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5 Chicago Bears WR targets who impressed at 2022 NFL CombineRyan Heckmanon March 7, 2022 at 2:30 pm

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Chicago Bears (Photo by Michael Hickey/Getty Images)

Over the last few days, NFL fans from all over have had their eyes on the 2022 NFL Combine. For Chicago Bears fans, specifically, many eyes were specifically on the wide receiver group.

The next few weeks are going to be crucial for the Bears. New general manager Ryan Poles was given a tough spot to come into as a first-time GM.

Poles is tasked with filling out a receiver room that currently has a budding wideout, Darnell Mooney, and second-year pro Dazz Newsome who rarely dressed as a rookie last year.

With Allen Robinson all but certain to find a new team, and the Bears staring at impending free agents like Marquise Goodwin and Damiere Byrd, along with return man Jakeem Grant, it’s going to be a tough ask for Poles to put together a strong receiving core.

At the 2022 NFL Combine, several wide receivers stood out as draft targets for the Chicago Bears.

It was refreshing to not have to focus so much on quarterbacks this year, as the Bears have one in Justin Fields. Hoping to build around their franchise passer, Poles and Matt Eberflus likely focused heavily on the receivers and offensive line.

Though the Bears are without a first or fourth-round pick in this year’s draft, there were plenty of wide receivers who proved they could be valuable selections in Rounds 2 and 3.

The Bears might even find a stud later than that, if they pay close enough attention.

There were many receivers who stood out at this year’s Combine for various reasons, but these five, in particular, looked like they would fit in well with the Bears.

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5 Chicago Bears WR targets who impressed at 2022 NFL CombineRyan Heckmanon March 7, 2022 at 2:30 pm Read More »

Making sense of “shocked but not surprised”

Making sense of “shocked but not surprised”

If you look up “surprised” in a thesaurus, you’ll find “shocked” is a synonym. During my time working as an editor, I don’t remember distinguishing between the two words. In the last few years, however, I’ve often come upon “I was shocked but not surprised” — or is it “surprised but not shocked”?  

In last week’s issue of his Picayune Sentinel, former Chicago Tribune columnist Eric Zorn wrote that the indictment of Michael Madigan was “a surprise but hardly a shock.” New York Times correspondent Maggie Haberman said that she was “shocked but not surprised” by Donald Trump’s defiance of the 2020 election results. Although one was shocked, not surprised, and the other surprised, not shocked, both journalists used “shock” and “surprise” in opposition. 

What either of them meant wasn’t entirely clear to me. 

In his English Help Online blog, Mike Cadman, an English teacher of nonnative speakers, distinguishes between the two words by degree of expectation, with “surprised” for unexpected situations and “shocked” for extremely unexpected situations. Since Trump told us beforehand that he would reject a loss, would Cadman take issue with Haberman’s use of “shocked”? What about Zorn’s not being shocked by Madigan’s startling indictment?

The suitable word is clearer in Cadman’s application of “surprised” to neutral or pleasant situations and “shocked” to something negative. For example, I would tell someone her gift surprised me but wouldn’t say it shocked me. 

Stephen L. Carter, a Yale law professor, novelist, and public intellectual, devoted a Bloomberg opinion column to “the opposition of shocked and surprised” after noticing that it “is suddenly everywhere.” Carter said that  “those who take grammar seriously have a responsibility to ensure that the expression is employed properly.”

Addressing the Haberman comment, Carter explains that saying that one is “shocked but not surprised” by Trump means that the behavior is shocking (bad) but nothing you didn’t expect of Trump. He gives other examples showing that “shocking” may express distress but not intense surprise to those who were paying attention. For example, the British newspaper The Independent found it shocking but not surprising that COVID infections in late 2020 were highest in the north of England. The Black Panther Party expressed shock about the 1971 police killing of Fred Hampton and Mark Clark but not surprise because “we have come to expect no better treatment.”

Most of Carter’s column focuses on “shocked but not surprised,” but he mentions an instance of the reverse. “I am not shocked but I am surprised,” an unnamed scholar said about Mississippi’s approving a new state flag without any Confederate symbols. If we consider “shocking” as suited to a shameful or distressing situation, we can take the comment to mean that Mississippi’s action was anything but shameful, but it was surprising, given the state’s racist history. 

Zorn’s comment can be read in a similar way: Madigan’s indictment was a surprise but not distressing, at least to most of us. 

Thinking of “shocked” as a higher degree of “surprised” can trip me up when I try to understand their use in opposition. It’s more helpful for me to think of “shock” for distasteful contexts. Donald Trump may do me a service here. As the headline on Carter’s column noted, “shocked but not surprised” was “a mantra for the Trump era.” Whenever I hear the phrase, I’ll recall behavior that was shocking but from Trump not surprising.

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Making sense of “shocked but not surprised”

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In Memorium: Duvall Hecht, The Man Who Let Me Listen

In Memorium: Duvall Hecht, The Man Who Let Me Listen

Duvall Hecht (1930-2022) Founder of Books on Tape.

The man who has helped keep me sane and happy over the last 17 years passed away last month in Costa Mesa, California, at the age of 91. His name was Duvall Hecht and though I had never met him his creation has been my daily companion on my long commute to the lab. In 1975 Mr. Hecht and his wife Sigrid invented Books on Tape.

Mr. Hecht founded B-o-T because wanted more things to listen to when he traveled. And once I started driving from the north suburbs to Westchester every day, I realized that I did too.

Barb actually tried audiobooks before I did, listening during her long drives to Joliet for a part-time hand therapy position. It was in her car that I had my first taste, catching a snippet of the Richard Russo novel “Empire Falls” while on a day trip. And I thought, “this could work for me, too.”

