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Chicago Bears GM candidate Ryan Poles has captured McCaskey’s interestJordan Campbellon January 25, 2022 at 3:37 pm

Tuesday figures to be yet another important day for the Chicago Bears as the team is beginning the second round of interviews in regards to their general manager vacancy after completing first round interviews with Pittsburgh Steelers’ executive Omar Khan and Indianapolis Colts’ executive Morroco Brown on Monday.

Late on Monday night, NFL Network insider Ian Rapoport provide an update on the Bears’ scheduled second round of interviews for their general manager vacancy. Rapoport reported that Kansas City Chiefs’ executive Ryan Poles, Tennessee Titans’ executive Moti Ossenfort, and New England Patriots’ executive Eliot Wolf are all expected to have second interviews with the Bears.

It would certainly appear that the Bears are making progress on finding their next general manager and there is an indication that their primary target may be Poles. On Monday night, Bears’ chairman George McCaskey was spotted at O’Hare Airport walking stride in stride with Poles.

Setting aside the jokes that this video has ignited such as Bears’ president Ted Phillips waiting in the clown car outside O’Hare Airport, ready to drive Poles and McCaskey back to Halas Hall, the idea that the Chiefs executive was picked up personally by the Bears’ chairman should be an encouraging sign.

@kapjhood @CarmenDeFalco @WaddleandSilvy @ESPN1000

Couldn’t help but notice Ryan Poles being met at O’Hare baggage claim this evening by his potential future employer. pic.twitter.com/iM30jLLuCO

— Eric Bohn (@BohnHomes) January 25, 2022

After being picked up from the airport personally by Chicago Bears’ chairman George McCaskey, Ryan Poles could be the favorite for the general manager vacancy.

One thing is clear, the Bears are definitely impressed with Poles. Immediately after Poles had finished his first interview with the team on Friday, it was reported on Saturday that the team would be bringing him back for a second interview. If the Bears want Poles, they may need to act fast. Poles is a finalist for the Minnesota Vikings’ general manager vacancy and is scheduled for a second interview on Wednesday.

There has been some criticism over the idea that McCaskey picked up Poles from the airport himself as opposed to having a staffer complete the task. That criticism is misguided. Over the course of the past 11 years, McCaskey has provided plenty of ammunition to be criticized. Personally picking up a prospective general manager candidate from the airport should not be something in which McCaskey is criticized for. Instead, McCaskey’s direct involvement should strongly suggest how Bears view Poles as a candidate.

It would appear that the Chicago Bears are closing in on a new general manager and Ryan Poles could make Halas Hall his permanent workspace after his interview on Tuesday.

Related Story:Chicago Bears should make a push for Sean Payton

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Chicago Bears GM candidate Ryan Poles has captured McCaskey’s interestJordan Campbellon January 25, 2022 at 3:37 pm Read More »

Fantasy basketball daily notes for Tuesday: Ayo Dosunmu making most of opportunityon January 25, 2022 at 3:32 pm


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In a league full of fun names, Ayo Dosunmu stands out. The second-round rookie scored a career-high 24 points for the depleted Chicago Bulls in a close win over the Oklahoma City Thunder on Monday night.

A Chicago native and Illinois product, Dosunmu has been thrust into a larger role in the rotation due to significant injuries to Alex Caruso and Lonzo Ball. It’s not just his scoring prowess that was notable last night, as the rookie also paced the team with eight assists.

In seven games as a starter this season, Dosunmu has averaged 38.8 minutes to go with 11.4 points, 4.7 rebounds and, most impressively, 5.9 assists. Available in free agency in nearly every league, Dosunmu could be a fantasy factor for the next several weeks.

