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Much to gain over final 5 games for Bears QB Justin Fields

The excitement over Justin Fields escalated to an all-time high before everything unraveled for him at the end of the Falcons game with an interception and a separated non-throwing shoulder.

He was playing better than ever and looked miles ahead of where he was while languishing in Matt Nagy’s offense as a rookie. He established himself as the best running quarterback in the NFL, and his passing proficiency progressed as well.

For some, that was enough to proclaim him the franchise quarterback with such certainty that they wanted him protectively shut down for the rest of the season when he got hurt. And while the overexuberance to declare Fields a superstar is very understandable for a fan base that has been starving for good quarterback play, there’s still work to do.

Fields is on schedule, no doubt. But he has not arrived.

“He knows there’s a lot ahead of him in terms of improvement,” coach Matt Eberflus said. “He wants to take that jump — that leap — here in these next few games.”

That’s why, as long as it’s not considered reckless to his health, it’s important that he plays as much as he can. And a showdown with the Packers gives him a chance to topple Aaron Rodgers and deliver a signature moment for the season. That’d be riveting theatre for the audience and a major mile marker in his career.

That’s a big part of what Fields has brought the Bears this season. Not only has he inspired optimism about their future that’s been missing for years, but he has made the games compelling television again.

The Packers will probably score 30-40 points Sunday. Can the Bears keep up? That hypothetical used to be terrifying. Now it’s thrilling. Thank Fields for that.

There’s talk of shutting Rodgers down, too, by the way, but that’s completely different. This is his 18th season. Fields has 21 career starts.

Yes, there are indications that he’s headed toward stardom.

Yes, he’s hurting.

Yes, the Bears are done even dreaming about the playoffs.

But there’s nearly one-third of a season left, and a young quarterback still seeking to prove himself needs those games.

Forget about whether Bears general manager Ryan Poles needs to be convinced of Fields. This is more for his own benefit than anything else. Fields is still in the stage where every snap he takes, every coverage he reads and every blitz he identifies helps build his mental database.

It’s reassuring, though, that it appears he is advancing in all areas.

“You can see it in his fundamentals, you can see it in his confidence, you can see it in the way that he delivers the ball — the timing of it, the rhythm of it,” Eberflus said. “You can see that every day in practice. We’ve been seeing that for a long time [in practice], and you’re starting to see it in games.”

While he’s an incredible runner, he’d be the first to say he has to get better as a passer. Even in his seven-game run where he flourished and led the Bears to 25.3 points per game, his passing was efficient, but hardly game-changing at just 167.3 yards per game.

He aspires to be a quarterback who can win with his arm and his legs, and that’s what the Bears need. That’s what Lamar Jackson and Josh Allen do. Fields has the potential to get there, too, but the only way to do that is through games.

There will be games when running isn’t much of an option. Good defenses can minimize those opportunities and force Fields to win via air. There already are situations like that within games, like third-and-long or two-minute drills. Obvious passing scenarios are the biggest challenge a quarterback faces, and Fields will have to conquer that.

There’s much for him to gain down the stretch. That’s a good reason for him to play.

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Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

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Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


The Florida strategy

MAGA’s attempt to scare white voters into voting against Pritzker didn’t work so well, to put it mildly.


It worked!

Leasing CHA land to the Chicago Fire is part of a longstanding plan to gentrify the city.


MAGA flip-flops

Men from Blago to Bolduc are trying to sing a new song.

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Redtwist names new artistic director

This has been a year of tremendous changes at the top for Chicago theaters, with Susan V. Booth taking over at the Goodman after Bob Falls’s 35 years as artistic director and Braden Abraham, formerly the artistic director for Seattle Rep, poised to take over as AD at Glencoe’s Writers Theatre in February. Cody Estle, formerly the AD for Raven Theatre, just moved to Next Act Theatre in Milwaukee; a search for his successor will be underway shortly. And we’re awaiting news for who will be replacing Chicago Shakespeare founder and artistic director Barbara Gaines (who plans to depart mid-2023) and longtime executive director Criss Henderson, who leaves at the end of this year.

