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Timeline: The Bears’ head-coaching search

A look at how the Bears came to the decision to hire Colts defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus as head coach Thursday:

Jan. 10: The Bears fire head coach Matt Nagy after four seasons. In a press conference, chairman George McCaskey announces the formation of a five-person interview panel that includes consultant Bill Polian, who advised McCaskey to fire Nagy and GM Ryan Pace in the first place. McCaskey also says he believes the Bears should hire a GM first, and then let him hire a coach.

Jan. 12: The Bears’ first interview was former Eagles coach and Super Bowl champion Doug Pederson.

Jan. 14: Brian Flores interviewed with the Bears four days after he was surprisingly fired by the Dolphins.

Jan. 15: The Bears talked to both former Colts and Lions head coach Jim Caldwell, who knows Bill Polian from their Colts days, and Packers offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett.

Jan. 16: Brian Daboll, the hottest offensive coordinator in the NFL, interviewed with the Bears one day after the Bills beat the Patriots in the first round of the playoffs.

Jan. 17: Eberflus, whose team missed the postseason after losing to the Jaguars in the season finale, went through the first round of Bears interviews.

Jan. 20: Buccaneers offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich interviewed three days before his team lost to the Rams in the playoffs.

Jan. 21: Bills defensive coordinator Leslie Frazier talked to the Bears two days before his defense would allow Patrick Mahomes to get the Chiefs into range for a game-tying field goal in 13 seconds.

Jan. 22: The Bears talked to Bucs defensive coordinator Todd Bowles, who would blitz in the final seconds and give up a huge play to Cooper Kupp the next day. Dan Quinn — the Falcons’ head coach from 2015-20 who led them to one ill-fated Super Bowl — talked to the Bears, too, six days after the Cowboys lost to the 49ers in the playoffs.

Jan. 25: The day he was hired as the Bears’ new general manager, Poles interviewed Caldwell at Halas Hall. He was the first of three candidates to receive a second interview from the Bears.

Jan. 26: Poles conducts Halas Hall interviews with both Eberflus — who had been invited back for a second round by the Bears’ five-person committee — and Quinn.

Jan. 27: The Bears hire Eberflus as head coach. It will be the first head-coaching job for Eberflus, 51, at any level.

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Chicago Bears signal change with hire of Matt Eberflus as head coachJordan Campbellon January 27, 2022 at 4:14 pm

The Chicago Bears have decided on their next head coach as the team has reached an agreement with now former Indianapolis Colts defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus. For Eberflus, this will be his first head coaching position in the NFL.

The Bears had an extensive list of head coaching candidates to replace Matt Nagy. After the Bears tabbed Ryan Poles as their new general manager on Tuesday, Poles proceeded to have final interviews with Eberflus, Dallas Cowboys defensive coordinator Dan Quinn, and former Detroit Lions head coach Jim Caldwell.

Eberflus will certainly represent a change of pace for the Bears from Nagy. After the Bears made the decision to move on from Nagy, the idea was that the team would be seeking an offensive minded head coach that can get the most out of quarterback Justin Fields. Eberflus, with a defensive background, would seemingly go against that mold.

When Eberflus was first mentioned as a candidate for the Bears’ head coaching vacancy, it was met with criticism. Criticism because of the affiliation that Eberflus had with Bill Polian. Polian was the consultant that the Bears had brought in to oversee the search for their new general manager and head coach. With Polian being a former member of the Colts’ organization, there was speculation that Eberflus would be forced upon Poles.

The hire of Matt Eberflus as their new head coach will provide the Chicago Bears with much needed change for the culture of their organization.

The encouraging take away from the Bears hiring Eberflus as their next head coach is that this would appear to be Poles’ decision. While Eberflus and Polian do share the Colts’ connection, reports over the past couple of days have suggested that the candidates were already discussions prior to their final interviews with the team. Meanwhile, it has been speculated that Polian was endorsing Caldwell.

The task at hand for Eberflus will now be to construct a coaching staff. Most importantly, Eberflus is going to need an offensive coordinator that gets the most out of Fields. As recent trends have suggested, a head coach that can operate as a CEO-type is often going to lead to the most success. That was the case with the Buffalo Bills when they hired Sean McDermott as their head coach. McDermott hired Brian Daboll as his offensive coordinator and it was Daboll that oversaw the development of Josh Allen into a top tier quarterback in the NFL. If Eberflus can find that same type of coordinator for Fields, then the Bears will be set-up for long-term success.

Eberflus, at the age of 51, will be a perfect pairing with Poles. The Chicago Bears now have both a general manager and head coach that can grow long-term into their respective positions.

Next:10 Off-season moves the Chicago Bears need to make

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Chicago Bears signal change with hire of Matt Eberflus as head coachJordan Campbellon January 27, 2022 at 4:14 pm Read More »

Sources: Bears to hire Colts DC Eberflus as coachon January 27, 2022 at 4:41 pm


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The Chicago Bears will hire Indianapolis Colts defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus as their head coach, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

Eberflus, 51, also was considered a candidate for the Jacksonville Jaguars‘ head-coaching vacancy. He will join new general manager Ryan Poles in taking over a Bears team that went 6-11 in 2021 under Matt Nagy and has missed the playoffs in nine of the past 11 seasons.

Chicago also interviewed Cowboys defensive coordinator Dan Quinn and former Colts and Lions head coach Jim Caldwell for the job.

Eberflus has spent the past four seasons as the Colts’ defensive coordinator under coach Frank Reich. His defenses finished in the top 10 in scoring three times, including being tied for ninth in 2021 at 21.5 points per game.

Eberflus will inherit a Bears team that ranked sixth in the NFL in total defense in 2021 but struggled offensively and endured instability at quarterback, where Andy Dalton alternated as the starter with rookie Justin Fields.

The Bears do not have a first-round draft pick in 2022 because they traded that selection to the New York Giants to select Fields, who showed flashes of potential both as a passer and a runner but finished with just seven touchdown passes and 10 interceptions. Chicago went 2-8 in the 10 games Fields started this past season.

