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Bold prediction made about Chicago Cubs offseasonJordan Campbellon September 26, 2022 at 9:30 pm

The Chicago Cubs are preparing for what figures to be an important offseason where the team is expected to be aggressive in the free agency market as a method to expedite the rebuild that began in earnest at the 2021 Major League Baseball Trade Deadline.

The Cubs showed glimpses of returning to active spending last offseason with lucrative free-agent deals with starting pitcher Marcus Stroman and outfielder Seiya Suzuki.

Stroman and Suzuki figure to be a part of the next contending Cubs team but the question remains of when that team will actually arrive.

Stroman, for his part, thinks that the Cubs are close to contending based on recent comments he made to The Athletic:

“I think we’re close,” Stroman said. “A lot of that’s out of my control. Hopefully, we make a few moves. I think we have a great core group of guys, great young guys coming up that are going to make great contributions throughout a full year. But yeah, if we add a few pieces, I think we can compete in the division right away.”

Those “few pieces” figure to be added this offseason. The Cubs are in the process of evaluating the top free agent starting pitchers available this offseason and it has long been expected that the team will sign one of the four top free agent shortstops that will be available this winter.

Current signs might be pointing to Carlos Correa being that shortstop.

When talking about the prospects of Correa returning to his current team, the Minnesota Twins, Jim Souhan of the Star Tribune made the strong implication during his podcast that Correa will be signing with the Cubs this offseason.

“All it takes is one idiotic owner” to give Carlos Correa 35 million a year. pic.twitter.com/B5vdz2ODJc

— Stan (@Crewsett) September 26, 2022

The Cubs’ interest in Correa last winter was no secret. The Cubs reportedly were willing to spend heavily on Correa last year but had reservations about the length of a potential deal. It remains to be seen if Correa will be seeking a 10-year deal this winter but the Cubs likely will be one of the main teams involved in his market.

Carlos Correa remains a perfect fit for the direction of the Chicago Cubs.

And before diving into Correa’s numbers this season, let’s once again apply the following caveat: The Cubs pursuing the top four free agent shortstops this offseason is not an indictment of their current shortstop, Nico Hoerner. Hoerner is a firm member of the next great Cubs’ core and his infield flexibility allows for the Cubs to address their offensive need by signing one of the top free agent shortstops.

After a slow start to the 2022 season, Correa has returned to form in his first year with the Twins. Correa currently has a slash line of .289/.365/.468/.834 with a 140 wRC+ and 4.2 WAR. In other words, Correa is still very much an elite offensive talent and would be a great fit for the Cubs.

Correa has previously gone on record and been critical of the Cubs’ plan and his willingness to sign with a team that is rebuilding. The Cubs will need to sell Correa on the idea that they are ready to contend and the comments made by Stroman may be the beginning of their pitch.

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Bold prediction made about Chicago Cubs offseasonJordan Campbellon September 26, 2022 at 9:30 pm Read More »

Shots fired at Chicago Police Department facility in Homan Square

A person was shot by police Monday after using a fire escape to gain entry to a Chicago police facility in North Lawndale, then grabbing a gun he found and aiming it at officers, a law enforcement source told the Sun-Times.

The shooting happened around noon on the fifth floor of the police department’s Homan Square facility at 1011 S. Homan Ave., according to police communications.

After climbing the fire escape to gain access to the building, the person grabbed at least one gun from a table inside, the source said. He aimed at officers who were in the middle of a training session and was shot.

The person was taken to Stroger Hospital in critical condition, according to a Chicago Fire Department spokesman.

An officer was taken to Mount Sinai Medical Center but did not suffer a gunshot wound, the fire department said. The nature of the officer’s injuries weren’t immediately known.

No other details were released by police.

After the shooting, officers cordoned off streets and directed traffic around the Homan Square facility, a former Sears, Roebuck & Co. warehouse. A police spokeswoman urged members of the media not to photograph officers around the facility because they may be working undercover or doing other sensitive work.

The Homan Square compound houses the police department’s Evidence and Recovered Property Section and also serves as a hub for undercover operations and the counterterrorism bureau.

The facility earned a shadowy reputation after the Guardian published a series of stories in 2015 likening it to a CIA “black site” where suspects have allegedly been “disappeared” and subjected to off-the-books questioning and abuse.

