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Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon October 13, 2022 at 7:01 am

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

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Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


MAGA flip-flops

Men from Blago to Bolduc are trying to sing a new song.


Just like we told you

The Bears finally make their play for public money to build their private stadium.


The choice is yours, voters

MAGA’s Illinois Supreme Court nominees are poised to outlaw abortion in Illinois—if, gulp, they win.

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Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon October 13, 2022 at 7:01 am Read More »

10-1: Ranking the top 10 most entertaining teams in the NBAon October 13, 2022 at 2:26 pm

Here we go: The top 10 in our 2022-2023 League Pass Rankings! We revealed Nos. 30-11 on Tuesday, and you can read about the rankings formula there.

10. DALLAS MAVERICKS (35)

Look at this soul-snatcher:

That is the smile of someone who knows he has you. The Mavs’ offense is one-dimensional — Luka Doncic walks ball up, runs two-man game — but that dimension contains multitudes. The typical spread pick-and-roll pairs ball handler and rim-runner; Doncic can do that with any of Dallas’ bigs. He can make all the passes blindfolded.

Doncic’s size and comfort in the middle of the paint — the dead zone for some ball handlers — open up endless possibilities. He’s at his most predatory dragging smaller defenders into pick-and-rolls. Switch, and he mashes them in the post with smirking cruelty. (He took sadistic pleasure brutalizing Patrick Beverley in the 2021 playoffs.) Send help, and he picks you apart.

Even against like-sized defenders and traditional coverages, Doncic is a three-steps-ahead genius burrowing inside. His high-arching step-back is borderline unblockable, and he has hit 50% from floater range over the past two seasons — and a LeBron James-esque 73% at the rim last season.

The threat of those shots unlocks Doncic’s generational passing. He understands how every up-fake, pivot, and half-spin freaks help defenders into thinking they should swarm — and which passes any slight rotation might expose. Last season, he even started throwing straight backward overhead passes to pick-and-pop bigs. Maxi Kleber and Christian Wood must be ready at all times.

This is my favorite piece of Mavs art in ages:

The navy sings against the new white-washed floor.

Will Josh Green look at the rim? Can the Mavs maintain their top-10 defense? How many violations of the Theo Pinson bench decorum rule will Theo Pinson commit?

9. LOS ANGELES LAKERS (35.5)

The Lakers ranked No. 2 last season, but the idea of them — How will Russell Westbrook fit? — turned out to be way more interesting than the experience.

The Lakers played fast, but they were boring — unorganized, dispirited, lacking any cohesive identity. LeBron James remains the ultimate chessmaster, but there’s little reason to suspect the overall product will be much different. (Darvin Ham said this week he’s considering starting Anthony Davis at center, and leaning there would boost L.A.’s watchability. You can’t play Westbrook, LeBron, Anthony Davis, and a traditional center — even one with decent range like Thomas Bryant or Damian Jones. Don’t sleep on Jones’ passing!)

They scored this high only because of their art — including the league’s prettiest court — and the comedy category. Are Beverley and Westbrook really friends? Like, really? Or will latent tension boil over? Comedy can become pathos, and we reached that point with Westbrook last season when the Sacramento Kings’ blared “Cold as Ice!” on every bonked jumper and layup.

Will James engage pout mode once he breaks the scoring record if the Lakers are toast? James achieved peak eye-rolling sulkiness ahead of the 2018 trade deadline, when he realized the Cavs were dead barring a roster shake-up. It was bizarrely enthralling.

Thumbs up to these white throwbacks — replicas of the jerseys the team wore in their first-ever game, per league officials. They even have faux belt loops! Powder blue is always welcome.

Lonnie Walker IV has untapped upside, and he’s going to careen into 1-on-4 attacks that will aggravate James. Stand up, Juan Toscano-Anderson hive!

8. MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES (35.5)

The Wolves ranked first in pace and second in scoring efficiency after Jan. 1 last season. They have one blockbuster young star in Anthony Edwards, fast becoming a three-level scorer as his confidence soars on pull-ups and step-backs.

Edwards wants to dunk people into oblivion — the bigger, the better. He flies at the rim as if he thinks he can dunk through humans — that they will disintegrate beneath him.

One of the league’s keenest offensive tinkerers — Chris Finch — must figure out how to mesh Karl-Anthony Towns and Rudy Gobert in an unusual double-center look that has to work given the Wolves traded everything short of the old Metrodome baggie for Gobert.

2 Related

Finch will get creative on defense, too. On some nights, the Wolves might flip-flop matchups — slotting Towns onto centers, and stashing Gobert elsewhere so he can act as roving shot-blocker. We might see glimpses of last season’s blitzing defense as a surprise adjustment.

Kyle Anderson weaponizes his slowness; defenders stumble ahead of his elongated moves, allowing Slow-Mo to saunter through creases. He snatches some of the league’s cleanest live-dribble steals. Jaden McDaniels still seems like a blank canvas, and looms as Minnesota’s swing factor. Jaylen Nowell jacks and struts with a gunslinger’s bravado. How will D’Angelo Russell — on an expiring contract — respond if Finch yanks him for Jordan McLaughlin in crunch time again?

The Wolves relegated their gaudy neon green to the trimmings on this pristine new jersey:

Standing ovation for the fangs extending down off the “M” and “V.”

PSST: Towns’ averages in 11 postseason games: 19 points, 12 rebounds, 2 assists, 3.5 turnovers (gag!), and many, many silly fouls. He has three single-digit scoring games, plus a dud in last season’s play-in. It’s time.

Giannis Antetokounmpo is one-of-one. He evolves each season — more floaters, more screening in the pick-and-roll, snappier passing. He supplies highlights both preposterous and of the most visceral basketball violence. Antetokounmpo rising from underneath the rim, off two feet, and cramming on someone’s head is perhaps the rudest act in the sport.

I loved his recent speech about the importance of will over skill. It was once fashionable to compare Antetokounmpo and Ben Simmons — enormous, turbocharged ball handlers with rickety strokes. What might Simmons accomplish if the Philadelphia 76ers surrounded him with shooters — as the Bucks have done for Antetokounmpo?

Even five years ago, before Antetokounmpo cracked the top five in MVP voting, the comparison failed the smell test. Antetokounmpo was bigger, faster, longer — better. Most of all, he was tougher. While Simmons’ struggles at the line turned into something of a phobia, Antetokounmpo kept coming — kept drawing contact, kept risking failure, kept improving. That’s will.

The Bucks are a fast-break machine — Four Steps or Less — but their half-court offense finished dead last in points per possession in the playoffs. Even with Khris Middleton out, that raised alarms internally. I suspect the Bucks will spend the regular season honing anti-switch devices on offense and experimenting with new looks on defense — including snuffing 3s after spending years living with above-the-break triples.

o Rivalries on opening nighto Must-see Christmas Day lineupo Games you won’t want to miss o Videos: Top schedule release reactionso Full NBA schedule

Who emerges as trustworthy playoff guys among George Hill, Jevon Carter, Joe Ingles, Jordan Nwora, and Serge Ibaka? If the answer is “no one,” the Bucks could face critical depth issues. How much Antetokounmpo at center will we see?

Once every few games, an opposing player annoys Jrue Holiday — and draws out Holiday’s playoff-level defense as punishment. What a nightmare.

Marques Johnson was a five-time All-Star, nailed a supporting role in “White Men Can’t Jump,” and is now one of the best analysts in any sport. Not fair.

Boston’s stars offer different stylistic ingredients, but they don’t always synthesize on offense. The defense … holy hell. They are huge, mean, smart — a switching forcefield. (Marcus Smart and Blake Griffin have to wager on who takes the most charges, right?)

They are also strategically quirky. The Celtics clicked into place when they shifted their center — Robert Williams III — onto nonthreatening wings, unleashing him as a free safety.

Time Lord didn’t just reject shots. He obliterated them. He spiked some before they even left shooters’ hands — before they really became shots at all. Others, he smashed against the backboard with such force you almost expected them to become impaled in the glass. From mid-January on, Boston allowed 105.4 points per 100 possessions — four points stingier than the league’s No. 2 defense.

