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A fifth starter is much needed for the Chicago White SoxVincent Pariseon November 26, 2022 at 6:28 pm

The Chicago White Sox have a lot of needs following their incredibly disappointing 2022 season. One of the biggest needs that they have is another starting pitcher. This is a spot that can help them win a lot more games in 2023 and maybe even make the playoffs.

Reynaldo Lopez and Garrett Crochet are trending toward becoming full-time bullpen guys so that leaves Dylan Cease, Lucas Giolito, Lance Lynn, and Michael Kopech as the four starters that they have ready for the 2023 campaign.

Dallas Keuchel was DFA’d in the middle of the 2022 season and Johnny Cueto was his replacement. They also got some starts from David Martin who was decent for a good amount of the season.

Cueto might be on his way out the door which means that someone new is going to have to come in. We know it won’t be Jacob deGrom or Justin Verlander so they are going to have to think smart. Even Carlos Rodon might be out of their price range.

The Chicago White Sox need someone that can help them with their rotation.

They are rumored to be in on Mike Clevinger which wouldn’t be a terrible upgrade at all. No matter who it is, they need to decide on someone. If it is Davis Martin, there are certainly worse options but also there are plenty of upgrades out there.

Having a guy that you can rely on as the number five guy is very important because that will help you win as many games as possible. Lots of teams don’t really have that luxury.

If they signed a good pitcher, Lucas Giolito would probably end up being the fifth guy in the rotation until he proves that he is fully back. That is very possible but nobody can be sure just yet. He got better down the stretch in 2022 but not enough to make you confident in him long-term.

Carlos Rodon is probably the best realistic option. The only reason it is a realistic possibility is because of the fact that he was once a Chicago White Sox pitcher and could want to return. He was amazing for the San Francisco Giants in 2022 and should be good for a while. The White Sox desperately need someone like this but any good starter will do at this point.

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A fifth starter is much needed for the Chicago White SoxVincent Pariseon November 26, 2022 at 6:28 pm Read More »

Jets vs Bears: Can the Bears block Quinnen Williams or does he cause the Bears offense to be grounded?

The Bears enter Week 12 banged up against the Jets

The Chicago Bears (3-8) come into the game with the New YorkJets (6-4) trying to end their season-long four game losing streak while the Jets are trying to stay in the playoff race in the AFC after their loss to the Patriots on Sunday. Here is a position by position breakdown of the Jets.

Quarterback: This game is the first matchup of Justin Fields versus Zach Wilson. Both of these quarterbacks were taken in the 2021 NFL Draft. Wilson was the 2nd overall pick in that draft and has a career record of 8-12 as a starter. While Fields, has a career record of 5-16.

Since Week 5, Wilson has only passed for more than 200 yards once and only has 4 touchdown passes in seven starts this season. The passing offense ranks 20th in passing yards and 22nd in yards per attempt. Last week versus the Patriots, the offense only had two yards of offense in the second half and Wilson went 9 for 22 for 77 yards for the entire game. When facing pressure, Wilson is last in passer rating, completion percentage and yards per attempt. 

Wilson is one of the biggest weaknesses of this Jets team that is trying to make the playoffs for the first time since 2010. After his lackluster performance versus the Patriots, head coach Robert Saleh has decided to bench Wilson and start Mike White versus the Bears on Sunday. White will make his fourth start in the NFL and has a career record of 1-2 with five touchdowns and eight interceptions.

Running Back: Coming into the season, the Jets had planned to have a running back platoon of Michael Carter and rookie Breece Hall. Carter got the first shot and the majority of the snaps in their first five games however he was removed for being ineffective and was replaced by Hall. The rookie emerged in week 5  and accumulated 463 rushing yards and averaged 4.2 yards per carry before his sustained an injury to his ACL that ended his season.

After the injury to Hall, the Jets traded for running back James Robinson from the Jaguars but he has only managed 75 yards in three games for the Jets. Carter has done okay in place of Hall but the running game has been as good as it was with Hall. The running game ranks 18th in the league and has run for less than 100 yards in six of their nine games this season.

Offensive Line: According to ESPN, the Jets rank 11th in pass rush win rate and 9th in run rush rate this season. The Jets rank in the middle of the league in sacks allowed and pressure rate but just gave up a four sacks to the Patriots on Sunday.

The offensive line has dealt with injuries throughout the season and trying to replace those injured players has been difficult. Tackle Mehki Becton who started 13 games for the Jets last season fractured his knee cap in the pre season and is lost for the season. Tackle Duane Brown who the team signed in the offseason has also spent some time on injured reserve this season with a shoulder injury. Highly-regarded guard Alijah Vera-Tucker is out for the season with a torn triceps.

