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Cleveland Cavaliers at Chicago Bulls: 1 Best Bet

The Chicago Bulls look to avenge Friday’s loss to the Washington Wizards as they head to the United Center for their home-opener.

The 1-1 Chicago Bulls find themselves as betting underdogs for the second consecutive evening as they host the 1-0 Cleveland Cavaliers in their home-opener. Zach LaVine aims to make his season debut and following last night’s inconsistent offensive output, his presence is more than welcome. Time will tell if he will face knee issues throughout the season, and as we have seen, Demar Derozan can only do so much even when he’s scoring at an all-star level.

We grabbed the over on Vucevic’s points last night, but with a fairly unclear picture of what the Chicago Bulls scoring output will look like in LaVine’s return, I’ll avoid any point totals and head to a similar play from night one in hopes to improve us to 3-0 on the season. Let’s get a bounce back win in the standings for our Bulls, and let’s keep the streak alive on the bet slips!

2022 Bulls Best Bet Record: (2-0)

Ayo Dosunmu Over 3.5 Assists (Sportsbook odds may vary)

The fan favorite, Ayo Dosunmu, has inherited a huge role to open the season in Lonzo Ball’s absence, and despite LaVine’s return to the lineup tonight, Dosunmu will remain in the starting lineup and his minutes should remain significant.

Through two games, Ayo has racked up over 30 minutes in each game, and while his box score output in last night’s loss wasn’t eye opening, I think we see the opportunities return to the volume that was seen in night one where he scored 17 points and 4 assists. With LaVine’s scoring output returning to the lineup, I don’t necessarily see the same scoring opportunities as the Miami game, but I do believe we will see the playmaking opportunities grow to a higher level.

Cleveland is an interesting matchup to break down because the inside presence of Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen are nothing to laugh at, however, the perimeter defenders do not command the same respect. For the Chicago Bulls to have success tonight, they will need to have strong guard play, and no matter how you shake it, Ayo should have plenty of opportunities to find teammates for open looks.

I’ll bring up the same point that I made for Ayo’s assist total on night one to illustrate the value that we have here again. Most non-star players will have their prop totals set right around their season average, or in this case early in the year, last year’s totals.

If you look at Ayo’s assist per game numbers from last season, it is right around the 3.5 number, giving you by the blind-eye a relative tossup to make a bet. If you dig deeper, we have the luxury of Dosunmu being a rare case where we have almost a complete 50/50 sample size of starting minutes and bench minutes. Last year in 40 games as a starter, Ayo averaged 5.5 assists per game, and as long as they continue to reflect these numbers to his overall averages from last year, we will find an edge, and especially in a game where I’d argue his playmaking could be on full display.

To close things out, in four games against the Cleveland Cavaliers last season, all in a starting role, Dosunmu averaged 4.75 assists, aiding the Bulls to a 3-1 record over Cleveland. I love Dosunmu to have a serious impact tonight, and honestly could prove to be the x-factor to winning or losing this contest. I’m going to take a swing on him to hit a couple of threes as well at some serious plus-money, but the value is all over his assist total tonight.

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Bears rookie Jaquan Brisker: ‘I’m just getting warmed up.’

Never lacking for confidence, Bears rookie safety Jaquan Brisker had big plans the moment he stepped on the practice field at Halas Hall in April — embracing the idea of winning the Defensive Rookie of the Year Award. And he has even bigger plans after quickly establishing himself as a playmaker through his first six NFL games.

Details?

“I’m just getting warmed up, I’ll say that,” Brisker said.

On a rebuilding Bears team where progress — especially on offense –is so incremental it’s often imperceptible, Brisker is a foundation piece who has lived up to expectations as the rookie most likely to succeed.

Cornerback Kyler Gordon figured to have his ups and downs as a rookie starter at a hot-spot position. And while he’s trending upwards, he’s sure enough had his tough moments. Brisker, literally in a better position to succeed at strong safety in Matt Eberflus’ defense, has acclimated quickly.

All but anointed a Week 1 starter from the moment he was drafted, Brisker recovered a fumble on his fifth NFL snap against the 49ers in the season opener. He’s far from a finished product, but he’s already become a player you can’t help but watch even before the snap.