The Celtics became one of the greatest defenses of all time, even as smart opponents began exploring counters to Boston’s scheme — running Williams around off-ball screens, using more false actions. Expect more of that cat-and-mouse game now that opponents have had an offseason to study.

Boston found its flow on offense too. Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, and Smart cooperated in more two-man actions — forcing switches Tatum and Brown could exploit. Tatum’s liquid grace and Brown’s straight-line power make for a perfect contrast. Derrick White added Spursian quick decision-making.

The Celtics’ green uniforms are maybe the best in sports, and they improved their historic court by removing the chunky white circle from underneath the leprechaun:

The tribute to Bill Russell is understated and noble.

Grant Williams never shuts up. Mike Gorman and Brian Scalabrine are tremendous. Boston is under championship pressure, with a coach — Joe Mazzulla — thrust into the spotlight under bad circumstances. What is Mazzulla about? How do the players respond?

5. NEW ORLEANS PELICANS (37)

You have to be good and watchable to rise here; the algorithm sees 50-win upside.

I don’t care if these guys shoot a single 3-pointer. I just want to see Zion Williamson pinballing to the rim, bodies flying everywhere after making even glancing contact with this linebacker phenom. He gets from arc to rim faster than a camera flash, out of every action: pick-and-rolls as screener or ball handler; post-ups in which he plows through victims like shorter Shaquille O’Neal, or spins around them like wider James Worthy; end-to-end rampages you almost feel through your screen. (The Pelicans with Williamson have played at ludicrous speed.)

The roster isn’t really built for it, but please, Willie Green, give us some Williamson at center!

Forget second jumps. Williamson has the league’s quickest third and fourth jumps. Pity the fools who box out Williamson and Jonas Valanciunas. Reserve them extra time in the cold tub, maybe the hospital.

CJ McCollum might put a defender on his butt at any moment. He connects complex dribbles — hesitation, crossover, pull-back — with unusual fluidity, and cans all variety of floaters with either hand. Brandon Ingram’s midrange arsenal is simpler, but almost as effective.

Wednesday, Oct. 19

Knicks vs. Grizzlies, 7:30 p.m.Mavericks vs Suns, 10 p.m.

Friday, Oct. 21

Celtics vs. Heat, 7:30 p.m.Nuggets vs Warriors, 10 p.m.

*All times Eastern

Larry Nance Jr. is all flare screens and twirling handoffs, and he’ll play tons of crunch-time center. Herbert Jones’ arms actually typed this column from New Orleans; instead of shooting 3s, should he just reach all the way from the arc and plop the ball in?

Jose Alvarado’s crouching, hide-and-seek backcourt steals are incredible theater. He’ll have ball handlers looking over their shoulders even when he’s not in the game. He is Keyser Soze.

The Pelicans are due some fresh art. The bench overflows with interesting players. Here’s hoping Dyson Daniels earns run.

4. DENVER NUGGETS (38)

Nikola Jokic might be the most inventive passer in basketball history, and is for sure No. 1 all time among bigs. He dares passes everyone else is scared to try — slips to cutters where the passing window is no bigger than the basketball itself.

Jokic imagines passes no one else sees — and then makes them. As he’s gotten in better shape, he’s added occasional dunks and tornado baseline spins.

The regular season is about finding the right balance of defensive schemes for Jokic. This is perhaps the biggest season in Nuggets history; they need everything in place for the playoffs.

Jokic has his pick-and-roll mind-meld partner back in Jamal Murray. Murray’s role in their two-man devastation has long been underrated. He’s an ace pull-up shooter with a knack for slick pocket passes that lead Jokic into open space.

They have the league’s prettiest and most varied give-and-go partnership. We see the classic — Murray bolting away from handoffs, and Jokic lofting him buttery goodness:

But they also turn routine pick-and-rolls into give-and-gos within that tricky midpaint area:

That is a mini masterpiece. In terms of both shot selection and process, Denver is a nice antidote to 3s-and-dunks spread-pick-and-roll hegemony. Murray’s Blue Arrow celebration is cool.

Michael Porter Jr. is perhaps the X factor of the season. Will he accept third-banana status? Kentavious Caldwell-Pope locks the starting five into place. Bruce Brown does the same for the bench, and gives Denver crunch-time lineup flexibility. Once every 10 games and out of absolutely nowhere, Jeff Green posterizes someone.

Are you worried about Denver’s bench offense? Bones Hyland isn’t.

3. MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES (39)

Ja Morant is the new League Pass superstar. He is a hellacious rim-attacker, cocking it back and hammering pain onto larger humans; he jumped over and through Malik Beasley for the highlight of last season.

Morant’s sneering swagger set the tone for the team from day one. There is nothing fake about the Grizzlies’ puffed-chest arrogance. They do not conceive of themselves as the little guy challenging Goliaths. Trash-talking LeBron James is not, for them, unearned pluck. They believe they are Goliath, now.

Morant could chase points, dominate the ball, hunt the spectacular. Instead, he brings teammates with him — empowers them, uses the attention he draws to create shots for them. Morant is a whip-smart cutter, willing to cut as a decoy (or to catch lobs above the square). He slows down in transition, knowing trailers come open in his wake.

Memphis defends with ferocity — Dillon Brooks going chest to chest with all comers, everyone swiping at the ball. The Grizz forced heaps of turnovers, and blazed at the league’s second-fastest pace. Do not look away from the Memphis alley-oop machine.

Desmond Bane has borderline Ray Allen-level precision in his jumper. Remember when Steven Adams carried Tony Bradley — 6-10, 250 pounds — away from an altercation as if he were about to take Bradley to Suplex City? What a legend.

The young guys will get chances filling in for Jaren Jackson Jr. and departed veterans. I give it two games before an opposing announcer expresses shock at John Konchar’s leaping ability

Can you spot the subtle upgrade from last season’s court …

… to their new one?

They eliminated that silver-blue racing stripe along the baseline that always confused me.

2. GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS (40)

The Warriors came so close to reclaiming their No. 1 perch, with Draymond Green providing a new, unfortunate reason to tune in to Golden State’s basketball symphony.

Green’s punch might have been one hot-tempered man going through personal issues losing control, and slugging his trash-talking foil. It became more because we saw it, yes, but also because of the deeply human and almost literary arcs one could project onto it.

Green, in the final year of his contract, might be aging out of the dynasty he helped build. Jordan Poole, on the verge of his first massive deal, is a keystone in extending that dynasty beyond Green’s NBA lifespan. A decade ago, when this all started, Green was the low draft pick who roared — trash-talking his elders, challenging them, refusing to show deference. That is how Poole relates to Green now.

ESPN’s countdown of the league’s best players returns for its 12th season. See which stars made the cut, which vaulted to the top and which are sliding down the list.

o NBArank 1-5: International stars on the riseo NBArank 6-10: How far LeBron and KD fello NBArank 11-25: L.A. duo and rising Wolveso NBArank 26-100: Russ, Ben and a host of Qso Debate! LeBron’s ranking and top-10 tweaks

To win a title, there can be no fissures. There will be lingering tension over what happened last week. How will it manifest? How long will it last?

The potential basketball tragedy of all this — of contract realities and personality conflicts intruding upon this Bay Area basketball idyll — is that Green, Klay Thompson, and Stephen Curry should finish their careers together as Warriors. That is how it’s supposed to be. What they share is why we follow sports — an understanding of one another’s tendencies, strengths, and weaknesses so deep, they barely have to talk on the court. Every simple action between them contains a dozen counters, and they choose them in the moment, in sync, in step, always connected.

It is a bond of winks and nods that cannot form unless you share tens of thousands of reps at the highest level. And it is, still, beautiful to watch.

Andre Iguodala is part of their fabric too, and he gets another chance at a proper swan song. The army of lottery picks is in position to seize roles. Whether they are ready will go a long way to determining Golden State’s repeat chances. Jonathan Kuminga is at eye level with the rim before you even realize what’s happening.

Golden State is a top-five art team. Curry, Green, and Thompson will wear captain “Cs” on throwback jerseys — rare in the NBA.

These new alternates are nice:

The Warriors deal in bright yellow and blue. This clean navy look is a pleasing change, even it is eerily similar to the University of California, Berkeley color scheme. I like how the shorts echo the team’s bridge-wiring motif.