The department pushed back on the Guardian’s claims at the time, saying it “abides by all laws, rules and guidelines pertaining to any interviews of suspects or witnesses, at Homan Square or any other CPD facility.”

Still, the department has faced a series of lawsuits over alleged abuse at the facility, and activists have demanded it closed.

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Chicago news roundup: Boy dies after being pushed off Navy Pier, shots fired at CPD facility

Good afternoon. Here’s the latest news you need to know in Chicago. It’s about a 5-minute read that will brief you on today’s biggest stories.

This afternoon will be mostly sunny with a high near 64 degrees. Tonight will be partly cloudy with a low around 45. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny with a high near 60.

Afternoon Edition

Chicago’s most important news of the day, delivered every weekday afternoon. Plus, a bonus issue on Saturdays that dives into the city’s storied history.

Toddler whose aunt is accused of pushing him into Lake Michigan dies

A 3-year-old boy who was pushed into Lake Michigan off Navy Pier has died, according to the medical examiner’s office.

Josiah Brown, 3, was pronounced dead at 10:16 a.m. yesterday, the Cook County medical examiner’s office said.

Authorities say Josiah was pushed into Lake Michigan on Sept. 19 by his aunt Victoria Moreno. Moreno then stood by as he sank below the water, where divers found him about 30 minutes later, Cook County prosecutors said. The boy was rushed to Lurie Children’s Hospital in critical condition.

Moreno was denied bail at her court hearing despite defense arguments that she suffers from mental health issues. Moreno, 34, is charged with attempted first-degree murder and aggravated battery to a child.

Moreno initially told responding officers that she was only a witness, then claimed she was holding the boy’s shirt and let go because he “was acting up,” according to a police report and a source with knowledge of the investigation.

Read the full story here.

More news you need

A person was shot by police earlier today inside a Chicago Police Department facility in North Lawndale, a source says. Here’s more on this story as it develops.Chicago police this morning released surveillance photos of a man and a woman wanted for beating and robbing a man on a Red Line train over the weekend. Read the full story here.Our Pulse of the Heartland series continues today with a focus on voters from Waukegan, who told our Mitchell Armentrout they want public officials to take a holistic approach to the problems facing their lakefront city. Armentrout has more from suburban voters here.Chicago’s La Salle Street, a distinguished corridor suffering from high commercial vacancies, could be energized by using TIF money to convert some classic buildings to residential use, city officials said today. David Roeder has more on the “invitation for proposals” to move the corridor away from a “monoculture” of offices.Local bird watchers have their fingers crossed that piping plover Imani will return to Montrose Beach and find a mate next summer after he spent this season alone, Nicky Andrews writes. For now, Imani will head south while bird-loving Chicagoans hope the piping plover – an endangered species – heads back to his beach home next summer.

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A bright one

20 trails where Chicago-area hikers can enjoy nature, peace before winter sets in

It’s not “purple mountains majesty” for hiking, Jason King knows. But Illinois, Indiana and southern Wisconsin offer trails that are free, close, not congested, and they offer a solace and beauty all their own.

“I love Illinois,” says King, who teaches geography at Moraine Valley Community College in Palos Hills. “I’ve lived here all my life. If you like simplicity, if you like the feel of the wind blowing through the trees … there’s no place better.”

The Palos Trail System is dear to hikers and also popular with mountain bikers.

Jason Lindsey/Illinois Office of Tourism

One of his favorite solo hikes to “get the world behind me” is near Gary, in the little-used western part of Indiana Dunes National Park. The Paul H. Douglas center is closed for now, but the namesake trail winds through Miller Woods and across the Grand Calumet River. It was named for the late U.S. senator from Illinois, who helped make the Dunes a national park. It’s a moderately challenging three and a half miles out and back, partly through sand dunes, so it’s a workout.

“It’s a truly unique trail,” King says. “I can’t think of another where, in a couple of miles, you’ll see a forest, you’ll see a marsh, you’ll see a unique biome called a black oak savannah, then the dunes, and finally you’re at the shore of Lake Michigan.”

There are many such gems within three hours of Chicago that aren’t as urban as the North Branch River Trail or as crowded as Starved Rock State Park in Utica. The joys of fall hiking include leaves changing colors, fewer mosquitos and ticks and cooler weather.

