What’s New

Warriors thankful for rest heading into NBA Finalson May 29, 2022 at 10:16 pm

SAN FRANCISCO — The Golden State Warriors have the gift of time as they head into the NBA Finals.

After wrapping up their Western Conference finals series against the Dallas Mavericks in five games, the Warriors will have exactly one week of rest before Game 1 of the Finals, which tips off Thursday night.

“We gave our guys two straight days off, which is almost unheard of, in playoffs or even just regular season,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said Sunday afternoon. “So it was a great chance to decompress the last couple of days. We won’t have a formal practice until tomorrow. It’ll be the first day we’ll build on our opponent. So I’ve said it many times: You go to the Finals, it’s almost a two-month journey filled with stress and fatigue, so if you can build a little break, it’s very meaningful.”

The Warriors took Friday and Saturday off before meeting at Chase Center on Sunday for treatment and light workouts. On Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, they will hold regular practices.

“Having two days off and a week between when we play, everybody can get their mind right, focus, and get the body back where they want it to get to,” Kevon Looney said.

1 Related

But Looney pointed out there are also some negatives that come with such a long layoff: “Some of the cons is you know, it’s stuff like game rhythm, game shape. You’ve got to make sure you’re doing all the stuff you normally do to stay sharp.”

Perhaps the biggest pro from the Warriors’ longer break is the time it’s giving the team’s injured players to work their way back. Andre Iguodala (neck), Gary Payton II (elbow) and Otto Porter Jr. (foot) each missed all or part of the Western Conference finals and could be game-changing players in the Finals.

Each of them is progressing nicely, the team said Sunday, and they are expected to be slowly integrated into team practices this week. As they rejoin group activity, the Warriors will get a better sense of their availability for the Finals.

No matter who the Warriors face — either the Boston Celtics or Miami Heat — Golden State will hold home-court advantage. The Warriors have a better record than the Celtics, and have the same record as the Heat, but won both regular-season games against Miami, giving them the tiebreaker. The Heat host the Celtics in Game 7 of the East finals Sunday night at 8:30 ET.

As soon as the Warriors beat the Heat in March, Kerr said he knew his team had just ensured themselves home-court against any team in the Eastern Conference. But it wasn’t something they were necessarily gunning for at that moment, just an added bonus for down the line.

“The last few weeks of the season we were struggling to the finish line with the injuries to Draymond and Steph and we had a couple of tough stretches there. Fortunately, we had put a bunch of wins in the bank early that gave us a cushion that we needed,” Kerr said. We were very conscious of hanging onto home-court if at all possible, and we were able to finish strongly.”

Home-court gives the Warriors another gift in the form of time: they don’t have to even think about getting on a plane for another week.

“To be in our beds for 11 days is very helpful,” Kerr said.

“It’s always special to play at home,” Looney said. “Being able to go through your routine, sleep in your own bed, and prepare at home and do things that you’re used to, it’s just a lot more comfortable. It’s a lot better to get the jitters out at home when the crowd is going for you.”

Read More

Warriors thankful for rest heading into NBA Finalson May 29, 2022 at 10:16 pm Read More »

Memorial Day is Not Veterans Day

Memorial Day is Not Veterans Day

Or

How to Dishonor the Honorable, Chicago Style

The Saturday before Memorial Day is when Chicago holds one of the oldest and arguably largest Memorial Day parades in the Nation. This is only right as Chicago also is one of the few if not the only city in America to have Service Academies for all five traditional branches of service. Space Force is officially a branch of the military alongside the Army, Navy, Marines, Air Force and Coast Guard but as of yet, there are no Service Academies established for this newest branch of the military.

This year in Chicago, the day started with a private breakfast for Gold Star families, something that has not been allowed since 2019 due to Covid restrictions. The wreath laying ceremony at Daly Plaza was well-attended, and the famed Memorial Day Parade down State Street was back, with thousands of participants and spectators.

For those of us for whom Memorial Day is personal, the return of Memorial Day events was gratefully welcomed. Sadly, though there were no restrictions for the first time since 2019, the meaning of the day was at best muddled. Most who participated in both the public and private moments know Memorial Day is when we honor those who did not come home, yet too many confuse Memorial Day and Veterans Day. Sadly, Mayor Lori Lightfoot seems to fall in the category of the confused.

The Mayor told the crowd at Daley Plaza about the extraordinary service of two remarkable Chicagoans who as Black men served a country that at the time failed to recognize them as equals in our society. These are always important stories to tell, but highlighting those who served, came home, had families and continued serve to our communities on Memorial Day is disrespectful to them as well as to those for whom the day is intended. The family of one of the men who Lightfoot mentioned was present to receive the proclamation that the Mayor chose to designate May 28, 2022, “Rick Murray Day”.

To be clear, Rick Murray served honorably in uniform and continued to serve Chicago and his fellow veterans with his long-time participation in Memorial Day parades. There is no question this man’s life and legacy are worth honoring. While I’m sure his family was moved to have him so publicly remembered, I wonder if they too felt the irony of specially highlighting a man that lived a long, full life after his military service on the one day of the year when we honor those who never came home. I hate to think how a man who gave so much time and devotion to the meaning of Memorial Day would feel about having that meaning diminished, in his name.

The dishonor and disrespect did not stop there. This staggeringly considerable lapse in judgement was preceded by the Mayor’s odd remarks at the Gold Star breakfast. The Mayor commented how nice it was to once again see so many of the families she first met at the Gold Star breakfast in 2020. That breakfast in 2020 did not take place, nor did the parade, so there were many confused looks among the Gold Stars at the incongruity in the Mayor’s memory.

