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Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show

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.

With support from our sponsors

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.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon October 11, 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.

With support from our sponsors

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.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon October 11, 2022 at 7:01 am Read More »

Chicago Bears land DJ Moore in one of these blockbuster tradesRyan Heckmanon October 11, 2022 at 2:00 pm

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At 2-3, the Chicago Bears are right about where many thought they would be during a rebuilding year.

With a new head coach, Matt Eberflus, and a new general manager, Ryan Poles, this was always going to be a tougher year in terms of wins and losses. However, just this last week, we finally saw some significant progress in Justin Fields and his development.

Having plenty of cap room next year and a full load of draft capital, the Bears should feel good about their future and building around Fields.

Other teams, though, don’t have that same luxury. The Carolina Panthers, for example, just fired head coach Matt Rhule and now appear to be launching a full-on rebuild of their own.

Teams will now be calling the Panthers trying to trade for some of their players as they hope Carolina will look to stockpile picks as they rebuild

— Jay Glazer (@JayGlazer) October 10, 2022

The Chicago Bears are in a position to be able to engage in trade talks with the Carolina Panthers.

With the Panthers likely headed for a top draft pick and being in position to select either C.J. Stroud or Bryce Young, it’s very likely they try and part with some of their veterans.

One of those veterans who could be traded is wideout D.J. Moore, whom the Panthers have already extended but have an “out” after the 2023 season. Now, there are rumors of the Panthers taking calls on guys like Moore, among others.

“I expect teams to place calls on Christian McCaffrey, D.J. Moore, Brian Burns and Derrick Brown.”

@jjones9 on a potential Panthers teardown

— CBS Sports (@CBSSports) October 10, 2022

The Bears desperately need a true number one wide receiver, and Moore has the talent to be exactly that. At only 25 years old and coming off three-straight 1,000-yard seasons, Moore has plenty of football ahead of him and would give the Bears a legitimate number one option on the outside, or in the slot. He is an extremely versatile weapon with lots of speed and excellent strength at the point of catch.

With Darnell Mooney in place, adding a wideout like Moore would give Fields a one-two punch that Chicago has been longing for this year. The myriad of random wide receivers has proven to be ineffective in establishing any passing threat, as fans have seen.

Should the Bears engage in trade talks regarding Moore, one of the following packages just might get a deal done.

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Chicago Bears land DJ Moore in one of these blockbuster tradesRyan Heckmanon October 11, 2022 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Swedish power-metal titans Sabaton continue to explore the Great WarMonica Kendrickon October 11, 2022 at 11:00 am

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 free of controversy as possible, that goal isn’t completely realistic given the themes of their songs and the realities of the world we live in. Sabaton released The War to End All Wars (Nuclear Blast) in March, along with a symphonic version a few weeks later. A follow-up to 2019’s The Great War, the albumcontinues the band’s deep dive into World War I. The songs are solid through and through, and the stories they share are memorable; “The Unkillable Soldier” tells the brutally inspiring tale of a famously indestructible Belgian, while “Race to the Sea” is an edge-of-the-seat drama about the Battle of Yser, in which Belgian forces held the line against an advancing German army.

The so-called Christmas truce—brief unofficial ceasefires that became widespread across the Western Front in December 1914—has become a corny, metaphorically abused cliche in pop culture. But Sabaton’s take on it (in the song “Christmas Truce”) is touching in its bittersweet earnestness, especially contrasted with the deliberate false optimism of the following track, “Versailles.” Sabaton aren’t breaking new ground with The War to End All Wars, and they’re less interested in doing so than in further refining what they do best. With the world in the state it is, they’ll never run out of material.

That said, they’re hardly done exploring the trenches of WWI. Last month, they dropped a surprise EP, Weapons of the Modern Age, the first installation in a trilogy about the mechanical and technological horrors of the Great War, and its six songs include the charging (“The Red Baron”), the eerie (“The Attack of the Dead Men”), and the heavy (“Dreadnought”). Sabaton were here last year opening for Judas Priest at Rosemont Theatre, and this concert is part of a rescheduled headlining tour intended for the spring.

Sabaton Epica open. Sat 10/15, 7 PM, Aragon Ballroom, 1106 W. Lawrence, $32.50, all ages

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Swedish power-metal titans Sabaton continue to explore the Great WarMonica Kendrickon October 11, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

The unsung women healing ChicagoJustin Agreloon October 11, 2022 at 11:01 am

This story was originally published by The Trace, a nonprofit newsroom covering gun violence in America. Sign up for its newsletters here.

