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High school football preview: The Top 10 quarterbacksMike Clarkon August 14, 2021 at 2:57 pm

Two highly ranked prospects from the CCL/ESCC superconference highlight the list of the area’s top 10 quarterbacks.

1. Kaden Cobb, Fenwick

The top-ranked quarterback in the state’s senior class will be leading what could be the most prolific passing game around. The 6-3, 180-pounder is committed to defending Mid-American Conference champ Ball State, and he has two D-I receivers to throw to: Eian Pugh (Illinois and Max Reese, who has Power Five offers from Arizona State and Kansas.

2. Dontrell Jackson, Marist

Another three-star prospect, Jackson is a consensus top-25 recruit in Illinois and top-75 QB in the nation. The son of the former Thornton standout and coach of the same name picked up his first D-I offer before his sophomore season and is headed for rising power Coastal Carolina.

3. Jack Lausch, Brother Rice

One of the state’s premier multisport athletes, Lausch will be a preferred walk-on for football and baseball at Notre Dame. He’s a two-time All-Catholic League quarterback and ranked as one of the top outfielders in the Midwest. The 6-3, 195-pounder also is an academic standout — he ranks No. 2 in his class.

4. Tre Jones, Oswego East

It’s been a busy couple years for Jones, a junior who started his prep career at Montini, transferred to Denmark High in Georgia last fall and returned to play at Montini this spring before being sidelined by a broken finger. Now he’s healthy and back in his hometown at Oswego East. The 6-2, 180-pounder has a Power Five offer from Arizona State.

Fenwick’s Kaden Cobb at practice in Oak Park, Wednesday, August 11, 2021.Kevin Tanaka/For the Sun-Times

5. Tommy Ulatowski. St. Rita

The starting quarterback for the Mustangs in the 2019 Class 5A state final is back and has the area’s best player — Ohio State-bound receiver Kaleb Brown — returning as his prime target. Expect recruiting interest to pick up for Ulatowski, a 6-2, 180-pounder, as the season goes on.

6. Mark Forcucci, Wheaton North

The Falcons were one of the breakout teams of the abbreviated spring season, thanks to a standout junior class. Forcucci, a 6-1, 190-pounder, was one of the leaders of that resurgence, which should continue this fall. He’s committed to Holy Cross.

7. Nathan Hayes, St. Charles East

As a sophomore in 2019, Hayes passed for 1,357 yards and 12 TDs for a Class 8A playoff qualifier. The 6-4, 195-pounder also is an elite pitcher with a 90 mph fastball. He’s committed to FBS power North Dakota State.

8. Aidan Gray, Naperville North

The 6-2, 175-pound junior could be primed for a breakout year after a pandemic-shortened spring season. He’s already caught some college coaches’ eyes as a three-star recruit and has a Western Michigan offer.

9. Jameson Sheehan, Cary-Grove

Historically, the Trojans have been very good when they have veterans at quarterback and fullback to lead their option offense. Sheehan, a 6-4, 190-pounder, and Nick Hissong are both back from this spring’s 4-0 team, so the arrow is pointing up for Cary-Grove.

10. Aaron Warren, Morgan Park

How good of a quarterback is Warren? Good enough for the Mustangs to switch Camron Fulton, an established starter, to defense last spring to allow Warren to get a head start on adjusting to the position. Long and athletic at 6-4, he can make plays with his arm and his feet.

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High school football preview: The Top 10 quarterbacksMike Clarkon August 14, 2021 at 2:57 pm Read More »

The Drake Wedding Rapon August 14, 2021 at 3:11 pm

Getting More From Les

The Drake Wedding Rap

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The Drake Wedding Rapon August 14, 2021 at 3:11 pm Read More »

Wisconsin looks to cash in with sports bettingRob Miechon August 14, 2021 at 2:00 pm

LAS VEGAS — Wisconsin finally noticed the numbers.

That Illinois set a record, of 16 months, in recording its first $5 billion in sports-betting business, breaking New Jersey’s previous standard by two months.

In this calendar year, nine states have written $1 billion worth of legal sports-wagering tickets. Football will push Iowa across that 10-digit goal line.

Since May 2018, when the Supreme Court let states seal their own sports-betting fates, $635 million in tax revenue has been generated in those jurisdictions.

Hundreds of millions. Billions. Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers noticed. He surprised many on July 1 by announcing alterations to the state’s gaming compact with the Oneida Nation that allow it to take sports bets.

Its brick-and-mortar operations might write tickets before the Packers’ opener Sept. 12 in New Orleans.

