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7 Best Dance Clubs in Chicago to Find a ReboundAlicia Likenon July 19, 2021 at 2:19 pm

When the pandemic first hit, some people predicted COVID-19 would test our relationships. Because spending ALL of our free time with one person is…challenging? Exhausting? Not natural? So if you and your boo didn’t make it out of quarantine together, no worries. It’s time to ~get back out there~ and hit up recently reopened Chicago dance clubs. We have created a list of the best dance clubs in the city where you might find your soulmate (or, you know, one night stand). 

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Saturday Night Disco is back! Join us in our lower level for all your favorite throwbacks!#Disco #wickerpark #danceparty

Posted by Debonair Social Club on Friday, July 16, 2021

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1575 N Milwaukee Ave Chicago, IL 60622

This easygoing late-night bar in Wicker Park is a neighborhood staple, complete with bottle service and dance parties until 2am on the weekends. Don’t miss DJ’s spinning tracks upstairs and downstairs for sick vibes. This is the perfect dance club in Chicago to meet someone new.

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222 W Ontario St Chicago, IL 60654

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Looking to find love suuuuper late? This old River North warehouse is open til 5am. Party like a rockstar amongst disco balls, exposed brick walls, and bright neon-signs that’ll give you a nice Instaglow. Heads up, you’ll need to make reservations on their website ahead of time. Book here, cupid.

632 N Dearborn St Chicago, IL 60654

You know what rhymes with Tao? WOW. And that’s exactly what you’ll get in this high-end, posh Asian nightclub. Dance the night away in this 1000-capacity dance club in Chicago featuring a 10-foot Japanese bell, world-famous DJ sets, and funky lights. Make your VIP request here

948 W Fulton Market Chicago, IL 60607

It might seem like an ordinary barbershop but tucked away behind a false wall is a dope speakeasy that’s super popular amongst Chicago locals. And it’s not your average nightclub: the dance dance is tiny and the space itself is pretty small. But the ambience is unparalleled with stylish seating and trendy decor. You should also know Blind Barber is cashless and all seated reservations are limited to 2 hours. Get yours here

3730 N. Clark St. Chicago, IL 60613

Say hello to Chicago’s independent nightclub, featuring the sickest DJs spinning techno dance music from across the globe. Snag a new sweetheart and sway among the blue, purple, and pink lights. Plus, if you love music, there are a ton of upcoming shows in July. 

4810 N Broadway Chicago, IL 60640

Looking for something a little more laid back? Check out this French nightclub featuring a state-of-the-art 25,000 watt KV2 Audio system and over 99 separate pieces of intelligent lighting. The space is gorgeous with comfortable seating and a cozy outdoor patio. 

1543 N Kingsbury St Chicago, IL 60642

Okay, Lincoln Park, we see you. If you’re looking for the best dance clubs in Chicago, this hybrid venue offers live music, private events, and epic nightclub performances. And with 10,000 square feet of space and three distinct bars, you can find your perfect vibe. Secure your reservations here

Featured Image Credit: Artem Bryzgalov on Unsplash

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7 Best Dance Clubs in Chicago to Find a ReboundAlicia Likenon July 19, 2021 at 2:19 pm Read More »

All eyes on Justin Fields when Bears camp opensPatrick Finleyon July 23, 2021 at 5:53 pm

Humboldt Park musician Scott Morrow was hit by a stray bullet June 20. Riding in the ambulance, he listed in his mind all the reasons he wanted to live: his family, friends and the album he was working on.

“And stupid stuff,” he told Block Club Chicago last week. “Like, ‘I can’t die before I see Justin Fields on the field for the Bears.'”

Monday, the rookie quarterback — and Fields’ parents — showed up at Morrow’s home to say hello. They delivered him a navy Fields jersey and posed for pictures with a smiling Morrow on his front lawn. Morrow excitedly posted them on social media.

It was a caring gesture from Fields — and good public relations. And it underscored the popularity Fields has enjoyed since the Bears traded up to draft him No. 11 overall in late April.

That attention goes into hyperdrive this week.

