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ChiSox OF Jimenez carted off with hammy injuryon April 23, 2022 at 10:37 pm

Chicago White Sox outfielder Eloy Jimenez left Saturday’s game against the Minnesota Twins with a right hamstring injury, the team announced on its official Twitter feed. He’s being further evaluated after being taken off the field on a medical cart.

Jimenez, 25, landed on first base awkwardly after hitting a ground ball to Twins third baseman Luis Arraez in the top of the second inning. He immediately went down to the ground and laid there until the cart came to get him as the training staff attended to his injury.

The latest ailment continues a two year ongoing narrative for the White Sox who lost Jimenez for nearly four months to a pectoral injury last spring training. Center fielder Luis Robert is currently nursing a groin problem after missing half of last season while third baseman Yoan Moncada hasn’t played yet this year due to a hip issue. Outfielder AJ Pollock just returned from his own hamstring injury.

The team also is down starters Lance Lynn and Lucas Giolito though the latter pitcher is scheduled to start on Sunday.

Jimenez was hitting .229 with one home run entering the game against the Twins on Saturday.

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ChiSox OF Jimenez carted off with hammy injuryon April 23, 2022 at 10:37 pm Read More »

‘Is this kid gonna fold?’: How 21-year-old Tyrese Maxey has become a playoff star for the Sixerson April 23, 2022 at 9:45 pm

WHILE THE NBA world waited on the offseason’s biggest drama, Philadelphia 76ers coach Doc Rivers pondered the future of a point guard not named Ben Simmons.

When Rivers met with his coaches ahead of the 2021-22 season to discuss lineups, he made a bold declaration:

No matter what happened with Simmons, Tyrese Maxey was going to start for the 76ers.

“That [was met] with a little, like, ‘How are we going to start him with Ben?'” Rivers said during practice last week. “And I said, ‘I don’t know, but he’s starting.'”

Maxey had played just 15.3 minutes per game as a rookie, showing flashes of promise, such as a 39-point, 44-minute performance last January, when four 76ers starters were sidelined due to COVID-19 health and safety protocols. He dropped 30 points in 35 minutes in the 2020-21 regular-season finale four months later.

But this was a leap to full-time starting point guard for a team with high-profile veterans, championship aspirations and the league’s biggest saga looming over it.

Predictably, as the season began there were plenty of growing pains.

“You couldn’t hear anything but ‘Tyrese! What the hell, Tyrese!'” 76ers forward Georges Niang said, imitating Rivers’ voice.

“And, you’re like, ‘Man, is this kid gonna fold?'”

2 Related

He didn’t. And after escaping that early-season commentary from Rivers, Maxey has not only become a fan favorite, but a critical player next to Joel Embiid and James Harden.

As the 76ers sit one win over the Toronto Raptors away from reaching the Eastern Conference semifinals, it’s Maxey — equipped with bursts of speed and energy and a historically improved jump shot — who could determine just how high this group’s ceiling can be raised.

“In my exit interview [last season], my goal was to get one percent better every single day,” Maxey says. “I stuck with it the entire summer.”

The result? Maxey has evolved from spark-plug rookie to offensive threat whom defenses can’t afford to ignore.

Where Maxey lands on ESPN’s 25-under-25 rankings

FEW GUARDS DART to the basket faster than the lightning-quick Maxey. The problem was what he did once he got there.

As a rookie, Maxey would regularly toss up awkward floaters when he entered the lane, a practice on which he and Rivers agreed the 6-foot-2 guard was far too reliant.

“I always thought, man, if I go in there, I think I’m going to get my shot blocked,” Maxey says.

“But then I just kept doing it and I realized, if I can get to the rim, I’m athletic enough and I have enough touch [that] more than likely it’ll go in.”

So Maxey went to school. While he grew up idolizing another dynamic combo guard in Dwyane Wade, Maxey spent much of the summer studying two of the best small interior scorers in recent NBA history.