In a final act of dishonor, the Mayor announced this year’s recipient of the General Logan award was Jean Harris, repeatedly and incorrectly referring to her as the mother of Sgt. Joshua Harris. Jean Harris has recently become one of the Survivor Outreach Services coordinators for Illinois, for which she deserves commendation, but she is Sgt. Harris’ stepmother. I can’t imagine the shock, dismay and heartbreak of Mille Harris hearing the Mayor tell the world that she is not the mother of the child she bore.

I am thankful and grateful that there are other events this Memorial Day weekend where the true meaning of the day will not be diminished, dishonored, or subverted. When listening to a speech by politicians on Memorial Day, their true feelings about, and the genuineness of, their support for our military, veterans, and those who made the ultimate sacrifice are evidenced by how many others they inappropriately try to include in their thanks. It is not unusual for doctors, nurses, teachers, and sundry others to receive mention on this day that is not about them. But, if specific individuals are mentioned, it will be someone who did not come home to enjoy the life they fought and died to defend.

Mayor Lightfoot mentioned three individuals in her speech, two veterans and a stepmother. In doing so, she dishonored the honorable service and memory of the two veterans on the day that is about those who did not come home. Worse, she insulted and dishonored the mother of a fallen hero by giving that title to another. Overall, it was a short speech she gave. It should have been shorter.

Filed under:
Uncategorized

Advertisement:
Advertisement:

Welcome to ChicagoNow.

Meet
our bloggers,

post comments, or

pitch your blog idea.

Subscribe by Email

Completely spam free, opt out any time.

Meet The Blogger

Denise Williams

Views and opinions from the Gold Star, Military and Veteran perspective are generally different from those of the civilian world. Much of what I write is “their” stories, as told to me as the Gold Star Mother of PFC Andrew Meari, KIA 11/1/10 in Kandahar, Afghanistan. This is how I continue to honor the Oath my son took.
I don’t like labels or boxes as the former is insufficient to describe a person and the latter limits a person but if you insist, call me a Progressive Republican. I believe in this country, our Constitution and above all, in the rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. I believe our government is supposed to serve the people, not tell them how to live.
To me, this is just common sense but since it seems to be a minority opinion, it has become “Uncommon Sense”.

Monthly Archives

May 2022
September 2021
July 2021
May 2021
January 2021
December 2020
October 2020
July 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
September 2019
July 2019
May 2019
June 2018
October 2017
September 2017
January 2017
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
December 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
August 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012

Categories

Uncategorized (62)
Military (53)
News-Politics (43)
Veterans Issues (32)
Politics (28)
War on Terror (28)
News (27)
Gold Star (19)
Islam (17)
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (17)

Latest on ChicagoNow

Memorial Day is Not Veterans Day

from Uncommon Sense by Denise Williams
posted today at 2:37 pm

Tired of the arguments against gun control

from Retired in Chicago by Marianne Goss
posted today at 11:02 am

Memorial Day and Chicago’s Week in Beer: May 30-June 2

from The Beeronaut by Mark McDermott
posted today at 12:37 am

Watch Berkowitz w/Bob Fioretti on replacing the source of Chicago’s two-year crime wave: Lightfoot, Preckwinkle, Foxx, Evans and Dart, Cable & Web

from Public Affairs with Jeff Berkowitz by Jeff Berkowitz
posted Saturday at 3:57 pm

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Preciado two-run shot brings Pelicans from behind to secure franchise record 12th straight victory; Slaughter and Espinoza with big games in big South Bend win

from Cubs Den by Michael Ernst
posted Saturday at 12:55 pm

Read these ChicagoNow blogs

Cubs Den

Chicago Cubs news and comprehensive blog, featuring old school baseball writing combined with the latest statistical trends

Pets in need of homes

Pets available for adoption in the Chicago area

Hammervision

It’s like the couch potato version of Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
Advertisement:

About ChicagoNow

FAQs

Advertise

Recent posts RSS

Privacy policy (Updated)

Comment policy

Terms of service

Chicago Tribune Archives

Do not sell my personal info

©2022 CTMG – A Chicago Tribune website –
Crafted by the News Apps team

Read More

Memorial Day is Not Veterans Day Read More »

White Sox’s Anderson helped off field after injuryon May 29, 2022 at 8:42 pm

CHICAGOWhite Sox shortstop Tim Anderson left Sunday’s game against the Cubs after fielding a ground ball in the top of the fifth inning.

Anderson, 29, fell to the ground after throwing catcher PJ Higgins out at first base. He limped off the field with the help of the White Sox training staff with an apparent leg or groin injury.

Anderson went 1 for 2 with a first-inning single and ranks among the league leaders with a .356 batting average.

Anderson is hitting .356 as an offensive catalyst for the second place Sox who are in the midst of another injury riddled season. The team is currently without stars Luis Robert (COVID-19), Eloy Jimenez (hamstring), Yoan Moncada (hip) and starter Lance Lynn (knee). In fact, Jimenez had to leave is first rehab game in the minors on Saturday.

Infielder Danny Mendick replaced Anderson at shortstop.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Read More

White Sox’s Anderson helped off field after injuryon May 29, 2022 at 8:42 pm Read More »

Cubs put lefty Miley on IL with shoulder strainon May 29, 2022 at 6:48 pm

CHICAGO — The Cubs placed left-hander Wade Miley on the 15-day injured list on Sunday with a left shoulder strain.