The most consistent offensive lineman this season has been guard Nate Herbig. Herbig ranks eighth in run block win rate this season according to ESPN and not allowed any sacks this season. The Bears should be able to overwhelm this injured offensive line and disrupt the Jets offense.

Wide Receiver: This group has not done well at all as the Jets have the 23rd ranked passing offense in the league and this group has only got four receiving touchdowns this season. Some of that is due to the inconsistency of Zach Wilson and the ability of Breece Hall (before his injury) and Michael Carter’s ability to catch the ball out of the backfield. Those two factors have even caused one of the Jets receivers to request a trade from the team. 

Rookie wide receiver Garrett Wilson leads the team in targets, receptions and receiving yards. Wilson is apart of this rookie wide receiver class that has been very impressive and making a difference on the teams that they were drafted to. Wilson only trails the Saints Chris Olave is receiving yards and yards per game this season among rookies.

The other wide receiver that has been productive for the Jets this season is Corey Davis. Davis, who grew up in the suburbs of Chicago is averaging a career-low 2.7 catches per game but is averaging 18.5 per reception which leads the team and is 2nd in the NFL. Davis is in his second year with the Jets and has been a disappointment so far for the team.

Davis has only played in 14  out of 26 games and has 53 catches, 843 yards and six touchdowns in his career with the Jets. His status for the game vs the Bears is up in the air after he missed the game on Sunday versus the Patriots.

The Bears secondary will not be tested by this pedestrian wide receiver group and a quarterback that struggles to complete passes down the field.

Tight Ends: The Jets use both Tyler Conklin and CJ Uzomah on the field for the majority of their offensive plays. Conklin has been more than productive than Uzomah and leads the team in receiving touchdowns with three but two of his touchdowns came in one game. Once again, the ineffectiveness of Zach Wilson as a passer has contributed to lack of production for the pass catchers of the Jets.

The Bears near to be aware of Conklin in the red zone where the majority of his touchdowns have come.

Defensive Line: The Jets have been game wreakers on the defensive line ranking in the top 10 in quarterback knockdowns, pressures, fewest yard per rush and rushing yards allowed. The player that has been a catalyst for this defensive line is Quinnen Williams. Williams has seven sacks which is tied for first in the league among defensive tackles and has the most quarterback hits among defensive tackles. Williams is having a career season and is a potential defensive player of the year candidate.

In addition to Williams, defensive end Carl Lawson is having a career year as well. Lawson is second on the team in sacks and quarterback hits. Last week, the Jets sacked Patriots quarterback Mac Jones six times and five of those sacks came from this tenacious defensive line.

This Jets defensive line is probably the best that the Bears have faced since facing the Cowboys in Week 8 and will be constantly trying to put pressure on Justin Fields and this Bears offensive line.

Linebackers: The Jets have been stellar versus the run and the linebackers for the Jets have been one of the reasons for their success. The leader of this group is C.J. Mosley. Mosley ranks in the top ten in tackles and has been the leader in tackles for the team in five out of their ten games. General Manager Joe Douglas restructured his contract this off-season to give the Jets some future salary cap room but he could be waived this off season by the Jets because of the shaky play he had in the beginning of his career with the Jets.

The other linebacker that has been impressive this season for the Jets is Quincy Williams. Williams who is the older brother of defensive tackle Quinnen Williams is second on the team in tackles behind Mosley. This season, he had six out of nine games he has had at least 5 tackles. Last year, the Jets allowed 138.3 rushing yards per game and so far this year they have allowed 103.7 rushing yards. The Bears may have some difficulty running versus this linebacker group.

Secondary: The Jets secondary has also taken a huge leap from the previous season as well. The star of this secondary is rookie Sauce Gardner. Gardner who was taken 4th overall in 2022 NFL Draft has been a true shutdown corner. He has been targeted 57 times and has only allowed one touchdown through ten games. He also leads the league in passes defended with 14. Gardner is one of the leading candidates to be Defensive Rookie of the Year.

The other cornerback who has stepped up is DJ Reed. Reed was signed this offseason as a free agent from the Seahawks and has not allowed a touchdown this season. He excels in zone coverage this season and has only allowed 89 yards while playing zone coverage.

With these two cornerbacks, the Jets have eleven interceptions which is already more than had during the entire 2021 season. The Bears wide receivers will have difficulty trying to get open versus this ball-hawking secondary.