Monday recap

Highlights

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Chris Paul, Phoenix Suns: 27 points (10-17 FG), 9 rebounds, 14 assists

Nikola Vucevic, Chicago Bulls: 26 points (10-18 FG), 15 rebounds, 4 assists, 3 blocks

Lowlights

Evan Fournier, New York Knicks: 7 points (3-9 FG), 0 rebounds, 0 assists

Monday takeaways

The Pelicans produced 64 points in the paint against the Pacers, the third-most New Orleans has scored in that area in a game this season. On a light night without a ton of star performances, one main takeaway is just how friendly a fantasy matchup Indiana has become. With Indiana missing several key starters, even a depleted New Orleans roster was able to feast on the Pacers. During the last 10 games, Indiana has allowed 116.1 points per 100 possessions to opponents, marking the fifth-worst defensive rating in the league over this span. Whenever looking for streaming options, pursuing the Pacers as a matchup could pay off.

Speaking of Indiana, the Pacers turned to rookies Chris Duarte and Duane Washington Jr. in the loss to the Pelicans. Washington Jr. produced a career-high 21 points thanks to sinking seven of his 12 3-point attempts, tying him with New York’s Quentin Grimes for the second-most 3-pointers made in a game by a rookie this season.

It wasn’t just Dosunmu playing a larger role for the Bulls on Monday, as combo guard Coby White filled the microwave role off the pine for Chicago. White couldn’t find his shot in the win, but he’s become a relevant option given the shots and minutes vacated by Caruso and Ball.

Injuries of note

Zach LaVine returned to the lineup for Chicago after missing multiple games with a knee injury. Even though his shot wasn’t falling, the fact LaVine handled a full workload is a good sign of things to come.

After missing multiple weeks due to a knee injury, Anthony Davis is listed as probable to play for the Lakers against the Nets this evening.

The Sixers won’t have Seth Curry, Danny Green or Shake Milton in the rotation against the Pelicans tonight. Tyrese Maxey should prove quite busy, while streaming Matisse Thybulle (if he plays through a shoulder ailment) could lead to gobs of defensive stats for those in roto or category leagues.

Analytics advantage for Tuesday

17hAndr? Snellings

1dJim McCormick

4hEric Karabell

2 Related

The Brooklyn Nets will be without Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving this evening, setting up James Harden with a heliocentric role leading the offense against the Lakers. Beyond the bearded one, I’m interested in streaming and daily fantasy shares of LaMarcus Aldridge and Patty Mills, two of the key waiver additions to consider this week.

Aldridge has seen his usage rate spike a team-high 7.2% with Durant and Irving off the floor this season. Mills, meanwhile, has posted a team-high 10.9 3-point attempts per 36 minutes in such scenarios.

DFS discussion

Richaun Holmes, Sacramento Kings: A long stint in health and safety protocols means Holmes is still building back to a full workload with the Kings, but this also includes a notable discount on DraftKings this evening. With a viable path to 25 minutes, Holmes is a nice frontcourt bargain against Boston tonight.

Derrick White, San Antonio Spurs: Identifying awful perimeter defenses can prove rewarding when eyeing scoring guards. Such is the case with White facing a porous Houston defense that has allowed the fourth-most DraftKings points per game to shooting guards on the season.

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Fantasy basketball daily notes for Tuesday: Ayo Dosunmu making most of opportunityon January 25, 2022 at 3:32 pm Read More »

The Chicago Bears might be down to three head coaching candidatesAnthony Damatoon January 25, 2022 at 2:00 pm

Hiring hasn’t always been easy for the Chicago Bears. With the opportunity for a fresh start after letting go of the toxic partnership of Matt Nagy and Ryan Pace, is it finally the moment we see Chicago put themselves ahead of the game with the right staff. With uprising talent flooding the market, you can’t help but ask yourself what are the bears up to now?

After Ian Rapport sent Bears fans into a frenzy on Monday with what could be the “final three” for the head coaching job, I couldn’t help but shake my head and wonder. With the potential young talent that floats throughout the league, why mention guys like Dan Quinn and Jim Caldwell when narrowing down the playing field?

Caldwell has a career 64-54 coaching record in 7 seasons with the Indianapolis Colts and Detroit Lions. In Caldwell’s first two seasons with the Colts, Caldwell helped them reach the playoffs in back-to-back seasons.

In his first year, he created a serious buzz around the league after Indianapolis went 14-2 in the regular season and then went on to win the AFC. In his second season, the Colts finished out the regular season at 10-6 and were bounced in the first round of the playoffs.