Not long ago, someone close to the Badger State’s political machinery informed me that those officials would “never” inquire about sports-betting possibilities with their tribal casinos.

They wouldn’t jeopardize current revenue streams with their native associates, those politicos believed, should sports betting be a losing proposition. However, they’ve learned about the house’s edge and tax windfalls.

David Carney, the award-winning sports talk-show host at WKTY in La Crosse, Wisconsin, is tuned to the state’s sports-wagering pulse, and he didn’t see this on the horizon.

“Not really, but it makes some sense,” he said. “Wish it was more all-encompassing, but it’s on a good track.”

If Wisconsin can succumb to the sports-betting elixir, then what about California, Texas, Hawaii and Utah?

OVER 45 1/2

No, not Utah. The Beehive State’s constitution forbids gambling.

On industry watchdog SportsHandle’s interactive map of states and the degree to which each is, or might be, involved with sports betting, “never” accompanies Utah.

Thirty-one jurisdictions (30 states and Washington, D.C.) have legalized sports betting; some are not yet live. Wisconsin could technically check in at No. 32, although Florida might swipe that number and push the Badger State to No. 33.

It’s a fluid landscape as news breaks frequently about one state’s prospects and another’s failures. Out of nowhere, a Wisconsin hogs the headlines.

The Sunshine State got the green light from the Department of the Interior, the federal branch that lords over tribal compacts and is expected to rubber-stamp the new Wisconsin-Oneida amendments.

Legal challenges, though, are expected in Florida because that deal allows the Seminole Tribe to accept bets off-property, via mobile apps. That jurisprudence could affect Wisconsin, even California.

(The Oneida pact prohibits betting on in-state collegiate programs, to which Carney alluded. A similar Illinois restriction will eventually be extinguished; watch Wisconsin follow suit.)

In California, a Florida-like ballot-measure proposal is being floated in conjunction with an upcoming recall election. In Texas, it won’t be broached again until 2023.

Three years ago, Westgate SuperBook executive vice president Jay Kornegay told me he expected 42 or 43 states to legalize sports betting within a few years. Thirteen states have ongoing legislation. On Monday, Kornegay set a firm Over/Under figure of 45 1/2 , by May 31, 2022.

Idaho, South Carolina, Alaska and Hawaii have no current legislation, according to SportsHandle. Wisconsin, though, had very recently been on that list, too.

THE NINTH ISLAND

Hawaii is a curious case study. So many of its natives have relocated to, and visit, Vegas, it is known as The Ninth Island. In decor and cuisine, the California Hotel and Casino downtown caters to Hawaiians.

The Hawaiian influence here is the foundation of a youth football program that feeds Liberty High, which upended 10-time defending state-champion Bishop Gorman in 2019 en route to its first title.

The Patriots perform The Haka, with intimidating warlike chants and waggling tongues, before every game as a nod to the community’s rich Polynesian heritage.

So I rang Big Paulie, a lifelong pal who has lived on the Big Island for 20 years, to gauge the pulse of island betting. Fluid landscape? He’s building a home near Hilo in Lava Zone 2.

Dog and cock fighting thrive here, he said, in fiercely protected arenas. He knows locals who wager $20,000 on a single outcome.

“They are so highly illegal and despised by the majority,” Big Paulie said, “that they only talk about it among themselves. They don’t let strangers in.”

On Oahu, he said, authorities often bust Asian-influenced illegal game rooms.

The pandemic zapped Oahu’s tourism, and the budget for a 20-mile elevated railway project has soared overboard, at $12 billion and counting.

The Boondoggle Express is cartoonish. When the carriages were delivered, their wheels were too narrow for the tracks. It might open in 2033.

Even the executive director for the rail authority, Lori Kahikina, admitted, “We haven’t been open, honest [or] transparent.”

In such a quagmire, in the only other state with a Utah-like constitution that forbids gambling, an online sports-betting pilot program has been discussed. But it’s on island time.

Hawaii is on my “Never” list. However, because mainland business is booming, I bet the Over with Kornegay. Two slices of pepperoni and a cherry Coke.

Perfect for both of our budgets.

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Wisconsin looks to cash in with sports bettingRob Miechon August 14, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Chicago baseball quiz: It’s 50-50, to tell you the truthBill Chuckon August 14, 2021 at 1:00 pm

True or false? “Always tell the truth. That way you don’t have to remember what you said” is a famous quote from Yogi Berra. That’s false. The quote is true, but the person who said it was Mark Twain.

It’s easy to be fooled by things that seem to make sense. In today’s quiz, I present you with nine seemingly factual statements. Or are they simply lies? You tell me in our True or False Quiz.

Good luck on the Chicago nine.