Miley also missed the start of the season with left elbow inflammation. He is 1-0 with a 3.38 ERA in three starts in his first season with Chicago.

The 35-year-old Miley hasn’t pitched since he worked six innings of three-run ball in a 5-4 victory over Arizona on May 22. The IL move was made retroactive to Thursday.

“I don’t think it’s that big of a deal,” manager David Ross said. “I think he’ll be back soon. I’m not too worried.”

Right-hander Mark Leiter Jr. was recalled from Triple-A Iowa. Leiter is 0-1 with a 6.57 ERA in five appearances with the Cubs this year, including three starts.

The Cubs also placed reliever Chris Martin on the bereavement list before their series finale against the crosstown White Sox. There was no corresponding move announced on Sunday.

The absences of Miley and Martin put the Cubs in a particular bind with their upcoming schedule. They play doubleheaders on Monday against Milwaukee and Saturday against St. Louis. They don’t have another day off until June 6.

“Yeah, we’ve got a lot of innings to cover,” Ross said. “We’ve got some guys banged up. Try to do the best we can to cover those and map them out as good as we possibly can and see where guys are at.”

Read More

Cubs put lefty Miley on IL with shoulder strainon May 29, 2022 at 6:48 pm Read More »

Tired of the arguments against gun control

Tired of the arguments against gun control

I had a different post written for today, but a personal focus felt crass after a week when 19 innocent fourth graders were gunned down in their classroom in Uvalde, Texas. That came 10 days after 10 African Americans were shot in a Buffalo grocery store. In both cases, the gunman was an 18-year-old male.

Closer to home, fear of gun violence, not new to people on the South and West Sides, has spread throughout Chicago like a metastasizing cancer. No place feels safe today. Downtown, where I live, has seen a surge in shootings this year, including highly publicized homicides near the Bean and a Red Line station. I used to walk home from Millennium Park or the Goodman Theatre on warm evenings. Now I’m nervous walking the block from the bus stop.

I don’t have anything to say that hasn’t been said elsewhere, but I need to express outrage and frustration.

I don’t understand how our politicians can continue to let this happen, how a minority beholden to the National Rifle Association can overrule the desire of the great majority of Americans for stricter gun regulations.

I’m tired of hearing about Second Amendment rights, as if the drafters of the Constitution 235 years ago could foresee military assault weapons being brought into classrooms, places of worship, concerts, nightclubs, and supermarkets.

I’m tired of hearing the “thoughts and prayers” cliché after a slaughter, as if it is enough.

“Guns don’t kill, people do,” we hear, and more attention to mental health is proposed. Although New York State has a red flag law, and his school had reported him, the shooter in Buffalo was still able to buy two rifles. Mentally ill people can’t kill with guns they can’t get. 

Gun control doesn’t work, we hear. It works elsewhere. We’re the only developed country in the world with such carnage from gun violence. Countries that tightened their gun laws, such as the UK and Australia, reduced their rates of gun-related deaths, including mass shootings. 

Chicago has strict gun regulations, and they haven’t solved the problem, we hear. Guns are brought from Indiana and other states that are lax about firearms. We need national solutions.

The NRA and Republicans propose “hardening schools” with extra security measures. The Uvalde school district has its own police, classroom door locks, and other security safeguards. The shooter still got in. Nineteen police officers stood for almost an hour in the hallway on the other side of the door from the shooter. A school officer hid during the 2018 shooting in Parkland, Florida, that massacred 17 people.  

The NRA and Republicans propose more gun ownership for self-defense. According to researchers, people rarely use guns in self-defense. Yet Americans continue to arm themselves out of fear — more than 5 million Americans bought their first guns in the last two years — and our firearm homicide rate goes up. 

Ten years ago, 20 elementary school children and six adults were gunned down at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut. Since then, there have been almost 1,000 school shootings among 3,500 mass shootings in the United States, and Congress has not passed one piece of gun legislation.

What can we ordinary people do? All I can think of is to stop electing representatives who take money from the NRA (see a list). The NRA overwhelming supports Republicans, so Chicagoans will need to help defeat candidates in other states.

Advertisement:
Advertisement:

Welcome to ChicagoNow.

Meet
our bloggers,

post comments, or

pitch your blog idea.

Subscribe by Email

Completely spam free, opt out any time.

Meet The Blogger

Marianne Goss

A retired university publications editor and journalist, I live in the South Loop and volunteer as a Chicago Greeter. Getting the most out of retired life in the big city will be a recurrent theme of this blog, but I consider any topic fair game because the perspective will be that of a retiree.

Recent posts

Tired of the arguments against gun control »

Marianne Goss on Retired in Chicago
Posted today at 11:02 am

First swimming lessons at 73 »

Marianne Goss on Retired in Chicago
Posted Monday at 9:25 am

Is it normal to forget the day? »

Marianne Goss on Retired in Chicago
Posted May 16, 2022 at 8:34 am

The downside of decorating comparisons »

Marianne Goss on Retired in Chicago
Posted May 9, 2022 at 7:24 am

Getting beyond guilt about parent in nursing home »

Marianne Goss on Retired in Chicago
Posted May 2, 2022 at 9:20 am

Recent Comments

How do you reconcile that guns have existed in American society since its founding? Indeed, without guns, there would have…
Read the story | Reply to this comment
In reply to Al Hip:
Thanks, Al, but I’d need to be able to swim more than one lap first. 🙂
Read the story | Reply to this comment
You can swim at the Hilton. My wife does and Beth Finke goes there too. They’re friendly. Avoid holiday weekends.
Read the story | Reply to this comment
Sounds as if you could start teaching swimming!
Read the story | Reply to this comment
This is inspiring, Marianne. Thank you for sharing your progress, and congratulations. I understand that swimming produces less wear on…
Read the story | Reply to this comment

