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First swimming lessons at 73

First swimming lessons at 73

One in five Americans say they can’t swim, according to the Red Cross. The next level up (barely swim?) is where I was. I had never had lessons but taught myself to float, tread water, backstroke, and manage a couple of weak freestyle strokes.

For some reason, it’s embarrassing to not swim, almost up there with not being able to ride a bike or drive a car. Maybe it’s the surprise that was the usual reaction to my confession of ineptness in the water. 

My family never went to the beach or a pool because my dad feared water after he fell through the ice and almost drowned as a kid. In grade school I wanted to learn to swim at the YMCA, but my parents listened to the nuns who said that Catholics shouldn’t patronize a so-called Protestant organization. 

But why blame the nuns and my parents when I’d had a half-century on my own to learn? Swimming never seemed like a pressing need, however. I hoped that my limited skills would keep me from drowning in any water I was likely to be around. 

Why the impulse arose to sign up for a swimming class at age 73 is a mystery. Our building has an outdoor pool, but I lived here nine years before thinking about swimming lessons. I don’t expect to swim laps for fitness. Even if I were to become capable — a long shot — the pool isn’t open two-thirds of the year. I can’t see myself getting on a bus in the winter to go to a pool. 

Strictly speaking, then, I didn’t have much reason for swimming lessons, but I signed up for a seven-session Chicago Park District class this spring without thinking twice about it. 

Five of us gathered in March for the first one-hour lesson at the Fosco Park pool in University Village. Since I had at least 30 years on the other four, I expected to be the worst student. Our instructor, Alex, reassured me that one is never too old to swim.

Alex began by asking our goals. I didn’t realize I had a goal until “To swim one lap” popped out of my mouth. Since one lap could mean our building pool’s 13-yard length and not Fosco’s 25 yards, perhaps that was realistic. 

That first session, Alex taught us proper breathing underwater (through the nose), correct body position (level), and flutter kicking (small and fast). “Keep your legs up; kick from the hips,” Alex coached as we flutter kicked up and down the pool holding a kickboard. I returned home exhausted. The next lesson added streamlining (gliding with hands overlapped above our heads), treading water, and back floating.

Ricardo, our new teacher after Alex was transferred to another pool, started every lesson with a warmup of flutter kicking to develop stamina. It was disheartening to discover how little endurance I had in water. Apparently averaging about 10,000 steps a day is not adequate conditioning for swimming. Stamina in water is different from stamina on land, Ricardo explained.

Breaking down the parts of the front crawl, or freestyle, and the backstroke, Ricardo taught us to stroke, using one arm and then both arms, at the edge of the pool and then holding pool noodles. He added flutter kicking and, for the front crawl, side breathing. We then put all the pieces together but still used noodles for support. Starting by kicking off the wall and streamlining, we gradually increased our distance on both our backs and our fronts. Reminding us to keep our legs up and to look down when doing the front crawl, Ricardo said the body “is like a teeter-totter in the water; if the head goes up, the legs go down. You start to sink.”

I had no trouble with the backstroke, probably because I could breathe normally with my face out of the water, but the front crawl was still a problem. When Ricardo had us toss the noodles and swim freestyle half the length of the pool, I did it but was out of breath, and I couldn’t meet his next challenge of swimming the full length. I felt discouraged that I was where I’d started — I could do a backstroke but tired right away with the front crawl. I didn’t know whether to fault my breathing, strokes, endurance, or all three, but I reminded myself that when I took up running, I didn’t jog two miles immediately, and I was in my 20s then.

By that point, I had learned that there was another reason to achieve the 25-yard swim besides my goal of swimming one lap. It is the last of the Red Cross’s basic water safety competencies that I needed. I watched videos for tips on technique and went to a CPD open swim once a week to build stamina. But the goal still didn’t seem within reach in the seventh and last class when I stopped several yards short every time Ricardo told us to swim the front crawl the full length of the pool. 

With a minute left in that final class, Ricardo had us do one last freestyle swim. I was flagging as usual but determined to keep going. When my hand touched the wall, I shouted, “I did it!” Ricardo and the other two students — there were only three of us stalwarts left — cheered. It wasn’t easy, but I can work on endurance in our building’s pool this summer, hoping that my neighbors aren’t watching. 

I don’t expect to build up enough endurance, however, to swim for exercise. According to fitness websites, aerobic swimming begins at 500 yards — 20 times my hard-earned distance. I doubt that I will progress that far, and it’s okay. I’m happy to have met the Red Cross’s safety standard, and I’ll always have walking, for exercise and transportation. 

The swim class upended my notion of how fit I am, and I’ve adjusted my expectations to my age. Another need is pressing. My joints are creaky when I get up from bed. Why did I stop doing yoga? Not sure, but it’s time to resume.