Thus began my long love affair with books on my car CD player. My passenger seat is never without a hard-plastic encased set of discs in their filmy envelopes. I have become adept at using one hand to fish the next CD out when the current chapter ends while driving at 80 75 65 mph on the Tri-State. Only once has a disc somehow found its way into the innards of the dashboard and disappeared for good.

And what a marvelous and varied bunch of novels I have listened to. I started with “East of Eden,” still one of my all-time favorite books. Of course, I had to listen to all of “Empire Falls,” and a whole bunch of other Russo books as well.

Oh, the places I have visited during my daily commute! I have traveled through Europe via Hemingway, explored Westeros and The Seven Kingdoms with George R. R. Martin, and ridden on the Underground Railway and to a reform school in Florida with Colson Whitehead. I have listened to Jack Reacher escape from dozens of impossible situations and heard Stephen King create dozens more. I heard Patti Smith tell her own rock’n’roll story in “The Kids are Alright,” and listened while Keith Richard shared the narration of “Life” with fellow mumbler Johnny Depp. And I laughed and cried while listening to “The Book Thief” and “All the Light We Cannot See.”

Lately, my car CD player has gotten squirrely. Every time I turn the car on, the CD backtracks, anywhere from 3 seconds to 3 minutes. I spend precious listening time figuring out where I am. And I know my next car won’t even have a CD player. Just one more reason to retire and say goodbye to my long commute.

But before I do, I want to bid Mr. Hecht a fond farewell. You powered me through the last 17 years, and for that, I am ever grateful.

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Latest on ChicagoNow

Making sense of “shocked but not surprised”

from Retired in Chicago by Marianne Goss
posted today at 8:15 am

In Memorium: Duvall Hecht, The Man Who Let Me Listen

from Getting More From Les by lesraff
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5 Chicago Bulls villains worse than Grayson AllenTodd Welteron March 7, 2022 at 1:00 pm

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Credit: Jeff Hanisch-USA TODAY Sports

Chicago Bulls fans greeted Grayson Allen to the United Center with a chorus of boos. The Milwaukee Bucks guard earned Chicago’s hatred for his flagrant foul back in January that sidelined Alex Caruso.

The Chicago Bulls have clearly missed Caruso since he was injured. Bulls fans made sure Allen knew exactly how they thought of him.

The Chicago Bulls players also gave a small measure of revenge when Derrick Jones Jr. delivered a hard foul to Allen with 8:21 left in the game. The problem was the timing was really bad as it happened in the fourth quarter, that game was tied at that point, and Jones Jr. was called a flagrant foul one.

That allowed Allen to make two free throws. It could have been even worse had Allen made a three-pointer.

Allen continues to give the Chicago Bulls faithful reasons to not like him. First, he had a questionable small collision with Ayo Dosunmu in the third quarter.

Then, he gave a less than rave review of the reception he got from the United Center crowd.

Grayson Allen asked about the crowd im post-game interview: “That was weak, I’ve had way worse in college.”#FearTheDeer

— Brandon Sneide ? (@Brandon_Sneide) March 5, 2022

Allen right now appears to be the Riddler in Chicago Bulls lore. The thing about Allen is he has always had the dirty player reputation going back to his college days at Duke. He has come nowhere close to the actions of Dennis Rodman during his Detroit Pistons days.

The only reason Rodman received forgiveness was that he helped the Chicago Bulls win three more championships during the Michael Jordan era.

Plus, Allen’s villainous actions come nowhere close to these five players in Chicago Bulls history.

5

Derek Harper

This spot could be reserved for Patrick Ewing. The New York Knicks and the Chicago Bulls had an intense rivalry in the early 1990s. Ewing was the superstar of those hated Knicks teams. Whenever anger towards Ewing comes up, think back to Scottie Pippen’s famous dunk over Ewing. It will forever be the greatest posterizing slam.

It was Harper who actually helped take the rivalry to its most intense level. During the 1994 Eastern Conference Semi-Finals, Harper delivered a hard foul in Game 2 to B.J. Armstrong.

In Game 3, Jo Jo English and Harper came to blows. The fight was so bad it ended two rows up at Chicago Stadium. Harper gave English a vicious takedown and it resembled something out of WWE.

Harper ended up being suspended for the next games of the series. He has been hated by Chicago Bulls ever since.

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5 Chicago Bulls villains worse than Grayson AllenTodd Welteron March 7, 2022 at 1:00 pm Read More »

NBA Power Rankings: Did LeBron’s historic night spark a Lakers move?on March 7, 2022 at 1:31 pm

Which NBA teams are making the biggest moves after an action-packed weekend?

On Saturday, the Miami Heat toppled the Philadelphia 76ers in a matchup of the top two teams in the Eastern Conference. James Harden didn’t suit up — he was held out in the second leg of a back-to-back — but the Heat limited Joel Embiid to 26.7% shooting to hand the Sixers their first loss since the All-Star break.

Saturday’s finale witnessed a historic performance that the Los Angeles Lakers hope can spark their stretch run. LeBron James poured in 56 points — his most as a Laker — to fuel a comeback win over the Golden State Warriors. It was just the Lakers’ second win over the past nine games as they cling to the Western Conference’s No. 9 seed.

The points kept coming on Sunday, as the Boston CelticsJayson Tatum dropped 54 on Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving and the Brooklyn Nets. Boston has won 14 of its past 16 games. And in a Finals rematch, the Milwaukee Bucks got 44 points from Khris Middleton to outduel the Phoenix Suns.

Who’s rising and falling with five weeks remaining in the regular season?