Tyrese Maxey is a key reason why the 76ers are one win from the Eastern Conference semifinals. Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images

“Tony Parker had a floater, but he also would get to the rim and he was able to put the ball on the backboard in different spots where the big couldn’t get it,” Maxey says. “And then Kyrie [Irving] … studied the spots on the backboard where you can spin it and it’ll fall in.”

Now, according to ESPN Stats & Information, Maxey is finding success attacking the rim from every angle. And while he’s going to his floater 4% less than last season, his 72 makes through this regular season and playoffs still rank among the top 10 leaguewide.

Maxey shot 60.5% on layups and dunks during the regular season, up from 54.7% in 2020-21. He’s been automatic in the playoffs, going 13-for-13 from the restricted area.

“He gets to the front of the rim before your help is there because he’s so fast,” Raptors coach Nick Nurse said Sunday. “He’s got a lot of the offensive package going, that’s for sure.”

That package wouldn’t be complete without also a massive upgrade to Maxey’s jump shot. That meant a summer of reps from beyond the arc — a lot of them.

“I would get up, and I’d be in the gym,” Maxey says. “First one in the gym at 6 a.m. and I’d try to make at least 700, 800 shots. And then I’d go lift and I’d come back again at 10 [a.m.] and I’m doing the same thing.”

That offseason gauntlet has paid historic dividends.

PlayerCatch
& shootOff the
dribbleDesmond Bane44.0%43.1%Mike Conley40.7%40.9%Tyrese Haliburton42.8%40.7%Kyrie Irving40.5%43.5%Tyrese Maxey44.9%40.3%(min. 100 3-point attempts each)

After shooting 30% on 1.7 3-point attempts per game last season, Maxey leapt to 42.7% on over four attempts per game in 2021-22.

Since the NBA introduced the 3-point line in the 1979-80 season, only two other players — Allan Houston and Todd Day — saw their percentages jump by at least 12% on such a dramatic increase in attempts, per ESPN Stats & Information research.

The season it happened for Houston and Day was 1994-95, when the NBA moved its 3-point line back to 22 feet, meaning Maxey is the only player in NBA history with such an improvement from the standard 3-point line.

Maxey also shot 44.9% on catch-and-shoot 3s, the sixth-best mark among the 175 players who attempted at least 150 such shots this season.

“It changes the dynamic of their team,” Raptors guard Fred VanVleet said last week of Maxey, whose scoring average jumped from 8.0 points per game during his rookie year to 17.5.

“Any time you’ve got a guy that’s got that type of speed and athleticism and has turned into a really good shooter, it just changes the floor spacing and the balance and the way that they operate, and it frees up Joel, it frees up James.”

AS HARDEN DRIBBLED up the left side of the court and surveyed the defense late in the third quarter of Game 1 against the Raptors, he saw a blur in a blue jersey streaking behind Toronto’s retreating defense.

Harden fired a dime, a two-handed, cross-court bounce right to Maxey, who launched and soared to the other side of the rim to finish a left-handed reverse layup, avoiding the block attempt by the chasing Pascal Siakam in the process.

What had started as a typical transition break turned into a lasting image of Maxey’s breakout playoff performance — and season.

Tyrese Maxey’s rise has given the 76ers one of the most exciting big threes of the 2022 NBA playoffs. AP Photo/Matt Slocum

“I saw growth,” Harden said of Maxey’s 2021-22 after his 38-point Game 1. “I saw him from being up-and-down and not really having consistent minutes last year in the postseason to starting and having a huge role on a championship-contending team.”

That growth has taken Maxey, 21, from a rookie who was seen as an intriguing part of the 76ers’ future — and occasionally rumored as a possible inclusion in trades — into a core player deemed untouchable in the Harden-Simmons trade discussions.

Harden’s elite passing, coupled with the defensive attention Embiid commands, has given Maxey the room to thrive in ways few around the league could’ve anticipated.

As Philadelphia moves forward — presumably with Harden receiving a lucrative new long-term contract this summer that would take him into his late 30s — Maxey is on a path to ensuring the 76ers have one of the league’s most exciting big threes.