Kendra Snow was working the closing shift at a laundromat in Englewood when her phone began to ring. It was a neighbor, telling her not to panic. Then, the devastating news: Snow’s 16-year-old son had been shot outside of a nearby liquor store. He was alive, but she needed to hurry. 

Snow remembers locking the laundromat door and running three blocks south toward the corner of 75th and Stewart. She knew the intersection well. It had long been a hot spot for neighborhood violence, one where both her younger brother and her son’s father had survived shootings. Still, nothing could’ve prepared her for this race toward her wounded son. 

“This is my neighborhood. I was like, how did this happen to my son?” Snow said of that night in October 2015. “How dare you? This is my baby.” Once she reached him, she learned he’d weathered two shots in the back.

He survived, but would need months of physical therapy and long-term care that Medicaid wouldn’t cover. His journey toward healing would be long and arduous—a path Snow says he’s still pursuing nearly seven years later. 

That journey would also prove challenging for the women in his life, women who loved him and watched him grow up. Snow, her aunt, her sister, and sister-in-law all rallied behind him, stepping in to provide the long-term care that he couldn’t access easily from hospitals or the state. 

Snow’s experience reflects that of many women of color in Chicago and elsewhere whose loved ones survive gun violence. In the aftermath of a shooting, they are often the ones who provide emotional labor and care to alleviate the ricocheting impacts of gun violence. This work is vital, necessary for people to forge a new normal for their everyday lives. Sometimes, it extends beyond familial ties and to communal ones. But even when it comes from outside the walls of a single home, it is often unpaid, undervalued, and hidden from public view. 

During the early months of her son’s recovery, Snow, along with her sister and sister-in-law, guided the teen through everyday tasks like eating, bathing, and homeschooling. Having to juggle her son’s care along with parenting six other children—while also working two jobs outside the home—was stressful. That stress was compounded by a trauma unique to survivors of gun violence: for months, Snow couldn’t shake the fear that every time he left home, it would happen again. 

“It was a battle of getting him back to his normal self,” Snow remembers. “I was absolutely stressed and drained . . .  he was like an infant again.” 

Snow’s efforts are part of a patchwork of woman-led care that serves Chicago communities where shootings are common. These women lead block clubs, grow community gardens, organize food drives, and provide free childcare. It’s labor that bears little resemblance to the tougher talk of often male-led violence prevention work, with its street intervention, workforce training, and behavioral health counseling. The women foster safety and address community needs, functioning as the hidden scaffolding of the more visible work. 

Kendra Snow poses in front of a community mural near the M.A.S.K. site in Englewood. Seeger Gray for The Trace

Lewis grew up on the south side, where she watched her community grapple with gun violence and the larger systems that create and compound it: racial segregation, economic disinvestment, concentrated poverty. Her first introduction to racial justice work came in the eighth grade, when her mother took her to protest the killing of Trayvon Martin. Then a child herself, Lewis couldn’t stop thinking about how young Martin was. She’d spend the next several years attending protests, organizing neighbors around various social issues, and earning her bachelor’s degree in sociology from the University of Pennsylvania. 

Lewis now channels her community work through her nonprofit, Free Root Operation, which combats Chicago’s gun violence crisis by making food and education more accessible. She started the nonprofit in 2020 as a way to house her various forms of community work under one roof. The organization is funded through individual donations and grants. Lewis says she’s only made enough for the organization’s basic needs, and sustains herself through other jobs. She’d like to see city leaders funnel more money toward community-based organizations at a level that’s at least on par with what Chicago spends on policing, about $1.9 billion this year.  

“We only have so much capacity and this work is very taxing—emotionally, mentally, physically,” Lewis said. “Folks need resources to give it their all and not have to worry about where they’re going to find their next meal.”

“Although we need to focus on our boys and our men, a lot of people’s solutions to gun violence end there. We also need to talk about the women who are also stakeholders of this gun violence issue in our communities.” 

Eva Maria Lewis, founder of the Bloom Cohort

In June, Lewis launched the Bloom Cohort, a program that pairs 10 Black women, mostly single mothers, with a mentor who helps them complete a goal, like continuing their schooling or becoming a baker. The thinking is that investments in opportunities for the women leading households in communities impacted by gun violence will translate to an increase in public safety. 

The idea for Bloom came from her conversations with Black women who kept saying they were struggling to find time for things outside parenting and work. Lewis witnessed her mom, who raised her alone, navigate a similar experience. And after years of community work, Lewis is having a related conversation with herself.