1. BROOKLYN NETS (41)

I considered invoking the Ian Eagle Corollary, which dates to the Joe Johnson “It’s not that bad here!” era and allows me to reduce the Nets score if the light-hearted categories — art, comedy — lift them higher than they deserve. I opted against it, and so the Nets three-peat as League Pass champions — which has really worked out for them in the Kevin DurantKyrie Irving era.

This team could be gone in 30 games — boring, bad, an entire era demolished. Irving could find new reasons to be the basketball player who doesn’t play basketball. Ben Simmons could melt — flinching at the threat of contact, wilting under Hack-a-Ben, holding a prolonged missed free throw contest with Nic Claxton. (Claxton is 6-of-25 from the line in the postseason.) All that could push Kevin Durant to renew his allegedly dormant trade request, at which point the Barclays Center may as well collapse into a sinkhole.

That’s the severe downside. The more likely downside is the Nets are run-of-the-mill good — a playoff team, but not strong enough to lift the stench of self-inflicted misery.

The journey to either of those bad places is disaster-movie riveting. Simmons hasn’t played a real game in 16 months; there is justified interest in every move he makes. Even that functional downside scenario features plenty of Irving and Durant, two flashbulb attractions.

Whatever your feelings about Irving, he is a show — a Maravichian dribbling magician with a bottomless bag of soft floaters and twisting layups. His lefty runner takes your breath away. Two seasons ago, when the Nets were quasi-functional, Irving was the one who got them running in transition.

Durant is one of the dozen greatest players ever, and perhaps the most well-rounded offensive force the game has ever seen. He is elite at literally every subsection of offense. He can assume any role, at any time. Even when Durant is raining pull-up fire, it might not be the classical beauty of his gangly game that draws you in. What really hits you in the gut — what mesmerizes — is the sheer invincibility of it, the way Durant exercises total dominion over everything from every place on the floor.

And that’s the upside. The soul-sapping melodrama can make you forget: This might work. They might be happy. They could be redeemed. They might be unstoppable on offense, Simmons tapping into his inner Draymond Green with endless shooting around him. They will take risks and innovate to survive on defense, and there is night-to-night joy in watching a team sink its teeth into that challenge.

The broadcast is as good as it gets, and the art is solid — including this alternate court, first revealed here, that matches the ABA-era stars-and-stripes uniforms the Nets are bringing back:

The differently colored painted areas — one blue, one red — are a gamble, but they work here.

Admit it: You can’t wait to watch this team.

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10-1: Ranking the top 10 most entertaining teams in the NBAon October 13, 2022 at 2:26 pm Read More »

Is Bears WR Darnell Mooney ready to break out? Beleaguered passing attack needs a sparkon October 13, 2022 at 2:18 pm

LAKE FOREST, Ill. – Chicago Bears running back David Montgomery was motioning for his offensive line to come back and get lined up for second down after he was convinced wide receiver Darnell Mooney couldn’t have possibly made such a spectacular catch.

But there was one problem.

“I’m like, ‘Oh my God,'” Montgomery said, after realizing Mooney made the body-contorting, one-handed catch. “He’s disgusting.”

While it was surprising anyone could make the kind of catch Mooney did late in the first half of Sunday’s game in Minnesota, Mooney was expected to have had many more “oh my God” catches five weeks into the season. Or just catches in general.

Mooney is coming off a sophomore season during which he caught 81 passes for 1,055 yards and four touchdowns — all team highs. The potential for a breakout season was tied to what was expected to be a second-year jump by quarterback Justin Fields.

But something happened on the way to the Fields-Mooney connection evolving into a consistent weapon — the Bears’ passing attack cratered.

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The Bears are last in the league in nearly every major passing category, including attempts (88) and yards per game (116.6).

The result has been a near disappearance of Mooney, who has just 10 receptions on 20 targets for 173 yards, and has yet to score. By comparison, Minnesota’s Justin Jefferson had 10 catches for 138 yards Sunday … in the first half.

Mooney’s acrobatic 39-yard catch wasn’t a TD grab, and it didn’t stop the Bears from losing 29-22 and falling to 2-3, but it did serve as a reminder of what the 24-year-old is capable of doing.

Will it be a spark that Mooney and the offense carry over into Thursday’s game against the 1-4 Washington Commanders (8:15 p.m. ET, Amazon Prime), who have given up 11 passing TDs, tied for second-worst in the NFL?

“Definitely a confidence-builder, for sure,” first-year head coach Matt Eberflus said.

Mooney’s grab led to a Montgomery touchdown run three plays later, and that helped initiate a comeback as the Bears overcame a 21-3 deficit to take a fourth-quarter lead. A late turnover allowed the Vikings to pull out the victory, but at this point, any improvement is a win for the Bears.

And there was no denying the Bears’ passing attack showed improvement Sunday, including Fields posting personal highs with a 71.4 completion percentage and 118.8 passer rating.

“I feel like my job is to be a playmaker at all times,” said Mooney, who was named an honorary team captain. “Whenever I get the ball, I just have to do everything I can to create a spark.”

NEARLY AN HOUR after the Bears squeaked out a 23-20 win over the Texans on Sept. 25, Mooney was in the north end zone at Soldier Field in full uniform, catching passes from the Jugs machine. Everyone else was long gone, aside from a member of the equipment staff who loaded footballs into the apparatus and the grounds crew cleaning up the field.

“I’ve seen it in basketball where guys might stay after to shoot around, but not in football,” Chicago practice squad receiver Isaiah Coulter said. “He might be the first ever to do that.”

It was Mooney’s way of dealing with a disastrous first three weeks.

Week 1: One catch for eight yards vs. San Francisco in a driving rainstorm at Soldier Field

Week 2: One catch on a screen pass for minus-4 yards in Green Bay

Week 3: Two catches for 23 yards — and one drop — vs. Houston

“Offensively, I didn’t think I helped out as much as I planned to,” Mooney said after the win over the Texans. “Just passing-game wise, I was just frustrated, not being the playmaker [who] I planned to be.”

Figuring out the root of what’s gone wrong has come with an honest self-assessment. While the analytics suggest Fields’ targets are getting open with an average of 3.9 yards of separation, the second-best in the NFL, Mooney has addressed his route imprecisions and miscommunication.

Everything you need this week:o Full schedule >> Injuries >>o Football Power Index rankings >>More NFL coverage >>

With over three minutes until halftime against the Giants in Week 4, Bears’ offensive coordinator Luke Getsy dialed up four vertical plays outside the red zone. Mooney was supposed to bend across the formation, but he split up the seam and was streaking toward the end zone.

While he was able to break free from the safety, he ran the wrong route, thinking of a similar play from last year.

“I’m supposed to be to the right of the top safety, and that’s where [Fields] was looking for me at,” Mooney said.

Fields didn’t see him and ended up scrambling for a first down. The drive ended with a field goal.

The disconnect between Fields and his receivers has been a storyline all season. Fields has the highest off-target percentage (27.4) in the NFL, according to ESPN Stats & Information. The quarterback has often received criticism for not connecting with his receivers and leaving players open.

But it’s not as if Fields has the most talented and experienced group of playmakers around him. Injuries have also plagued the Bears’ receiving corps. All that combined means Mooney — the WR1 — is being asked to do more than anyone else.

“He probably has the second-most difficult job of anybody on offense,” Bears wide receivers coach Tyke Tolbert said. “The quarterback is the first, but Mooney, at any point in time depending on the personnel we call, he can [be lined up in one of several WR spots], all in the same drive.

“He can handle it, but sometimes, like anything, you do so many different things, especially on the same drive, you may have a mental error here or there. It shouldn’t happen, but it does.”

Mooney’s one-handed catch against the Vikings was one of the most spectacular of the young season. Nick Wosika/Icon Sportswire

BEFORE THE BEARS wrapped up OTAs, Mooney reflected on how he would be relied upon to help Fields’ growth in Year 2.

“His success is my success, so as long as he’s doing good, I’m doing good, we’re all doing good,” Mooney said.

That mindset is why moments like the postgame Jugs session don’t surprise his teammates.

“The guy’s work ethic is crazy,” Bears receiver Dante Pettis said. “He’s just like — I’m going to come in, do my stuff, get better. He’s kind of obsessed with that, and it’s cool to see from someone younger.