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Making sense of the national media’s pessimism surrounding the Chicago BearsAnish Puligillaon May 23, 2022 at 1:00 pm

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If you’re a Chicago Bears fan, I’m sure you’ve seen it. 30th on NFL.com. 24th on ESPN. 27th on CBS Sports. 29th on NBC Sports. Even the ‘math’ (ESPN FPI) ranks the Bears 32nd in their team rankings.

With all this negativity surrounding the Bears’ outlook in 2022, the perception of this team amongst its fanbase (and even local media) and the national media could not be more diametric. Perhaps the national media, not as plugged into the team as the fans and local media, focus more on the Bears’ track record of hiring the right people and developing quarterbacks when forming their opinions, instead of evaluating their moves independent of the franchise’s history.

In any case, the outlook nationally is what it is and nothing can be done to fix this until games are played in September. However, I was curious as to how these power rankings actually pan out, especially for teams with second-year QBs expected to make big jumps.

The recent, immediate success of Justin Herbert and Joe Burrow specifically, in my opinion, has drastically altered many people’s perceptions of team building and conflated excellent wide receiver play with quarterback development, discounting other important characteristics such as leadership and football IQ which undoubtedly improve with experience.

The Chicago Bears may not be the 2022 summer media darlings, but winning May power rankings has zero relevance to how the season will play out.

A lot of what these power rankings are, and even the math, is looking at what is on paper and projecting the future. Most pundits nationally don’t have the time to watch every single snap from every single game, and more importantly, don’t have the time to monitor the pulse in all 32 locker rooms. Intangible qualities such as “a coach’s grasp on the locker room”, the scheme, player controversies, etc. are lost in the shuffle as national outlets put together content attempting to accurately characterize 32 NFL teams.

This is why even analytical projections such as FPI won’t do the Bears any favor. It wouldn’t account for a scheme change, the development of young players, and what an entire offseason of first-string reps might do for Justin Fields.

As a result, I decided to look back and see how accurate power rankings have been projecting the success of other second-year QBs. What follows here are two teams, in the past four years, that well overachieved their preseason ranking, showing how little these rankings actually mean.

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Making sense of the national media’s pessimism surrounding the Chicago BearsAnish Puligillaon May 23, 2022 at 1:00 pm Read More »

The Warriors are back in dynasty mode — because they never left iton May 23, 2022 at 2:25 pm

Memorable isn’t really the right word.

Painful, frustrating, demoralizing. That’s closer to how Draymond Green would describe the two seasons in between the Golden State Warriors‘ last NBA Finals appearance in 2019 and this season’s run to within one game of a return to the championship series after Sunday’s 109-100 win against the Dallas Mavericks in the Western Conference finals.

But there is one memory from the past two seasons that keeps coming back.

“None of these people really removed us from this space,” Green told ESPN’s Ohm Youngmisuk of the team missing the playoffs the previous two seasons. “Toronto beat us, but no one really came and said, ‘All right, the Golden State Warriors’ time is up.'”

For all his bluster and swagger, it’s easy to forget Green has always been one of the most astute observers of the NBA.

The Los Angeles Lakers won the NBA title in 2020 while the Warriors stumbled to the worst record in the league with Green, Klay Thompson and Stephen Curry missing all or significant portions of the season because of injuries. The Milwaukee Bucks won the title last season, while the Warriors were trying to groom their next generation of players to give their core another chance at reaching the biggest stage.

This season, young teams and superstars, like the three teams the Warriors have faced in these playoffs, began staking their claims on the NBA’s future. But no team or organization have come close to supplanting the Warriors from their dynastic perch.

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In the first round, Golden State took down two-time defending MVP Nikola Jokic and the Denver Nuggets. In the second round they bested Ja Morant and the Memphis Grizzlies, the team that’s often compared to them — even directly, as Dillon Brooks brashly did — during the early stages of their dynasty.

In these conference finals, the Warriors have given Mavericks superstar Luka Doncic the same type of attention and treatment they used to give to LeBron James: conceding his greatness and acknowledging he’s probably going to score 40-plus no matter what they throw at him defensively.

“Luka is incredible,” Green said of the Mavs’ All-Star, who scored 40 points Sunday but finished minus-19 in 40 minutes. “His time is now. His time is next. He’s a great player and he’s going to be great for a long time.”

The Warriors won, as they did in three out of four Finals’ matchups against James, by limiting everyone else. Sunday they held Doncic’s teammates to 36% shooting from the field and an atrocious 25% from 3.

It’s the third time in these playoffs Doncic has scored 40 or more points in a loss, tied with James (2009), Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (1977) and Jerry West (1965) for most in a single postseason, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

Over the next few weeks, much will be written and said about how the Warriors recast and reinvented themselves to get back to this stage.

But maybe the better question is whether they ever really left it?