“I’ve spent so much time trying to free other people. When I was younger, doing the work, going to protests, I wasn’t making any room for my own healing,” Lewis says. “I realized I needed the same type of care I was putting out.

“I am so much more than what I can do for other people.” 


Harsh penalties for gun crimes don’t make communities safer.


After Mayor Lori Lightfoot expanded the citywide curfew in response to a shooting, teenagers spoke about Chicago’s gun violence crisis and their relationship to the city.


We need money for schools, after-school programs, and mental health to change the status quo.

Read More

The unsung women healing ChicagoJustin Agreloon October 11, 2022 at 11:01 am Read More »

NBA betting preview: Why Joel Embiid is a good early bet for MVPon October 11, 2022 at 12:17 pm

Joel Embiid enters the 2022-23 NBA season with the third-best odds to win MVP behind Luka Doncic and Giannis Antetokounmpo. Photo by David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images

The 2022-23 season is quickly approaching and our betting experts have got you covered. Over the next two weeks we are taking a look at how to approach some of the top teams in league and giving out some futures best bets before the season tips off.

Sports Betting Insider Doug Kezirian gives his tips on favorites and longshots to bet for this season’s MVP award.

All odds from Caesars Sportsbook

NBA betting preview schedule

Thursday: The case for the Boston Celtics and Golden State WarriorsFriday: The case for the Brooklyn Nets and Milwaukee BucksMonday: The case for the Philadelphia 76ers and Los Angeles LakersTuesday: Who to bet for MVPWednesday: Betting win totals and awardsOct. 17: Social media and bettingOct. 18: NBA title odds and favorites

Is this is the year Joel Embiid breaks through and finally hoists the NBA MVP award?

Due to team success playing such a vital role with the voters, I typically like to wait until the season begins before I get heavily involved in the MVP race. I often build a portfolio of a few guys and try to ensure a solid payout. Of course that also entails tracking injuries and reading the tea leaves, particularly after the All-Star break.

However, the one bet I have made is on Embiid, who is currently +700 at Caesars Sportsbook. Narratives play a large role and the Sixers big man has finished as the runner-up in back-to-back seasons. While James Harden is talented and can put up great numbers, Embiid will ultimately get credit for any success the team has. The Sixers are expected to contend again for a top seed this year.

Favorites

Luka Doncic is currently the betting favorite to win the NBA MVP award this season, but history suggests otherwise. AP Photo/Gareth Patterson

Luke Doncic is the betting favorite (+390) and while he is certainly talented enough to win the award, history suggests it would be a surprise outcome.

In 23 of the last 25 seasons, the MVP has led a team that finished with a one- or two-seed in its conference. The two outliers were Nikola Jokic last year and Russell Westbrook in the 2016-17 season, when both starred for teams that finished with a Western Conference six-seed.

Both were unusual circumstances. Westbrook averaged a triple-double and broke Oscar Robertson’s all-time mark for triple-doubles in a single season. Last year, Jokic posted incredible statistics but he was a bit of a longshot entering the last few months until injuries to other contenders opened the door.

As for this season, the Mavericks are the seventh favorite in the Western Conference alone. However, in terms of regular season win totals, there is not a huge amount of separation. Dallas is positioned with 48.5 wins, while the league’s highest is the Boston Celtics with 53.5.

The main reason I prefer waiting to wager on the MVP race is that I need to assess the league’s dynamics. Some players look more fit than others and certain teams seemingly take the regular season more seriously.

With all that being said, I am grabbing Embiid. I do not feel his odds will get any longer and I expect Philadelphia to have a strong season from the start. I prefer Embiid over Giannis Antetokounmpo (+550), Jayson Tatum (10-1), Kevin Durant (10-1), Jokic (12-1) and Ja Morant (14-1).

Longshots

Devin Booker could be an interesting longshot to win the MVP award at +5550 odds before the season begins. Photo by Bart Young/NBAE via Getty Images

The other angle I typically take prior to the season is focused on longshots. Any guy with solid early momentum will see his odds shrink drastically and a few candidates come to mind. I could not blame anyone for backing Devin Booker (55-1), Anthony Edwards (60-1) or Rudy Gobert (100-1). I understand they are longshots for a reason but I believe the pricing is off.

The rationale for Booker is obvious. The Phoenix Suns are coming off a year where they finished with the league’s best record and while Chris Paul played a pivotal role, Booker is their best player. If he evolves his game even further, being the best player on the top overall seed is a huge plus for an MVP candidate’s campaign.