Kicking/Special Teams: Kicker Greg Zuerlein has made 17 out of 20 field goals this season and has made a long of 57 yards versus the Bills. Punter Braden Mann averages 47.3 yards and is fifth in the number of punts this season. The weather is expected to be good on Sunday so that should not affect the kicking game for both teams.

Both the Jets and the Bears gave up special teams touchdowns on Sunday that was pivotal in their respective losses.

Let me know what you think about this article on Twitter. 

 

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High school basketball: Saturday’s scores

Please send scores and corrections to [email protected].

Saturday, November 26, 2022

NON CONFERENCE

Amundsen at Bowen, 4:00

Austin at Proviso West, 6:00

Chatham Academy at Dunbar, 3:00

Clifton Central at Watseka, 7:30

Cristo Rey-St. Martin at Cristo Rey, 12:30

Hope Academy at Hansberry, 1:00

Southland at McNamara, 5:30

Winnebago at Pecatonica, 5:45

ASHTON-FRANKLIN CENTER

Hiawatha vs. Leland, 6:00

Amboy vs. West Carroll, 7:30

Polo vs. LaMoille, 6:00

Durand vs. Ashton-Franklin Center, 7:30

BATAVIA

Longwood vs. Raby, 6:00

Waubonsie Valley vs. Batavia, 7:30

BOYLAN

Richwoods vs. Freeport, 3:00

Marshall vs. Rockford Lutheran, 4:30

Boylan vs. St. Charles North, 6:00

COAL CITY / MANTENO

at Coal City

Seventh Place, 5:30

Coal City vs. Manteno, 7:00

Third Place, 5:30

Agricultural Science vs. TBA, 7:00

CRYSTAL LAKE CENTRAL

Belvidere North vs. Grayslake Central, 11:30

Hampshire vs. Hononegah, 1:00

Barrington vs. Crystal Lake Central, 2:30

DECATUR

Eisenhower (Decatur) vs. Springfield Southeast, 1:

Manual vs. Edwardsville, 2:30

Thornton vs. Peoria Central, 6:00

Bolingbrook vs. MacArthur, 7:30

DWIGHT / WOODLAND

at Dwight

Woodland vs. Grant Park, 2:00

Flanagan-Cornell vs. Earlville, 3:30

St. Bede vs. Dwight, 5:00

Ridgeview vs. Momence, 6:30

EL PASO-GRIDLEY

Olympia vs. Roanoke-Benson, 5:30

El Paso-Gridley vs. East Peoria, 7:00

FENTON

Clemente vs. Harlan, 2:30

Montini vs. Timothy Christian, 4:00

Fenton vs. Wheaton-Warr. South, 5:30

Fremd vs. Rolling Meadows, 7:00

GALESBURG

Madison vs. Wells, , 9:00a

Galesburg vs Ogden, 10:30

Wells vs. DeKalb, 1:00

Canton vs. Madison, 2:30

Ogden vs. Dunlap, 4:00

DeKalb vs. Galesburg, 7:30

GENESEO

Intrinsic-Downtown vs. Geneseo, 9:00a

Rock Falls vs. Erie-Prophetstown, 10:30

Kewanee vs. Rockridge, 12:00

East Moline vs. Rock Falls, 1:30

Erie-Prophetstown vs. Intrinsic-Downtown, 3:00

Rockridge vs. East Moline, 5:30

Geneseo vs. Kewanee, 7:00

GIBSON CITY-MELVIN-SIBLEY

Tri-Point vs. Fisher, 1:00

GCMS / Hoopeston vs. Armstrong-Potomac, 2:30

GCMS / Hoopeston vs. Lexington, 4:00

Iroquois West vs. Prairie Central, 5:30

GRANT / MUNDELEIN

at Mundelein

Lakes vs. Schurz, 12:00

Deerfield vs. Comer, 1:30

Carmel vs. Grant, 3:00

Mundelein vs. Warren, 4:30

HOMETOWN COMMUNITY

Phillips at Pekin, 11:30

North Chicago at Limestone, 11:30

North Chicago at Pekin, 6:00

Thornton Fr. North at Limestone, 6:00

Phillips at Morton, 6:45

JACKSONVILLE

Brooks vs. Notre Dame (Peoria), 11:00

Jacksonville vs. Glenwood, 12:30

Brooks vs. Glenwood, 5:30

LOYOLA / NEW TRIER

at Loyola

Rauner vs. Bulls Prep, 10:00

Butler vs. Taft, 11:45

Loyola vs. Lake Forest, 1:30

New Trier vs. St. Ignatius, 3:15

MAINE WEST

Lake Zurich vs. Elk Grove, 12:00

Maine West vs. Hoffman Estates, 1:30

NORTHRIDGE

Amundsen vs. Bowen, 4:00

Wheeling vs. Northridge, 5:30

OREGON

Oregon vs. North Boone, 11:00

Plano vs. Aquin, 11:00

Milledgeville vs. Harvard, 12:30

Christian Life vs. Hinckley-Big Rock, 12:30

Morrison vs. Newman, 2:00

Rockford Christian vs. South Beloit, 2:00

11th Place, 4:00

9th Place, 4:00

7th Place, 5:30

5th Place, 5:30

Third Place, 7:00

Championship, 7:00

OTTAWA

Marengo vs. Oak Forest, 1:00

Ottawa vs. LaSalle-Peru, 2:30

Thornridge vs. Oak Forest, 4:00

Pontiac vs. Princeton, 5:30

PALATINE

Round Lake vs. Buffalo Grove, 10:30

Jacobs vs. York, 12:00

Palatine vs. Hersey, 1:45

Glenbrook South vs. Stevenson, 3:15

QUINCY

Miller (MO) vs. Dixon, 5:30

Quincy vs. Lanphier, 7:00

RIDGEWOOD

Seventh Place, 10:00

Fifth Place, 12:00

Third Place, 10:00

Championship, 12:00

RIVERSIDE-BROOKFIELD

Zion-Benton vs. Hinsdale South, 12:00

Morton vs. University High, 1:30

Thornwood vs. Riverside-Brookfield, 3:00

Brother Rice vs. Curie, 4:30

ROCK ISLAND

Dyett vs. Carver, 10:00

Waukegan vs. Rock Island, 12:00

Tinley Park vs. Dyett, 2:00

Carver vs. Waukegan, 6:00

Tinley Park vs. Rock Island, 7:30

ROCKFORD

at Auburn

Bogan vs. Jefferson, 10:00

East St. Louis vs. Auburn, 11:30

Guilford vs. Perspectives-MSA, 1:00

Jefferson vs. Clark, 2:30

Rockford East vs. East St. Louis, 4:00

Harlem vs. Bogan, 5:30

Auburn vs. Larkin, 7:00

ROWVA-WILLIAMSFIELD

Henry-Senachwine vs. ROWVA-Williamsfield, 1:00

Henry-Senachwine vs. Galva, 4:00

ST. CHARLES EAST

East Aurora vs. South Elgin, 2:30

St. Charles vs. Willowbrook, 4:00

Westinghouse vs. Plainfield East, 5:30

Proviso East vs. Benet, 7:00

ST. VIATOR

Antioch vs. Libertyville, 1:30

Evanston vs. St. Viator, 3:00

SENECA

St. Anne vs. Somonauk, 1:00

Herscher vs. Mendota, 2:30

Serena vs. Hall, 4:00

Newark vs. Seneca, 5:30

STAGG

Lindblom vs. Argo, 1:00

Plainfield South vs. Stagg, 2:30

SYCAMORE

Belvidere vs. Sandwich, 3:00

Sycamore vs. Rochelle, 4:30

Dundee-Crown vs. Sterling, 6:00

Yorkville vs. Burlington Central, 7:30

WASHINGTON (IL)

St. Rita vs. Yorkville Christian, 11:00

WESTMINSTER CHRISTIAN

Horizon-Southwest vs. Indian Creek, 2:30

Westminster Christian vs. Elgin, 4:00

Elgin Academy vs. Genoa-Kingston, 5:30

St. Edward vs. Aurora Christian, 7:30

WETHERSFIELD

Bureau Valley vs. Putnam County, 4:00

Elmwood vs. Stark County, 6:30

Annawan vs. Wethersfield, 8:00

WHEATON ACADEMY

Wheaton Academy vs. St. Francis, 2:30

Fifth Place, 4:00

Bartlett vs. Metea Valley, 5:45

Championship, 7:30

WJOL / ST. FRANCIS UNIVERSITY

Minooka vs. Providence, 10:00

Joliet Central vs. Plainfield Central, 11:45

Bradley-Bourbonnais vs. Lockport, 1:30

Lemont vs. Romeoville, 3:15

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Kirby Dach wasn’t put in a good spot by the Chicago BlackhawksVincent Pariseon November 26, 2022 at 3:08 pm

The Chicago Blackhawks are a terrible hockey team. Their roster is up there amongst the worst in the entire National Hockey League. They are starting to build up a really nice farm system though which is a part of a five-year rebuild plan.

One mistake that they made that could have helped them rebuild right now came in the 2019 NHL Draft. They were still trying to win at that point for some reason but that is beside the point. They selected Kirby Dach with the third overall pick in the draft.

