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Pedro Grifol needs White Sox to play hard for him: ‘It’s everything really,’ says new manager

SAN DIEGO — Pedro Grifol has a lot to do and prove in 2023 as he takes over as manager of a White Sox team that went 81-81 in former manager Tony La Russa’s second year.

Grifol will be asked to prepare the Sox better and to get more out of the roster. Core players like Yoan Moncada, Luis Robert and Eloy Jimenez need to stay healthy and live up to their ability.

If the Sox have any chance of being a championship caliber team in what should be middle of their contention window, their big-money core of young talents signed to long-term deals need to perform like championship caliber players. That falls on them, but it also falls on Grifol, a relationship builder who got the most out of players like All-Star catcher Salvador Perez, when he was a coach with the Royals.

It’s often said the most important trait of a good manager is one who’s players play hard for him.

“It’s everything, really,” Grifol said Tuesday at the winter meetings. “When players want to get to the ballpark to play for each other and play for an organization and a manager and a staff, everything comes together.”

Grifol also wants to maintain a fun environment, something that was common under manager Rick Renteria but fleeting under La Russa, who managed two seasons after Renteria was fired. Pitcher Lucas Giolito often said fun was lacking and needed last season.

“That enjoyment that players need to be able to perform on a daily basis and motivate themselves on a daily basis and be motivated by us, it’s really important,” Grifol said.

“So part of my job is to delegate to our staff, allow them to work, allow the players to be themselves, whatever that is. And obviously we’ll have our rules here and there. Everybody’s got to stay in between those lines, but for the most part, those lines are flexible. Go ahead and be yourself and enjoy the game.”

“When you get that type of environment, you’re setting yourself up for good things.”

Good things, not injuries and under-performance, will be required from Robert, Moncada and Jimenez.

Robert will earn $9.5 million in the fourth year of a six-year, $50 million deal. He played in 98 games in 2022, batting .284/.319/.426 with 12 homers. Battling wrist problems in the second half, one of several physical ailments that bothered him, Robert did not homer and had five doubles in August and September.

His biggest achievement of 2022 was buying a $12 million home in Weston, Florida.

“My first impression on Luis is this guy’s an MVP candidate when I first laid eyes on him,” said Grifol, who has seen plenty of Robert as an AL Central foe. There’s nothing on the baseball field he can’t do.

“We’ve just got to keep him healthy.”

Grifol, new hitting coach Jose Castro and field coordinator Mike Tosar visited Robert and his family, spending “quality time” at Robert’s new digs which includes a hitting cage. Grifol said.

“He’s excited to get going,” Grifol said. “He’s in the process of getting healthy. He feels great. So we’re looking for big things from him this year.”

Moncada batted .212/.273/.354 with 12 homers and 51 RBI in 104 games.

He earns $17 million in 2023 in the fourth year of a seven-year, $70 million deal. Since batting .315/.367/.548 with 25 homers in 144 games in 2019 and then signing his deal, Moncada has disappointed offensively.

Jimenez will earn $9.5 million in the fifth year of a $43 million deal. Jimenez was held to 84 games because of a hamstring injury but batted .295/.358/.500 with 16 homers in 84 games. When healthy, he can be an offensive force.

“They have to want to be great, they have to want to work,” general manager Rick Hahn said Tuesday of the players. “And they have to want to be part of a championship caliber organization. The manager and the coaches play a role in creating the culture for the opportunity for that person to thrive, where they understand the expectations, where they are held accountable for their actions whether they are living up to those standards or not. On the opportunities where they are not, there are repercussions.

“Pedro and his staff are going to thrive in that area.”

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When will LeBron James break the NBA’s career points record?on December 6, 2022 at 1:13 pm

When LeBron James passed
Karl Malone for second
on the NBA’s career regular-season points list
, he set his sights firmly on Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the
NBA’s current all-time leading scorer.

Abdul-Jabbar has been atop the career points list since April 5, 1984 — eight months before James was even born — when he broke the mark previously held by Wilt Chamberlain. Now James has that record within reach, needing 908 points to surpass Abdul-Jabbar’s career total of 38,387.