Note: Throughout the regular season, our panel (Tim Bontemps, Jamal Collier, Nick Friedell, Andrew Lopez, Tim MacMahon, Dave McMenamin and Ohm Youngmisuk) is ranking all 30 teams from top to bottom, taking stock of which teams are playing the best basketball now and which teams are looking most like title contenders.

1. Phoenix Suns
2021-22 record: 51-13
Previous ranking: 1

In Friday’s 115-114 win over the New York Knicks, Cameron Johnson had a career night. After never making more than five 3-pointers in any game in his career, Johnson made six in the fourth quarter alone (including the game-winner). He finished with a career-high 38 points and a career-high nine triples. Also in the fourth quarter, Johnson scored 21 points — the same total the Knicks had as a team. — Lopez

2. Miami Heat
2021-22 record: 43-22
Previous ranking: 4

The Heat have now won 11 of their last 13 — and they pulled off one of their better wins of the season on Thursday over Durant and the Nets. Playing without Jimmy Butler, Kyle Lowry and P.J. Tucker, Bam Adebayo poured in 30 points and 11 rebounds to carry his team across the finish line. — Friedell

3. Memphis Grizzlies
2021-22 record: 44-22
Previous ranking: 2

2 Related

The Grizzlies’ grip on second place in the West didn’t last long. Memphis slipped back into third, mere percentage points behind the Warriors, with a loss to the last-place Houston Rockets on Sunday night. The Grizzlies have dropped four of the last seven games, including a couple of losses to sub-.500 teams. Ja Morant is averaging 35.3 points per game during that stretch — breaking the franchise’s single-game scoring record twice — but only two other Grizzlies have averaged double-figure scoring totals. — MacMahon

4. Milwaukee Bucks
2021-22 record: 40-25
Previous ranking: 8

Sure, the Bucks have one of the toughest remaining schedules in the NBA, but Giannis Antetokounmpo said Sunday he thinks the schedule can play to their advantage. “It’s good that we’re learning to play close games and it’s good that we have a ton of tough teams moving forward,” Antetokounmpo said after Sunday’s win against the Suns. “It can only make us better in my opinion.” Milwaukee has won four games in a row, including victories over Miami, Chicago and Phoenix. — Collier

5. Philadelphia 76ers
2021-22 record: 39-24
Previous ranking: 5

Philadelphia is 4-0 with Harden in the lineup, but beginning with Saturday’s loss in Miami (which Harden sat out on the second night of a back-to-back) things will get tougher in the games ahead. Even though Thursday’s game against Brooklyn won’t include Ben Simmons, who is still working through back issues as he continues to ramp up his activity level, seeing Harden against his old team will provide more than enough drama. — Bontemps

6. Golden State Warriors
2021-22 record: 43-21
Previous ranking: 3

The roughest stretch of the season continues for a frustrated group that is now 2-8 in its last 10 games after James dropped 56 points on them during Saturday’s loss. Golden State needs Draymond Green to come back — but they also need Klay Thompson to find his rhythm and Andrew Wiggins to reemerge as the difference-maker he was earlier in the season. — Friedell

7. Utah Jazz
2021-22 record: 40-23
Previous ranking: 7

Bojan Bogdanovic broke the franchise record by draining 11 3-pointers during his 35-point performance in Sunday’s win over the Oklahoma City Thunder. He had been in a bit of a funk before that, shooting just 32% from 3-point range in the previous 11 games. It was only the second time that someone other than Donovan Mitchell led the Jazz in scoring in the 11 games since Mitchell returned from a concussion. — MacMahon

8. Boston Celtics
2021-22 record: 39-27
Previous ranking: 10

The one thing that could be held against Boston as it turned its season around over the past few weeks was the lack of elite competition. By beating the Grizzlies and Nets (finally with Durant and Irving on the court together) this week, that critique no longer applies. The Celtics have to be seen as a legitimate East contender at this point, behind the combination of Tatum’s continued ascension and the league’s best defense. — Bontemps

9. Chicago Bulls
2021-22 record: 39-25
Previous ranking: 6

The Bulls have dropped four games in a row — matching their longest losing streak of the season — as they continue to struggle against the top teams in each conference. The Bulls begin the week as the No. 4 seed in the East but are 0-8 against the three teams — the Heat, Bucks and Sixers — ahead of them. They begin the week with a matchup in Philly. — Collier

10. Dallas Mavericks
2021-22 record: 39-25
Previous ranking: 9

Dorian Finney-Smith‘s performance down the stretch of Saturday’s comeback win over the Sacramento Kings provided a glimpse into why the Mavericks were glad to give him a four-year, $55 million contract extension. Finney-Smith hit a pair of clutch 3s in the final 74 seconds — including the game-winner with 3.8 seconds remaining — and held Kings star center Domantas Sabonis scoreless as his primary defender in the fourth quarter. Finney-Smith, an All-Defensive candidate, has averaged 14.3 points while shooting 60.7% from the floor and 54.8% on 3s during Dallas’ current 6-1 run. — MacMahon

11. Denver Nuggets
2021-22 record: 38-26
Previous ranking: 12

The Nuggets have won 10 of their last 12, and their last two wins have come despite added obstacles. Without Nikola Jokic, the Nuggets took care of Houston with DeMarcus Cousins delivering a throwback performance of 31 points and nine rebounds. Then on Sunday, coach Michael Malone got ejected in the third quarter, but Jokic took care of the Pelicans in overtime with 46 points, 12 rebounds, 11 assists, 4 blocks and 3 steals. According to the NBA, Jokic is the only player to put up those kind of numbers since blocks and steals were tracked starting in 1973-74. — Youngmisuk

12. Cleveland Cavaliers
2021-22 record: 37-27
Previous ranking: 11

Wednesday, March 9
Suns at Heat, 7:30 p.m.
Blazers at Jazz, 10 p.m.