The Hawks had that third overall pick because of a little bit of lottery luck. It was obvious that Bowen Byram should have been the pick at the time and now we know that a guy like Trevor Zegras also would have been a better pick.

With all of that said, Dach is still a really good player that can become a top-six forward on a good team. The Blackhawks traded him to the Montreal Canadiens over the summer and now we are seeing him thrive with his new team.

Kirby Dach is showing the Chicago Blackhawks that they didn’t handle him right.

On Friday afternoon, he made his return to Chicago to play against the Blackhawks and he was a difference-maker. He didn’t score or record a point in regulation but he scored the shootout game-winning goal. He let the crowd know it too which was honestly really nice to see.

Dach was never put in a good position by the Chicago Blackhawks. He was a bit over-drafted and that is not his fault. It is also not his fault that he was thrown into the fire of the NHL at 19 years old without just a little bit more development.

He absolutely could have used another year with his junior team before making this jump to the NHL but he didn’t. Even Jack Hughes (who was the number one pick in the same draft and an absolute superstar now) struggled at that age and could have used another non-NHL year.

Of course, the same struggles (if not worse) would exist for Kirby Dach. Now he is in a good situation with his new organization and the Hawks have moved on with a new regime in charge of things. It is a good deal for both sides at this point.

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Kirby Dach wasn’t put in a good spot by the Chicago BlackhawksVincent Pariseon November 26, 2022 at 3:08 pm Read More »

Ezra Hendrickson passes chemistry test in first year with Fire

Ezra Hendrickson’s first head-coaching season with the Fire certainly was educational, teaching him some new lessons after he had served as an assistant with three teams.

”As a first-year coach, I learned a lot of things,” Hendrickson said shortly after the 2022 season ended.

During the season, Hendrickson showed some weaknesses to improve on and some strengths to use as a foundation entering 2023.

He probably waited too long to start Jhon Duran over struggling Kacper Przybylko at striker, a decision that cost the Fire goals and points. Squandering a pair of home 2-0 leads that turned into 3-2 losses didn’t reflect well on Hendrickson’s coaching. And the Fire were never consistently able to defend and attack well at the same time. It seemed as though if one part of the team was doing well, the other probably was sputtering.

On the plus side, youngsters Duran and Brian Gutierrez took steps forward. The Fire had a generally dependable back line, and their strong start at least provided a glimpse of Hendrickson’s vision.

Another area Hendrickson seems confident in is the culture he instilled during the season.

Perhaps the best example of that was how the Fire responded after their 3-2 loss to the Crew on July 9 at Soldier Field. That was the first of two home defeats after holding a 2-0 lead, and the obituaries for the season were being written soon after the final whistle.

Instead of capitulating, however, the Fire were unbeaten in their next five games — including four victories — to get back into the playoff picture. Hendrickson said a team with a poor culture wouldn’t have been able to recover the way they did.

“We showed some resilience,” Hendrickson said. “We showed some team chemistry, and we showed some fight that we were able to . . . go on a nice run of games where we just bonded together as a team and did what we set out to do from the start of the season.

“In that aspect, keeping a cohesive group, a group that believes in each other, a group that believes in what it is that you are doing, we are very good at doing that.”

The next part of making that culture permanent, however, is winning.

Hendrickson, an MLS Cup winner with three teams during his playing career, knows that. A constructive culture only goes so far when the victories don’t come, and it routinely comes undone when losses pile up.

Hendrickson doesn’t think that happened in 2022, the fifth consecutive season in which the Fire missed the playoffs.

Even though the Fire again failed to reach the postseason, however, Hendrickson liked how they played down the stretch, crediting them with not giving up. He was encouraged by late road ties against the Revolution and Crew, results that would’ve looked better if the Fire didn’t need three points from those games.

“In the growth of the culture and the team as a whole, it’s been really good this year,” Hendrickson said. ”We have shown some progress. We are showing that we are on the right track to where we are trying to be. I would say that things are looking up rather than looking downward.”

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Latest loss for the Bulls exactly what Billy Donovan has been warning

None of this has caught Billy Donovan off guard.

Maybe that’s why he sounded more sage than coach from Day 1 of the Bulls’ training camp.

“I knew this year was going to be a lot harder than last year, I just knew what was coming, and I’m not surprised,” Donovan has said several times, including last week.

Further evidence of that difficulty was again on display in the overtime loss to Oklahoma City on Friday night. More defensive lulls, more careless turnovers, and again not always understanding how to take advantage of mismatches.