That hasn’t prevented the occasional grumble from Rivers — usually because of Maxey’s defense, which remains a work in progress — but the 76ers guard of the present and future has deservedly earned the respect of opposing defenses, coaches and his teammates.

“If it was up to me, he would probably be the Most Improved Player in the league,” Embiid said before the start of the playoffs, “[with] what he’s accomplished and the situation we were in all year.

“I’ve always believed it was going to pay off.”

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‘Is this kid gonna fold?’: How 21-year-old Tyrese Maxey has become a playoff star for the Sixerson April 23, 2022 at 9:45 pm Read More »

Raptors’ Barnes named NBA Rookie of the Yearon April 23, 2022 at 7:18 pm

TORONTO — Raptors forward Scottie Barnes edged Cleveland Cavaliers forward Evan Mobley to win the 2021-22 NBA Rookie of the Year Award, with the 15-point difference between them marking the smallest gap over the 20 seasons the NBA has conducted the voting under its current format.

Barnes, who returned to action Saturday in Game 4 of Toronto’s Eastern Conference first-round series against the Philadelphia 76ers after missing Games 2 and 3 with a sprained left ankle, had 48 first-place votes and finished with 358 points, while being listed on every ballot.

Mobley, meanwhile, had 43 first-place votes and was named to 99 of the 100 ballots.

Barnes, the fifth overall pick out of Florida State, averaged 15.3 points, 7.5 rebounds, 3.5 assists, 1.08 steals, 0.74 blocks and 35.4 minutes in 74 games for Toronto, leading all rookies in minutes, ranking third in points and rebounds and finishing fifth in assists, steals and blocks.

He won the Eastern Conference Rookie of the Month Award the past two months of the season, and becomes the third Raptor — after Damon Stoudamire in 1996 and Vince Carter in 1999 — to win the honor as the league’s top rookie.

“What you see on the court is exactly who Scottie is: enthusiastic. Joyful. Athletic. Skilled, and a winner,” Raptors president Masai Ujiri said in a statement. “We — and our fans — loved seeing his development through this season, and we can’t wait to see what the future brings.”

Mobley, who was picked third by Cleveland out of USC, averaged 15 points and 8.3 rebounds in 69 games for the Cavaliers, helping turn them back into a playoff contender for the first time since LeBron James left the franchise four years ago.

Following Barnes, who was honored with the award before Game 4, and Mobley in the voting were Detroit Pistons guard Cade Cunningham, the top overall pick, who received the other nine first-place votes; Houston Rockets guard Jalen Green, the second overall pick, who had one second-place vote; Orlando Magic forward Franz Wagner, the eighth overall pick, who received two third-place votes; and New Orleans Pelicans forward Herb Jones, the 35th overall pick, who picked up a single third-place vote.

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Raptors’ Barnes named NBA Rookie of the Yearon April 23, 2022 at 7:18 pm Read More »

Happy 458th, Bard of Avon!

Happy 458th, Bard of Avon!

Today’s the birthday of Shakespeare, Will

Who penned his plays with ink and quill.

Some scholars doubt he actually wrote them,

Still I’ll think of him whenever I quote them.

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I’m Jerry Partacz, happily married to my wife Julie for over 40 years. I have four children and eleven grandchildren. I’m enjoying retirement after 38 years of teaching. I now have an opportunity to share my thoughts on many things. I’m an incurable optimist. I also love to solve crossword puzzles and to write light verse. I love to read, to garden, to play the piano, to collect stamps and coins, and to watch “Curb Your Enthusiasm”.

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Happy 458th, Bard of Avon! Read More »

Raptors’ Barnes named NBA Rookie of the Yearon April 23, 2022 at 7:18 pm

Toronto Raptors forward Scottie Barnes has been named the 2021-2022 NBA Rookie of the Year, the league announced Saturday.

Barnes received 378 points (48 first-place votes). Cleveland Cavaliers center Evan Mobley finished in second place with 363 points (43 first-place votes). The 15-point difference between the first- and second-place finishers is the smallest smallest margin in NBA Rookie of the Year balloting under the current voting format, which began with the 2002-03 season.

