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Former Cubs pitcher Jon Lester announces his retirement

Former Cubs pitcher Jon Lester, part of the heart of the 2016 World Championship team, will retire from baseball, ESPN reported.

Lester, a 200-game winner who also won two titles while with the Boston Red Sox, told ESPN that he is no longer can physically handle a full MLB season.

“It’s kind of run its course,” Lester told the network. “It’s getting harder for me physically. The little things that come up throughout the year turned into bigger things that hinder your performance.

“I’d like to think I’m a halfway decent self-evaluator. I don’t want someone else telling me I can’t do this anymore. I want to be able to hand my jersey over and say, ‘Thank you, it’s been fun.’ That’s probably the biggest deciding factor.”

Lester was the Cubs’ big free-agent addition who ignited their World Series run, signing a six-year, $155 million deal in December 2014. Seventy-seven of his 200 victories came as a member of the Cubs.

He signed with the Washington Nationals when the Cubs declined his option after the 2020 season. He split the 2021 season between the Nationals and St. Louis Cardinals.

Lester made five All-Star appearances and has a 2.51 postseason ERA.

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Former Chicago Bears player asks for interview on TwitterRyan Heckmanon January 12, 2022 at 3:38 pm

Over the past two days, the Chicago Bears have been busy searching for a couple of big replacements within their organization.

On Monday morning, a day notoriously referred to as “Black Monday,” the Bears fired both head coach Matt Nagy and general manager Ryan Pace.

Now, the search is on for the next pair of candidates to bring the Bears back to glory. This search, though, is looking to be a very widespread adventure. Already, the Bears have requested to interview nearly 20 individuals between the two openings.

Wednesday morning, the Bears could put in another interview request if they so choose.

Former Chicago Bears linebacker Rosevelt Colvin submitted his interest in an opening via Twitter.

The Bears have requested to interview A LOT of people… BUT HAVEN’T CALLED ME!! I’m starting to feel like they aren’t taking me serious. Trust me I have a plan. I know what needs to be done to win. I am your guy!!! #hirerosey #DaBears

— Rosevelt Colvin (@rcolvin3) January 12, 2022

Rosevelt Colvin was drafted by the Bears back in 1999 in the fourth round after playing his college ball at Purdue. His best two seasons came in 2001 and 2002 when he totaled 10.5 sacks in each of those seasons as an outside linebacker.

Colvin then went on to play for the New England Patriots for the remainder of his career, before retiring after the 2008 season.

One thing Colvin could bring to the table, first and foremost, is his Super Bowl experience. Colvin played alongside Tom Brady for several seasons and was part of two Super Bowl Champion teams in 2004 and 2005.

Whether or not he is serious with the Twitter request, Colvin does have experience around winning locker rooms and the greatest quarterback in league history. He also played under one of the greatest coaches in NFL history.

Not only does Colvin have winning experience within a great organization, he knows the city of Chicago and he has still been involved in football since his retirement.

Colvin is currently an analyst for the Big Ten Network and has been involved in their podcasting network for a while now as well.

Whether or not the Bears take his request seriously, this does bring up another recent topic of former players and their relationships with the organization. Many former players have recently taken to Twitter as well, except to raise their concerns with the organization after George McCaskey called former Bears center Olin Kreutz a liar in his press conference Monday.

The Bears have always seemed to screw up relations with former players, and maybe this would be an opportunity to steer the ship in a positive direction. Get Colvin in there for an interview and see what he has to say. Worst case scenario, he doesn’t get a job. But, at least the Bears would be listening to a former player for once.

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Former Chicago Bears player asks for interview on TwitterRyan Heckmanon January 12, 2022 at 3:38 pm Read More »

Company announces Zero-day work week. Plans to run on guilt

Company announces Zero-day work week. Plans to run on guilt

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DeMar DeRozan and his late-career renaissance with the Bullson January 12, 2022 at 1:57 pm


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THE STADIUM CREW has already begun to disassemble the United Center floor, turning the arena from a basketball court to a hockey rink following the Chicago Bulls‘ victory over the Orlando Magic. It’s Jan. 3, and as they stack the courtside seats, remove the scorer’s table and line the outside of the stands with hockey boards, DeMar DeRozan stands alone at the free throw line 30 minutes after the buzzer.

He’s stewing. “S—,” he yells, his voice echoing off the walls of the arena. Another miss.

DeRozan, who is shooting better than 85% from the line on the season, had an uncharacteristically poor night, finishing 7-for-13 and missing 4 of his 9 free throws in the second half, including three in the final 30 seconds. A few minutes earlier, DeRozan had grabbed Taurean Green, a Bulls player development coach, to head back to the court. On their way out, DeRozan was reminded the crew is flipping the court ahead of the Chicago Blackhawks‘ home game the next night.

“Well, I’m going to shoot if I have to until all the floor is gone,” DeRozan said.

Nevermind that the Bulls had just collected what was their eighth consecutive victory, or that in the two games prior, DeRozan had become the first player in NBA history to hit game-winning buzzer-beaters on consecutive nights.

As he stands at the line, the clangs of equipment being hauled off around him, he hears his father’s voice booming in his head.

“My dad used to cuss me out when I missed free throws,” DeRozan says after a Bulls practice a few days later. “He used to yell from the bleachers. He used to say it was a dollar every time I missed a free throw.

“The other night, the only thing on my mind is my f—king dad would kill me if he saw me miss this many free throws. That’s why I take it so seriously.”

And so back on the rapidly disintegrating floor, DeRozan, still in his home whites, shoots. And shoots. And shoots.

He challenges himself to make 10 consecutive free throws before he can count them toward his total. If he misses one before he hits 10 in a row, he starts over. He estimates, later that night, that he made about 250 free throws after the game, hitting 10 in a row, 25 times.

“When he does something wrong he has to correct it perfectly,” DeRozan’s longtime trainer Chris Farr says. “You can say we’re going to shoot 100 free throws, but if it doesn’t feel right, he just keeps going. He keeps going until he gets it right.”

LISTEN: DeMar DeRozan’s rise as an MVP candidate

Now in his 13th season in the NBA, DeRozan is experiencing the rarest of sports commodities: a late-career renaissance. After emerging as a scorer with the Toronto Raptors and honing his skills as a playmaker with the San Antonio Spurs, DeRozan is averaging 26.2 points per game in leading the Bulls to the best record (27-11) in the Eastern Conference, and a prime-time Wednesday matchup with the Brooklyn Nets (10 p.m. ET, ESPN).

At age 32, DeMar DeRozan is better than ever.

“DeMar’s from Compton, but when you roll his thumbprint, he’s really from Louisiana,” Farr says. “In Louisiana, they make that dish called gumbo. And I think what has happened is, it’s a culmination of everything: Toronto, San Antonio, high school, everything is coming together at the right time. He’s putting everything together and leaving it all out there. You can see the results.”