Redtwist Theatre is also making some staff changes. Founded in 1994 as Actors Workshop Theatre by the husband-and-wife team of Michael Colucci and Jan Ellen Graves, they changed their name to their current moniker in 2001 and moved to their storefront home at 1044 W. Bryn Mawr (smack-dab in the center of the Bryn Mawr Historic District and just down the street from City Lit Theater) a year later. The company has mostly focused on American classics (Arthur Miller and Edward Albee have been particular favorites) alongside contemporary writers like Lucas Hnath and Lauren Gunderson. 

Colucci and Graves stepped aside in 2019 and Charlie Marie McGrath took over as AD—just in time for the COVID-19 shutdown to put a screeching halt to live theater. McGrath steered the company into virtual productions and helped pave the way for reopening shows after COVID, but she too decided to step aside in May of 2022. 

Longtime ensemble member Brian Parry has served as interim artistic director for the past few months, but now the board has announced that Dusty Brown will be the new AD. Brown, a nonbinary director from Atlanta whose resume includes work with Georgia Shakespeare and Georgia Ensemble Theatre, has an MFA in directing from Ohio University and directed Macbeth for Three Crows Theatre at Redtwist earlier this fall. 

Brown will be joined by Eileen Dixon as community director and Michael Dias as development director. Dixon’s background includes acting and directing with a particular focus on new play development, and Dias is an actor and mime with deep experience in independent production. 

Redtwist will be announcing its next season shortly. 

Steep Theatre wins major city grant

Big news for another Edgewater theater company: Steep Theatre, which lost its longtime rental home on Berwyn Avenue in 2020, and then bought a former Christian Science reading room down the street, has been awarded the largest grant in the company’s 21-year history—a $2.988 million Community Development Grant from the City of Chicago.

The funds will help the company build out what is currently a pretty raw space in their new venue into a black-box theater and enhance public space for community engagement projects. (The company ran the Boxcar, a bar and performance space adjoining their former home, and frequently made that space available for other artists and neighborhood organizations for a couple of years before losing their lease.)

In a press release, Steep’s artistic director Peter Moore said, “We recognize that this is an investment not only in our company, but in our Edgewater community and our theatre community, which has been hit so hard these last two years by the pandemic. We take those responsibilities very much to heart. Chicago isn’t Chicago without its theatre, and we’re proud that our city recognizes theatre as both an indispensable cultural asset and an undeniable economic catalyst.”

Steep is also searching for a new executive director; Kate Piatt-Eckert, who held that role for nine years, left the company last month.

Jenn Freeman (Po’Chop) in Litany. Freeman is one of five Chicago artists receiving a fellowship from Dance/USA this year. Credit: Jordan Phelps

Chicago artists recognized by Dance/USA

Each year, Dance/USA, the national service organization for professional dance, awards fellowships to artists. This year’s cohort recognizes 30 artists “representing an array of modalities rooted at the intersection of social and embodied practices. These include community-building and culture-bearing practices, healing and storytelling practices, activism and representational justice practices, and more.”

Of those 30, five are based in Chicago: footwork artist Jemal “P-Top” Delacruz; Jenn Freeman, also known as Po’Chop; cat mahari; Vershawn Sanders-Ward; and Anna Martine Whitehead.

Delacruz cofounded The Era footwork crew in 2014, and (among many other accolades) he received a National Dance Project Award from the New England Foundation for the Arts in 2019. 

Freeman’s work has focused on elements of storytelling, striptease, and dance, and she’s also the creator of the digital zine The Brown Pages. She’s collaborated on video projects with Jamila Woods and Mykele Deville and also created the dance-film series Litany in association with Rebuild Foundation.