He is the third Raptors player to capture the honor joining Damon Stoudamire (1995-96) and Vince Carter (1998-99).

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Raptors’ Barnes named NBA Rookie of the Yearon April 23, 2022 at 7:18 pm Read More »

French jazz guitarist, known for adding music to Woody Allen films, appears in Chicago

French jazz guitarist, known for adding music to Woody Allen films, appears in Chicago

Stephane Wrembel, and his band, at the Green Mill Cocktail Lounge, Friday, April 22, 2022. (Photo credit: Lawrence Hartmann)

Chicago received a much-needed shot in the arm on Friday night, April 22, at 8:00 p.m. when the Stephane Wrembel Quintet took the stage at the Green Mill Cocktail Lounge, 4802 N. Broadway.

Wrembel, one of the world’s foremost interpreters of the music of renowned Belgian jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt, filled the storied room with his warm chords and mellow flavors. His band, including a second guitarist, a bassist, a drummer, and a violinist, sometimes rocked Al Capone’s bar with a mélange that sounded a bit like jazz, rock n’ roll, and classical music all rolled into one delicious sound.

In addition to being an interpreter of Reinhardt, Wrembel is also a composer of original music. This is delightfully apparent in Woody Allen’s most recent film, “Rifkin’s Festival,” (2022), for which Wrembel wrote the entire score.

Wrembel also contributed music to the Allen films “Vicky Cristina Barcelona” (2008), and “Midnight in Paris” (2011).

Music-loving Chicagoans, thirsty for good music and good drinks after two years of pandemic restrictions, started trickling into the Uptown bar on April 22 around 8:00 p.m., at the start of the Wrembel Quintet gig. By the end of the second set, the place, famously aglow in muted red and orange, was jam-packed with a crowd ready for a touch of European magic.

In a brief interview between sets, I asked Wrembel how he would describe his music.

“I can’t describe it,” he said. “It’s my music. I think it’s really hard to describe music. There are a few archetypes. But the rest is just music… (A) lot comes from the dream life. You don’t have to be asleep to be dreaming.”

Wrembel, 48, was born in Paris. He grew up in Fontainebleau, France, a town just southeast of the French capital. The guitarist currently lives in Maplewood, New Jersey, right outside of New York City, when he’s not delighting audiences around the world with his music.

In 2022, Wrembel and his band are scheduled to play in such disparate locales as California; Texas; Ohio; Quebec, Canada; and New York City.

The Romani people of Europe, also known as gypsies, seem to have played an important role in creating Wrembel’s sound. For instance, Django Reinhardt was of Romani-French heritage. And Wrembel learned to play guitar at gypsy campsites in the countryside of France.

I asked Wrembel what that was like, learning his instrument in these gypsy campsites.

“It’s really like entering a different world,” he said. “Like taking a journey to a different world. The gypsies have such a different way of life. They’re way closer to nature. And probably their humanity. Their minds are not all possessed by the Western corporate mind. Their minds are closer to the natural state of man.”

Finally, I asked Wrembel what it was like to work with the film director and writer Woody Allen.

First, he said, referring to Allen, “He was so organic.” Then, he continued, “My interactions with (Allen) and his team are very professional and humane. Everyone has been so professional. And that’s uncommon in (this) industry.”

“I love to work with Woody Allen,” Wrembel said.

“I know what he has,” he said. “He knows what I have. But there’s a bit of surprise there. When you choose to work with the right people, you let the flow happen.”

The Stephane Wrembel Quintet is scheduled to play tonight, April 23, 2022, from 8:00 p.m. to midnight, at the Green Mill Cocktail Lounge, 4802 N. Broadway, Chicago. This is the last scheduled date for the group at the Green Mill this spring. Cover charge is $20. Cash only.

Stephane Wrembel CD’s are available at the bar, or through the bar’s ace waitstaff.

Stephane Wrembel’s website is www.stephanewrembel.com.