Draymond Green and the Golden State Warriors need one more win to close out the Dallas Mavericks in this year’s Western Conference finals. Glenn James/NBAE via Getty Images

“We didn’t leave the space because we just got too old to do it,” Green told Youngmisuk. “We didn’t leave the space because all of us went our separate ways. We left the space because Klay Thompson was out and then he was out again, and Andre [Iguodala] wasn’t here.

“And then Steph Curry was out. We didn’t leave this space because we weren’t capable of being in the space anymore.”

There is one important figure from the Warriors dynasty Green left out of this analysis, of course. The guy who won back-to-back Finals MVPs in 2017 and 2018, who left as a free agent in 2019 to play for the Brooklyn NetsKevin Durant.

That could be an oversight on Green’s part, or a subtle reminder that the Warriors won a championship in 2014-15 and a single-season record 73 games in 2015-16 before Durant joined them.

That early Warriors style of play has been on full display in this series.

The top-seeded Miami Heat lead the Boston Celtics, 2-1, with a trip to the NBA Finals on the line. You can catch all the action on ESPN and ABC.

Game 4: Mon., Heat at Celtics (ABC)
Game 5: Wed., Celtics at Heat (ESPN)
Game 6*: Fri., Heat at Celtics (ESPN)
Game 7*: May 29, Celtics at Heat (ESPN)

*If necessary
All games at 8:30 p.m. ET

Those Warriors came to prominence by using their length, talent and intelligence to play suffocating defense and the NBA’s most democratic, aesthetically pleasing offense.

That, and absolutely crushing their opponents in the third quarter.

On Sunday night, Golden State turned a 48-47 halftime lead into a 78-68 cushion heading into the fourth quarter.

According to ESPN Stats & Info, the Warriors have out-scored the Mavericks by 10.3 points per game in the third quarter in this series. That is on pace to be their best such differential in any series under coach Steve Kerr — better than 9.7 points they outscored the Houston Rockets by in the third quarters of the 2018 conference finals.

That seven-game series was far closer than this or any of their subsequent conference finals games. Sunday’s win was Golden State’s ninth straight win in the conference finals, dating back to that Game 7 win in Houston in 2018.

“For us to get back to this stage and win one playoff series, let alone where we are now, it’s not motivation,” said Curry, who finished with 31 points, 11 assists and 5 rebounds. “It’s more of an excitement that we can do it a different way.”

“The motivation is that we’re back on this stage with an opportunity to chase the Finals appearance after a two-year hiatus with our core, and a new cast of characters.”

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: Heat 2, Celtics 1
o Heat survive Butler exit, earn win
o How Boston keeps bouncing back
o How vintage Butler took over Game 1

West finals: Warriors 3, Mavs 0
o Mavs’ Doncic reflective after 40 in loss
o ‘OMG WIGGS’: Reaction to poster dunk
o The best version of Draymond Green

MORE: Scores, full schedule and more

Those nine straight wins in the conference finals share a throughline, despite the two-season gap in between. The Warriors tend to get stronger as the series wears on, while simultaneously exploiting weaknesses they unearth in their opponents.

In this series, Golden State has identified the Mavericks’ lack of rim protection, which team sources told ESPN will be a point of emphasis for Dallas to address in the offseason.

According to Second Spectrum tracking, the Warriors are shooting 72.6% on layups and dunks this series — on pace to be the second-highest in a single series by any team since player tracking began in 2013-14.

Sunday they made 68.8% of their layup and dunks. Doncic was the closest defender on 11 of those and he was a sieve, yielding 10 layups or dunks, including Andrew Wigginstomahawk dunk on him with 6:38 remaining.

The 11 layup attempts are tied for second most in a game in Doncic’s career (most in his playoff career) and the 10 makes are the most he has allowed in any game.

That’s both an expression of Doncic’s individual issues on defense and the Warriors’ emphasis on forcing him to expend energy on that end of the floor.

“I’m still learning,” Doncic said. “I think after the season is done, whenever we are, I’m going to look back and learn a lot of things. This is my first conference finals in the NBA.”

The Warriors, though, have been here plenty of times before. The way they’re playing now, it’s like they never really left.

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The Warriors are back in dynasty mode — because they never left iton May 23, 2022 at 2:25 pm Read More »

These 3 trades involve Zach LaVine leaving the Chicago BullsAnish Puligillaon May 23, 2022 at 12:00 pm

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The impossible has happened. Chicago Bulls All-Star Zach LaVine has decided to leave for greener pastures. After five long, hard years in the windy city, fighting against the laughing stock reputation this franchise has had and finally helping lead our favorite team back to the playoffs, he has surprisingly left.

While, like most Bulls fans, I don’t believe Zach LaVine will be in another uniform this Fall, it’s interesting to consider the options this team has should he decide to move on. If he does, the Bulls are more or less guaranteed assets in return as none of the teams with the space to sign him outright would make any sense from a financial or winning perspective.

