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Sources: Bulls’ Ball doubtful for start of seasonon September 2, 2022 at 10:42 pm

CHICAGOBulls guard Lonzo Ball is expected to miss training camp and is doubtful for the start of the regular season due to lingering pain and discomfort following meniscus surgery on his left knee in January, sources told ESPN on Friday.

While a source reiterated Ball’s knee is structurally sound after he underwent arthroscopic surgery on Jan. 28, he continued to experience pain while attempting basketball activities as he spent the summer rehabbing in Los Angeles.

Ball will arrive in Chicago next week to undergo further evaluation by the team, but he is unlikely to participate when the Bulls begin training camp at the end of this month, sources said.

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Throughout the summer, the Bulls have remained vague about a potential timeline for Ball’s recovery while he has seen multiple knee specialists to determine the cause and treatments for the lingering pain and discomfort, sources said.

“He’s getting better, probably not at the speed that we would like,” Bulls vice president Arturas Karnisovas said in July during a broadcast for one of the team’s Summer League games. “But he’s getting better.”

When Ball suffered the initial injury in January, the Bulls announced an initial recovery timeline of six to eight weeks. However, Ball’s knee never responded to several attempts by the team to ramp up his activity for a return to the court at the end of last season.

Ball was eventually ruled out for the rest of the season at the beginning of April, limited to a career-low 35 games. At his exit interview at the end of that month, Ball acknowledged that his knee recovery was “at a standstill.”

Prior to the injury, Ball had been one of the sparks of Bulls’ fast start, averaging 13.0 points, 5.4 rebounds and 5.1 assists.

Chicago owned a record of 27-13 when Ball appeared in his last game on Jan. 14 before finishing 19-23 down the stretch without him and losing their first round series against the Milwaukee Bucks in five games.

Ball, who will turn 25 in October, had a procedure to repair a meniscus tear in the same knee in 2018 while playing for the Los Angeles Lakers, but he returned for the start of training camp then.

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Sources: Bulls’ Ball doubtful for start of seasonon September 2, 2022 at 10:42 pm Read More »

Notre Dame Football could get a boost with new 12-team CFB PlayoffVincent Pariseon September 2, 2022 at 8:27 pm

As Notre Dame Football prepares (as the number five ranked team in the country) to take on Ohio State (the number two ranked team in the country), there was a huge bit of news announced in regards to college football.

It came out that they were going to expand to a 12-team playoff in the next few years. There are going to be the six highest-ranked conference champions along with the six at-large teams in the country.

This is outstanding news for the Notre Dame Fighting Irish football program. The fact that they are not in a conference has hindered them ever since the College Football Playoff was implemented and it doesn’t have to anymore.

You would think that based on their track record, they would be one of the six at-large teams almost annually.

Notre Dame’s Athletic Director Jack Swarbrick is going to meet next week with the 10 FBS commissioners to figure out details.

The Notre Dame Football team will benefit from the new CFB Playoff rules.

Notre Dame is still at a disadvantage by not being in a conference because they all can be a champion or at-large while they can only be at-large. However, they are still in a much better spot than they are in the four-team format.

The Irish pretty much have to go undefeated in order to make it into the four-team version of the College Football Playoff because the committee will almost certainly choose a one-loss conference champion over a one-loss Notre Dame team that was idle during championship week.

For that reason alone, this expansion is great news for them as they try to continue their amazing football program. 2022 is going to be the new year with Marcus Freeman in charge as the head coach which means that things are already changing for the school’s football program.

Hopefully, they are able to continue playing well each year so that they can take advantage of this new style once it is implemented. They are pushing for it to be done sooner rather than later but it will be done no later than the 2026 season which is amazing news.

All college football fans can rejoice on this day. It is amazing news for the FBS and everyone’s season will have just got a lot more exciting when it is implemented. We can only hope that it helps Notre Dame as much as it appears that it does.