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French jazz guitarist, known for adding music to Woody Allen films, appears in Chicago

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French jazz guitarist, known for adding music to Woody Allen films, appears in Chicago Read More »

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Franklin looks sharp in brief outing; Higgins goes 4-for-4, knocks in 3; Gallardo and Swarmer go 5 strong to earn wins; Wetzel homers

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Franklin looks sharp in brief outing; Higgins goes 4-for-4, knocks in 3; Gallardo and Swarmer go 5 strong to earn wins; Wetzel homers

Richard Gallardo (Photo by Stephanie Lynn)

AAA

Iowa 4, Louisville 2

Game Recap

The Cubs didn’t get many baserunners, but when they did P.J. Higgins managed to knock them in yesterday. He went 4-for-4. Matt Swarmer and the pen didn’t need more than that. Swarmer is one of those guys whose stuff falls just short of MLB caliber, but he commands it well and knows how to use it, so he makes for an excellent pitcher to fill out your AAA staff.

Top Performers

Matt Swarmer: 5 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 0 BB, 6 K (W, 2-0, 1.08)James Bourque: 2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, BB, 4 K (4.15)Erich Uelmen: 2 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 BB, K (S, 1, 0.00)P.J. Higgins: 4-4, 2B, 3 RBI (.294)Donnie Dewees: 1-4, 2 R, SB (3) (.323)

Injuries, Updates, and Trends

Clint Frazier has been placed on the 10-day IL with appendicitis, opening the door for Alfonso Rivas (who hit everything thrown to him in his brief stint with Iowa), to return to Chicago.

AA

Rocket City 8, Tennessee 3

Top Performers

Bryce Windham: 1-3, 2B, 2 R, BB (.238)Luis Vazquez: 1-2, R, RBI, BB (.276)Nelson Velazquez: 1-3, RBI, BB, CS (.283)Brandon Leibrandt: 3 IP, 4 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 3 K (2.89)

High-A

Beloit 9, South Bend 4

Game Recap

After a long rain delay, the Cubs took early command of this game. Kohl Franklin got the start and looked comfortable on the mound. He’s still not stretched out very far, but he looked more crisp with his control in this than in his previous two outings. He struck out three, one on his 4-seam (96-97) and another two on his plus changeup. Franklin didn’t throw many pitches to get through his two innings, but he mixed in a few spike curves, one of which was good, another which he hung was lined into CF. The development of that pitch will a big key for him this year.

After a 1-2-3 2 K inning, this meeting is now in recess pic.twitter.com/LIy70Dfclp

— Todd (@CubsCentral08)

April 23, 2022

This is good! pic.twitter.com/fU5J3EEDei

— Todd (@CubsCentral08)

April 23, 2022

In the bottom of the 2nd, the Cubs loaded the bases with no outs. Ed Howard delivered a two-run single, then Jake Washer knocked in Howard to put South Bend up 3-0. It would be all Beloit from then on though. All three relievers who followed Franklin surrendered multiple runs.

2 RBI single for Ed Howard. He is looking pretty good this week at the plate pic.twitter.com/Q9PkCJqQ5P

— Todd (@CubsCentral08)

April 23, 2022

Top Performers

Kohl Franklin: 2 IP, H, 0 R, 0 BB, 3 K (6.23)Ed Howard: 2-4, R, 2 RBI (.209)Luis Verdugo: 1-2, RBI, 2 BB (.226)Caleb Knight: 1-2, R, 2 HBP (.167)Fabian Pertuz: 2-5, 2B (.279)

Low-A

Myrtle Beach 5, Delmarva 2

Game Recap

Richard Gallardo struck out five as he tossed five shutout innings to earn his first win of the year. He mixed pitches throughout his outing and seemed to keep the Delmarva hitters off balance (poor camera view so hard to give details).

The game remained knotted 0-0 until the 5th, when Pete Crow-Armstrong came through with a two-run single. Two innings later, with family and friends in attendance, Jacob Wetzel launched a two-run homer to give the Pelicans pen some breathing room.

IN HIS HOME STATE!