Once the Bears open training camp Tuesday at Halas Hall, Fields figures to be the most-watched Bears player in a preseason practice since rookie quarterback Mitch Trubisky four years ago — and, before then, maybe a decade, given that the Khalil Mack trade came only after the 2018 camp.

When the Bears hold their first camp practice Wednesday, Fields will have his every throw scrutinized by coaches and media. Fans who arrive for any one of the 14 practices in which they are welcome will want to see Fields first. Those same fans made Fields’ navy jersey the NFL’s third most popular, in terms of sales, in the month following the draft. Fields’ orange one ranked fourth. The white jersey ranked fifth. When the Bears host the Dolphins in their first preseason game Aug. 14, there’s no question that more fans will be wearing Fields’ No. 1 than the jersey of any other player.

Given the area’s Big Ten footprint, Bears fans have already seen more of Fields at Ohio State than they ever did when Trubisky was at North Carolina. They’ve set their outsized expectations thusly.

All eyes will be on Fields. But that, amazingly, should feel familiar.

“I’m made for this,” Fields said during rookie minicamp. “I’m built for this. It’s nothing new to me.”

Of the many traits that separate him from Trubisky is exactly that: the spotlight he’s had to embrace since before he could drive.

His junior year in high school, Fields was seen by most recruiting services as the No. 2 high school quarterback in America, behind only future No. 1 pick Trevor Lawrence. In 2017, Fields won the Elite 11 camp competition, a gathering of the nation’s elite high school passers.

Fields was heralded as one of the best signings in the nation when he chose to stay in his home state and play for Georgia. When he transferred after a year, he landed at Ohio State, one of the few programs in the nation whose fans can match the Bulldogs’ passion. All he did there was go 20-2 — with his only losses coming to Alabama in the national championship game and Clemson in the national championship semifinals.

There’s no way to prepare Fields for the pressure awaiting him in Chicago — to be the franchise’s first elite passer since Sid Luckman, who last played in 1950; to be the first Bears player to throw for 4,000 yards in a season; and to win the team’s first playoff game in 11 years and first Super Bowl in 37. But Fields’ high school and college resume makes him the most qualified rookie quarterback the franchise has ever drafted to try to take down those ghosts. The only players that come close are Rex Grossman, who finished second in Heisman Trophy voting in 2001, and Jim McMahon, who was third in 1981.

The Bears have rushed to tamp down the expectations that were set into motion the minute they called Fields’ name. Last month, to emphasize that the rookie will have to learn behind Andy Dalton, coach Matt Nagy even declared that Fields has no chance to start in Week 1.

The hype train, though, had already left the station.

This week, after three months of expectations, it will start to pick up speed.

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All eyes on Justin Fields when Bears camp opensPatrick Finleyon July 23, 2021 at 5:53 pm Read More »

Chicago police officers caught in roiling mess of fear, shock, anger — and hesitationMichael Sneedon July 23, 2021 at 5:09 pm

Crime.

COVID.

Corruption.

The three C’s of a hungry Chicago news media.

Although COVID’s new deadly cousin, the Delta variant, has sounded the latest alarm, the city has been caught in a nightmare. It touches all areas, including the city’s economic engine, Michigan Avenue, as well as what resembles a war zone in the city’s impoverished, gang-ridden South and West sides.

And the Chicago Police Department, in the midst of its own racial reckoning, is caught in the roiling mess of fear, shock, anger and God help us … hesitation.

Policemen take the oath of heroes; to serve and protect; to put their lives on the line.

The nobility of a policeman’s work is now being questioned. CPD is moving into a new era orchestrated by the cold lens of technology.

Meanwhile, Chicagoans are recalibrating what it means to go to work, to walk the streets or park a car because of a spike in crime. Cops are rethinking how to do their jobs.

There are many folk aphorisms in the CPD.

Such as:

“If you want to be loved, be a fireman. Don’t be a cop.”

I have heard it for decades.

Everybody loves firemen.

“Firemen loved being loved,” said a former top Chicago Police source, one of several interviewed for this column, which included retired top brass and former street cops. All wished to remain anonymous.

“They deserve it,” one said. “But so do policemen … and they are not getting any of it. Who wants to be on the police force right now?