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Notre Dame Football could get a boost with new 12-team CFB PlayoffVincent Pariseon September 2, 2022 at 8:27 pm Read More »

Raptors’ Masai Ujiri: BAL can produce NBA-level talenton September 2, 2022 at 8:59 am

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Christian Koloko’s NBA draft profile (0:21)Check out the highlights from former Arizona player Christian Koloko. (0:21)

Toronto Raptors president Masai Ujiri told ESPN that the Basketball Africa League (BAL) will grow into a league capable of producing players that can play in the NBA regular season, but urged patience with its development efforts.

Ujiri, who has been influential in the NBA’s work in Africa, signed Zamalek star Anas Mahmoud to the Raptors’ Summer League roster last year, making the Egyptian international the first player to jump to the NBA from the BAL.

Mahmoud was followed into the Summer League a year later by the Central African Republic’s Evans Ganapamo (Milwaukee Bucks), but neither BAL star was able to earn a regular season NBA roster spot.

Ujiri, who was in Cairo for the Basketball Without Borders camp, told ESPN: “I think it (the BAL producing NBA players) is going to come.

“Right now, we have the league in a couple of phases before the finals, so it’s going to have to become a regular league in some kind of way and I know Amadou [Gallo Fall, the BAL president] is working strongly on that. We have the right ingredients.

“The truth is: leagues take a while to build. The NBA took a while to build. The [English] Premiership took a while to build. These things take a long time — the WNBA has taken a while to build. It just doesn’t happen overnight. We’re talking about the third season [of the BAL in 2023].

“Later, the talent is really going to maybe marinate a little bit on the continent and the goal is to build the continent [to a point] where players are interested in playing in the league here, but obviously, the NBA is the biggest basketball league in the world and the biggest talent is going to go there for now.”

Toronto Raptors president Masai Ujiri, who is of Nigerian heritage, has been in charge of Basketball without Borders Africa since 2003. Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images

Ujiri was co-directing this year’s Basketball Without Borders (BWB) Africa camp, with Cleveland Cavaliers general manager Mike Gansey, LA Clippers scout Lance Blanks, and World Association of Basketball Coaches president Patrick Hunt joining him.

Ujiri has been a director of BWB since 2003, when the youth development camp — organised by the NBA and FIBA — first arrived in Africa. He has not missed an edition on the continent since then, although the previous two before this year were cancelled due to COVID-19.

The 52-year-old, who was born in Bournemouth, England, to a Nigerian family, had a modest playing career but subsequently developed into a highly successful scout and later executive.

One challenge he faces with BWB is to ensure that youngsters who, like him, are not good enough to play in the NBA but can serve the game in other capacities, are not lost to the system.

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Ujiri explained: “I think you have to maximise basketball and when you maximise basketball, basketball gives you the ability to open other doors. We teach these kids to take their talent to the furthest and best that they can get it when they play.

“Through that, you’re going to get a scholarship here, you’re going to get an opportunity to go places, you’re going to get opportunities to network, opportunities to compete and win and you’re going to get opportunities to have some adversity. This creates us as people.

“Sometimes, our talent is not good enough. I was the same way. I wasn’t good enough to even play at a higher level in Europe. Then, I started to develop coaching and started to have a feeling that maybe coaching was something I wanted to do. That’s how scouting came about and these kids can do so many things these days in sports.

“You can be a sports administrator, a sports doctor, a sports lawyer. You can be an agent, you can be a coach, you can work in the medical field, you can be in sports entertainment.

“These kids have to realise that after they’ve really, really pushed their talent and their opportunity as much as they can, this could be a scholarship to a university in your town, in Australia, in the US – you can go play college basketball. There are so many players who have developed to become something else in their careers.”

Egypt international Anas Mahmoud played in the NBA Summer League for the Toronto Raptors in 2021, but was later sidelined by a shoulder injury. David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images

Reflecting on the progress BWB has made in producing NBA-level talent, Ujiri said: “The talent has come a long way. There are many more opportunities now.