Afrofuturism, body history, and exploring the “informal legacy of Blk liberation through documentation” are intertwined parts of mahari’s practice. A past recipient of the 3Arts Award in dance, along with other awards, one of mahari’s current projects, Blk Ark: the impossible manifestation, is “a multimodal reflective of marronage, anarchism, Hip Hop, and play to be completed [in] 2025.” 

Sanders-Ward, the founding artistic director of Red Clay Dance Company, has also received numerous plaudits for her company’s work. In 2019, Red Clay opened its own community studio space in Woodlawn. Her upcoming site-specific choreographic project set to premiere in June 2023, Rest.Rise.Move.Nourish.Heal, was also selected for a 2021 National Dance Project Award from New England Foundation.

Martine Whitehead’s work, both collaborative and solo, has “‘embodied epistemologies of Black in FORCE! an opera in three acts, created with Ayanna Woods, Angel Bat Dawid, and Phillip Armstrong, the waiting room of a prison provides the setting for a piece that, as Martine Whitehead says, is “a structure for resourcing ourselves to dream of a world beyond the prison-industrial complex and all its impoverished tentacles that reach into our lives and make it almost or actually impossible to live.” 

Each artist receives a $30,167 grant from Dance/USA (provided in partnership with the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation) to be used at their discretion.

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Bears RB David Montgomery ‘a big part of the plays we did well’

The last time the Packers defense took the field, they gave up 363 rushing yards — 13 shy of an Eagles record that was 72 years and six days old.

Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts and running back Miles Sanders combined for 300 yards, numbers that must have echoed through the heads of Bears players as they prepared to face their rivals Sunday at Soldier Field.

No team has rushed for more yards — per game and carry — than the Bears this season. The Packers have given up the most rushing yards and the fourth-most per carry.

Running back David Montgomery, though, didn’t want to sound too excited.

“We’re just going to play our game to the best of our ability and play with the H.I.T.S. principle and carry ourself in the manner that’s going to win this game,” he said.

That will probably be on the ground. Sunday against the Jets, Montgomery ran for 79 yards, his second-highest total this season, on 14 carries. His 67 rushing yards a week earlier against the Falcons was tied for his third-best total this year.

Even late in the Jets blowout, Montgomery was plowing through defenders.

“It’s just who I am — any opportunity I get to perform and play the game I love playing,” Montgomery said.

Head coach Matt Eberflus said Montgomery “was a big part of that the plays we did well” against the Jets.

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Packers T David Bakhtiari out for Bears game after getting appendix removed

Packers tackle David Bakhtiari had his appendix removed Friday and will miss Sunday’s game against the Bears. Bakhtiari Tweeted that he woke up Friday thinking he’d strained his abdomen, mentioned it to his team doctor and was soon in surgery.

He was limited to 27 snaps last year while recovering from a torn left ACL that required three surgeries. He missed the first Bears game but has appeared in nine contests this year.

The Bears’ starting right tackle, Riley Reiff, is likely to play after being a full participant Friday while recovering from a back injury. Reiff, who turned 34 Thursday, is the honorary captain this week. Bears backup tackle Larry Borom was ruled out with an ankle/knee injury.

Busy week

Tim Boyle got a phone call from his agent at 10 p.m. Tuesday — he was watching a Christmas movie — saying the Bears were claiming the quarterback off the Lions practice squad.

Four hours later, he woke up to catch a 5 a.m. flight from Detroit to Chicago.

Boyle, who is the Bears’ third-stringer, knows the offense. He appeared in 11 games for the Packers from 2019-20 while Luke Getsy, the Bears’ offensive coordinator, was on staff.

He’ll spend the bye week going back to Detroit to get his car and move out of his house.

“The first 24 hours were hectic …” he said. “But being a quarterback is being able to roll with the punches and be flexible in those moments.”

This and that

o Cornerback Kindle Vildor is questionable because of an ankle injury but was a full participant Friday.

o Receiver Dante Pettis, who has been sick since Sunday, practiced in full for the first time Friday and will play.

o Packers safety Darnell Savage is doubtful with a foot injury.