Monthly Archives

May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016

Categories

Uncategorized (260)
Current events and social commentary (119)
Life lessons (80)
Chicago (51)
Health and fitness (50)
Retirement (49)
Reading (38)
Entertainment (36)
Consumer matters (36)
Consumer and money matters (35)

Tags

Latest on ChicagoNow

Tired of the arguments against gun control

from Retired in Chicago by Marianne Goss
posted today at 11:02 am

Memorial Day and Chicago’s Week in Beer: May 30-June 2

from The Beeronaut by Mark McDermott
posted today at 12:37 am

Watch Berkowitz w/Bob Fioretti on replacing the source of Chicago’s two-year crime wave: Lightfoot, Preckwinkle, Foxx, Evans and Dart, Cable & Web

from Public Affairs with Jeff Berkowitz by Jeff Berkowitz
posted Saturday at 3:57 pm

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Preciado two-run shot brings Pelicans from behind to secure franchise record 12th straight victory; Slaughter and Espinoza with big games in big South Bend win

from Cubs Den by Michael Ernst
posted Saturday at 12:55 pm

Who else loves to read?

from Looking for the Good by Susan Schulhof
posted Saturday at 10:18 am

Read these ChicagoNow blogs

Cubs Den

Chicago Cubs news and comprehensive blog, featuring old school baseball writing combined with the latest statistical trends

Pets in need of homes

Pets available for adoption in the Chicago area

Hammervision

It’s like the couch potato version of Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
Advertisement:

About ChicagoNow

FAQs

Advertise

Recent posts RSS

Privacy policy (Updated)

Comment policy

Terms of service

Chicago Tribune Archives

Do not sell my personal info

©2022 CTMG – A Chicago Tribune website –
Crafted by the News Apps team

Read More

Tired of the arguments against gun control Read More »

Report suggests Chicago Bulls send Zach LaVine to Mavericks in sign-and-tradeRyan Heckmanon May 29, 2022 at 3:20 pm

This is the summer of Zach LaVine for the Chicago Bulls — Round 2.

Back in 2018, the Bulls faced the reality of LaVine entering restricted free agency, meaning they could match any offer sent his way — and they did, when the Sacramento Kings signed him to an offer sheet.

Now an unrestricted free agent, LaVine is gearing up for the process, and he wants to enjoy the whole sha-bang. LaVine will be courted by several teams, with the Bulls hoping to re-sign him in Chicago.

Although LaVine can make the most money by staying in Chicago, there is always the possibility of him leaving. If he does, then a potential scenario involves a sign-and-trade. One recent rumor suggests the Bulls could move LaVine to the Dallas Mavericks, pairing him with Luka Doncic.

NBA insider Marc Stein believes the Dallas Mavericks are a possible landing spot for Chicago Bulls star Zach LaVine.

Stein writes:

“Sources nonetheless maintain that one option already being weighed by team brass is the prospect of joining the sign-and-trade bidding for the Chicago Bulls’ Zach LaVine, amid a growing belief around the league that LaVine, as he heads into free agency, has more interest in leaving Chicago than initially presumed.”

First of all, the mere fact that there will be a bidding war involving a sign-and-trade could be potentially good news for the Bulls.

Is it good news that LaVine could be leaving? Absolutely not. However, if LaVine does want to leave Chicago, then the Bulls should be fortunate to get something in return for his services. And, if there are multiple teams involved, then the highest bidder will likely be giving up a hefty package to land the All Star guard.

Second, Stein maintains the thought that LaVine has more interest in leaving Chicago than people originally thought. That is saying something. More than any rumor we have seen floating around, this one holds plenty of weight. Stein is plugged in, and basketball fans know this.

If LaVine did indeed head to Dallas, the Bulls would probably take on the contract of Spencer Dinwiddie to replace his spot in the rotation. But, they would also have to get draft compensation in return as well.

If the Bulls were able to get a package revolving around Dinwiddie, Dorian Finney-Smith and a first-round pick, at minimum, then that would be at least satisfactory. Bulls fans wouldn’t feel great about losing LaVine, but again, being able to get a haul in return will be better than nothing.

Read More

Report suggests Chicago Bulls send Zach LaVine to Mavericks in sign-and-tradeRyan Heckmanon May 29, 2022 at 3:20 pm Read More »

Game 7 is here! The keys that will send the Heat or Celtics to the NBA Finalson May 29, 2022 at 4:13 pm

After the many ups and downs of the 2022 Eastern Conference finals, including double-digit wins and injuries to star players, the Miami Heat and Boston Celtics are facing off for Game 7 in Miami on Sunday at 8:30 p.m. ET (on ESPN and the ESPN app).

The winner will advance to play the Golden State Warriors in the NBA Finals, with Game 1 on Thursday (9 p.m. ET, ABC and the ESPN app).

Jimmy Butler helped Miami stave off elimination Friday night by pouring in 47 points, 9 rebounds and 8 assists in a 111-103 Game 6 win in Boston. Now the top-seeded Heat will try to cash in on any semblance of a home-court advantage despite the Celtics going 2-1 at FTX Arena in this conference final series.

“You put yourself in this position, going up 3-2, to have two games to win one,” Celtics coach Ime Udoka said Saturday. “So as much as you love to finish it on your home court, we’ve been up and down this series, and due to that, it’s where it is right now.”