Most recently, the Mavericks, Hawks, Blazers, and Lakers were reported to be the four teams interested in potentially poaching Zach LaVine. All four of these teams would have to complete a sign and trade with Chicago, but oftentimes in these trades, the team getting the best player wins the deal. Since Doncic, Young, Lillard, and LeBron likely won’t be included in any trade packages – the Bulls stand to get worse as a team should LaVine leave.

This leaves the Chicago Bulls in an interesting spot. With a roster still full of young talent, but led by two stars on the wrong side of 30, where do they go? Retool and try to keep competing or tear it down and acquire as many assets as possible?

If Zach LaVine leaves, the Chicago Bulls will have some major decisions to make regarding their other two stars.

With DeMar’s trade value at an all-time high and Vucevic on a great contract for an all-star big, I believe, if Zach LaVine is intent on leaving no matter what, that the Chicago Bulls should trade their remaining two stars and attempt to rebuild around Patrick Williams and Lonzo Ball. Even though this would be a short-term setback in terms of success, it would be the best for the long-term future of this franchise.

What follows here are three trades for the Chicago Bulls’ big three that would drastically transform the team going into the 2022-23 season should Zach LaVine demand a trade and force his way out of Chicago. Once again, as a reminder, I do not believe Zach will leave Chicago – this is merely a thought experiment.

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These 3 trades involve Zach LaVine leaving the Chicago BullsAnish Puligillaon May 23, 2022 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Photos: Boeing Starliner Successfully Launches to the International Space Station

Photos: Boeing Starliner Successfully Launches to the International Space Station

After a stuck thruster valve delayed the launch of the Boeing Starliner capsule in August 2021, the spacecraft successfully lifted off this past Thursday to the International Space Station (ISS) as part of the OFT-2 mission.

Following the successful launch Starliner then autonomously docked to the ISS Friday afternoon. Starliner is carrying about 500 pounds of cargo and supplies to the station.

NASA and Boeing hope to certify Starliner for human flight after this mission. If all goes according to plan, Starliner departs the ISS on May 25, making a desert landing back on Earth in the western U.S.

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I’ve turned a lifetime fascination for space exploration and astronomy into a career writing, speaking, and creating STEM programming about all things space. Until I get the chance to experience space for myself I’ll share the stories of every mission of a lifetime I have the opportunity to witness.

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Defense, IQ and massive third-quarter runs: We’ve seen these Warriors beforeon May 23, 2022 at 1:37 pm

Memorable isn’t really the right word.

Painful, frustrating, demoralizing. That’s closer to how Draymond Green would describe the two seasons in between the Golden State Warriors‘ last NBA Finals appearance in 2019 and this season’s run to within one game of a return to the championship series after Sunday’s 109-100 win against the Dallas Mavericks in the Western Conference finals.

But there is one memory from the past two seasons that keeps coming back.

“None of these people really removed us from this space,” Green told ESPN’s Ohm Youngmisuk of the team missing the playoffs the previous two seasons. “Toronto beat us, but no one really came and said, ‘All right, the Golden State Warriors’ time is up.'”

For all his bluster and swagger, it’s easy to forget Green has always been one of the most astute observers of the NBA.

The Los Angeles Lakers won the NBA title in 2020 while the Warriors stumbled to the worst record in the league with Green, Klay Thompson and Stephen Curry missing all or significant portions of the season because of injuries. The Milwaukee Bucks won the title last season, while the Warriors were trying to groom their next generation of players to give their core another chance at reaching the biggest stage.

This season, young teams and superstars, like the three teams the Warriors have faced in these playoffs, began staking their claims on the NBA’s future. But no team or organization have come close to supplanting the Warriors from their dynastic perch.

1 Related

In the first round, Golden State took down two-time defending MVP Nikola Jokic and the Denver Nuggets. In the second round they bested Ja Morant and the Memphis Grizzlies, the team that’s often compared to them — even directly, as Dillon Brooks brashly did — during the early stages of their dynasty.

In these conference finals, the Warriors have given Mavericks superstar Luka Doncic the same type of attention and treatment they used to give to LeBron James: conceding his greatness and acknowledging he’s probably going to score 40-plus no matter what they throw at him defensively.

“Luka is incredible,” Green said of the Mavs’ All-Star, who scored 40 points Sunday but finished minus-19 in 40 minutes. “His time is now. His time is next. He’s a great player and he’s going to be great for a long time.”

The Warriors won, as they did in three out of four Finals’ matchups against James, by limiting everyone else. Sunday they held Doncic’s teammates to 36% shooting from the field and an atrocious 25% from 3.

It’s the third time in these playoffs Doncic has scored 40 or more points in a loss, tied with James (2009), Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (1977) and Jerry West (1965) for most in a single postseason, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

Over the next few weeks, much will be written and said about how the Warriors recast and reinvented themselves to get back to this stage.

But maybe the better question is whether they ever really left it?