“Most of the time, I feel like I’ve grown into a role where I try to help people out, show them the ropes a little bit, but I didn’t really have to do that with him. … I’ve learned a lot from him watching the way he works.”

After a brutal three weeks, things started to change in Week 4 against the Giants. Fields’ best pass of the season came on a 56-yard strike over the middle of the field to Mooney, who finished with four catches for 94 yards.

It wasn’t perfect, but it was a start. Chicago has thrown the ball more the past two weeks but still has the fewest passing attempts through five weeks of any NFL team since 1982.

Despite the lack of volume, there are moments that point to Fields and Mooney working through this slump.

On the Bears’ first drive Sunday in Minnesota, Fields tried to hit Mooney on a corner route in the end zone, but the pass went incomplete. Mooney ran his route at too steep of an angle. Fields’ pass was off-target.

Yet unlike their earlier games, Fields and Mooney got back on track before halftime. The Bears ran that same play three drives later, resulting in the turning point of the game with Mooney’s 39-yard grab.

“It definitely gave us a lot of momentum,” Fields said.

Now the challenge for the Bears is to build off their modest improvement and sustain some momentum. There’s a transition period for any team with a new coach and system, but it’s the time of the season when consistency needs to be achieved.

“I feel like any type of a spark, just passing the ball down the field, can give confidence to the offense,” Mooney said. “I understand the process we have to go through with our offense and everything being new, everybody still learning and just trying to believe in the offense. It’s a journey that you just have to stay into it, believe in and trust the process.”

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Is Bears WR Darnell Mooney ready to break out? Beleaguered passing attack needs a sparkon October 13, 2022 at 2:18 pm Read More »

Lowe’s League Pass Rankings: the top 10 must-watch teams this seasonon October 13, 2022 at 1:28 pm

Here we go: The top 10 in our 2022-2023 League Pass Rankings! We revealed Nos. 30-11 on Tuesday, and you can read about the rankings formula there.

10. DALLAS MAVERICKS (35)

Look at this soul-snatcher:

That is the smile of someone who knows he has you. The Mavs’ offense is one-dimensional — Luka Doncic walks ball up, runs two-man game — but that dimension contains multitudes. The typical spread pick-and-roll pairs ball handler and rim-runner; Doncic can do that with any of Dallas’ bigs. He can make all the passes blindfolded.

Doncic’s size and comfort in the middle of the paint — the dead zone for some ball handlers — open up endless possibilities. He’s at his most predatory dragging smaller defenders into pick-and-rolls. Switch, and he mashes them in the post with smirking cruelty. (He took sadistic pleasure brutalizing Patrick Beverley in the 2021 playoffs.) Send help, and he picks you apart.

Even against like-sized defenders and traditional coverages, Doncic is a three-steps-ahead genius burrowing inside. His high-arching step-back is borderline unblockable, and he has hit 50% from floater range over the past two seasons — and a LeBron James-esque 73% at the rim last season.

The threat of those shots unlocks Doncic’s generational passing. He understands how every up-fake, pivot, and half-spin freaks help defenders into thinking they should swarm — and which passes any slight rotation might expose. Last season, he even started throwing straight backward overhead passes to pick-and-pop bigs. Maxi Kleber and Christian Wood must be ready at all times.

This is my favorite piece of Mavs art in ages:

The navy sings against the new white-washed floor.

Will Josh Green look at the rim? Can the Mavs maintain their top-10 defense? How many violations of the Theo Pinson bench decorum rule will Theo Pinson commit?

9. LOS ANGELES LAKERS (35.5)

The Lakers ranked No. 2 last season, but the idea of them — How will Russell Westbrook fit? — turned out to be way more interesting than the experience.

The Lakers played fast, but they were boring — unorganized, dispirited, lacking any cohesive identity. LeBron James remains the ultimate chessmaster, but there’s little reason to suspect the overall product will be much different. (Darvin Ham said this week he’s considering starting Anthony Davis at center, and leaning there would boost L.A.’s watchability. You can’t play Westbrook, LeBron, Anthony Davis, and a traditional center — even one with decent range like Thomas Bryant or Damian Jones. Don’t sleep on Jones’ passing!)

They scored this high only because of their art — including the league’s prettiest court — and the comedy category. Are Beverley and Westbrook really friends? Like, really? Or will latent tension boil over? Comedy can become pathos, and we reached that point with Westbrook last season when the Sacramento Kings’ blared “Cold as Ice!” on every bonked jumper and layup.

Will James engage pout mode once he breaks the scoring record if the Lakers are toast? James achieved peak eye-rolling sulkiness ahead of the 2018 trade deadline, when he realized the Cavs were dead barring a roster shake-up. It was bizarrely enthralling.

Thumbs up to these white throwbacks — replicas of the jerseys the team wore in their first-ever game, per league officials. They even have faux belt loops! Powder blue is always welcome.

Lonnie Walker IV has untapped upside, and he’s going to careen into 1-on-4 attacks that will aggravate James. Stand up, Juan Toscano-Anderson hive!

8. MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES (35.5)

The Wolves ranked first in pace and second in scoring efficiency after Jan. 1 last season. They have one blockbuster young star in Anthony Edwards, fast becoming a three-level scorer as his confidence soars on pull-ups and step-backs.

Edwards wants to dunk people into oblivion — the bigger, the better. He flies at the rim as if he thinks he can dunk through humans — that they will disintegrate beneath him.

One of the league’s keenest offensive tinkerers — Chris Finch — must figure out how to mesh Karl-Anthony Towns and Rudy Gobert in an unusual double-center look that has to work given the Wolves traded everything short of the old Metrodome baggie for Gobert.

2 Related

Finch will get creative on defense, too. On some nights, the Wolves might flip-flop matchups — slotting Towns onto centers, and stashing Gobert elsewhere so he can act as roving shot-blocker. We might see glimpses of last season’s blitzing defense as a surprise adjustment.

Kyle Anderson weaponizes his slowness; defenders stumble ahead of his elongated moves, allowing Slow-Mo to saunter through creases. He snatches some of the league’s cleanest live-dribble steals. Jaden McDaniels still seems like a blank canvas, and looms as Minnesota’s swing factor. Jaylen Nowell jacks and struts with a gunslinger’s bravado. How will D’Angelo Russell — on an expiring contract — respond if Finch yanks him for Jordan McLaughlin in crunch time again?

The Wolves relegated their gaudy neon green to the trimmings on this pristine new jersey:

Standing ovation for the fangs extending down off the “M” and “V.”

PSST: Towns’ averages in 11 postseason games: 19 points, 12 rebounds, 2 assists, 3.5 turnovers (gag!), and many, many silly fouls. He has three single-digit scoring games, plus a dud in last season’s play-in. It’s time.

Giannis Antetokounmpo is one-of-one. He evolves each season — more floaters, more screening in the pick-and-roll, snappier passing. He supplies highlights both preposterous and of the most visceral basketball violence. Antetokounmpo rising from underneath the rim, off two feet, and cramming on someone’s head is perhaps the rudest act in the sport.

I loved his recent speech about the importance of will over skill. It was once fashionable to compare Antetokounmpo and Ben Simmons — enormous, turbocharged ball handlers with rickety strokes. What might Simmons accomplish if the Philadelphia 76ers surrounded him with shooters — as the Bucks have done for Antetokounmpo?

Even five years ago, before Antetokounmpo cracked the top five in MVP voting, the comparison failed the smell test. Antetokounmpo was bigger, faster, longer — better. Most of all, he was tougher. While Simmons’ struggles at the line turned into something of a phobia, Antetokounmpo kept coming — kept drawing contact, kept risking failure, kept improving. That’s will.

The Bucks are a fast-break machine — Four Steps or Less — but their half-court offense finished dead last in points per possession in the playoffs. Even with Khris Middleton out, that raised alarms internally. I suspect the Bucks will spend the regular season honing anti-switch devices on offense and experimenting with new looks on defense — including snuffing 3s after spending years living with above-the-break triples.

o Rivalries on opening nighto Must-see Christmas Day lineupo Games you won’t want to miss o Videos: Top schedule release reactionso Full NBA schedule

Who emerges as trustworthy playoff guys among George Hill, Jevon Carter, Joe Ingles, Jordan Nwora, and Serge Ibaka? If the answer is “no one,” the Bucks could face critical depth issues. How much Antetokounmpo at center will we see?