“There is no doubt there was a huge need for revamp and review,” the source added. “That’s life. Things change. But it’s like there is a mark on every policeman’s chest. That’s scary as hell — for everyone.”

That’s taking a toll on the thin blue line, says another former member of the top cop brass

“Policemen today are like deer caught in the headlights,” the source said.

“They’ve been working 12-hour days with no days off for weeks, maybe a month due to soaring crime; eight fatalities every weekend, 50 shot, a city out of control and in a downward spiral,” the source said.

“The cops are being held accountable, probably to 15 agencies, but nobody seems to be calling the politicians to be held accountable … or anyone in this s- – -storm,” the source added.

“There are now gangbangers in every neighborhood in the city. The only people they feared were cops. Now … nobody respects or fears cops if they know the police are handcuffed.

“I’ve been in a car with cops recently when kids stop next to us, then look at us, and then drive through a red light totally passive and unresponsive. And they look both ways before they go through. It’s a message. A very scary one.

“Then there are the kids walking five in a row careening down State Street and bumping people walking down the street — and the swarms of 10 to 15 kids coming into a store and stealing stuff and not being prosecuted if it’s under $1,000.”

The reality is, “the only ones who understand police are other police. Absolutely the truth,” the source said.

“That’s probably one of the biggest problems: how do you understand what it’s like to live in a nightmare unless you live in it?”

Recordings of profound decisions made under stress are now being picked over by attorneys, the news media and politicians.

“Policemen and women are disgusted with the spectrum of every profound decision made under stress being parsed and analyzed to death,” said another one-time member of the upper echelon member of the police brass.

“And, yes, there is talk of standing back instead of risking their family’s future on an honest mistake of a moment.

“Would a surgeon permit that … or a therapist … or even an alderman? The police are the cutting edge of that razor, the tip of that spear,” said the former police counselor.

“They operate in turbo time. Decisions are made in split seconds on the street. Now every action is questioned. Consequently, an extra layer of fear puts you in an organic condition ready to move to code red.”

Is the city going to get the police department it deserves?

Let’s hope.

Sneedlings . . .

Kudos to Chicago Teamsters Joint Council President Terrence J. Hancock who was named Chairman of the Board of Easterseals Metropolitan Chicago. . . . Congrats to newlyweds Emily Mowry and Joe Wallace on tying the knot in the boffo garden of Emily’s Uncle Marc MacCormick, who not only planted the Eden — also presided over the July 9 ceremony. . . . Saturday birthdays: Jennifer Lopez, 52; Bindi Irwin, 23; and Karl Malone, 58. . . . Sunday birthdays: Matt LeBlanc, 54; Hulk, 35; and James Lafferty, 36.

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Chicago police officers caught in roiling mess of fear, shock, anger — and hesitationMichael Sneedon July 23, 2021 at 5:09 pm Read More »

NFL doc: 80% of players have at least 1 vaccine shotPatrick Finleyon July 23, 2021 at 5:04 pm

Eighty percent of all NFL players have at least begun the process of becoming vaccinated for the coronavirus, though the range of compliance among teams still ranges widely, NFL chief medical officer Allen Sills said Friday.

Nine teams have at least 90% of their players who have received at least one shot, he said, while five teams sit below 70%.

The Steelers and Cowboys have reported for training camp, while the rest of the league will do the same early next week.

The NFL sent a memo Thursday saying that teams unable to play in a game because of an outbreak caused by their own unvaccinated players could be subject to forfeit, with the unplayed game hurting in the standings. Unvaccinated players will face limitations once camp begins, from wearing masks indoors to being unable to eat with their teammates.

Sills said he encourages players to listen to professionals — and “not get information from Instagram or Facebook posts” — when deciding whether or not to get vaccinated.

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NFL doc: 80% of players have at least 1 vaccine shotPatrick Finleyon July 23, 2021 at 5:04 pm Read More »

Feds want nearly 10 years for Galesburg man who joined Minneapolis rioting before heading to ChicagoJon Seidelon July 23, 2021 at 5:46 pm

Federal prosecutors in Minnesota are asking a judge to punish a man from downstate Galesburg with nearly a decade in prison for burning down a Sprint store amid last year’s rioting in Minneapolis before turning his sights on Chicago.