Looking ahead to Game 7 on Sunday, we asked our ESPN experts to highlight a player, coach, trend or strategy that could swing the outcome and propel one of these teams into the Finals. Here are their answers:

Heat’s Spoelstra orchestrating a Game 7 chess match

After emerging from the 2020 Finals, a series he ended up losing to the Los Angeles Lakers, Erik Spoelstra assessed the strategy matchup against LeBron James.

2 Related

“He was making adjustments to our adjustments to the adjustments. And not making an adjustment to the adjustment I thought about making an adjustment, but I bluffed the adjustment, and he knew I was making a bluff,” Spoelstra said then.

The Heat coach was paying James, who led the team to four Finals and two titles under Spoelstra, a compliment. But Spoelstra was also offering a glimpse into his own world.

All NBA coaches make strategy moves during playoff series, but Spoelstra is in an elite class. He’s grandmaster in the chess matches that take place over the course of seven, even when he’s just faking a maneuver.

In Game 6 on Friday, he knew the Celtics had significantly prepared for his zone defense, so in the second half he broke out sudden double teams on Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown that staggered the Boston offense. It helped undercut a comeback attempt and buy the Heat time to regain control of the game.

Sunday is the sixth Game 7 Spoelstra will coach. He has won three of them, those coming in the title runs in 2012 and 2013 when James was on his side. The Heat’s institutional knowledge is often staggering, and Game 7s are another example. President Pat Riley has been involved in more than a dozen. In 1988, when Riley was coaching the Lakers to a title, he won them in three consecutive series.

The Boston Celtics and Miami Heat are tied 3-3 with a trip to the NBA Finals on the line. You can catch all the action on ESPN.

Game 7: Sunday, 8:30 p.m. ET (ESPN)

The last time Spoelstra faced the Celtics in a Game 7, in 2012, he stunned Boston by morphing Chris Bosh into a 3-point shooter as part of a surprise game plan. Bosh had only made four 3-pointers in his first 40 career playoff games but made three in the second half that night as the Heat advanced to the Finals.

“We have earned the right to have this [Game 7] experience,” Spoelstra said Saturday.

Spoelstra was talking about the road win in Game 6 and the season-long grind that won the Heat the right to host. But he’s got the experience edge on Celtics’ coach Ime Udoka, coaching his first Game 7, and probably has something up his sleeve that he is ready to spring on the Celtics.

— Brian Windhorst

Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

Second-half performance key for Celtics duo Tatum, Brown

The Celtics had clawed their way back by halftime of Game 6, trailing by just two after a slow start. Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown combined to score 36 of Boston’s 46 points at the midway point.

But when the second half started, both Tatum and Brown disappeared.

Boston’s stars combined to take seven shots in the second half. In the fourth quarter, they each took only one.

That kind of inactivity won’t get it done in a Game 7 on the road Sunday.

“I think it’s just the flow of the game, how the game was going,” Tatum said of his second-half struggles. “Obviously, I’ve got to watch the film and things like that, but I think being out there and just the feel of the game, drawing a lot of attention, trying to find mismatches.”

The NBA75 celebration continues with the NBA playoffs, which runs through June, when the league will crown a champion for its milestone season.

East finals: Celtics 3, Heat 3
o Udoka: Celtics need better start in G7
o Celtics one win away from Finals
o Boston’s defense is too much for Miami

West finals: Warriors 4, Mavs 1
o Warriors eliminate Mavs, head to Finals
o ‘OMG WIGGS’: Reaction to poster dunk
o The best version of Draymond Green

MORE: Scores, full schedule and more

This is the third time Tatum has played in an Eastern Conference final in his first five NBA seasons. It’s the fourth time in six seasons for Brown. It has been a long time, however, since they were last in a Game 7 of an East final: four years ago, when they hosted the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Tatum threw down a memorable dunk over LeBron James in that game, but it was the Cavaliers who advanced to the Finals. Earlier this week, after Boston won Game 5, Tatum was asked if it felt different this time around being up 3-2 in this series, just as Boston had been then in 2018.

“Yeah, it does,” Tatum said. “My rookie year, being up 3-2, you know, obviously different team now. I’m a lot better, J.B. is. We’re just older. And we’ve been through those tough times.”

Those tough times have prepared Tatum and Brown for this moment — the same one they went through when they went to Milwaukee and won a Game 6 to keep their season alive in the East semifinals, before coming home and winning Game 7.

Now more than ever the Celtics need their leading men to rise to the moment Sunday and not allow the Heat to take them out of the proceedings like they did in Game 6.

— Tim Bontemps

All eyes should be on Heat star Butler

Jimmy Butler versus Boston’s elite defense has been the single most important factor in this series, and it will be the thing to watch in Game 7. If Butler has another big game, Miami will likely advance — if he does not, Boston will.

Boston was the most efficient defense in the NBA this season in part because it defended drives as well as any team in the NBA. The Celtics ranked first in the league by holding drivers to just 0.93 points on average thanks in large part to their fleet of aggressive, long and talented defenders.

But that same crew was not at their best in Game 6, as Butler effectively turned pick actions into juicy driving opportunities that propelled Miami on the road.

Butler drove the ball 10 times in Game 4 and just nine times in Game 5, per Second Spectrum tracking. But in Game 6, Butler recorded 23 drives and in turn, he scored 20 points in the paint — tied for his most in any game this season — and added 11 more at the line.

— Kirk Goldsberry

Strus stepping up could fuel Miami’s long game

It has become a simple theme for the Heat throughout some of their biggest games this postseason — when Max Strus hits shots, Miami usually finds a way to win.