“You think about the camps – BWB, the FIBA camps, Giants of Africa camps, the SEED [Academy] camps. All these players are doing basketball camps. Al-Farouq Aminu just had one, Pascal Siakam just had one, Luc Mbah a Moute has his, Luol Deng has his. There are so many of them going on [across] the continent… Bismack Biyombo just had his in the Congo, Serge Ibaka – all these guys are coming and giving back.

“Also, kids are now seeing that these kids can make it. Just on my team, Precious Achiuwa came from Giants of Africa, Pascal Siakam came from BWB, Christian Koloko — who we have just drafted — came from BWB. Kids see this – that there is opportunity – they are getting coached. Look at the standard of coaches that even come here.”

Steve Kerr (Golden State Warriors), Chauncey Billups (Portland Trail Blazers), Willie Green (New Orleans Pelicans), Chris Finch (Minnesota Timberwolves) and Wes Unseld Jr. (Washington Wizards) were the current NBA head coaches present at the camp in Cairo this past week.

“We are proud. There is plenty of work to be done. We are so proud that this camp has this level of prospects and this level of talent,” Ujiri said.

“They continue to grow – the coaches continue to grow and the game continues to grow on the continent.”

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Raptors’ Masai Ujiri: BAL can produce NBA-level talenton September 2, 2022 at 8:59 am Read More »

Notre Dame can change the entire CFB landscape this weekendVincent Pariseon September 2, 2022 at 7:23 pm

It is always interesting when Notre Dame Fighting Irish plays on a big stage like the one they are going to be playing on this weekend. On Saturday night, they will face the Ohio State Buckeyes in one of the biggest matchups of the entire college football season.

This matchup is one of three ranked matches this weekend as number five Notre Dame will take on number two Ohio State. The winner of this game will feel very good about their chances at the College Football Playoff late in the year.

The biggest storyline of this game going in for Notre Dame is the fact that it is the (regular season) head coaching debut of Marcus Freeman who replaced Brian Kelly (who left Notre Dame for LSU) ahead of their bowl game earlier this year.

Marcus Freeman is getting the luxury of opening this season as their full-time head coach against his alma mater, Ohio State University. He played there for a few seasons before being drafted by the Chicago Bears in 2009.

He waived before that 2009 season and then spent a few summers/practice squad sessions with the Buffalo Bills and Houston Texans. In 2010, he started his coaching career as a graduate assistant with Ohio State.

From there he had stints as different types of coaches with Kent State, Purdue, Cincinnati, and Notre Dame before getting the head coaching job when Kelly left for LSU. This is a great opportunity for him to make a statement.

The Notre Dame Fighting Irish have a big test ahead of them this weekend.

Tyler Buchner is going to be the quarterback of Notre Dame for the first time this season. He is a dynamic player that has a chance to be a difference maker. He earned the spot as the starting quarterback and should be very good for them this season.

Very few people are going to give Notre Dame a chance. Ohio State is one of the legit powers in the college football world even though they had a somewhat down year (by their standards) in 2021. Notre Dame is a very good team in its own right and should be able to compete here.

It is very hard to go on the road and win in these types of games but that is what Notre Dame needs to do. There are a lot of people that would be making a big statement with a win here. A victory for Notre Dame would flip the 2022 season upside down.

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Notre Dame can change the entire CFB landscape this weekendVincent Pariseon September 2, 2022 at 7:23 pm Read More »

La Esquina, Creepshow, Miss Continental, and Miss Holmes

At the corners of Cullerton and Carpenter sits La Esquina, a community center that opened this spring to provide free art classes and provide safer space for neighborhood youth to explore their creativity. Tonight, La Esquina hosts their first annual expo and fundraiser at Thalia Hall (1807 S. Allport). From 5-9 PM, this event is open to all ages and free (though a $5 donation is suggested). The expo will feature photos, murals, and music by local artists. There will also be a “fashion experience” by Estefania Galvan, and you can snag a complimentary ticket to the after hours party. When 9 PM rolls around, things go strictly 17+ with a multi-level B-boy battle soundtracked by Tony Touch of the Rock Steady Crew, Avantist, and Dave Parley, who was the electronic duo Prayers’s original synth player. If you don’t snag one of those complimentary tickets earlier in the evening, it’s $20 to attend the evening portion–but for that level of community and entertainment? I’m surprised it doesn’t cost more. (MC) 