Matthew Lee Rupert, 29, “drove over 400 miles to exploit an aggrieved community for fun” and “packed a duffle bag full of artillery-shell fireworks, but apparently forgot his signs protesting the death of George Floyd,” prosecutors wrote in a court filing seeking the harsh sentence Thursday.

The fireworks that prosecutors say Matthew Rupert brought with him to riot in Minneapolis.
U.S. District Court records

Rupert then moved on from Minneapolis to Chicago as rioting and looting began to break out here May 30, 2020. He did so even though someone warned him on Facebook that in Chicago, “they just dont pull out guns .they use them .” But Rupert was soon arrested after violating the curfew Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced in response to the unrest.

Jordan Kushner, Rupert’s defense attorney, told the Chicago Sun-Times by email he expected to file his own position paper on Rupert’s potential sentence by the end of the day Friday. Rupert’s sentencing is set for Aug. 10.

Meanwhile, the first federal court sentencing in Chicago to directly address the violence here took place last week, when U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman gave three years of probation to Jacob Fagundo for setting fire to a Chicago police vehicle.

Rupert pleaded guilty to arson in April, admitting he posted a roughly two-hour video to Facebook Live on May 29, 2020, in which he could be seen encouraging violence against law enforcement, damaging property, breaking into buildings and looting businesses in Minneapolis. His plea agreement says he can be heard on the video declaring, “We came to riot!”

Eventually, Rupert can also be seen asking for lighter fluid and entering a boarded-up Sprint Store, according to the plea deal. It said he entered a back room of the store, knocked boxes into a pile on the ground and sprayed them with lighter fluid. A juvenile Rupert brought along with him from Galesburg then lit the pile on fire at Rupert’s direction, according to the document.

The resulting fire totaled the store, according to the feds. Liberty Mutual, which insured the property, has so far paid nearly $4 million to repair the building and replace lost rental income, and Sprint lost hundreds of thousands of dollars in inventory, they said. The store is still closed.

Meanwhile, prosecutors say Rupert has a lengthy history getting into trouble and taunting law enforcement. Even though he has been locked up, they also said Rupert has been caught with alcohol, got in a fight and threatened inmates and correctional officers.

Finally, they said the severe sentence would also send an important message.

“While nobody hopes for widespread civil disorders in the future, the likelihood of such events remains a distinct possibility as the country grapples with this period of societal change,” they wrote.

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Feds want nearly 10 years for Galesburg man who joined Minneapolis rioting before heading to ChicagoJon Seidelon July 23, 2021 at 5:46 pm Read More »

Big Ten will let individual schools decide on COVID-19 protocolsRalph D. Russo | Associated Presson July 23, 2021 at 5:32 pm

Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren said the conference will take take a “decentralized” approach to COVID-19 protocols by allowing each school to put in place its own plan.

“Our schools are finalizing their proposed policies and procedures for the fall,” Warren said at Big Ten football media days at Lucas Oil Stadium. “We’ll get that information in early August, we’ll combine it, and then we’ll get together with our chancellors and presidents and other key constituents to make the determination as far as how we handle the fall.”

Warren also said there has been no determination on whether games would be forfeited — as has been suggested by the Southeastern Conference and Big 12 — if teams cannot play because of COVID-19 issues.

Last season, the Big Ten at first called off its fall football season because of the pandemic before reversing course and deciding instead to start in late October.

The late start left no room for games to be made up and numerous Big Ten games were canceled because of COVID-19 left teams short players.

Warren said the conference plans to hire a chief medical officer before football season starts.

Preseason All-Big Ten

The preseason all-Big Ten team released Thursday includes three Ohio State players among 10 players selected by a media panel.

Offensive left tackle Thayer Munford and wide receivers Chris Olave and Garrett Wilson are cornerstones for a Buckeyes program that has won four consecutive conference titles and qualified for the College Football Playoff the past two years.

Each were 2020 first-team All-Big Ten selections.