TRUE OR FALSE?

1. Robinson Chirinos signed with the Cubs’ organization in July 2000 and played his first game for the Cubs in July 2021.

2. Since 2018, no White Sox batter has had more “golden sombrero” games (four strikeouts in a game) than Yoan Moncada.

3. Andrew Romine and his brother, Austin Romine, both have played for the Cubs and Tigers.

4. In David Ross’ last official at-bat in the -majors, he hit a home run in the World Series.

5. Since 2014, no one has had more seasons with 100-plus RBI than Jose Abreu.

6. Steve Stone once was traded for Ron Santo.

7. Jim Deshaies was the losing pitcher against the White Sox in his major-league debut. He also was the 1,000th player to play in an official game for the Yankees.

8. Craig Breslow, the Cubs’ assistant general manager, has been called “the smartest man in baseball, if not the entire world.”

9. Joe McEwing, the White Sox’ third-base coach, was the runner on third when Mark McGwire hit his 70th home run of the 1998 season.

QUIZ ANSWERS

I cannot tell a lie (this week) — all the answers are true.

1. Chirinos signed with the Cubs in 2000 but did not reach the majors until 2011, after he had been traded to the Rays. He returned to the Cubs as a free agent last month.

2. As of this week, Moncada’s nine “sombreros” were the third-most in the majors since 2018.

3. The Romine brothers’ father, Kevin, spent his entire career with the Red Sox. Andrew Romine played for the Tigers from 2014-17, and Austin Romine played for the Tigers in 2020. Both are on the Cubs’ 40-man roster.

4. Ross walked in his last official plate -appearance but homered in his last official AB of Game 7 of the 2016 World Series.

5. Abreu entered the 2021 season with five 100-plus RBI seasons, tied with Nolan Arenado.

6. In 1973, Stone was one of four players the Sox traded to the Cubs for Santo.

7. The Sox beat the Yankees 6-3 on Aug. 7, 1984, and Deshaies, “Mr. 1,000,” was the losing pitcher.

8. Breslow graduated from Yale with a B.A. in molecular biophysics and biochemistry. He also gained admission to the NYU School of -Medicine. On June 16, 2019, the Wall Street -Journal wrote that he was pretty, pretty, smart.

9. On Sept. 27, 1998, in McEwing’s 10th game in the majors, he was on third base in the seventh inning when McGwire hit his 70th dinger of the season.

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Chicago baseball quiz: It’s 50-50, to tell you the truthBill Chuckon August 14, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Sky ‘locked in’ on championship pushAnnie Costabileon August 14, 2021 at 1:00 pm

The Sky wrapped up their second preseason training camp of sorts Saturday, a day before they host the top-ranked Storm at Wintrust Arena.

Sunday’s game kicks off the second portion of the 2021 WNBA season for the Sky, who are approaching it with a different level of intensity.

“We were locked in before,” coach and general manager James Wade said. “But subconsciously you knew there was going to be a break. Now this is the final turn.”

The Sky’s second-half schedule will not be kind.

Opening against the reigning WNBA champions will test their potential right away. They’ll play the Storm two more times in August, the Aces three times in September and sprinkled in are rematches against the Wings, Lynx and Mercury.

A silver lining in the challenges presented by the remainder of the Sky’s schedule is that all but five games are at home.

Wade was quick to point out that his team’s road record (7-4) is better than at home (3-6).

Defensive consistency will be the biggest key to the Sky’s championship run. Keeping teams off the three-point line, forcing turnovers and limiting their own have been priorities at practice.

“We have to play start to finish until the horn goes off,” Kahleah Copper said. “We had a lot of crazy close games.”

The Sky are third in the league in defensive rating (95.8). Eight of their 10 losses came by fewer than 10 points, five of them by five or fewer points.

Their final loss of the first portion of the schedule came after Tina Charles’ offensive rebound putback at the buzzer sent the game to overtime. Those are the kinds of plays the Sky can’t afford to give up if they want to win their first title in franchise history.

This team’s X-factor is their depth. They don’t have players like A’Ja Wilson or Breanna Stewart who are going to score 20-plus points a night. They do have five players averaging in double figures, plus a dependable bench led by Allie Quigley.

The Sky are one of the most balanced teams on both ends of the court and that will play to their advantage as they close out the regular season.

“It’s going to be our depth in the end,” Diamond DeShields said. “We have a range of scorers, not just one or two players.”

Center Stefanie Dolson, fresh off a gold medal win with USA’s 3×3 team, is bringing an added level of confidence into the final 12 games.