Draymond Green and the Golden State Warriors need one more win to close out the Dallas Mavericks in this year’s Western Conference finals. Glenn James/NBAE via Getty Images

“We didn’t leave the space because we just got too old to do it,” Green told Youngmisuk. “We didn’t leave the space because all of us went our separate ways. We left the space because Klay Thompson was out and then he was out again, and Andre [Iguodala] wasn’t here.

“And then Steph Curry was out. We didn’t leave this space because we weren’t capable of being in the space anymore.”

There is one important figure from the Warriors dynasty Green left out of this analysis, of course. The guy who won back-to-back Finals MVPs in 2017 and 2018, who left as a free agent in 2019 to play for the Brooklyn NetsKevin Durant.

That could be an oversight on Green’s part, or a subtle reminder that the Warriors won a championship in 2014-15 and a single-season record 73 games in 2015-16 before Durant joined them.

That early Warriors style of play has been on full display in this series.

The top-seeded Miami Heat lead the Boston Celtics, 2-1, with a trip to the NBA Finals on the line. You can catch all the action on ESPN and ABC.

Game 4: Mon., Heat at Celtics (ABC)
Game 5: Wed., Celtics at Heat (ESPN)
Game 6*: Fri., Heat at Celtics (ESPN)
Game 7*: May 29, Celtics at Heat (ESPN)

*If necessary
All games at 8:30 p.m. ET

Those Warriors came to prominence by using their length, talent and intelligence to play suffocating defense and the NBA’s most democratic, aesthetically pleasing offense.

That, and absolutely crushing their opponents in the third quarter.

On Sunday night, Golden State turned a 48-47 halftime lead into a 78-68 cushion heading into the fourth quarter.

According to ESPN Stats & Info, the Warriors have out-scored the Mavericks by 10.3 points per game in the third quarter in this series. That is on pace to be their best such differential in any series under coach Steve Kerr — better than 9.7 points they outscored the Houston Rockets by in the third quarters of the 2018 conference finals.

That seven-game series was far closer than this or any of their subsequent conference finals games. Sunday’s win was Golden State’s ninth straight win in the conference finals, dating back to that Game 7 win in Houston in 2018.

“For us to get back to this stage and win one playoff series, let alone where we are now, it’s not motivation,” said Curry, who finished with 31 points, 11 assists and 5 rebounds. “It’s more of an excitement that we can do it a different way.”

“The motivation is that we’re back on this stage with an opportunity to chase the Finals appearance after a two-year hiatus with our core, and a new cast of characters.”

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: Heat 2, Celtics 1
o Heat survive Butler exit, earn win
o How Boston keeps bouncing back
o How vintage Butler took over Game 1

West finals: Warriors 3, Mavs 0
o Mavs’ Doncic reflective after 40 in loss
o ‘OMG WIGGS’: Reaction to poster dunk
o The best version of Draymond Green

MORE: Scores, full schedule and more

Those nine straight wins in the conference finals share a throughline, despite the two-season gap in between. The Warriors tend to get stronger as the series wears on, while simultaneously exploiting weaknesses they unearth in their opponents.

In this series, Golden State has identified the Mavericks’ lack of rim protection, which team sources told ESPN will be a point of emphasis for Dallas to address in the offseason.

According to Second Spectrum tracking, the Warriors are shooting 72.6% on layups and dunks this series — on pace to be the second-highest in a single series by any team since player tracking began in 2013-14.

Sunday they made 68.8% of their layup and dunks. Doncic was the closest defender on 11 of those and he was a sieve, yielding 10 layups or dunks, including Andrew Wigginstomahawk dunk on him with 6:38 remaining.

The 11 layup attempts are tied for second most in a game in Doncic’s career (most in his playoff career) and the 10 makes are the most he has allowed in any game.

That’s both an expression of Doncic’s individual issues on defense and the Warriors’ emphasis on forcing him to expend energy on that end of the floor.

“I’m still learning,” Doncic said. “I think after the season is done, whenever we are, I’m going to look back and learn a lot of things. This is my first conference finals in the NBA.”

The Warriors, though, have been here plenty of times before. The way they’re playing now, it’s like they never really left.

Read More

Defense, IQ and massive third-quarter runs: We’ve seen these Warriors beforeon May 23, 2022 at 1:37 pm Read More »

Chicago Bulls should target these guards in 2022 NBA DraftRyan Heckmanon May 23, 2022 at 11:00 am

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With the 2022 NBA Draft just one month away, the Chicago Bulls get set to add another talented player to a current playoff roster.

On June 23, the draft takes place and these Bulls will hold the no. 18 overall pick in the first round. Without a second-round pick, this sole selection is a crucial one for a team that may need to add a key reserve to their bench.

The Bulls could have a few different options at that pick, and might end up going with a big man if the right one falls. Many would love to see the Bulls snag a backup big with this pick at no. 18.