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Bears fans won’t be sorry to see Aaron Rodgers go — but they should be

There’s a chance Sunday will be the last time Aaron Rodgers saunters into Soldier Field as Chicago’s biggest villain since the burglars from “Home Alone.” Unlike Joe Pesci and Daniel Stern, though, he usually walks out with what he came to take.

Justin Fields will have something to say about it in a showdown that belies both team’s dismal records. But it’s fair to wonder if Sunday will be the last chapter in Rodgers’ one-sided rivalry with the Bears.

Rodgers has 59.5 million reasons to return to the Packers in 2023 — that’s his guaranteed salary, in dollars — but he said Sunday night that he’s still putting off making a decision about retirement until after the season. That could come soon. Once the 4-8 Packers are eliminated from the playoffs — and they have only a 3.6 percent chance of making them, per Football Outsiders — then Rodgers will likely shut down for the season, rest his injured thumb and ribs, and ponder his future. Jordan Love would finish the season at quarterback.

For an athlete who’s not been shy about pursuing outside interests, from hosting “Jeopardy!” to drinking ayahuasca tea, it’s impossible to rule out Rodgers moving onto his next chapter, even with the guaranteed money awaiting him.

If so, Bears fans wouldn’t be sorry to see him go. But it’d be a shame.

Sports are better when athletes embody greatness — and Rodgers has done that, beating the Bears in 24 of 29 tries and 11 out of 14 at Soldier Field. When he told Bears fans he owned them last year, he wasn’t wrong.

Sports are better, too, when fans have someone to root against. Rodgers, who grew up watching WGN, knows that the Cubs are only elevated by their rivalry with the Cardinals — and vice versa. The Bears, in a strange way, are made more relevant by their duels with Rodgers, even if they end up scraped off the bottom of his cleat.

Rodgers, who turned 39 on Friday, spent the last few seasons outrunning Father Time by a few furlongs. He was the NFL MVP in 2020 and 2021, He made the Pro Bowl seven times in his 30s.

“Year-in and year-out, he kind of changed his way,” said Bears offensive coordinator Luke Getsy, Rodgers’ former coach who remains his friend. “He used to be a heavier guy — now he’s not a heavy guy anymore. Just things like that.

“He’s always been naturally gifted, so the throwing part of it has always been something that he’s always been really good at. That hasn’t changed.”

This season, though, has made Rodgers mortal. Slowed by injuries, he ranks 13th with a 93.5 passer rating, 19th with a 64.8 completion percentage and 22nd with 6.8 yards per pass. He’s thrown as many interceptions in 12 games this season as he did in his previous two years combined.

He’s not alone. Tom Brady won a Super Bowl in 2020 and finished second in MVP voting last year but has been surprisingly average in his age 45 season. Matt Ryan, the third-oldest starter in the NFL, was benched earlier this season by the Colts, only to return.

Matthew Stafford, the sixth-oldest NFL starter, is having the worst season of his career just months after leading the Rams to the Super Bowl. Russell Wilson, also 34, has been one of the league’s most terrible quarterbacks since being traded to the Broncos.

The Packers’ dropoff is just as surprising. Rodgers has been their starter since 2008; their next loss will cement only their third losing season when he hasn’t missed more than half his games due to injury.

Father Time is catching up to Rodgers. Perhaps he’ll retire before it gets any closer.

Or maybe he’ll do what he’s done in so many games against the Bears before: rise from almost certain defeat to torture them even more.

Either way, Bears fans would be wise to take a long look at him Sunday.

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This Chicago Cubs rival made a significant MLB tradeVincent Pariseon December 2, 2022 at 10:26 pm

The Chicago Cubs are out here believing that they can be a playoff contender in the National League Central Division.

With the St. Louis Cardinals aging a little bit in addition to the Milwaukee Brewers on the decline, things might be looking up for the Chicago Cubs because we know that the Pittsburgh Pirates and Cincinnati Reds aren’t doing anything notable anytime soon.