EARLY BEFORE SHOOTAROUND one morning in 2018, San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich addressed the team with some breaking news, DeRozan recalls.

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“DeMar’s going to be the point guard,” Popovich said.

DeRozan was incredulous. Point guard? Me? Nah.

DeRozan was a scorer. He had been a scorer as a first-round draft pick out of USC in 2009 through his first nine seasons in the NBA. He’d averaged at least 20 points per game in every season since 2013-14. Sure, DeRozan had averaged 5.2 assists in his last season with the Raptors, but Kyle Lowry was the point guard. And it wasn’t like Popovich had prepped him on this plan, either, before addressing the team.

“Now [as a point guard] you’ve got to understand everybody on the team,” DeRozan says. “Their capabilities, their strengths, their weaknesses and how I can help them. How I could bring the best out of these players. It started with Pop bringing the best out of me that I didn’t think I had.

“Before then, I was a scorer. … If I’m 5-for-30, I don’t care. If I’m 15-for-30. Like that was my whole mindset. [Popovich] challenged me to the point of understanding the game in the complete whole. How to be a point guard. How to be a playmaker. How to dictate the game. How to move without the play. How to play without the ball. How not to turn over the ball.”

Popovich challenged DeRozan repeatedly, putting him in situations out of his comfort zone.

DeRozan flourished — averaging 6.2 assists in his first season in San Antonio, 5.6 in his second and a career-high 6.9 assists in 2020-21.

“It was like all right cool, I want to take on this challenge because I don’t want to be mad about me being here,” he says. “You can’t just dribble, dribble, dribble, you’ve got to be efficient with everything you do. … Slowly but surely, it made me a better basketball player, understanding stuff on the court instead of just scoring. … To combine those two things and the knowledge that came with it, I think put me in a place to where I’m at now.”

While DeRozan’s game was rounding into form on the basketball court, his life off of it was in turmoil.

His father, Frank, was dealing with several long-term illnesses in Los Angeles. Once a regular at Raptors games from 2009 to 2018, Frank had spent years in and out of hospitals before he died on Feb. 19, 2021. During his tenure in San Antonio, DeRozan would take a private plane in between games or practices to spend time with his father.

Get access to exclusive original series, premium articles from our NBA insiders, the full 30 for 30 library and more. Sign up now to unlock everything ESPN+ has to offer.

“I just wanted to sit by him,” DeRozan says. “There were times, I flew home, he didn’t even know I was there. I’d just sit next to his bed for hours.”

The Spurs kept it quiet but allowed DeRozan to fly to Los Angeles whenever possible. Popovich urged him to go and come back whenever he could; he didn’t even have to play if he didn’t want to.

But DeRozan never wanted his absence to become a distraction, even if he often played on only a couple hours of sleep.

“I’d be lying to you if I didn’t say I had days, or I had moments where I was like, ‘Damn, is this s— ever going to get back to some type of peace?'” DeRozan says. “There were days where it was hard to figure out how I was going to maneuver through so much emotionally so I could be myself out there on the court.”

When DeRozan hit NBA free agency for the first time this past summer, he could still hear his father, whom he talked with on the phone after every game, in his mind, helping with the decision-making process.

When he was 10 years old, DeRozan remembers playing 1-on-1 with Frank. On one particular play, Frank went in too hard and accidentally busted his son’s lip. Tasting his own blood instantly threw the younger DeRozan off his game.

Sensing this, and a lesson to impart on his young son, Frank did not relent. Instead, he made it even tougher on DeRozan to score. He blocked his shot. He bullied him in the paint. Frank, a former football player, was a burly man, and no matter how hard DeRozan tried to inch closer to the basket, it was hopeless. Eventually DeRozan had enough.

“I kicked the ball over the fence and said, ‘Man, I don’t want to play no more,'” DeRozan says. “I got in the car and cried all the way till we got home, so I could tell my momma.

“There’s a whole psychological approach that he was trying to show me. Keep your calm, keep your cool, this happens in sports. I always remember that basketball moment so clearly because it makes perfect sense to the game to this day. I think a lot of my calmness comes from moments I shared with him on the court.”

Before the season, DeRozan inked a tattoo on his left shoulder of one of his favorite portraits of his father.

“He had to heal himself,” Farr says. “A lot of that stuff he holds within. I think now, he’s opening up more and that’s just part of the healing process. I’m just glad Chicago softened the weight on him and gave him the opportunity.

“He got the hug he needed when he got there.”

ZACH LAVINE WAS still in Tokyo playing for Team USA in the Olympics when the Bulls overhauled their roster during free agency last summer — leaving only LaVine, Coby White and Patrick Williams remaining from the last season’s team. When news broke that DeRozan was signing with Chicago, LaVine got DeRozan’s number and sent him a text.

“I was like, ‘Man, look we need somebody like you on the team,'” LaVine says.

Shortly after LaVine returned stateside, he made the 90-mile drive to go work out with his new teammate. They stayed in the gym together for 2 1/2 hours and then sat for another hour, talking about their vision for the season. There was an instant connection.

The two share a strong mutual respect. For all the talented players DeRozan has played with — his best friend Lowry, an All-Star big man in LaMarcus Aldridge — he had never had an outside scorer like LaVine. And while LaVine had ascended to make his first All-Star Game and was playing for Team USA, he lacked the playoff experience and pedigree DeRozan could provide.

“Him coming here and being able to be himself, I think was the best thing for him,” LaVine says. “And for me personally, because I needed another guy on the team that each and every game was going to go out there and have my back.”

“I’ve been here the last five years and we have done nothing but lose. I put up incredible stats that get washed under the rug because we lose. But individually, you’re not going to have that success until you’re a successful team. I have no ego. I don’t mind sharing or DeMar DeRozan taking fourth-quarter shots or hitting game-winners. I’m happy because we’re winning.”

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DeMar DeRozan discusses his Bulls teammates trying to prove doubters wrong by challenging for a NBA championship.

After DeRozan signed, Chicago coach Billy Donovan flew to California to meet with the Bulls’ new duo. The whispers of skeptics from outside the organization had crescendoed.

Could these two ball-dominant guards work together? Would this defense be just bad or historically bad? Where’s the outside shooting?

An ESPN offseason survey of 10 scouts and executives around the league tabbed DeRozan’s signing as the worst move of the offsesason.

“Don’t worry about anything, this s— will work,” DeRozan told LaVine. “If we do what we’re supposed to do, the caliber of players that we are, everybody will be happy.”