All times Eastern

Cleveland’s renaissance season continues to regress. The Cavs beat the Raptors on Sunday to stop their slide — during which they had lost six out of seven games — but lost a major piece in doing so. Center Jarrett Allen left the game with a reportedly fractured finger that will sideline him indefinitely. For a team that is already missing Caris LeVert and is currently sixth in the East, the upcoming stretch will be critical to their chances of avoiding the play-in tournament. — McMenamin

13. Minnesota Timberwolves
2021-22 record: 36-29
Previous ranking: 15

The Timberwolves have won four consecutive games to keep pace in what is becoming an increasingly packed playoff picture in the Western Conference. Minnesota has a grip on the No.7 seed, which would give them two chances to win one home game to qualify for the playoffs. The Wolves trail the Nuggets by two games for the No. 6 seed but are only two games ahead of the red-hot LA Clippers at No. 8. — Collier

14. LA Clippers
2021-22 record: 34-32
Previous ranking: 16

The Clippers were flying high last week after perhaps their sweetest win of the season, a 132-111 thrashing of the Lakers on Thursday. But they followed that up with their most disappointing loss in a month, 116-93 to the struggling Knicks at home on Sunday. Still, the Clippers have shown that they are going to be a fixture in the playoff race. And on Saturday, Paul George was shooting right-handed before practice. In the few times that he has been seen during the portion that the media is allowed to see practices and shootarounds, George was previously seen only shooting with his left hand due to the torn ligament in his right elbow. George still has a ways to go before a potential return, but this was a positive sign. — Youngmisuk

15. Toronto Raptors
2021-22 record: 34-30
Previous ranking: 14

It’s now three losses in a row for the Raptors, who have fallen three games behind sixth-place Cleveland and have an uphill climb to escape from the play-in tournament. Much of this is out of Toronto’s control, given the injuries to Fred VanVleet (knee) and OG Anunoby (finger), but if the Raptors don’t get into the top six at the end of the season, they’ll likely look back to this week as when things began to slip away. — Bontemps

16. Brooklyn Nets
2021-22 record: 32-33
Previous ranking: 13

Even Durant’s return from injury hasn’t been enough to turn around the struggling Nets, who have lost 17 of 20 after Sunday’s defeat to Tatum and the Celtics. Brooklyn is now ninth in the East, a half game behind Charlotte Hornets — which it faces in an important road game on Tuesday. Simmons’ debut remains at least a few weeks away as he deals with a back injury. And on top of all that, the Nets see old teammate Harden and the Sixers in Philadelphia on Thursday. — Friedell

17. Atlanta Hawks
2021-22 record: 31-32
Previous ranking: 17

Atlanta holds the No. 10 spot in the Eastern Conference standings and are virtually tied with Charlotte and Brooklyn, sitting ahead of them at 32-33 while the Hawks are 31-32. The Hawks are hitting their stride at the right time, though, as they try to vault themselves higher into the playoff race. Atlanta has won five of their last seven games — they also have the second-easiest schedule remaining. — Lopez

18. Los Angeles Lakers
2021-22 record: 28-35
Previous ranking: 19

James became the first player in league history with a 50-point game on his resume both before the age of 21 and after the age of 35 with his 56-point masterpiece in Saturday’s win over the Warriors. “Hopefully this is the win that changes that momentum,” coach Frank Vogel said of his team’s recent struggles being put on pause by James’ night. — McMenamin

19. Charlotte Hornets
2021-22 record: 32-33
Previous ranking: 18

With seven of their next nine games at home, the Hornets will have a chance to move up in the East’s play-in tournament mix. Charlotte enters Monday in a three-way tie with Atlanta and Brooklyn for eighth place in the East. — Bontemps

20. New Orleans Pelicans
2021-22 record: 27-37
Previous ranking: 21

The Pelicans are 4-1 since the All-Star break, with the only loss coming Sunday in overtime against Denver. Since the break, Brandon Ingram has excelled, averaging 29.4 points, 7.2 assists and 5.6 rebounds on 58.5% shooting. Even with giving up 138 points to Denver, the Pelicans still have a 101.4 defensive rating since the break, the best in the NBA. Their net rating of 19.3 since the break is also best in the league in that short stretch. — Lopez

21. Washington Wizards
2021-22 record: 29-34
Previous ranking: 20

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It was a great week for the Wizards regardless of what happened in the win-loss column. First, Bradley Beal told reporters that “it’s fair” to say that he is leaning toward re-signing with Washington this offseason. Then, Kristaps Porzingis made his long-awaited Wizards debut, scoring 25 points in 21 minutes to help beat the Pacers. Washington has lost 13 of its last 19 overall but have won two of its last three heading into a four-game west swing. — Youngmisuk

22. Portland Trail Blazers
2021-22 record: 25-38
Previous ranking: 22

The Blazers’ four-game winning streak entering the All-Star break has been replaced by a four-game slide. Portland’s defense has allowed 120 or more points in all four losses, and key players are sitting out games with injuries. Justise Winslow (Achilles) has missed three straight games and Anfernee Simons (quad) and Eric Bledsoe (Achilles) will not play on Monday. — Youngmisuk