Jacob Wetzel hits a two-run homer for his first big fly of the season.

Pelicans 4, Shorebirds 1 in the middle of the seventh. pic.twitter.com/a66krIaMPd

— Myrtle Beach Pelicans (@Pelicanbaseball)

April 23, 2022

Top Performers

Richard Gallardo: 5 IP, 2 H, 0 R, BB, 5 K (W, 1-0, 3.55)Jacob Wetzel: 1-4, HR (1), R, 3 RBI, SF (.238)Pete Crow-Armstrong: 2-4, 2 RBI, BB, SB (6), CS (1) (.265)Ethan Hearn: 1-2, 2B, R, 2 BB (.143)Juan Mora: 2-2, 2 R, BB (1.000)Peter Matt: 2-5, (.189)

Injuries, Updates, and Trends

Pete Crow-Armstrong (.265/.432/.529) has reached safely in 8 of his 9 games this season while compiling a .432 OBP out of the leadoff spot so far. He’s walked more than he has struck out (8-to-6) and has also been hit twice. The centerfielder is considered maybe the best defender in the system, and he’s also swiped 6-of-7 bases. A plus middle of the field defender who gets on, steals bases, and also flashes occasional power (4 XBH so far) as a leadoff man is one of those elusive unicorns that every team searches for, fans thirst for, but very rarely materializes. PCA has a chance to be that guy though.

https://t.co/yZKxXZ2Afx

— Michael Ernst (@mj_ernst)

April 23, 2022

Cole Roederer played CF in an EXST game yesterday, a good indicator he may be close to returning to full season ball following his TJS last season. My guess is the Cubs would ease him back into action in the warmer Myrtle Beach weather rather than the cooler South Bend temps, but we’ll see.

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Recent Comments

Howard’s single was right at the left-fielder and it was smoked! A few feet left or right and it easily…
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In reply to cubbustible:
Villar hasn’t even been known for his defense. I think the plan was to go with Wisdom at 3rd with…
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In reply to cubbustible:
Well, it’s April, I guess. David has been doing lots of mixing and matching. At some point, I’d like to…
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In reply to 44slug:
I don’t understand how Ross can keep hitting Willson high in the order. Or even today, playing Willson at DH,…
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I don’t understand how Ross can keep hitting Willson high in the order. Or even today, playing Willson at DH,…
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Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Franklin looks sharp in brief outing; Higgins goes 4-for-4, knocks in 3; Gallardo and Swarmer go 5 strong to earn wins; Wetzel homers Read More »

Raptors’ Barnes named NBA Rookie of the Yearon April 23, 2022 at 6:48 pm

Toronto Raptors forward Scottie Barnes has been named the 2021-2022 NBA Rookie of the Year, the league announced Saturday.

Barnes received 378 points (48 first-place votes). Cleveland Cavaliers center Evan Mobley finished in second place with 363 points (43 first-place votes). The 15-point difference between the first- and second-place finishers is the smallest smallest margin in NBA Rookie of the Year balloting under the current voting format, which began with the 2002-03 season.

He is the third Raptors player to capture the honor joining Damon Stoudamire (1995-96) and Vince Carter (1998-99).

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Raptors’ Barnes named NBA Rookie of the Yearon April 23, 2022 at 6:48 pm Read More »

Bonnie Raitt’s “Just Like That”: Like great wine, she keeps getting better

Bonnie Raitt’s “Just Like That”: Like great wine, she keeps getting better

Bonnie Raitt is like fine wine. It’s pretty good when it’s young, but as it ages, it gains richness and maturity that makes it special.

It’s hard to believe that Bonnie Raitt started her recording career in 1971. Fifty-one years ago. Five decades. It’s hard enough to get a start in the record business, but to still be relevant after fifty years is remarkable. Not only has she managed to stick around that long, but having her biggest success in the second half of a career is unheard of. Is there anyone from that generation of music legends that can say that?