Olave returns for his senior year with 87 receptions for 1,435 yards and 19 touchdowns in three seasons. In two seasons, Wilson has 73 receptions for 1,155 yards and 11 TDs.

Other East Division players honored were Indiana quarterback Michael Penix Jr. and Penn State wide receiver Jahan Dotson.

The West Division players include Minnesota running back Mohamed Ibrahim, Northwestern safety Brandon Joseph, Iowa center Tyler Linderbaum, Purdue wide receiver David Bell and Wisconsin linebacker Jack Sanborn. Ibrahim and Joseph were first-team All-Big Ten last season.

Ibrahim rushed for 1,076 yards and 15 TDs on 201 carries as a junior. The scores rank fourth for a single season in school history.

Advisor Alvarez

Former Wisconsin athletic director and coach Barry Alvarez is joining the Big Ten as the special adviser for football.

Alvarez retired from Wisconsin after the past 18 years as AD and 16 seasons previously as coach of the Badgers. Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren announced Alvarez would be joining the conference, starting Aug. 2.

“I trust Barry Alvarez implicitly,” Warren said. “He means everything to this conference.”

Alvarez will work with Warren on College Football Playoff expansion, television and bowl contracts, scheduling, and player health and safety.

Alvarez led the Badgers to three Big Ten titles and three Rose Bowl victories as a head coach and went 119-74-4.

Warren also said Wisconsin Chancellor Rebecca Blank will replace Northwestern President Morton Schapiro as chairperson of the Big Ten Council of President and Chancellors.

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Big Ten will let individual schools decide on COVID-19 protocolsRalph D. Russo | Associated Presson July 23, 2021 at 5:32 pm Read More »

Big 12 members discuss how to keep Texas and Oklahoma from bolting to the SECRalph D. Russo | Associated Presson July 23, 2021 at 5:17 pm

INDIANAPOLIS — Big 12 leaders held a call without Texas and Oklahoma on Thursday to discuss how to keep the league’s flagship schools from bolting to the Southeastern Conference — and contingency plans to survive without them.

“There was no panic,” a person familiar with the meeting told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the Big 12 was not making its internal discussions public. “All options are on the table.”

The Big 12 put out a statement Thursday night that revealed few details, but made clear the eight members in danger of being left behind want the Longhorns and Sooners to stay put. And that leaving could be costly for Texas and Oklahoma.

“There is a recognition that institutions may act in their own self-interest, however there is an expectation that members adhere to Conference bylaws and the enforcement of Grant of Rights agreements,” the statement said.

The Big 12’s grant of rights, which ties a school’s media rights to the conference, runs through the current television deals with ESPN and Fox. Those expire in June 2025.

For Oklahoma and Texas to leave the Big 12 sooner they would either relinquish tens of millions in television revenue for every year the grant is in effect or agree to a financial settlement with the conference.

The person familiar with Thursday’s call said Commissioner Bob Bowlsby, athletic directors and school presidents and chancellors discussed possible options for persuading Texas and Oklahoma to remain in the Big 12 and potential ways to keep the conference going if they leave.

Texas and Oklahoma were invited to join the call, and the hope is the Big 12 will soon hear directly from their conference mates, the person said.

Texas and Oklahoma have discussed a move to the SEC with officials from the powerhouse conference, but no formal invitation has been extended nor have the schools officially informed the Big 12 they intend to leave.

Earlier Thursday, leaders from other conferences leaders were hesitant to speculate on what’s next, but some observers were concerned about the potential consequences.

“College football is filled with people operating in silos and what they fail to realize is that if they only look at and try to build their silo as big and as shiny as possible than the entirety of the sport is not going to be as strong as it needs to be,” said former Colorado quarterback Joel Klatt, the lead college football analyst for Fox, which holds television rights with the Big 12, Big Ten and Pac-12.

“I think a move like this would be to the detriment of the sport overall.”

Former Oklahoma quarterback and Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield put it more starkly: “It would ruin the Big 12. It would be done,” Mayfield said during a break in shooting TV commercials in Cleveland.