In his final season, Caldwell and the Colts parted ways after a nightmare of a 2-14 season. That ultimately led him to Detroit where in 4 seasons, Caldwell led the Lions to the playoffs 2 times (although never winning a playoff game).

Is Caldwell the answer to the Bears’ infamously bad hiring process? Absolutely not. While Caldwell is the only coach of the 3 with an emphasis offensively, Caldwell hasn’t coached since 2017.

With a young quarterback and an overall young team going through a rebuild, I can’t be on board with the Bears hiring another unproven coach who is approaching 68 years old to come back into the league nearly 5 years later after being fired by a division rival in Detroit.

It sounds like the Chicago Bears might be down to three head-coach candidates.

The #Bears are set to request 2nd interviews with 2 more candidates — #Cowboys DC Dan Quinn & ex-#Lions coach Jim Caldwell, per me and @MikeGarafolo. #Colts DC Matt Eberflus has his 2nd interview on Wednesday, per @TomPelissero. #Saints DC Dennis Allen is interviewing tomorrow.

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) January 24, 2022

Quinn, who posed as head coach for the Atlanta Falcons from 2015-2020 is also on the Bears’ radar. Quinn, who has been proven to be a force in the defensive coordinator department through his time in the NFL, can’t say the same about being the coach who leads the charge.

He helped lead the Falcons to the Super Bowl in 2016. After that, he slowly but surely fizzled out of his head coaching role in 2020 after starting the season 0-5 with the Falcons where he was then fired mid-season.

In the early stages of his career, his success came while coaching the “legion of boom” on the defensive side of the ball when the Seattle Seahawks went 13-3 and rolled past Denver to win the Super Bowl.

Quinn has had great success once again coaching the Dallas Cowboys defense this season. As a head coach, however, Quinn is just 46-44 and has been criticized mostly for his inability to lead a football team.

I wouldn’t mind seeing Dan Quinn as the Bears’ next defensive coordinator but it seems as though the league, as well as Quinn, have their sites on him being a head coach once again. Quinn is a bad fit for the Bears who possesses no offensive ability and a sub 500 record in the National Football League.

Eberflus was a linebacker coach who started his NFL career with the Cleveland Browns in 2009. From there, he bounced around the league until he found his defensive coordinating home with the Indianapolis Colts.

Eberflus has become a big name in the NFL since finishing 3rd in assistant coach of the year in 2018 while also developing Darius Leonard on his way to becoming the defensive rookie of the year.

Eberflus certainly deserves a shot as a head coach in this league but he may want to start with a team that is focused on primarily strengthening their defense.

While I do see serious potential in Eberflus, once again I can’t get behind hiring a coach who possesses defensive emphasis. That can’t happen after just drafting Justin Fields a year ago accompanied by David Montgomery and Darnell Mooney in the years prior.

Time will tell who the Bears will ultimately hire but they should focus on an offensive mind who is young and who knows how to bring the most out of this youthful, hungry team. Brian Flores is my front runner for the position. I’m not exactly sure why he’s been neglected.

After what he’s shown as far as production in Miami, I don’t see how there is any speculation. Flores built a successful offense around Tua Tagovailoa is lightyears behind Fields. Touching base on Daboll, I’m not completely sold. Daboll could be a product of his QB.

He has had great success coaching offense for the Buffalo Bills. He is ultimately responsible for the success of Josh Allen and has leaned pretty heavily on the 6’5 240 pound QB. Daboll, who up until Buffalos late-game OT heartbreak loss in Kansas City, ran 68% of the offense through Allen.

Is the Buffalo OC worthy of great coaching? How will he coach without the superhuman athlete? Of course, the answers become unknown but coaching is a lot easier when Allen is improvising with laser focus, a rocket arm, and 4.7 speed when evading pressure.

Many argue that Daboll can get a hold of Fields and make him just as special but after many tiresome seasons, it is hard to leave that up to chance.