In a series-clinching Game 5 win against the Atlanta Hawks in the Eastern Conference quarterfinals, Strus delivered 15 points and hit three shots from beyond the arc. And in Games 5 and 6 wins against the Philadelphia 76ers — Strus had a combined 39 points and eight 3s that spaced the floor for the rest of his teammates. In Game 3 against the Celtics, it was 16 points, including a dagger 3-pointer late in the game that helped seal the win for Miami.

In Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals, there was Strus knocking down big shots, while chipping in 13 points and three more 3s. The fact he did all that in Game 6 after coming into the game having missed all 16 of the shots he took in Game 4 and 5 made it that much sweeter for a Heat team that has developed trust in him throughout the past two years.

With Tyler Herro‘s status for Game 7 uncertain because of a groin injury, it will be up to the 26-year-old sharpshooter to rise to the occasion when the Heat need him to deliver again. Strus has shown during this playoff run that he is not afraid of the stage, and now he has the opportunity to live up to the moment.

— Nick Friedell

play0:58

Celtics head coach Ime Udoka voices his thoughts on having to play Game 7 in Miami.

Vegas favors Celtics despite being on the road

The Heat played all regular season for the right to host Game 7 as the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference, one spot ahead of the Celtics. Las Vegas isn’t impressed. Boston still enters the game as 2.5-point favorites at Caesars Sportsbook.

This is just the third time a road team has been favored in a winner-take-all game since 1990-1991, per ESPN Stats & Information. The other two were the LA Clippers at the Houston Rockets in the 2015 conference semifinals (who also lost Game 6 at home with a chance to advance) and the Golden State Warriors at Houston in the 2018 conference finals.

Get access to exclusive original series, premium articles from our NBA insiders, the full 30 for 30 library and more. Sign up now to unlock everything ESPN+ has to offer.

The Rockets split those two games, beating the Clippers in 2015 but losing to the Warriors — who went on to win their third championship in four years — in 2018. (The Celtics were also favored over Toronto as the lower seed in Game 7 in 2020, but that game was played on a neutral site in the NBA’s bubble restart.)

It’s not terribly surprising the road Game 7 favorites have all come within the last eight postseasons. As home-court advantage has diminished in recent years, so it appears has the Game 7 edge.

Not counting 2020, home teams in Game 7 have gone 13-8 (.619) with a plus-4.1 point differential in that span. Over the previous 10 years, they were 22-9 (.710) with a plus-8.4 differential. And even that was a decline from the massive advantage in the 1990s, when home teams went 16-2 in Game 7s, outscoring their opponents by an average of 9.5 points per game.

The Celtics being favored on the road makes more sense in the context of the way they have outscored Miami over the course of this series. Boston’s plus-33 point differential through six games is seventh-largest in NBA history in favor of a lower seed in a seven-game series. Of the previous six where the road team had a plus-30 differential or better entering Game 7, they went 4-2 in the deciding game.

— Kevin Pelton

Read More

Game 7 is here! The keys that will send the Heat or Celtics to the NBA Finalson May 29, 2022 at 4:13 pm Read More »

Jimmy Butler, Jayson Tatum and the intangibles that could swing Game 7on May 29, 2022 at 2:16 pm

After the many ups and downs of the 2022 Eastern Conference finals, including double-digit wins and injuries to star players, the Miami Heat and Boston Celtics are facing off for Game 7 in Miami on Sunday at 8:30 p.m. ET (on ESPN and the ESPN app).

The winner will advance to play the Golden State Warriors in the NBA Finals, with Game 1 on Thursday (9 p.m. ET, ABC and the ESPN app).

Jimmy Butler helped Miami stave off elimination Friday night by pouring in 47 points, 9 rebounds and 8 assists in a 111-103 Game 6 win in Boston. Now the top-seeded Heat will try to cash in on any semblance of a home-court advantage despite the Celtics going 2-1 at FTX Arena in this conference final series.

“You put yourself in this position, going up 3-2, to have two games to win one,” Celtics coach Ime Udoka said Saturday. “So as much as you love to finish it on your home court, we’ve been up and down this series, and due to that, it’s where it is right now.”

Looking ahead to Game 7 on Sunday, we asked our ESPN experts to highlight a player, coach, trend or strategy that could swing the outcome and propel one of these teams into the Finals. Here are their answers:

Heat’s Spoelstra orchestrating a Game 7 chess match

After emerging from the 2020 Finals, a series he ended up losing to the Los Angeles Lakers, Erik Spoelstra assessed the strategy matchup against LeBron James.

2 Related

“He was making adjustments to our adjustments to the adjustments. And not making an adjustment to the adjustment I thought about making an adjustment, but I bluffed the adjustment, and he knew I was making a bluff,” Spoelstra said then.

The Heat coach was paying James, who led the team to four Finals and two titles under Spoelstra, a compliment. But Spoelstra was also offering a glimpse into his own world.

All NBA coaches make strategy moves during playoff series, but Spoelstra is in an elite class. He’s grandmaster in the chess matches that take place over the course of seven, even when he’s just faking a maneuver.

In Game 6 on Friday, he knew the Celtics had significantly prepared for his zone defense, so in the second half he broke out sudden double teams on Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown that staggered the Boston offense. It helped undercut a comeback attempt and buy the Heat time to regain control of the game.

Sunday is the sixth Game 7 Spoelstra will coach. He has won three of them, those coming in the title runs in 2012 and 2013 when James was on his side. The Heat’s institutional knowledge is often staggering, and Game 7s are another example. President Pat Riley has been involved in more than a dozen. In 1988, when Riley was coaching the Lakers to a title, he won them in three consecutive series.