The entire 2021 season has seen a different level of commitment from Dolson. She changed her body, gave up free time for practice time and even broke off a relationship to remove any kind of distraction from her life.

Dolson’s focus is reflected in all of her teammates. As the Olympic break comes to an end, they know there is no more room for error.

“You can’t have any slippage,” Wade said. “We’re not going to have that time to regroup. Everybody is more locked in on what we want to accomplish as a whole.”

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Sky ‘locked in’ on championship pushAnnie Costabileon August 14, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bulls: Zach LaVine enticed DeMar DeRozan to choose BullsRyan Heckmanon August 14, 2021 at 12:58 pm

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Chicago Bulls: Zach LaVine enticed DeMar DeRozan to choose BullsRyan Heckmanon August 14, 2021 at 12:58 pm Read More »

Chicago outdoors: Swallowtail bits, flea market trolley lines, Michigan record king, loving “Home Waters”Dale Bowmanon August 14, 2021 at 11:39 am

Notes come around Chicago outdoors and beyond.

WILD OF THE WEEK

Dan Davies was in his backyard in Griffith, Ind., watering when he saw a butterfly that made him email, “I’ve never seen one that colorful.” Michael Jeffords, entomologist for the Illinois Natural History Survey and one author of “Butterflies of Illinois: A Field Guide,” identified it as a yellow morph of a female eastern tiger swallowtail. Then he added, “They also come in black that is a mimic of the pipeline swallowtail. All tiger swallowtail males are yellow, but [there are] different morphs of the female varies, depending on location. Yellow are more common in the northern part of it’s range.”

WOTW, the celebration of wild stories and photos around Chicago outdoors, runs most weeks in the special two-page outdoors section in the Sun-Times Sports Saturday. To make submissions, email [email protected] or contact me on Facebook (Dale Bowman), Twitter (@BowmanOutside) or Instagram (@BowmanOutside).

WILD TIMES

HUNTER SAFETY

Wednesday-Thursday, Aug. 18-19: Kankakee, (815) 935-2700

Thursday and next Saturday, Aug. 19 and 21: Mundelein, (847) 918-6145

Friday-next Saturday, Aug. 20-21: Ingleside, [email protected]

Aug. 28-29: Palatine, palatineparks.org

FISH GATHERING

Thursday, Aug. 19: Dale Bowman on “Pandemic changes,” Fish Tales Fishing Club, Worth Township offices, Alsip, 7 p.m., fishtalesfishingclub.com

LUNCHTIME LECTURES

Monday, Aug. 16: Austin Happel, a research biologist at the Shedd Aquarium, Bridgehouse Museum on Chicago Riverwalk, free, noon-12:45 p.m., bridgehousemuseum.org/events

SAFARI CLUB

Through Sunday, Aug. 15: Online auction for Safari Club International Illinois and Chicago chapters, 2021-on-line-fundraiser

CONSERVATION WORLD

Through Aug. 22: Illinois State Fairgrounds, Springfield, 10 a.m.-7 p.m., www2.illinois.gov/dnr/ConservationWorld/

U.S. COAST GUARD AUXILIARY

Next Saturday, Aug. 21: Boat America, Waukegan, Curt Schumacher, [email protected]

ILLINOIS PERMITS

Through Monday, Aug. 16: Applications, third lottery, firearm/muzzleloader deer

Monday, Aug. 16 to Aug. 31: Applications, first lottery, duck/goose blinds, www2.illinois.gov/dnr/hunting/waterfowl/Pages/OnlinePermitApplication.aspx

Aug. 31: Deadline, applications for free upland game permit

DALE’S MAILBAG

Trolley rigs found at a flea market by Ron Wozny. Credit: Ron Wozny
Trolley rigs found at a flea market by Ron Wozny.
Ron Wozny

“From one guy at the flea yesterday eight trolley rigs. . . . Allstate [Arena] parking lot, every Sunday a.m. You would find tons of stuff you don’t really need but can’t live without.” Ron Wozny

A: Wozny proving why he is one of the great collectors of Chicago fishing memorabilia with a great find. Just another reason we need that Chicago Fishing Museum.

BIG NUMBER

47.86: Official weight of the Michigan state-record Chinook, caught Aug. 7 by Luis Ricardo Hernandez Martinez while trolling with Capt. Bobby Sullivan of Icebreaker Charters.

(L-R) Capt. Bobby Sullivan, Luis Ricardo Hernandez Martinez, Jay Wesley and Scott Heintzelman with the Michigan-record Chinook.  Provided by the Michigan DNR
(L-R) Capt. Bobby Sullivan, Luis Ricardo Hernandez Martinez, Jay Wesley and Scott Heintzelman with the Michigan-record Chinook.
Provided by the Michigan DNR

LAST WORD

“I just finished `Home Waters.’ It was a great as advertised (apparently writing talent is an inheritable trait). I had to limit myself to no more than two chapters/day in order to avoid racing through it.”