Related Story:The Chicago Bears should do anything to get Sean Payton

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The Chicago Bears might be down to three head coaching candidatesAnthony Damatoon January 25, 2022 at 2:00 pm Read More »

3 free agent position players the Chicago Cubs need to targetJordan Campbellon January 25, 2022 at 1:00 pm

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Chicago Cubs Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-USA TODAY Sports

While the Chicago Cubs wait for a new Collective Bargaining Agreement to be finalized between Major League Baseball and the Major League Baseball’s Players Association, there is no doubt that the team will need to be prepared for when they can resume their off-season activity and spending.

Entering the off-season, there had been questions over how much the Cubs would be willing to spend. However, in the moves that the Cubs made prior to the lockout beginning the first week of December, the team proved that they would be willing to spend this off-season.

The first move of the Cubs’ off-season was claiming veteran starting pitcher Wade Miley off of waivers from the Cincinnati Reds. The reason why the move was a surprise was that Miley is owed $10 million for the 2022 season. Claiming a veteran pitcher with a price tag of $10 million is not the move a team that is looking towards a rebuild would make.

After the Cubs’ claim of Miley, the team still had a need in their starting rotation. In the hours leading up the lockout, the Cubs addressed that need in a major way with the signing of free-agent starting pitcher Marcus Stroman.

Stroman signed a three-year deal with the Cubs on a deal that could be north of $71 million when all is completed. The third year of the deal is a $21-million player option.

There is no question that the Cubs have firmly addressed their starting rotation with the additions of Miley and Stroman. After a 2021 trade deadline that saw the Cubs trade Javier Baez, Kris Bryant, and Anthony Rizzo, the team will need to replace that production if they are going to have any chance of competing in 2022.

The Chicago Cubs will need to address the holes in their starting lineup.

Fortunately for the Cubs, there are plenty of attractive position players still available. These are the three best position-player free agents that the Cubs should target once activity resumes.

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3 free agent position players the Chicago Cubs need to targetJordan Campbellon January 25, 2022 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Analyzing Blackhawks storylines to expect in second half of season

DENVER — From the outside, the second half of this 2021-22 Blackhawks season seems rather pointless.

The playoffs are merely a pipe dream at the moment. The Hawks’ postseason odds entering Monday — when they officially began the second half by taking the ice for Game No. 42 against the Avalanche — ranged from 0.4% to 7.2%, depending on the source, but all sources agreed they were long shots.

None of the many below-average statistics from the team’s first half suggests they’re capable of making the kind of miraculous run they’d need to rejoin the conversation, either.

The future vision of the organization and the leaders — including hockey operations president, general manager and coach — who will implement that vision remain entirely undecided, too. So the Hawks’ second-half results and trends won’t even necessarily be worth extrapolating as hints of what’s to come in 2022-23.

And, as new forward Sam Lafferty put it Monday, 41 games are “a lot of games.” That equates to 2,460 minutes of hockey with virtually no meaning, which might feel like three months of simply going through the motions.

Inside the locker room and coaches’ room, though, the Hawks aren’t thinking of the road ahead as inconsequential.

Interim coach Derek King, asked Monday about his goals and expectations for the second half, said he’ll be broadly focusing on “how we’re competing, how we’re playing [and if we’re] getting contributions from everybody.”

“That’s how we have to win hockey games,” he added. “Hopefully we just keep climbing the charts here, so it makes it a lot harder to get rid of guys at the deadline and we keep the guys we have here.”

King raises a good point about the trade deadline, which will almost certainly headline the second half. It’s so late this year — not until March 21 — that the Hawks still have 21 more games to play before then (they’ll only have 19 left to play afterward), but even its lead-up could be juicy.

From King’s perspective, he’d understandably prefer to keep the current team together, knowing the bond they’ve formed and the strain that getting traded puts on any player’s family.

From a building-toward-the-future perspective, conversely, it would make sense for the Hawks to convert trade-worthy players — a list that starts with Marc-Andre Fleury, then continues with Dominik Kubalik, Calvin de Haan, Dylan Strome, Ryan Carpenter and beyond — into prospects and/or draft picks.