Check out the full list of recommended outdoor trails from WBEZ.

From the press box

Your daily question?

How confident are you in Justin Fields as the Bears’ long-term QB? Tell us why.

Send us an email at [email protected] and we might feature your answer in the next Afternoon Edition.

On Friday, we asked you: As we enter another season amid the pandemic, how has your approach to COVID-19 changed since 2020? Here’s what some of you said…

“It hasn’t. I am still cautious. I have my vaccines. I am retired so it’s much easier for me. I can see who I want and avoid strangers. Going to concerts is my only concern. I can’t stay away from the music. Knock on wood I haven’t gotten it yet.” –Bobette Staley

“My approach hasn’t change I still wear my mask everyday.” — Traci Hill

“Seriously? I don’t wear a mask unless a doctor’s office insists. If you wear one, I won’t judge you. Just came back from Great Britain and no one wears one except maybe a couple American tourists. If I’m sick, sure I’ll wear a mask. Btw, I’m allboostered and had COVID in 2020. But masks now are a rarity.” –Charlie Stewart

“My life hasn’t changed at all, I’ve never worn a mask, I just stay away from people that look like they have a flu, there’s still morons that wear their mask even when they’re driving alone in their car, some people are just afraid to live, not me.” –Roy Hillard Locke

Thanks for reading the Chicago Sun-Times Afternoon Edition. Got a story you think we missed? Email us here.

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2 shot dead at Hero’s Sports Bar in Posen

Two people were shot to death early Sunday at Hero’s Sports Bar in Posen, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

Officers responded to calls of a shooting in the parking lot of the bar about 4:30 a.m. at 14346 S. Western Ave, Posen police said in a Facebook post.

One man, 39, was shot multiple times and pronounced dead, the medical examiner’s office said. Another person was struck in the chest and died.

The medical examiner’s office determined that both deaths were homicides.

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Monday Night Football Week 3 Prop Bets

The 2-0 New York Giants host the 1-1 Dallas Cowboys on Monday Night Football.

The classic NFC East rivalry renews on Monday Night Football, with Daniel Jones and the Giants looking to improve to 3-0 for the first time since 2009. Standing in their way will be the Dak Prescott-less Dallas Cowboys, with Cooper Rush at the helm coming off a 20-17 win over the Cincinnati Bengals. Many may be surprised to see the Giants undefeated, but under first year head coach, Brian Daboll, many believe this team can stay competitive throughout 2022, health permitting.

Daniel Jones has not exactly supplanted himself as “the guy”, but under Daboll, through two games has shown signs of progression from a ball security standpoint. Through his first three seasons, Jones record 36 fumbles and 29 interceptions over 38 career games. Not all 36 of those fumbles were lost, but the point stands that the 1.7 fumbles+interceptions is a brutal measure. Of course, it is only a two week sample size, but through two weeks Jones has only recorded one of each. Still not perfect, but if the trend continues, it really is a drastic difference that will increase the competitive ability of this football team.

You can take it or leave it, but I will scream from the mountain tops that Brian Daboll is a very good offensive coach, and while Daniel Jones doesn’t appear to be “the guy”, Daboll has and can continue to put Jones in the best possible position to succeed.

Behind Dak Prescott, dating back to 2016, the Cowboys have dominated the Giants with a 9-3 record, 9-2 with Dak. The three losses? The final week of 2020 without Dak and both teams out of contention, and both matches in the 2016 season, the last season the Giants found themselves in the postseason. The dominance of the Giants, and the NFC East as a whole during that stretch has been real, however, the layout of this division is by far the deepest it has been since that 2016 season.

Enter Cooper Rush and his 2-0 career record as a starter, including a win last year in primetime against Minnesota, and last week against the Bengals. Rush threw for 19/31 passing with 235 yards and a touchdown, leading the Cowboys to 17 of their 20 points in the first half of that contest. At the end of the day, I think the winner of this game is going to be the team that wins the turnover battle, and more than likely that should fall on the shoulders of Jones and Rush. Now let’s get into today’s best bets!