Once every few games, an opposing player annoys Jrue Holiday — and draws out Holiday’s playoff-level defense as punishment. What a nightmare.

Marques Johnson was a five-time All-Star, nailed a supporting role in “White Men Can’t Jump,” and is now one of the best analysts in any sport. Not fair.

Boston’s stars offer different stylistic ingredients, but they don’t always synthesize on offense. The defense … holy hell. They are huge, mean, smart — a switching forcefield. (Marcus Smart and Blake Griffin have to wager on who takes the most charges, right?)

They are also strategically quirky. The Celtics clicked into place when they shifted their center — Robert Williams III — onto nonthreatening wings, unleashing him as a free safety.

Time Lord didn’t just reject shots. He obliterated them. He spiked some before they even left shooters’ hands — before they really became shots at all. Others, he smashed against the backboard with such force you almost expected them to become impaled in the glass. From mid-January on, Boston allowed 105.4 points per 100 possessions — four points stingier than the league’s No. 2 defense.

The Celtics became one of the greatest defenses of all time, even as smart opponents began exploring counters to Boston’s scheme — running Williams around off-ball screens, using more false actions. Expect more of that cat-and-mouse game now that opponents have had an offseason to study.

Boston found its flow on offense too. Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, and Smart cooperated in more two-man actions — forcing switches Tatum and Brown could exploit. Tatum’s liquid grace and Brown’s straight-line power make for a perfect contrast. Derrick White added Spursian quick decision-making.

The Celtics’ green uniforms are maybe the best in sports, and they improved their historic court by removing the chunky white circle from underneath the leprechaun:

The tribute to Bill Russell is understated and noble.

Grant Williams never shuts up. Mike Gorman and Brian Scalabrine are tremendous. Boston is under championship pressure, with a coach — Joe Mazzulla — thrust into the spotlight under bad circumstances. What is Mazzulla about? How do the players respond?

5. NEW ORLEANS PELICANS (37)

You have to be good and watchable to rise here; the algorithm sees 50-win upside.

I don’t care if these guys shoot a single 3-pointer. I just want to see Zion Williamson pinballing to the rim, bodies flying everywhere after making even glancing contact with this linebacker phenom. He gets from arc to rim faster than a camera flash, out of every action: pick-and-rolls as screener or ball handler; post-ups in which he plows through victims like shorter Shaquille O’Neal, or spins around them like wider James Worthy; end-to-end rampages you almost feel through your screen. (The Pelicans with Williamson have played at ludicrous speed.)

The roster isn’t really built for it, but please, Willie Green, give us some Williamson at center!

Forget second jumps. Williamson has the league’s quickest third and fourth jumps. Pity the fools who box out Williamson and Jonas Valanciunas. Reserve them extra time in the cold tub, maybe the hospital.

CJ McCollum might put a defender on his butt at any moment. He connects complex dribbles — hesitation, crossover, pull-back — with unusual fluidity, and cans all variety of floaters with either hand. Brandon Ingram’s midrange arsenal is simpler, but almost as effective.

Wednesday, Oct. 19

Knicks vs. Grizzlies, 7:30 p.m.Mavericks vs Suns, 10 p.m.

Friday, Oct. 21

Celtics vs. Heat, 7:30 p.m.Nuggets vs Warriors, 10 p.m.

*All times Eastern

Larry Nance Jr. is all flare screens and twirling handoffs, and he’ll play tons of crunch-time center. Herbert Jones’ arms actually typed this column from New Orleans; instead of shooting 3s, should he just reach all the way from the arc and plop the ball in?

Jose Alvarado’s crouching, hide-and-seek backcourt steals are incredible theater. He’ll have ball handlers looking over their shoulders even when he’s not in the game. He is Keyser Soze.

The Pelicans are due some fresh art. The bench overflows with interesting players. Here’s hoping Dyson Daniels earns run.

4. DENVER NUGGETS (38)

Nikola Jokic might be the most inventive passer in basketball history, and is for sure No. 1 all time among bigs. He dares passes everyone else is scared to try — slips to cutters where the passing window is no bigger than the basketball itself.

Jokic imagines passes no one else sees — and then makes them. As he’s gotten in better shape, he’s added occasional dunks and tornado baseline spins.

The regular season is about finding the right balance of defensive schemes for Jokic. This is perhaps the biggest season in Nuggets history; they need everything in place for the playoffs.

Jokic has his pick-and-roll mind-meld partner back in Jamal Murray. Murray’s role in their two-man devastation has long been underrated. He’s an ace pull-up shooter with a knack for slick pocket passes that lead Jokic into open space.

They have the league’s prettiest and most varied give-and-go partnership. We see the classic — Murray bolting away from handoffs, and Jokic lofting him buttery goodness:

But they also turn routine pick-and-rolls into give-and-gos within that tricky midpaint area:

That is a mini masterpiece. In terms of both shot selection and process, Denver is a nice antidote to 3s-and-dunks spread-pick-and-roll hegemony. Murray’s Blue Arrow celebration is cool.

Michael Porter Jr. is perhaps the X factor of the season. Will he accept third-banana status? Kentavious Caldwell-Pope locks the starting five into place. Bruce Brown does the same for the bench, and gives Denver crunch-time lineup flexibility. Once every 10 games and out of absolutely nowhere, Jeff Green posterizes someone.

Are you worried about Denver’s bench offense? Bones Hyland isn’t.

3. MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES (39)

Ja Morant is the new League Pass superstar. He is a hellacious rim-attacker, cocking it back and hammering pain onto larger humans; he jumped over and through Malik Beasley for the highlight of last season.

Morant’s sneering swagger set the tone for the team from day one. There is nothing fake about the Grizzlies’ puffed-chest arrogance. They do not conceive of themselves as the little guy challenging Goliaths. Trash-talking LeBron James is not, for them, unearned pluck. They believe they are Goliath, now.

Morant could chase points, dominate the ball, hunt the spectacular. Instead, he brings teammates with him — empowers them, uses the attention he draws to create shots for them. Morant is a whip-smart cutter, willing to cut as a decoy (or to catch lobs above the square). He slows down in transition, knowing trailers come open in his wake.

Memphis defends with ferocity — Dillon Brooks going chest to chest with all comers, everyone swiping at the ball. The Grizz forced heaps of turnovers, and blazed at the league’s second-fastest pace. Do not look away from the Memphis alley-oop machine.

Desmond Bane has borderline Ray Allen-level precision in his jumper. Remember when Steven Adams carried Tony Bradley — 6-10, 250 pounds — away from an altercation as if he were about to take Bradley to Suplex City? What a legend.

The young guys will get chances filling in for Jaren Jackson Jr. and departed veterans. I give it two games before an opposing announcer expresses shock at John Konchar’s leaping ability

Can you spot the subtle upgrade from last season’s court …

… to their new one?

They eliminated that silver-blue racing stripe along the baseline that always confused me.

2. GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS (40)

The Warriors came so close to reclaiming their No. 1 perch, with Draymond Green providing a new, unfortunate reason to tune in to Golden State’s basketball symphony.

Green’s punch might have been one hot-tempered man going through personal issues losing control, and slugging his trash-talking foil. It became more because we saw it, yes, but also because of the deeply human and almost literary arcs one could project onto it.

Green, in the final year of his contract, might be aging out of the dynasty he helped build. Jordan Poole, on the verge of his first massive deal, is a keystone in extending that dynasty beyond Green’s NBA lifespan. A decade ago, when this all started, Green was the low draft pick who roared — trash-talking his elders, challenging them, refusing to show deference. That is how Poole relates to Green now.

ESPN’s countdown of the league’s best players returns for its 12th season. See which stars made the cut, which vaulted to the top and which are sliding down the list.

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To win a title, there can be no fissures. There will be lingering tension over what happened last week. How will it manifest? How long will it last?

The potential basketball tragedy of all this — of contract realities and personality conflicts intruding upon this Bay Area basketball idyll — is that Green, Klay Thompson, and Stephen Curry should finish their careers together as Warriors. That is how it’s supposed to be. What they share is why we follow sports — an understanding of one another’s tendencies, strengths, and weaknesses so deep, they barely have to talk on the court. Every simple action between them contains a dozen counters, and they choose them in the moment, in sync, in step, always connected.

It is a bond of winks and nods that cannot form unless you share tens of thousands of reps at the highest level. And it is, still, beautiful to watch.

Andre Iguodala is part of their fabric too, and he gets another chance at a proper swan song. The army of lottery picks is in position to seize roles. Whether they are ready will go a long way to determining Golden State’s repeat chances. Jonathan Kuminga is at eye level with the rim before you even realize what’s happening.

Golden State is a top-five art team. Curry, Green, and Thompson will wear captain “Cs” on throwback jerseys — rare in the NBA.

These new alternates are nice:

The Warriors deal in bright yellow and blue. This clean navy look is a pleasing change, even it is eerily similar to the University of California, Berkeley color scheme. I like how the shorts echo the team’s bridge-wiring motif.

1. BROOKLYN NETS (41)

I considered invoking the Ian Eagle Corollary, which dates to the Joe Johnson “It’s not that bad here!” era and allows me to reduce the Nets score if the light-hearted categories — art, comedy — lift them higher than they deserve. I opted against it, and so the Nets three-peat as League Pass champions — which has really worked out for them in the Kevin DurantKyrie Irving era.

This team could be gone in 30 games — boring, bad, an entire era demolished. Irving could find new reasons to be the basketball player who doesn’t play basketball. Ben Simmons could melt — flinching at the threat of contact, wilting under Hack-a-Ben, holding a prolonged missed free throw contest with Nic Claxton. (Claxton is 6-of-25 from the line in the postseason.) All that could push Kevin Durant to renew his allegedly dormant trade request, at which point the Barclays Center may as well collapse into a sinkhole.

That’s the severe downside. The more likely downside is the Nets are run-of-the-mill good — a playoff team, but not strong enough to lift the stench of self-inflicted misery.

The journey to either of those bad places is disaster-movie riveting. Simmons hasn’t played a real game in 16 months; there is justified interest in every move he makes. Even that functional downside scenario features plenty of Irving and Durant, two flashbulb attractions.

Whatever your feelings about Irving, he is a show — a Maravichian dribbling magician with a bottomless bag of soft floaters and twisting layups. His lefty runner takes your breath away. Two seasons ago, when the Nets were quasi-functional, Irving was the one who got them running in transition.

Durant is one of the dozen greatest players ever, and perhaps the most well-rounded offensive force the game has ever seen. He is elite at literally every subsection of offense. He can assume any role, at any time. Even when Durant is raining pull-up fire, it might not be the classical beauty of his gangly game that draws you in. What really hits you in the gut — what mesmerizes — is the sheer invincibility of it, the way Durant exercises total dominion over everything from every place on the floor.

And that’s the upside. The soul-sapping melodrama can make you forget: This might work. They might be happy. They could be redeemed. They might be unstoppable on offense, Simmons tapping into his inner Draymond Green with endless shooting around him. They will take risks and innovate to survive on defense, and there is night-to-night joy in watching a team sink its teeth into that challenge.

The broadcast is as good as it gets, and the art is solid — including this alternate court, first revealed here, that matches the ABA-era stars-and-stripes uniforms the Nets are bringing back:

The differently colored painted areas — one blue, one red — are a gamble, but they work here.

Admit it: You can’t wait to watch this team.

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Lowe’s League Pass Rankings: the top 10 must-watch teams this seasonon October 13, 2022 at 1:28 pm Read More »

Bears vs. Commanders — What to Watch 4

KEY MATCHUP

After a slow start to the 2022 season — no sacks in four games –Commanders defensive end Montez Sweat had two of the Commanders five sacks of Ryan Tannehill last week.

Chase Allen, the 2020 No. 2 overall pick, is still recovering from a torn ACL he suffered last season. But the Commanders still have three first-round picks on the defensive line with Sweat, Pro Bowl tackle Jonathan Allen (nine sacks last season) and tackle Daron Payne.

“Two guys inside that are pretty dynamic — it creates challenges when you have that many guys that can rush,” Bears coach Matt Eberflus said. “We’re gonna have our hands full.”

Bears fifth-round rookie left tackle Braxton Jones has had some rookie moments but overall has been promising in his first five games, showing game-to-game improvement. For what it’s worth he is the highest graded rookie offensive lineman in theNFL through five games by Pro Football Focus — andwas the Bears’ second-highest graded player on either side of the ball (behind cornerback Kindle Vildor) last week.

TRENDING

The Bears are 32nd and last in the NFL in third-down defense after the Vikings converted 12-of-15 (80%) of their third downs last week.

The Commanders’ offense, on the other hand, was 0-for-9 (0%) on third-down conversions in a 21-17 loss to the Titans last week and are 20th overall through five weeks.

PLAYER TO WATCH

Bears quarterback Justin Fields is coming off a career-best 118.8 passer rating against the Vikings — 15-of-21 for 208 yards, one touchdown, no interceptions. He was

more efficient than prolific, but that’s still significant progress for a quarterback in these parts.

When Fields had a promising opener against the 49ers, he struggled against the Packers at Lambeau Field the following week. This time he will be at home against a defense that has allowed a 113.7 passer rating (10 touchdowns, no interceptions) in its last four games.

X-FACTOR

The Bears have been tapering for the last two weeks in anticipation of the short-week game, as Eberflus has shortened valuable practice time to keep his team fresh following a Sunday road game against the Vikings.

For what it’s worth, the home team is 11-12 on Thursday night over the past two seasons. Washington is 2-0 on Thursday Night Football under former Bears defensive coordinator Ron Rivera — beating the Giants 30-29 at home in Week 2 last year and the Cowboys 41-16 at AT&T Stadium on Thanksgiving in 2020.

The Commanders had a distraction this week when Rivera had to clarify a comment that the big difference between his 1-4 team and the Eagles (5-0), Cowboys (4-1) and Giants (4-1) was the quarterback — a tacit knock on Carson Wentz. Could be nothing, but on a struggling team, always the possibility of making things worse.

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Blackhawks’ Josiah Slavin, Petr Mrazek connect with fans through Cameo

DENVER — Blackhawks forward prospect Josiah Slavin did a double take when he received a Cameo request one day to film a video inviting a random fan’s friends to his poker night.

Was that an indication he’d made it big-time?

“Yeah, you could say so,” he said with a laugh.

Options on Cameo — the popular website (coincidentally headquartered in Chicago) on which anyone can request a personalized video from a long list of celebrities of all types, at a price — are rather limited for Hawks fans.

Plenty of Hawks-adjacent off-ice personalities have accounts, as do a few former stars such as Denis Savard and Jeremy Roenick. But only two players on the 2022-23 roster do: Slavin and new goaltender Petr Mrazek. And they both have mildly interesting stories that explain how they joined.

Two years ago, Mrazek teamed up with “Saves Help,” a charitable organization founded and run by Czech goalie Simon Hrubec that fundraises for children in need in the Czech Republic.

A massive group of other Czech goalies playing in leagues spanning the globe — including Mrazek, Karel Vejmelka, Vitek Vanecek, Pavel Francouz and Dan Vladar within the NHL — donate a predetermined amount per save they make over the course of the season, although one doesn’t necessarily have to be a professional goalie (or a hockey player at all) to donate.

Over the last two seasons, Saves Help has raised about 933,000 Czech Koruna — equivalent to about $37,000 — including 8,570 Koruna from Mrazek on account of his 857 saves.

But Mrazek wanted to find a way to contribute even more, and that’s where his Cameo comes in. He sends all proceeds from the videos, which cost $99 each, to Saves Help.

“Those are the things [that] sometimes you want to help,” he said. “It’s interesting, some [of the] requests. But it has been fun. That’s how you keep close with the fans. It’s a busy schedule in the year, so it’s hard to keep up with fans on social media or after the games, so this is the kind of thing that makes it easier.”

Slavin, meanwhile, was encouraged by his brother, Hurricanes defenseman Jaccob Slavin, to set up an account. Their U-16 hockey coach with the Colorado Thunderbirds had a connection to someone working for Cameo, and he had told them about it.

In the time since, Slavin — whose videos cost only $15 — has been tracked down by Hawks fans with all sorts of requests. Wishing someone a happy birthday? He has done it. Congratulating someone for graduating from high school? He has done it. Encouraging someone recovering from surgery? He has done it.

“It comes in waves,” he said. “Once I get one, I’ll normally get a couple in that week. But it’s good to be able to connect with fans and get my name out there a little bit.”

There are also weeks in which Slavin doesn’t receive any requests, to be fair, but every time he does is a small honor for the 2018 seventh-round pick. He just made his first 15 career NHL appearances last season, and even those were unexpected, he said.

After working in particular on his skating explosiveness — his first few strides — this summer, Slavin will be back in the mix for Hawks call-ups this season, and he conceivably could grow into a solid bottom-six forward down the road. But while he grinds to make the NHL full-time, he’s perhaps already the Hawks’ leader in this one corner of the internet.

“I get to be myself,” he said. “It’s pretty cool to just share my story with them.”

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Chicago Blackhawks: Game one went exactly how you’d thinkVincent Pariseon October 13, 2022 at 11:00 am

The Chicago Blackhawks were in Denver to take on the Colorado Avalanche in game one of the 2022-23 season. There are low expectations on this team going in and they showed everyone why in game number one. It went as you’d expect.

Most teams in the league are better than the Hawks but the Colorado Avalanche are significantly better. It might be the best team in the league against the worst team in the league.

The Colorado Avalanche are the defending Stanley Cup champions. Before the game, they had a ceremony to celebrate it that ended with them raising the banner that will forever represent the 2022 champs.

Jack Johnson of the Blackhawks was a member of the Avalanche last season and was allowed to participate in the celebration with his now-former teammates. That was really cool to see as it isn’t something you see all too often.

Congrats to Jack!!

It was so cool to see the Colorado Avalanche let him be a part of the celebration. He was on the team after all.

Amazing moment

pic.twitter.com/r4ov8Fmsw0

— DaWindyCityFS (@DaWindyCityFS) October 13, 2022

When the game started, everything you know about both teams started to show. The Avalanche were all over the Hawks. They looked faster, smarter, and more skilled because they are. That allowed them to win the game by a final score of 5-2.

The Chicago Blackhawks didn’t have a lot of success in their first game.

A lot of the usual suspects got it done for Colorado. Andrew Cogliano got things started for the Avalanche in terms of goal-scoring. Valeri Nichuskin and Artturi Lehkkonen each had two.

In the assist column, Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar each had two, Mikko Rantanen had four, and both Artturi Lehkkonen and Devon Toews had one. It was a solid game for that offensive group.

As for the Hawks, Jonathan Toews scored his first goal of the season which is amazing for him. He wants to have a good year for a variety of reasons. The Hawks are tanking but they want to see certain players show their worth.

In his Blackhawks debut, Max Domi also scored. That is someone that the Hawks might look to trade at some point so it is good to see some of these guys make themselves noticeable.

It is so nice to see the captain on the board early for the #Blackhawks pic.twitter.com/1oymO2PW01

— DaWindyCityFS (@DaWindyCityFS) October 13, 2022

Mad Max Domi has his first goal with the Chicago #Blackhawks! pic.twitter.com/ERMuLSRvWR

— DaWindyCityFS (@DaWindyCityFS) October 13, 2022

Both Chicago goals were on the power play. In fact, only Andrew Cogliano’s opening goal was an even-strength goal while the other six goals scored were all with the man advantage. Special teams clearly played a role in the game.

Again, this game went exactly as you’d expected. It is going to be interesting to see how the rest of the season goes for both of these teams but they will not mirror each other. This is a process for Chicago and losing this game is a part of the process.

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Chicago Blackhawks: Game one went exactly how you’d thinkVincent Pariseon October 13, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

The road ahead

On the cover: Photo of Adam Carston and his collections by Yijun Pan. Credit: Yijun Pan

“Good things come to those who wait,” the adage goes.

Back in the summer of 2009, I found myself in Chicago as an alternative journalism fellow at Medill, and I quickly fell in love with the city, its people, culture, and greasy spoons (if I close my eyes and concentrate hard enough, I can still taste the chili at Ramova Grill). Around the same time, I also started a one-sided love affair with the Reader.

Armed with the vim and vigor only a self-assured freelancer can possess, I transformed some of my big city exploits into would-be Best of Chicago blurbs I pitched to the then-editor. The entries encompassed topics such as “Best non-Latin neighborhood display of copyright infringement” and “Best place to get coffee and potentially pick up a foreign STI along the way.” I never heard back.

A few years later, my upward masthead journey landed me at the alt-weekly in Santa Fe, where I started as arts and culture editor, and was later promoted to deputy editor. Admiring from afar the quality content the Reader was producing, and with my unrequited relationship still going strong, I jumped at the opportunity to apply for the managing editor position—a big leap for me at the time, that I felt I was ready for. I was interviewed, but ultimately it wasn’t my turn, and the position was filled by someone more qualified. My dream job at my dream outlet, all while living in my dream apartment (atop Cafe Jumping Bean in Pilsen) would have to wait.

Enrique Limón Credit: Sarah Joyce/GlitterGuts

A stint as managing editor and later editor in chief at the alternative publication in Salt Lake City as well as helming the launch of an international news startup followed. All the while, I kept thinking of the one that got away. 

That all changed this month.

Shaping the Reader’s latest incarnation as a full-fledged nonprofit newsroom is not a responsibility I take lightly. The storied publication and its talented staff continue to be a force, and it’s my pleasure to usher in what its next 50 years in the community will look like.

The road might have been long, but trust me when I say the prize is oh so sweet. Cheers to what lies ahead! (Oh, and if anyone has leads on that apartment, please let me know.)


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E3 Radio is a proud member of the Chicago Independent Media Alliance (CIMA), a partnership of independent, local media entities. Today through October 17th, you can donate to our #WeAmplifyChicagoVoices campaign at SaveChicagoMedia.org. Read on to learn more about our Anna DeShawn, the founder of CIMA partner E3 Radio and the Qube. Chicago native Anna…


The 2022 Chicago Public Library Foundation Awards celebrate bold stories, bold voices, and our bold library

What happens when award-winning playwright Tony Kushner, Top Chef Rick Bayless, and TikTok sensation Shermann “Dilla” Thomas walk into a room? Join us on October 19, 6:00 pm CST to find out. The Chicago Public Library Foundation Awards are back! This year we’ve put the spotlight on storytelling and the powerful ways that stories can…


On the right track: The High Speed Rail Alliance aims to make trains a more practical option for getting across Chicago and the nation

The High Speed Rail Alliance aims to make trains a more practical option for getting across Chicago and the nation In the second part of the Reader’s series spotlighting advocacy organizations working to make our region a better place to walk, bike, and ride buses and trains, we caught up with Rick Harnish, executive director…


The world is a beautiful place with Algernon Cadwallader in it

The pop-culture industry loves to resurface detritus from my youth, add a little polish, and launch it on whatever streaming service I’m most likely to drop due to rising subscription fees—and I’m mostly just exhausted by it. Band reunions, especially of bands whose reputations and fan bases have kept growing since their breakup, are a…


Making good moves

A Step Ahead Chess brings kids together online and in person.


Blick Art Materials returns to Downtown Chicago

The national art supply retailer hosts the grand opening of its new Loop location on October 21 If you’ve been wondering about all the excitement at that impossible-to-miss building with the large glockenspiel clock at 16 W Randolph, it’s due to the arrival of its newest tenant, Blick Art Materials. On Friday, October 21, Blick…


Rapper-singer Angelenah makes her R&B debut with I Don’t Regret a Thing

Gossip Wolf has been hip to Chicago rapper and singer Angelenah, aka Ashley Hart and Angel Davanport, ever since she released the 2018 EP Sore but Grateful. She’s been sharpening her skills in the years since, and last week she dropped I Don’t Regret a Thing, which showcases her flamboyant singing across six luscious R&B…


In her first Chicago appearance, Clara de Asís collaborates with Aperiodic to model the aesthetic virtues of nonintervention

Clara de Asís is a Spanish-born, France-based multi-instrumentalist and sound artist who uses played and collected sounds as prompts to focus the power of the listener’s attention on the potentialities of the sound fields around them. The crackle of static and the decaying reverberations of struck metal on her new collaboration with Ryoko Akama, Sisbiosis…


Swedish power-metal titans Sabaton continue to explore the Great War

Founded in 1999, Swedish power-metal veterans Sabaton cast a microscopic gaze on the horrors of war with a sweeping, majestic, and anthemic sound that walks the line between empathizing with humans on the battlefield and glorifying the unglorifiable. Their records deliver poetic lessons in military history (usually European), and though they aim to stay as…


The right (to a) call

A new consent decree is a victory against CPD abuse years in the making.