The Boston Celtics and Miami Heat are tied 3-3 with a trip to the NBA Finals on the line. You can catch all the action on ESPN.

Game 7: Sunday, 8:30 p.m. ET (ESPN)

The last time Spoelstra faced the Celtics in a Game 7, in 2012, he stunned Boston by morphing Chris Bosh into a 3-point shooter as part of a surprise game plan. Bosh had only made four 3-pointers in his first 40 career playoff games but made three in the second half that night as the Heat advanced to the Finals.

“We have earned the right to have this [Game 7] experience,” Spoelstra said Saturday.

Spoelstra was talking about the road win in Game 6 and the season-long grind that won the Heat the right to host. But he’s got the experience edge on Celtics’ coach Ime Udoka, coaching his first Game 7, and probably has something up his sleeve that he is ready to spring on the Celtics.

— Brian Windhorst

Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

Second-half performance key for Celtics duo Tatum, Brown

The Celtics had clawed their way back by halftime of Game 6, trailing by just two after a slow start. Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown combined to score 36 of Boston’s 46 points at the midway point.

But when the second half started, both Tatum and Brown disappeared.

Boston’s stars combined to take seven shots in the second half. In the fourth quarter, they each took only one.

That kind of inactivity won’t get it done in a Game 7 on the road Sunday.

“I think it’s just the flow of the game, how the game was going,” Tatum said of his second-half struggles. “Obviously, I’ve got to watch the film and things like that, but I think being out there and just the feel of the game, drawing a lot of attention, trying to find mismatches.”

The NBA75 celebration continues with the NBA playoffs, which runs through June, when the league will crown a champion for its milestone season.

East finals: Celtics 3, Heat 3
o Udoka: Celtics need better start in G7
o Celtics one win away from Finals
o Boston’s defense is too much for Miami

West finals: Warriors 4, Mavs 1
o Warriors eliminate Mavs, head to Finals
o ‘OMG WIGGS’: Reaction to poster dunk
o The best version of Draymond Green

MORE: Scores, full schedule and more

This is the third time Tatum has played in an Eastern Conference final in his first five NBA seasons. It’s the fourth time in six seasons for Brown. It has been a long time, however, since they were last in a Game 7 of an East final: four years ago, when they hosted the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Tatum threw down a memorable dunk over LeBron James in that game, but it was the Cavaliers who advanced to the Finals. Earlier this week, after Boston won Game 5, Tatum was asked if it felt different this time around being up 3-2 in this series, just as Boston had been then in 2018.

“Yeah, it does,” Tatum said. “My rookie year, being up 3-2, you know, obviously different team now. I’m a lot better, J.B. is. We’re just older. And we’ve been through those tough times.”

Those tough times have prepared Tatum and Brown for this moment — the same one they went through when they went to Milwaukee and won a Game 6 to keep their season alive in the East semifinals, before coming home and winning Game 7.

Now more than ever the Celtics need their leading men to rise to the moment Sunday and not allow the Heat to take them out of the proceedings like they did in Game 6.

— Tim Bontemps

All eyes should be on Heat star Butler

Jimmy Butler versus Boston’s elite defense has been the single most important factor in this series, and it will be the thing to watch in Game 7. If Butler has another big game, Miami will likely advance — if he does not, Boston will.

Boston was the most efficient defense in the NBA this season in part because it defended drives as well as any team in the NBA. The Celtics ranked first in the league by holding drivers to just 0.93 points on average thanks in large part to their fleet of aggressive, long and talented defenders.

But that same crew was not at their best in Game 6, as Butler effectively turned pick actions into juicy driving opportunities that propelled Miami on the road.

Butler drove the ball 10 times in Game 4 and just nine times in Game 5, per Second Spectrum tracking. But in Game 6, Butler recorded 23 drives and in turn, he scored 20 points in the paint — tied for his most in any game this season — and added 11 more at the line.

— Kirk Goldsberry

Strus stepping up could fuel Miami’s long game

It has become a simple theme for the Heat throughout some of their biggest games this postseason — when Max Strus hits shots, Miami usually finds a way to win.

In a series-clinching Game 5 win against the Atlanta Hawks in the Eastern Conference quarterfinals, Strus delivered 15 points and hit three shots from beyond the arc. And in Games 5 and 6 wins against the Philadelphia 76ers — Strus had a combined 39 points and eight 3s that spaced the floor for the rest of his teammates. In Game 3 against the Celtics, it was 16 points, including a dagger 3-pointer late in the game that helped seal the win for Miami.

In Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals, there was Strus knocking down big shots, while chipping in 13 points and three more 3s. The fact he did all that in Game 6 after coming into the game having missed all 16 of the shots he took in Game 4 and 5 made it that much sweeter for a Heat team that has developed trust in him throughout the past two years.

With Tyler Herro‘s status for Game 7 uncertain because of a groin injury, it will be up to the 26-year-old sharpshooter to rise to the occasion when the Heat need him to deliver again. Strus has shown during this playoff run that he is not afraid of the stage, and now he has the opportunity to live up to the moment.

— Nick Friedell

play0:58

Celtics head coach Ime Udoka voices his thoughts on having to play Game 7 in Miami.

Vegas favors Celtics despite being on the road

The Heat played all regular season for the right to host Game 7 as the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference, one spot ahead of the Celtics. Las Vegas isn’t impressed. Boston still enters the game as 2.5-point favorites at Caesars Sportsbook.

