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Going for the goldKerry Reidon November 3, 2022 at 8:12 pm

If you’re an adult of a certain age, hearing the name “Peabody” in conjunction with science may make you think of a polymath anthropomorphic cartoon dog, companion to young lad Sherman. But in Glen Berger and Morgan Taylor’s quirky new musical, now in a world premiere with Young People’s Theatre of Chicago at the Greenhouse Theater Center, the title is a play on words. Young Alyssa Peabody (Eileen Doan) is determined to win her middle-school science fair with a project that focuses on patterns of, um, micturition: noticing how much her stepbrother pees after guzzling sports drinks, she wants to see if there’s a connection between what goes in, and what comes out. Of course, when word of her bathroom experiment gets out, her last name leads to a predictable rise in teasing from her classmates.

Peabody, a Musical Comedy for Intrepid Young Scientists Through 11/20: Fri 7 PM, Sat-Sun 10 AM and 1 PM; 1 PM only Sun 11/6; Greenhouse Theater Center, 2257 N. Lincoln, 773-404-7336, yptchi.org, $25 ($19 under 12), ages 5+

If you think a musical built around bodily fluids is a recipe for disaster, may I remind you that Urinetown! (created by former Chicagoans Mark Hollmann and Greg Kotis) won several Tony Awards and has become a perennial favorite across the country? But Berger (a writer for the animated kids’s show Arthur, as well as the author of several adult plays, such as Underneath the Lintel) and Taylor (the creator of the popular kids’ multimedia character Gustafer Yellowgold, who sadly died in August at age 52) are actually raising some cogent questions about how we approach scientific inquiry. A lot of science deals with things that we’re trained to think of as “gross.” But finding solutions to global problems (like, say, water shortages) depends on scientists being willing to dive into murky research streams.

Directed by YPT artistic director Randy White, the 90-minute show (geared for ages five and over) touches on scientific competition and sabotage as Alyssa’s classmate, Philip (Sam Linda) teams up with her stepbrother (Jonathan Shaboo) to steal her samples. Along the way, the script shoehorns in (sometimes awkwardly) snippets about famous women in science, including Mary Anning, whose work collecting fossils took the stage in Laura Schellhardt’s Digging Up Dessa at Theatre Above the Law earlier this year. We also meet more-famous male scientists such as Isaac Newton and Galileo (most of them played with amusing bewigged panache by Jonathan Schwart).

When Philip and Alyssa’s principal (Sabrina Edwards) insists that they put aside their differences and work together, they really find the groove for their research. Similarly, White’s ensemble works together smoothly, playing multiple roles that require them to shift from adults to tweens quickly. The music is recorded, not live, which is perhaps a bit of a disappointment, but judging from the reactions of the kids at the show I attended, Peabody held their interest and, one hopes, sparked some curiosity about the scientific process—even amid the sometimes groan-worthy scatological humor. 


Wednesday, November 30, 2022 at the Museum of Contemporary Art

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Going for the goldKerry Reidon November 3, 2022 at 8:12 pm Read More »

White Sox’ new manager Pedro Grifol makes good first impression

As first impressions go, Pedro Grifol flashed more home run power than the 2022 White Sox. To say he hit his introductory press conference as the team’s new manager out of the park Thursday might be a stretch, but it’s safe to say he had a very good first day at the plate.

A former catcher with hitting coach experience on a diversified resume, Grifol said many of the right things forward-thinking baseball minds like to hear, things like “controlling the strike zone on both sides of the plate.” He talked up the value of analytics. He came as advertised as a strong communicator and let it be known he’ll demand the same energy and commitment from his players that he promised to bring.

There was a significant curiosity factor with Grifol, a low-profile pick and baseball lifer who spent the last three years as Royals bench coach, when Grifol donned a White Sox cap and jersey No. 5 – an ode to Royals great and friend George Brett – at the press conference at Guaranteed Rate Field and during a later meeting with beat writers. A significant part of a fan base hadn’t even heard of him when it was learned Tuesday that Grifol, 52, would be the man to replace Tony La Russa.

Observed was a baseball lifer who, before saying anything else, thanked his wife and three daughters, all of whom were present, for their sacrifice allowing him to follow his dream. Grifol then discussed his life in baseball and what he has in mind for the Sox, appearing comfortable and polished enough to be the daily management face of the organization.

“Extremely emotional day for me,” Grifol said.

“I’ve been wanting to do this for a long, long time, but I’ve enjoyed every minute of it.”

Grifol never played in the majors but knew he wanted to manage when he played in Triple-A.

“A dream come true,” he said. “Managers are hired because most of the time [the team is] in a rebuilding situation and really they’ve got some time to kind of set things. This is a place where everybody’s expecting us to take the next step, and the next step is October baseball. The core to do that is here.”

Following the 78-year-old La Russa, Grifol will bring a welcome presence and refreshing perspective for a team who’s “fire” was questioned by veteran Johnny Cueto last season. The Sox finished 81-81 after entering the season with World Series hopes.

“Every single day, I’m going to bring the energy,” Grifol said. “I guarantee you our staff is going to bring the energy every single day and that’s going to permeate through that clubhouse. And if it doesn’t to the individual, we’ll have a conversation because we need 26 guys pulling in the right direction with that type of energy every night.”

A Cuban-American born and raised in Miami, Grifol joins the Sox after a 10-year stint in Kansas City (2013-22). He will be the fourth Latino manager in the majors, joining Boston’s Alex Cora, St. Louis’ Oliver Marmol and Washington’s Dave Martinez.

Prior to his three seasons as bench coach, Grifol’s roles with the Royals included quality control and catching coach (2018-19), catching coach (2014-17) and special assignment and hitting coach (2013-14) and Arizona Rookie League hitting coach (2013).

Grifol spent 13 seasons (2000-12) in the Mariners organization before joining the Royals, including one as manager at Class A High Desert in 2012. He also worked as director of minor league operations, coordinator of instruction and major league coach with Seattle and managed four seasons in the Venezuelan and Dominican Winter Leagues.

“We will be fundamentally sound, we will play with passion, pride for this uniform,” Grifol promised. “This means something. We will respect the game, our fans, and earn their trust.

“We will work hard and play winning baseball every night. We will definitely hold each other accountable. I truly see great things happening here. I’m really excited to be a part of it.”

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Former Bears DE Alex Brown standing out on NBC Sports Chicago’s ‘Football Aftershow’

Asked for his thoughts this week about how the Bears handled the Roquan Smith situation, Alex Brown thought back to his playing days with the team.

“That particular system, when we saw [linebacker] Lance Briggs come in at 230, 235 pounds, you knew he was going to be an All-Pro that year,” said Brown, a defensive end in 2002-09. “When he came in at 245, 248, you knew it was going to be a struggle all year trying to get him down so he can be that player.

“Roquan could fit in this system if he got his body right. He needed to lose 10 pounds, 12 pounds maybe to be a superstar in this defense. He’s a tackling machine, and this is what the ‘Will’ linebacker is, make tackles in space. Absolutely Roquan can do that. He is a phenomenal player.”

But he won’t be for the Bears after general manager Ryan Poles traded him to the Ravens this week. Still, Brown said the Bears handled the situation correctly.

“When you look at Roquan, coming in as a rookie, he held out. This year, held out,” Brown said. “If you don’t think your close on a contract, you franchise him, you can bet your butt that he’s going to hold out and not come play until he absolutely has to. Do you want to go through that, or is it better for the team to get a second- and a fifth-[round draft pick] and move on from that big contract?”

That’s the kind of commentary viewers of NBC Sports Chicago’s “Football Aftershow” have come to expect from Brown, who has been a part of the network’s Bears postgame coverage since 2016. But he’s standing out this season after Olin Kreutz’s departure from the show.

Kreutz had become the de facto lead analyst for his biting commentary, but an incident in May at CHGO Sports prompted NBCSCH to remove him from the cast. The show goes on with host David Kaplan, former Bears coach Dave Wannstedt, Briggs and Brown.

David Kaplan (from left), Dave Wannstedt, Alex Brown and Lance Briggs form the “Football Aftershow” cast.

NBC Sports Chicago

Brown leans on his playing experience to put the current Bears in perspective. His career ran the gamut, from playing for a four-win team in 2002 to playing in Super Bowl XLI. He endured a rebuild, as well, when then-GM Jerry Angelo hired Lovie Smith to coach in 2004.

Brown lives in Atlanta and is an executive sales representative for Traffic Tech, a logistics company based in Chicago. He follows the Bears throughout the week and flies in the day before a game. The arrangement allows him to spend time with his wife, son and three daughters.

When he played, Brown respected those who worked in the media, calling them the bridge between players and fans. He said he knew he wanted to join them after his career.

“I love taking to people, and I love football,” Brown said. “If somehow I could convince someone to pay me to talk about football, it’d be awesome. That led me down that path.”

Brown had a stint at 120 Sports, which morphed into Stadium, and he appeared on radio shows. He hasn’t had any broadcast training, but he had plenty of practice answering questions as an athlete.

“At about 14-15 years old, I was starting to get interviewed after football games and basketball games, and you start to understand,” Brown said. “You hear the question, you think about it briefly but quickly and then you give an answer that you won’t mind hearing two, three hours later.”

Brown said the hardest part of starting out as an analyst was speaking critically of former teammates who were still playing.

“You have to be honest and evaluate them,” he said. “When they didn’t play well, you have to say that. And then you’re going to dinner with them afterward and they’re looking at you funny. But now that all those guys are gone, you can truly be as unbiased as you can without piling on.”

As much as he enjoys his job at NBCSCH, Brown has other aspirations. Remember, he’s from Florida, and he played at the University of Florida.

“I like talking about teams that I love. I love the Bears, and I love my Florida Gators,” Brown said. “I love the SEC. I’d love to do the Bears or the SEC Network. That’s the only way I would ever stop everything and go down to the SEC Network if they called me. That would be my dream job.”

If Brown keeps this up, he just might live that dream.

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Bears podcast: Bears wrap wild week vs. Dolphins

Patrick Finley and Jason Lieser pick their winners for Sunday’s Bears-Dolphins game and dissect the team’s state of mind after a tumultuous week.

New episodes of “Halas Intrigue” will be published regularly with accompanying stories collected on the podcast’s hub page. You can also listen to “Halas Intrigue” wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Luminary, Spotify and Stitcher.

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The Eyeworks Festival of Experimental Animation returnsKathleen Sachson November 3, 2022 at 6:30 pm

It’s oddly fitting that the touring, Los Angeles-based Eyeworks Festival of Experimental Animation went on hiatus during the dog days of the pandemic. A mainstay of such programming here in Chicago, it screened everywhere from microcinemas to museums before finding a home at Northwestern University’s Block Cinema for the past several years, where up until 2019 it was an annual program. 

Aside from the obvious, practical reasons for the lacuna, life as we knew it had ceased to be as animated; the frenetic movement, the often garish colors, the universe of bizarre ideas alchemized into existence that come through in the festival’s curation may have been too tantalizing to our then-static proprium. 

It’s similarly fitting that opening the return of the festival on Friday at 7 PM (the first of three screenings going on through Saturday afternoon) is a selection of short films by local filmmaker Laura Harrison, whose work reminds you that you are brazenly, grotesquely, fearlessly alive. 

Harrison’s Little Red Giant, The Monster that I Was (2016) depicts, through a hodgepodge of animation styles, a nightmarish barbecue where a misunderstood artist is driven to extremes after taking in the hypocrisy, back-stabbing, and general pretension of her academic peers. Recounting her story from jail, the forthright protagonist expounds upon the circumstances that led to that moment, specifically the imaginary constructs that she’d developed as a child and that continue both to haunt and invigorate her.

Harrison’s work routinely deals with characters on the margins of society; her style of animation renders such microcosms “realistic” through a commensurate mode of abstraction. In The Lingerie Show (2015), adapted from a story by Beth Raymer, a drug-addicted woman details her chaotic life over a particularly fraught interlude but with a peppy garrulousness that softens the hard edges of her messed-up circumstances. It’s evocative of films by Larry Clark and Harmony Korine, with a diverse array of animation styles that further complicate the already labyrinthine intricacies of an addict’s bearings. 

Her latest, The Limits of Vision (2022), is the longest of the three films at just over half an hour. It adapts Robert Irwin’s eponymous 1986 novel to suitably psychedelic effect. Centered on a London housewife who becomes increasingly obsessed with the gradations of her mundane existence, it presents a more genteel milieu than the previous two films, but still with the intention of examining life’s bantam surrealities. Harrison will appear in person at the screening, along with festival curators Alexander Stewart and Lilli Carré.

As for the subsequent two shorts programs (which Stewart and Carré will also attend), imagine a junk drawer of animation out of which one might pull . . . well, anything that’s animated, be it by hand or computer or maybe something else not yet imagined by us laypeople. There are no overarching themes, nor are the programs limited to a specific timeframe. Swedish filmmaker Lars-Arne Hult’s Strip-tease in Shorts Program 1, for example, is from 1981. Once an animator for Disney who worked on Winnie the Pooh, Hult exhibits a more adult-oriented craft in Strip-tease. Bold lines conform to the figures of such living beings as a naked woman, a naked man, and even a monkey and a bird. The entire process of transformation via animation is the conceit of this amusing short.

The Eyeworks Festival of Experimental AnimationNov 4-5, The Block Museum, 40 Arts Circle Drive, EvanstonFreeeyeworksfestival.com

Perhaps betraying my introductory assertion that the films included in the programming are more animated than we’ve been used to being these last few years, Latvian conceptual artist Krišs Salmanis’s 100 Still Lives (2014) depicts 100 still-life arrangements photographed after being taken down and set up again the same way 100 times; the minute discrepancies between the imperfectly replaced arrangements account for this wry animation.

David Daniels pioneered a technique called Strata-cut animation in his CalArts thesis film Buzz Box (1985). On the occasion of the innovative short film’s 20th anniversary, Daniels made a remix (2005), which was digitally remastered and peppered with new audio. In Shorts Program 2 on Saturday at 3 PM, innovation is similarly evident in Tim Macmillan’s Ferment (1999), for which the filmmaker used a time-slice technique that combines a series of shots taken in approximately five-second intervals to communicate a single moment of time in Bath, England.  

Pallavi Agarwala’s Once More With Feeling (2016) and Sondra Perry’s It’s In The Game ’17 (2017) use animation as a means of exploring imperialism. In the former, Agarwala manipulates historical postcards from such countries as India, South Africa, and Iran to illustrate British military actions memorialized with statues. The collage-like structure of the animation suggests the ways in which imperialist countries often insert themselves into tableaus where they do not belong. 

The latter, which screens in Shorts Program 2, features Perry’s brother, Sandy, a college basketball player whose likeness was appropriated in an EA Sports video game without his permission. Incorporating a visit to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Perry subtly connects the theft of her brother’s identity to the history of colonizing countries stealing art and historical artifacts. Animation here is also implicated as a means of pilferage vis-à-vis the unsanctioned video game rendering.

On the other hand, Hayoun Kwon’s 489 Years (2016) also probes a fraught history, with hyperrealistic, video game-style animation illustrating testimony from a South Korean soldier about the mine-laden demilitarized zone between North and South Korea. 

Purer modes of animation demarcate other works in Shorts Program 2, like Barry Doupé’s Red House (2022) and Matthew Thurber’s How the Dog Learned Perspective (2021). Both are charmingly crude in execution but display an exquisite level of artistry that succeeds in making the laborious seem effortless. And speaking of purity, a couple of films between both programs will be projected on celluloid: Paul Vester’s Picnic (1987) and Joanna Priestley’s Jade Leaf (1985), in 35-millimeter and 16-millimeter, respectively, in Shorts Program 1, and Rose Lowder’s Bouquets 28-30 (2005) in 16-millimeter in Shorts Program 2. The festival’s ongoing commitment to a diversity of exhibition formats is commendable, especially considering the inherent tactility of the animation process itself.


Wednesday, November 30, 2022 at the Museum of Contemporary Art

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The Eyeworks Festival of Experimental Animation returnsKathleen Sachson November 3, 2022 at 6:30 pm Read More »

ESPN 1000 woos, wows Bears into multiyear radio partnership

In an age of streaming video, radio is still important in sports, particularly to the Bears.

“We don’t have regional television broadcasts like the other teams in town,” said Scott Hagel, the Bears’ senior vice president of marketing and communications. “That hometown call, that’s the only place you can get it. And so that continues to be a very important part of our plan.”

Now, ESPN 1000 is a part of that plan. The Good Karma Brands station will carry Bears games starting next season under a multiyear deal. Audacy-owned WBBM-AM (780) chose not to continue as the Bears’ flagship when its contract expires after this season for financial reasons.

“We’re happy with the work that Audacy’s team has done,” Hagel said. “But when the opportunity came to see what the potential was elsewhere, candidly, Good Karma just did a phenomenal job of showing enthusiasm for how to bring Bears football to life on ESPN 1000 and their other platforms. It excited us.

“They did a great job of not just necessarily selling us, but really showing us who they are and how they operated, and they gave us a great deal of comfort to make a move like this. It’s a big deal, and we did not take the decision lightly.”

The big question on fans’ minds is whether longtime voices Jeff Joniak and Tom Thayer will remain on the broadcast. The answer: That’s everyone’s intention.

“We’re interested in keeping the same play-by-play team, but we have to wait till the season ends to make any sort of announcement,” said Keith Williams, ESPN Chicago market manager and GKB senior vice president. “They’re under contract. I can’t comment further than that.”

Another concern for fans is ESPN 1000’s signal, which is weak in parts of the area. Williams pointed to the station’s HD signal at 100.3-HD2 and the ESPN Chicago app as alternatives. He said the station had no plans to add an FM channel like WBBM did with WCFS-FM (105.9).

Hagel said the Bears also were drawn to GKB for its distribution. After adding the White Sox for the 2021 season, the company grew the team’s network from eight affiliates in 2020 to a record 25 this year, extending coverage across the Midwest.

ESPN 1000 is now firmly back on the local-rights scene. Until the Sox came aboard, the station hadn’t carried a team from the four major professional leagues since 2016, when it had the Bulls.

“From our standpoint, having the Bears and the White Sox and ESPN, we’re a one-stop shop,” Williams said. “We just have to continue to entertain and inform our fans. It’s all about making sure our advertising partners are getting the results they need, too.

“Our full intent with these play-by-play partnerships with the Bears and White Sox, this is pretty much 12 months out of the year that you’ve got some kind of live game happening. It’s hard to find audiences that are engaged today as they are with live sports.”

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The Eyeworks Festival of Experimental Animation returns

It’s oddly fitting that the touring, Los Angeles-based Eyeworks Festival of Experimental Animation went on hiatus during the dog days of the pandemic. A mainstay of such programming here in Chicago, it screened everywhere from microcinemas to museums before finding a home at Northwestern University’s Block Cinema for the past several years, where up until 2019 it was an annual program. 

Aside from the obvious, practical reasons for the lacuna, life as we knew it had ceased to be as animated; the frenetic movement, the often garish colors, the universe of bizarre ideas alchemized into existence that come through in the festival’s curation may have been too tantalizing to our then-static proprium. 

It’s similarly fitting that opening the return of the festival on Friday at 7 PM (the first of three screenings going on through Saturday afternoon) is a selection of short films by local filmmaker Laura Harrison, whose work reminds you that you are brazenly, grotesquely, fearlessly alive. 

Harrison’s Little Red Giant, The Monster that I Was (2016) depicts, through a hodgepodge of animation styles, a nightmarish barbecue where a misunderstood artist is driven to extremes after taking in the hypocrisy, back-stabbing, and general pretension of her academic peers. Recounting her story from jail, the forthright protagonist expounds upon the circumstances that led to that moment, specifically the imaginary constructs that she’d developed as a child and that continue both to haunt and invigorate her.

Harrison’s work routinely deals with characters on the margins of society; her style of animation renders such microcosms “realistic” through a commensurate mode of abstraction. In The Lingerie Show (2015), adapted from a story by Beth Raymer, a drug-addicted woman details her chaotic life over a particularly fraught interlude but with a peppy garrulousness that softens the hard edges of her messed-up circumstances. It’s evocative of films by Larry Clark and Harmony Korine, with a diverse array of animation styles that further complicate the already labyrinthine intricacies of an addict’s bearings. 

Her latest, The Limits of Vision (2022), is the longest of the three films at just over half an hour. It adapts Robert Irwin’s eponymous 1986 novel to suitably psychedelic effect. Centered on a London housewife who becomes increasingly obsessed with the gradations of her mundane existence, it presents a more genteel milieu than the previous two films, but still with the intention of examining life’s bantam surrealities. Harrison will appear in person at the screening, along with festival curators Alexander Stewart and Lilli Carré.

As for the subsequent two shorts programs (which Stewart and Carré will also attend), imagine a junk drawer of animation out of which one might pull . . . well, anything that’s animated, be it by hand or computer or maybe something else not yet imagined by us laypeople. There are no overarching themes, nor are the programs limited to a specific timeframe. Swedish filmmaker Lars-Arne Hult’s Strip-tease in Shorts Program 1, for example, is from 1981. Once an animator for Disney who worked on Winnie the Pooh, Hult exhibits a more adult-oriented craft in Strip-tease. Bold lines conform to the figures of such living beings as a naked woman, a naked man, and even a monkey and a bird. The entire process of transformation via animation is the conceit of this amusing short.

The Eyeworks Festival of Experimental AnimationNov 4-5, The Block Museum, 40 Arts Circle Drive, EvanstonFreeeyeworksfestival.com

Perhaps betraying my introductory assertion that the films included in the programming are more animated than we’ve been used to being these last few years, Latvian conceptual artist Krišs Salmanis’s 100 Still Lives (2014) depicts 100 still-life arrangements photographed after being taken down and set up again the same way 100 times; the minute discrepancies between the imperfectly replaced arrangements account for this wry animation.

David Daniels pioneered a technique called Strata-cut animation in his CalArts thesis film Buzz Box (1985). On the occasion of the innovative short film’s 20th anniversary, Daniels made a remix (2005), which was digitally remastered and peppered with new audio. In Shorts Program 2 on Saturday at 3 PM, innovation is similarly evident in Tim Macmillan’s Ferment (1999), for which the filmmaker used a time-slice technique that combines a series of shots taken in approximately five-second intervals to communicate a single moment of time in Bath, England.  

Pallavi Agarwala’s Once More With Feeling (2016) and Sondra Perry’s It’s In The Game ’17 (2017) use animation as a means of exploring imperialism. In the former, Agarwala manipulates historical postcards from such countries as India, South Africa, and Iran to illustrate British military actions memorialized with statues. The collage-like structure of the animation suggests the ways in which imperialist countries often insert themselves into tableaus where they do not belong. 

The latter, which screens in Shorts Program 2, features Perry’s brother, Sandy, a college basketball player whose likeness was appropriated in an EA Sports video game without his permission. Incorporating a visit to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Perry subtly connects the theft of her brother’s identity to the history of colonizing countries stealing art and historical artifacts. Animation here is also implicated as a means of pilferage vis-à-vis the unsanctioned video game rendering.

On the other hand, Hayoun Kwon’s 489 Years (2016) also probes a fraught history, with hyperrealistic, video game-style animation illustrating testimony from a South Korean soldier about the mine-laden demilitarized zone between North and South Korea. 

Purer modes of animation demarcate other works in Shorts Program 2, like Barry Doupé’s Red House (2022) and Matthew Thurber’s How the Dog Learned Perspective (2021). Both are charmingly crude in execution but display an exquisite level of artistry that succeeds in making the laborious seem effortless. And speaking of purity, a couple of films between both programs will be projected on celluloid: Paul Vester’s Picnic (1987) and Joanna Priestley’s Jade Leaf (1985), in 35-millimeter and 16-millimeter, respectively, in Shorts Program 1, and Rose Lowder’s Bouquets 28-30 (2005) in 16-millimeter in Shorts Program 2. The festival’s ongoing commitment to a diversity of exhibition formats is commendable, especially considering the inherent tactility of the animation process itself.


Wednesday, November 30, 2022 at the Museum of Contemporary Art

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Bears OC Luke Getsy says WR Chase Claypool has ‘really cool, unique’ skills

The Bears’ offense has been clicking lately, and it could step up another level when wide receiver Chase Claypool debuts Sunday against the Dolphins. Offensive coordinator Luke Getsy said Claypool will play, but he’s not sure how expansive his role will be with such a limited time to learn the playbook.

Nonetheless, he sees a lot of potential.

“[He] had an unbelievable rookie season and shows a really cool, unique set of skills to be able to move around the field,” Getsy said before practice Thursday. “A guy who can do a lot of different things is really important for us in how we attack the game, so I’m really excited to see how far he can take it. I’m sure it will be one of those things where each week he’ll be able to get a little bit more [of a role].”

The Bears traded a second-round pick to the Steelers for Claypool on Tuesday, and he practiced shortly after arriving Wednesday.

He had 32 catches for 311 yards and a touchdown in eight games for the Steelers, which was a drop in production from his first two seasons. Over 2020 and ’21, Claypool had 1,733 yards and 11 touchdowns on 121 catches.

The Bears averaged just 16 points per game over the first four, but have scored 22.8 points per game since. They set a season high with 33 points in a win over the Patriots, then followed with 29 in the loss to the Cowboys last week.

Quarterback Justin Fields has been at his best over the last four games, too. He has completed 64.1% of his passes, averaged 182 yards per game, thrown five touchdowns against two interceptions and posted a 97.6 passer rating. He also rushed for 69.3 yards per game and scored two touchdowns.

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Bulls guard Ayo Dosunmu can’t replace Lonzo Ball, but he’s sure trying

No one was going to replace Lonzo Ball.

To a man, the Bulls organization was adamant about that throughout training camp and into the start of the regular season.

Leave it to the kid from Chicago, however, to at least try pulling off a pretty good imitation.

Former Morgan Park High School standout Ayo Dosunmu went into Thursday’s off day with somewhat pedestrian stats. In his 30-plus minutes a game, he was averaging 12.5 points, 4.4 rebounds, 3.3 assists, and a 13.99 player efficiency rating.

But his sophomore season playing for his hometown team isn’t just about numbers. It’s about growth, both in the idea of becoming a two-way player, and a vocal leader.

Go ahead and check both of those boxes.

“You know what he brings to the table, but he steps up to the challenge all the time,” All-Star guard Zach LaVine said of his teammate. “Ayo, even in his second year, is a vocal leader on our team, and he helps pick up our energy, offensively, defensively, just the way he carries himself.”

That was again on display in the 106-88 Wednesday blowout of Charlotte, but his signature game of the young season came a night earlier, when Dosunmu finished with 17 points in the win in Brooklyn, but more impressively handcuffed future Hall of Famer Kyrie Irving into by far his worst performance of not only this season, but a few years.

Irving came into the showdown with the Bulls averaging 30.1 points per game in the first month of the season, but went 2-for-12 for four points, and mostly with Dosunmu shadowing him.

“[Irving] has so many counters, the most offensively-skilled player the game has ever seen, and I just wanted to use my length, try and beat him to the spots,” Dosunmu said. “Test all his shots. Once he gets to his pivot [foot], the game really starts. I just tried to contest as many shots as I could.”

A performance very Ball-like.

What Dosunmu also did the last few games was finally getting his fellow starters to understand the urgency of playing hard from the opening tip. A lingering issue through the first nine games, even in the five wins.

That’s the part of Ball’s game that has been a huge hole.

In the 35 games Ball did play before the left knee first started becoming an issue, the Bulls were 22-13, but were also a very good team from the first whistle.

Ball was a plus-35 in plus/minus just in the first quarters alone as evidence of that.

The story was quite different with Dosunmu now running the point this season as Ball continued rehabbing, but the last two games that’s starting to change.

“That’s really been something we’ve been focusing on,” Dosunmu said of better first-quarter starts. “We’ve been talking about that a lot. The games we won, the games we lost, we always come out [and go down] 12-2, 12-4, and then we have to fight back. If we have to have that fight anyway, why waste it? Why not come out strong, come out and throw that first punch, and then later in the game when we do make that run, rather than it bringing us back from 19 or 10, now it’s giving us an eight-point lead.”

In Dosunmu’s mind, the best way to make sure his team is engaged early? His mouth, but also his defense.

“The offense we have, the shots are going to come,” Dosunmu said. “I just want to be that vocal leader that can come out and harp on guys, keep harping on them, ‘Let’s come out strong [on defense].’ ”

Ball would be proud.

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Pedro Grifol Officially Named Chicago White Sox New Manager

The Chicago White Sox have officially tabbed Pedro Grifol as their 42nd Manager.

As reported few days back, the Chicago White Sox have officially hired Kansas City Royals bench coach, Pedro Grifol as the team’s new gaffer, replacing Hall of Famer, Tony La Russa.

The White Sox announced the move Thursday after Grifol agreed to take the job earlier in the week.

General manager Rick Hahn mentioned in a statement the 52-year-old Grifol’s experience in a variety of coaching and scouting roles at the major and minor league levels. He also cited the fact that Grifol is bilingual and called him a “modern baseball thinker.”

“He is an excellent communicator and an experienced game planner who brings a high energy and detail-oriented approach to leadership,” Hahn said. “He is committed to building an inclusive and cohesive clubhouse, and we could not be happier to have Pedro leading our club.”

Grifol spent the past 10 seasons in a variety of coaching roles with Kansas City under former managers Ned Yost and Mike Matheny. He was part of teams that captured back-to-back pennants and won the World Series in 2015.

The 52-year-old will try to lift a team coming off of a disappointing season. The White Sox finished second in the AL Central at 81-81 and missed the playoffs after running away with the division in 2021.

La Russa missed the final 34 games because of health problems and announced he would not return, ending a disappointing two-year run with the franchise that gave him his first job as a big league skipper.

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