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

Tonight kicks off The Creepshow, a three-day Stephen King film festival at the Music Box (3733 N. Southport) hosted by The Losers’ Club, a weekly podcast that discusses King’s work and influence (from his books to his tweets). The festival’s lineup includes screenings of The Shining, Pet Sematary II, Doctor Sleep, Creepshow, 1408, Creepshow 2, Christine, Misery, and Stand By Me, and concludes on Sunday with a live stage show by the Losers where they articulate a self-described “sprawling and deranged vision of the Stephen King cinematic universe.” Each show is individually priced $8-$12 ($6-$9 for members), but a festival pass costs $60 ($50 for members)–handy if you, like me, are torn between any handful of titles. For instance, The Shining (screening tonight at 7 PM) is an entirely different movie when you experience Stanley Kubrick’s lush cinematography on the expanse of the big screen while Wendy Carlos’s dramatic original score washes over you in surround sound. And who knew–there is a Shining sequel (Doctor Sleep) with Ewan McGregor(!) as Danny Torrence(!!) that sounds totally bizarre(!!!). Creepshow delivers maximum camp and will leave you satisfyingly disgusted by its practical effects blown up that big. And who doesn’t want to experience John Carpenter’s Christine soundtrack as the acclaimed director and synth lord originally envisioned it (in the theater)? Check out the Music Box’s website for showtimes and ticket information. (MC)

For most, this is Labor Day weekend, a welcome three-day respite to kick back and end the summer on a high note, but for anyone involved in the world of drag pageantry, tonight is the start of the event-filled Continental Weekend. The Miss Continental pageant has been hosted in Chicago since its inception in 1980 (all hail the legendary Chilli Pepper; the first Miss Continental and a Chicago LGBT Hall of Fame inductee), and has been a marker of excellence for the international drag pageantry community since Jim Flint (founder of the 53-year-old venue Baton Show Lounge) planted the seeds for what ultimately became an international network of pageant systems featuring some of the best in drag performance. The weekend’s main events are four pageants hosted at Park West (322 W. Armitage) and the Riviera Theater (4746 N. Racine). Tonight’s Miss Continental Elite pageant (7 PM at Park West) features contestants that are strictly 40 years old or older, which means that the talent portion of the evening is usually out of this world as the audience gets to enjoy watching performers with decades of experience commanding a stage. The rest of the holiday weekend boasts a different pageant each night (Mr. Continental at the Park West on Saturday night, and the Riviera hosts the Miss Continental Plus pageant Sunday night and wraps it up with the main Miss Continental pageant on Monday evening). Tickets are available for purchase starting two hours before each pageant in person at the venue’s box offices. For more information about the pageants and scheduled after parties at the Baton Show Lounge’s Uptown location (4713 N. Broadway), go to the Baton’s website or call (312) 527-9338. (SCJ)

RuPaul’s Drag Race alumna Trinity K. Bonet performing her winning number for the talent portion of the MIss Continental 2019 pageant competition.

The name is Holmes—MISS Sherlock Holmes! Lifeline Theatre first introduced us to Christopher M. Walsh’s female version of the famous Baker Street detective in 2016 with Miss Holmes, which went on to subsequent productions at theaters around the U.S. Now they’re producing the sequel, which—logically enough—is entitled Miss Holmes Returns. Also returning are company members Katie McLean Hainsworth in the title role and Mandy Walsh as her sidekick, Dr. Dorothy Watson. The two investigate a murder in which a young immigrant woman is implicated, but they have their doubts that things are as clear-cut as Scotland Yard makes them seem. Elise Kauzlaric directs the show, which continues in previews tonight at 7:30 PM and tomorrow at 2:30 and 7:30 PM (tickets $25) before the press opening Sunday at 2:30. Performances run through 10/16 at Lifeline (6912 N. Glenwood); tickets for the regular run are $45 ($35 seniors and active/retired military personnel with ID, $15 students with ID). Call 773-761-4477 or visit lifelinetheatre.com for reservations. (KR)