Well, there was a big trade involving this division on Friday. The Seattle Mariners traded Jesse Winker and Abraham Toro to the Milwaukee Brewers in exchange for Kolen Wong and 1.75 million dollars. It is one that changes things up for these two teams big time.

Winker is now coming back to the NL Central after all of those years with the Cincinnati Reds. Both he and Toro had a negative WAR in 2022 while Wong was one of the best all-around second basemen in the American League.

The Chicago Cubs are in a division with some teams that are getting weak.

This is a very strange trade for the Brewers as they are clearly becoming a worse team even though they are getting two players for one.

It is odd that they are becoming a worse team even though the Central is winnable for them coming into 2023. You’d think that they have had a plan on what to do next following this move but you just never know. The Winter Meetings are fast approaching.

If the Brewers are going the route of a retool as it seems, the Cubs should try to take advantage. They had a strong second half in 2022 and things are looking up. They have a lot of holes to fill but it seems like they will be able to do so this offseason to some degree.

Nobody is expecting them to compete for the World Series anytime soon as they are lightyears away from the Los Angeles Dodgers, Atlanta Braves, Philadelphia Phillies, San Diego Padres, and New York Mets but they can certainly compete within their division right now.

This off-season is officially underway as moves continue to be made and now it is starting to affect the division. We will see how the Cubs respond going forward.

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Could the Cubs and Astros swap Catchers this offseason?

All eyes point to the Cubs making a move during the Winter Meetings

With the 2022 MLB Winter Meetings in San Diego right around the corner, the MLB rumor mill is no doubt going to heat up. All eyes are going to be on the top free agents and the loaded Shortstop pool to see who goes where but there’s an interesting storyline developing between the Cubs and Astros.

Yesterday national reporter for USA Today Bob Nightengale weighed in on the possibility that the Chicago Cubs and the Houston Astros could be big players for the two best free-agent catchers this offseason.

It could turn out to be an intriguing free agent swap of catchers this winter:
The Chicago #Cubs are showing strong interest in Houston #Astros free agent catcher Christian Vazquez; the Astros have engaged in early talks with Cubs free agent catcher Willson Contreras.

Last week Ken Rosenthal reported that the Astros have maintained contact with Contreras and fully intend on meeting with him during the Winter Meetings next week. On the other hand, The Athletic reported last month that the Cubs have interest in Christian Vazquez.

Who is Christian Vasquez?

Christian Vazquez is a 32 year old catcher is who is an above average defender and someone who hits near the league average every year. He spent 7 years with the Boston Red Sox before being traded this past summer to Houston after Houston’s ownership vetoed a trade which would have sent Contreras to Houston. Vazquez’s best year came in 2019 when he hit 23 HR’s and 72 RBI’s (both career highs) to go along with a .276 average.

How are the Cubs going about their catcher search?

Last month after Wilson Contreras declined the Cubs qualifying offer Team president Jed Hoyer was asked by reporters how they plan to replace Contreras and what they are looking for specifically.

It’s a two-way position. Obviously, you want guys who can hit, but it’s a run-prevention position.

So much of it is game-calling, preparation, feeling strongly about everything that pitchers do is a ‘we’ thing. It’s about teamwork and that collaboration.

The Cubs currently have Yan Gomes, P.J. Higgins, and prospect Miguel Amaya on their current 40 man roster. Unfortunately Gomes and Higgins are both backup catchers at best and Amaya is currently a big fat question mark for the Cubs due to injury setbacks in seasons past.

How would Contreras fit with Houston?

With the Houston Astros kicking off the offseason with the biggest move so far in inking former White Sox Jose Abreu to a 3 year deal they are now zeroing in on another former Chicago Stalwart. Houston almost traded for Contreras at the trade deadline this year and are now heavily pursuing him in free agency.