Pete Lamar, describing the joy of reading “Home Waters,” by John Maclean, who is the son of Norman Maclean, author “A River Runs Through I.t” Click here for my review of it.

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Chicago outdoors: Swallowtail bits, flea market trolley lines, Michigan record king, loving “Home Waters”Dale Bowmanon August 14, 2021 at 11:39 am Read More »

Jake McCabe, Connor Murphy united on Blackhawks after 12 years of friendshipBen Popeon August 14, 2021 at 11:30 am

In the summer of 2009, then-16-year-old Connor Murphy and 15-year-old Jake McCabe were slightly overwhelmed.

They had just been the last two players chosen — and were called in together to hear the news — for a U.S. team at a junior hockey -development camp. They were months away from joining the U.S. -National Team Development Program. Their hockey careers were quickly accelerating, but they were still mere teenagers.

“At that age, everything is such a shock,” Murphy said. “It felt so crazy to be connecting with guys who were across the U.S. [It] almost felt like they were across the world at the time. And we literally were playing against kids across the world after that.”

But they at least had each other. Murphy, an Ohioan, and McCabe, a Wisconsinite, quickly became friends.

Twelve years later, they remain close. And this fall, for the first time, they’ll be united on NHL ice.

With McCabe leaving the Sabres to sign a four-year contract with the Blackhawks, and Duncan Keith’s departure making Connor Murphy by far the Hawks’ longest-tenured defenseman, their friendship has come full circle.

“It’s definitely the spot I wanted to be, so sometimes I have to pinch myself that it’s real,” McCabe said. “It’s pretty cool to be able to drive over to Fifth Third [Arena] now and hop on the ice with the rest of the guys.”

“In the [locker] room the other day, we were both saying it feels weird seeing him sitting in the stall by us with Hawks gear on,” Murphy said. “It has been so many years [of] seeing him around with all of his Buffalo stuff and reconnecting in the summer. Now realizing that we’re going to be together every day of the year, that’s an exciting thing.”

Jake McCabe, alongside Murphy, has been a regular on US national teams since age 15.
Marko Hannula/USA Hockey

After joining the USNTDP in the fall of 2009, it didn’t take long for McCabe and Murphy to become familiar with each other.

“It was very quick,” McCabe said. “You get to know your teammates pretty quick when you spend all the time in the world with them. We both lived in the same general area, or at least our billet families did. You eat lunch together, you sometimes drive to the rink together [and] we were hurt together, so we spent a lot of time together.”

Wait a second. Hurt together?

“We actually both suffered the same injury: We both had a stress fracture in our lower backs,” McCabe said. “We were out for a couple months and did the same rehab together: Manual therapy and strengthening. It was nice, actually.”

In between games, practices and tournaments with the USNTDP, players still attend public high school. For McCabe and Murphy, Pioneer High in Ann Arbor, Michigan, was their assigned school.

And while they were sidelined with their back injuries, there was a lot more school and a lot less hockey.

“We needed another elective credit, so we took guitar class together,” Murphy said. “We were sitting in there with our back braces, playing guitar, trying to learn that, thinking about how cool it would be. It’s funny how far we’ve gotten since then.”

Murphy moved on to Canadian juniors and McCabe to the University of Wisconsin in 2011, but the friends continued to play alongside each other on U.S. national teams.

McCabe recalls Murphy scoring the overtime championship-winning goal for the U.S. against Sweden in the 2011 World Under-18 Championships. And Murphy recalls McCabe serving as the U.S. captain and top-pair defenseman en route to a gold medal in the 2013 World Under-20 Championships.

McCabe’s top-pair partner, in another remarkable present-day, Hawks-related twist, was Seth Jones. That team was also stacked with John Gibson (now with the Ducks) in goal, J.T. Miller (Canucks) up front and Jacob Trouba (Rangers) also on defense.

“That was an awesome tournament,” McCabe said. “We had a really, really talented team. John Gibson was definitely our MVP; he was unbelievable all tournament long. But we just had a really good group.”

Connor Murphy impressed Stan Bowman with his play during the 2016 World Championships.
Andre Ringuette/HHOF-IIHF Images

After turning pro, McCabe and Murphy again represented the country and played together in the 2014 and 2016 World Championships.