Raitt’s musical journey has been documented many times. While her early albums were well received by critics, they didn’t sell well. She lost recording deals and struggled to find companies that would take a chance on putting out her music. Then in 1989, almost two decades after her start as a recording artist, she finally hit it big with the release of her tenth album, “Nick of Time.” Two years later she followed up with “Luck of the Draw.” At a time when people were no longer buying albums in the same number that they did when Raitt started, “Luck of the Draw” sold more than seven million copies. Three Grammys followed. It’s been onward and upward since then.

Bonnie Raitt is now seventy-two years old. Yesterday, she released her seventeenth album. “Just Like That” is her first album of new music in six years. It’s what you would expect from a Raitt record. There’s a mixture of rock, blues and funk with a few ballads mixed in. There is plenty of guitar, highlighted by Bonnie’s unmistakable slide guitar sound. By the way, did you know that Prince ask her to teach him how to play slide guitar, but I digress?

Anyway, although there’s not a lot of new ground covered on this latest Raitt recording, that’s okay. Other than a couple of songs dealing with illness, death and mortality, it’s the same Bonnie Raitt formula that we’ve known and have loved since 1971. Like that fine wine that we’ve savored over and over again, the sound of Bonnie Raitt’s music is just as sweet.

Related Post: Can you believe Bonnie Raitt’s first album is fifty years old?

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The Chicago Bulls were outplayed by one bitter enemy in particularRyan Heckmanon April 23, 2022 at 1:00 pm

Just when you thought the tides were turning in the Chicago Bulls‘ first round series with the Milwaukee Bucks, Billy Donovan and company came out and laid an egg in Game 3.

This was the Bulls’ first home playoff game in five years. The building was electric — to begin with. The energy was largely positive, especially after the Bulls went out and took back home court advantage in Game 2 with a huge defensive effort.

But, as tipoff went down at the United Center for Game 3, the momentum swung right back in favor of Milwaukee, and in a hurry.

The Bucks raced out to a 33-17 lead after the first quarter, and Chicago looked lethargic, unmotivated and out of energy from the get-go. What didn’t help was the fact that maybe the most hated Bucks player was having himself a night.

Grayson Allen single-handedly ripped the heart out of Chicago Bulls fans and took life out of the United Center.

The Bucks entered this game without the likes of All Star Khris Middleton, who will miss the remainder of the series. In order to fill his shoes, the Bucks needed someone to step up.

Grayson Allen being the 3rd-best player on the floor in this 1st half is a real gut punch for #Bulls fans.

— Cody Westerlund (@CodyWesterlund) April 23, 2022

Unfortunately for Bulls fans, that man was Grayson Allen.

Of course, Allen’s infamous foul on Alex Caruso earlier in the season made him easy for Bulls fans to hate. That foul led to injury and put Caruso out for a long time. It was also deemed dirty by many, making Allen public enemy number one going forward.

In Game 3, it was Allen who came out firing, aggressive and looking to establish himself early on. Coming off the bench, Allen began by knocking down a trio of three-pointers in a hurry.

Throughout the rest of the game, Allen was aggressive going to the bucket on occasion and made some rather impressive finishes. Allen ended the game with 22 points, six boards, one steal and one block, also knocking down 5-of-7 front downtown as well.

If you put Allen in a Chicago uniform, he would have been the best player on the Bulls Friday night. Not a single Bulls player outscored Allen, nor did they come close to his +15 in the plus/minus category.

Chicago’s leading scorer ended up being Nikola Vucevic with 19, followed by 15 from Zach LaVine and just 11 from DeMar DeRozan. The fact that Allen outscored all three of the Bulls’ top players should serve as an embarrassment and, more so, a wake-up call for Game 4.

If the Bulls want to stand a chance in this series, they must sadly learn from watching Allen’s performance. The guy went into a hostile environment and played his tail off. Chicago’s effort was lacking all night long and they couldn’t hit their shots.

Game 4 tips off at noon on Sunday. Let’s hope these Bulls come out with a whole lot more energy than they did in this one.

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The Chicago Bulls were outplayed by one bitter enemy in particularRyan Heckmanon April 23, 2022 at 1:00 pm Read More »