“We’ve just got to be able to stay the course and respond,” Donovan said. “Like I said, this wasn’t going to be easy.”

Breaking the stallions rarely is.

It’s not an excuse for the 8-11 record, but what Donovan and his staff have been trying to do on the offensive end is change habits. Not only habits from last season, but for several players, habits they’ve had for years.

Simply put by Donovan, if the Bulls want to reach the second round of the playoffs – where executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas has set the bar – then they need to be less DeMar DeRozan-centric.

“DeMar took us as far as he can take us, and we really have to look at, OK, how can we make another step or jump?” Donovan explained. “If we get back to that, where it’s all [isolations] all the time, it just gets too easy to defend. This is going to take some time offensively for us to play the way we need to play, which is a little bit different.”

That doesn’t mean he doesn’t want to lean on DeRozan, especially late in games. Crunch time often comes down to isolation basketball, my best vs. your best. Since last season, there have been few better than DeRozan in fourth-quarter scoring and hero moments. Donovan just doesn’t want everyone standing around and hoping DeRozan can throw the cape on and carry the day.

So while back-to-back victories over Boston and Milwaukee this week were considered the signature wins of the young season, it might actually be a Nov. 7 game against Toronto that Donovan would point to.

Getting 35 points from the bench that night was huge, as was Zach LaVine’s 30, while youngsters Patrick Williams and Ayo Dosunmu added a combined 22.

As for DeRozan?

Nine points, including 5-of-6 from the free throw line, six rebounds, but the real kicker? Seven assists. That didn’t include the hockey assists that led to a basket because of DeRozan’s presence and spacing.

Bigger picture? In the eight Bulls wins this season, DeRozan averaged 22.6 points and 5.6 assists per game. In the 11 losses, the veteran was 28.7 points and 3.7 assists.

Compare that to LaVine, who was averaging 22.3 points per game in wins and 19.9 points in losses.

So is less of DeRozan actually more in Donovan’s new-look offense? Not necessarily. The coach wants better spacing – that’s why Nikola Vucevic has found himself with career numbers in corner threes already this season – but also doesn’t want the ball sticking to one player too long.

The fourth quarter in the win at Milwaukee was a film gem that Donovan could also point to.

DeRozan got his 36 in that game, but also had a team-high eight assists. In that final stanza, however, it was just five points from DeRozan.

Fast forward to the loss to the Thunder and the overtime, LaVine, Vucevic, and DeRozan were the only three to take shots – although LaVine and Vucevic only put up three-pointers – and DeRozan was the only one that scored, going 3-for-6.

Easily defended, difficult to win.

So was the loss in Oklahoma City really a shocker? For some. Just not Donovan.

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The Bears have become unlikely action heroes in Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS — Positive remarks have been floating around Vegas sportsbooks about the exciting NFL team whose betting attention has escalated in recent weeks, with an average of 29.6 points.

Had this team been producing that the entire season, it would be a notch behind the league-leading, 30-points-a-game Chiefs.

The Eagles? Bills? Bengals?

Nope.

Despite having lost four consecutive games and seven of their last eight, the Bears have been luring the cash.

Duane Colucci, director of race and sports at the Rampart Casino in Summerlin, where a hive of Chicago ex-pats and fans reside, noted the uptick in Bears business, the protagonist being second-year quarterback Justin Fields.

“It’s picking up momentum, and a lot of that has to do with Fields,” Colucci said. “He’s flashy. He’s doing things [Michael] Vick and Lamar Jackson have done, duplicating their numbers.

“This kid has the talent. He’s a focus on the future. You’re hearing some positive thoughts now out of Bears fans and backers, which hasn’t been the case for years.”

The wave of points has triggered bundles of betting dough, as Bears games are 7-4 to over. The optimal total angle, however, has been on their first halves, which is 8-3 to over.

APPETIZERS

Digging deeper reveals other nuggets, like playing over on the Bears’ projected team-points total and Fields’ estimated rushing yards. The Bears lost 27-24 to the Falcons on Sunday. But New York-based handicapper Tom Barton capitalized, for a fifth consecutive week, by betting over on the Bears’ team total of 22 points.

And in each of the last three weeks, Barton was on over regarding Fields’s rushing yards; on Sunday, that mark was 70.5, and Fields ran for 85 yards.

Over the previous two weeks, that figure was in the 60s; he dashed for 147 and 178 yards in those games, respectively.

“They’re handing out free money,” Barton said. “I also hit on [Fields] scoring a TD [against the Falcons] at even money, but the previous two weeks that was +120 or higher. I’ve been making a small fortune.”

Fields has run for at least one touchdown in each of his last five games.