“[In 2014], I was fresh out of college, so I wasn’t playing a whole bunch — I was more just opening the door and letting the other guys go out there,” McCabe said with a laugh. “But [in 2016], we were actually ‘D’ partners most of the tournament.”

Although that 2016 team finished fourth, a certain USA Hockey executive watching from the stands in Russia — Hawks general manager Stan Bowman — was impressed by the McCabe-Murphy pairing’s performance.

“I remember leaving there thinking, ‘These guys are really good, young defensemen,’ ” Bowman said earlier this summer.

” ‘It seems they have bright careers ahead of them, and it would be nice one day to bring them to Chicago.’ “

That same year, McCabe rented a summer apartment in River North with his wife and “loved it right away.” Working out with two college friends ultimately connected him to Chicago-based GVN Performance, which became his permanent summer training group.

After Bowman acquired Murphy from the Coyotes in 2017, the longtime friends would occasionally run into each other or hang out during offseasons in Chicago, but their time together remained limited.

Meanwhile, McCabe’s Hawks connections continued to grow, such as when the Hawks last year hired GVN trainer Juan Gonzalez as the Rockford IceHogs’ strength and conditioning coach. McCabe’s daughter’s birth in April further cemented the family’s future in Chicago.

Finally, this July, with McCabe an unrestricted free agent and Bowman rebuilding a maligned defense, the union that long seemed inevitable finally happened.

“My wife and I were talking about free agency coming up and hoping there was going to be a fit [with the Hawks],” McCabe said. “And luckily enough, there was mutual interest. It came together relatively quickly.”

“I was super excited, obviously,” Murphy said. “Any time you have a buddy that joins onto the team, it feels great.”

McCabe remains on track to be 100% recovered from knee surgery in February in time for training camp next month, whereas Murphy has focused on his conditioning and puck-moving skills during summer training.

They, along with Jones and Calvin de Haan, comprise the revamped defensive core expected to greatly improve the Hawks’ ability to keep the puck out of their net next season.

“It is amazing how some of this stuff comes full circle,” Murphy said. “To think that, after 12 years, we’re back in a similar stage together is pretty cool.”

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Jake McCabe, Connor Murphy united on Blackhawks after 12 years of friendshipBen Popeon August 14, 2021 at 11:30 am Read More »

Bears hope Justin Fields will be off and running vs. DolphinsPatrick Finleyon August 14, 2021 at 10:00 am

Andy Dalton was watching film in the Bears’ quarterbacks room during organized team activities in June when he turned to ask Justin Fields a question.

“I asked him, ‘What is it like to run 4.4?” Dalton said.

Fields, the Bears’ rookie quarterback, ran a 4.45-second 40-yard dash at Ohio State’s pro day. With no NFL Scouting Combine because of the coronavirus, Fields’ time — along with those of every other prospect who couldn’t travel to Indianapolis — was recorded into the combine record books. Fields ran, simply, the second-fastest 40-yard dash time of any quarterback prospect this century. He trails only Robert Griffin III, the former Washington quarterback who ran hurdles in the U.S. Olympic trials. Griffin ran a 4.33 in 2012.

“Not many people can do that at the quarterback position,” Bears coach Matt Nagy said. “But when you have designed runs and you have plays that break down, and [Fields] can just make anybody on the field not catch him, that’s a pretty good strength that he has that a lot of guys don’t have.”

When the Bears run onto Soldier Field to face the Dolphins on Saturday, they’ll play perhaps the most anticipated preseason game in franchise history. It’s partly because fans are returning to the lakefront for the first time since the end of the 2019 season. But it’s mostly because of Fields, whom the Bears traded up to draft in late April.

Hungry for any sign of progress, fans will eat up every throw — heck, some cheered a handoff he made at Family Fest — but they should pay attention to every run. For the first time since he wore Buckeye stickers on his gray helmet, Fields will be able to show his speed on a football field, when opponents chase him with bad intentions.

His teammates will watch, too.

“I’m excited for the first preseason game for us to really be able to see him get a chance to get outside the pocket and make a play with his legs,” receiver Allen Robinson said. “We see his throwing ability every day. It’s exciting seeing him, when he pulls the ball down, seeing his athletic ability and how he moves and how he can run.

“I’m definitely excited to see him get that opportunity against another opponent when he can actually possibly break a long one. Because I think he has that capability in him.”

In 34 college games, Fields ran 260 times for 1,133 yards. One reason for the unimpressive 4.4 yards per carry average: in college football, sacks count against the quarterback’s rushing yards.

Fields’ most notable play came when he didn’t have the ball at all. On Dec. 5, he handed off to Ohio State running back Trey Sermon and chased after him, looking to make a block. Fifty-seven yards later, having passed Sermon, Fields blocked a Michigan State defender at the 7-yard line. Sermon scored.