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La Esquina, Creepshow, Miss Continental, and Miss HolmesKerry Reid, Micco Caporale and Salem Collo-Julinon September 2, 2022 at 6:38 pm

At the corners of Cullerton and Carpenter sits La Esquina, a community center that opened this spring to provide free art classes and provide safer space for neighborhood youth to explore their creativity. Tonight, La Esquina hosts their first annual expo and fundraiser at Thalia Hall (1807 S. Allport). From 5-9 PM, this event is open to all ages and free (though a $5 donation is suggested). The expo will feature photos, murals, and music by local artists. There will also be a “fashion experience” by Estefania Galvan, and you can snag a complimentary ticket to the after hours party. When 9 PM rolls around, things go strictly 17+ with a multi-level B-boy battle soundtracked by Tony Touch of the Rock Steady Crew, Avantist, and Dave Parley, who was the electronic duo Prayers’s original synth player. If you don’t snag one of those complimentary tickets earlier in the evening, it’s $20 to attend the evening portion–but for that level of community and entertainment? I’m surprised it doesn’t cost more. (MC) 

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

Tonight kicks off The Creepshow, a three-day Stephen King film festival at the Music Box (3733 N. Southport) hosted by The Losers’ Club, a weekly podcast that discusses King’s work and influence (from his books to his tweets). The festival’s lineup includes screenings of The Shining, Pet Sematary II, Doctor Sleep, Creepshow, 1408, Creepshow 2, Christine, Misery, and Stand By Me, and concludes on Sunday with a live stage show by the Losers where they articulate a self-described “sprawling and deranged vision of the Stephen King cinematic universe.” Each show is individually priced $8-$12 ($6-$9 for members), but a festival pass costs $60 ($50 for members)–handy if you, like me, are torn between any handful of titles. For instance, The Shining (screening tonight at 7 PM) is an entirely different movie when you experience Stanley Kubrick’s lush cinematography on the expanse of the big screen while Wendy Carlos’s dramatic original score washes over you in surround sound. And who knew–there is a Shining sequel (Doctor Sleep) with Ewan McGregor(!) as Danny Torrence(!!) that sounds totally bizarre(!!!). Creepshow delivers maximum camp and will leave you satisfyingly disgusted by its practical effects blown up that big. And who doesn’t want to experience John Carpenter’s Christine soundtrack as the acclaimed director and synth lord originally envisioned it (in the theater)? Check out the Music Box’s website for showtimes and ticket information. (MC)

For most, this is Labor Day weekend, a welcome three-day respite to kick back and end the summer on a high note, but for anyone involved in the world of drag pageantry, tonight is the start of the event-filled Continental Weekend. The Miss Continental pageant has been hosted in Chicago since its inception in 1980 (all hail the legendary Chilli Pepper; the first Miss Continental and a Chicago LGBT Hall of Fame inductee), and has been a marker of excellence for the international drag pageantry community since Jim Flint (founder of the 53-year-old venue Baton Show Lounge) planted the seeds for what ultimately became an international network of pageant systems featuring some of the best in drag performance. The weekend’s main events are four pageants hosted at Park West (322 W. Armitage) and the Riviera Theater (4746 N. Racine). Tonight’s Miss Continental Elite pageant (7 PM at Park West) features contestants that are strictly 40 years old or older, which means that the talent portion of the evening is usually out of this world as the audience gets to enjoy watching performers with decades of experience commanding a stage. The rest of the holiday weekend boasts a different pageant each night (Mr. Continental at the Park West on Saturday night, and the Riviera hosts the Miss Continental Plus pageant Sunday night and wraps it up with the main Miss Continental pageant on Monday evening). Tickets are available for purchase starting two hours before each pageant in person at the venue’s box offices. For more information about the pageants and scheduled after parties at the Baton Show Lounge’s Uptown location (4713 N. Broadway), go to the Baton’s website or call (312) 527-9338. (SCJ)

RuPaul’s Drag Race alumna Trinity K. Bonet performing her winning number for the talent portion of the MIss Continental 2019 pageant competition.