On the Bears’ team totals (in the low 20s) over the last five weeks, Barton has risked nearly $7,000, clearing more than $6,000 in profit by going 5-0.

When the Bears hosted the Dolphins, he drove 130 miles from his home near the tip of Long Island to Atlantic City to lay $3,000 on the Bears. The Dolphins won 35-32.

“Loved that bet,” Barton said. “They don’t come around very often.”

He was perplexed last week when both BetMGM and Caesars issued statements about their most popular prop action, in tickets and money, being over on Fields’s rushing yards.

On his nationally syndicated SportsGarten sports-gambling radio show, Barton predicted they’d boost that into the 80s in Atlanta, but it was 70.5.

“Why would they post [those statements], other than to dare people to take the under? Then they barely move the line?”

Barton stresses treading lightly, though, for Sunday’s game against the Jets, whose defense is formidable. Plus, Fields got banged up in Atlanta, and the books might actually post something in the 80s.

COUGS GROWING CLAWS

Northwestern State registered the mammoth early college hoops shock victory, as a +1100 moneyline underdog, in a 64-63 victory at 25-point favorite TCU on Nov. 14. Risking $100 won $1,100.

Instead of taking the spread points, betting the underdog to win outright — on the moneyline — is a gutsy tactic but returns a handsome, if not hefty, profit.

Colorado (+900 ML) upended Tennessee 78-66. Murray State (+650) dunked Texas A&M 88-79. Prairie View A&M (+525) slapped Washington State 70-59.

Of all the upheavals, however, our favorite occurred Nov. 16 when Chicago State, at +425, defeated Valparaiso 87-74 at the Cougars’ Jones Convocation Center. Guards Eljah Weaver and Wesley Cardet are the rudders.

The program went 28-170 in the seven seasons before coach Gerald Gillion arrived a year ago. It won seven games last season, but it made noise in my world by covering the spread in 18 of 32 games.

That .563 cover percentage produced a return of 2.6 units. That might seem flimsy, but Chicago State being a profitable wagering option wasn’t fathomable not so long ago.

This is a bold season for Gillion — one of only two independents, with Hartford. Tough road games (Marquette, Minnesota, Stanford, Gonzaga) will deliver vital paydays for the program’s survival.

However, those big boys have been warned; Gillion is teaching these Cougars how to win.

SPIRALING

The Blackhawks won four of their first six games, perhaps inspiring some fans to hope this wouldn’t be a futile campaign. Then came 10 defeats over their next 12 games.

Circa Sports oddsman and NHL ace Jeff Davis has seen some promise in keeper Arvid Soderblom. However, Davis views that early win streak as an anomaly for a team struggling in key 5-on-5 categories.

Davis gave us a dismal Hawks preseason forecast, with the $10.5 million contracts of 34-year-old players Patrick Kane (team-best 14 points) and Jonathan Toews (12 points) being particularly prickly.

“I wouldn’t know when it would be,” Davis said Monday, “but the sooner they trade one or both of them, the more their potential return would likely be than if they waited right up until the deadline.”

The NHL trading deadline is Friday, March 3.

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Bears’ culture club — all for 1, and 1 for all

The culture disparity in the aftermath of the Jets’ loss to the Patriots in the Meadowlands and the Bears’ loss to the Falcons in Atlanta couldn’t have appeared to be more stark last Sunday.

About the same time Jets quarterback Zach Wilson was irking teammates, fans, former NFL players, Hall of Famers and national NFL analysts by dismissing his own responsibility for the 10-3 loss — saying he did not feel he let the defense down — seemingly every Bears player was blaming himself for a 27-24 loss to the Falcons.

Quarterback Justin Fields made a point to apologize to the entire team for his role. Before he could finish, safety Eddie Jackson stopped him and told him it was unnecessary.

Wilson’s attitude probably doesn’t represent the Jets locker room, but Fields’ and Jackson’s attitude definitely represents the Bears’ locker room.

A similar scenario, in fact, played out when reporters entered the room for post-game interviews at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Safety DeAndre Houston-Carson was among multiple special-teams players to take responsibility for Cordarrelle Patterson’s 103-yard kickoff return that made the difference in the game.

“That one’s on me,” Houston-Carson said. “I want to make every play. That one’s on me.”

As soon as those words were spoken, teammate Elijah Hicks, overhearing Houston-Carson’s comment in the next locker, interjected: “It wasn’t on him.”

The Bears have what arguably is a rebuilding team’s dream scenario heading into Sunday’s game against the Jets at MetLife Stadium: a 3-8 record, a competitive team, a developing quarterback, the No. 3 pick in the draft — and great team culture.