“[Speed] is a huge weapon that he brings and that’s been a part of his game,” Nagy said. “I don’t think you see him overuse it; he just uses it when he needs to, in college. And it’s worked for him.”

Nagy calls it “burst” — both the zip that the rifle-armed Fields puts on his passes but the gear he shifts into, like a sports car, when he takes off running. Nagy sees it on tape, but he feels it on the practice field. Strangely, too, it’s not even when Fields is running with the ball. It’s when he’s jogging from one practice session to the other.

“Watch his burst when he throws routes on air to the wideouts,” Nagy said. “Watch that burst when that drill is done and he bursts to the other end of the field. You can see it. That’s where you feel it.”

Nagy’s felt it before — he coached Michael Vick in Philadelphia from 2009-12. The NFL’s career rushing leader for quarterbacks, Vick led the league with 6.8 yards per carry in 20210.

“Michael Vick was somebody that, when he was in practice he did his stuff and he did everything he was asked to do, but on Sunday — and I was on the sideline when he was playing — it was electric how he played,” Nagy said. “It was a different level. That was crazy. Anybody that coached Michael can say that.

“But Justin, again, you feel that burst.”

Nagy has coached a speedy quarterback before, but the threat didn’t last long. Mitch Trubisky averaged 6.2 yards per carry — and totaled 421 rushing yards — in 2018.

As Trubisky’s injury history grew — he bruised his shoulder in November 2018 and tore the labrum in his shoulder in September 2019 — Trubisky ran less. By October 2019, Nagy was preaching that he wanted him to be a thrower.

“You have to be a quarterback that can run,” Nagy said then.

Trubisky didn’t reach 400 rushing yards — combined — over his final two seasons.

The tone with Fields has been different. The coaching staff has yet to question Fields’ aggressiveness the way they did Trubisky. Nagy used to say he wanted Trubisky to have a “touchdown-to-checkdown” mentality when throwing — look deep first, then short. During draft week, Nagy joked about Fields having a “touchdown-to-touchdown mentality,” a line he repeated in mandatory minicamp and again in training camp.

The Bears liked that teams had to prepare for Trubisky’s legs. They knew that there were coverages some teams wouldn’t play on third down — man being one of them — for fear of having their defenders’ backs turned if Trubisky scrambled.

That remains true with Fields. When Nagy interviewed nine defensive coordinators in January, each one brought up the challenge of defending an athletic quarterback.

“It adds a whole other dynamic they have to defend,” general manager Ryan Pace said. “A lot of guys have it. A lot of guys don’t. And [Fields] has it.”

By the second week of training camp, quarterbacks coach John DeFilippo was challenging Fields to attack the defense even more. The message: not a lot of people walking the earth can throw and run like Fields.

“When you escape,” DeFilippo said he told Fields, “I want to see that full speed. And if there is a throw to make, you make it. And if there is not, then you use your God-given ability to create. …

“Justin has that added gift, for sure. And you can never take that out of a guy.”

It comes with its risks, though.

About halfway through the second quarter of Ohio State’s national semifinal win against Clemson, Fields scrambled up the middle. Eleven yards later, at the Tigers’ 19, Fields saw linebacker James Skalski running right at him, and turned his back to protect the ball.

Skalski tackled him helmet-first — he was ejected for targeting — but the damage was done.

“One of the more vicious shots I’ve seen in a long time,” Ohio State coach Ryan Day said.

Fields’ ribs ached for weeks — and hampered him in the national title loss to Alabama.

“I’m still scarred from that Clemson hit,” Fields said. “Literally every time I tuck the ball down and run I’m thinking about getting out of bounds or getting down. There’s of course going to be times when you have to, of course, try to fight for extra yardage. I’m definitely smarter and trying to protect myself more. …

“The hit hurt so much, every time I run now, I just think of that hit and I’m not trying to take a hit like that again. So I definitely get out of bounds or getting down.”

He should have slid.

“We want him to cut it loose — but don’t take that extra hit,” Nagy said. “We’ll live to see another down. We don’t need you guys getting speared.”

Fields, a former baseball shortstop, knows how to slide. Vick, one of the game’s greatest athletes ever, did not.

“We had to get the Slip ‘n’ Slide out in practice with Michael …” Nagy said. “Learning how to slide and not take a hit, that extra hit, and there’s that timing element too. Because some guys if you slide too late and they hit you — you know, even if it’s a penalty, you’re still getting hit.”