The name is Holmes—MISS Sherlock Holmes! Lifeline Theatre first introduced us to Christopher M. Walsh’s female version of the famous Baker Street detective in 2016 with Miss Holmes, which went on to subsequent productions at theaters around the U.S. Now they’re producing the sequel, which—logically enough—is entitled Miss Holmes Returns. Also returning are company members Katie McLean Hainsworth in the title role and Mandy Walsh as her sidekick, Dr. Dorothy Watson. The two investigate a murder in which a young immigrant woman is implicated, but they have their doubts that things are as clear-cut as Scotland Yard makes them seem. Elise Kauzlaric directs the show, which continues in previews tonight at 7:30 PM and tomorrow at 2:30 and 7:30 PM (tickets $25) before the press opening Sunday at 2:30. Performances run through 10/16 at Lifeline (6912 N. Glenwood); tickets for the regular run are $45 ($35 seniors and active/retired military personnel with ID, $15 students with ID). Call 773-761-4477 or visit lifelinetheatre.com for reservations. (KR)

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La Esquina, Creepshow, Miss Continental, and Miss HolmesKerry Reid, Micco Caporale and Salem Collo-Julinon September 2, 2022 at 6:38 pm Read More »

Donovan Mitchell to the Cavs spells trouble for the Chicago BullsAnish Puligillaon September 2, 2022 at 5:48 pm

While much of the eastern conference has made moves to improve their squads, the Chicago Bulls chose to stand pat, only adding some veterans in Goran Dragic and Andre Drummond. While they are solid names, on the court they aren’t anything more than some okay depth – depth which the Bulls desperately needed, but still not enough to the point where they have closed the gap between them and the eastern elite.

While the Bulls chose to take the ‘run it back’ approach, the Celtics went out and acquired Malcolm Brogdon, the 76ers convinced James Harden to take a pay cut and signed PJ Tucker, Atlanta acquired Dejounte Murray to pair with Trae Young, while the Nets convinced their core to stay together and run it back as a unit for at least one more year.

Already, the Bulls were losing ground on their competition in the East, with many pundits and fans already saying that there is a wide range of possible outcomes for the upcoming season depending on the health of the roster and the development of key young contributors.

Now, add to the mix that the Cavaliers have just acquired Donovan Mitchell, and that equation becomes an extra level of complicated.

On paper, the Chicago Bulls are now the 7th best team in the East.

Take a look at their competition starting with: Miami, Philadelphia, Milwaukee, and Boston – the top 4 seeds from a year ago. We all know the Chicago Bulls’ record against top teams a year ago, and nothing they’ve done this offseason besides banking on the development of Patrick Williams lends any optimism towards a marked improvement in that record this upcoming season.

Then, take a look at a healthy Brooklyn Nets team featuring Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving, Ben Simmons, and a decent supporting cast.

That’s already 5 teams clearly ahead of the Chicago Bulls. This is where, a week ago, I would say the Bulls have a chance to claim that sixth seed and avoid the play-in tournament as they are talented and experienced enough to hold off Toronto, Cleveland, and Atlanta.

Now, Cleveland has to be considered in that upper tier of Eastern Conference teams. With Donovan Mitchell, Darius Garland, Evan Mobley, and Jarrett Allen, they boast 3 All-NBA caliber players, and another all-star in Jarrett Allen. This is a team that is objectively better than the Bulls, and one that if healthy, should have no problem avoiding the play-in tournament.

I believe the Chicago Bulls can still make the playoffs, but assuming every team stays healthy, their path to postseason play will assuredly come through the play-in tournament. This is the consequence of choosing to not make any major moves to leapfrog the competition.