The Big 12 was thought to be on life support about a decade ago after losing Nebraska, Colorado, Texas A&M and Missouri. Managing to hold on to Texas and Oklahoma allowed the Big 12 to survive as a Power Five conference after it added TCU and West Virginia.

Back when that was playing out, conferences were reacting to one another. The Big Ten pushed over the first domino when it announced in 2009 it was going to explore expansion. Eventually, it lured Nebraska away from the Big 12.

“We often talk about how uncomfortable this time is,” new Nebraska AD Trev Alberts said. “It is. It’s a changing environment. There’s a lot of stress. Now’s the time you want to be part of some stability.”

That Big Ten expansion sparked a frenzy, with conferences and schools fending for themselves. Could a Texas/Oklahoma move to the SEC be the next fire starter?

Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren was asked about the news and whether it could prompt the conference to look at expansion — maybe even reaching out to the two Big 12 schools — as he opened football media days at Lucas Oil Stadium.

Warren stayed away from speculating, calling the news just another example of the volatility sweeping through college sports.

“That’s the world that we live in right now,” he said. “From where we sit, we’re always constantly evaluating what’s in the best interest of the conference.”

Atlantic Coast Conference Commissioner Jim Phillips, who took over earlier this year after being athletic director at Northwestern, took a similarly cautious approach.

“I think it’s critically important for all of us to always be paying attention to what’s happening in the landscape and understanding what’s happening across the country, whether you’re a conference commissioner, whether you’re an athletic director, whether you’re a president,” he said. “It’s just part of all of our responsibility. And this is the latest maybe conversation that we’re hearing about.”

Former Wisconsin athletic director Alvarez was at Lucas Oil Stadium because the Big Ten announced he would be taking a new role at the conference: special advisor for football. He retired earlier this year.

Alvarez, 74, is not one to shy away from giving his thoughts on a topic. But news of realignment ramping up again caught him off guard.

“It’s something you certainly have your antenna up for,” Alvarez said.

Missouri coach Eli Drinkwitz said he had one question for the SEC if it did decide to add the Longhorns and their Horns Up hand sign to the conference?

“Is Horns Down going to be a be a 15-yard penalty in the SEC (as it can be at times in the Big 12)?” Drinkwitz said. “I asked Commissioner Sankey and he said ‘no comment.'”

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Big 12 members discuss how to keep Texas and Oklahoma from bolting to the SECRalph D. Russo | Associated Presson July 23, 2021 at 5:17 pm Read More »

NBA, Olympic basketball not exactly the same gameTim Reynolds | Associated Presson July 23, 2021 at 4:47 pm

TOKYO — The U.S. men’s basketball team was about to start playing its final warm-up for the Tokyo Olympics a few days ago in Las Vegas, and Spain’s Ricky Rubio found himself in a pregame conversation with American guard Zach LaVine.

Rubio has well over a decade of experience in the international game. LaVine has a few weeks.

“This is different,” LaVine told Rubio.

Rubio nodded. LaVine wasn’t wrong.

The rims are 10 feet high and much of the court looks the same as what American NBA players are used to, but the nuances of the international game — the Olympic game — are much different. Quarters are 10 minutes long instead of 12, games move more quickly with fewer time-outs, the 3-point line is closer, the level of physicality is higher and much of what happens on defense under FIBA rules simply doesn’t fly in the NBA.

“I mean, it’s basketball, but it’s a little different,” Rubio said. “That being said, it’s not just the rules, it’s the role they have on the team as well. Maybe you have one or two shots in the first quarter when you usually have like five or six in the first five minutes of the game, and you have to be ready for that. There’s a lot of handchecks; it’s called different in NBA than in FIBA. There is a lot of physicality. I will say, it’s played different.”

And as U.S. coach Gregg Popovich has pointed out many times — first when he coached the Americans in the Basketball World Cup two years ago and now in the lead-up to the Tokyo Games — that many of the teams in the Olympics have been together before and have a familiarity with the different rules.

He’s been preaching about it often with this group, particularly the element of a 40-minute game versus the NBA’s 48-minute variety.