Just ask Trubisky. At home against the Vikings in 2018, Trubisky scrambled left and tried to slide. Instead of going feet-first like a baseball player, he went head-first — which, per NFL rules, still grants him protection from oncoming defenders.

That didn’t stop Vikings safety Harrison Smith, who hit Trubisky. He was flagged and fined, but Trubisky’s right shoulder was jammed into the ground. Trubisky missed two games. The Bears lost one. They missed a first-round bye by one win — and lost in the wild-card round.

“We lost him for a few weeks,” Nagy said. “You’ve got to be smart. That’s where we’ve got to educate [Fields]. Things happen a little faster. Don’t be stupid. You know, get down when you get a chance.”

During practice earlier this month, Fields scrambled and, to his coaches’ delight, slid.

“I was just thinking about baseball, actually,” Fields said.

Fields is looking forward to taking his first hit in eight months Saturday — but not like that.

“Moving a little bit, running around a little bit definitely pumps me up a little bit more rather than staying kind of calm in the backfield,” he said. “Running around and getting hit — It’s of course gonna be first time since January, but I’m definitely excited.”

He’s not the only one.

‘”He’s special,” Dalton said. “If he’s got that room in front of him, that’s a part of his game that he can definitely use, with his speed that he’s got.”

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Bears hope Justin Fields will be off and running vs. DolphinsPatrick Finleyon August 14, 2021 at 10:00 am Read More »

Horoscope for Saturday, August 14, 2021Georgia Nicolson August 14, 2021 at 5:01 am

Moon Alert

There are no restrictions to shopping or important decisions. The moon is in Scorpio.

Aries (March 21-April 19)

Today you have strong opinions about shared property or something to do with the assets that your partner or someone else owns. Because of this, you might be at odds with someone older or more experienced. Nevertheless, your high energy will make you feisty!

Taurus (April 20-May 20)

Today the moon is opposite your sign at odds with stern Saturn, which can make conversations with authority figures difficult and challenging. Someone you know will be full of energy and demand to be taken seriously or to be recognized. (You can’t avoid this.)

Gemini (May 21-June 20)

You might have difficulty at work dealing with someone, especially someone older or more experienced. You might encounter this person in connection with your health or something to do with a pet. Be patient because this encounter is brief — then it’s gone.

Cancer (June 21-July 22)

Children might be an increased responsibility. You might also encounter rules and regulations that affect your plans with sports or social occasions. Nevertheless, you have lots of energy to socialize and have fun today! Go with what works.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)

Family conversations will be lively because you have strong opinions about what you want. Nevertheless, someone older or more experienced might counter you or try to block your efforts. Find a way to make everyone happy. A workable compromise. (That’s your best solution.)

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

Today fiery Mars is in your sign dancing with the moon, which excites you and energizes all your conversations with others. You have something to say! You want to be heard! At one point, you might encounter some opposition from someone older at work or connected with your health.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

You might encounter some difficulties with financial matters today. Credit cards might be rejected. Officials might block something that you want to do. (Something will be an irritant.) Nevertheless, you are firm and confident about trying to correct any glitches to your financial situation.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

Today the moon is in your sign at odds with Saturn but energized by Mars. Therefore, dealing with a parent or an older family member might be challenging. Nevertheless, you feel confident and full of positive energy to go after what you want. Nothing will hold you back.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

You might choose to play things low-key today and work alone or behind the scenes because it feels better. Possibly, someone older or more experienced will get in the way of your plans or block you in some way. They might even criticize you or make you feel diminished. This is temporary. You bounce back!

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

You might encounter difficulty with a friend today or a member of a group. In fact, for a few of you, a friendship might end. Nevertheless, your high energy and positive state of mind will carry the day for you and will even promote your relations with others. Relax.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)

It will be apparent to others that someone is blocking your aims and desires today. Whatever or whoever blocks you might be an authority figure who cites rules and regulations. Or it could be a parent or some kind of a situation that does not favor you. Nevertheless, you will persevere!

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)

You might encounter challenges or difficulties to travel plans or something to do with your studies today. Someone in authority might thwart your efforts. This will not hold you back because you are determined and you have strong energy! Courage!

If Your Birthday Is Today

Actress Mila Kunis (1983) shares your birthday. You are high spirited, intelligent, perceptive and organized. You are also charming and adaptable. The combination of these qualities is why others often seek your advice. In a nine-year cycle, this is your last year, which is why it’s a time of endings and wrapping up what you’ve been involved with for the last nine years. Next year is a new beginning!

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Horoscope for Saturday, August 14, 2021Georgia Nicolson August 14, 2021 at 5:01 am Read More »