However, another position of need for the Bulls could end up being at guard. The Bulls might be able to use another guard who could play either point or two guard.

At pick no. 18, the Chicago Bulls could add a talented guard who would become a key part of the rotation.

One of the questions some fans are asking this offseason is whether or not the Bulls should hold onto Coby White. After watching him disappear in the postseason, there are a lot of fans who would like to see White moved.

However, because of his poor play in the postseason, White’s trade value is going to be at its lowest point.

Even if the Bulls don’t get a ton in return, trading White should be an option. The Bulls need more consistency from their backup guards than what White provided them this season. Chicago needs a guard who can play defense, first and foremost, but also give them another shooter off the bench.

Once we get out of the top eight or nine picks, this draft is going to get interesting and could see several names get called at different positions. But, when the Bulls are on the clock at no. 18 overall, one of the following guards would be excellent options.

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Chicago Bulls should target these guards in 2022 NBA DraftRyan Heckmanon May 23, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

Wiggins’ huge dunk, effort spark Dubs to 3-0 leadon May 23, 2022 at 7:33 am

DALLAS — As Andrew Wiggins took off from just inside the free throw line, as his body met Luka Doncic‘s in the air, as his head reached above the cylinder, the Golden State Warriors forward said he saw just one thing: “I just saw rim.”

His poster on the Dallas Mavericks star was originally called as a charge, but Warriors coach Steve Kerr swiftly challenged it, and the decision was overturned.

Wiggins doesn’t know where that dunk ranks in his collection, but Stephen Curry say it’s the best he’s ever seen from his teammate. Klay Thompson said he looked like Dominique Wilkinson.

“That was impressive, I’m not going to lie,” Doncic said of the poster. “I saw the video again and I was like, ooh. That was pretty incredible. I wish I had those bunnies.”

2 Related

Wiggins had a postseason career-high 3 dunks against the Mavericks on Sunday night as his performance sparked a 109-100 win by the Warriors and gave them a commanding 3-0 lead in the Western Conference finals.

“If you can come in and play good basketball, you can essentially put a team away tonight,” Warriors forward Draymond Green said. “Now, this team isn’t going to quit … but you can instill a lot of doubt with coming out and winning this game. And we knew that.”

Ask any NBA player and they’ll tell you the playoffs are different. The postseason has a different level of intensity and therefore requires a whole different level of play from individuals. Green elevates himself so much, that the term “Playoff Draymond,” has been coined for the way he performs.

Before this postseason run, Wiggins hadn’t had much experience in the playoffs. But through his 14 playoff games this year, he’s proven to have a playoff level of his own.

On Sunday, he finished with 27 points — 18 of which came in the restricted area — on 11-of-20 shooting and 11 rebounds.

Andrew Wiggins’ electrifying dunk on Luka Doncic earned high praise from his Warriors teammates — as well as the Mavs superstar himself, who remarked, “That was impressive, I’m not going to lie.” Glenn James/NBAE via Getty Images

“That’s a guy who has been criticized for being lackadaisical and the beat goes on, you’ve heard it all, yet, on the biggest stage he’s come through,” Green said. “It’s great to see, absolutely amazing to see him pick up his level of play.”

Wiggins started the season playing with this same level of assertiveness and aggression. It’s what earned him his first-ever All-Star appearance — and as a starter, at that. Coming out of the break, he hit a lull. But his teammates say that’s normal.

“He’s worked so hard to get to this point,” Thompson said. “We’ve just got to help him become a champion, and he will obviously help us. What he did tonight … that’s what we brought him on for. He is such a talented player. I’m so grateful we have him.”

Kerr said the Warriors wouldn’t be winning playoff games without Wiggins, particularly this series against the Mavericks. In Game 3, Wiggins held Doncic to 8-of-15 shooting. Wiggins has been the best primary defender on Doncic all postseason, holding him to 53% shooting — Doncic’s lowest field goal percentage so far these playoffs.

Heading into this series, the Warriors’ mindset for defending Doncic was understanding they probably couldn’t completely stop him, but just make sure everything he gets is earned, not given. That, and eliminate every other scoring option.

Doncic has now scored 40 points in two games, and yet Golden State leads the series 3-0. But, they have not started looking ahead to the Finals. The Warriors have been in this position too many times to look too far ahead.

“This team won’t lay it down,” Thompson said. “We are going to have to go take it. They are not going to give it to us. Just going to have to just play together, play as a unit. Strength in numbers, that’s been our mantra.”

“That’s a guy who has been criticized for being lackadaisical and the beat goes on, you’ve heard it all, yet, on the biggest stage he’s come through. It’s great to see, absolutely amazing to see him pick up his level of play.”
Draymond Green on Andrew Wiggins

Looking at the odds, the Warriors are now the favorites to win the NBA championship. Ask Thompson and he says he believed that to be true from the moment this season tipped off.