Giants 2nd Half Spread (-0.5)  

The thought process for this pick is twofold. On one hand, I really like what the Giants defense has done in the second half of these first two games under this coaching regime. Week 1 against Tennessee, this defense following a 13-0 halftime deficit, held the Titans to seven 2nd half points, including three-and-outs on three of their first four defensive drives. When healthy this defense is formidable, and while everyone remembers the dumpster fire that was the second half of 2021, this Giants defensive was scrappy through the first half of the season last year.

In the case of the Cowboys, I’m expecting a similar outing to last week’s performance. Potentially solid first half, with a rough 2nd half as the Giants make necessary adjustments. Rush came to life on the final drive to set the Cowboys up for the win, but Cincy outscored Dallas 14-3 in the second half, and had it not been for some of the general issues that the Bengals are facing, that second half could have been far worse for Dallas.

I’ll avoid the full Monday Night Football game spread, but give me the G-Men to outscore Dallas in the second half.

Saquon Barkley Over 77.5 Rushing Yards

The feelings toward Saquon Barkley around the NFL public are certainly mixed, but given the right matchup, and given the personnel of the Giants offense, Barkley is primed for big production. What gives me the most confidence here, is that the Giants seem fixated on feeding Saquon the rock.

I still believe that Saquon, despite his injuries, is a very talented back, but in my opinion the reason he’s being fed to this extent is a lack of trust, at least to some degree, in Daniel Jones. I say to some degree, because they have allowed him to throw 20+ times in both games, but the lack of trust comes in the deep pass department.

Jones’ intended air yards per pass attempt ranks 31st in the NFL. For the sake of New York, that number will hopefully improve, but unless there is a drastic change, the Giants will lean on long grind-it-out type drives, protecting the football, and most importantly for this pick, feeding Saquon Barkley. In Week 2, Barkley fell short of this yardage total, but not for a lack of attempts. Saquon carried the ball 21 times for 72 yards against a tough Carolina rush defense that also held Alvin Kamara to a similar output.

My opinion for tonight’s Monday Night Football matchup, will be that this Dallas rush defense isn’t quite as stout as Carolina’s was. They did have success last week up against Joe Mixon and the Bengals, but as mentioned, that team has issues, and the Bengals were throwing for their lives in the second half of that game, almost entirely abandoning the run. If you are telling me that Barkley is going to rush the ball around 20 times once again, I’m happy to bet on his over, provided it isn’t north of 100.

I think Saquon gets up over 90 today and should have a couple of nice 15+ yard runs under his belt when the night is done. Let’s win some money on Monday Night Football, shall we?

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Las Vegas music festival shooting documentary explores the massacre and its aftermath

NEW YORK — A pair of cowboy boots that Ashley Hoff never thought she would see again helped unlock a powerful story about the worst mass shooting in modern U.S. history.

The resulting film, “11 Minutes,” is an inside account of the 2017 massacre at a country music festival in Las Vegas and, more importantly, about how it reverberated in the lives of those who were there. More than three hours long, the four-part documentary debuts Tuesday on the Paramount+ streaming service.

“I’ve never felt more useful or more like the universe put me exactly where I was supposed to be,” said Hoff, an executive producer of “11 Minutes.”

It seems like a strange sentiment given that Hoff was at the show on Oct. 1, 2017, four rows from the stage as Jason Aldean sang “Any Ol’ Barstool.” Hoff heard popping sounds that she and her husband, Shaun, first dismissed as fireworks — not the work of a gunman firing from a nearby hotel window.

She turned to look at her husband and saw someone just behind him struck in the face by a bullet. They alternated ducking to the ground for cover and running away, depending on when they could hear the gunshots.

At one point, she kicked off her cowboy boots because it was too slippery to run in them, eventually escaping the killing field where 58 people died that night, and two more later of their injuries. More than 850 people were hurt before the gunfire stopped.

Nine months later, an FBI agent was at Hoff’s door with her boots — part of a little-known unit that returns property left behind by people caught in these incidents.

Hoff, already in the film business, thought that made an intriguing subject. She was encouraged to broaden her focus through her experience with fellow survivors and the involvement of director Jeff Zimbalist and veteran producers Susan Zirinsky and Terence Wrong.

Many survivors, like herself, were unhappy with media coverage of the massacre, believing there was too much focus on the gunman and that it was forgotten too soon.

“We all went back to our corners to suffer in silence,” she said.