In addition, the acquisition of Mitchell makes the future murkier as well. All of Cleveland’s big 4 are under 25 years old, giving them arguably the brightest future of any team in the East outside Boston. This team isn’t going anywhere, and even if the Bulls bet on Patrick Williams pans out, a core in 2024/25 of LaVine, Williams, Lonzo, and Dosunmu will not remotely stack up with what Cleveland and Boston will be working with.

It’s imperative now that AKME comes up with a plan to add more star talent to the Chicago Bulls – especially because now in the central division, there are two teams to be reckoned with: one with Giannis, and another with 4 perennial all-stars under 25.

Let’s also not forget that within their own division, Detroit and Indiana have quietly been stockpiling talent, headlined by Jaden Ivey and Cade Cunningham, and Halliburton, Hield, and Turner, respectively.

The Chicago Bulls have work to do, as both their short and long-term outlook leave them in the middle of the road of the East – if they continue to stand pat then I’m afraid they’ll continue to slip down the standings as the rest of the conference catches up.

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Donovan Mitchell to the Cavs spells trouble for the Chicago BullsAnish Puligillaon September 2, 2022 at 5:48 pm Read More »

The Chicago Bears announce insane news on Ted PhillipsVincent Pariseon September 2, 2022 at 5:15 pm

The Chicago Bears are a bad football organization. They have been poorly run for the better part of four decades. A lot of it has had to do with Ted Phillips who has been the President and CEO. He has been with the organization for over 40 years.

It came out on Friday that he is going to retire in February after all of this time. It has come out that until then, he is going to lead the efforts to get the new stadium in Arlington Heights. That could be a very strong way for him to go out and leave on a positive note.

Don Pompei of The Athletic was the first one to report this story. It is the type of story that is going to be huge across the entire National Football League.

With Phillips in charge, the Bears have been very bad. They don’t have any sustained success with him at the top and it is time for a change. This news that he is going to retire is going to change the franchise going forward.

BREAKING: Bears president/CEO Ted Phillips retiring at the end of the 2022 season. My exclusive story for @theathletic here. https://t.co/PUujAz6Vln

— Dan Pompei (@danpompei) September 2, 2022

#Bears president/CEO Ted Phillips will retire after 40 years with the club in February. Until then, he’s at the forefront of the club’s efforts to land a new stadium in Arlington Heights. @danpompei nailed the story.

— Brad Biggs (@BradBiggs) September 2, 2022

The Chicago Bears have had some ups and downs with Ted Phillips at the top.

It is obvious that the Bears have had poor performances on the field under Phillips which is going to be his legacy. However, the team has thrived off the field which has made him successful in his work from that standpoint.

Now, the Bears have to move on and focus on winning football games while transitioning into a new stadium. If Phillips helps lead the way into this new Arlington stadium, they will be very well off going forward because they can make even more money.

A lot of change has come to this team in the last 12 months. They have hired a new GM, a new head coach, multiple new coaches in other areas, and are transitioning into a new starting quarterback. With Phillips leaving, that really only leaves the ownership group left.

Hopefully, this provides some hope for the franchise as it transitions into its next phase. 2022 is going to be a bad year on the field but there is light at the end of the tunnel for them.

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The Chicago Bears announce insane news on Ted PhillipsVincent Pariseon September 2, 2022 at 5:15 pm Read More »

Celtics’ Gallinari tore ACL while playing for Italyon September 2, 2022 at 5:23 pm

Boston Celtics forward Danilo Gallinari has been diagnosed with a torn left ACL suffered while playing for the Italian national team.

A source told ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski that the expected recovery time is between six and 12 months and that Gallinari is determined to try to return late in the 2022-23 NBA season.

Gallinari previously suffered a torn left ACL in April 2013 that ended up requiring two surgeries and kept him out of the NBA until the 2014-15 season.

The 34-year-old Gallinari was injured Saturday during a FIBA World Cup qualifying game against Georgia. He grabbed his left knee after a bounce pass in the lane before hobbling over to the sideline, holding the back of the knee as trainers rushed to his aid. Gallinari then limped to the locker room with the help of a staff member and a teammate.

