athletes like that.”

STREAK-BREAKER

Niumatalolo was an assistant head coach when the Midshipmen ended Notre Dame’s long streak in the series with a 46-44 triple-overtime victory in South Bend in 2007. As head coach, Niumatalolo is 3-9 against the Irish with wins in 2009, 2010, 2016. Notre Dame has won the last three matchups.

“If you don’t have any belief, you have zero chance,” Niumatalolo said. “We’ve got to play as well as we can play, and they have to help us a little bit.”

INJURY REPORT

Navy free safety Kevin Brennan is listed as questionable because of a shoulder injury that has kept him sidelined for the last three games. He has worked closely with freshman starter Rayuan Lane, much like injured Notre Dame free safety Kyle Hamilton has done the last two weeks.

“(Hamilton’s) doing a nice job coaching (but) I’d rather him play,” Kelly said.

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Navy’s triple-option disrupts Notre Dame’s game preparationJohn Fineran | APon November 4, 2021 at 7:33 pm Read More »

Minnesota run defense expects challenge from IllinoisDave Campbell | Associated Presson November 4, 2021 at 6:32 pm

Illinois running back Chase Brown scores against Penn State. | Barry Reeger/AP

The Gophers are second in the conference and eighth in the FBS with an average of 93 rushing yards allowed per game. Illini running back Chase Brown is third in the Big Ten in rushing.

MINNEAPOLIS — The thousand-mile distance from Big Ten country to South Texas where Jack Gibbens grew up was never too far for a budding linebacker to dream of one day playing in the thick of throwback, pound-it-on-the-ground football.

Gibbens finally got his chance this season with Minnesota.

The graduate transfer from Abilene Christian has been thriving in the middle of a defense that has given the Gophers a big boost in their climb to first place in the Big Ten West Division.

“I love trying to stop the run. I love seeing teams try to run. It’s been super fun playing against it, all the way going back to spring playing against our offense every day,” said Gibbens, who is second on the team with 51 tackles. “I just love this style of football in the Big Ten.”

Minnesota is second in the conference and eighth in the FBS with an average of 93 rushing yards allowed per game, but the work has just begun.

The Gophers (6-2, 4-1) host Illinois on Saturday (11 a.m. ESPN2), when defending Chase Brown will become their top priority. Brown is third in the Big Ten in rushing, with two 200-yard games already on his resume this year. Only three other players in the FBS have done that in 2021.

New coach Bret Bielema is back where he belongs in the West Division, bringing the same smash-mouth offense he fostered at Wisconsin a decade ago. The Illini used that to win at Penn State two weeks ago in a nine-overtime slugfest.

“I’ve got a lot of ton of respect and admiration for him and how he does it,” said Gophers coach P.J. Fleck, who is 3-1 against Illinois since arriving at Minnesota in 2017.

The Illini (3-6, 2-4), like the Gophers this season, lean on an experienced offensive line. They like their blockers so much they even rolled out a seven-lineman package against Penn State.

The Gophers have a confident group, too, having clearly moved past the mess their run defense was in 2020. Gibbens and Mariano Sori-Marin have solidified the linebacker spots. The defensive line is as deep as it’s been in years, with Clemson transfer Nyles Pinckney playing a vital role at tackle.

“Every week, it gets harder to win football games as the season goes on. For us to get complacent, in my mind it would just be ridiculous, so we’re always coaching to get better,” defensive coordinator Joe Rossi said.

NOVEMBER TO REMEMBER

The Gophers led the division at this time two years ago, too, when they beat Penn State to stay undefeated before losing at Iowa, winning at Northwestern and losing to Wisconsin to watch the Badgers get the conference championship game berth.

Quarterback Tanner Morgan, one of several starters from the 2019 team, mentioned those losses as a lesson for the Gophers entering this final stretch. This time, they start November against Illinois and travel to Indiana between the game at Iowa and the finale against Wisconsin.

“If you think ahead or look back at what you’ve done or anything like that, you have just left the door open for teams to beat you,” Morgan said.

PROPS FOR PETERS

Illinois quarterback Brandon Peters, who lost the starting job and regained it when Art Sitkowski broke his arm against Penn State, went 14 for 19 for 190 yards and two touchdowns last week against Rutgers. Bielema had a candid conversation with the sixth-year player prior to the game.

“I said, ‘If you want to play and continue to even think about playing beyond here, this is it,'” Bielema said. “‘You’ve either got to do it, or it’s not going to get done. So let’s let it all hang out.'”

LATE LOSSES

The Illini had their final drive halted at the 34-yard line with 1:08 left in the 20-14 defeat by Rutgers. In three other losses, the Illini also had the ball at the end within one score but came up short against UTSA (37-30), Maryland (20-17) and Purdue (13-9).

LECAPTAIN, MY CAPTAIN

The Gophers are down to two healthy scholarship players at running back, freshmen Mar’Keise Irving and Ky Thomas, after three season-ending injuries and one departure via the transfer portal. Both Irving and Thomas have topped the 100-yard mark in each of the last two games, but the depth at the position remains precarious.