At his career scoring average of 27.1 PPG, James would need 34 games to rack up that total, putting him on track to break the record on Feb. 9 against the Milwaukee Bucks. James has missed six games this season, and if he continues to miss games at the same rate he did last season, the record-breaking game would come March 12 against the New York Knicks. Through 16 games this season, James is averaging 26.1 PPG, leaving him slightly behind his career pace.

We’ll have ongoing coverage of LeBron’s quest, including updated game-by-game projections and complete stats, throughout the season.

JAMES VS. ABDUL-JABBAR

Even though James has already missed six games this season, he’s significantly ahead of the pace Abdul-Jabbar set in his 20th and final season in 1988-89. James has scored 418 points in 16 games in 2022-23; Abdul-Jabbar needed 42 games to reach the 415-point mark.

JAMES

ABDUL-JABBAR

YEAR-BY-YEAR POINT TOTALS

20TH YEAR COMPARISON

“Hopefully we’re in town, because I’m coming to that game [when LeBron breaks the record]. If we have a game, I still might come to the game, because that’s a big accomplishment. I love Bron and everything he’s done for me and everything he stands for.”

TYRONN LUE

LA Clippers head coach

Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images

On the second game of the Lakers’ road trip, James finished 29 points on 12-for-26 shooting from the field against the Wizards.

LAST 5 GAMES

“To know that I’m on the verge of breaking probably the most
sought-after record in the NBA, things that people say would probably never be done, I think it’s
just super humbling for myself. I think it’s super cool.”

LeBRON JAMES

On passing Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

Photo by Garrett Ellwood/NBAE via Getty Images

PI/Zuma Press/Icon Sportswire

James has only faced Cleveland 19 times in his career, including a 27-point performance earlier this season. He put up 46 points, his most against the Cavs, back on Jan. 25, 2021.

MORE LEBRON JAMES

Edited by Adam Reisinger.

Produced by ESPN Creative Studio: Michelle Bashaw, Rob Booth, Chris DeLisle, Jessi Dodge, Heather Donahue,
Jarret Gabel, Luke Knox, Rachel Weiss.

Illustrations by Iveta Karpathyova. Development by Christian Ramirez. Research by ESPN Stats and
Information.

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When will LeBron James break the NBA’s career points record?on December 6, 2022 at 1:13 pm Read More »

Cubs agree to one-year deal with center fielder Cody Bellinger

SAN DIEGO – The Cubs made their first big move of the offseason on Tuesday, agreeing to terms with center fielder Cody Bellinger on a one-year deal worth $17.5 million, a Sun-Times source confirmed.

“It is a really good fit,” Cubs manager David Ross said in abstract, while the move has yet to be made official, “from a perspective of, it is great defense, great bass running, left handed bat with the potential to have an uptick offensively.”

Bellinger landed on the free agent market when the Dodgers non-tendered him last month. He won the NL MVP just three years ago. But his offensive production has slipped in the years since. He was hampered by injuries in the 2021 season, and his batting average dipped to .165. This past year, he hit .210 with 19 home runs.

“He’s a player probably a lot of teams are surprised is available,” Bellinger’s agent, Scott Boras, said earlier on Tuesday. “A 27-year-old, MVP-type guy who suffered an injury and is getting his strength back, I think there’ s a lot of teams that are looking at that as a very serious upside.”

Boras said he’d received multi-year offers for Bellinger, but they preferred a one-year deal.

If Bellinger has a bounce-back year with the Cubs, he’d hit free agency again next year with more leverage.

“There are certain baseball truisms that I think are true,” president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer said Monday, “like, being strong up the middle really helps.”

Signing Bellinger is the Cubs’ first step to strengthening their roster up the middle of the field. Adding at shortstop and catcher would continue that process.

Both Hoyer and Cubs chairman Tom Ricketts have discussed the team’s financial flexibility this offseason. Hoyer said in October that if he asked for “a significant amount of money” to sign one or more free agent targets, he was sure the Cubs would have the resources to do so.