The Bears made two postseason appearances in their four years under Nagy but last won a playoff game in 2010. They are 1-3 in the postseason since appearing in Super Bowl XLI after the 2006 season, a game the Colts won.

Eberflus began his coaching career at Toledo in 1992 and spent nine years with the Rockets as a student assistant, grad assistant, outside linebackers and defensive backs coach. He spent the next eight seasons as Missouri’s defensive coordinator (2001-08) before making the jump to the NFL, where he coached linebackers in Cleveland (2009-10) and Dallas (2011-17) before joining the Colts ahead of the 2018 season.

In Eberflus’ first season in Indianapolis, the Colts improved from 30th to 10th in scoring defense, from 30th to 11th in total defense and from 26th to eighth in rush defense. He also worked under noted defensive coordinators Rob Ryan and Monte Kiffin in Dallas, which allowed him to work in 3-4 and 4-3 schemes.

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Sources: Bears to hire Colts DC Eberflus as coachon January 27, 2022 at 4:41 pm Read More »

10 offseason moves Ryan Poles and the Chicago Bears should makeRyan Heckmanon January 27, 2022 at 2:00 pm

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Chicago Bears (Photo by Douglas P. DeFelice/Getty Images)

When the dust settles and the Chicago Bears have their coaching staff assembled, it will be all about one thing and one thing only: building a roster around quarterback Justin Fields.

New general manager Ryan Poles comes from an organization which did something similar in building around Patrick Mahomes, and that’s worked out with flying colors thus far. Poles was in a couple of different roles over his tenure with the Kansas City Chiefs and had much to do with scouting and personnel evaluation.

Now, his next challenge awaits. Building around Fields and ensuring the defense continues to improve as well — and doing it without much draft capital in this year’s draft.

The one thing Poles has going for him, though, is that the Bears are in the upper half of the league in terms of cap space. Depending on the outlet you trust, the Bears actually sit right around 10th or 11th in the league in available money.

Chicago Bears general manager Ryan Poles will have plenty of offseason decisions ahead of him and must make them wisely.

After getting the staffing figured out, Poles and company will have several decisions to make. The Bears have their own free agents to deal with, and maybe even some potential veteran cuts to make.

The Bears also have a plethora of needs to fill either via the draft or free agency. Luckily, there will be some key names available in the free agent pool, especially at the wide receiver position.

Poles’ ability to continue building around Fields will define his early success or failure in Chicago, and in order to keep the momentum shifting upwards, he’ll need to make a good amount of moves in his first offseason. These 10 moves should be an excellent start to his tenure.

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10 offseason moves Ryan Poles and the Chicago Bears should makeRyan Heckmanon January 27, 2022 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Dylan Strome has his first career hat trick in Blackhawks winVincent Pariseon January 27, 2022 at 1:00 pm

The Chicago Blackhawks earned a really nice win over the Detroit Red Wings on Wednesday night. These two teams aren’t as big of rivals as they once were but it still feels special when they get together for a little original six hockey. Dylan Strome had a lot of fun as he led the way to victory.

Strome has had a very frustrating year. Things got better for him when Chicago made a coaching change as he was being healthy scratch more than he was playing. That is not how you handle a former third overall pick, especially one who has been good for the team.

Playing on the fourth line is not the way for Strome. In order to get the most out of him, he needs to be playing with other skilled players just like him. That was the case against Detroit and he rewarded them for that move.

Strome had a hat trick and one assist in the 8-4 victory. His goals were his fifth, sixth, and seventh on the season. His assist was his ninth so he has 16 points on the season. He certainly isn’t going to have four points every night but getting more production out of him going forward would be a huge help.

The Chicago Blackhawks had a huge offensive outburst thanks to Dylan Strome.

This game turned out to be crazy in the end. The Hawks kept looking like they were going to blow the game but they pulled away, in the end, thanks to a bad Detroit turnover and an empty-net goal. It wasn’t pretty but they earned the win anyway.

The Blackhawks needed this. They are not going to be a playoff team but scoring some goals was much needed after getting shut out by the Colorado Avalanche earlier this week. The Detroit Red Wings aren’t close to the Avalanche but they are still a pretty good team. Dropping seven on them with an empty netter as an eighth is something to feel good about.

Going forward, the Blackhawks need to cater to Strome. He is still very young and could be a solid piece on a good team. They should honestly trade him if they are going to treat him any other way. He has all of the skills in the world and could make an impact on a team that treats him properly.

The Hawks have to play that Avalanche team again on Friday night. This time, however, it is going to be on home ice. Colorado is red hot right now but the Hawks are a team that could provide a trap.

The Avs, as mentioned before, are significantly better but you never know how things go in this league. Hopefully, Strome’s first career hat trick provides a spark in his game and he is able to produce a lot more going forward.

Related Story:3 teams that should trade for Marc-Andre Fleury

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Dylan Strome has his first career hat trick in Blackhawks winVincent Pariseon January 27, 2022 at 1:00 pm Read More »

2022 NBA All-Star debate: Who deserves to start in Cleveland?on January 27, 2022 at 12:49 pm


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The 2022 NBA All-Star Game is just a few weeks away, and on Thursday night the NBA will reveal the 10 players voted in as starters along with the two All-Star captains who will draft their teams for the eventual showdown in Cleveland on Feb. 20.

As of the last public reveal of the fan vote, Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James had surpassed Golden State Warriors rival Stephen Curry as the leading vote-getter in the West, putting him in line to be a captain for the fifth consecutive year. Curry, meanwhile, is in a tight race with the Dallas MavericksLuka Doncic and Memphis GrizzliesJa Morant to be a starter at guard. The race is even closer in the East, in which three players are separated by fewer than 200,000 votes for the second guard spot.

Before the starters are announced Thursday night, we asked our experts to break down those two races, plus three other big All-Star questions, including which player could join Morant as a first-time All-Star in 2022.