Either way, the upward or downward trends in the performance of those trade-bait players — as well as players with expiring contracts, such as Kirby Dach, Philipp Kurashev, Caleb Jones, Kevin Lankinen and Lafferty — will be worth monitoring, even if the team’s overall trends are not.

How the Hawks’ prospects fare, and what NHL opportunities they receive, will also matter. Lukas Reichel will arrive back in Chicago eventually, able to play up to seven more games without burning the first year of his entry-level contract (and potentially more if the Hawks don’t mind burning it). And whether any separation occurs in the logjam of young defensemen Ian Mitchell, Jakub Galvas, Wyatt Kalynuk, Nicolas Beaudin, Alec Regula and Isaak Phillips will be interesting.

Several off-ice questions might have clearer answers by the time the April 29 season finale against the Sabres rolls around, too. How plausible is King’s full-time coaching candidacy? What permanent role will interim general manager Kyle Davidson assume? Will the current attendance dynamic — not selling out but still drawing sizable crowds — change when the team is dead in the water, and, if so, how will that alter marketing strategies moving forward?

The day-to-day grind of the Hawks’ second half will seem monotonous at times, but at least a handful of intriguing storylines should emerge.

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81-year-old woman dies in fire in Avalon Park

An 81-year-old woman died in a house fire in Avalon Park on the South Side early Tuesday

Fire crews responded to a house fire in the 8200 block of South Cornell Avenue about 2 a.m., Chicago police said. The woman was removed from the home with severe burns.

She was rushed to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where she died of her injuries, police said. Her name has not yet been released.

Area Two detectives were investigating.

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Three shot when fight breaks out in Rolling Meadows sports bar

Three people were shot when a fight broke out among patrons of a sports bar in Rolling Meadows late Monday night, according to police.

Officers were called to the Stadium Sports Club in the 4000 block of Arbor Drive around 11:40 p.m.

Two of the wounded were hospitalized and the third, the suspected gunman, was being questioned, police said in a statement.

No charges were announced and police said the shooting remained under investigation.

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Chicago Blackhawks can’t find offense in 2-0 loss to AvsRyan Sikeson January 25, 2022 at 11:33 am

Despite playing seven games over the last 11 days, the Colorado Avalanche had no trouble shutting out the Chicago Blackhawks in Monday’s 2-0 loss for Chicago.

The Blackhawks have now lost four straight while the Avalanche extended their home winning streak to a franchise-record 16 consecutive games.

However, despite coming into this game as heavy favorites, Colorado was held scoreless in the first period, with Chicago dominating 10-8 in shots on goal.

The home team broke through with nearly 8:30 remaining in the second period. Nazem Kadri tallied his 16th goal of the season, a powerplay goal that was set up beautifully going from Gabriel Landeskog to Cale Makar to Nathan MacKinnon before Kadri’s blast squeaked past Blackhawks’ netminder Marc-Andre Fleury.

All-Star Nazem Kadri comes through in the second period! #GoAvsGo@kylekeefetv | @RycroftMark pic.twitter.com/OYFMLxRONn

— AltitudeTV (@AltitudeTV) January 25, 2022

Fleury gave the Blackhawks everything he had, making several big saves in the middle frame to keep the Avalanche off the board leading up to the powerplay goal. In all, the 37-year-old stopped 27-of-29 shots faced on the night.

The Chicago Blackhawks have scored only four 5-on-5 goals in Marc-Andre Fleury’s last five starts.

The Blackhawks had matching seven-shot second and third periods, with Avalanche netminder Pavel Francouz recording his second consecutive shutout. Further, he became the first Colorado goalie to post back-to-back shutouts since Patrick Roy in January 2003.

Trailing 1-0 in the third period, the Blackhawks were effectively put away with just over 13 minutes remaining in regulation. After Seth Jones sent the puck up the boards, Landeskog recovered the puck and found a wide-open Mikko Rantanen in front of the Chicago net. The Finnish forward did the rest with a great backhand shot that disrupted Fleury’s timing.