Edwards and Gobert are connected because they are now teammates in Minnesota. Their season win total of 49.5 suggests that oddsmakers are expecting a big leap, and I agree with that.

Edwards seems on the verge of an explosive season. He averaged 25.5 PPG on 40% shooting from beyond the arc in last year’s playoffs. Many future All-Stars take a giant step in their third season and perhaps the same comes true for the former No. 1 pick. The question is whether Minnesota has the goods to compete for a top seed and Edwards can blossom into a true MVP. Usually a candidate out of nowhere is dismissed, like DeMar DeRozan last year but at 60-1, I could understand the argument.

However, I’d rather grab a piece of Gobert at 100-1. Of course he’s highly unlikely to win it but if Minnesota does reach its ceiling, Gobert would receive a lot of credit. The three-time defensive player of the year dominates that end of the court and he could literally change Minnesota’s entire team defense. Also, he was known mostly as a screener in Utah, but perhaps he thrives in a new system where he can score enough points to have MVP consideration. He can finish at the rim and a point guard like D’Angelo Russell may be exactly what he needs to have decent scoring numbers.

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NBA betting preview: Why Joel Embiid is a good early bet for MVPon October 11, 2022 at 12:17 pm Read More »

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 free of controversy as possible, that goal isn’t completely realistic given the themes of their songs and the realities of the world we live in. Sabaton released The War to End All Wars (Nuclear Blast) in March, along with a symphonic version a few weeks later. A follow-up to 2019’s The Great War, the albumcontinues the band’s deep dive into World War I. The songs are solid through and through, and the stories they share are memorable; “The Unkillable Soldier” tells the brutally inspiring tale of a famously indestructible Belgian, while “Race to the Sea” is an edge-of-the-seat drama about the Battle of Yser, in which Belgian forces held the line against an advancing German army.

The so-called Christmas truce—brief unofficial ceasefires that became widespread across the Western Front in December 1914—has become a corny, metaphorically abused cliche in pop culture. But Sabaton’s take on it (in the song “Christmas Truce”) is touching in its bittersweet earnestness, especially contrasted with the deliberate false optimism of the following track, “Versailles.” Sabaton aren’t breaking new ground with The War to End All Wars, and they’re less interested in doing so than in further refining what they do best. With the world in the state it is, they’ll never run out of material.

That said, they’re hardly done exploring the trenches of WWI. Last month, they dropped a surprise EP, Weapons of the Modern Age, the first installation in a trilogy about the mechanical and technological horrors of the Great War, and its six songs include the charging (“The Red Baron”), the eerie (“The Attack of the Dead Men”), and the heavy (“Dreadnought”). Sabaton were here last year opening for Judas Priest at Rosemont Theatre, and this concert is part of a rescheduled headlining tour intended for the spring.

Sabaton Epica open. Sat 10/15, 7 PM, Aragon Ballroom, 1106 W. Lawrence, $32.50, all ages

Read More

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

The unsung women healing Chicago

This story was originally published by The Trace, a nonprofit newsroom covering gun violence in America. Sign up for its newsletters here.

Kendra Snow was working the closing shift at a laundromat in Englewood when her phone began to ring. It was a neighbor, telling her not to panic. Then, the devastating news: Snow’s 16-year-old son had been shot outside of a nearby liquor store. He was alive, but she needed to hurry. 

Snow remembers locking the laundromat door and running three blocks south toward the corner of 75th and Stewart. She knew the intersection well. It had long been a hot spot for neighborhood violence, one where both her younger brother and her son’s father had survived shootings. Still, nothing could’ve prepared her for this race toward her wounded son. 

“This is my neighborhood. I was like, how did this happen to my son?” Snow said of that night in October 2015. “How dare you? This is my baby.” Once she reached him, she learned he’d weathered two shots in the back.

He survived, but would need months of physical therapy and long-term care that Medicaid wouldn’t cover. His journey toward healing would be long and arduous—a path Snow says he’s still pursuing nearly seven years later. 

That journey would also prove challenging for the women in his life, women who loved him and watched him grow up. Snow, her aunt, her sister, and sister-in-law all rallied behind him, stepping in to provide the long-term care that he couldn’t access easily from hospitals or the state. 