1. Which of the three leading vote-getters among West guards (Curry, Doncic, Morant) should NOT be an All-Star starter?

Kendra Andrews: Surprisingly, this came down to Curry and Doncic, but Doncic is the one who should not be an All-Star starter. Morant has been the most jaw-dropping player to watch, and the way he has led the Grizzlies to the third seed in the West — ahead of the Mavericks, Utah Jazz and Denver Nuggets — makes him untouchable in this category. Both Curry and Doncic have had their shooting woes this season, but Curry is still the greatest shooter of all time and deserves to be a starter.

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Jamal Collier: Doncic. Curry and Morant have been the best players on two of the top teams in the conference. The success of both the Warriors and Grizzlies has been relatively surprising compared to preseason expectations, all while Curry and Morant have authored some of the most thrilling moments and jaw-dropping on-court performances. Doncic and the Mavericks finally started clicking in January, but the other two guards had already staked their claim into the early MVP discussion.

Kirk Goldsberry: Doncic because his individual numbers haven’t been great — both his scoring and efficiency numbers have dipped since last season — and because he’s looking up at those other two guys in the Western standings. Curry is slumping but he’s still an MVP candidate who is a fan favorite, while Morant is both a human highlight film and the breakout star for Memphis. A Curry-Morant backcourt seems pretty electrifying to me.

Tim MacMahon: Doncic is the least deserving based on his relatively slow start, which was due in large part because he reported to camp out of shape. He has had recent performances that indicate he’s rounding into first-team All-NBA form — and he’s still a top-10 scorer and nightly triple-double threat — but Curry and Morant have been more impactful and spectacular.

Kevin Pelton: I actually went with Phoenix Suns guard Chris Paul as my second starter. Morant and Doncic represent an extreme example of how much weight to put on the first half of this season — where Morant has blown up on the court — vs. acknowledging an established level of play. Of them, I’d lean to the Grizzlies’ guard. But Paul hits the sweet spot of consistent greatness, ranking ahead of them in value metrics because he has been healthy all season.

2. Which of the four leading vote-getters among East guards (DeMar DeRozan, Zach LaVine, Trae Young and James Harden) should get the two starting spots?

Collier: DeRozan and Young, as long as we’re OK with ignoring that DeRozan is a frontcourt player for the Chicago Bulls. He’s having, perhaps, the best season of his career to help carry Chicago to its best start in a decade, which gives him the nod over LaVine, his teammate. Even though Atlanta’s record has been one of the league’s biggest disappointments in the first half, Young has carried the Hawks to an elite offense. Young is having the best season of his career and although Harden has been fantastic recently, he has taken a step back from his usual excellence.

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MacMahon: How DeRozan is listed as a guard is another discussion, but he’s at the top of this list of candidates. I’ll go with Young as the second guard from the East. You could hold the Hawks’ record against him, but Atlanta’s run to the East finals last postseason should have put to rest the argument that Young isn’t a winner. He’s the only player in the league to rank top-five in scoring and assists, and is one of the game’s great showmen.

Goldsberry: I’m going with the veterans here for a few reasons. First, check this out: DeRozan and Harden were born 19 days apart in August 1989 in Los Angeles. They grew up together, and if they started in the backcourt together, it would be awesome. Second, you can justify this choice with their performances. Young has been impressive, but it hasn’t translated to winning in the ways the other three players have done. I’ll give DeRozan the nod over LaVine because he has been so special — those buzzer-beaters, hello! — in his first season in Chicago, and Harden deserves respect for combining scoring and assists in ways that have kept the Brooklyn Nets near the top of the East.

Andrews: DeRozan is a lock. He has been an absolute game-changer for the Bulls and has been the biggest key — not LaVine — to them having the second-best record in the East. Looking at the other candidates: Harden’s numbers haven’t been great, but he’s on the Nets. Young has played extremely well, but the Hawks aren’t winning as much. That being said, Young should get the other starting job in the East’s backcourt. He’s currently fifth in scoring and is coming off an Eastern Conference Player of the Week showing that highlighted how lethal he has been.

Pelton: Again, I’m going off the board. My first vote went to DeRozan, despite the fact he has barely played guard (76 minutes all season, per my analysis of lineup data from NBA Advanced Stats). But my other vote went to the Toronto RaptorsFred VanVleet, who is a distant seventh in the voting. Given proper credit for his defensive advantage over the other three players, he has been the best performer of the group.

3. Denver’s Nikola Jokic and Philadelphia’s Joel Embiid will likely nab starting ‘frontcourt’ spots. Is it time to bring ‘Center’ back to the ballot?

Pelton: Yes, although less because we don’t need to avoid a bad token starting center and more because of the opposite possibility — unwieldy All-Star lineups with multiple centers. If we’re looking to better reflect how the game is actually played, a breakdown more like PG/wing/post makes more sense than the current backcourt/frontcourt split, and it also limits controversy over where players such as DeRozan and the Miami Heat‘s Jimmy Butler should be considered (they’re both wings under this construction).

Wednesday, Jan. 26
Knicks at Heat, 7:30 p.m.
Suns at Jazz, 10 p.m.

Friday, Jan. 28
Lakers at Hornets, 7:30 p.m.
Knicks at Bucks, 10 p.m.

All times Eastern

Andrews: No. We’re still in the era of positionless basketball in which it is nearly impossible to solely label certain players as centers, rather than forwards. Embiid and Jokic have certainly brought the prototypical NBA center back in fashion, but there are too few of them around the league for them to have their own category.

Goldsberry: Yes. Centers are a humongous part of the heritage of pro basketball, and the fact this league has gerrymandered the big man off this iconic ballot is an outrage. It’s time to change that and as both Jokic and Embiid have proved this season, the death of the center position has been greatly exaggerated. Size and strength still matter in hoops, but these guys have both resurrected the relevance of the position by being hyperskilled in ways old-school centers just couldn’t fathom. This isn’t charity, these fellas are both legit MVP candidates, too.