Brisker has three tackles for loss this season. His sack of Commanders quarterback Carson Wentz last Thursday night was Brisker’s second sack of the season in six games. No Bears safety has had two sacks in a season since Al Afalava in 2009, and no safety has had more than two since Mike Brown and Mike Green in 2001.

Afalava was a one-year Bear and Green was an over-achiever as a seventh-round draft pick. But Brown was one of the best safeties in Bears history — an All-Pro in 2001 and Pro Bowl player in 2005 whose star would be in another realm if not for injuries.

Brisker has earned comparisons to Brown, whose instinct for the position and dedication to improvement and fundamentals always seemed to put him in the right place at the right time. Brisker has those same qualities.

“I see him improving in practice,” Eberflus said when asked about Brisker’s potential for staying power as an impact player. “Some of the things work with him is the footwork and the block protection and all those things you have to do a good job at safety.”

And perhaps most of all, Brisker is a good fit for this defense.

“Man, he’s tough,” Eberflus said. “What I love about him is his toughness. He’s a mentally and physically tough player, and that’s what we covet here at the Bears. You have that with the way he wants to learn and get better with Andre [Curtis, the Bears’ safeties coach] and learn from the older guys. He’s willing to get better every day — that’s going to make for a good product.”

Even after the fast start, Brisker’s self-evaluation during the mini-bye was more about what he should do better. He doesn’t want to rely too much on his instinct for the position.

“I could be a lot more consistent,” he said. “I could play a lot lower, be more of a technician and just reading my keys better. There are a lot of plays where I could have walked in front ofinterceptions or gotten my hands on ball or even got a strip-fumble. I could be a lot more of a playmaker.”

And while he has big dreams, he knows any individual accolades are unlikely to come without team success.

“I can’t get too high or too low,” Brisker said. “There’s always room to get better. This is my first year, so obviously I’ve got to keep learning and getting better. Until we’re in the playoffs and [success] like that, I’m not satisfied.”

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Mac Jones ruled questionable; Bears preparing for both QBs

The Patriots called quarterback Mac Jones — and almost one-quarter of their roster — questionable to play Monday night against the Bears. Jones is recovering from an ankle injury that opened the door for a rookie to shine.

Jones was limited in practice Saturday for the third-straight day. If he can’t go, Bailey Zappe would start in his place for the third week in a row. The first-year player from Western Kentucky has won the two games he started, almost beat the Packers in relief and has a 111.4 passer rating this season.

The Bears have been preparing for both quarterbacks, coach Matt Eberflus said after Saturday’s practice. He said it would be a greater challenge if one was a running threat and the other was not.

“They’re a similar style, so it’s really one in the same,” he said.

The Bears studied Zappe’s tape the last three weeks — but also from college, where Eberflus said he was an accurate passer from the shotgun.

When healthy, Jones has been the starter ever since the Patriots drafted him No. 15 overall — four spots after the Bears took quarterback Justin Fields — in 2021.

Eberflus succeeded in defending Jones last year. In a December victory, his Colts defense held Jones to a pedestrian stat line: 26-for-45 for 299 yards, two touchdowns, two interceptions and a 74.2 passer rating.

“For a young player, he’s got really good poise in the pocket, delivers the ball on time, he’s very accurate, he’s tough,” Eberflus said. “He’s done a lot of good things. Obviously, his last year as a rookie was amazing. So he’s a great talent.”

Clean health

Saturday marked the third-straight day that the Bears’ injury report included not a single player.

“It’s been 13, 14 years in the league now, I don’t know that I’ve ever at that before at this time of the year,” Eberflus said. “We’re certainly fortunate. We’re excited about that. It really goes down to the players before practice, after practice, taking care of their bodies, [and] our performance staff.”

It’s an encouraging turn for Eberflus, whose intense practices could have been responsible for in-practice injuries to cornerback Jaylon Johnson and linebacker Matt Adams in Week 3. Eberflus shortened practice leading up to the Bears’ Thursday night game after looking at the tracking software that measured players’ speed in practice and games.

“I thought it worked out well,” he said. “I thought the guys were playing hard. I thought they were healthy, and that’s what you want.”