The Italian team had said last weekend that Gallinari had suffered a torn meniscus.

Gallinari had signed with the Celtics on July 12 via the midlevel exception and was being counted on for depth as Boston looks to return to the NBA Finals.

A first-round draft pick of the New York Knicks in 2008, Gallinari has averaged 15.6 points and 4.7 rebounds per game in his career while also playing for the Denver Nuggets, LA Clippers, Oklahoma City Thunder and Atlanta Hawks.

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Celtics’ Gallinari tore ACL while playing for Italyon September 2, 2022 at 5:23 pm Read More »

Dreary North Fest will broaden your understanding of extreme music—and test your limits

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Brett Ray had proved his commitment to extreme music long before he launched the extreme-music blowout Dreary North Fest last year. He’s been booking shows for more than two decades, and he’s been releasing music through his label, Suspended Soul Tapes and Records, for close to ten years. He also regularly tests strangers’ capacity to endure high-decibel punishment in several bands—most notably as the front man of Midwestlust, whose knots of grindcore and harsh noise seethe like a rat king trying to untangle itself. That group performs on night two of the second annual Dreary North, whose amazingly dense and somewhat unstable lineup includes 65 other musical projects at the time of this writing—I expect that even a few fanatics may see it as a bit much. (Most sets will run between ten and 20 minutes; otherwise the day just wouldn’t be long enough.) To outsiders, extreme music can sound undifferentiated in its nastiness, but Ray recognizes its spectrum, and Dreary North’s offerings are far from monochromatic; I’d be hard-pressed to think of another festival that spotlights long-running Virgina grind group Suppression, sludgy Indiana punk outfit Shih Tzu, and experimental Chicago hip-hop duo Angry Blackmen. Dreary North’s scope is global, with acts from Mexico (Violencia), Japan (Crimes of Love), Brazil (Test), and Belgium (Psywarfare), among other locales, but of course the lineup also does great work spotlighting acts from Chicago and elsewhere in Illinois. Agitprop-driven posthardcore band the Ableist and postapocalyptic metal group Urine Hell help kick off the third and final day of the fest as part of a block of local acts that could play Subterranean on any other night—if you’re curious about extreme music, they’d make a great entry point. The lineup is likely to continue changing after this is published, but updates should be available at the festival’s event page on Facebook.

Dreary North Fest day one Today’s bill consists of Suppression, Sirius Blvck, Collapsing Scenery, Slutbomb, Hopeless Voyage, World Peace, Angry Blackmen, Sick/Tired, Spring Break, Scumbag Fred, Pig City, Magical Mind, Constituents, Choke, Utility, Breaking/Entering, Aseethe, Shitstormtrooper, and Meredith Haines. Fri 9/9, 2 PM, Subterranean, 2011 W. North, $40 single-day pass, $100 three-day pass, 17+

Dreary North Fest day two Today’s bill consists of Psywarfare, Crowhurst, Wake, Violencia, Pain Chain, Wounded Touch, Canadian Rifle, Midwestlust, Nunn, Intercourse, Chip7, Snuffed, Backslider, Sarin, Spit Pile, Dug, Hallucination Realized, School Drugs, Heel Turn, Citizen 2-13, Blackwater Sniper, Subservient Dominance, Blunt, Janna Lee, and Stress Positions. Sat 9/10, 2 PM, Subterranean, 2011 W. North, $40 single-day pass, $100 three-day pass, 17+

Dreary North Fest day three Today’s bill consists of Merc, KST.DEX, Test, Niku Daruma, Rush Falknor, Sissy Spacek, Crimes of Love, Everlasting Light, Dental Work, Fuck It . . . I Quit!, Swollen Organs, Nequient, Shih Tzu, Davis Ag, Dipt, DeathEnvy, Disperser, Canyons, Urine Hell, MWA, Shrivel Up, and the Ableist. Sun 9/11, 2 PM, Subterranean, 2011 W. North, $40 single-day pass, $100 three-day pass, 17+

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