This is just the third time a road team has been favored in a winner-take-all game since 1990-1991, per ESPN Stats & Information. The other two were the LA Clippers at the Houston Rockets in the 2015 conference semifinals (who also lost Game 6 at home with a chance to advance) and the Golden State Warriors at Houston in the 2018 conference finals.

Get access to exclusive original series, premium articles from our NBA insiders, the full 30 for 30 library and more. Sign up now to unlock everything ESPN+ has to offer.

The Rockets split those two games, beating the Clippers in 2015 but losing to the Warriors — who went on to win their third championship in four years — in 2018. (The Celtics were also favored over Toronto as the lower seed in Game 7 in 2020, but that game was played on a neutral site in the NBA’s bubble restart.)

It’s not terribly surprising the road Game 7 favorites have all come within the last eight postseasons. As home-court advantage has diminished in recent years, so it appears has the Game 7 edge.

Not counting 2020, home teams in Game 7 have gone 13-8 (.619) with a plus-4.1 point differential in that span. Over the previous 10 years, they were 22-9 (.710) with a plus-8.4 differential. And even that was a decline from the massive advantage in the 1990s, when home teams went 16-2 in Game 7s, outscoring their opponents by an average of 9.5 points per game.

The Celtics being favored on the road makes more sense in the context of the way they have outscored Miami over the course of this series. Boston’s plus-33 point differential through six games is seventh-largest in NBA history in favor of a lower seed in a seven-game series. Of the previous six where the road team had a plus-30 differential or better entering Game 7, they went 4-2 in the deciding game.

— Kevin Pelton

Read More

Jimmy Butler, Jayson Tatum and the intangibles that could swing Game 7on May 29, 2022 at 2:16 pm Read More »

Early bold predictions for Justin Fields and the Chicago Bears offenseRyan Heckmanon May 29, 2022 at 12:00 pm

Use your (arrows) to browse

A year ago, the Chicago Bears were primed to head into yet another season under the reign of Matt Nagy.

The Bears’ offense was stale. It was a train on the road to nowhere, and fast. To have a rookie quarterback like first-round pick Justin Fields was supposed to be a luxury — something many coaches dream about.

Instead, Nagy played games throughout the summer and eventually worked Fields into the starting slot. But, Nagy did no favors for Fields in his rookie season, and now the Bears’ offense is largely a laughing stock based on Nagy’s doing in 2021.

Now under new offensive coordinator Luke Getsy and the leadership of Matt Eberflus, the Bears are hoping to turn a corner on offense. Not only is Fields’ development on the line, but the future of this entire franchise along with it.

The 2022 season is a big one for quarterback Justin Fields and the Chicago Bears offense.

Last year, Fields went through his share of rookie mistakes. But, there is hope for improvement in 2022.

New general manager Ryan Poles may not have done enough in the minds of every fan or analyst out there, in order to support Fields, but this is the quarterback’s time to shine. If Fields is as good as we think he is, it’s going to be up to him to make his teammates better.

If all went according to plan, and as good as it could possibly go in 2022 for Fields, then this Bears offense will look far different — and in a good way.

The 2022 season may not end up with a winning record for the Bears, but Fields and the offense could surprise some people. Erring on the side of positivity and hopefulness, let’s boldly predict some stat lines for the 2022 Bears offense.

Use your (arrows) to browse

Read More

Early bold predictions for Justin Fields and the Chicago Bears offenseRyan Heckmanon May 29, 2022 at 12:00 pm Read More »

The Chicago Cubs should strongly consider Dallas KeuchelVincent Pariseon May 29, 2022 at 11:00 am

The Chicago White Sox designated Dallas Keuchel for assignment on Saturday. For those who don’t know, that means that they cut him. He was so brutal for them in 2022 that it had to be done. To be honest, because of that fact, he would be perfect for the Chicago Cubs.

The Cubs are a very bad team. Yes, they beat the White Sox on Saturday because they took advantage of Tony La Russa’s incompetence. However, despite their struggles through the first third of the season, the White Sox are significantly better than the Cubs.

That is why Dallas Keuchel would be a great fit on the north side. They are so bad that they are going to be much better off losing a lot more games in 2022. They should be able to land a top-five pick with this disgrace of a roster and Keuchel could help with that.

It is obvious that they need someone to eat innings on the mound too which is exactly what you are going to get from him. Along the way, he is going to walk lots of guys and allow a lot of hard contact which is why he was cut but it will matter so much less with the Cubs.

The Chicago Cubs should consider bringing in Dallas Keuchel as he was just cut.

If anything, the pressure being off Keuchel might help him relax. The Cubs aren’t going anywhere so it isn’t like he is going to be in the middle of a pennant race or anything like that. He would make a great depth arm for them in what promises to be a horrid year.

It would also be nice for Dallas and his family. They wouldn’t have to move as he would be going from one side of town to another. He would also be collecting another check while playing for an MLB team again. It is so perfect.

Meanwhile, the White Sox are so lucky to get rid of this guy. All of the positives of him coming to the Cubs are why he was a very bad fit for the White Sox. They are supposed to be much better than they’ve shown and Keuchel is a big reason why. They were behind the eight-ball every time he started.

If Dallas Keuchel came to the Cubs, a lot of people would benefit from it. There is no doubt that they should at least consider it. The worst that could happen is that he continues to be bad and the Cubs rebuild properly by adding the best possible draft picks.

Read More

The Chicago Cubs should strongly consider Dallas KeuchelVincent Pariseon May 29, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »