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High school football: IHSA Class 6A state football playoff pairings

The Illinois High School Association state football playoff pairings have been revealed. Only the pairings have been released so far, dates and times of the games will be posted on Monday afternoon.

In the first round, the higher seed hosts the game. In subsequent rounds, the school that has hosted fewer times during the current playoff series hosts the game. If both teams have hosted an equal number of times, the higher seed hosts. The game must be played on Saturday, unless both schools agree to play the game on Friday.

One playoff round will take place each week, starting with the first round games on Friday, Oct, 28 and Saturday, Oct. 29. This season’s state championship games will be held at Memorial Stadium in Champaign. The Class 1A thru 4A title games will take place on Friday, Nov. 25. The Class 5A thru 8A title games will be Saturday, Nov. 26.

Class 6A

#16 Schurz (5-4) at #1 Wauconda (8-1)

#9 Antioch (6-3) at #8 Notre Dame (6-3)

#13 Deerfield (6-3) at #4 St. Ignatius (7-2)

#12 Grayslake Central (6-3) at #5 Belvidere North (7-2)

#15 Crystal Lake South (5-4) at #2 Prairie Ridge (8-1)

#10 Riverside-Brookfield (6-3) at #7 Kaneland (6-3)

#14 Senn (5-4) at #3 Grayslake North (8-1)

#11 Harlem (6-3) at #6 Amundsen (7-2)

#16 Eisenhower (5-4) at #1 Lemont (9-0)

#9 Quincy (7-2) at #8 Glenwood (7-2)

#13 Kenwood (6-3) at #4 Perspectives (8-1)

#12 Washington (6-3) at #5 Bremen (8-1)

#15 Oak Forest (5-4) at #2 Simeon (9-0)

#10 Champaign Centennial (7-2) at #7 Crete-Monee (7-2)

#14 Danville (6-3) at #3 Normal West (8-1)

#11 Richards (6-3) at #6 East St. Louis (7-2)

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High school football: IHSA Class 6A state football playoff pairings

The Illinois High School Association state football playoff pairings have been revealed. Only the pairings have been released so far, dates and times of the games will be posted on Monday afternoon.

In the first round, the higher seed hosts the game. In subsequent rounds, the school that has hosted fewer times during the current playoff series hosts the game. If both teams have hosted an equal number of times, the higher seed hosts. The game must be played on Saturday, unless both schools agree to play the game on Friday.

One playoff round will take place each week, starting with the first round games on Friday, Oct, 28 and Saturday, Oct. 29. This season’s state championship games will be held at Memorial Stadium in Champaign. The Class 1A thru 4A title games will take place on Friday, Nov. 25. The Class 5A thru 8A title games will be Saturday, Nov. 26.

Class 6A

#16 Schurz (5-4) at #1 Wauconda (8-1)

#9 Antioch (6-3) at #8 Notre Dame (6-3)

#13 Deerfield (6-3) at #4 St. Ignatius (7-2)

#12 Grayslake Central (6-3) at #5 Belvidere North (7-2)

#15 Crystal Lake South (5-4) at #2 Prairie Ridge (8-1)

#10 Riverside-Brookfield (6-3) at #7 Kaneland (6-3)

#14 Senn (5-4) at #3 Grayslake North (8-1)

#11 Harlem (6-3) at #6 Amundsen (7-2)

#16 Eisenhower (5-4) at #1 Lemont (9-0)

#9 Quincy (7-2) at #8 Glenwood (7-2)

#13 Kenwood (6-3) at #4 Perspectives (8-1)

#12 Washington (6-3) at #5 Bremen (8-1)

#15 Oak Forest (5-4) at #2 Simeon (9-0)

#10 Champaign Centennial (7-2) at #7 Crete-Monee (7-2)

#14 Danville (6-3) at #3 Normal West (8-1)

#11 Richards (6-3) at #6 East St. Louis (7-2)

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High school football: IHSA Class 7A state football playoff pairings

The Illinois High School Association state football playoff pairings have been revealed. Only the pairings have been released so far, dates and times of the games will be posted on Monday afternoon.