A literary mission

Chicago Books to Women in Prison partners with Women & Children First to get books behind bars.


Central Illinois police training for mental health cases questioned

Significant issues remain around police use of involuntary commitments.

Read More

The road ahead Read More »

The road aheadEnrique Limónon October 13, 2022 at 10:00 am

On the cover: Photo of Adam Carston and his collections by Yijun Pan. Credit: Yijun Pan

“Good things come to those who wait,” the adage goes.

Back in the summer of 2009, I found myself in Chicago as an alternative journalism fellow at Medill, and I quickly fell in love with the city, its people, culture, and greasy spoons (if I close my eyes and concentrate hard enough, I can still taste the chili at Ramova Grill). Around the same time, I also started a one-sided love affair with the Reader.

Armed with the vim and vigor only a self-assured freelancer can possess, I transformed some of my big city exploits into would-be Best of Chicago blurbs I pitched to the then-editor. The entries encompassed topics such as “Best non-Latin neighborhood display of copyright infringement” and “Best place to get coffee and potentially pick up a foreign STI along the way.” I never heard back.

A few years later, my upward masthead journey landed me at the alt-weekly in Santa Fe, where I started as arts and culture editor, and was later promoted to deputy editor. Admiring from afar the quality content the Reader was producing, and with my unrequited relationship still going strong, I jumped at the opportunity to apply for the managing editor position—a big leap for me at the time, that I felt I was ready for. I was interviewed, but ultimately it wasn’t my turn, and the position was filled by someone more qualified. My dream job at my dream outlet, all while living in my dream apartment (atop Cafe Jumping Bean in Pilsen) would have to wait.

Enrique Limón Credit: Sarah Joyce/GlitterGuts

A stint as managing editor and later editor in chief at the alternative publication in Salt Lake City as well as helming the launch of an international news startup followed. All the while, I kept thinking of the one that got away. 

That all changed this month.

Shaping the Reader’s latest incarnation as a full-fledged nonprofit newsroom is not a responsibility I take lightly. The storied publication and its talented staff continue to be a force, and it’s my pleasure to usher in what its next 50 years in the community will look like.

The road might have been long, but trust me when I say the prize is oh so sweet. Cheers to what lies ahead! (Oh, and if anyone has leads on that apartment, please let me know.)


Now Playing: Chicago’s history in movie ads

Adam Carston created Windy City Ballyhoo on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. It’s a repository of Chicago movie ads, photographs, and film reviews from the last century. 


Pecking themselves to death

Albert Chen (Christopher Thomas Pow) is sitting on a park bench eating what appears to be a burrito or a hot pocket when a hunched old man, dressed in an intersection of athleisure and preppie that signals respectability, comfort, and a baseline certainty of invisibility, shuffles in. “Hey! You Chinese?” he hollers. Albert, though he…


Why would a survivor of sexual trauma want D/s kink?

Some who have submissive desires and traumatic sexual histories find BDSM therapeutic.


From domestic terrorism to the voting booth

When Michael Fanone, the former Trump supporter and D.C. cop who nearly died at the hands of the January 6 mob at the U.S. Capitol, comes to the Chicago Humanities Festival next week to join We Are Proud Boys: How a Right-Wing Street Gang Ushered in a New Era of American Extremism author Andy Campbell…


Tough calls

When the police bring too many risks with them, where can you turn in a crisis?


Ghosts of gentrification

As fall settles into Chicago, a ghostly chill raises the hackles of those attuned to a different kind of presence in the city’s streets. We live in a city of disappearances: from the original loss of home of Chicago’s many Native tribes, to the thousands of people disappeared by the Chicago Police Department into the…


CircEsteem opens enrollment for their Social Circus Instructor Training program

When most employees speak of “juggling” tasks or “jumping through hoops” at their place of employment, they’re speaking metaphorically, but for future participants in CircEsteem’s Social Circus Instructor Training program, it’s literally part of the job. Founded in 2001, the Uptown-based non-profit organization uses circus arts as a tool to foster connection, creativity, and self-esteem.…


Meet Anna DeShawn of E3 Radio and the Qube

E3 Radio is a proud member of the Chicago Independent Media Alliance (CIMA), a partnership of independent, local media entities. Today through October 17th, you can donate to our #WeAmplifyChicagoVoices campaign at SaveChicagoMedia.org. Read on to learn more about our Anna DeShawn, the founder of CIMA partner E3 Radio and the Qube. Chicago native Anna…


The 2022 Chicago Public Library Foundation Awards celebrate bold stories, bold voices, and our bold library

What happens when award-winning playwright Tony Kushner, Top Chef Rick Bayless, and TikTok sensation Shermann “Dilla” Thomas walk into a room? Join us on October 19, 6:00 pm CST to find out. The Chicago Public Library Foundation Awards are back! This year we’ve put the spotlight on storytelling and the powerful ways that stories can…


On the right track: The High Speed Rail Alliance aims to make trains a more practical option for getting across Chicago and the nation

The High Speed Rail Alliance aims to make trains a more practical option for getting across Chicago and the nation In the second part of the Reader’s series spotlighting advocacy organizations working to make our region a better place to walk, bike, and ride buses and trains, we caught up with Rick Harnish, executive director…


The world is a beautiful place with Algernon Cadwallader in it

The pop-culture industry loves to resurface detritus from my youth, add a little polish, and launch it on whatever streaming service I’m most likely to drop due to rising subscription fees—and I’m mostly just exhausted by it. Band reunions, especially of bands whose reputations and fan bases have kept growing since their breakup, are a…


Making good moves

A Step Ahead Chess brings kids together online and in person.


Blick Art Materials returns to Downtown Chicago

The national art supply retailer hosts the grand opening of its new Loop location on October 21 If you’ve been wondering about all the excitement at that impossible-to-miss building with the large glockenspiel clock at 16 W Randolph, it’s due to the arrival of its newest tenant, Blick Art Materials. On Friday, October 21, Blick…


Rapper-singer Angelenah makes her R&B debut with I Don’t Regret a Thing

Gossip Wolf has been hip to Chicago rapper and singer Angelenah, aka Ashley Hart and Angel Davanport, ever since she released the 2018 EP Sore but Grateful. She’s been sharpening her skills in the years since, and last week she dropped I Don’t Regret a Thing, which showcases her flamboyant singing across six luscious R&B…


In her first Chicago appearance, Clara de Asís collaborates with Aperiodic to model the aesthetic virtues of nonintervention

Clara de Asís is a Spanish-born, France-based multi-instrumentalist and sound artist who uses played and collected sounds as prompts to focus the power of the listener’s attention on the potentialities of the sound fields around them. The crackle of static and the decaying reverberations of struck metal on her new collaboration with Ryoko Akama, Sisbiosis…


Swedish power-metal titans Sabaton continue to explore the Great War

Founded in 1999, Swedish power-metal veterans Sabaton cast a microscopic gaze on the horrors of war with a sweeping, majestic, and anthemic sound that walks the line between empathizing with humans on the battlefield and glorifying the unglorifiable. Their records deliver poetic lessons in military history (usually European), and though they aim to stay as…


The right (to a) call

A new consent decree is a victory against CPD abuse years in the making.


A literary mission

Chicago Books to Women in Prison partners with Women & Children First to get books behind bars.


Central Illinois police training for mental health cases questioned

Significant issues remain around police use of involuntary commitments.

Read More

The road aheadEnrique Limónon October 13, 2022 at 10:00 am Read More »