So far, he has been right. Chicago hasn’t experienced this kind of bliss in a decade. The Bulls have missed the playoffs for four straight seasons, but now they are on top of the East for the first time since the 2011-12 season, the height of the Derrick Rose era in Chicago. DeRozan, on his third team in five years, is leading a Bulls team that is on pace to win 58 games this season. (They were projected to win just 40).

DeRozan (26.5) and LaVine (26.4) rank seventh and eighth, respectively, in the NBA in scoring. Guards Lonzo Ball and Alex Caruso have been the team’s defensive anchors, guiding the Bulls to a respectable 13th in defensive efficiency to go along with the league’s fourth-best offense.

In the fourth quarter, the Bulls turn their offense over to DeRozan, leaning on his combination of scoring and playmaking. He holds the ball for an average length of 6.9 seconds during clutch time possessions, per Second Spectrum tracking data, the fifth longest in the league, trailing some of the most ball-dominant guards such as Memphis’s Ja Morant, Phoenix’s Chris Paul and Atlanta’s Trae Young.

During clutch time — when the score is within five points in the last five minutes of a game — DeRozan is averaging 4.0 points on 57% shooting. Over the past 25 seasons, only one player has averaged 4.0 points while shooting at least 55% from the field during clutch time for an entire season — LeBron James (2008-09 and 2017-18).

DeRozan ranks third in the NBA in total clutch time points (72); LaVine is sixth (66).

DeRozan is second in the NBA in total fourth-quarter points (262), while LaVine is tied for seventh (210). The last pairs of teammates to both rank in the top seven in fourth-quarter points were Dwyane Wade and LeBron James for the Miami Heat and Dirk Nowitzki and Jason Terry for the Dallas Mavericks in 2010-11, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

“Nothing flusters him,” LaVine says of DeRozan. “I can watch him and be like, ‘Oh wow, he’s not worried about the score, the time or the defender.’ He’s going to get to his spot and he’s going to get the shot that he wants.”

Bulls star DeMar DeRozan knocks down a 3-pointer at the buzzer, a one-legged heave to lead Chicago to a 108-106 victory over the Indiana Pacers on Dec. 31. (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images)

Even if the shots he needs look like DeRozan’s unlikely pair of buzzer-beaters — a heave off one-leg to beat the Indiana Pacers and a corner 3 over two defenders to beat the Washington Wizards on the next night — the Bulls trust DeRozan to execute in those moments.

Perhaps good fortune played a role in DeRozan’s buzzer-beaters, but he insists luck isn’t the only reason. He spends time perfecting those off-balance moves, he says. While working out last summer, he played 1-on-1 with his cousin — “big dude, athletic dude, he says he got the fastest hands this side of the Mississippi,” as DeRozan describes him — and he’ll allow the cousin to hack him without penalty.

So when DeRozan hit that game winner in Indiana, his family group chat erupted, not with shock, but familiarity.

“That’s the same shot D be making in the backyard,” DeRozan recalled the messages coming in. “They see it and understand where it comes from. Where it’s not necessarily surprising or a bad shot. … I drilled so many things to where sometimes you’ve got to go in the trick bag and shoot an unusual shot to be able to get it off and make it.”

And it’s not just off-balance 3-pointers. DeRozan has elevated his patented midrange game, too. He’s shooting 48.0% from the area, the highest average of his career.

And he’s taking 3-pointers at the highest rate since 2017-18, up to 2.1 attempts per game, and converting at a career-high 35.7% from beyond the arc.

Wednesday, Jan. 12
Mavs at Knicks, 7:30 p.m.
Nets at Bulls, 10 p.m.

Friday, Jan. 14
Warriors at Bulls, 7:30 p.m.
Mavs at Grizzlies, 10 p.m.

All times Eastern

“You play the piano long enough you’re going to get better at it. You will understand certain keys a little bit better, certain tones,” DeRozan says. “That’s how I look at my game and that’s how I wanted to approach my game. … That was one thing I learned from Kobe [Bryant]. As long as you play, if you’re not continuously getting better at one thing, you will continue to be the same player. Even if you improve one thing a season, after a span of time, by the time you are done you have got better at X amount of things.”

Sitting on a couch inside an office at the Bulls’ practice facility, DeRozan looks down. He thinks about all he has been through since that last appearance in the Eastern Conference Finals with the Raptors in 2015-16.

“I’ve failed in big moments. I’ve had success in big moments,” DeRozan says. “I’m big on going through the tough times because the tough times [are going to] show you something that the good times can’t. That’s going to show you how to be resilient, how to be tough, how to be calm in tense moments where certain people are not calm.”

He offers an inspired rant, rattling off the chapters of adversity he has endured over the past few years: The devastating trade to San Antonio, away from his best friend and the only NBA home he’d ever known … playing multiple seasons through a global pandemic, in isolation … the fragility of life, including the deaths of close friends, Bryant and Nipsey Hussle, and his father.

“For so long, I was, like, tensed up trying to figure out what and why so much stuff happened. Trying to maneuver through so much. Now it’s like you kind of just let your hair down and let everything you’ve been through just take over for itself. The good, the bad, the ugly, everything you endured. … I don’t look at it like it’s vindication. It’s just — it’s peace.”

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DeMar DeRozan and his late-career renaissance with the Bullson January 12, 2022 at 1:57 pm Read More »

What if the new Chicago Bears regime is not sold on Justin Fields?Dominique Blantonon January 12, 2022 at 1:00 pm

The Chicago Bears‘ chairman, George McCaskey, went ahead and fired head coach Matt Nagy and the general manager Ryan Pace. With the help of Hall of Fame team builder Bill Polian as a consultant, the Bears seem to be off to a great start because of the names being brought in.

When you hear names like Ed Dodds (Indianapolis Colts Assistant GM), Joe Schoen (Buffalo Bills Assistant GM), and Rick Smith (former Texans GM), just to name a few, it tells you that the Bears seem to be in decent shape during this process. Despite the very odd and bad presser, you must give George some credit for hiring Polian to assist him in the search.

For so many reasons, the Bears’ GM and HC jobs are the most sought-after jobs this offseason. They have young pieces on defense to build around while also having veterans to compete within year one of the regime change. The offensive side of the ball needs plenty of work but also has some promising, ascending young players.

However, one big reason the job is so attractive is because of quarterback Justin Fields. GMs should be eager to build around a young, talented QB with tons of potential. Head coaches will see Fields and want to be the person to unlock all his potential.

The Chicago Bears need to hire someone that is all in on Justin Fields as QB.

What people have not considered is what happens if one of these candidates (GM or HC) wants the job but is not a fan of Fields? I do not think it would be a smart move for a GM and/or HC to immediately dismiss Fields as the future of the Bears.