That’s translated into an approach to free agency that’s made an impression on agents.

Said Boras: “I think the Tom Tom drum is finally beating again.”

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Jury awards $2.6 million to fired Lake County circuit court clerk workers

Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly identified the office held by Lake County Circuit Court Clerk Erin Cartwright Weinstein.

A jury awarded more than $2.6 million to three former Lake County employees who claimed they were fired by Circuit Court Clerk Erin Cartwright Weinstein because they supported her opponent in the 2016 election.

One of Weinstein’s first acts after taking office in December 2016, after defeating incumbent Keith Brin, was to fire three of Brin’s former top deputies — Michelle Higgins, Tiffany Deram and Joshua Smothers.

While Weinstein and the county attorneys offered multiple reasons for terminating the three during six days of trial testimony, the verdict returned Friday showed jurors believed Weinstein fired the workers because they weren’t on her team, attorney Paul Vickrey said.

“I think the jury was sending a message,” Vickrey said Monday, noting jurors’ award increased the amount of punitive damages for each of the three plaintiffs to $75,000 from the $50,000 they had requested.

“Dedicated, competent civil servants should not have to worry about losing their jobs every four years for exercising their First Amendment rights on their own personal time,” Vickrey said.

In an email response to questions Monday, Weinstein denied the firings were tied to the workers’ support for Brin.

“I am very disappointed in the verdict,” Weinstein wrote. “I would never terminate someone’s employment for supporting my opponent. I did what I believed was in the best interest of my administration. The attorney general’s office is currently working on post-trial motions, and reviewing the possibility of an appeal.”

A spokeswoman for Attorney General Kwame Raoul declined to comment on the case.

Higgins, Deram and Smothers had actively campaigned for Brin in the months before they were fired. Weinstein, her husband or Weinstein’s top deputy, Donna Hamm, had seen the three workers marching in parades alongside Brin or at other political events throughout the campaign, according to records in the case.

Higgins had worked in the clerk’s office since 1985 and was chief of the criminal courts division when she was fired in December 2016. Deram, who had worked in the office since 1998, was deputy chief of the records division. Smothers, who had worked for the clerk since 2007, was supervisor of the Round Lake branch court. The three had argued that their jobs did not involve making policy decisions and that political alignment with the clerk was not a valid job requirement.

In depositions, Weinstein admitted that she had consulted the county human resources department about firing the employees the week before she took office, and that she did not review their personnel files before telling them to clean out their desks, according to court records.

Including punitive damages, compensation for pain and suffering, lost wages and pension, Higgins was awarded $1.1 million; Deram received $1 million; and Smothers $542,000. Weinstein won a second term as clerk in 2020.

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Sources: Bellinger, Cubs reach 1-yr., $17.5M dealon December 7, 2022 at 12:46 am

Outfielder Cody Bellinger and the Chicago Cubs are in agreement on a one-year, $17.5 million contract, sources familiar with the deal told ESPN’s Jeff Passan on Tuesday.

The 27-year-old Bellinger continued to provide Gold Glove-caliber defense in center field for the Los Angeles Dodgers last season, in addition to plus speed on the bases, but he continued to struggle offensively.

Bellinger ventured into the free agent market a year early after he was non-tendered by the Dodgers following the 2022 season. He had been due to make in the neighborhood of $18 million in 2023.

2 Related

He was named the National League’s Most Valuable Player after a 2019 season in which he slashed .305/.406/.629 with 47 home runs, 115 RBIs and 15 stolen bases while being worth 7.7 FanGraphs wins above replacement. Since then, though, Bellinger has slashed just .203/.272/.376 over a stretch of 295 regular-season games. His .648 OPS from 2020 to 2022 ranked 299th out of the 338 qualified hitters during that stretch.

Bellinger’s batting average plummeted to .165 in 2021, and continued into last season, when he hit .210 with 19 home runs in 144 games for a Dodgers team that set a franchise record with 111 wins.