But the same can’t be said for everyone else, especially outside of the Warriors locker room. This season was viewed as a building year — integrating their core of Curry, Thompson and Green with their newfound talent of Jordan Poole, James Wiseman and Jonathan Kuminga.

But then Otto Porter Jr. emerged as their most reliable veteran. Kevon Looney became an iron man. And Wiggins shed his label as a “lazy” player to become an All-Star.

All of that has led the Warriors to find themselves in a position that this franchise — albeit not all the players — is very familiar with: one game away from the Finals. But, they won’t skip steps.

“Being one win away from the Finals means absolutely nothing,” Green said. “It means you have to win one more game and we have to make sure we come in with an even better focus than we did tonight, which was incredible. Closeout games are always the toughest. We have to come out and win the game, they are not going to give it to us.”

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Wiggins’ huge dunk, effort spark Dubs to 3-0 leadon May 23, 2022 at 7:33 am Read More »

Wiggins’ huge dunk, effort sparks Dubs to 3-0 leadon May 23, 2022 at 7:33 am

DALLAS — As Andrew Wiggins took off from just inside the free throw line, as his body met Luka Doncic‘s in the air, as his head reached above the cylinder, the Golden State Warriors forward said he saw just one thing: “I just saw rim.”

His poster on the Dallas Mavericks star was originally called as a charge, but Warriors coach Steve Kerr swiftly challenged it, and the decision was overturned.

Wiggins doesn’t know where that dunk ranks in his collection, but Stephen Curry say it’s the best he’s ever seen from his teammate. Klay Thompson said he looked like Dominique Wilkinson.

“That was impressive, I’m not going to lie,” Doncic said of the poster. “I saw the video again and I was like, ooh. That was pretty incredible. I wish I had those bunnies.”

2 Related

Wiggins had a postseason career-high 3 dunks against the Mavericks on Sunday night as his performance sparked a 109-100 win by the Warriors and gave them a commanding 3-0 lead in the Western Conference finals.

“If you can come in and play good basketball, you can essentially put a team away tonight,” Warriors forward Draymond Green said. “Now, this team isn’t going to quit … but you can instill a lot of doubt with coming out and winning this game. And we knew that.”

Ask any NBA player and they’ll tell you the playoffs are different. The postseason has a different level of intensity and therefore requires a whole different level of play from individuals. Green elevates himself so much, that the term “Playoff Draymond,” has been coined for the way he performs.

Before this postseason run, Wiggins hadn’t had much experience in the playoffs. But through his 14 playoff games this year, he’s proven to have a playoff level of his own.

On Sunday, he finished with 27 points — 18 of which came in the restricted area — on 11-of-20 shooting and 11 rebounds.

Andrew Wiggins’ electrifying dunk on Luka Doncic earned high praise from his Warriors teammates — as well as the Mavs superstar himself, who remarked, “That was impressive, I’m not going to lie.” Glenn James/NBAE via Getty Images

“That’s a guy who has been criticized for being lackadaisical and the beat goes on, you’ve heard it all, yet, on the biggest stage he’s come through,” Green said. “It’s great to see, absolutely amazing to see him pick up his level of play.”

Wiggins started the season playing with this same level of assertiveness and aggression. It’s what earned him his first-ever All-Star appearance — and as a starter, at that. Coming out of the break, he hit a lull. But his teammates say that’s normal.

“He’s worked so hard to get to this point,” Thompson said. “We’ve just got to help him become a champion, and he will obviously help us. What he did tonight … that’s what we brought him on for. He is such a talented player. I’m so grateful we have him.”

Kerr said the Warriors wouldn’t be winning playoff games without Wiggins, particularly this series against the Mavericks. In Game 3, Wiggins held Doncic to 8-of-15 shooting. Wiggins has been the best primary defender on Doncic all postseason, holding him to 53% shooting — Doncic’s lowest field goal percentage so far these playoffs.

Heading into this series, the Warriors’ mindset for defending Doncic was understanding they probably couldn’t completely stop him, but just make sure everything he gets is earned, not given. That, and eliminate every other scoring option.

Doncic has now scored 40 points in two games, and yet Golden State leads the series 3-0. But, they have not started looking ahead to the Finals. The Warriors have been in this position too many times to look too far ahead.

“This team won’t lay it down,” Thompson said. “We are going to have to go take it. They are not going to give it to us. Just going to have to just play together, play as a unit. Strength in numbers, that’s been our mantra.”

“That’s a guy who has been criticized for being lackadaisical and the beat goes on, you’ve heard it all, yet, on the biggest stage he’s come through. It’s great to see, absolutely amazing to see him pick up his level of play.”
Draymond Green on Andrew Wiggins

Looking at the odds, the Warriors are now the favorites to win the NBA championship. Ask Thompson and he says he believed that to be true from the moment this season tipped off.