Collier: No. These two outliers shouldn’t set the rules. Positions aren’t getting any easier to define, so the more flexibility, the better. The goal should be to get the best and most exciting five players on the floor in each conference, so better to keep things malleable.

MacMahon: No. If anything, it’s time to remove the positions from the voting process altogether. Just pick the best players. My West ballot would include two centers among starters, with Utah’s Rudy Gobert joining Jokic in the frontcourt. But there shouldn’t be a quota on centers selected, which led to some East big men getting the nod over better players back in the day.

4. Which player (other than Morant) who has never been an All-Star is most deserving of a spot this year?

Could Darius Garland be a first-time All-Star with the game in Cleveland? NBAE via Getty Images

Goldsberry: There are three enticing candidates who are with the Cleveland Cavaliers. All-Star selections always skew toward high-profile stars in big-time markets, but Darius Garland, Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen each deserve a look. Ultimately I’ll go with Garland, who leads this surprising team in minutes, points and assists. And when he’s been on the floor this season, the Cavs have been at their best; they have a net rating of 9.4 with Garland. Oh, and the game is in Cleveland!

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Collier: VanVleet. The Raptors are in the mix for playoff positioning in the East with VanVleet leading the way as a two-way force. He’s putting up career-highs in points and assists while improving his shooting efficiency and volume, making him deserving of being elevated to an All-Star.

Pelton: VanVleet. I don’t think his All-Star case got enough consideration last season, when the Raptors were below .500 most of the first half. He has been even better this season, and I hope East coaches take notice because there’s a bit more urgency given VanVleet, who turns 28 next month, is older than the rising stars who fill out this category.

Andrews: Garland. This season has been a breakout season for the third-year player and he has been the biggest difference-maker for a Cleveland team stacked with young guns making a surprising run. After losing Collin Sexton and Ricky Rubio for the year, Garland’s production and leadership only got better. He’s averaging a team-best 19.7 points per game and 8.2 assists, good for sixth in the NBA.

MacMahon: With all due respect to Garland, let’s go off the radar with San Antonio’s Dejounte Murray. He’s on pace to become the third player in NBA history to average at least 19 points, eight rebounds, eight assists and two steals per game. The other two? Magic Johnson in 1980-81 and Michael Jordan in 1988-89.

5. Who is your way-too-early pick for All-Star Game MVP?

LeBron James is already a three-time All-Star MVP winner. NBAE/Getty Images

Pelton: James. Returning to his native Northeast Ohio, I anticipate LeBron will be motivated to put on a show for fans and remind everyone how incredible a player he remains at age 37.

Who is No. 1 in the latest NBA Basketball Power Index? Go to Ratings

Andrews: There are a lot of different ways to go on this one, but I’m going with Curry. Curry has been itching to get out of his shooting slump, and if he hasn’t by then, participating in the light-hearted All-Star Game could be the perfect opportunity to do so. And once Curry gets going from deep, there’s not much that tops that.

MacMahon: I’m sure LeBron would love to put on a show in Cleveland, which is of course a home game of sorts for him. He’d also probably relish in reminding everybody he is still arguably the NBA’s best player, regardless of the Lakers’ mediocre record.

Collier: Morant. He’s easily the most likely to do something that makes you go “OH MY GOD.” I’ll take the walking highlight reel to show out on his first chance on an All-Star stage.

Goldsberry: James is frustrated with the Lakers right now, and he might just use this glitzy game in his hometown to remind his peers and the rest of the basketball world that he is one of the league’s greatest players. He has done it all in his career, but this is the first time he has the opportunity to play in an All-Star Game in Cleveland. I think he’ll put on a show.

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2022 NBA All-Star debate: Who deserves to start in Cleveland?on January 27, 2022 at 12:49 pm Read More »

The mysterious fall and harrowing story of an NBA centeron January 27, 2022 at 12:53 pm


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IT WAS THE start of the fourth quarter and the Boomers, the Australian Olympic team, were in a tight game against Italy in an important group stage match. The Aussies had inched ahead and a finishing kick would guarantee advancement to the medal round. Coach Brian Goorjian peered down the bench, looking to put his rugged center into the game.

The Aussie had been playing well; he had 14 points in 14 minutes and nailed a couple 3-pointers, which had become the big man’s specialty. Now, he was needed on the inside to battle fellow NBA players Nicolo Melli and Danilo Gallinari. But he was nowhere to be found.

Where was Aron Baynes?

It was a long way to the bathroom in the Saitama Super Arena outside Tokyo, and Baynes had gone to use it between the third and fourth quarter. He had to go diagonally across the court, down a hallway and a flight of stairs. It still didn’t make sense. Baynes had left running so as not to miss the start of the final frame.

Concerned, one of the staff members went to look for him, tracing Baynes’ steps. As he did, the staffer found him. In the locker room on a tile floor near the bathroom, the 6-foot-10 Baynes was sprawled on the floor, blood on his uniform and on the floor from two deep, inexplicable puncture wounds in his upper arm.

The team doctor was summoned. Then paramedics. Still on the floor, Baynes was groggy and couldn’t get himself up. He remembered running around a corner to head toward the bathrooms.

Then, nothing.

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An investigation broke out. There were two hooks on the wall for towels that looked like they could’ve caused the cuts. Maybe Baynes had hit his head on the ground. As the team of medical officials got him onto a stretcher, he was texting photos of his wounds to his agent in New York and keeping an eye on the end of the game, which the Boomers had eked out by three points.

He still had not used the bathroom and needed to go, so he got up off the stretcher.

He immediately fell to the floor.

In the confusion of the moment, no one had realized that Baynes had lost his ability to walk. Or that he was headed for a nightmare that would derail his basketball career and leave him isolated in a Japanese hospital, weeping in pain day after day, with the possibility that he might be paralyzed.

“The loneliest time in my life was laying in that hospital, going in and out of consciousness, going over my life plan and my goals and just crying,” Baynes says, speaking about the ordeal for the first time.

“My uncle Don had an accident 10 years ago. He’s a quadriplegic,” he says. “My family’s had first-hand experience with this going down. I was so scared.”

Aron Baynes played in 53 games — starting 31 — for the Raptors in 2020-21 AP Photo/Chris O’Meara

AFTER PLAYING IN college at Washington State, Baynes had played nine seasons in the NBA with five different teams. In 2014, he’d won a championship with the San Antonio Spurs. He’d made almost $40 million. He had a career season with the Phoenix Suns in 2019-20, averaging 11.5 points and 5.6 rebounds that led to a two-year, $14.3 million contract that year with the Toronto Raptors.

And one of the most important moments of his career had been unfolding in Japan. The greatest generation of Australian basketballers — including NBA players Patty Mills, Joe Ingles, Matisse Thybulle, Dante Exum, Matthew Dellavedova and Jock Landale — were with Baynes as their country went for its first-ever Olympic medal. They’d beaten Team USA the last two times they’d played, and there was a hope they could do it again and win gold.

After halftime of the Boomers’ first game, just three days before their seminal game against the Italians, Baynes had come out to warm up for the second half against Nigeria. With his hands still wet from hand sanitizer lathered on just minutes before, he had gone up for the most basic of dunks in the layup line.

As he did, his fingers slipped off the rim. On the way down, he’d lost his balance and crashed to the court, landing on his head and neck. He sat the second half out of precaution.

“We don’t really know what happened. The neurologists can’t be sure of that exact cause. But I was in a lot of pain after that fall,” Baynes says now. “I was pretty sore and needed painkillers to play.”

Three days later, when Baynes slipped and fell again in the bathroom — and it isn’t clear whether it was due to the effects of the first fall or just water on the floor — his health rapidly declined.

“The loneliest time in my life was laying in that hospital, going in and out of consciousness, going over my life plan and my goals and just crying.”

Aron Baynes

When he was first found in the locker room and roused to consciousness, medics initially thought he’d suffered a concussion. But as time passed, his legs started to tingle. Then he realized he couldn’t move his left hand and arm. Still needing to relieve himself, someone brought an empty water bottle. He couldn’t go.

“Over about a half hour I really started to deteriorate,” Baynes says.

Victory in hand, his teammates came back to the locker room to check on him. Focused on the game, they knew nothing of what happened. He had always been the rugged play-through-pain type. It’s the Australian way, and Baynes was the toughest on the team.

“We came into the locker room just wondering where Baynesie was at,” Dellavedova says. “He was in a bad way. At first it was like, ‘Can he play in the rest of the tournament?’ And then we were like, ‘Is he going to be OK?'”

Baynes was taken by ambulance to the hospital and immediately put through an array of scans. An MRI showed he had internal bleeding that was putting pressure on his spinal cord.

BAYNES COULDN’T COMMUNICATE well with the Japanese nurses and doctors. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Tokyo was in a state of emergency, so Baynes couldn’t have anyone from the team with him.

“He sent me a picture of the holes in his arm and said the doctor was checking him out and the next thing I know he’s in hospital bed and his texts were panicked,” says Daniel Moldovan, Baynes’ longtime agent. “No one could get us any answers. We were scrambling for information and trying to keep [his wife] Rachel updated in Australia. I wanted to take the next flight but at that point I couldn’t even get into Japan.”

As he waited for doctors to review the tests, Baynes was put into a room so small he could touch both walls with his hands, if he’d had full movement of them. There was no bed long enough for him, so the nurses slid another bed sideways to prop up his feet.

Baynes struggled to use the translation app on his phone. What did come through was that the doctors felt Baynes needed surgery to relieve the pressure on his spine. He got on the phone with his wife and children back in Australia and tried to figure out what to do.

“I was still hoping to play in the next game,” Baynes says, tearing up at the memory of the call and talking to his wife. “The Japanese [doctors] thought I was crazy. Looking back, I can’t believe what was happening.”

Wednesday, Jan. 26
Knicks at Heat, 7:30 p.m.
Suns at Jazz, 10 p.m.

Friday, Jan. 28
Lakers at Hornets, 7:30 p.m.
Knicks at Bucks, 10 p.m.

All times Eastern

He ended up on the phone with an Australian neurosurgeon at 2 a.m. The doctor had seen the condition before and had a treatment plan of medication and physical therapy to reduce the swelling so he could get home.

“The Aussie docs put us at ease,” Moldovan says. “They knew what to do. Once we got a handle on it, we had a road map.”

For nearly two weeks, Baynes focused on doing what he had to do to stand. If he could stand, he was told, he could take the flight from Tokyo to Brisbane. It became his obsession, even though he often wasn’t strong enough, relying on therapists to move his limbs for him. The nerve pain seared throughout his body.

“I couldn’t cope. I was like a combination of burning, fire, knives,” Baynes says. “I needed the pain meds, but they knocked me out immediately, so I had to time it around the games. The nurses showed me so much compassion.”

Ten days after the accident, the Boomers ended up winning the bronze medal with a brilliant performance against Slovenia. When it came time for the ceremony, Baynes, alone and watching from his makeshift hospital bed in between doses of high-level pain medication, wept seeing his teammates receive the medals, especially when his name was announced.

The nurses didn’t understand the post-game ceremonies, so they came to give him his meds in an IV as soon as the game was over. Baynes set a series of alarms on his iPhone, so he’d stay awake to see it.

The next day, teammates Dellavedova and Nathan Sobey came to the hospital to bring Baynes his medal. He was better. The swelling on his spine had decreased and he was getting stronger with therapy. The hospital allowed him to see the team doctor and the athletic trainer for 15 minutes a day. Dellavedova and Sobey had posed as doctors to get past security.

“It was a pretty emotional visit, you know?” Dellavedova says. “It had been such a long journey for us to get there and he was such a big part of the program. There were a few tears. I don’t want to get in trouble with the Japanese officials, but I’m glad we were able to get in there.”

Baynes jokes: “Delly got an online degree.”