Enter Derik LeCaptain, a backup linebacker and special teams ace who joined the program as a walk-on in 2019 and was awarded a scholarship during preseason camp. LeCaptain had 5,199 career rushing yards at Southern Door High School in Wisconsin, so his experience made him a natural choice for the position switch. LeCaptain had a 24-yard touchdown run last week against Northwestern, prompting the Minnesota sideline to erupt with joy.

“Derek LeCaptain is just one of the best guys you’ll ever meet,” Gibbens said. “He deserves everything he gets. You see how hard he works, and then it pays off on Saturdays. It’s like the perfect example of when you do the right things all the time.”

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Minnesota run defense expects challenge from IllinoisDave Campbell | Associated Presson November 4, 2021 at 6:32 pm Read More »

Exciting Braves pennant win, but I have mixed feels about this year’s World SeriesGene Lyonson November 4, 2021 at 6:17 pm

Atlanta Braves relief pitcher Tyler Matzek. | Ashley Landis/AP

The real reason I’m lukewarm about the World Series is that it’s the end of the season, and I’m never ready for that.

The World Series has come around again, evoking the usual mixed feelings. For one thing, I don’t have a team this year, although I’ll be pulling for Atlanta in honor of my friend Lauren, a serious Braves fan I pretty much talked into baseball when she was my student. As a sometime athlete and a serious reader with a taste for complex narratives, she was a natural.

Also, the Houston Astros cheated. Big-time. Cunning and crude, the team’s 2017 electronic sign-stealing, trashcan-banging scheme tipping hitters to incoming pitches could have been designed by Vladimir Putin. It wouldn’t have bothered me if several Astros had been banished from baseball like Pete Rose, whose compulsive gambling hurt mainly himself.

All four of Houston’s 2021 infielders — Yuli Gurriel, Jose Altuve, Carlos Correa and Alex Bregman — participated actively. And their entire punishment, as Washington Post sportswriter Barry Svrluga puts it, has been that “they get booed on the road.”

So it can’t be Houston, although all four are terrific athletes who never needed to cheat. What’s more, they were reckless. There are too many guys changing teams and talking to think so brazen a scam would stay secret.

But the real reason I’m lukewarm about the World Series is that it’s the end of the season, and I’m never ready for that. From April through October, I begin every day with a cup of black coffee and the box scores, and end most evenings watching the Boston Red Sox. I believe I missed one game during the 2021 season due to a funeral or some damn thing …

OK, that’s a joke.

But the advent of satellite TV and video recorders has made it possible for a serious fan to spend a couple or three hours every night in a Scheherazade-like trance following the never-ending story at a ballpark 1,000 miles from home. (Also, to fast-forward through commercials, pitching changes and conferences at the mound.) It helps that I’ve always liked Boston and that the NESN announcing team is so companionable.

Sometimes I give my Arkansas wife pronunciation quizzes to test her ability to talk like former Red Sox infielder and broadcaster Jerry Remy. For example, how would Jerry say the name “Dustin Pedroia”?

“Pe-droy-er,” she answers, as if to say, “Ask me a hard one.”

See, my wife is a baseball coach’s daughter who spent her formative years driving across Arkansas and Oklahoma in school buses filled with wisecracking ballplayers. In sixth grade, she carried an autographed photo of the great Brooks Robinson, her daddy’s best player, in her billfold. OK, so she’d clipped it from the newspaper and forged the inscription. It’s the thought that counts. Diane’s often the woman laughing when others are gasping.

This morning, I asked if she’d slept well, and she answered, “three-run johnson” — Red Sox color man Dennis Eckersley’s slightly off-color phrase for a big home run. So she’d had a good night. “It’s a beautiful thing,” Eck will say.

Yes, she sometimes tires of my obsession, and I’m generally forbidden from detailed game accounts — particularly at bedtime. But stories revealing players’ character and personalities are often welcome. The other day, for example, I told her about maybe the most thrilling pitching performance I’d witnessed this year during the seventh inning of the sixth game of the Braves-Dodgers series.

Braves leading 4-2, Dodgers batting, National League pennant on the line. Runners at second and third, nobody out. Fans going nuts; disaster looming. First-ballot Hall of Famer Albert Pujols at bat, line-drive hitting machine (and former Red Sox) Mookie Betts hitting third. Atlanta brings in this great, hulking left-hander Tyler Matzek, somebody I’d never seen before.

Turns out Matzek got the “yips” a few years back and was out of the game. It’s a baseball term for an inexplicable condition that turns a guy with pinpoint control and a 98-mph fastball into a guy who can’t play catch with his brother without endangering his life. He told his wife he couldn’t go on. They cried about it together.

But he got help, started at the bottom and worked his way back. So now he’s trying to save the Braves’ season in the biggest game of his life. But let Luke Jackson tell the story. He’s the relief pitcher who made the mess Matzek walked into, facing three batters: double, walk, double.