Snow’s experience reflects that of many women of color in Chicago and elsewhere whose loved ones survive gun violence. In the aftermath of a shooting, they are often the ones who provide emotional labor and care to alleviate the ricocheting impacts of gun violence. This work is vital, necessary for people to forge a new normal for their everyday lives. Sometimes, it extends beyond familial ties and to communal ones. But even when it comes from outside the walls of a single home, it is often unpaid, undervalued, and hidden from public view. 

During the early months of her son’s recovery, Snow, along with her sister and sister-in-law, guided the teen through everyday tasks like eating, bathing, and homeschooling. Having to juggle her son’s care along with parenting six other children—while also working two jobs outside the home—was stressful. That stress was compounded by a trauma unique to survivors of gun violence: for months, Snow couldn’t shake the fear that every time he left home, it would happen again. 

“It was a battle of getting him back to his normal self,” Snow remembers. “I was absolutely stressed and drained . . .  he was like an infant again.” 

Snow’s efforts are part of a patchwork of woman-led care that serves Chicago communities where shootings are common. These women lead block clubs, grow community gardens, organize food drives, and provide free childcare. It’s labor that bears little resemblance to the tougher talk of often male-led violence prevention work, with its street intervention, workforce training, and behavioral health counseling. The women foster safety and address community needs, functioning as the hidden scaffolding of the more visible work. 

Kendra Snow poses in front of a community mural near the M.A.S.K. site in Englewood. Seeger Gray for The Trace

Lewis grew up on the south side, where she watched her community grapple with gun violence and the larger systems that create and compound it: racial segregation, economic disinvestment, concentrated poverty. Her first introduction to racial justice work came in the eighth grade, when her mother took her to protest the killing of Trayvon Martin. Then a child herself, Lewis couldn’t stop thinking about how young Martin was. She’d spend the next several years attending protests, organizing neighbors around various social issues, and earning her bachelor’s degree in sociology from the University of Pennsylvania. 

Lewis now channels her community work through her nonprofit, Free Root Operation, which combats Chicago’s gun violence crisis by making food and education more accessible. She started the nonprofit in 2020 as a way to house her various forms of community work under one roof. The organization is funded through individual donations and grants. Lewis says she’s only made enough for the organization’s basic needs, and sustains herself through other jobs. She’d like to see city leaders funnel more money toward community-based organizations at a level that’s at least on par with what Chicago spends on policing, about $1.9 billion this year.  

“We only have so much capacity and this work is very taxing—emotionally, mentally, physically,” Lewis said. “Folks need resources to give it their all and not have to worry about where they’re going to find their next meal.”

“Although we need to focus on our boys and our men, a lot of people’s solutions to gun violence end there. We also need to talk about the women who are also stakeholders of this gun violence issue in our communities.” 

Eva Maria Lewis, founder of the Bloom Cohort

In June, Lewis launched the Bloom Cohort, a program that pairs 10 Black women, mostly single mothers, with a mentor who helps them complete a goal, like continuing their schooling or becoming a baker. The thinking is that investments in opportunities for the women leading households in communities impacted by gun violence will translate to an increase in public safety. 

The idea for Bloom came from her conversations with Black women who kept saying they were struggling to find time for things outside parenting and work. Lewis witnessed her mom, who raised her alone, navigate a similar experience. And after years of community work, Lewis is having a related conversation with herself.

“I’ve spent so much time trying to free other people. When I was younger, doing the work, going to protests, I wasn’t making any room for my own healing,” Lewis says. “I realized I needed the same type of care I was putting out.

“I am so much more than what I can do for other people.” 


Harsh penalties for gun crimes don’t make communities safer.


After Mayor Lori Lightfoot expanded the citywide curfew in response to a shooting, teenagers spoke about Chicago’s gun violence crisis and their relationship to the city.


We need money for schools, after-school programs, and mental health to change the status quo.

Read More

The unsung women healing Chicago Read More »

White Sox reportedly have their top 3 candidates for manager

The White Sox have their top three manager candidates to replace Tony La Russa according to reports.

The Chicago White Sox are seeking a new manager after the Tony La Russa era came to a disappointing end this season. With the White Sox not in the playoffs, the search is on.

And according to a report, they may have their top three candidates.

In his Sunday morning article, USA Today’s Bob Nightengale named the three leading candidates for the White Sox manager.

The Chicago White Sox want to hire a veteran manager to replace Tony La Russa, not wanting to take a chance on someone with no experience.

Some managers who fit the bill: Bruce Bochy, Mike Shildt, Ron Washington, John Gibbons, Bo Porter, Joe Girardi, Joe Maddon.

Bochy, Washington and Shildt are considered the leading candidates.