Australia’s Aron Baynes, center, runs up the court alongside teammate Dante Exum, right, during an Olympic Group B showdown against Italy. WU HONG/EPA-EFE

ON HIS 11TH day in the hospital, Baynes was finally able to stand. Then, in an exercise to work on motor skills, he was able to stack one cup on top of another, an accomplishment he’d been working toward. He was so excited that he FaceTimed his wife. When she answered he saw his youngest of three children, his six-month old daughter, learning to do the same. He began to cry.

Getting home was brutal. A special medical plane was chartered for the 4,000-mile flight. In order to keep him safe, doctors determined he’d need to be strapped down on his back and anesthetized for the entire eight-hour flight. When he finally got home to Brisbane, he had to be stretchered to an ambulance because he still couldn’t walk. Australia’s strict COVID-19 protocols meant he had to go into a mandatory two-week quarantine in a local hospital, still unable to see his family.

He began intensive physical therapy, which was the best time of his day because the room had windows and his family could see him. His goal was simple: Be strong enough to hug his wife and children when he was let out of quarantine.

He stayed in the hospital in Brisbane for nearly a month. He progressed each day, from wheelchair to walker to walking on his own, mostly dealing with weakness in his left leg, quite literally re-teaching his body how to move step by step, working his legs and feet in sync.

After a couple more months, he was finally able to run.

Following a breakthrough on Wednesday, he rewarded himself. It had been a week without falling. He picked up a basketball for the first time since August and tossed in a few set shots as part of his daily therapy.

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Though he’s kept largely silent about his condition, he’s been inundated with texts, emails and calls from former teammates and coaches checking in. He watches NBA games most days.

He’s been going to the beach with his family. It’s mid-summer in Australia, and he hasn’t been home in the summer in years.

This week he attended a Brisbane Bullets-Melbourne United game and watched Dellavedova score 16 points to lead United to the win. Dozens of kids came over to pose with him for photos. He was happy.

“If you saw me now, you wouldn’t know anything happened,” Baynes says. “There’s been a lot of progress in the last six months.”

Baynes turned 35 during this ordeal, and his goal is to get back to the NBA next season. He’s rehabbing aggressively every day. “He has no off switch, he wants to do it eight hours a day. We try to back him off but it’s not in his nature,” Moldovan says.

Part of his drive to get back to the league is because of how much he is enjoying the way NBA referees are calling the games this year. More physical play is being allowed, which favors his long-preferred style.

“It looks so much more fun now. That’s how I grew up playing and I really want to get back to it,” Baynes says. “I’ve got the want to get there and every single day I expect a lot out of everyone around me.

“I don’t know what the path will look like, but I’m going to give it one hell of a crack.”

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The mysterious fall and harrowing story of an NBA centeron January 27, 2022 at 12:53 pm Read More »

KC’s Mid-Major Top 10: UAB rising, Loyola Chicago still No. 1on January 27, 2022 at 1:22 pm


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UAB Blazers head coach Andy Kennedy says he misses TV.

The camaraderie. The access. The mindset.

“I miss it after those tough L’s, I’ll tell you that!”

Spoken like a coach. But that’s who Andy Kennedy inescapably is, a two-year detour under bright lights of a different kind notwithstanding.

Nine 20-win seasons helped make “AK” the winningest coach in the history of Ole Miss basketball. But in the ultra-high-stakes world of Power 5 hoops, even that was not enough to appease university officials, who denied Kennedy a contract extension heading into the final year of his deal in 2017. Mounting tension led to a decision midway through the season in which the parties agreed to part ways following the SEC tournament. But with four games remaining, Kennedy abruptly resigned, issuing a written farewell that said his presence had become “detrimental to finishing the season in a fashion representative of the standard [of] this program.”

Unintentional though it might have been, that de facto news bulletin led to a career in the media as a TV analyst at ESPN and SEC Network. Despite no prior experience and no previous commentating ambitions, Kennedy excelled.

2dJoe Lunardi

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23hJonathan Givony and Mike Schmitz

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“I have no doubt if he continued with television he would have been great at it,” says ESPN senior coordinating producer David Ceisler. “He stayed authentic to who he is. Fun, reactive, great energy, engaging to converse.”

Kennedy simplified it.

“I wanted to call the game as if I was sitting on the couch, drinking a beer with a buddy.”

Which is what he did for two full seasons, broadcasting games in the arenas where he once coached and analyzing the coaches against whom he once matched wits. Invitations to practices and film sessions were part of the gig, opportunities that provided a sorely needed fresh perspective on the game.

“I got to see, ‘Hey man, if I get back [into coaching] maybe I’m going try some of this,'” recalls Kennedy, who knew deep down no amount of forehead powderings could mask his true calling.

Andy Kennedy took Ole Miss to the NCAA tournament in 2013 and 2015. Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

So when the chance to take over at his alma mater presented itself, Kennedy took it, with an eye on returning UAB basketball to the glory years he helped make glorious. A Parade All-American in high school, Kennedy spent one season at NC State under Jim Valvano, before transferring to Birmingham to play for Gene Bartow, a legend of equal standing. Bartow led Memphis State to the 1973 national championship game, then later succeeded John Wooden at UCLA before leaving to take over as men’s basketball coach and director of athletics at UAB, where he built Blazers sports from the ground up.

Kennedy flourished under Bartow, leading the Sun Belt Conference in scoring his senior season, finishing a three-year career with 1,787 points, second most in school history. A series of knee injuries cut short a promising pro playing career, which led to a pivot toward the path of his mentor. It was not well-received.

“Coach Bartow wasn’t very helpful,” remembers Kennedy, adding “he didn’t want me to get into coaching. He told me, ‘Coaching is a great business if it wasn’t for those games.'”

Still there was no convincing the then-26-year-old, who paid his dues as an assistant first at South Alabama, then at UAB under Murry Bartow, Gene’s son, before joining Bob Huggins at Cincinnati. That foundation, including a year as Bearcats interim head coach, led Kennedy to Ole Miss, a program coming off four consecutive losing seasons. In year one, the Rebels improved by seven wins. Year two, they won 24 games. In nine of the next 10 seasons they won at least 19 games, including two trips to the NCAA tournament. Kennedy’s lone losing season in Oxford was his final season.