In the first round, the higher seed hosts the game. In subsequent rounds, the school that has hosted fewer times during the current playoff series hosts the game. If both teams have hosted an equal number of times, the higher seed hosts. The game must be played on Saturday, unless both schools agree to play the game on Friday.

One playoff round will take place each week, starting with the first round games on Friday, Oct, 28 and Saturday, Oct. 29. This season’s state championship games will be held at Memorial Stadium in Champaign. The Class 1A thru 4A title games will take place on Friday, Nov. 25. The Class 5A thru 8A title games will be Saturday, Nov. 26.

Class 7A

#32 Buffalo Grove (4-5) at #1 Mount Carmel (9-0)

#17 Downers Grove North (6-3) at #16 Lincoln Park (7-2)

#25 Bradley-Bourbonnais (5-4) at #8 Collinsville (8-1)

#24 Brother Rice (5-4) at #9 Jacobs (8-1)

#29 Maine West (5-4) at #4 St. Charles North (8-1)

#20 Hoffman Estates (6-3) at #13 Elk Grove (7-2)

#28 Reavis (5-4) at #5 Prospect (8-1)

#21 Geneva (6-3) at #12 St. Rita (7-2)

#31 Argo (5-4) at #2 Hersey (9-0)

#18 Batavia (6-3) at #15 Guilford (7-2)

#26 Libertyville (5-4) at #7 Yorkville (8-1)

#23 DeKalb (6-3) at #10 Moline (8-1)

#30 Plainfield Central (5-4) at #3 Pekin (9-0)

#19 Normal (6-3) at #14 Hononegah (7-2)

#27 Willowbrook (5-4) at #6 Wheaton North (8-1)

#22 Larkin (6-3) at #11 Lake Zurich (8-1)

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High school football: IHSA Class 7A state football playoff pairings

The Illinois High School Association state football playoff pairings have been revealed. Only the pairings have been released so far, dates and times of the games will be posted on Monday afternoon.

In the first round, the higher seed hosts the game. In subsequent rounds, the school that has hosted fewer times during the current playoff series hosts the game. If both teams have hosted an equal number of times, the higher seed hosts. The game must be played on Saturday, unless both schools agree to play the game on Friday.

One playoff round will take place each week, starting with the first round games on Friday, Oct, 28 and Saturday, Oct. 29. This season’s state championship games will be held at Memorial Stadium in Champaign. The Class 1A thru 4A title games will take place on Friday, Nov. 25. The Class 5A thru 8A title games will be Saturday, Nov. 26.

Class 7A

#32 Buffalo Grove (4-5) at #1 Mount Carmel (9-0)

#17 Downers Grove North (6-3) at #16 Lincoln Park (7-2)

#25 Bradley-Bourbonnais (5-4) at #8 Collinsville (8-1)

#24 Brother Rice (5-4) at #9 Jacobs (8-1)

#29 Maine West (5-4) at #4 St. Charles North (8-1)

#20 Hoffman Estates (6-3) at #13 Elk Grove (7-2)

#28 Reavis (5-4) at #5 Prospect (8-1)

#21 Geneva (6-3) at #12 St. Rita (7-2)

#31 Argo (5-4) at #2 Hersey (9-0)

#18 Batavia (6-3) at #15 Guilford (7-2)

#26 Libertyville (5-4) at #7 Yorkville (8-1)

#23 DeKalb (6-3) at #10 Moline (8-1)

#30 Plainfield Central (5-4) at #3 Pekin (9-0)

#19 Normal (6-3) at #14 Hononegah (7-2)

#27 Willowbrook (5-4) at #6 Wheaton North (8-1)

#22 Larkin (6-3) at #11 Lake Zurich (8-1)

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High school football: IHSA Class 8A state football playoff pairings

The Illinois High School Association state football playoff pairings have been revealed. Only the pairings have been released so far, dates and times of the games will be posted on Monday afternoon.

In the first round, the higher seed hosts the game. In subsequent rounds, the school that has hosted fewer times during the current playoff series hosts the game. If both teams have hosted an equal number of times, the higher seed hosts. The game must be played on Saturday, unless both schools agree to play the game on Friday.