“We all thought it could’ve been a similar situation tonight,” Patrick Kane said, comparing the Avs game earlier this month to Monday. “We grinded pretty hard for 2.5 periods. Just maybe didn’t have a big enough push there in the 3rd period to equalize the game.”

Ooooh that backhand from Rantanen pic.twitter.com/HQMgBdEWoT

— Shayna (@hayyyshayyy) January 25, 2022

Jones led all Blackhawks skaters with 29:50 TOI, recording one shot, five hits, and three blocked shots.

Notes: Chicago placed goalie Kevin Lankinen on injured reserve with a hand injury on Monday morning. Arvid Soderblom was recalled from AHL Rockford to serve as Fleury’s backup.

“I’m still trying to get when it happened and why (Lankinen) didn’t really complain about it, so it was something he just dealt with and fought through it,” Blackhawks interim head coach Derek King said in advance of Monday’s game.

The Chicago Blackhawks are back in action in Detroit for a showdown with the Red Wings on Wednesday. Puck drop is set for 6:30 pm CT.

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Chicago Blackhawks can’t find offense in 2-0 loss to AvsRyan Sikeson January 25, 2022 at 11:33 am Read More »

Blackhawks’ hard work not enough to avoid another loss to Avalanche

Pavel Francouz’s 23-save shutout carried the Avalanche over the Blackhawks 2-0 on Monday. | AP Photo/David Zalubowski

The Hawks again kept up with arguably the NHL’s best team Monday, but still suffered a 2-0 defeat that stretched their losing streak to four straight games.

DENVER — Twice this January, the Blackhawks have kept up with the Avalanche. Twice, they’ve still left defeated.

First was the 4-3 overtime loss at home on Jan. 4, when Cale Makar’s stunning game-winner overshadowed an impressive comeback by the Hawks.

Then came Monday’s 2-0 loss in Colorado, where the Hawks worked hard and got their sticks on pucks all night but ultimately couldn’t solve Avs goalie Pavel Francouz.

“We all thought it could have been a similar situation [to Jan. 4] tonight,” Patrick Kane said. “We grinded pretty hard for two-and-a-half periods. Just maybe we didn’t have a big enough push there in the third [period] to equalize the game.”

Still, Kane can’t help but look at the Avalanche — a team loaded with talent, assured in their identity and enjoying life on top of the NHL mountain, having won 16 straight at home and 25 of their last 30 overall — and feel simultaneous twinges of nostalgia and jealousy.

“Yeah, it looks like a fun way to play, huh?” he said, smiling. “Maybe back in the day, you took that for granted a little bit.”

The Hawks have now lost four straight — and eight of 12 since the holiday break — despite playing fairly well their last two outings. After Saturday’s overtime loss to the Wild, they entered the third period Monday only trailing 1-0 and almost tied it when Philipp Kurashev barely missed an open net from a tight angle.

Up against the top teams in the Western Conference, though, they’re learning that playing fairly well often isn’t enough.

“[We made] just couple mistakes, and when you’re playing against a great team, two mistakes will cost you,” interim coach Derek King said. “There were times we competed the right way, and other times we dropped our compete level a little lower than it should be and they capitalized. That’s why they’re one of the best teams in the league.”

One bright spot during the past two games has been the emerging chemistry of an unusual trio: Jonathan Toews centering Alex DeBrincat and Sam Lafferty. They were clearly the Blackhawks’ most active and dangerous forward line Monday, with Lafferty’s speed helping “push the pace,” King said, for an increasingly settled-down Toews and always-dangerous DeBrincat.

Even that line eventually made a significant mistake, though, letting Mikko Rantanen slip behind all of them and out-wait Marc-Andre Fleury to score the backbreaking goal with 13:19 left.

The final stats were closer than one might expect for this on-paper lopsided matchup, with the Avalanche finishing with advantages of only 62-55 in shot attempts, 29-23 in shots on goal and 34-26 in scoring chances. Then again, the Avalanche did still have more of all three.

“We had some chances early on — some good looks,” Kane said. “[It] would have been nice to take a lead, play with a lead against a team like that. Their goalie played well. I still think we probably could have created a little bit more.”

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