Harris will play

The Patriots listed a whopping 12 players as questionable, including tackle Isaiah Wynn (shoulder) and receivers Nelson Agholor (hamstring) and Kendrick Bourne (toe). More notable, though, was running back Damien Harris having no injury designation after missing last week’s game with a hamstring problem. Harris is averaging 4.5 yards per carry this year.

He’ll share time with the bruising Rhamondre Stevenson, who is averaging 5.1 yards per carry.

“They have two guys at the running back position that are a yin and a yang,” Eberflus said.

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Blackhawks’ solid start providing early validation of internal self-belief

The Blackhawks entered Saturday tied for a playoff spot.

That fact has no real significance. The season is less than two weeks old; the Hawks have played only four games. But it’s something of an achievement for this team nonetheless.

They’ve unquestionably exceeded expectations during these first four games. The systems coach Luke Richardson has installed have the Hawks outperforming their talent level, and some of general manager Kyle Davidson’s low-key, low-risk pickups over the past year — guys like Sam Lafferty, Jason Dickinson and goalie Alex Stalock — are off to hot starts.

The home-opener victory Friday against the Red Wings was one of the more memorable, surprising, feel-good wins this Hawks team has earned in years.

They’re not letting two comeback victories get to their heads, and rightfully so. After practice Saturday, Max Domi kept repeating that they’re approaching things one day at a time, admitting it is a cliche yet an accurate cliche.

But the internal self-belief with which the Hawks entered this season — which nobody else in the hockey world shared — has received a bit of validation.

“The players are believing the message,” Richardson said Saturday. “They’re understanding what they’re supposed to be doing on the ice. [Today we watched] all kinds of clips in the neutral zone where we got better from the beginning of the season until now, already. [It] seems like it’s starting to become automatic.

“As teams start to pre-scout us, they’ll see it, too. So we’re going to have to adjust to that. But if we have that base, it’s easy to adjust. If we’re not organized, if you don’t have a base plan to go off of, it’s pretty hard to adjust. … It’s a good start, but [there’s] a long way to go.”

Richardson’s easy-to-understand systems are one factor driving this early success, but the sense of equality — where every player is treated the same — that Richardson has instilled might be an even bigger factor.

Starting three-on-three overtime Saturday not with Patrick Kane, Jonathan Toews or Seth Jones but rather Lafferty, Dickinson and Jack Johnson was partially matchup-based — Lafferty had been checking Wings star Dylan Larkin all game — but also sent a message: The players playing the best will play the most.

Domi said that was used as “motivation for the rest of our team,” and two minutes later, he scored the game-winner.

The same equality emphasis has held true on off-days, as well, such as in video review sessions.

“We want to make sure they feel everyone is accountable the same, and everybody’s going to get the [same] acknowledgement when they do it right,” Richardson said. “[MacKenzie] Entwistle is a great example. He missed a check in one of the earlier games this season, and I pointed it out in the video room. I said, ‘We’re not trying to embarrass anyone here, but you have to have that check.’

“Then he had a great forecheck and plastered somebody…and we put that on the video [Wednesday]. I pointed out, ‘I know I showed ‘Entsy’ missing his check. Well, I want to show you guys when we do something right.’ You can’t just take it for granted.”

The Hawks’ unofficial new mantra of “every man contributing equally” will be tested now, though, by starting goalie Petr Mrazek’s groin strain.

The injury is not “as bad as they thought” and Mrazek is officially day-to-day, but it sounds like he’ll likely miss a little time.

Stalock will start Sunday against the Kraken but prospect Arvid Soderblom, called up late Friday, will make just his third career NHL start this week against either the Panthers or Oilers. The Hawks had wanted to give the 23-year-old Swedish netminder another year of development in Rockford full-time, but that plan is now on hold.

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Bears Fans react to trade rumor with Chiefs about Starting RB and DL

Bears fans are in their feels about saying goodbye

The Chicago Bears will have plenty of rumors surrounding them about possible trades this week. The team sits at 2-4 with a tough schedule coming. The Bears are expected to trade assets into draft picks as the trade deadline approaches. One viral trade rumor had some Bears fans at different stages of the grief cycle posting takes on social media.

Recent names dropped earlier in the week were linebacker Roquan Smith and Robert Quinn. On Saturday, another name, David Montgomery, was added to the potential trade block. His name was dropped as ESPN reporter Jeremy Fowler reported the Kansas City Chiefs were looking for help on both sides of the ball.

The Chiefs are looking for defensive line help via trade or free agency, per @JFowlerESPN.
Noted that the team is searching for an ‘impact player’ on either side of the ball, and mentioned OBJ but says not their top target.
Interesting week ahead 👀

A Twitter account that tweets potential rumors suggested Montgomery and Quinn were possible acquisitions for the Chiefs. While this isn’t a credible source, their names provoked a firestorm of takes from Bears fans.

There are four players the #Chiefs could be looking into at the trade deadline: #ChiefsKingdom #NFLRumors
#Bears Robert Quinn and David Montgomery
#Seahawks Sidney Jones
#Panthers DJ Moore

Personally, I say ship out Montgomery, Quinn, and Smith right now. Let the Bears assemble as many pieces as cheaply as possible for the rebuild. Montgomery and Smith will take up too much fat at the Halas Hall dining room on the books for new contracts. However, not many fans were on board with the parting of two of the best players on a bad NFL team.

Bears fans react to the  trade

The potential trade got fans excited. Not many Bears fans appeared to be upset about losing Quinn. But there were mixed options on what to do with Montgomery.

Don’t understand why bears would get rid of Monty. He’s the hardest running and best blocking RB on the team. https://t.co/wKDJ4qEoQm

What In the world would Matty Nagy do with Montgomery!???? https://t.co/x3zCTlkIFL

@ChrisMaltbyBD If you’re about identity and doing things the right way, let’s not flip home-grown Bears players who have met and surpassed expectations.
Roquan and Montgomery are the whole point of drafting. You draft to get the pedigree, foundation and production.
Quinn’s a different story.

Please get Montgomery off the Bears and give Herbert the keys. https://t.co/KKaL1uCg7s

@nflrums They can have both Quinn and Monty for a second round pick

@AkamatsuJjh completely agree.. besides, Montgomery may be the only guy besides Mooney who can catch with serious YAC

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Sources: Silver talks possible tanking solutionson October 22, 2022 at 7:56 pm

NBA commissioner Adam Silver, in recent comments to Phoenix Suns employees, addressed possible solutions for tanking while noting that he understands why teams would do it when a “once-in-a-generation player” is about to enter the league, according to sources who were present.

Calling it a “serious issue” that has sparked “hundreds” of meetings, Silver’s comments came this week during a question-and-answer session in the Suns’ arena, where Silver also apologized multiple times on behalf of the league office to a large group of Suns employees for workplace misconduct under majority team owner Robert Sarver.

During the session, one employee asked Silver about tanking, a theme that is widely expected to dominate the league conversation with 7-foot-4 French phenom Victor Wembanyama — a potentially franchise-altering prospect — being projected to be the No. 1 pick in the 2023 draft.

“We put teams on notice,” Silver told employees. “We’re going to be paying particular attention to the issue this year.”

1 Related

Speaking of a concept in European soccer, Silver told employees that the league has thought about relegation as a potential solution to ensure the worst-performing teams are incentivized to compete. But the commissioner then said relegation would be “destabilizing” to the NBA.

In such a scenario, Silver told employees, relegation would essentially mean demoting the worst one or two teams to the G League while promoting the best team or two from the G League to the NBA.

“It would so disrupt our business model,” Silver told employees. “And even if you took two teams up from the G League, they wouldn’t be equipped to compete in the NBA.”

In an effort to help reduce tanking, the NBA flattened draft lottery odds in 2019, so now teams with the three worst regular-season records each have a 14% chance of winning the lottery. (Before that, the team with the worst record had a 25% chance, the second-worst team had a 19.9% chance and the third-worst team had a 15.6% chance.)

Still, Silver told employees that tanking remains an issue this season.

“It’s something we have to watch for,” Silver said. “A draft is, in principle, a good system. But I get it, especially when there is a sense that a once-in-a-generation player is coming along, like we have this year.” Silver didn’t mention Wembanyama by name, sources present said, but added that the league will adjust as necessary.