In six MLB seasons, all with Los Angeles, Bellinger has a career .248 batting average with 152 home runs, 422 RBIs and 62 stolen bases. The two-time All-Star selection was NL Rookie of the Year in 2017, NLCS MVP in 2018 and won a World Series ring in 2020.

ESPN’s Alden Gonzalez contributed to this report.

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Sources: Bellinger, Cubs reach 1-yr., $17.5M dealon December 7, 2022 at 12:46 am Read More »

NBA prospect Victor Wembanyama shows versatility in Metro 92’s losson December 7, 2022 at 12:12 am

play

Victor Wembanyama shows off his skills in impressive sequence (0:34)Projected No. 1 pick Victor Wembanyama scores inside, blocks a shot and then drains a 3-pointer all within 30 seconds. (0:34)

Victor Wembanyama, a 7-foot-4 NBA draft prospect, keeps displaying why he is projected to go No. 1 overall in next year’s draft.

1 Related

The 18-year-old star is known for his perimeter shooting, exceptional defense and his eight-foot wingspan. Wembanyama’s skills were on display once again as he recorded 15 points, six rebounds and three blocks in Tuesday’s game.

Unfortunately for Wemby and Co., it wasn’t enough as his Paris-based Metropolitans 92’s nine-game win streak came to an end in a 102-77 loss to Chorale Roanne in LNB Betclic Elite action.

Here are a look at his highlights from Wemby’s latest outing:

Wembanyama’s next game with the Metropolitans 92 will be on Dec. 11 against Monaco.

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NBA prospect Victor Wembanyama shows versatility in Metro 92’s losson December 7, 2022 at 12:12 am Read More »

Sources: Bellinger, Cubs reach 1-yr., $17.5M dealon December 7, 2022 at 12:01 am

Outfielder Cody Bellinger and the Chicago Cubs are in agreement on a one-year, $17.5 million contract, sources familiar with the deal told ESPN’s Jeff Passan on Tuesday.

The 27-year-old Bellinger continued to provide Gold Glove-caliber defense in center field for the Los Angeles Dodgers last season, in addition to plus speed on the bases, but he continued to struggle offensively.

Bellinger ventured into the free agent market a year early after he was non-tendered by the Dodgers following the 2022 season. He had been due to make in the neighborhood of $18 million in 2023.

2 Related

He was named the National League’s Most Valuable Player after a 2019 season in which he slashed .305/.406/.629 with 47 home runs, 115 RBIs and 15 stolen bases while being worth 7.7 FanGraphs wins above replacement. Since then, though, Bellinger has slashed just .203/.272/.376 over a stretch of 295 regular-season games. His .648 OPS from 2020 to 2022 ranked 299th out of the 338 qualified hitters during that stretch.

Bellinger’s batting average plummeted to .165 in 2021, and continued into last season, when he hit .210 with 19 home runs in 144 games for a Dodgers team that set a franchise record with 111 wins.

In six MLB seasons, all with Los Angeles, Bellinger has a career .248 batting average with 152 home runs, 422 RBIs and 62 stolen bases. The two-time All-Star selection was NL Rookie of the Year in 2017, NLCS MVP in 2018 and won a World Series ring in 2020.

ESPN’s Alden Gonzalez contributed to this report.

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Sources: Bellinger, Cubs reach 1-yr., $17.5M dealon December 7, 2022 at 12:01 am Read More »

Practical holiday magicIrene Hsiaoon December 6, 2022 at 10:06 pm

Uncle Joe was dead, to begin with. There is no doubt whatsoever about that. The cardboard boxes littered the floor, filled with Joe’s tools, Joe’s college textbooks, Joe’s albums and manuals, Joe’s CDs, Joe’s tax returns, Joe’s unfinished projects, and all manner of Joe’s mess and memorabilia, stacked in a circle radiating outwards from a table upon which was posed a glass of half-drunk wine. There is no doubt that Joe was dead. This must be distinctly understood, or nothing wonderful can come of the story that Aunt Trudy (LaKecia Harris) is going to relate. For beyond her wineglass glints a piece of cardboard that has transcended its purpose as a receptacle for detritus and collectibles to become, thanks to the judicious application of Sharpies and string lights, a space for the most fantastic magic—but more on that part later.