Bruce Bochy, Ron Washington, and Mike Shildt all have playoff experience. Bochy recently retired from the MLB after winning three World Series as the Giants’ manager. Ron Washington reached the World Series and multiple ALCS with the Rangers back in the early 2010s. Mike Shildt took the Cardinals to multiple playoffs, but nothing past the NLDS before being fired a couple years ago.

Bochy was widely regarded as a player’s, especially veterans’ coach. Washington is known as the best fielding and third base coach in the entire league. Shildt was successful, but was let go do to friction with the front office.

When Bochy retired, he seemed to want to put baseball behind him. However, he is coaching Team France in the World Baseball Classic, possibly a note to teams that he would have some interest. Washington is a fantastic assistant coach, and while many pundits say he should be a top candidate everywhere, it may be hard to convince him to leave the best core in baseball in Atlanta, especially at age 70. Shildt is coaching third for the Padres and the most likely to want to get back in the head role.

These “candidates” definitely have pros and cons, and it will be interesting to see how ownership decides to go forward with their interviews and evaluations.

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White Sox reportedly have their top 3 candidates for manager Read More »

Alec Regula earns Blackhawks roster spot thanks to offensive instincts in defenseman’s body

DENVER–Despite playing defense from an early age, Alec Regula grew up attending hockey camps with his older brother, CJ, that emphasized shooting, stick-handling and other skills primarily intended for forwards.

The offensive instincts the Regula boys picked up back then are still impacting their hockey careers in 2022.

CJ, a later-in-life defenseman convert, just started his senior season at Ohio State. (Alec has, in turn, become a Buckeyes fan, which he said earns him plenty of “dirty looks” back home in the Detroit suburbs).

Alec, meanwhile, has earned a spot in the Blackhawks’ opening-night NHL lineup Wednesday against the Avalanche and a chance to prove he can be a full-time NHL player.

“He gives us a dimension that can shoot a puck on the power play,” coach Luke Richardson said Monday. “Right now, until we get some full bodies back, he has an opportunity. The most he makes of that opportunity is going to help his situation.”

Added Regula: “I have really big aspirations in this league. I just have to keep chipping away at it. I don’t want to get ahead of myself. … [Once] I play Wednesday, it shifts to trying to stay in the league. It’s that kind of grind every day. It doesn’t really change. But it’s definitely [time to] take a second, pat yourself on the back and feel good about it.”

Multiple moving parts among the Hawks’ defensive corps have opened the door wider for Regula. Entering training camp, the defense looked like the more stable half of the roster, but that’s no longer the case.

With Riley Stillman traded to the Canucks and Jake McCabe, Caleb Jones and Ian Mitchell all injured–McCabe and Jones both practiced Monday, the latter in a non-contact sweater, but won’t play Wednesday–the Hawks on Monday claimed 30-year-old journeyman Jarred Tinordi off waivers from the Rangers, mainly just to have another healthy option.

Regardless of how the depth-chart shuffle sorts out over the next month, though, Regula should remain a significant part of the Hawks’ longer-term plans.

The 22-year-old righty is building off a semi-breakout season in which he tallied 26 points in 41 AHL games and held his own in 15 NHL games, mostly late in the year. He has always been a somewhat unique prospect given that his impressive offensive instincts reside in an intimidating 6-4, 210-pound body. He just needs to learn how to use that body.

“His size is key, but he has to establish himself to use that size a little more,” Richardson said. “[He can do] a little stick-on-puck, but then [needs to use] the body — it can’t be just the stick. … That’s something he’s going to have to implement in his game to be a regular defenseman.”

Regula has worked on improving his conditioning, too. Playing heavy minutes in all situations last season in Rockford, he often discovered his “gas tank would run out a little bit early.” He followed an intense schedule of bike rides and skates this summer, and he noticed a difference this preseason, although Monday’s long session in thin Colorado air did remind him he’s not invincible yet.

On the power play, the Hawks want Regula to jump over the boards for Seth Jones–who remains the first unit’s quarterback–eager to shoot the puck. And when it comes to that, it’s a good thing he grew up attending all those camps.

“Whatever time we get, 30 or 40 or 50 seconds, [I’ll] try to have a shooting mentality,” Regula said. “That’s when you create the most, [when I’m] being a shooter and letting my instincts take over.”

Note: Newly acquired forward Jason Dickinson will miss at least the first two games awaiting U.S. immigration paperwork, meaning Buddy Robinson–despite clearing waivers Monday–will remain on the NHL roster for now.

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