Without the split, however, there would have been no stint in broadcasting, and without that stint in broadcasting, there would be no change in the now-53-year-old.

“No question I’m a different coach,” Kennedy admits. “I’m still very, very demanding when it comes to accountability. But having the perspective of being away from coaching, I don’t want it to be such a grind where it takes out the joy of the game for my players.”

Now in his second season leading UAB, Kennedy’s style is resulting in wins. Last year, the Blazers went 22-7 including a 13-5 mark in Conference USA. This year, they’re 16-4, 6-1 in C-USA with a real shot at an at-large bid should they fail to win the conference tournament. For the guy who approached his old gig like he was drinking a beer on a couch with his buddy, explaining why this job suits him best is easy.

“A lot of my friends were like, ‘Hey, I don’t know why you’d get back into the grind of coaching? In broadcasting you never lose a game.’ And that’s true. But I like to say, ‘Yeah, but ya never win one either.'”

Other mid-major mastery:

o Tremendous job by Jacksonville head coach Jordan Mincy and athletic director Alex Ricker-Gilbert in surprising redshirt junior guard Thomas Owen with a scholarship after 3 1/2 years as a walk-on. Our advice … bring the Kleenex for this one:

o Electrifying Missouri State junior guard Isiaih Mosley pumped in 40 points Saturday in a 79-69 win over AP No. 22 Loyola Chicago. It was Mosley’s second 40-point game this season, and he became the first Missouri Valley Conference player to do so since Hersey Hawkins of Bradley did it nine times (!) in the 1987-88 season.

o Army trailed arch-rival Navy by as many as 27 Saturday, before rallying for the biggest comeback in Patriot League history. Coach Jimmy Allen’s team closed the second half on a 34-12 run over the final 11:34, then got a bucket from Jalen Rucker with 29 seconds to go in OT to allow the Black Knights to “sing second.”

o UNC Asheville junior Drew Pember posted a 41-point, 11-rebound effort in an OT win Saturday at Radford. Pember is the first Big South player with a 40-point/10-rebound game since Longwood’s Tristan Carey in February of 2013.

o Five teams in college basketball currently have win streaks of at least nine games: Auburn (16), Boise State (13), Houston (9) and two schools separated by just 40 miles: Wagner and Princeton! The Tigers won their 10th straight game Saturday as coach Mitch Henderson’s team extended the program’s longest win streak since the 2016-2017 season. The Seahawks won their ninth straight Sunday, the third different nine-game win streak since coach Bashir Mason took over the program in 2012.

o UNC Wilmington won four road games in eight days to remain unbeaten in the CAA (6-0). Senior guard Jaylen Sims’s dramatic buzzer-beater sealed Thursday’s 71-70 win at James Madison.

o With five assists Monday in a win over Eastern Illinois, Belmont’s Grayson Murphy passed Eastern Kentucky’s Bruce Jones to become the all-time assist leader in the Ohio Valley Conference.

o How’s this for balance? All 13 Texas A&M-Corpus Christi players to appear in games this season have scored double figures in at least one game.

o When South Dakota State hosts North Dakota Thursday in Frost Arena they’ll do so with the best home winning percentage in all of college basketball over the past decade! The Jackrabbits are 136-7 in Brookings since the 2011-12 season, a .951 winning percentage. Gonzaga is second with a .948 winning percentage.

KC’s Mid-Major Top 10 for this week:

Last week: 1

The Ramblers’ stay in that other poll was short, but there’s no way The Committee is overreacting to one loss. Saturday’s defeat at the hands of Isiaih Mosley and Missouri State was Loyola’s first since Thanksgiving — and the first on U.S. soil all season. (Its only other two losses were to Michigan State and Auburn in the Bahamas.) Make no mistake, coach Drew Valentine’s team is the real deal, as Tuesday’s bounce-back win against Southern Illinois showed. Circle the Feb. 6 rematch at Missouri State on your calendar.

Next up: at Southern Illinois (Thursday)

Last week: 2

As is the case with Loyola, we just can’t drop Davidson, for two reasons: (A) VCU is very good, and (B) 15 wins in 16 games is still remarkable. Prior to Wednesday night, the Wildcats’ most recent losses were consecutive games in mid-November to fellow mid-major contenders San Francisco and New Mexico State. There’s still not a team in America that will want to see Davidson on its side of the bracket come NCAA tournament time.

Next up: vs. La Salle (Saturday)

Last week: 3

Following a brutal, eight-day stretch that included a home win over Saint Mary’s then a road split with Gonzaga (loss) and San Francisco (win), the Cougars (17-4) returned to action with a slightly less daunting week. Sharpshooter extraordinaire Alex Barcello pumped in 22 in a win over San Diego on Thursday; then on Saturday, granite-framed freshman Fousseyni Traore posted his fourth double-double in eight games in a victory over Portland. Coach Mark Pope’s team begins a Northern California road trip on Thursday, before rematches with the Dons and Zags in early February, this time in Provo.

Next up: at Santa Clara (Thursday)

Last week: 5

In a league filled with big-time players, there’s simply no better one-two combination than David Roddy and Isaiah Stevens. Roddy is sixth in the Mountain West in both scoring (18.6 PPG) and rebounding (7.9 RPG), while Stevens leads the conference in assist-to-turnover ratio while averaging 15.1 PPG. Though the Rams’ lone loss, a 30-point thumping at San Diego State, is a sore thumb, coach Niko Medved’s team remains one of just two teams in Division I with only one defeat (Auburn).

Next up: vs. UNLV (Friday)

Last week: 7

The Racers made it three wins in five days and eight straight overall following victories over Eastern Illinois, UT Martin and Tennessee Tech. But it’s the way they’re winning that’s sending shivers throughout the Ohio Valley. Murray State is 8-0 in conference play, with an average margin of victory of 21.8 points, including an eye-opening 22-point road win versus Belmont. Just five teams in Division I score it better than coach Matt McMahon’s team, whose lone loss in the past two months came at Auburn. Can you say legit?