Manual Cinema’s Christmas Carol Through 12/24: Wed-Fri 7:30 PM, Sat 3 and 7:30 PM, Sun 2 and 6 PM; also Tue 12/20 7:30 PM and Wed 12/21 and Fri 12/23 3 PM, Sat 12/24 3 PM only; open captions Thu 12/15; Writers Theatre, 325 Tudor Ct., Glencoe, 847-242-6000, writerstheatre.org, $35-$90

It’s Christmas 2020, and Aunt Trudy is alone. She is alone because, as aforementioned, Uncle Joe is dead, and, as the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic required, most everyone is in quarantine. And yet, because of the marvel of modern technology, her house is full, not only with the stuff and memory of the departed but also with the specters of his numerous blood and legal relations—of which Trudy is, in fact, not one, as Joe and Trudy never crossed over from cohabitation to connubiality (“a mutual decision,” Trudy insists). That’s right—it’s a good old-fashioned Zoom Christmas, and for Joe’s aggressively festive fam, that means it’s time to gather (virtually) for Uncle Joe’s annual puppet presentation of Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol, as reanimated by his grieving widow (in spirit only)!

Aunt Trudy is not amused. Actually, Aunt Trudy seems a little stuck in the anger stage of grief, and, in the absence of her once-loved Joe, some cardboard figures and the muted countenances of his family are indeed a sad compensation for the real thing.

Scowling in front of a camera that beams her shoebox puppet show to an audience of distant and—for all practical purposes—imaginary kin, she whips open the cardboard curtain and begins a monotone rendition. The flatness of her voice is matched by the two-dimensionality of the paper doll puppets that first appear: dour Ebenezer Scrooge, hunched at his desk and his chipper nephew Fred inviting him to dinner, all beneath Trudy’s withering glare. This glare is magnified a dozen or more times by a screen above the stage that makes a puppet the size of a person—and thus manifests this disgust at a scale that extends to all of us who have gathered here in Glencoe for a Christmas puppet show. “Bah humbug!” sneers Ebenezer/Trudy with feeling. But before we have time to tire of Trudy’s testy telling, the miracle of modern technology proves its man-made provenance: Faces freeze! The connection is unstable! The lights go dark! And then, as Trudy is joined by three silent hooded figures (Lizi Breit, Julia Miller, and Jeffrey Paschal), the story can begin.

In Manual Cinema’s Christmas Carol, adapted from the Dickens with additional writing by Nate Marshall, storyboards and puppet designs by Drew Dir with additional puppets by Chicago Puppet Studio, and original score and sound design by Ben Kauffman and Kyle Vegter, their signature style of keeping the mechanisms of their image-making visible works double, not only by keeping viewers tuned into the practical magic of making cut paper tell tales, but also by shaping Aunt Trudy’s role as puppeteer, commentator, and player. The puppet show can be viewed on two scales and both are life-size: Trudy and a paper box on a stage, and Trudy and the story on a screen. The effect is as disorienting as the shifts in place and scale we’ve become accustomed to on Zoom, which brings us all to act in an imaginary place, and here renders live Trudy tiny as Joe’s puppets next to the projected story, sealing her place as a personage within it. (The company first presented the show online in 2020.)

As Scrooge undergoes the customary visitations, much of Dickens’s story unfolds in dreamlike images that succeed each other in cinematic blinks of the eye that take us immediately from time to time and place to place, blending tears and rain, skeletons with bare tree branches, in every way wondrous. Trudy’s backstory with Joe unfolds in parallel, as she remembers the party where they met, their early love, and then how their ways diverge as Trudy is seduced by capitalistic values and workaholism, while Joe remains generous and friendly but financially irresponsible and dependent on the woman he did not marry. As Ebenezer wrestles with his shriveled soul with the aid of the spirits who haunt him this one night, so does Trudy surrender to the silent ministrations of the ghostly puppeteers. When the third spirit arrives—gargantuan, cloaked, and looming horribly—it comes for the two of them.