But the same can’t be said for everyone else, especially outside of the Warriors locker room. This season was viewed as a building year — integrating their core of Curry, Thompson and Green with their newfound talent of Jordan Poole, James Wiseman and Jonathan Kuminga.

But then Otto Porter Jr. emerged as their most reliable veteran. Kevon Looney became an iron man. And Wiggins shed his label as a “lazy” player to become an All-Star.

All of that has led the Warriors to find themselves in a position that this franchise — albeit not all the players — is very familiar with: one game away from the Finals. But, they won’t skip steps.

“Being one win away from the Finals means absolutely nothing,” Green said. “It means you have to win one more game and we have to make sure we come in with an even better focus than we did tonight, which was incredible. Closeout games are always the toughest. We have to come out and win the game, they are not going to give it to us.”

Read More

Wiggins’ huge dunk, effort sparks Dubs to 3-0 leadon May 23, 2022 at 7:33 am Read More »

The Last Week of School is the Best Week of the Year

The Last Week of School is the Best Week of the Year

This week is one of my favorite weeks of the year: the last week of school. With fifty-two weeks each year it can be tough to choose the best. The build-up to Christmas is nice. That lazy week between Christmas and New Year’s, when the entire world seems discombobulated and economic production falls close to zero is pretty great. Thanksgiving and its excesses can really hit the spot. And nobody hates Spring Break.

But there’s nothing like that last week of school.

My kids have four days left. The school year ends on Thursday, officially, but what’s really happening these last four days? The high schoolers will have finals, no doubt. There’s plenty of studying to be done, but nothing new to be learned. Woe to the teacher who tries to cover new material this week. It ain’t happenin’.

The elementary school usually has field day – parachute, kickball, tug o’ war – one afternoon this last week, but they moved up the schedule this year for some reason, so it’s already done. Monday is iPad Charger Turn In Day, which seems to imply iPads will use less than 100% of their juice over the following three days. There’s the awards ceremony, which will take up an hour, and the Fifth Grade Send Off, which is Thursday’s big deal. But what happens the rest of the week? Not a lot. Which is what makes it great!

Speaking of Fifth Grade Send Off, this is the end of the line for me and elementary school. My kids are spread out in age such that I’ve had at least one kid in elementary school for 19 of the last 20 years. But this is it. I’ve got four more days as an elementary school parent, and I miss it already.

I could write all day about my nostalgia for something that hasn’t even ended yet, but that’s not what this is.

The last week of school.

I’m so envious of my kids. They’re finishing fifth, ninth, and eleventh grade this year. And when the bell rings on Thursday they’ll know they have the entire summer ahead of them. They’re night owls, and if you’re looking for them Thursday night at midnight, or even later, you’ll find them at home, wide awake, as if trying to milk every second from summer. Of course, that’s offset by sleeping late, and the summer sun is always high in the sky by the time they wake up. But it doesn’t matter. They don’t have to get up for school. Time becomes insignificant.

As I thought about this final week of school, I tried to pinpoint what made it so special, and not until I wrote that last sentence did I put my finger on it. Time.

My daughter is finishing fifth grade and I’m sure that summer will seem so long. She’ll probably be bored every now and then. But she won’t think about summer only being 76 days long. (I feel like summer is ending and it hasn’t even begun yet. But that’s a deeply-held trait of mine: nostalgia for something that hasn’t happened yet.) She’ll enjoy each day, and appreciate not waking up early for school, and no one telling her that she needs to go to bed. These are the nights that she’ll develop her individualism, spending hours by herself, doing whatever she wants with no expectations or responsibilities.

My sons are in high school. My older son is finishing eleventh grade, which means this could be his last summer. Next year at this time he’ll be graduating high school, and then the adult trap of productiveness falls upon him.

I’m torn between my Get A Job tendencies and my Enjoy the Summer, You’re a Kid tendencies. There’s plenty of time for work, but those years of being a kid are fleeting. And he’s old enough that his summer is going to be shorter than his sister’s summer. He knows what’s coming. He’ll enjoy the summer, but he’ll have one eye on that horrendous day in August when school begins again. He is my son after all. It’s hard to enjoy anything with a sense of dread hanging over you.

The melancholy in all of this is adulthood. Nothing ruins a childhood as completely as becoming an adult.

Some adults get summers off. I suspect that’s why many teachers choose to teach. Summers off is a definite perk. But even if an adult has summers off, they’re not really off. They know what’s coming. They know time will have its way with them, and that first day back at work will be here before they know it.

Also, let’s not forget that adults have something that kids don’t have: responsibilities. And that lack of responsibilities may be the biggest make or break factor of the summer. And once it’s gone, it’s gone. Never to return. Until retirement, I guess. Although, youth is gone by then.

I’m going to enjoy this week. There aren’t many of them left.

But don’t tell my kids.

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