A new GM and HC having 3-4 years to evaluate a young QB who has the upside of being one of the best young signal-callers in this league is an asset. Add in the fact that they aren’t bound to him because they didn’t draft him and it’s a no-brainer.

If candidates come in automatically looking for an exit route from Fields, that is a bad sign. The new regime should be able to play both sides of the fence. If you were not sold on him coming out of the draft, at the very least you let him have a chance to prove that he can be the guy.

Finding a franchise QB is the toughest assignment for a GM; not giving young talent in Fields a chance because you sticking to your pre-draft evaluation just adds more pressure to your job. With the roster constructed as is, the Bears are in an interesting position.

You can look at the roster as more of a retooling than a rebuild. For years, the main problem for the Bears has been on the offensive side of the ball, specifically finding a franchise quarterback. It would be completely unnecessary for the new regime to not give Fields a fair look before making a decision if he is the right QB for the franchise moving forward.

Related Story:An updated criteria on the new Chicago Bears GM

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What if the new Chicago Bears regime is not sold on Justin Fields?Dominique Blantonon January 12, 2022 at 1:00 pm Read More »

DeMar DeRozan and his late-career renaissance with the Chicago Bullson January 12, 2022 at 12:58 pm


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THE STADIUM CREW has already begun to disassemble the United Center floor, turning the arena from a basketball court to a hockey rink following the Chicago Bulls‘ victory over the Orlando Magic. It’s Jan. 3, and as they stack the courtside seats, remove the scorer’s table and line the outside of the stands with hockey boards, DeMar DeRozan stands alone at the free throw line 30 minutes after the buzzer.

He’s stewing. “S—,” he yells, his voice echoing off the walls of the arena. Another miss.

DeRozan, who is shooting better than 85% from the line on the season, had an uncharacteristically poor night, finishing 7-for-13 and missing 4 of his 9 free throws in the second half, including three in the final 30 seconds. A few minutes earlier, DeRozan had grabbed Taurean Green, a Bulls player development coach, to head back to the court. On their way out, DeRozan was reminded the crew is flipping the court ahead of the Chicago Blackhawks‘ home game the next night.

“Well, I’m going to shoot if I have to until all the floor is gone,” DeRozan said.

Nevermind that the Bulls had just collected what was their eighth consecutive victory, or that in the two games prior, DeRozan had become the first player in NBA history to hit game-winning buzzer-beaters on consecutive nights.

As he stands at the line, the clangs of equipment being hauled off around him, he hears his father’s voice booming in his head.

“My dad used to cuss me out when I missed free throws,” DeRozan says after a Bulls practice a few days later. “He used to yell from the bleachers. He used to say it was a dollar every time I missed a free throw.

“The other night, the only thing on my mind is my f—king dad would kill me if he saw me miss this many free throws. That’s why I take it so seriously.”

And so back on the rapidly disintegrating floor, DeRozan, still in his home whites, shoots. And shoots. And shoots.

He challenges himself to make 10 consecutive free throws before he can count them toward his total. If he misses one before he hits 10 in a row, he starts over. He estimates, later that night, that he made about 250 free throws after the game, hitting 10 in a row, 25 times.

“When he does something wrong he has to correct it perfectly,” DeRozan’s longtime trainer Chris Farr says. “You can say we’re going to shoot 100 free throws, but if it doesn’t feel right, he just keeps going. He keeps going until he gets it right.”

Now in his 13th season in the NBA, DeRozan is experiencing the rarest of sports commodities: a late-career renaissance. After emerging as a scorer with the Toronto Raptors and honing his skills as a playmaker with the San Antonio Spurs, DeRozan is averaging 26.2 points per game in leading the Bulls to the best record (27-11) in the Eastern Conference, and a prime-time Wednesday matchup with the Brooklyn Nets (10 p.m. ET, ESPN).

At age 32, DeMar DeRozan is better than ever.

“DeMar’s from Compton, but when you roll his thumbprint, he’s really from Louisiana,” Farr says. “In Louisiana, they make that dish called gumbo. And I think what has happened is, it’s a culmination of everything: Toronto, San Antonio, high school, everything is coming together at the right time. He’s putting everything together and leaving it all out there. You can see the results.”

EARLY BEFORE SHOOTAROUND one morning in 2018, San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich addressed the team with some breaking news, DeRozan recalls.

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“DeMar’s going to be the point guard,” Popovich said.

DeRozan was incredulous. Point guard? Me? Nah.

DeRozan was a scorer. He had been a scorer as a first-round draft pick out of USC in 2009 through his first nine seasons in the NBA. He’d averaged at least 20 points per game in every season since 2013-14. Sure, DeRozan had averaged 5.2 assists in his last season with the Raptors, but Kyle Lowry was the point guard. And it wasn’t like Popovich had prepped him on this plan, either, before addressing the team.

“Now [as a point guard] you’ve got to understand everybody on the team,” DeRozan says. “Their capabilities, their strengths, their weaknesses and how I can help them. How I could bring the best out of these players. It started with Pop bringing the best out of me that I didn’t think I had.

“Before then, I was a scorer. … If I’m 5-for-30, I don’t care. If I’m 15-for-30. Like that was my whole mindset. [Popovich] challenged me to the point of understanding the game in the complete whole. How to be a point guard. How to be a playmaker. How to dictate the game. How to move without the play. How to play without the ball. How not to turn over the ball.”

Popovich challenged DeRozan repeatedly, putting him in situations out of his comfort zone.

DeRozan flourished — averaging 6.2 assists in his first season in San Antonio, 5.6 in his second and a career-high 6.9 assists in 2020-21.

“It was like all right cool, I want to take on this challenge because I don’t want to be mad about me being here,” he says. “You can’t just dribble, dribble, dribble, you’ve got to be efficient with everything you do. … Slowly but surely, it made me a better basketball player, understanding stuff on the court instead of just scoring. … To combine those two things and the knowledge that came with it, I think put me in a place to where I’m at now.”

While DeRozan’s game was rounding into form on the basketball court, his life off of it was in turmoil.

His father, Frank, was dealing with several long-term illnesses in Los Angeles. Once a regular at Raptors games from 2009 to 2018, Frank had spent years in and out of hospitals before he died on Feb. 19, 2021. During his tenure in San Antonio, DeRozan would take a private plane in between games or practices to spend time with his father.

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“I just wanted to sit by him,” DeRozan says. “There were times, I flew home, he didn’t even know I was there. I’d just sit next to his bed for hours.”

The Spurs kept it quiet but allowed DeRozan to fly to Los Angeles whenever possible. Popovich urged him to go and come back whenever he could; he didn’t even have to play if he didn’t want to.

But DeRozan never wanted his absence to become a distraction, even if he often played on only a couple hours of sleep.