One playoff round will take place each week, starting with the first round games on Friday, Oct, 28 and Saturday, Oct. 29. This season’s state championship games will be held at Memorial Stadium in Champaign. The Class 1A thru 4A title games will take place on Friday, Nov. 25. The Class 5A thru 8A title games will be Saturday, Nov. 26.

Class 8A

#32 Conant (5-4) at #1 Lincoln-Way East (9-0)

#17 Neuqua Valley (7-2) at #16 Lane (7-2)

#25 Stevenson (6-3) at #8 Warren (8-1)

#24 Andrew (6-3) at #9 Huntley (8-1)

#29 Belleville East (5-4) at #4 South Elgin (9-0)

#20 Bolingbrook (6-3) at #13 Maine South (7-2)

#28 Lockport (5-4) at #5 Glenbard West (8-1)

#21 Homewood-Flossmoor (6-3) at #12 Glenbrook South (8-1)

#31 Oswego East (5-4) at #2 York (9-0)

#18 Marist (6-3) at #15 Naperville North (7-2)

#26 Downers Grove South (6-3) at #7 Palatine (8-1)

#23 Minooka (6-3) at #10 Glenbard East (8-1)

#30 Rich (5-4) at #3 Plainfield North (9-0)

#19 Naperville Central (6-3) at #14 Lyons (7-2)

#27 Plainfield South (6-3) at #6 Loyola (8-1)

#22 Edwardsville (6-3) at #11 O’Fallon (8-1)

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High school football: IHSA Class 8A state football playoff pairings

The Illinois High School Association state football playoff pairings have been revealed. Only the pairings have been released so far, dates and times of the games will be posted on Monday afternoon.

In the first round, the higher seed hosts the game. In subsequent rounds, the school that has hosted fewer times during the current playoff series hosts the game. If both teams have hosted an equal number of times, the higher seed hosts. The game must be played on Saturday, unless both schools agree to play the game on Friday.

One playoff round will take place each week, starting with the first round games on Friday, Oct, 28 and Saturday, Oct. 29. This season’s state championship games will be held at Memorial Stadium in Champaign. The Class 1A thru 4A title games will take place on Friday, Nov. 25. The Class 5A thru 8A title games will be Saturday, Nov. 26.

Class 8A

#32 Conant (5-4) at #1 Lincoln-Way East (9-0)

#17 Neuqua Valley (7-2) at #16 Lane (7-2)

#25 Stevenson (6-3) at #8 Warren (8-1)

#24 Andrew (6-3) at #9 Huntley (8-1)

#29 Belleville East (5-4) at #4 South Elgin (9-0)

#20 Bolingbrook (6-3) at #13 Maine South (7-2)

#28 Lockport (5-4) at #5 Glenbard West (8-1)

#21 Homewood-Flossmoor (6-3) at #12 Glenbrook South (8-1)

#31 Oswego East (5-4) at #2 York (9-0)

#18 Marist (6-3) at #15 Naperville North (7-2)

#26 Downers Grove South (6-3) at #7 Palatine (8-1)

#23 Minooka (6-3) at #10 Glenbard East (8-1)

#30 Rich (5-4) at #3 Plainfield North (9-0)

#19 Naperville Central (6-3) at #14 Lyons (7-2)

#27 Plainfield South (6-3) at #6 Loyola (8-1)

#22 Edwardsville (6-3) at #11 O’Fallon (8-1)

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High school football: No. 1 Mount Carmel beats No. 2 Loyola

No. 1 Mount Carmel at No. 2 Loyola. The hype had been building since August. Both teams took care of business throughout the season and arrived in Wilmette on Saturday with perfect records. Neither team had even been tested.

There were 11 touchdowns and multiple big plays from some of the area’s best players. But the crucial moment in the Caravan’s 42-37 victory came from unknown sophomore backup quarterback/punter Jack Elliott with 10:05 left to play.

Elliott’s 18-yard pass to Damarion Arrington on a fake punt kept Mount Carmel’s key drive alive. A few plays later Blainey Dowling connected with Darrion Gilliam on a 12-yard touchdown pass to give the Caravan a 12-point lead and the cushion they needed to pull out the win.

“Jack saved the game right there,” Dowling said. “He saved the game.”

Loyola coach John Holecek: “That was a rough one.”

Elliott has been practicing the play all season. That’s four months of work and preparation for one moment in front of a massive crowd on live television in the game of the year.

“Blainey always says to stay calm, cool and collected,” Elliott said. “I knew my time was coming and I made the best of my opportunity.”

Dowling wasn’t on the field for the play, but he was clearly on Elliott’s mind. That’s a sign of Dowling’s massive leadership impact on Mount Carmel.

“Anytime you have [Dowling] at quarterback I like my chances no matter what happens,” Caravan coach Jordan Lynch said.

Dowling was 15-for-27 passing for 158 yards and two touchdowns. He also ran for a 14-yard touchdown in the third quarter.

Mount Carmel (9-0, 3-0 CCL/ESCC Blue) trailed 24-14 at halftime and seemed to be coming unraveled before the break. An assistant threw an iPad after a penalty. Then an unsportsmanlike foul set Loyola up for a touchdown.

“We have dealt with a lot of adversity as a team and that helps us overcome stuff,” Dowling said. “There were a lot of penalties and stuff but we bounced back.”

The Caravan lost star running back Darrion Dupree to an ankle injury in the second quarter. He had seven carries for 81 yards.

Alonzo Manning II and Denny Furlong kept the running game alive for Mount Carmel. Furlong had six carries for 95 yards and Manning, a Marist transfer, provided an 18-yard touchdown run in the third quarter.

“Manning’s name was called and he stepped up,” Dowling said. “I said earlier that we had to get the Marist out of him. He did right there, you could tell. He was a Carmel player.”

Furlong also had four receptions for 78 yards and one touchdown. Danyil Taylor caught a 13-yard touchdown pass and Jimmy Deacy caught four passes for 24 yards.

Loyola (8-1, 2-1) had a chance to win the game on its final drive but stalled at the Mount Carmel 27. That’s within field goal range for Michael Baker, the Ramblers’ talented kicker, so the five-point lead was just enough.

The Caravan’s defensive line disrupted Loyola quarterback Jake Stearney throughout the game. The Colgate recruit was 13-for-31 passing for 170 yards and one touchdown.

“We kept the [defensive line] fresh up front by rotating a lot of guys in,” Lynch said. “We were still cramping and struggling but we got the pressure and the tipped passes when we needed it.”

Mount Carmel has struggled at Loyola over the past decade and things looked bleak for the Caravan at halftime. The turnaround happened quickly in the second half and didn’t appear likely.

“If you have the killer mentality no one is going to be able to stop you,” Arrington said. “We fought as a fist. That’s the brotherhood.”

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Bulls’ Donovan ahead of LaVine debut: ‘He’s fine’on October 23, 2022 at 12:54 am

CHICAGOBulls guard Zach LaVine will make his season debut against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Saturday.

LaVine missed the first two games of the season as he continues to recover from offseason surgery on his left knee. He played in the Bulls’ first three preseason games and reiterated throughout early training camp that his knee felt good before he began to experience discomfort after practice ahead of the season opener.

Coach Billy Donovan acknowledged the Bulls will have to monitor LaVine’s workload throughout the season, especially when they are playing back-to-back games.

“There’s nothing wrong with him structurally, he’s fine,” Donovan said prior to the game Saturday. “It’s just something that we’ll have to manage. We knew we were going to have to manage that going into the season. We just didn’t know when or what it will look like.”

LaVine, who signed a five-year, $215 million extension this summer, made his second straight All-Star team last season en route to averaging 24.4 points, 4.6 rebounds and 4.5 assists on 47.6% shooting.

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White Sox’ calling off SoxFest? Talk about a ‘mediocre’ move

It’s not even 2023 yet, and already the White Sox are under .500 for the new year.

Calling off SoxFest? Really?

That’s such a bad look, and yet another self-inflicted error for the club that led the major leagues in errors in 2022. Yet another “L” for a team that lost as many games as it won — though it felt so much worse than that — in a calamitous season that called the credibility of the organization into question.

Talk about being “mired in mediocrity,” the words general manager Rick Hahn used as the impetus for the last rebuild. Mediocre isn’t just going 81-81 and playing a barely watchable brand of baseball. It’s also eighty-sixing an annual event — canceled the previous two years out of necessity due to COVID-19 concerns — at which fans are supposed to be able to rub elbows with Sox players and other representatives of the club and have their voices heard, even just a little bit.

And Sox fans have much to say these days, not much of it good but all of it mighty important to them.

“We recognize our fans may be disappointed the event will not take place,” the team said in an insubstantial statement that attributed the decision to “several factors.”

Not explaining further than that invites the public to speculate that Sox bigwigs don’t have the stomach for being questioned and criticized, perhaps even booed as Tom Ricketts was at the Cubs Convention in 2020. Ricketts survived that day, as miserable and humiliating as it surely was. The Cubs’ 2023 event is on for Jan. 13-15 at the Sheraton Grand Chicago.

It’s easy to call off plans for an outing when things are tense between you and the friends on the other side of the table. But it’s kind of a weak move.

What about hearing from the new manager, whoever he is? What about hearing from new players? Oh, well, it would’ve been nice.

The Tony La Russa days are over, but this is reminiscent of the sorry sight of Sox players jogging down the first-base line because their wary manager thought it better not to risk some pain. Calling off SoxFest, the Sox appear to be going half-speed into a critical offseason.

THREE-DOT DASH

Is Kirk Ferentz, the dean of college football coaches, begging Iowa to fire him? It might be the only way to explain why he continues to employ son Brian as the Hawkeyes’ offensive coordinator.

Iowa’s Ferentz has a mess on his hands.

Photo by Rich Schultz/Getty Images

This is Kirk’s 24th season and Brian’s sixth as OC. Iowa has taken up permanent residence in the lower half of the Big Ten offensive rankings in recent years, but this season has been like something out of a Clive Parker novel. The Hawkeyes have the worst offense in the country — by a mile — and committed six more turnovers Saturday in a 54-10 loss at Ohio State.

“But we won 10 games in 2021,” Ferentz supporters say.

But that offense ranked 13th in the Big Ten, is the proper reply. …

Oh, if and when Iowa does move on Ferentz? Be prepared for alum Brett Bielema’s name to jump straight to the top of the list. Could the mayor of Champaign really turn that one down? …

Is there a less-inspiring sight in Chicago sports than Bulls forward Patrick Williams crouching behind the three-point line, not moving, waiting for a pass that probably isn’t — and definitely shouldn’t be — coming?

We have to assume Williams once was an athletic sort who loved basketball, or else the Bulls wouldn’t have wasted a No. 4 overall pick on him. He sure doesn’t look like he’s having any fun out there. …

Nikola Vucevic either makes you happy by scoring inside or makes you crazy by clanging another three-pointer off the rim. There is no in between. …

Early take on Luke Richardson’s Blackhawks: They’re playing hard and have yet to set the sport back by generations. Not terrible. …

Patriots 31, Bears 13. What, you want me to lie?

THIS YOU GOTTA SEE

Bears at Patriots (Monday, 7:15 p.m., ESPN): Or you could always watch Peyton and Eli Manning call the game on ESPN2. In between brotherly yuks, the pair of two-time Super Bowl champs ought to have some interesting insights into Justin Fields’ struggles.

“Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel” (Tuesday, 9 p.m., HBO): Among the stories tonight is a look at the rampant violence referees are enduring on fields and courts of play. Then again, what could be more important than your 7-year-old niece’s flag football game?

World Series, Game 1 (TBD, Fox-32): We don’t know the combatants yet, but sources assure us neither the Sox nor the Cubs will be involved.

ONLY BECAUSE YOU ASKED

From Ian, via email:

“Doesn’t Fighting Illini Chase Brown deserve to be included in the Heisman Trophy conversation? Don’t you need this great column idea?”

Illinois’ Chase Brown is going great, but maybe not Heisman great.

Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images

Wet blanket alert: Thanks, but nah. Brown has been great, no doubt, but Illinois is winning all these games because of its defense. Two rushing yards allowed against Wisconsin. Six points allowed against Iowa. Thirty-eight passing yards allowed against Minnesota. It seems almost disrespectful to this team to pretend Brown is why it’s happening.

If I were casting my ballot today, Tennessee quarterback Hendon Hooker would be on it for sure, probably at No. 1. Brown wouldn’t be in my top three, but let’s see what he does the rest of the way. He has some huge Saturdays ahead of him.

THE BOTTOM FIVE

Iowa QBs: The Hawkeyes finally pulled starter Spencer Petras and sent backup Alex Padilla into the game. What did Padilla do to deserve that?

The Lakers: No, two games in isn’t too soon to heave this team into the trash bin.

Russell Wilson: We didn’t want him as Bears QB anyway, did we?

Pickleball: I’ve never hated anything more, and I still don’t even know what it is.

Javy Baez and Kris Bryant: Didn’t they get the memo that all ex-Cubs are supposed to be in the ALCS or the NLCS right now?

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Bears’ key young players push through frustrating, loss-laden start to careers

In three seasons at Notre Dame, tight end Cole Kmet tasted the bitterness of defeat just five times. The Bears will match that total merely in the month of October if they can’t beat the Patriots on Monday or the Cowboys next week.

Kmet grew up in the Chicago suburbs, so he certainly knew how exasperating it can be to watch or play for the Bears when they drafted him in 2020. But that doesn’t make it any easier to endure the ever-growing pile of losses.

“A lot of us have come from really successful programs and we’re used to winning a lot, so it is frustrating,” Kmet said. “It’s a black-and-white league where you’re judged off wins and losses, and there’s urgency to it. You understand there’s a process to it, and you get tired of hearing that sometimes, but you’ve gotta stick to it and keep coming to work.”

For Kmet, that “process” has encompassed all of his young career.

The Bears are 16-23 over the last three seasons. They made the playoffs in 2020, but no one took that 8-8 team seriously. They’re an eight-point underdog against the Patriots and probably won’t be favored again until Week 10 against the Lions.

The Bears have several key young players like Kmet who have known nothing but losing since arriving at Halas Hall, and that’s not an ideal foundation for anyone’s career. At some point it must be demoralizing. It’d be natural to wonder if it’ll ever change, or if it’ll just be endless obscurity like playing for the Jaguars.

Putting in the daily work with no results can wear players down. After getting rocked by the Buccaneers last season, quarterback Justin Fields said, “I’ve never been in this position, where I’mlosing, so I don’t know how to feel.” Ohio State was 20-2 in his two seasons as starter, but he’s 4-12 in the NFL.

Last week, shortly after the embarrassing 12-7 home loss to the Commanders, Fields said he was sick of hearing about how he and the Bears are so close to turning it around.

“Just gotta work harder,” he said when asked how to withstand the defeats. “That’s the only thing I know how to do, so just keep going.”

That was the consensus among him, Kmet, cornerback Jaylon Johnson and wide receiver Darnell Mooney — all in their second or third season of Bears sludge. All they can do is keep working.

Playing better would help, too. The Bears would win more games if Fields played like Justin Herbert, if Kmet played like Travis Kelce, if Mooney played like Tyreek Hill and if Johnson played like — actually, he’s doing fine. But they’re all intent on making a bigger contribution.

“It starts with doing your job,” said Johnson, whose Utah teams went 27-14. “I go into each week thinking, ‘How can I do my job better? How can I play a perfect game?’ Until I play a perfect game and intercept every ball and make every tackle, there’s always ways for me to get better.

“It’s tough losing, but there’s never been a breaking point for me where our record caused me mental fatigue or pressure.”

Mooney’s collegiate experience was probably closest to what he’s seen during his three seasons with the Bears. Tulane was 3-9 before he got there, then climbed steadily to 7-6 by the time he left.

His main takeaway was “learn from [losing], but don’t get comfortable with it,” so he tries to stay optimistic.

“Justin said he’s tired of hearing that we’re this close, but honestly, we are,” he said. “At the end of the game, every time, we’ve had the opportunity to win — besides the Green Bay game. I think of the positive, that we are close. So finish the damn game.”

But after three years of that frustration?

“I just worry about what I can worry about,” he said. “And get open.”

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