23. New York Knicks
2021-22 record: 26-38
Previous ranking: 24

New York got a desperately needed win Sunday night against the Clippers after a pair of tough losses to the 76ers was followed by an absolute backbreaker at the hands of Cam Johnson and the Suns Friday night. Either way, with a 5 1/2-game gap between the Knicks and the play-in tournament, the final 18 games are going to be about looking ahead to next year as opposed to trying for a second straight trip to the playoffs. — Bontemps

24. San Antonio Spurs
2021-22 record: 24-40
Previous ranking: 23

San Antonio has dropped four in a row with a chance for Gregg Popovich to tie the all-time regular season coaching wins mark. Popovich should have a chance to tie and break the record soon; the Spurs have their next seven games at home, starting with the Lakers on Monday. — Lopez

25. Sacramento Kings
2021-22 record: 24-42
Previous ranking: 25

Sacramento couldn’t protect a 19-point lead and wasted a 44-point effort from De’Aaron Fox in a 114-113 loss to the Luka Doncic-less Mavericks on Saturday. With the sixth-worse record in the league, the Kings will be looking for some lottery luck in the next couple months. — McMenamin

26. Indiana Pacers
2021-22 record: 22-44
Previous ranking: 26

The Pacers have put the ball in the hands of second-year guard Tyrese Haliburton since acquiring him at the trade deadline, which has led to an uptick in his offensive production. Haliburton has scored 20 or more points in six of his first nine games since joining the Pacers while still maintaining his threat as a passer, averaging over 9.0 assists per game. — Collier

27. Oklahoma City Thunder
2021-22 record: 20-44
Previous ranking: 27

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is shining despite injuries sidelining the rest of the Thunder’s regular starting lineup as well as some key reserves. Gilgeous-Alexander has 33.3 points, 6.0 rebounds and 6.7 assists in six games since the All-Star break, while shooting 56.6% from the floor. It’s a matter of time before the 23-year-old makes an All-Star appearance, and he’s likely to still be the Thunder’s centerpiece once the long-term rebuilding project starts paying dividends. — MacMahon

28. Detroit Pistons
2021-22 record: 17-47
Previous ranking: 28

The Pistons will be going for their third consecutive victory on Monday, which would mark the first time since the 2018-19 season Detroit has won three in a row. Overall, the Pistons are playing much better recently, winning five of the past seven games while rookie Cade Cunningham is averaging 20.4 points, 8.0 rebounds and 4.9 assists during that span. — Collier

29. Orlando Magic
2021-22 record: 16-49
Previous ranking: 30

Markelle Fultz made his season debut after missing the past year because of an ACL injury, and Orlando actually picked up two wins — which makes this one of their most productive weeks of the season. Over his first three contests, Fultz is averaging 9.0 points and 3.7 assists over 16.7 minutes per game. — Friedell

30. Houston Rockets
2021-22 record: 16-48
Previous ranking: 29

Jalen Green‘s rookie season is following a pattern similar to 2020 No. 1 overall pick Anthony Edwards — a rough first half followed by significant improvement. Green has averaged 18.1 points on 46.7% shooting in 14 games since the start of February. He’s scored at least 20 points in five of the last seven games, including his 24-point performance Sunday, when the Rockets snapped a 12-game losing streak with an upset over the Grizzlies. — MacMahon

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NBA Power Rankings: Did LeBron’s historic night spark a Lakers move?on March 7, 2022 at 1:31 pm Read More »

I’ve become a mall walker

I’ve become a mall walker

Have you ever gone to an indoor mall and seen people walking. I’m not talking about shoppers. There are dedicated walkers doing laps around the mall. Not to typecast them, but they’re usually in a group and are usually senior citizens. Okay, I guess I am going to typecast them.

What’s your reaction when you see this? Mine has always ranged from a roll of my eyes to a shake of my head to laughing out loud. Well, not anymore. Why you may ask? Because I’ve become one of them.

I’M A MALL WALKER!

Is this a recent development? Oh, it’s very recent. It’s less than one week old. But, here’s the why to the story.

About six weeks ago I had stomach surgery. The recovery process has been steady but slow. At this point, I can do everything I did before the surgery, but in smaller portions. I still tire easily. I’m still trying to regain all my strength. I guess that happens when two feet of your colon is removed and it causes you to lose fifteen pounds. Yeah, I do look better at this weight, but what good is that when you’re talking multiple naps every day.

I decided I needed some exercise. Actually, my doctors decided this, I just went along with their decision. First time for everything.

Anyway, it was determined that walking was the way to start. Now we’re talking late February/early March, in Chicago. It’s now meteorological spring but it doesn’t come in like a lamb. It’s still cold…damn cold. No walking around the neighborhood or heading to the lakefront. Not yet. Hence….it’s off to the mall.

To be honest, I don’t know how long this will last. I already blew off yesterday’s walk to watch basketball and golf. Plus, the weather should be getting nicer soon . I’d much rather do my walking outside in the fresh air. But for now, it’s off to the mall for my three thousand or so steps.

Oh my God, I’ve become one of them.

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I’ve become a mall walker

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MVP mode: Jokic scores 30 in 4th, OT to key winon March 7, 2022 at 5:55 am

As Nikola Jokic sat at the podium for his postgame news conference, his Denver Nuggets teammate Bones Hyland briefly popped in the room to let his thoughts be known.

“MVP! MVP! MVP!”

The comments came after the reigning MVP put up an excellent case for why he should get another in the Nuggets’ 138-130 win over the New Orleans Pelicans.

Jokic finished with 46 points, 12 rebounds, 11 assists, 4 blocks and 3 steals — numbers no other player has reached in a single game in NBA history since blocks and steals started being tracked in 1973-74. In the fourth quarter and overtime alone, Jokic had 30 points on 10-of-11 shooting.