“I’d be lying to you if I didn’t say I had days, or I had moments where I was like, ‘Damn, is this s— ever going to get back to some type of peace?'” DeRozan says. “There were days where it was hard to figure out how I was going to maneuver through so much emotionally so I could be myself out there on the court.”

When DeRozan hit NBA free agency for the first time this past summer, he could still hear his father, whom he talked with on the phone after every game, in his mind, helping with the decision-making process.

When he was 10 years old, DeRozan remembers playing 1-on-1 with Frank. On one particular play, Frank went in too hard and accidentally busted his son’s lip. Tasting his own blood instantly threw the younger DeRozan off his game.

Sensing this, and a lesson to impart on his young son, Frank did not relent. Instead, he made it even tougher on DeRozan to score. He blocked his shot. He bullied him in the paint. Frank, a former football player, was a burly man, and no matter how hard DeRozan tried to inch closer to the basket, it was hopeless. Eventually DeRozan had enough.

“I kicked the ball over the fence and said, ‘Man, I don’t want to play no more,'” DeRozan says. “I got in the car and cried all the way till we got home, so I could tell my momma.

“There’s a whole psychological approach that he was trying to show me. Keep your calm, keep your cool, this happens in sports. I always remember that basketball moment so clearly because it makes perfect sense to the game to this day. I think a lot of my calmness comes from moments I shared with him on the court.”

Before the season, DeRozan inked a tattoo on his left shoulder of one of his favorite portraits of his father.

“He had to heal himself,” Farr says. “A lot of that stuff he holds within. I think now, he’s opening up more and that’s just part of the healing process. I’m just glad Chicago softened the weight on him and gave him the opportunity.

“He got the hug he needed when he got there.”

ZACH LAVINE WAS still in Tokyo playing for Team USA in the Olympics when the Bulls overhauled their roster during free agency last summer — leaving only LaVine, Coby White and Patrick Williams remaining from the last season’s team. When news broke that DeRozan was signing with Chicago, LaVine got DeRozan’s number and sent him a text.

“I was like, ‘Man, look we need somebody like you on the team,'” LaVine says.

Shortly after LaVine returned stateside, he made the 90-mile drive to go work out with his new teammate. They stayed in the gym together for 2 1/2 hours and then sat for another hour, talking about their vision for the season. There was an instant connection.

The two share a strong mutual respect. For all the talented players DeRozan has played with — his best friend Lowry, an All-Star big man in LaMarcus Aldridge — he had never had an outside scorer like LaVine. And while LaVine had ascended to make his first All-Star Game and was playing for Team USA, he lacked the playoff experience and pedigree DeRozan could provide.

“Him coming here and being able to be himself, I think was the best thing for him,” LaVine says. “And for me personally, because I needed another guy on the team that each and every game was going to go out there and have my back.”

“I’ve been here the last five years and we have done nothing but lose. I put up incredible stats that get washed under the rug because we lose. But individually, you’re not going to have that success until you’re a successful team. I have no ego. I don’t mind sharing or DeMar DeRozan taking fourth-quarter shots or hitting game-winners. I’m happy because we’re winning.”

play
1:45

DeMar DeRozan discusses his Bulls teammates trying to prove doubters wrong by challenging for a NBA championship.

After DeRozan signed, Chicago coach Billy Donovan flew to California to meet with the Bulls’ new duo. The whispers of skeptics from outside the organization had crescendoed.

Could these two ball-dominant guards work together? Would this defense be just bad or historically bad? Where’s the outside shooting?

An ESPN offseason survey of 10 scouts and executives around the league tabbed DeRozan’s signing as the worst move of the offsesason.

“Don’t worry about anything, this s— will work,” DeRozan told LaVine. “If we do what we’re supposed to do, the caliber of players that we are, everybody will be happy.”

So far, he has been right. Chicago hasn’t experienced this kind of bliss in a decade. The Bulls have missed the playoffs for four straight seasons, but now they are on top of the East for the first time since the 2011-12 season, the height of the Derrick Rose era in Chicago. DeRozan, on his third team in five years, is leading a Bulls team that is on pace to win 58 games this season. (They were projected to win just 40).

DeRozan (26.5) and LaVine (26.4) rank seventh and eighth, respectively, in the NBA in scoring. Guards Lonzo Ball and Alex Caruso have been the team’s defensive anchors, guiding the Bulls to a respectable 13th in defensive efficiency to go along with the league’s fourth-best offense.

In the fourth quarter, the Bulls turn their offense over to DeRozan, leaning on his combination of scoring and playmaking. He holds the ball for an average length of 6.9 seconds during clutch time possessions, per Second Spectrum tracking data, the fifth longest in the league, trailing some of the most ball-dominant guards such as Memphis’s Ja Morant, Phoenix’s Chris Paul and Atlanta’s Trae Young.

During clutch time — when the score is within five points in the last five minutes of a game — DeRozan is averaging 4.0 points on 57% shooting. Over the past 25 seasons, only one player has averaged 4.0 points while shooting at least 55% from the field during clutch time for an entire season — LeBron James (2008-09 and 2017-18).

DeRozan ranks third in the NBA in total clutch time points (72); LaVine is sixth (66).

DeRozan is second in the NBA in total fourth-quarter points (262), while LaVine is tied for seventh (210). The last pairs of teammates to both rank in the top seven in fourth-quarter points were Dwyane Wade and LeBron James for the Miami Heat and Dirk Nowitzki and Jason Terry for the Dallas Mavericks in 2010-11, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

“Nothing flusters him,” LaVine says of DeRozan. “I can watch him and be like, ‘Oh wow, he’s not worried about the score, the time or the defender.’ He’s going to get to his spot and he’s going to get the shot that he wants.”

Bulls star DeMar DeRozan knocks down a 3-pointer at the buzzer, a one-legged heave to lead Chicago to a 108-106 victory over the Indiana Pacers on Dec. 31. (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images)

Even if the shots he needs look like DeRozan’s unlikely pair of buzzer-beaters — a heave off one-leg to beat the Indiana Pacers and a corner 3 over two defenders to beat the Washington Wizards on the next night — the Bulls trust DeRozan to execute in those moments.

Perhaps good fortune played a role in DeRozan’s buzzer-beaters, but he insists luck isn’t the only reason. He spends time perfecting those off-balance moves, he says. While working out last summer, he played 1-on-1 with his cousin — “big dude, athletic dude, he says he got the fastest hands this side of the Mississippi,” as DeRozan describes him — and he’ll allow the cousin to hack him without penalty.

So when DeRozan hit that game winner in Indiana, his family group chat erupted, not with shock, but familiarity.