“You can’t have a bad quarter,” Popovich said. “In the NBA, you can do that. But those last eight minutes are really important. Sometimes, that’s where talent takes over, in the last eight minutes. But in a 40-minute game there are many fewer possessions. Your turnovers become more important. … In a sense, it’s more of an NCAA one-and-done thing than it is being in an NBA playoff and you might have a second game poor but you can come back the third game and the fourth game and so on and so forth.

“It’s a matter of extreme focus, expecting nothing, asking for nothing, and being very, very serious from the get-go.”

Perhaps out of habit, some players on the U.S. team argued for a goaltending call against Nigeria’s Chimezie Metu in the Americans’ first exhibition game in Las Vegas. Kevin Durant was taking a free throw for the U.S., and as his second shot bounced on the rim Metu reached up and knocked it away. That’s goaltending in the NBA, but legal under FIBA rules.

And U.S. forward Keldon Johnson seemed a bit surprised when he picked up his fifth foul in the game against Spain and got told he had fouled out. In the NBA, the sixth foul sends someone to the bench for the rest of the evening; in FIBA, it only takes five.

“As the game goes on, as we continue to go through this process, we’re figuring out the difference between the international game and the game we play,” U.S. guard Damian Lillard said. “There’s been moments where we’re all looking around saying ‘what’s going on?’ We’re learning on the fly.”

Zone defense is a big part of the international game; NBA teams play zone as well, but with the twist that the defensive 3-second rule still applies. That rule isn’t in the FIBA book, so teams can pack the paint for the entirety of a defensive possession if so inclined.

There are other little differences as well, such as how backcourt fouls are whistled and what constitutes a travel.

“Everybody is learning,” Nigeria coach Mike Brown said. “Including me.”

What the Americans are learning is that Rubio was right. The game is the same — just very different.

“I think the different rules are going to be an adjustment,” U.S. forward Jerami Grant said. “But that’s what we’re here working on right now. We’ve got a great group of guys, certainly a talented group of guys and we’re learning pretty fast.”

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NBA, Olympic basketball not exactly the same gameTim Reynolds | Associated Presson July 23, 2021 at 4:47 pm Read More »

Tokyo Olympics begin with muted ceremony and empty stadiumFoster Klug | Associated Presson July 23, 2021 at 3:38 pm

TOKYO — Belated and beleaguered, the virus-delayed Tokyo Summer Olympics finally opened Friday night with cascading fireworks and made-for-TV choreography that unfolded in a near-empty stadium, a colorful but strangely subdued ceremony that set a striking tone to match a unique pandemic Games.

As their opening played out, devoid of the usual crowd energy, the Olympics convened amid simmering anger and disbelief in much of the host country, but with hopes from organizers that the excitement of the sports to follow would offset the widespread opposition.

“Today is a moment of hope. Yes, it is very different from what all of us had imagined,” IOC President Thomas Bach said. “But let us cherish this moment because finally we are all here together.”

“This feeling of togetherness — this is the light at the end of the dark tunnel of the pandemic,” Bach declared. Later, Japanese tennis star Naomi Osaka received the Olympic flame from a torch relay through the stadium and lit the Olympic cauldron.

Trepidations throughout Japan have threatened for months to drown out the usual packaged glitz of the opening. Inside the stadium after dusk Friday, however, a precisely calibrated ceremony sought to portray that the Games — and their spirit — are going on.

Early in the ceremony, an ethereal blue light bathed the empty seats as loud music muted the shouts of scattered protesters outside calling for the Games to be canceled. A single stage held an octagon shape meant to resemble the country’s fabled Mount Fuji. Later, an orchestral medley of songs from iconic Japanese video games served as the soundtrack for athletes’ entrances.

Mostly masked athletes waved enthusiastically to thousands of empty seats and to a world hungry to watch them compete but surely wondering what to make of it all. Some athletes marched socially distanced, while others clustered in ways utterly contrary to organizers’ hopes. The Czech Republic entered with other countries even though its delegation has had several positive COVID tests since arriving.

“You had to face great challenges on your Olympic journey,” Bach told the athletes. “Today you are making your Olympic dream come true.”