According to ESPN Stats & Information research, Jokic is the first player in the past 25 seasons to have 30 points or more in the fourth quarter and overtime while also shooting 90% from the field. The last player to shoot that efficiently while putting up that many points in the fourth and overtime? Kobe Bryant, who had 33 on 84.6% shooting against the Portland Trail Blazers on March 16, 2007.

Jokic also joined Wilt Chamberlain as the only players in NBA history with a 45-point triple-double on 70% or better shooting.

“Phenomenal. Different. He’s just different,” Nuggets forward Aaron Gordon said of Jokic’s performance. “That’s just not something that you see often. He took over, 30 points in the fourth quarter and overtime, that’s just sick. That was just an amazing game. He’s an amazing ballplayer.”

Nuggets coach Michael Malone said Jokic’s effort was “just another reason, example, exhibition of why Nikola’s the MVP.”

This was the second time the Nuggets and Pelicans went to overtime this season, and it was the second time Jokic dominated the game down the stretch to lift Denver to a victory. He scored 11 consecutive points in overtime on Dec. 8 and finished with 39 points, 11 assists and 11 rebounds.

“What a luxury to have the MVP in an overtime game knowing you can just play through him,” Malone said. “They double-teamed him, Monte Morris makes a big 3. It’s just such a confidence that you have because you know in a close game he’s just going to make the play again and again. For him to step up the way he did just speaks to his greatness.”

Malone didn’t get to see Jokic’s spectacular late-game performance, however. He was ejected after arguing a traveling call against Gordon with 1:06 left in the third quarter.

The Pelicans, who trailed by 21 in the first half, stormed back and took a 10-point lead heading into the fourth quarter. That’s when Jokic took over.

“My teammates were looking for me. I was making shots and being aggressive. Just a really good period,” Jokic said.

Jokic scored 15 of the final 17 points in regulation for Denver, helping the Nuggets go on a 17-6 run in the final 3:08 to send the game to the extra period. After the Pelicans took a 130-126 lead in overtime, the Nuggets scored the next 10 points — including back-to-back possessions on which Jokic drilled a deep 3-pointer as the shot clock was winding down and then a 17-foot jumper in the lane with 28.3 left to put the game away.

Jokic missed the previous Nuggets game with a non-COVID illness, and he said after the win that he didn’t eat for nearly a day and a half.

“I just felt a little bit off. I just had something, I felt like I needed to throw up. It was just a weird feeling,” Jokic said. “I felt weak. I felt not ready. I didn’t want to go out there and just cheat and not perform at that level. If I can’t give 100 percent, if I’m 80 percent I’m not going to go out there.”

Jokic said he struggled at times in the first half trying to get back into the flow of the game, but it was evident he figured it out by the fourth quarter.

“This dude is incredible,” Gordon said. “I don’t say that about a lot of people. I only say that about a handful of people. This dude is incredible. He’s the MVP. I believe that. He’s coming out night in and night out putting up ridiculous numbers and we’re winning. I don’t know everybody that votes on it but this guy gotta be at the top of the list.”

Read More

MVP mode: Jokic scores 30 in 4th, OT to key winon March 7, 2022 at 5:55 am Read More »

MVP mode: Jokic scores 30 in 4th, OT to key winon March 7, 2022 at 5:55 am

As Nikola Jokic sat at the podium for his postgame news conference, his Denver Nuggets teammate Bones Hyland briefly popped in the room to let his thoughts be known.

“MVP! MVP! MVP!”

The comments came after the reigning MVP put up an excellent case for why he should get another in the Nuggets’ 138-130 win over the New Orleans Pelicans.

Jokic finished with 46 points, 12 rebounds, 11 assists, 4 blocks and 3 steals — numbers no other player has reached in a single game in NBA history since blocks and steals started being tracked in 1973-74. In the fourth quarter and overtime alone, Jokic had 30 points on 10-of-11 shooting.

According to ESPN Stats & Information research, Jokic is the first player in the past 25 seasons to have 30 points or more in the fourth quarter and overtime while also shooting 90% from the field. The last player to shoot that efficiently while putting up that many points in the fourth and overtime? Kobe Bryant, who had 33 on 84.6% shooting against the Portland Trail Blazers on March 16, 2007.

Jokic also joined Wilt Chamberlain as the only players in NBA history with a 45-point triple-double on 70% or better shooting.

“Phenomenal. Different. He’s just different,” Nuggets forward Aaron Gordon said of Jokic’s performance. “That’s just not something that you see often. He took over, 30 points in the fourth quarter and overtime, that’s just sick. That was just an amazing game. He’s an amazing ballplayer.”

Nuggets coach Michael Malone said Jokic’s effort was “just another reason, example, exhibition of why Nikola’s the MVP.”

This was the second time the Nuggets and Pelicans went to overtime this season, and it was the second time Jokic dominated the game down the stretch to lift Denver to a victory. He scored 11 consecutive points in overtime on Dec. 8 and finished with 39 points, 11 assists and 11 rebounds.

“What a luxury to have the MVP in an overtime game knowing you can just play through him,” Malone said. “They double-teamed him, Monte Morris makes a big 3. It’s just such a confidence that you have because you know in a close game he’s just going to make the play again and again. For him to step up the way he did just speaks to his greatness.”

Malone didn’t get to see Jokic’s spectacular late-game performance, however. He was ejected after arguing a traveling call against Gordon with 1:06 left in the third quarter.

The Pelicans, who trailed by 21 in the first half, stormed back and took a 10-point lead heading into the fourth quarter. That’s when Jokic took over.

“My teammates were looking for me. I was making shots and being aggressive. Just a really good period,” Jokic said.