“That’s the same shot D be making in the backyard,” DeRozan recalled the messages coming in. “They see it and understand where it comes from. Where it’s not necessarily surprising or a bad shot. … I drilled so many things to where sometimes you’ve got to go in the trick bag and shoot an unusual shot to be able to get it off and make it.”

And it’s not just off-balance 3-pointers. DeRozan has elevated his patented midrange game, too. He’s shooting 48.0% from the area, the highest average of his career.

And he’s taking 3-pointers at the highest rate since 2017-18, up to 2.1 attempts per game, and converting at a career-high 35.7% from beyond the arc.

Wednesday, Jan. 12
Mavs at Knicks, 7:30 p.m.
Nets at Bulls, 10 p.m.

Friday, Jan. 14
Warriors at Bulls, 7:30 p.m.
Mavs at Grizzlies, 10 p.m.

All times Eastern

“You play the piano long enough you’re going to get better at it. You will understand certain keys a little bit better, certain tones,” DeRozan says. “That’s how I look at my game and that’s how I wanted to approach my game. … That was one thing I learned from Kobe [Bryant]. As long as you play, if you’re not continuously getting better at one thing, you will continue to be the same player. Even if you improve one thing a season, after a span of time, by the time you are done you have got better at X amount of things.”

Sitting on a couch inside an office at the Bulls’ practice facility, DeRozan looks down. He thinks about all he has been through since that last appearance in the Eastern Conference Finals with the Raptors in 2015-16.

“I’ve failed in big moments. I’ve had success in big moments,” DeRozan says. “I’m big on going through the tough times because the tough times [are going to] show you something that the good times can’t. That’s going to show you how to be resilient, how to be tough, how to be calm in tense moments where certain people are not calm.”

He offers an inspired rant, rattling off the chapters of adversity he has endured over the past few years: The devastating trade to San Antonio, away from his best friend and the only NBA home he’d ever known … playing multiple seasons through a global pandemic, in isolation … the fragility of life, including the deaths of close friends, Bryant and Nipsey Hussle, and his father.

“For so long, I was, like, tensed up trying to figure out what and why so much stuff happened. Trying to maneuver through so much. Now it’s like you kind of just let your hair down and let everything you’ve been through just take over for itself. The good, the bad, the ugly, everything you endured. … I don’t look at it like it’s vindication. It’s just — it’s peace.”

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DeMar DeRozan and his late-career renaissance with the Chicago Bullson January 12, 2022 at 12:58 pm Read More »

Do not expect Nick Saban to the Chicago Bears anytime soonTodd Welteron January 12, 2022 at 12:00 pm

Alabama legendary head coach Nick Saban did not win his eighth college football national title. Could Saban be lured back to the NFL after his team was unable to reach the college football mountaintop?

Would he want to take one more run at adding a Super Bowl ring to his seven National Championship rings? More specifically, would he be interested in the Chicago Bears head coaching or general manager job?

His name was recently discussed on the local radio station, 670 the Score’s Mully and Haugh show about being a possible candidate. For context’s sake, it was done more with the idea of going for a big name than demanding Saban be seriously considered.

If Chicago Bears chairman George McCaskey wants to make a splash, the water coming out of the pool gets no bigger than Saban. While it is fun to dream, the reality is Saban is entrenched in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

Why would he leave a job where runs his empire unquestioned to go work for Chicago Bears’ chairman and noted fanboy George McCaskey? Why would he give up the chance to recruit 25 first-round draft picks a year for a league where you typically just get one shot at first-round talent in one year?

Saban is a legend in Alabama. In Chicago, he would have his head being called for on the first failed fourth-down conversion. Plus, he did not particularly like his time in the NFL when he was the head coach for the Miami Dolphins.

Saban also stands to make a lot more money in the college ranks than in the NFL. If Mel Tucker can get $95 million from Michigan State, imagine how much Saban is in line for at Bama.

The only reason the Chicago Bears should call Nick Saban is to ask about Brian Daboll.

The #Dolphins and #Bears are requesting permission to interview #Bills OC Brian Daboll, source said. He’ll get more interest, as well.

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) January 11, 2022

Brian Daboll served as Saban’s offensive coordinator in 2017. Saban should be called for his opinion on his former assistant. Saban may give biased feedback. At the same time, Saban is a straight shooter.

It would be good to get feedback on Daboll to make sure he is not just another Matt Nagy. Saban can provide insights on how married to a scheme Daboll can get. He can let the Chicago Bears know what type of coach and leader Daboll is from first-hand experience.

It could not hurt George McCaskey and his search committee to ask about ways Saban has adapted over the years to maintain success. There is nothing wrong with picking the legendary coach’s mind about talent development.

At 70 years old, it is hard to imagine Saban suddenly wanting to take on the NFL one more time. Not when he can have the pick of his players and not when he has total power over an entire state. He has a well-oiled machine in Alabama. Why give up that for a clunker in Chicago?

Related Story:Chicago Bears request to interview wrong Buffalo Bills coordinator

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Do not expect Nick Saban to the Chicago Bears anytime soonTodd Welteron January 12, 2022 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Lester retires with 200 wins, 3 World Series ringson January 12, 2022 at 12:18 pm


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Three-time World Series champion and 200-game winner Jon Lester is retiring after a 16-year career.

Lester, 38, told ESPN that his body just isn’t up for the rigors of a major league season anymore. He made 30 or more starts 12 times during his career and 28 during his final season split between the Washington Nationals and St. Louis Cardinals.

His r?sum? includes five All-Star appearances and a 2.51 postseason ERA.

“It’s kind of run its course,” Lester said. “It’s getting harder for me physically. The little things that come up throughout the year turned into bigger things that hinder your performance.

“I’d like to think I’m a halfway decent self-evaluator. I don’t want someone else telling me I can’t do this anymore. I want to be able to hand my jersey over and say, ‘Thank you, it’s been fun.’ That’s probably the biggest deciding factor.”

Lester leaves a legacy of postseason success. He won two World Series titles with the Boston Red Sox in 2007 and 2013 and a third ring with the Chicago Cubs in 2016, helping break a 108-year title drought. Additional playoff appearances in 2008, 2009, 2014, 2015, 2017 and 2018 made him an October fixture.

36mJesse Rogers

18hBuster Olney

1 Related

Those memories will shine brightest for Lester.

“I remember the nervous feeling I had before Game 4 of the World Series in 2007,” he said. “I remember standing on the mound in Game 5 against St. Louis in 2013, in a tie series, and an [paper] airplane got thrown from the upper deck that lands right behind the mound. I still remember looking at that.

“And then the turmoil of Game 7 in 2016 [when the Cubs won in extra innings].”

In his prime, the 6-foot-4 Lester dominated with a nasty cutter and intimidating presence on the mound, which included his patented look: glove resting just under his chin as he stared in for signs from the catcher.