Organizers held a moment of silence for those who had died in the pandemic; as it ticked off and the music paused, the sounds of the protests echoed in the distance.

Protesters’ shouts gave voice to a fundamental question about these Games as Japan, and large parts of the world, reel from the continuing gut punch of a pandemic that is stretching well into its second year, with cases in Tokyo approaching record highs this week: Will the deep, intrinsic human attachment to the spectacle of sporting competition at the highest possible level be enough to salvage these Olympics?

Time and again, previous opening ceremonies have pulled off something that approaches magic. Scandals — bribery in Salt Lake City, censorship and pollution in Beijing, doping in Sochi — fade into the background when the sports begin.

But with people still falling ill and dying each day from the coronavirus, there’s a particular urgency to the questions about whether the Olympic flame can burn away the fear or provide a measure of catharsis — and even awe — after a year of suffering and uncertainty in Japan and around the world.

“Today, with the world facing great challenges, some are again questioning the power of sport and the value of the Olympic Games,” Seiko Hashimoto, president of the Tokyo 2020 Organizing Committee, said in a speech. But, she said of the Games’ possibilities, “This is the power of sport. … This is its essence.”

Japanese Emperor Naruhito declared the Games open, with fireworks bursting over the stadium after he spoke.

Outside, hundreds of curious Tokyo residents lined a barricade that separated them from those entering — but just barely: Some of those going in took selfies with the onlookers across the barricades, and there was an excited carnival feeling. Some pedestrians waved enthusiastically to approaching Olympic buses.

The sports have already begun, and some of the focus is turning toward the competition to come.

Can the U.S. women’s soccer team, for instance, even after an early, shocking loss to Sweden, become the first to win an Olympics following a World Cup victory? Can Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama win gold in golf after becoming the first Japanese player to win the Masters? Will Italy’s Simona Quadarella challenge American standout Katie Ledecky in the 800- and 1,500-meter freestyle swimming races?

For now, however, it’s hard to miss how unusual these Games promise to be. The lovely national stadium can seem like an isolated militarized zone, surrounded by huge barricades. Roads around it have been sealed and businesses closed.

Inside, the feeling of sanitized, locked-down quarantine carries over. Fans, who would normally be screaming for their countries and mixing with people from around the world, have been banned, leaving only a carefully screened contingent of journalists, officials, athletes and participants.

Olympics often face opposition, but there’s also usually a pervasive feeling of national pride. Japan’s resentment centers on the belief that it was strong-armed into hosting — forced to pay billions and risk the health of a largely unvaccinated, deeply weary public — so the IOC can collect its billions in media revenue.

“Sometimes people ask why the Olympics exist, and there are at least two answers. One is they are a peerless global showcase of the human spirit as it pertains to sport, and the other is they are a peerless global showcase of the human spirit as it pertains to aristocrats getting luxurious hotel rooms and generous per diems,” Bruce Arthur, a sports columnist for the Toronto Star, wrote recently.

How did we get here? A quick review of the past year and a half seems operatic in its twists and turns.

A once-in-a-century pandemic forces the postponement of the 2020 version of the Games. A fusillade of scandals (sexism and other discrimination and bribery claims, overspending, ineptitude, bullying) unfolds. People in Japan, meanwhile, watch bewildered as an Olympics considered a bad idea by many scientists actually takes shape.

Japanese athletes, freed from onerous travel rules and able to train more normally, may enjoy a nice boost over their rivals in some cases, even without fans. Judo, a sport that Japan is traditionally a powerhouse in, will begin Saturday, giving the host nation a chance for early gold.

The reality, for now, is that the delta variant of the virus is still rising, straining the Japanese medical system in places, and raising fears of an avalanche of cases. Only a little over 20% of the population is fully vaccinated. And there have been near daily reports of positive virus cases within the so-called Olympic bubble that’s meant to separate the Olympic participants from the worried, skeptical Japanese population.

For a night, at least, the glamor and message of hope of the opening ceremonies may distract many global viewers from the surrounding anguish and anger.

“After more than half a century, the Olympic Games have returned to Tokyo,” Hashimoto said. “Now we will do everything in our power to make this Games a source of pride for generations to come.”

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