Jokic scored 15 of the final 17 points in regulation for Denver, helping the Nuggets go on a 17-6 run in the final 3:08 to send the game to the extra period. After the Pelicans took a 130-126 lead in overtime, the Nuggets scored the next 10 points — including back-to-back possessions on which Jokic drilled a deep 3-pointer as the shot clock was winding down and then a 17-foot jumper in the lane with 28.3 left to put the game away.

Jokic missed the previous Nuggets game with a non-COVID illness, and he said after the win that he didn’t eat for nearly a day and a half.

“I just felt a little bit off. I just had something, I felt like I needed to throw up. It was just a weird feeling,” Jokic said. “I felt weak. I felt not ready. I didn’t want to go out there and just cheat and not perform at that level. If I can’t give 100 percent, if I’m 80 percent I’m not going to go out there.”

Jokic said he struggled at times in the first half trying to get back into the flow of the game, but it was evident he figured it out by the fourth quarter.

“This dude is incredible,” Gordon said. “I don’t say that about a lot of people. I only say that about a handful of people. This dude is incredible. He’s the MVP. I believe that. He’s coming out night in and night out putting up ridiculous numbers and we’re winning. I don’t know everybody that votes on it but this guy gotta be at the top of the list.”

Read More

MVP mode: Jokic scores 30 in 4th, OT to key winon March 7, 2022 at 5:55 am Read More »

MVP Mode: Jokic scores 30 in 4th, OT to key winon March 7, 2022 at 5:55 am

As Nikola Jokic sat at the podium for his postgame news conference, his Denver Nuggets teammate Bones Hyland briefly popped in the room to let his thoughts be known.

“MVP! MVP! MVP!”

The comments came after the reigning MVP put up an excellent case for why he should get another in the Nuggets’ 138-130 win over the New Orleans Pelicans.

Jokic finished with 46 points, 12 rebounds, 11 assists, 4 blocks and 3 steals — numbers no other player has reached in a single game in NBA history since blocks and steals started being tracked in 1973-74. In the fourth quarter and overtime alone, Jokic had 30 points on 10-of-11 shooting.

According to ESPN Stats & Information research, Jokic is the first player in the past 25 seasons to have 30 points or more in the fourth quarter and overtime while also shooting 90% from the field. The last player to shoot that efficiently while putting up that many points in the fourth and overtime? Kobe Bryant, who had 33 on 84.6% shooting against the Portland Trail Blazers on March 16, 2007.

Jokic also joined Wilt Chamberlain as the only players in NBA history with a 45-point triple-double on 70% or better shooting.

“Phenomenal. Different. He’s just different,” Nuggets forward Aaron Gordon said of Jokic’s performance. “That’s just not something that you see often. He took over, 30 points in the fourth quarter and overtime, that’s just sick. That was just an amazing game. He’s an amazing ballplayer.”

Nuggets coach Michael Malone said Jokic’s effort was “just another reason, example, exhibition of why Nikola’s the MVP.”

This was the second time the Nuggets and Pelicans went to overtime this season, and it was the second time Jokic dominated the game down the stretch to lift Denver to a victory. He scored 11 consecutive points in overtime on Dec. 8 and finished with 39 points, 11 assists and 11 rebounds.

“What a luxury to have the MVP in an overtime game knowing you can just play through him,” Malone said. “They double-teamed him, Monte Morris makes a big 3. It’s just such a confidence that you have because you know in a close game he’s just going to make the play again and again. For him to step up the way he did just speaks to his greatness.”

Malone didn’t get to see Jokic’s spectacular late-game performance, however. He was ejected after arguing a traveling call against Gordon with 1:06 left in the third quarter.

The Pelicans, who trailed by 21 in the first half, stormed back and took a 10-point lead heading into the fourth quarter. That’s when Jokic took over.

“My teammates were looking for me. I was making shots and being aggressive. Just a really good period,” Jokic said.

Jokic scored 15 of the final 17 points in regulation for Denver, helping the Nuggets go on a 17-6 run in the final 3:08 to send the game to the extra period. After the Pelicans took a 130-126 lead in overtime, the Nuggets scored the next 10 points — including back-to-back possessions on which Jokic drilled a deep 3-pointer as the shot clock was winding down and then a 17-foot jumper in the lane with 28.3 left to put the game away.

Jokic missed the previous Nuggets game with a non-COVID illness, and he said after the win that he didn’t eat for nearly a day and a half.

“I just felt a little bit off. I just had something, I felt like I needed to throw up. It was just a weird feeling,” Jokic said. “I felt weak. I felt not ready. I didn’t want to go out there and just cheat and not perform at that level. If I can’t give 100 percent, if I’m 80 percent I’m not going to go out there.”

Jokic said he struggled at times in the first half trying to get back into the flow of the game, but it was evident he figured it out by the fourth quarter.

“This dude is incredible,” Gordon said. “I don’t say that about a lot of people. I only say that about a handful of people. This dude is incredible. He’s the MVP. I believe that. He’s coming out night in and night out putting up ridiculous numbers and we’re winning. I don’t know everybody that votes on it but this guy gotta be at the top of the list.”

Read More

MVP Mode: Jokic scores 30 in 4th, OT to key winon March 7, 2022 at 5:55 am Read More »

The Lady From The Sea Moral Message on the Power to Choose is sound but sluggish.

The Lady From The Sea Moral Message on the Power to Choose is sound but sluggish.

Do I matter? And what is the purpose of my life, are questions we have all asked ourselves. But what does it mean to be free? 