The Christmas classic retains its charm in Manual Cinema’s Christmas Carol, which brings the old story to our recent present in this new telling, while also acknowledging feelings—anger, frustration, and disappointment—that are particular and familiar to loss, holidays, and our technological moment.

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High school basketball: Tuesday’s scores

Tuesday, December 6, 2022

CATHOLIC LEAGUE

De La Salle at DePaul, 7:00

Marmion at Fenwick, 7:00

Montini at St. Rita, 7:00

Providence at Leo, 7:00

Providence-St. Mel at Brother Rice, 7:00

St. Laurence at Mount Carmel, 7:00

EAST SUBURBAN CATHOLIC

Carmel at Nazareth, 7:00

Joliet Catholic at St. Patrick, 7:00

Marian Catholic at St. Viator, 7:00

Marist at Notre Dame, 7:00

ILLINOIS CENTRAL EIGHT

Coal City at Wilmington, 7:00

Herscher at Lisle, 6:45

Manteno at Reed-Custer, 6:45

Streator at Peotone, 7:00

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL

Elgin Academy at Francis Parker, 6:00

Latin at Morgan Park Academy, 6:00

University High at North Shore, 6:30

INTERSTATE EIGHT

Ottawa at Kaneland, 7:00

Rochelle at Plano, 7:00

Sandwich at Morris, 7:00

LITTLE TEN

Hiawatha at Earlville, 7:00

Hinckley-Big Rock at DePue, 7:00

Indian Creek at Serena, 7:00

LaMoille at Newark, 5:30

Somonauk at IMSA, 7:00

METRO PREP

Universal at CPSA, 5:30

NOBLE LEAGUE – GOLD

Bulls Prep at Noble Academy, 7:00

Butler at Comer, 7:00

Johnson at Rowe-Clark, 7:00

NORTH SUBURBAN

Mundelein at Zion-Benton, 7:00

Stevenson at Lake Zurich, 7:00

Warren at Libertyville, 7:00

Waukegan at Lake Forest, 7:00

NORTHEASTERN ATHLETIC

Mooseheart at South Beloit, 7:00

Westminster Christian at Harvest Christian, 6:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE RED-SOUTH / CENTRAL

Brooks at Kenwood, 5:00

Lindblom at Hyde Park, 7:00

Morgan Park at Simeon, 5:00

Perspectives-Lead at Longwood, 6:30

Phillips at Curie, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-CENTRAL

Catalyst-Maria at Kennedy, 5:00

Englewood STEM at Dunbar, 5:00

Hubbard at DuSable, 5:00

King at Bogan, 5:00

Urban Prep-Englewood at Richards (Chgo), 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-SOUTH