“When manager Brian Snitker emerged from the dugout,” Jackson told Sports Illustrated, “he felt only relief. ‘Thank you,’ he told the skipper. ‘I can’t buy an out right now.’ Besides, he knew who was on his way: ‘Tyler Nutsack,’ Jackson said. ‘That’s what everyone calls him, because he’s got to drag those huge balls out to the mound every night.”‘

The coach’s daughter laughed out loud at that. Lauren in Atlanta got a kick out of it, too.

Because Nutsack struck out the side, and the Braves won the pennant.

Send letters to [email protected].

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Exciting Braves pennant win, but I have mixed feels about this year’s World SeriesGene Lyonson November 4, 2021 at 6:17 pm Read More »

Iowa, on a two-game losing streak, looks to bounce back at NorthwesternAndrew Seligman | Associated Presson November 4, 2021 at 6:03 pm

Coach Kirk Ferentz and Iowa have been struggling since being ranked No. 2 earlier this season. | Andy Manis/AP

The Wildcats have fared well against the Hawkeyes in recent years, winning four of the past five meetings.

Iowa was rolling along, unbeaten at No. 2 in the AP poll and with its sights set on a spot in the College Football Playoffs just a few weeks ago.

Now?

The 19th-ranked Hawkeyes will try to steady themselves after back-to-back losses when they visit Northwestern on Saturday (6 p.m., BTN, 720-AM).

“There are a lot bigger things in the world going on than Iowa football losing two in a row,” center Tyler Linderbaum said. “I’m excited to see how we respond.”

The Hawkeyes (6-2, 3-2 Big Ten) were riding high and in the playoff picture at 6-0 for the third time in coach Kirk Ferentz’s 23 seasons following a win over then-No. 4 Penn State at Kinnick Stadium. But things turned in a big way after that.

Iowa got outscored by a combined 51-14 in losing at home to Purdue and, following a bye, at Wisconsin. The Hawkeyes are tied with the Boilermakers and Badgers in the Big Ten West, a game behind first-place Minnesota, and looking to regroup against struggling Northwestern (3-5, 1-4).

“You try to forge ahead,” Ferentz said. “I guess if there’s any good thing here, we have plenty of experience. You can go back historically and look at a lot of our seasons. Can’t think of many that didn’t have bumps and adversity along the way. Really, all you got to do is look at the last three years.”

Iowa lost three straight in 2018. The Hawkeyes dropped back-to-back games in 2019 and 2020, winning their final six last season after opening with losses to Purdue and Northwestern. But they are 31-11 over the past four years.

“I think everybody was fairly happy at the end of the season,” Ferentz said. “At least internally, we all felt pretty good about our team and the way we did things.”

Northwestern is coming off back-to-back blowout losses since beating Rutgers on Oct. 16 — 33-7 at Michigan and 41-14 to Minnesota. Coach Pat Fitzgerald pulled quarterback Ryan Hilinski in last week’s game against the Gophers, and Andrew Marty completed 10 of 16 passes with a pair of touchdowns in his first appearance since Sept. 18.

LOOKING BACK

Northwestern has fared well against the Hawkeyes in recent years, winning four of the past five meetings. The Wildcats rallied from 17 down last season in a 21-20 victory at Kinnick Stadium. Brandon Joseph had two interceptions, and Northwestern shut out Iowa in the second half.

GROUND GAINS

The Hawkeyes rank 118th in the nation and 13th in the Big Ten in rushing, but they’re going against a defense that is among the worst in the country at stopping the run. That could lead to a bounce-back performance for Tyler Goodson. The team’s leading rusher has 95 yards on 25 carries over the past two games, including 27 yards on 13 attempts against Wisconsin.

SENIOR COACHES

With Ferentz and Pat Fitzgerald on opposing sidelines, the game will match the Big Ten’s two longest-tenured coaches.

“There’s just been such a high consistency of play with the Hawkeyes,” said Fitzgerald, in his 16th season. “They’ve got a brand and a style that shows up in all three phases. There’s just a year-in and year-out consistency to it.”

TAKE IT AWAY

One thing Iowa hasn’t done much the past two games is force turnovers. The Hawkeyes have taken the ball away just one time in that span and have not picked off a pass, even though they lead the nation with 16 interceptions. Iowa has also committed seven turnovers over the past two games, throwing four interceptions against Purdue and losing three fumbles against Wisconsin.

LOOKING AHEAD

This will be Northwestern’s final appearance at Ryan Field this season. The Wildcats are scheduled to host Purdue on Nov. 20, though that game will be played at Wrigley Field. Northwestern also visits Wisconsin (Nov. 13) and Illinois (Nov. 27).

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Iowa, on a two-game losing streak, looks to bounce back at NorthwesternAndrew Seligman | Associated Presson November 4, 2021 at 6:03 pm Read More »