These questions have rattled within the minds of humanity since the time of Adam and Eve. Court Theatre continues its 2021/22 season with The Lady from the Seaby Henrik Ibsen, translated by Richard Nelson, and directed by Shana Cooper. 

Ibsen, a Norwegian playwright and theatre director, starts The Lady From The Sea, using a character similar to himself by introducing us to Ballested, an immigrant who came to the small fjord town in Northern Norway after his traveling theater company disbanded. Ballested, who wears a plethora of heads to help make ends meet, is finishing up a painting when a young lad named Lyngstrand strolls into the garden. 

He meets the daughters of Dr. Wangel, Bolette, an intellectual young woman who plays the role of a mother to her younger sister Hilda after her mother passed. Bolette longs to see the world but fears she will never leave the long, narrow, deep inlet between high cliffs called home, as she needs to care for her father and sister. Hilda is the rambunctious younger sister hiding her feelings of needing a mother’s love lashes out by looking for ways to rebuke her stepmother, Ellida, using a celebration of her deceased mother’s birthday as one of her ways to demonstrate her displeasures. 

However, Ibsen centers The Lady From the Sea around Ellida, a lighthouse-keeper’s daughter. Ellida, who grew up loving the open Sea, married Edvard Wangel, a doctor whose wife passed, leaving him with two daughters (Bolette and Hilde). 

While married, they have a child, who dies. Wangel believes Ellida spiraled into depression, causing issues within their marriage, and asked an old friend of Ellida, Arnholm, to return to aid in her recovery. However, Arnholm, who was also the former tutor of Bolette, believes the letter sent for him to return is due to a fixation Bolette has for him, not realizing Wangel has learned Arnholm was a rejected lover who once proposed to Ellida. But Ellida’s illness has nothing to do with Wangel or Arnholm but a demonic haunting of a stranger from the past. 

A stranger who returns with a proposition. The freedom to choose between a lost love from the past. Or the love she lost because of her past. 

Considered one of the founders of modernism in theatre and the father of realism, Ibsen’s The Lady from the Sea, written in 1888, was his firstof several mystical, psychological dramas.

The Lady From the Sea touched on many of the cultural views of the 1800s when Ibsen wrote this play, where women’s ideological place, her thoughts, dreams, and admiration should center around their husbands or the men’s plans, ideas and pursuits. It also hinted that the woman had to financially lean on the man’s kindness to have any possibilities of survival. Written during the Women’s Rights Movement era, many could have seen The Lady From the Sea as a groundbreaking pattern for a women’s right to choose, which is Ibsen’s primary focal point in this playwright’s five-act play. 

Though Ibsen is considered one of the most influential playwrights of his time, The Lady From The Sea first hour and thirty minutes can cure your insomnia. Its lethargic pace, which Ibsen may have deliberately intended, as he enjoyed the development of humanizing the character, seems to have confused the audience, not understanding its direction. 

I was one of the few who previously saw the adaptation, so I knew its ending, which indeed held the audience’s attention. However, I believe a better translation of The Lady From The Sea is using the method of reverse chronology storytelling (RCS), whereby it hints throughout the play the ending. RCS would intrigue its audience; rather than this adapted from new translation which slowly draws them into a slow hypnotic sleep.    

The cast Chaon Cross (Ellida), Gregory Linington (Dr. Wangel), Tanya Thai McBride (Bolette), Angela Morris (Hilda), Will Mobley (Lyngstrand), Samuel Taylor (Arnholm), Dexter Zollicoffer (Ballested), and Kelli Simpkins (The Stranger) did their best to bring out this psychological battle for freedom. And playwright Richard Nelson and director Shana Cooper’s desire to bring out Ibsen’s passion for having the audience feel the humanism of real people being in front of you was admirable. Still, unfortunately, The Lady From The Sea falls short of accomplishing a compelling message where humans have the right to choose freedom over war. 

Назавжди Україна (Forever Ukraine)

In the end, Ellida’s husband releases her from their vows. She is free to choose and makes a decision that liberates her from the lamented anguish that plagued her soul. But Bolette is captured by the kindness of men to achieve her goals.

Let’s Play Somewhat Recommends The Lady From The Sea. 

Court Theatre

The Lady from The Sea

Written by Henrik Ibsen

Adapted From a New Translation By Richard Nelson

Directed by Shana Cooper

Now Running through March 27, 2022

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Let’s Play

Rick and Brenda McCain are the review critics of “Let’s Play Inc!” With the loving support of great theater members within the Chicagoland area, we have been passionately reviewing plays for many years to where we are on our way to helping people “Discover the hidden gems of Chicagoland theaters.”
We have seen these great plays at American Blues Theater, Black Ensemble, Court Theater, Drury Lane, Goodman, Lookingglass, Northlight, Paramount, Shakespeare, Steppenwolf, Victory Gardens, Writers and the list continues to grow each month.
We pride ourselves on being a trusted source in helping individuals get the inside story on each play to guide you to a remarkable theater performance.
Our goal is to leave a memorable impression that will entice you to visit one of these impressive theaters and enjoy the excitement within Chicagoland that happens on a daily basis.
Rick and Brenda are also internet radio host of The Let’s Stay Together Talk show where they have quickly become to trusted informational platform on ALL RELATIONSHIPS. Within a short period, they have reached people all around the globe, and they continue to grow due to their fun, relatable conversations that are open and honest.
They bring that same joy to Let’s Play so join them as they open your eyes to the hidden gem of Chicagoland theaters.
You can reach us about reviewing your upcoming play, by contacting us at [email protected].

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The Lady From The Sea Moral Message on the Power to Choose is sound but sluggish.

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The Lady From The Sea Moral Message on the Power to Choose is sound but sluggish. Read More »