The film takes you vividly inside the event with cellphone and police body-cam footage. The cooperation of Las Vegas police was key, bringing footage like the race to hospitals with survivors and the moment when a tactical unit burst into the casino hotel room where the gunman had barricaded himself.

Film producer Ashley Hoff was present at the Route 91 Harvest, a country music festival, on Oct. 1, 2017 in Las Vegas where 58 people were shot and killed by a lone gunman. Nine months later, an FBI agent was at Hoff’s door with her boots (which she had kicked off in order to run faster from the gunfire) — part of a little-known unit that returns property left behind by people caught in such incidents.

The experiences of people like Jonathan Smith, a Black concertgoer who had felt unwelcome because of a white man’s remark wondering why he was there, and Natalie Grumet, who had just survived cancer, are weaved throughout the story. Both were seriously injured.

“Is it easy to watch? No, but it shouldn’t be easy to watch,” said SiriusXM host Storme Warren, who was onstage in Las Vegas that night. “I don’t know why you would tell the story if it were easy to watch.”

Warren at first hesitated when asked to participate in the film, dealing with his own PTSD and wary because of past media coverage. He and Aldean, who gave his first interview about Las Vegas to filmmakers, are important ties to the country community.

Hoff believes that her own experience that night, even though it is not included in the film, helped convince some of those involved to talk.

Searingly, the parents of Carrie Parsons, a young woman who didn’t survive her wounds, discuss dealing with every parent’s worst nightmare, and how their time to grieve with her body was cut short.

“They’re going to cremate my daughter in 10 minutes,” a tearful Ann-Marie Parsons recalled being told. “How do you deal with that?

After the shooting stopped, police talked of hearing the rings of cellphones as they walked among bodies still on the concert grounds, knowing there were desperate callers on the other end wanting to know if their loved ones were safe.

Beyond the concertgoers, it’s startling to see some of the first responders — often not the most emotive types — speak about how they’ve dealt with the emotional aftermath. “I was a very angry man. Very angry,” said Brian Rogers, paramedic operations chief, in the film.

Part four of “11 Minutes,” begins at dawn on Oct. 2, 2017, and focuses on some of the enduring bonds between survivors, and some of the rescuers.

It’s Hoff’s favorite part. “I do like to encourage people that there is goodness in the end, so hang in for that,” she said.

“There are extraordinary acts of courage and human beings helping human beings,” said Zirinsky, chief of the See It Now Studios production company. “They’re just regular people. In the darkest hours, people found each other.”

Zirinsky, the former CBS News president, produced “9/11,” perhaps the most memorable doc made in the wake of that disaster, and considers “11 Minutes” the most powerful film she’s worked on since.

While the film talks about the gunman, whose motive remains a mystery since he killed himself before police reached him, it pointedly does not mention his name. Almost militantly so: A series of audio news reports included are cut off just before the name is spoken.

It was found that the gunman had searched the internet for “how to be a social media star” in the days before the shooting. Even in death, Hoff doesn’t want to give him that wish.

The film ends with a slow crawl showing the names of those killed five years ago in Las Vegas, as well as the victims of every mass shooting since that time in the U.S. where at least four people were killed.

“I don’t call it a political statement,” Zirinsky said. “I call it a statement of reality.”

Both Hoff and her husband escaped the concert without any gunshot wounds, although Hoff broke her arm when she slipped and fell trying to run in her cowboy boots. She didn’t notice her injury until they stopped running.

She’s fine if people take the message from her film that enough’s enough.

“We need to stop turning away, and we need to understand what going through this was like,” she said. “It changes a person forever.”

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High school football: Ejected Kenwood, Morgan Park players will be suspended for one game, no word from CPS on further punishments after post-game fight

The final fallout from the fight after the Morgan Park vs. Kenwood football game on Saturday at Lane Stadium is still unknown.

Shortly after the game, Morgan Park coach Chris James estimated that 18-20 players total on both teams were ejected from the game with unsportsmanlike conduct penalties.

According to Illinois High School Association rules, all of those players will have to sit out their next game. For Kenwood that is a matchup against Brooks (1-4); for Morgan Park it is a game against Hubbard (0-5).

It appeared that some assistant coaches were also ejected from the game. They would also miss the next game according to IHSA rules.

There is some precedent for Chicago Public Schools to apply harsher penalties than the one-game suspension the IHSA automatically imposes. Immediately after the game, James said he expected CPS to “levy some heavy suspensions.”

CPS released a statement to the Sun-Times on Monday that didn’t contain any specifics:

“CPS expects all of our student athletes to treat each other with respect. The District assists schools to prevent, prepare, respond, and recover from crises that affect the school population, including students and staff, with the goal of safeguarding the physical, emotional, and psychological well-being of the CPS community. The District’s Office of Sports Administration (OSA) is working with school leadership to continue its investigation and respond in accordance with District policies and procedures.”

Multiple fights broke out all over the field at Lane Stadium after the game on Saturday. CPS security and coaches and administrators from both schools struggled to calm things down. The chaotic scene lasted about 10 minutes.

Both teams are loaded with college prospects and just outside the Super 25 rankings. Multiple media outlets were at Lane Stadium to cover one of the best Public League matchups of the season, but the game was ugly from the start. The first quarter was marred by multiple unsportsmanlike penalties and it deteriorated from there.

CPS Sports Director David Rosengard speaks with Kenwood principal Karen Calloway after the altercation between Kenwood and Morgan Park.

Kirsten Stickney/For the Sun-Times

Both coaches acknowledged the events on Twitter over the weekend.

“CPS coaches, referees, administration and leadership are all working together to prevent issues like the end of today’s game from happening. We’ll be better, because we’re family & we all want to make a difference,” James tweeted.

Kenwood coach Sinque Turner released a statement on Twitter on Sunday: “On behalf of the entire Kenwood Academy football program I want to apologize to CPS sports administration, the entire Kenwood Community, Ms. Calloway and the Morgan Park football team for all the uncharacteristic behavior my team displayed during yesterday’s football game.”

Kenwood and Morgan Park are both heavy favorites to win their Week 6 games, even if they are missing a dozen or more players due to the suspensions.

If CPS or the IHSA levies a two-game or longer suspension, Kenwood could be significantly impacted. The Broncos face Simeon, the top Public League football team, in a highly-anticipated game in Week 7.

There hasn’t been any word from the IHSA yet, but it typically allows CPS to handle incidents internally.

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White Sox, Tony La Russa are at a crossroad after disappointing season

It was supposed to be a medical issue.

And it should be a medical issue.

But as we’ve learned with the White Sox, no issue is simple.

In most cases, the health and concern for Tony La Russa would supersede any development, especially since the Hall of Fame manager has been away from the team for the last four weeks and won’t return for the remainder of the 2022 season.

The team’s disclosure Saturday, with La Russa’s consent, that he underwent “additional testing and medical procedures,” speaks to the seriousness of his health after his doctors directed him not to return.

A return wouldn’t have mattered at this point, as the Guardians captured the American League Central title, flattening the Sox and Twins in the process.

And unfortunately for the Sox, not winning a division title they were expected to win for the second consecutive season comes with consequences.

Or should it?

Bruce Jenkins, the award-winning columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle, once described the Sox as “the wackiest ship in the Navy.”

That was nearly 20 years ago, and the phrase still fits.

The 2021 AL Central champions never led in 2022 by more than two games and fell out of first for good on April 21. Injuries zapped much of their power, but bloated contracts awarded several years ago to Yasmani Grandal and Yoan Moncada challenge their efforts to retool the roster.

With new rules instituted in 2023 that will reward speed and athleticism, the Sox will be hard-pressed to adjust unless they trade at least one of their big-ticket players.

They must have the same buy-in from their players that the Guardians displayed in seizing the division title in a convincing manner.

“As for as young a group as it is, we haven’t done a lot of babysitting, which I appreciate,” manager Terry Francona said before the Guardians swept the Sox last week in a three-game series at Guaranteed Rate Field.

The Sox haven’t won a playoff series since capturing the 2005 World Series under then-general manager Ken Williams, who retooled the roster the previous winter with deeper starting pitching and a much-needed balance of speed and power.

Rick Hahn, who took over the general manager duties after the 2012 season, declined to assess the 2022 season until closer to its completion.

Nevertheless, this season represented a regression that infuriated apassionate fan base that already tolerated a tedious rebuild and had every right to expect no less than a third consecutive AL playoff berth.