“The cutter is what neutralized me,” said Mark Teixeira, who along with Evan Longoria has the distinction of striking out more times than anyone else (22) against Lester. “He would go outside and see me diving over the plate, then he would come in with the cutter.”

“The reason that he was such a bulldog was he didn’t give in. And he wasn’t afraid to walk guys. He knew how to pitch the lineup.”

Lester is one of only nine modern left-handers with 200 wins, a .600 winning percentage and a career ERA under 4.00. Six of the other eight are in the Hall of Fame, while one, CC Sabathia, isn’t eligible yet.

Jon Lester retires after 16 major league seasons that included five All-Star nods and World Series wins with the Red Sox and Cubs. Jerry Lai/USA Today Sports

Off the field, Lester was known as the teammate who united the clubhouse.

“If you’re building a baseball player, as far as how they treat other people, what their goals are, how you want them to compete and act on and off the field, he’s the model,” said Cubs manager David Ross, who was Lester’s personal catcher during the pitcher’s first two years in Chicago.

Lester signed a $155 million free-agent contract with the Cubs in 2015. The decision to sign with a last-place team wasn’t easy.

“Him taking a chance on us when he did set the stage for everything that came,” then-general manager Jed Hoyer said. “He was clearly only coming here for one reason, and everyone knew it.”

Lester called signing with the Cubs “the single biggest decision we’ve ever made in my pro career,” though he struggled in his early weeks in Chicago, with a 6.23 ERA in April 2015.

“Coming in, you’re expected to be the guy to bring the World Series,” he said. “I felt that early on in 2015. I was trying to win the World Series in the first month of the season. Rossy [David Ross] pulled me aside and basically told me to be myself. ‘You don’t need to do anything more than what you’ve done. Just relax and pitch.'”

The next month, his ERA dropped to 1.76, and Lester’s career in Chicago took off. One online poll of Chicago fans named him the greatest free-agent signing in the city’s history — not least because Lester served as a recruitment tool to bring other stars to the Cubs.

“The reason I went there is I knew they had a chance to win a championship because Jon Lester went there,” said former big leaguer John Lackey, who signed with Chicago in 2016. “He changed that organization, but that was a signal to the baseball world they were serious. That put them on the map for veteran guys.”

In his second year in Chicago, Lester went 19-5 with a 2.44 ERA and was named National League Championship Series co-MVP. He pitched three times in the World Series against Cleveland, including a relief appearance in Game 7, on his way to a third World Series ring.

“I don’t want someone else telling me I can’t do this anymore. I want to be able to hand my jersey over and say, ‘Thank you, it’s been fun.’ That’s probably the biggest deciding factor.”

Jon Lester, on his decision to retire

It was the start of a remarkable postseason stretch. From 2016 to 2018, Lester compiled a 1.93 ERA in 10 playoff appearances.

“He worked harder than anyone I’ve ever been around,” Ross said. “When it was time to work, he was going to work. When it was time to play, he was going to make sure everyone had a good time. That’s probably the biggest compliment I could give him.”

Lester began his career with the Red Sox in 2002 and made his big league debut in June 2006.

Late that season, back pain sent Lester to the hospital, where he was eventually diagnosed with anaplastic large T-cell lymphoma. He underwent chemotherapy but was able to return to the team midway through 2007.

“I was in Triple-A on a rehab assignment in Pawtucket after cancer,” Lester said. “My parents were there and they were leaving that day or the next day to go home, and I told them they have to change their flight and I said, ‘I’m starting the next night in Cleveland.’

“That’s one of the top moments of my career. Seeing their faces was pretty cool. Once I got back to baseball, I tried not to take anything for granted and really appreciated being around the guys.”

The experience led to the creation of Lester’s charity, NVRQT, short for ‘Never Quit,’ which helps fundraise for pediatric cancer research. He will continue with the foundation in retirement.

Lester’s time in Boston left an impression on him.

“It makes you grow up really fast, and it’s an awesome, awesome place to me,” Lester said. “It made me more accountable than if I was somewhere else.”

Lester threw 5 2/3 shutout innings against the Colorado Rockies in Game 4 to clinch the 2007 World Series title. In the 2013 World Series, Lester went 2-0 with a 0.59 ERA against St. Louis.

“Any time he had the ball, it was a different feeling as a teammate,” former teammate Dustin Pedroia said. “The power, the way he worked, the will to win. He had great stuff, but his best gift was he found a way to win. That’s something you can’t teach, you can’t coach. It’s a special player that has that. There’s not many.”

Lester was traded to Oakland in 2014 and started a wild-card playoff game, which the A’s eventually lost, before signing with the Cubs that offseason.

After the 2020 season in Chicago, Lester signed with the Nationals. Dealt to the Cardinals at the trade deadline, he went 4-1 with St. Louis while winning his 200th and final game in late September.

“Playing with Waino [Adam Wainwright] and Yadi [Yadier Molina] was awesome,” Lester said. “It was a cool experience to play for that organization. You learn to understand why they’re so successful every year.”

The Cardinals earned a wild-card berth, allowing Lester one final postseason opportunity. But by the end of the season, particularly after a COVID-19 quarantine in 2020, Lester knew it was time to go.

“The part that helped me be OK with this was quarantine,” Lester said. “I was home, at a time of the year I wasn’t normally home. That opened my eyes. … When the work outweighs the joy, then it’s kind of time to reevaluate where you’re at.”

Lester said he might consider television work and didn’t rule out coming to Cubs spring training to tutor young pitchers — but full-time coaching isn’t in the cards. He said he will miss many aspects of the game but knows he lived up to one commitment he made to himself.

“I never wanted fans to leave a game and ask, ‘Was the effort there?'” Lester said. “I think I always gave it.”

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Lester retires with 200 wins, 3 World Series ringson January 12, 2022 at 12:18 pm Read More »

Lester retires with 200 wins, 3 World Series ringson January 12, 2022 at 12:02 pm


print

Three-time World Series champion and 200-game winner Jon Lester is retiring after a 16-year career.

Lester, 38, told ESPN that his body just isn’t up for the rigors of a major league season anymore. He made 30 or more starts 12 times during his career and 28 during his final season split between the Washington Nationals and St. Louis Cardinals.

His r?sum? includes five All-Star appearances and a 2.51 postseason ERA.

“It’s kind of run its course,” Lester said. “It’s getting harder for me physically. The little things that come up throughout the year turned into bigger things that hinder your performance.

“I’d like to think I’m a halfway decent self-evaluator. I don’t want someone else telling me I can’t do this anymore. I want to be able to hand my jersey over and say, ‘Thank you, it’s been fun.’ That’s probably the biggest deciding factor.”

