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Advertise in our Nonprofit IssueAmber Nettleson October 24, 2022 at 5:58 pm

The Chicago Reader’s nonprofit issue publication date is Nov. 24, 2022.

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Please let me know if you have any questions! Happy to hop on the phone to discuss, or you can set some time with me. — Amber Nettles 

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Patriots QB Mac Jones active for Bears game, will start

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Mac Jones is active for Monday night’s game against the Bears and will start at quarterback, coach Bill Belichick told the team’s pregame radio show.

Belichick refused to name a starter this week, and the Patriots called Jones — as well as 11 other teammates — questionable for “Monday Night Football.” Rookie Bailey Zappe, who had won both his starts after replacing Jones when he hurt his ankle, was the other candidate to start.

The Bears prepared for both quarterbacks. Head coach Matt Eberflus and defensive coordinator Alan Williams said doing so was not a tremendous challenge, citing their similar playing styles. They figured the Patriots would run a similar offense regardless of who started.

Jones has struggled this season, losing two of the three games that he started and posting a lowly passer rating of 76.2. Zappe posted a 111.4 passer rating in three games, which included a loss to the Packers in relief of Brian Hoyer.

The highlight of the Bears’ inactives report was who was not on it: N’Keal Harry, who has recovered from high-ankle surgery, will play for the first time this season. The Bears traded the Patriots a 2023 seventh-round pick for the former first-round choice in July.

Bears inactives include cornerback Lamar Jackson, tight end Jake Tonges, defensive lineman Kingsley Jonathan and receiver Isaiah Coulter.

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Bulls coach Billy Donovan looking to protect Alex Caruso from himself

It was a nice plan.

Then again, Alex Caruso was full of solid ideas on media day a month ago, especially when asked about protecting himself from himself.

“I’ve definitely got to be maybe smarter,” Caruso said then. “Maybe a 50/50 ball that’s going out of bounds, you might let one or two go out and save it for the postseason. But I say that now sitting in front of a microphone. When I get out there, it might be different.”

It always has been with Caruso.

That’s why coach Billy Donovan said on Monday, that while there’s not a minutes restriction on Caruso, there is a close watch of what he’s putting into each game.

“I think one of the things that’s been a little challenging for him is his minutes have greatly increased here than they had been,” Donovan said. “We’ve got to make sure that he’s productive in his minutes, and the way he plays, he’s reckless. And I say that in a very complimentary way. He puts himself into the game and he’s probably going to be susceptible to these types of things. We have to watch him. When he starts getting up in the 30-plus minutes over a period of time, I think that’s a big toll on him. Because generally his loads are, even for his number of minutes, are high because of how much he exerts in a game.”

And those minutes have a history of the outcome of the game.

In Bulls wins last season in which Caruso was healthy and playing, he averaged 27.5 minutes per game, and in losses it was 28.6 minutes per game. It was like that with the Lakers during the 2020-21 and the 2019-20 season as well.

The way Donovan sees it there is a balance to make sure that Caruso plays with fire, but not keep him out there too long and allow that fire to burn out or for him to injure himself.

“That’s what got me here,” Caruso said of playing with the intensity he brings. “That’s why the Bulls want me on the team. That’s why Billy loves what I do with my energy and my defense and how I bring other guys along. I don’t think I can change that.”

Donovan didn’t either. That’s why he snickered when reminded of what Caruso said in September about playing with less reckless abandon.

“I mean that sounds good, but I think if there’s a loose ball he’s not going to sit there and say, ‘This is probably one I’m not going to go after,’ ” Donovan said. “I want him to be who he is. He plays the game all out and he’s going to give you everything he has.”

Numbers game

Through the first two games, Donovan only went 10 deep into his rotation. That changed in the Cavaliers game, not only because Zach LaVine returned to the starting lineup, but also because Donovan was able to get Derrick Jones Jr. playing time.

How often that will continue remained an unknown, but with the medical staff watching minutes in the early portion of this season, as well as Patrick Williams struggling, Donovan told Jones he’d better stay ready.

“We’re just trying to find different combinations of guys that when they get in there play well,” Donovan said. “[Jones has] been a total pro with the way he’s handled himself.”

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Advertise in our Nonprofit Issue

The Chicago Reader’s nonprofit issue publication date is Nov. 24, 2022.

We are offering any nonprofits our 26x rate PLUS 15% off for the nonprofit issue, on any size display ad. Display ads will be featured throughout the Nonprofit Issue (11/23/22), and you can specify if you want to appear in a specific section of the paper (news, arts, theater, etc.) (we will adhere to those specifications as space permits).

Rates:

Nonprofit ratesBase Rate26x rate26x +15% OFF (Your Price)Full Premium*$2,950$2,220$1,887FULL$2,700$2,025$1,7213/4 Page$2,330$1,740$1,4791/2 Page$1,400$1,050$8931/3 Page$975$740$6291/4 Page$800$600$5101/6 Page$535$405$3441/8 Page$435$330$2811/12 Page$265$200$170

*Full Premium includes Pages 3, 5, Inside Front, Inside Back. 

Booking deadline is noon Tuesday, Nov. 15. Full color and design services are included at no additional charge, if needed.

Please let me know if you have any questions! Happy to hop on the phone to discuss, or you can set some time with me. — Amber Nettles 

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Advertise in our Nonprofit Issue Read More »

Bears GM Ryan Poles defends QB Justin Fields’ ‘progress’ amid struggles

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Bears quarterback Justin Fields ranks near the bottom of the NFL in most passing categories, but general manager Ryan Poles remains upbeat on his overall improvement regardless of how imperceptible it is in his production.

“Justin’s been a big topic in his development,” Poles said. “We’re encouraged with the progress that’s there. I know it’s not in the statistics and on the paper all the time, but he is getting better in a lot of different areas. As a whole, we’ve gotta play better around him as well to allow him to keep playing well and get his confidence going and execute at a high level.”

Poles said he’ll have his eye on “a few different things” regarding Fields over the final 11 games, starting tonight against the Patriots.

“How he’s being used — Are we putting him in a position where he can be successful?” he said. “And then the execution and the details of what he’s being asked to do and really speeding up to the game and making decisions quicker. But again, the beautiful thing about football is it’s reliant on everybody else. So as a whole, we have to improve. I think we’ll see that everyone starts to get better and we’ll start to ascend.”

Poles took over in January, inheriting a team that went 22-27 over the last three years under predecessor Ryan Pace and coach Matt Nagy. He became a first-time general manager at age 37 and hired Matt Eberflus as coach.

Poles was conservative in his first offseason with a clear priority of building the Bears for the future rather than trying to compete this season. All of his additions on the offensive line and at wide receiver were on budget-friendly, short-term contracts.

The deficiencies at those positions could make it difficult for the Bears to get a clear view of where Fields stands, though Poles disagreed.

“We’re still able to evaluate everyone in our current situation,” he said. “I’m convicted in the things we did do in the offseason and the draft, and we’ll continue to chip away. Everything that we’re doing is to sustain success over a long period of time. Within that, I think we can still evaluate our players.”

When pressed specifically about the pass-blocking issues, which are part of the equation of Fields being sacked 23 times (third-most in the league), Poles said, “There’s give and take on that. It’s a little bit of [Fields] executing faster, but then there’s also some protection things that need to improve. It’s really a wholistic deal that needs to improve for him to stay upright.”

Fields has a 54.8 completion percentage, last among players who have thrown at least 100 passes. He has 869 yards passing (30th), four touchdown passes (29th), five interceptions (seventh-highest) and a 72.7 passer rating (32nd).

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Alex Stalock’s fearless goaltending winning over Blackhawks

All the ingredients are in place for Blackhawks goaltender Alex Stalock to contend for the Masterton Trophy this season.

A comeback story? After missing more than a year with COVID-19-induced myocarditis in his heart, he checks that box. Dedication to hockey? That’s evident both in his daily work ethic and in his determination to make that aforementioned comeback.

A successful season? There’s a long way to go, but Stalock’s performance so far has been encouraging. That would certainly provide a fitting final chapter to the fairytale.

But Stalock, personally, isn’t thinking about any of that. Instead, the 35-year-old Minnesotan is enjoying simply being part of a team again. It’s fun for him, as he makes very clear.

“That’s why I love coming to the rink: Being around a group of guys,” he said Monday. “Obviously, we have fun when we’re on the ice. You love playing the games. But to be…around a group that’s having fun, it’s fun to be back.

“[This team has] a good mix. A ton of youth, kids that love to have fun. They’re in the NHL, they’re new to it, and every day to them is a joy. You’ve got veterans in here that have won many [Stanley] Cups and been around a long time … Everybody likes to put in the work, and it’s clicking for us right now. [There’s] nothing to complain about.”

Stalock is as true to himself in the locker room as he is on the ice, where his fearless willingness to leave his crease to play the puck or aggressively challenge shooters — as well as to try any other crazy maneuvers that might possibly stop the puck — immediately elevates the excitement level of every game in which he’s involved.

Off the ice, his weathered appearance, wild arm gestures, seen-it-all attitude and gregarious personality have made him an instantly popular teammate.

“He’s that energy-style goalie,” coach Luke Richardson said. “The guys love him. He gave out the team award after the game [Sunday] night and everyone loved it. [There was] a big roar for him. The players really battle for the guys who battle for them, so it’s nice to see.”

Alex Stalock’s chaotic, fearless goaltending style instantly adds excitement to any game.

Michael Reaves/Getty Images

He did allow four goals Sunday against the Kraken, but he was hardly at fault for any of them, and he made several key saves at key times that enabled the Hawks’ rally.

Through his first three appearances, Stalock has now saved 76 of 81 shots for a .938 save percentage. His goals saved above average (GSAA) is plus-2.9, which ranked 11th among 63 goalies league-wide entering Monday.

He has closely resembled his form as a stellar rotational goalie with the Wild back in 2019-20, when he posted a 20-11-4 record, .910 save percentage and plus-8.5 GSAA.

And with Petr Mrazek sidelined for another week or two by a strained groin, Stalock will remain the Hawks’ primary backstop in the short-term future. Prospect Arvid Soderblom was previously expected to start one of the two remaining games on the homestand — either Tuesday against the Panthers or Thursday against the Oilers — but Richardson said Stalock will actually start both. Stalock and Soderblom will likely then split the back-to-back weekend games against the Sabres and Wild.

Stalock certainly won’t complain about the hefty workload, though. After enduring two years essentially out of the league, he cherishes the opportunity to settle into a rhythm again.

“If you don’t play for a couple weeks, you go in and you’re trying to catch up to the speed of the NHL,” he said. “[When] you can be in there every other night, [you can] pick up where you left off just a night or two ago. It makes it easier.

“The way things are going here right now, it’s a good feeling for everybody.”

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College Football Primetime Games Best Bets Recap 10/22

Another wild weekend of college football that will mix up conferences and divisions yet again week move into week 9.

First we will recap this past weekend of college football as we review the best bets from last week.

Iowa vs. Ohio State

I did say Iowa has zero offense and Spencer Petras was never the answer. If you had the chance to just watch the first snap of the game you would see why. Petras threw it right at an Ohio State players chest for an interception. Iowa’s only touchdown was from their defense as well. Ohio State doesn’t look good to be honest. I know we see 54 points but some was because of the defense and a lot of the times the offense was starting at midfield or in plus territory. Stroud didn’t look sharp at all, they couldn’t really run, Jaxon Smith-Njigba is hurt again and they used 3 total timeouts during the game because of play calling being slow and running out of time.

The Bet: -30 was a success but weirdly didn’t feel like it for a while.

Syracuse vs. Clemson

I want to keep this short cause I feel bad for Syracuse and I believe college football/ NCAA should investigate those refs. Cuse should have won but Dino Babers needs to be more aggressive second half.

The Bet: +13.5 was a success. Clemson is zero fun.

Cincinnati vs. SMU

We were on the right side of the bet the whole game and the refs completely screwed us especially on this pass interference call. Im still really upset to be fair cause we had no business losing that. SMU had their backup in and Cincy didn’t want to try and score late when they could’ve sealed the game for us. Pain.

The Bet: -3.5 not a success but it should have been.

Ole Miss vs. LSU

Both teams stink let’s be real. I said both QB’s are miserable to watch in all of college football and boy was I right. Jayden Daniels ran over 20 times like I said he would but he also threw it successfully 21 times. Every single throw that was a success was a comeback route. I’m not kidding LSU threw a comeback route every play and Ole Miss had no clue what to do apparently. Jaxson Dart stinks just like I said he would but I genuinely believed in Lane Kiffin and the running attack but they were so bad that this was to me the worst game of the day. Not cause I’m mad the bet missed (I am) but both QB’s stink and both teams stink.

The Bet: Ole Miss ML or +1.5 was not a success. Miserable game.

UCLA vs. Oregon

Pure college football game and atmosphere. Fun all around. I should have added the over but I was weirdly confident in Oregon at home to cover a spread that so many thought was high and took UCLA because of it. I mentioned Dorian Thompson-Robinson going missing at some point and it happened. He missed so many throws it was pretty incredible. Zach Charbonnet was a monster but couldn’t do everything. Bo Nix went crazy like he did last year against LSU its just one of those games where he’s just completely next level and that won the game and covered for us.

The Bet: -6.5 was a success.

Texas vs. Oklahoma State

41-34 makes no sense cause that game was utterly miserable to watch. I mentioned so many people want to make Quinn Ewers into an elite QB and I think that thought process should be completely put to bed. He went 19-49. Oh my God. His 2 TD’s were from short passes that the players housed themselves. I sat through that whole thing drive after drive, scoring opportunity after scoring opportunity and Quinn Ewers literally just threw it away. So many chances to cover the spread but it was like Ewers and Sarkisian knew we had -6.5 and couldn’t let us be happy.

The Bet: Texas -6.5 was not a success I mentioned the Over which was a success but I’m speechless at how that game played out.

Mississippi State vs. Alabama

Started off interesting I thought Miss State would score twice but they didn’t which really helped the spread. Will Rogers was trying for Miss State but Bama off a loss was just a little too much for Miss State and for anyone in college football to be fair. Bryce and the offense looked good early but then looked really bad. I just want to mention Bill O’Brien is their offensive coordinator and he’s been miserable the last two years and he’s lucky Bryce Young is his QB.

The Bet: Alabama -21 was a success due to the defense.

Minnesota vs. Penn State

Tanner Morgan the starter for Minnesota was ruled out which to be fair really put Penn State -4.5 in the driver seat. They stopped Ibrahim enough like I said needed to be the main gameplay regardless of the QB. Clifford and the offense played well enough to score timely touchdowns to keep Minnesota down and out. White Out games at Penn State are one of the coolest things in college football. They play Ohio State next week at home. Massive game so there should be another White out right!? Nope. The game is at noon. Stay tuned for that best bet preview this week.

The Bet: -4.5 was a success thanks to the backup QB and the White Out.

Kansas State vs. TCU

Another game where backup QB’s were paramount. All night it felt like we were on the right side of the bet. Adrian Martinez went down early out of nowhere and FOX didn’t have a sideline reporter to tell us why he wasn’t playing cause he was fully padded and walking around. But the backup Will Howard was playing really well in his stead. Kansas State was putting up numbers and stopping TCU everything was fine. Then Will Howard for Kansas State went down and the 3rd string QB came in and immediately threw a pick on the first play. We just needed one touchdown late to save us with the spread and we had a shot cause miraculously Will Howard came back and drove K-State down the field. On 3rd down he had a receiver wide open in the end zone and…..he overthrew it. K-State tried to kick the field goal on 4th to cut it to 7 and the kicker missed another field goal and we were dead from there.

The Bet: +3.5 was not a success. It was for a while but we were too happy and the betting God’s took that away.

Record for 10/22– 6-4 which includes the Texas Ok. St over. Painful College Football Saturday cause it should have been so much better.

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Silver: Changes greatly reduced incentive to tankon October 24, 2022 at 9:59 pm

In an interview with ESPN’s Malika Andrews on “NBA Today,” NBA commissioner Adam Silver said that he believes the changes the league has made to its system in recent seasons, from flattening the lottery odds to adding the play-in tournament, have greatly reduced the incentives for teams to tank for high-profile prospects, including French phenom Victor Wembanyama.

“You’re dealing with a 14% chance of getting the first pick,” Silver said. “I recognize at the end of the day analytics are what they are and it’s not about superstition. A 14% chance is better than a 1% chance or a no percent chance. But even in terms of straightforward odds, it doesn’t benefit a team to be the absolute worst team in the league, and even if you’re one of the poor-performing teams, you’re still dealing with a 14% chance [of winning the lottery].

“It’s one of these things where there’s no perfect solution, but we still think a draft is the right way to rebuild your league over time. We still think it makes sense among partner teams, where a decision was made where the worst-performing teams are able to restock with the prospects of the best players coming in. So we haven’t come up with a better system.”

Last week, Silver spoke to employees of the Phoenix Suns in the wake of the findings of the investigation into the conduct over the past two decades of team owner Robert Sarver and his eventual decision to sell his stakes in both the Suns and the WNBA’s Phoenix Mercury. ESPN’s Baxter Holmes reported, as part of that conversation, that Silver said the idea of relegation has been previously discussed by the NBA as one possible solution to give teams an incentive to compete.

1 Related

But as part of his interview Monday afternoon, Silver said there is no realistic way for that system to be put in place in the NBA.

“I can’t say I was deadly serious about relegation, because we don’t have the same system as European soccer and it would make no sense to send an NBA team to the G League or a G League team to the NBA,” Silver said.

“But obviously that is how other leagues deal with situations like this where they force teams to stay competitive because the consequences of finishing at the bottom of the league are dramatically detrimental to the health of the team. But it’s something as I was saying to the folks in Phoenix that we keep our eye on. We understand we are selling competition to our fans.”

With regards to another hot-button topic in NBA circles these days — the prospect of expansion — Silver said jokingly that “word traveled fast” when LeBron James said earlier this month that he hoped to one day be part of the ownership group of an expansion team in Las Vegas. But while Silver said expansion will be back on the table again in the future, he reiterated his prior stance that the league both wants to get through the upcoming collective bargaining discussions with the National Basketball Players Association — both sides can opt out of the current deal by the end of this year — and its new television rights deal, which should be wrapped up in the next year or so ahead of the current deal expiring in 2025, before eventually shifting back to expansion.

One thing that is front of mind for Silver is the status of WNBA star Brittney Griner, who remains in custody in Russia as she has been since February. Silver said that, after the NBA was initially told not to put a bigger spotlight on Griner’s story, he and the league have been doing everything possible to try to bring her back to the United States.

“[We] have been very public about our belief that she deserves to be released at this point,” Silver said. “Even to the extent she was convicted of a minor crime, any punishment at this point is dramatically disproportionate. There should be mercy, of course, for anyone in her position, and we’ve had direct conversations with the White House, with the State Department, you heard opening night, Steph Curry spoke out about her incarceration … to be quite honest, we are doing everything we know available to us, which is to continue to raise her profile and have direct conversations with the U.S, government on all levels.

“But beyond that, it’s frustrating for everyone, it’s enormously frustrating for her family, but I’m not sure what else we could be doing right now.”

As for the reason Silver was in Phoenix speaking to Suns employees, he said he understood having a system that, in part, has a need for employees to call an anonymous tip line “isn’t going to work for everyone.” He added that there needs to be an emphasis on training and ongoing dialogue with team employees to ensure that the proper climate is in place within NBA teams to ensure all employees are being treated in the way they deserve to be.

“One of the things we’ve begun doing this year is having direct conversations with the human resources groups at every team to ensure proper training is in place, that teams can have their own systems of hotlines and things, even independent of what the league does,” Silver said. “[We are] talking about these issues regularly with our board of governors, who ultimately oversee all of our teams, bringing heightened attention to issues around diversity and inclusion, and our teams being part of that is being true to the data, continuously talking about what we are seeing in our teams in terms of hiring practices, who is in positions of leadership.

“Our goal is to operate under best practices, not uniquely to the NBA or for a sports league but for whatever best of class is in industries, and that’s something we’re learning about all the time, and we have professionals focused on it.”

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White Sox Fans React to Bryce Harper’s 2-Run Bomb

White Sox fans lament organizational failures as they watch Bryce Harper win the NL Pennant

It’s hard out here for a Chicago White Sox fan.

Aside from being the “Second City’s Second Team”, being reduced to a trivia question associated with gambling, and growing up, watching your team as the bad guy in two feelgood baseball movie franchises (One of which required literal divine intervention). This past year, White Sox fans suffered through the most disappointing season in recent memory, going from being favored to win the World Series to finishing 81-81. Now we have to watch an old target go to the World Series the team could be playing in.

Sometimes my TL just gives this lifelong White Sox fan multiple kicks to the groin… https://t.co/Y7aDmWnAOf

A common thread in White Sox fans’ suffering can be traced back to lousy ownership. I already wrote about Jerry Reinsdorf  “Reinsdorfing” a managerial search. But we also have to talk about another facet of the rebuild, and a White Sox fans’ nightmare.

The Ride #WhiteSox The Ride
Fans Were Expecting to #WhiteSox
Enjoy: Fans got: https://t.co/Z2EbEDijPZ https://t.co/k5HEO8Mc8P

I already brought up in my last blog that the White Sox were in contention to sign then-free agents Bryce Harper and/or Manny Machado. We all know how this ended. This year’s National League Championship Series pitted Bryce Harper’s Philadelphia Phillies and Machado’s San Diego Padres. The Phillies won the series 4-1, with Harper blasting a two-run home run in the bottom of the 8th inning of game 5 to give the Phillies a 4-3 victory.

Almost immediately, White Sox fans on Twitter, aka “White Sox Twitter”, lamented what could have been. General manager Rick Hahn had offered Manny Machado and his agent a $250 million deal, which Machado implicitly spurned to sign a 10-year, $300 million deal with the Padres. Then they gave up on Bryce Harper, even after Harper expressed interest in playing for the Sox (Do the White Sox have a bad time dealing with Scott Boras?).

So of course, Sox fans were mad at the organizational failures. It’s not that Jerry Reinsdorf can’t afford either or both players. Forbes estimated his worth to be $1.8 billion. It was only this year that the Bulls, whom Jerry also owns, finally offered a 9-digit contract, a 5-year, $215.2 million deal for Zach Lavine (who doesn’t think highly of Reinsdorf it seems, but that’s another story). Point is, the White Sox could easily have afforded Harper, Machado, or both. But Jerry may have “Reinsdorfed”, or “Dorf’d” the process, unwilling to spend that much on them.

Most importantly, the Phillies made moves in-season that the White Sox did not do. They fired then-manager Joe Girardi after a 22-29 start, after which they went on a 7-game winning streak, signed Nick Castellanos and Kyle Schwarber in free agency, and acquired Noah Syndergaard at the trade deadline.

The White Sox, well… they got Jake Diekman?

Remember when the Phillies fired their manager early into the season? Now they’re going to the World Series.
*cries in White Sox fan*

It is impossible to say what could have happened if the Sox did get Bryce Harper. Who knows, maybe they could have gone to the World Series this year. Or, with their already-stacked lineup, they didn’t need him. Hindsight is 20/20, of course. White Sox fans have unfortunately gotten used to watching other teams succeed while they… don’t. They don’t know what the organization will do in the offseason.

A once-promising rebuild is looking shaky. The new manager might not be able to fix everything, and there are huge concerns about the minor league system (this author believes the White Sox should model themselves after the St. Louis Cardinals in that regard, but that’s just my opinion. Disclaimer: This author’s father is a lifelong Cardinals fan from southern Illinois). It was probably inevitable that calls for Jerry to sell the White Sox finally materialized.

Scott Boras is no prize to deal with but Reinsdorf’s kindergarten mentality with him has cost the Sox through the years for sure. https://t.co/4RoOXMM7LU

And to top it all off, they canceled SoxFest.

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