If the two sides eventually come to an agreement that will raise the question of how Contreras will fit with Houston. The most obvious option would be to stick Contreras at the position he is most familiar with in catcher but Houston already has Martin Maldonado who is regarded as an above average defender behind the dish. What is intriguing about Contreras is he is unlike other catchers in the MLB. He can DH where he did just so for the Cubs 39 times in 2022. He can play the outfield and even came up as an infielder as a rookie back in 2016.

Wilson Contreras has also been linked to the St.Louis Cardinals which makes sense with the retirement of Yadier Molina. A dark horse could always swoop in and sign Contreras but if he ends up with either Houston or St.Louis, Cubs fans are going to hate seeing him in either uniform.

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Chicago Bulls trade rumors: Lakers targeting DeRozan, Vucevic?

The Los Angeles Lakers reportedly have their eyes on a pair of Bulls players that might be available

The Chicago Bulls are getting to the point where they are going to have to make a decision on what they want to do for the future of the franchise. Through 21 games, the Bulls are 9-12 overall and on the outside looking in on the playoff race.

Will the Bulls be sellers and try to rebuild through the draft and acquiring assets? Or will they go for a big move and trade away future capital?

On Friday, one trade rumor floated out there involved the Los Angeles Lakers and their potential pursuit of two key players on the Bulls — DeMar DeRozan and Nikola Vucevic.

During the newest episode of NBA reporter Zach Lowe’s podcast, he talks about trade scenarios that Bill Simmons brought up recently. One including the Los Angeles Lakers. And from there, Lowe reports that the Lakers have had internal discussions about both DeMar DeRozan and Nikola Vucevic as RealGM writes:

“The trade I saw on Twitter was Russ and both picks, one with light protections I think for DeRozan and Vucevic,” said Zach Lowe on his podcast. “I can tell you 100 percent for sure that the Lakers have had internal discussions about that very possibility, if it would ever come up. “Not that they would do that. Let me be clear.”

Now, this is where the Bulls would need to pick a path for the future if approached by the Lakers. Getting future first rounders would be the key but those wouldn’t be soon either way. The Pelicans own the Lakers 2023 first rounder, and the rights to 2024 or a swap to 2025.  So it gets a little confusing and murky when talking picks.

But it will be interesting to see if the Bulls do engage in talks and pick a lane here as the season goes on.

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Follow us on Twitter at @chicitysports23 for more great content. We appreciate you taking time to read our articles. To interact more with our community and keep up to date on the latest in Chicago sports news, JOIN OUR FREE FACEBOOK GROUP by CLICKING HERE

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Violent Night

Santa is on the prowl in Violent Night, and he’s packing heat, tattoos, and a surprising amount of heart. David Harbour is the grizzled-up Saint Nick, and he’s just a guy, still prone to tender sympathy with young believers, as well as vomiting from his sleigh during his holiday deliveries. But when he stumbles onto a band of mercenaries so dastardly you actually sympathize wholly with the wealthy family who owns the compound they’re attacking (and headed by a scene-stealing Beverly D’Angelo), he reluctantly decides to bring the Christmas cheer . . . by any hilariously violent means necessary.

Violent Night kicks cynicism to the curb as Santa rediscovers Christmas magic between bloodbaths, bonds with the young and wide-eyed Trudy (Leah Brady, the movie’s embodiment of innocence and belief), and battles John Leguizamo in one of his most twisted roles yet—a villain so committed he dubs himself Scrooge and eventually becomes determined to end Christmas itself. Their standoff is one of the most imaginatively grisly in a movie full of satisfying ends, no small task for audiences who have long since become acclimated to niche content. And even with the usual tropes that must be indulged, the cartoonish brutality is still worthy of the multiple Home Alone callbacks. 

Despite refusing to tip a few scales in the favor of those attempting to rob the rich to feed themselves, Violent Night still manages to conjure its own holiday miracle—the desire for a sequel in a market glutted with them. R, 112 min.

Wide release in theaters

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