Next up: at Tennessee Tech (Thursday)

Last week: 6

The folks in Moraga, California, celebrated the Missouri State win over Loyola Chicago on Saturday as much as anyone west of the Missouri River. The Gaels’ December victory over the Bears further strengthens a r?sum? that includes a Quadrant 1 win at Utah State and three Quadrant 2 wins. Want to build that r?sum? even more? Take care of business on Thursday at San Francisco.

Next up: at San Francisco (Thursday)

Last week: 8

The Blazers ended Louisiana Tech’s 19-game home win streak on Saturday with an 83-76 decision in Ruston. Jordan “Jelly” Walker tied a UAB record with nine 3-pointers en route to a career-high 36 points. UAB’s top four scorers all made their way to Birmingham via the transfer portal: Walker (Tulane), Quan Jackson (Georgia Southern), KJ Buffen (Ole Miss) and Michael Ertel (UL Monroe).

Next up: at Western Kentucky (Thursday)

Last week: 9

Senior forward Abu Kigab helped the Broncos finish off another a perfect week on Tuesday with a gigantic 65-62 win over Wyoming. After the Cowboys took a 60-58 lead with 2:46 to play, Kigab scored BSU’s final seven points. With victories over Utah State (Thursday) and San Diego State (Saturday), coach Leon Rice’s club made it six wins in 13 days in five different states — while extending its overall win streak to 13 in a row. In an absolutely loaded Mountain West, the team to beat resides in Boise, Idaho.

Next up: at Fresno State (Friday)

Last week: Unranked

A warm welcome back to America’s most trusted poll for coach Rick Pitino’s club, which continues to mow down the MAAC. On Tuesday, the Gaels swatted Siena 74-57 thanks, in part, to a season-high 11 blocked shots. Two days earlier, top scorer Tyson Jolly exploded for 20 points in Iona’s win over Quinnipiac. Iona is 11-1 since Dec. 1, with its lone defeat coming at the hands of Saint Louis by a slim point. The proof is in the people, and the players … well, this group is a problem.

Next up: vs. Saint Peter’s (Sunday)

Last week: Unranked

Welcome back to the Top 10, USF, following a week in which the Dons lost to Gonzaga but bounced back with a thrashing of Pepperdine in Malibu, California. Coach Todd Golden’s team still has a r?sum? that is at-large worthy, thanks to wins over Davidson and UAB — and losses to only Grand Canyon, Loyola Chicago, BYU and Gonzaga.

Next up: vs. Saint Mary’s (Thursday)

Others receiving votes: North Texas, Wyoming

Dropped out: San Diego State (No. 4), Ohio (No. 10)

ESPN Stats & Information researcher Jared Berson contributed to this article.

Follow KC on Instagram: @kevinconnorsespn & Twitter: @kevconnorsespn

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KC’s Mid-Major Top 10: UAB rising, Loyola Chicago still No. 1on January 27, 2022 at 1:22 pm Read More »

Man seriously wounded in exchange of gunfire with Chicago Police officers on Lower Wacker Drive

A man was seriously wounded in a shootout with Chicago police officers on Lower Wacker Drive in the Loop Wednesday night, officials said.

Two Chicago police officers were hospitalized for injuries but did not suffer gunshot wounds, officials said.

The shooting happened just before 9 p.m. after the officers pulled over a car that was recently stolen, according to preliminary information from Chicago police. the officers approached the car in the 200 block of East Lower Wacker Drive and there was an “exchange of gunfire,” police said.

A 25-year-old man was shot several times and was taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital in serious to critical condition, Chicago fire officials said.

Chicago police work the scene where a man was shot in a “police-involved” shooting in the 200 block of E. Lower Wacker Drive, in The Loop neighborhood, Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2022.Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

One officer was transported to the hospital in fair to serious condition, fire officials said. Another officer was taken to Rush Medical Center in good to fair condition, fire officials said. Neither officer suffered gunshot wounds.

Two people in the car with the 25-year-old were taken into custody, according to police. Two weapons were recovered.

Brian Burns was at a red light on Lower Wacker Drive when he saw police speeding toward a vehicle stopped in front of him. Burns said he saw an officer exit with his weapon drawn as the vehicle attempted to reverse.

Burns then decided to reverse his car away from the area and said he heard shots ring out as he was driving away. Within a minute, Burns said he saw dozens of police vehicles arrive on the scene.

The Civilian Office of Police Accountability is investigating the incident.

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Man seriously wounded in exchange of gunfire with Chicago Police officers on Lower Wacker Drive Read More »

2 killed, 6 wounded by gunfire in Chicago Wednesday

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Eight people were shot, two fatally Jan. 27, 2022 in Chicago.

Two people were killed and six others were wounded by gunfire in Chicago Wednesday.

A man, 31, was found shot to death in a home in Brighton Park on the Southwest Side around 2:30 a.m. Wednesday, Chicago police said. He had suffered gunshot wounds to his face and shoulder and was pronounced dead at the scene in the 2500 block of West 45th Place, police said.
A man, 37, was shot to death in Lawndale on the West Side around 8:10 p.m. He was standing outside in the 1200 block of South Kedzie Avenue when a van stopped across the street and someone inside opened fire, police said. He was struck in the jaw and chest and taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he was pronounced dead, police said.
A 19-year-old man was critically wounded in the Archer Heights neighborhood around 9:30 p.m. He was sitting in the passenger seat of a car when someone on the sidewalk fired shots in the 5000 block of South Komensky Avenue, police said. He was struck in the abdomen, and his friends drove him to St. Anthony Hospital, police said. He was later transferred to Mount Sinai Hospital in critical condition.

At least five others were wounded in shootings across Chicago Wednesday.

Three people were shot Tuesday in Chicago.

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2 killed, 6 wounded by gunfire in Chicago Wednesday Read More »