Hahn has praised acting manager Miguel Cairo, the coaches and players for adjusting on short notice but stopped short of elaborating on the future of the team or the dugout leadership next season.

Which brings us back to La Russa.

La Russa was nine years removed from the dugout when he accepted an invitation to return to Chicago with the sole mission of winning a World Series title.

That crusade remains as firm as ever, according to two sources who were familiar with La Russa’s thinking that led him to returning and completing the mission that fell short here when the Orioles eliminated the Sox in the 1983 AL Championship Series.

La Russa likely wouldn’t have returned for any team or owner but Jerry Reinsdorf, who regretted allowing then-general manager Ken “Hawk” Harrelson to fire him in 1986.

La Russa is under contract for one more year to achieve his singular goal for his boss, who attended what was thought to be La Russa’s final game as manager for the Cardinals in Game 7 of the 2011 World Series.

But this is a different landscape. This season’s debacles put the franchise at a crossroad. Season ticket holders have a right to feel leery after feeling misled by a team that didn’t hit home runs, failed to run the bases with precision, and didn’t field and throw with a sense of urgency.

La Russa thrives on a challenge, occasionally reminding media members when he believes they’re wrong in forecasting the team’s fortunes or not praising a player or achievement to his liking.

Some of his in-game decisions, however, have clouded his otherwise shiny Hall of Fame plaque. He remains adamant that he’s made the correct in-game choices, proving that his intensity hasn’t wavered.

But intensity can go only so far. Tommy Lasorda suffered a minor heart attack midway through the 1996 season and told reporters he was medically cleared to return.

However, those heath concerns and the wish to spend more time with his family convinced Lasorda to retire from the dugout at age 68 and serve as a GM and adviser until his death in 2021.

Meanwhile, La Russa admitted he couldn’t replicate the intensity of preparing and managing a game during his stints as an executive with the Diamondbacks and Red Sox after leaving the Cardinals.

Perhaps the current time away from the team will allow him to assess his future.

“It was good because you don’t want anybody to feel something dangerous to their life,” Sox designated hitter Eloy Jimenez told reporters after learning La Russa wouldn’t return in 2022.

La Russa’s doctors will have the biggest say in La Russa’s future, as well as the Sox. The roster needs changing, even in the face of some potentially immovable contracts.

And if La Russa isn’t medically cleared to return in 2023, Reinsdorf and Co. must decide whether to continue their World Series or Bust mission, or embark on another rebuild that would alienate fans who waited patiently for the first youth movement to crystalize into a world championship.

But it all starts with La Russa’s health and well-being.

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Shots fired at Chicago Police Department facility in Homan Square

A person was shot by police Monday after using a fire escape to gain entry to a Chicago police facility in North Lawndale, then grabbing a gun he found and aiming it at officers, a law enforcement source told the Sun-Times.

The shooting happened around noon on the fifth floor of the police department’s Homan Square facility at 1011 S. Homan Ave., according to police communications.

After climbing the fire escape to gain access to the building, the person grabbed at least one gun from a table inside, the source said. He aimed at officers who were in the middle of a training session and was shot.

The person was taken to Stroger Hospital in critical condition, according to a Chicago Fire Department spokesman.

An officer was taken to Mount Sinai Medical Center but did not suffer a gunshot wound, the fire department said. The nature of the officer’s injuries weren’t immediately known.

No other details were released by police.

After the shooting, officers cordoned off streets and directed traffic around the Homan Square facility, a former Sears, Roebuck & Co. warehouse. A police spokeswoman urged members of the media not to photograph officers around the facility because they may be working undercover or doing other sensitive work.

The Homan Square compound houses the police department’s Evidence and Recovered Property Section and also serves as a hub for undercover operations and the counterterrorism bureau.

The facility earned a shadowy reputation after the Guardian published a series of stories in 2015 likening it to a CIA “black site” where suspects have allegedly been “disappeared” and subjected to off-the-books questioning and abuse.

The department pushed back on the Guardian’s claims at the time, saying it “abides by all laws, rules and guidelines pertaining to any interviews of suspects or witnesses, at Homan Square or any other CPD facility.”

Still, the department has faced a series of lawsuits over alleged abuse at the facility, and activists have demanded it closed.

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