“Teams are smarter, they are creative, and they respond — we move, they move — so we’re always looking to see whether there’s yet a better system,” Silver told employees.

Silver also addressed a question about league expansion, which he told Suns employees the league will look at more closely once it is through its upcoming television rights negotiations. (The NBA’s current TV rights package, a nine-year deal with ESPN and Turner Sports, is slated to expire after the 2024-25 season.)

“In order to evaluate any teams coming in, we need to know where we stand from a media standpoint; that’s obviously our most significant form of revenue overall,” Silver told employees.

But Silver also discussed the “potential dilution of talent” — that is, adding more teams would weaken the overall product.

“None of us can remember going into a season where there was a perception of so much competition, but, still, the goal is to have 30 competitive teams, not 20, or whatever it is, so think we do pay attention to the dilution factor,” he told employees.

Still, Silver said that the league is, overall, doing well and that there is no shortage of strong candidates for new teams in new cities, though he didn’t name any specific cities. Las Vegas and Seattle are considered likely candidates for new NBA teams should the league expand.

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House of the Exquisite Corpse, Pilsen Open Studios, Panther Party, and moreMicco Caporale and Kerry Reidon October 22, 2022 at 3:35 pm

Pilsen Open Studios is happening from noon-8 PM today and tomorrow along 18th Street and elsewhere in the neighborhood from Halsted to Western. Galleries, artists, and vendors invite visitors and neighbors to experience the hyperlocal arts community. This 20-year-old event celebrates aesthetic traditions and innovations within hip-hop, muralism, screenprinting, self-publishing, graffiti, and more. Appreciators, admirers, and artists can learn about the work and intention that goes into maintaining and advancing these art forms. Today and tomorrow, Colectivo Pop Up takes over Breathing Space Chicago (2105 W. 18th St.); ZINEmercado will be selling zines from the neighborhood, PRINTmercado will sell original prints by local artists, and DISCOmercado will be selling vinyl from local musicians and labels. Activities include a live t-shirt printing demonstration from Instituto Gráfico de Chicago. For a complete list of locations and activities, consult the Pilsen Open Studios Vendor/Event Map. (MC)

Well, since you’re already in Pilsen, might as well check out Sounds of Solidarity (1855 S. Blue Island). From noon-5 PM, the Pilsen Love Fridge is teaming up with mutual aid project Chi Resists to host a celebration of local BIPOC creativity. Throughout the afternoon, there will be art, music, and poetry, as well as a donation spot for winter survival gear to be locally repurposed. Free children’s books are available. (MC)

And as long as you’re there, stop by La Esquina (1942 S. Carpenter) too. They’ll be open noon-7 PM both days of Open Studios to celebrate the launch of Beyond Heaven: Chicago House Party Flyers Volume III, 1983-1992. Publisher Almighty & Insane Books will be selling copies as well as other titles about local culture and ephemera, and author Mario “Live It Up” Luna will be displaying his collection of house ephemera while signing books. At 6 PM, UPC founder Luis Gabriel Aguilera and musical polymath Jesse de la Peña will be joined by friends from local party crews for a round-table on the house scene of 1980s Chicago, followed by live DJ sets inspired by the era. (MC)

Cap off your day in the neighborhood with Healthy Hood Chicago’s Panther Party at HHC’s headquarters (2242 S. Damen). Original members of the Black Panther Party will share their personal experiences and lessons from that time while discussing the party’s local legacy. In addition to a slate of vendors selling local wares, hip-hop artist Jiggy Bars will perform. This 7 PM event is free, but donations are encouraged. (MC)

There are a ton of spooky seasonal shows happening right now, and we’ll have a special guide to some of them closer to Halloween. But one to add right now is Rough House Theater’s House of the Exquisite Corpse, returning to the Chopin Theatre (1543 W. Division) through 11/5. The piece takes audiences through seven different installations, loosely inspired by parts of the body and featuring puppetry, music, soundscapes, and other elements that collectively create what Reader critic Kimzyn Campbell calls “a peep show, where the audience is the voyeur of an interior world, with puppeteers, physical theater artists, and designers (dozens of collaborators in all) combining forces to make a haunted house that defies expectations.” There are rolling admissions Thu-Sat beginning at 7 PM (the number of entries available vary), and tickets are $15-$45. For information and reservations, visit roughhousetheater.com. (KR)

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House of the Exquisite Corpse, Pilsen Open Studios, Panther Party, and moreMicco Caporale and Kerry Reidon October 22, 2022 at 3:35 pm Read More »

House of the Exquisite Corpse, Pilsen Open Studios, Panther Party, and more

Pilsen Open Studios is happening from noon-8 PM today and tomorrow along 18th Street and elsewhere in the neighborhood from Halsted to Western. Galleries, artists, and vendors invite visitors and neighbors to experience the hyperlocal arts community. This 20-year-old event celebrates aesthetic traditions and innovations within hip-hop, muralism, screenprinting, self-publishing, graffiti, and more. Appreciators, admirers, and artists can learn about the work and intention that goes into maintaining and advancing these art forms. Today and tomorrow, Colectivo Pop Up takes over Breathing Space Chicago (2105 W. 18th St.); ZINEmercado will be selling zines from the neighborhood, PRINTmercado will sell original prints by local artists, and DISCOmercado will be selling vinyl from local musicians and labels. Activities include a live t-shirt printing demonstration from Instituto Gráfico de Chicago. For a complete list of locations and activities, consult the Pilsen Open Studios Vendor/Event Map. (MC)

Well, since you’re already in Pilsen, might as well check out Sounds of Solidarity (1855 S. Blue Island). From noon-5 PM, the Pilsen Love Fridge is teaming up with mutual aid project Chi Resists to host a celebration of local BIPOC creativity. Throughout the afternoon, there will be art, music, and poetry, as well as a donation spot for winter survival gear to be locally repurposed. Free children’s books are available. (MC)

And as long as you’re there, stop by La Esquina (1942 S. Carpenter) too. They’ll be open noon-7 PM both days of Open Studios to celebrate the launch of Beyond Heaven: Chicago House Party Flyers Volume III, 1983-1992. Publisher Almighty & Insane Books will be selling copies as well as other titles about local culture and ephemera, and author Mario “Live It Up” Luna will be displaying his collection of house ephemera while signing books. At 6 PM, UPC founder Luis Gabriel Aguilera and musical polymath Jesse de la Peña will be joined by friends from local party crews for a round-table on the house scene of 1980s Chicago, followed by live DJ sets inspired by the era. (MC)

Cap off your day in the neighborhood with Healthy Hood Chicago’s Panther Party at HHC’s headquarters (2242 S. Damen). Original members of the Black Panther Party will share their personal experiences and lessons from that time while discussing the party’s local legacy. In addition to a slate of vendors selling local wares, hip-hop artist Jiggy Bars will perform. This 7 PM event is free, but donations are encouraged. (MC)

There are a ton of spooky seasonal shows happening right now, and we’ll have a special guide to some of them closer to Halloween. But one to add right now is Rough House Theater’s House of the Exquisite Corpse, returning to the Chopin Theatre (1543 W. Division) through 11/5. The piece takes audiences through seven different installations, loosely inspired by parts of the body and featuring puppetry, music, soundscapes, and other elements that collectively create what Reader critic Kimzyn Campbell calls “a peep show, where the audience is the voyeur of an interior world, with puppeteers, physical theater artists, and designers (dozens of collaborators in all) combining forces to make a haunted house that defies expectations.” There are rolling admissions Thu-Sat beginning at 7 PM (the number of entries available vary), and tickets are $15-$45. For information and reservations, visit roughhousetheater.com. (KR)

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Chicago Bulls: This heartbreaking loss is their first of the yearVincent Pariseon October 22, 2022 at 2:00 pm

The Chicago Bulls are a team that needs to get as many wins as possible as they are dealing with a bit more adversity to start this season than they did last season. Last year, their impressive start allowed them to tread through some tough months to end the season and still make the playoffs.

It is a team that might not be afforded the opportunity this year because it is going to be much harder this year because of a few key injuries. They are going to be without Lonzo Ball for a while and Zach LaVine is missing from these first couple of games.

Earlier in their week, they stunned the Miami Heat on the road to sneak away with their first victory of the season. That was a great win without LaVine to begin the year and start hot. That made a game against a much weaker Washington Wizards feel so much more important.

These might be the types of games that the Bulls need to take in order to be a playoff team this year. That is why this one felt so heartbreaking even though it was the second game of the year. It is the fact that they had the chance to take it and they missed it.

Although they were down 15 at one point, they came all the way back. Guys like DeMar DeRozan, Ayo Dosunmu, and Nikola Vucevic had strong games down the stretch but it wasn’t enough to outlast the Wizards who took a 102-100 victory on their home court.

The Chicago Bulls came so close to pulling off a major comeback victory.

DeRozan made a great play to finally get it tied at 100. The Wizards scored a two to make it 102 to 100 with enough time for the Bulls. DeMar took a game-winning three-point shot but it missed as time expired. As mentioned before, it was a heartbreaker that they could have had but didn’t.

Even a stud like DeRozan misses a big shot every now and again. Making it close without LaVine is huge but it would have been nice to start 2-0.

However, they have a chance to bounce back big with their home opener on Saturday night against the Cleveland Cavaliers. This should be a lot of fun.

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Chicago Bulls: This heartbreaking loss is their first of the yearVincent Pariseon October 22, 2022 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Time is right to look outside organization for next White Sox manager

Not since they hired Jerry Manuel in 1997 have the White Sox gone outside their family to find a manager.

Since Manuel was fired in 2003, former Sox shortstop Ozzie Guillen, former Sox third baseman Robin Ventura,Sox bench coach Rick Renteria and former Sox manager Tony La Russa have managed the team. Those hires produced a World Series title under Guillen in 2005 but only three postseason appearances since then with a total of one victory in each one.

The same leadership team of chairman Jerry Reinsdorf, executive vice president Ken Williams and general manager Rick Hahn has remained firmly in place since 2002, when Hahn became assistant GM under GM Williams. Hahn was promoted to GM and Williams to VP in October 2012, and the decision-making dynamic is much the same.

“Similar to probably just about every major decision since I’ve been around here for over the last 20-odd years, in the end, it’s a collaborative process and ideally, Kenny, Jerry and I come up with a consensus,” Hahn said of the next managerial hire the day La Russa stepped down for health reasons. “I’ll be leading the process. I’ll be the one having these initial conversations here, over the coming weeks. A number of people being part of these conversations.”

The Sox are keeping the process close to the vest, in typical Sox style, although it’s known that Astros bench coach Joe Espada, one of the first candidates interviewed by the team, is high on their list, if not at the top. Bruce Bochy came off the market when the Rangers hired him Friday.

“They are doing some serious due diligence with this,” a club source said Wednesday.

Hahn two weeks ago said “it’s really a matter of getting the best opinion of someone and in the end, making a recommendation and all being on the same page.”

They were on the same page for a complete overhaul and rebuild in 2016 that produced consecutive playoff appearances in 2020 and ’21 but went off the rails in 2022, going 81-81 under La Russa in the franchise’s most disappointing season in recent memory.

After making every hire a family affair since Manuel, it may be time to go outside an organization many in baseball circles view as dysfunctional. There is something to be said for a fresh view and ideas.

Hahn suggested it could happen.

“One thing that perhaps breaks from the mold of at least the last few hires, having a history with the White Sox, having some sort of connection to White Sox DNA, is by no means a requirement,” he said.

Outside of bench coach Miguel Cairo, who guided the Sox to an 18-16 record after La Russa stepped away, “having that history with the White Sox is not necessarily a characteristic that we’re looking for this time,” Hahn said.

And yet, as the Sox’ interview process approaches three weeks, numerous longer-shot possibilities from within, including pre- and postgame TV analyst Guillen and former Sox star Jim Thome — a special assistant to Hahn who in the past expressed interest in managing but might not be looking to now — are popular talk-show and rumor-mill fodder.

Guillen said he’s interested in returning.

“I know this team is very good,” he said.

But he told the Sun-Times that, as of Friday, he wasn’t interviewing for the job, contrary to reports he already had or will next week.

Reinsdorf said five years ago that a reunion with Guillen, whose tenure on the South Side did not end well, “can’t happen.” Then again, no one saw La Russa coming back — except for Reinsdorf — two years ago.

Stay tuned.

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