Lester leaves a legacy of postseason success. He won two World Series titles with the Boston Red Sox in 2007 and 2013 and a third ring with the Chicago Cubs in 2016, helping break a 108-year title drought. Additional playoff appearances in 2008, 2009, 2014, 2015, 2017 and 2018 made him an October fixture.

36mJesse Rogers

18hBuster Olney

1 Related

Those memories will shine brightest for Lester.

“I remember the nervous feeling I had before Game 4 of the World Series in 2007,” he said. “I remember standing on the mound in Game 5 against St. Louis in 2013, in a tie series, and an [paper] airplane got thrown from the upper deck that lands right behind the mound. I still remember looking at that.

“And then the turmoil of Game 7 in 2016 [when the Cubs won in extra innings].”

In his prime, the 6-foot-4 Lester dominated with a nasty cutter and intimidating presence on the mound, which included his patented look: glove resting just under his chin as he stared in for signs from the catcher.

“The cutter is what neutralized me,” said Mark Teixeira, who along with Evan Longoria has the distinction of striking out more times than anyone else (22) against Lester. “He would go outside and see me diving over the plate, then he would come in with the cutter.”

“The reason that he was such a bulldog was he didn’t give in. And he wasn’t afraid to walk guys. He knew how to pitch the lineup.”

Lester is one of only nine modern left-handers with 200 wins, a .600 winning percentage and a career ERA under 4.00. Six of the other eight are in the Hall of Fame, while one, CC Sabathia, isn’t eligible yet.

Jon Lester retires after 16 major league seasons that included five All-Star nods and World Series wins with the Red Sox and Cubs. Jerry Lai/USA Today Sports

Off the field, Lester was known as the teammate who united the clubhouse.

“If you’re building a baseball player, as far as how they treat other people, what their goals are, how you want them to compete and act on and off the field, he’s the model,” said Cubs manager David Ross, who was Lester’s personal catcher during the pitcher’s first two years in Chicago.

Lester signed a $155 million free-agent contract with the Cubs in 2015. The decision to sign with a last-place team wasn’t easy.

“Him taking a chance on us when he did set the stage for everything that came,” then-general manager Jed Hoyer said. “He was clearly only coming here for one reason, and everyone knew it.”

Lester called signing with the Cubs “the single biggest decision we’ve ever made in my pro career,” though he struggled in his early weeks in Chicago, with a 6.23 ERA in April 2015.

“Coming in, you’re expected to be the guy to bring the World Series,” he said. “I felt that early on in 2015. I was trying to win the World Series in the first month of the season. Rossy [David Ross] pulled me aside and basically told me to be myself. ‘You don’t need to do anything more than what you’ve done. Just relax and pitch.'”

The next month, his ERA dropped to 1.76, and Lester’s career in Chicago took off. One online poll of Chicago fans named him the greatest free-agent signing in the city’s history — not least because Lester served as a recruitment tool to bring other stars to the Cubs.

“The reason I went there is I knew they had a chance to win a championship because Jon Lester went there,” said former big leaguer John Lackey, who signed with Chicago in 2016. “He changed that organization, but that was a signal to the baseball world they were serious. That put them on the map for veteran guys.”

In his second year in Chicago, Lester went 19-5 with a 2.44 ERA and was named National League Championship Series co-MVP. He pitched three times in the World Series against Cleveland, including a relief appearance in Game 7, on his way to a third World Series ring.

“I don’t want someone else telling me I can’t do this anymore. I want to be able to hand my jersey over and say, ‘Thank you, it’s been fun.’ That’s probably the biggest deciding factor.”

Jon Lester, on his decision to retire

It was the start of a remarkable postseason stretch. From 2016 to 2018, Lester compiled a 1.93 ERA in 10 playoff appearances.

“He worked harder than anyone I’ve ever been around,” Ross said. “When it was time to work, he was going to work. When it was time to play, he was going to make sure everyone had a good time. That’s probably the biggest compliment I could give him.”

Lester began his career with the Red Sox in 2002 and made his big league debut in June 2006.

Late that season, back pain sent Lester to the hospital, where he was eventually diagnosed with anaplastic large T-cell lymphoma. He underwent chemotherapy but was able to return to the team midway through 2007.

“I was in Triple-A on a rehab assignment in Pawtucket after cancer,” Lester said. “My parents were there and they were leaving that day or the next day to go home, and I told them they have to change their flight and I said, ‘I’m starting the next night in Cleveland.’

“That’s one of the top moments of my career. Seeing their faces was pretty cool. Once I got back to baseball, I tried not to take anything for granted and really appreciated being around the guys.”

The experience led to the creation of Lester’s charity, NVRQT, short for ‘Never Quit,’ which helps fundraise for pediatric cancer research. He will continue with the foundation in retirement.

Lester’s time in Boston left an impression on him.

“It makes you grow up really fast, and it’s an awesome, awesome place to me,” Lester said. “It made me more accountable than if I was somewhere else.”

Lester threw 5 2/3 shutout innings against the Colorado Rockies in Game 4 to clinch the 2007 World Series title. In the 2013 World Series, Lester went 2-0 with a 0.59 ERA against St. Louis.

“Any time he had the ball, it was a different feeling as a teammate,” former teammate Dustin Pedroia said. “The power, the way he worked, the will to win. He had great stuff, but his best gift was he found a way to win. That’s something you can’t teach, you can’t coach. It’s a special player that has that. There’s not many.”

Lester was traded to Oakland in 2014 and started a wild-card playoff game, which the A’s eventually lost, before signing with the Cubs that offseason.

After the 2020 season in Chicago, Lester signed with the Nationals. Dealt to the Cardinals at the trade deadline, he went 4-1 with St. Louis while winning his 200th and final game in late September.

“Playing with Waino [Adam Wainwright] and Yadi [Yadier Molina] was awesome,” Lester said. “It was a cool experience to play for that organization. You learn to understand why they’re so successful every year.”

The Cardinals earned a wild-card berth, allowing Lester one final postseason opportunity. But by the end of the season, particularly after a COVID-19 quarantine in 2020, Lester knew it was time to go.

“The part that helped me be OK with this was quarantine,” Lester said. “I was home, at a time of the year I wasn’t normally home. That opened my eyes. … When the work outweighs the joy, then it’s kind of time to reevaluate where you’re at.”

Lester said he might consider television work and didn’t rule out coming to Cubs spring training to tutor young pitchers — but full-time coaching isn’t in the cards. He said he will miss many aspects of the game but knows he lived up to one commitment he made to himself.

“I never wanted fans to leave a game and ask, ‘Was the effort there?'” Lester said. “I think I always gave it.”

Read More

Lester retires with 200 wins, 3 World Series ringson January 12, 2022 at 12:02 pm Read More »