Ah, culture. The Bears have lost four consecutive games and seven of their last eight. In the four consecutive losses the offense has scored 28.8 points a game (fifth in the NFL in that span), while the defense has allowed 28.8 points a game (31st). Special teams has allowed two touchdowns. The offense has allowed two touchdowns. There’s blame to go around for everyone. But — for whatever it’s worth — the Bears are Team Kumbaya.

Having seen good culture and leadership turn to dust too many times at Halas Hall, I dared to scoff this week at the notion of culture, which seems overrated. But defensive coordinator Alan Williams was having none of it.

“Can I stop you right there and say never,” Williams said. “It’s never overrated.”

It’s an NFL truth — coaches value culture as much as fans value the No. 3 pick in the draft.

“My first year in the league when I was in Tampa, Rich McKay [the Buccaneers’ general manager] said, ‘Never underestimate good leadership and good people in the locker room — that always stuck with me in terms of culture being one of the things that helps you win,'” Williams said.

“I’ve been in the NFL long enough to go through some tough stretches. The things that get you through those tough stretches are good people — good players that have some moral fiber about them. I think we have that.”

Williams said it starts from the top — with general manager Ryan Poles and coach Matt Eberflus — “The messages they give, the type of people they bring,” Williams said. Poles got off to a rough start when three players were arrested in the offseason — Byron Pringle (reckless driving, suspended license), Matt Adams (possession of a loaded firearm without a state license) and David Moore (drug and weapons charges). But the Bears have since stayed off the police blotter and have passed every character test so far.

“Most teams fall apart from within. It’s not external forces,” Williams said. “When you have guys that like each other, that have some moral fiber, that when things aren’t going well they don’t … splinter. They work harder. They sacrifice more for themselves. That can’t help but build your team in a positive way.”

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Bears vs. Jets — What to Watch 4

KEY MATCHUP

Three years after he was the third overall pick in the draft, Jets defensive tackle Quinnen Williams is having a breakout season, with eight sacks and 18 quarterback hits this season.

Williams has a half-sack or more in eight of the Jets’ last nine games. He heads a Jets pass rush that is fourth in the NFL in sacks (32) and second in quarterback hits (81) — including 17 sacks and 24 quarterback hits in the last three games.

As productive as the Bears’ offense has been in the running game, their pass protection has been shaky, including last week when the Grady Jarrett-led Falcons sacked Justin Fields four times.

The Bears figure to get a boost with right guard Teven Jenkins’ likely return from a hip injury, but the interior line — left guard Cody Whitehair, center Sam Mustipher and presumably Jenkins — will have to be better than they’ve been regardless of wither Fields or Trevor Siemian starts at quarterback.

TRENDING

The last four quarterbacks to face the Bears have had 100-plus passer ratings, with a combined seven touchdowns and one interception — Dak Prescott (114.5), Tua Tagovailoa (135.7), Jared Goff (113.6) and Marcus Mariota (100.2).

Now the Bears’ withering defense — without cornerback Kyler Gordon and safety Jaquan Brisker, who are in concussion protocol — faces Jets back-up Mike White, who will start after former No. 2 overall pick Zach Wilson was benched this week.

White had a 75.1 passer rating (five touchdowns, eight interceptions) in four games in place of Wilson last season. But that’s deceiving. He had a spectacular debut as a starter, throwing for 405 yards and three touchdowns (with two interceptions) in a 34-34 upset of the Bengals. And he was on his way to a similar performance the following week — against Matt Eberflus’ Colts defense (7-of-11, 95 yards, one touchdown, no interceptions 121.4 rating) — before leaving with a forearm injury in the first quarter of a 7-7 game.

PLAYER TO WATCH

The Bears will either be starting a banged-up Justin Fields or a rusty Trevor Siemian at quarterback.

Fields separated his shoulder on the final drive against the Falcons last week. Except for a token appearance against the Cowboys in Week 8, Siemian hasn’t played since a relief appearance with the Saints last season in Week 17 — he threw two touchdown passes in a 30-20 victory over the Falcons. He hasn’t started since last Thanksgiving, a 31-6 loss to the Bills.

X-FACTOR

The Jets have improved significantly in Robert Saleh’s second season as head coach — from 4-13 to 6-4; from 32nd in scoring defense to ninth through 11 games. But they had some internal strife following a 10-3 loss to the Patriots last week, with Wilson irking some teammates by dismissing accountability for the loss.

Wilson has since apologized to his teammates, but it’s possible that turning to White — a locker room favorite — could energize an up-and-coming team.

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