Agricultural Science at Harlan, 5:00

Dyett at Fenger, 5:00

South Shore at Corliss, 5:00

Urban Prep-Bronzeville at ACE Amandla, 5:00

Vocational at UC-Woodlawn

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-CENTRAL

Back of the Yards at Excel-Englewood, 5:00

Horizon-Southwest at Hancock, 5:00

Kelly at Instituto Health, 5:00

Solorio at ACERO-Garcia, 5:00

Tilden at ACERO-Soto, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-SOUTH

Air Force at Bowen, 5:00

Goode at EPIC, 5:00

Hirsch at Chicago Military, 5:00

Julian at Excel-South Shore, 5:00

Washington at Carver, 5:00

RIVER VALLEY

Beecher at Clifton Central, 7:00

Gardner-So. Wilmington at Grace Christian, 7:00

Grant Park at Donovan, 7:00

Momence at Illinois Lutheran, 7:00

Tri-Point at St. Anne, 7:00

SOUTH SUBURBAN – CROSSOVER

Argo at Thornton Fr. South, 6:30

Evergreen Park at Oak Forest, 6:30

Hillcrest at Eisenhower, 6:30

Lemont at Richards, 6:30

Oak Lawn at Bremen, 6:00

Reavis at Thornton Fr. North, 6:30

Shepard at Tinley Park, 6:30

SOUTHLAND

Kankakee at Thornton, 6:30

SOUTHWEST PRAIRIE – EAST

Joliet Central at Romeoville, 6:30

Plainfield East at Joliet West, 6:30

Plainfield South at Plainfield Central, 6:30

SOUTHWEST PRAIRIE – WEST

Plainfield North at Minooka, 6:30

West Aurora at Oswego, 6:30

Yorkville at Oswego East, 6:30

UPSTATE EIGHT

East Aurora at Elgin, 7:00

Fenton at Bartlett, 7:00

South Elgin at Larkin, 7:00

Streamwood at Glenbard East, 5:30

West Chicago at Glenbard South, 7:00

NON CONFERENCE

Antioch at Johnsburg, 7:00

Aurora Central at Aurora Christian, 7:30

Buffalo Grove at Barringon, 7:00

Christian Liberty at Alden-Hebron, 7:30

DRW Prep at Austin, 5:00

Elk Grove at Hoffman Estates, 7:00

Elmwood Park at IC Catholic, 7:30

Grayslake North at Deerfield, 7:00

Hersey at Conant, 7:00

Intrinsic-Belmont at ITW-Speer, 6:30

LaLumiere-Blue (IN) at Evanston, 7:00

Lincoln-Way East at Crete-Monee, 5:00

Lockport at York, 7:00

Lowpoint-Washburn at Princeville, 7:30

Maine West at Addison Trail, 6:30

MCC Prep at Islamic Foundation, 6:00

Naperville North at Wheaton Academy, 7:30

Niles West at Taft, 6:30

Oregon at West Carroll, TBA

Parkview Christian at Christian Life, 7:30

Phoenix at Chicago Military, 5:00

Prospect at Palatine, 7:00

Richmond-Burton at Round Lake, 7:30

Ridgewood at Riverside-Brookfield, 7:00

Roanoke-Benson at Cornerstone Christian, 7:30

Rochelle Zell at Cristo Rey-St. Martin, 5:30

Rolling Meadows at Fremd, 7:00

Schaumburg Christian at Families of Faith, 7:15

St. Edward at St. Francis, 7:00

Urban Prep-West at Juarez, 5:00

Westmont at Timothy Christian, 7:30

Wheeling at Schaumburg, 7:00

Woodstock at Sycamore, 7:00

Woodstock North at Genoa-Kingston, 7:00

HALL

Mendota vs. LaSalle-Peru, 5:00

Princeton vs. Rock Falls, 6:30

Hall vs. Putnam County, 8:00

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3 free agent outfielders the Chicago White Sox should targetTodd Welteron December 6, 2022 at 11:32 pm

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The Chicago White Sox are not going to be big spenders in free agency. Do not expect Aaron Judge to solve the White Sox outfield problems.

Instead, general manager Rick Hahn might look to the farm system to solve the Sox problem in right field. Oscar Colas is in line to possibly be the Opening Day right fielder.

Colas is the Sox second-ranked prospect. He provides a left-handed power bat the White Sox lineup desperately needs. Colas blasted 23 home runs last year in the Minor Leagues. His combined slash between A, AA, and Triple-A ball was .314/.371/.524.

If Colas plays like a Rookie of the Year, that still leaves the Chicago White Sox in need of a left fielder.

Eloy Jimenez can play some left field. Andrew Vaughn could man the position as well. Neither is going to play great defense at a position where a team normally puts its worst defender.

Vaughn is better suited to play first and get some at-bats at DH. Jim?nez should exclusively be at DH.

While the Sox have two options to stand out in left, the team would be better served to get a player in free agency that can adequately field the position and maybe even play some other outfield positions.

Luckily for the Chicago White Sox, three players on the free-agent market would be a great fit on the Southside. Also, these free agents hit left-handed and the Sox lineup could use a few bats from the left side of the plate.

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3 free agent outfielders the Chicago White Sox should targetTodd Welteron December 6, 2022 at 11:32 pm Read More »