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NHL bettors are saying tanks to the Blackhawks

LAS VEGAS — Circa Sports oddsman Jeff Davis took a few days to cook his hockey books, sift through rosters, distill player ratings and schedules and sprinkle in some secret ingredients.

About six weeks ago, he produced NHL regular-season point totals, and divisional, conference and Stanley Cup odds.

For Blackhawks fans, the finished product had a certain stench.

“It’s a team that is looking to tank,” says Davis, 45. “Not the players, but upper management. And, frankly, they should.”

Because, he says, the NHL’s bottom-feeders — Arizona, Chicago, Montreal and San Jose — all covet 17-year-old Connor Bedard, a slick 5-9 center for the Regina Pats of the Western Hockey League.

The prize of the next NHL draft.

Adding 35-year-old Jack Johnson alerted Davis to the Hawks’ intentions.

“To me, the Jack Johnson signing looks like an elite tank signing,” says Davis. “It makes them look like they’re trying, by signing a veteran. But he’s arguably one of the worst defensemen in the league.

“I don’t see how they can be good. It looks like they’re actively trying to get Connor Bedard. Their floor is a lot lower than their ceiling is high.”

Davis devised an initial Blackhawks’ season-points total of 62.5, which has been bet up to 64. He found a 70.5 at another shop and made a healthy Under wager.

“I couldn’t believe somebody had [a 70], because when you have a team in their situation . . . I don’t see how this roster can make the playoffs, given the teams around them. They’ll just be trying out all these kids on the third and fourth lines.”

SPIRALING HAWKS

Chicago has missed the playoffs four of the last five seasons, and it might flirt with a second 50-point full season since 1995-96.

Is that the price of success, of seven triple-digit point seasons over a nine-campaign stretch, highlighted by Stanley Cups in 2010, 2013 and 2015?

“They win some Cups, sign these guys to big deals,” says Davis. “Eventually, you get into [salary-]cap hell. The contracts are great, until the last season or two, and that’s where they are now.”

It’s all kids, says Davis, or guys like 28-year-old left wing Jujhar Khaira, who has a negative plus-minus in six of seven NHL seasons in which he has logged more than 10 games.

To win Lord Stanley’s silverware this season, Chicago is an astronomical 1,000-to-1 shot, along with Arizona, at Circa Sports and DraftKings.

Some people wagered Over on Chicago early (pumping its points total) at Circa and Under elsewhere, hoping to “middle” between 63 and 70 points — a gap pro bettors consider substantial.

At the South Point, puck sage John the Barber favors Columbus. It has the Blue Jackets’ points at 82, 30-1 odds to win the Metropolitan Division, 40-1 to take the East and 75-1 to win it all. Chicago’s point total is 64.5 at the South Point.

(Odds and prices subject to change.)

To win the Hart Trophy, Patrick Kane is 100-1 at the Westgate SuperBook. New Czech goalie Petr Mrazek is 300-1 to win the Vezina at DraftKings.

“He’s been great in his career,” says Davis of Mrazek. “He’s also been horrendous.” Alex Stalock is the Blackhawks’ 35-year-old reserve keeper.

Colorado is the Stanley Cup choice at the South Point (+350), DraftKings (+380) and Circa (+480).

Davis taps the Avalanche to inspire Hawks fans, since Colorado ended 2016-17 with an NHL-low 48 points. Last season, it won its third Stanley Cup, its first since 2001.

The Avs, whose projected 112.5-point total is the largest at Circa, play host to Chicago on Oct. 12 in both teams’ season opener.

Davis also spotlights Colorado center Nathan MacKinnon, in the final season of a seven-year, $44.1 million contract.

“Look at MacKinnon, who’s on a ridiculously cheap contract. He didn’t want to play on a bad team. He wanted [Colorado to have] cap space, and they win a Cup. That’s what Chicago needs to happen.”

HOCKEY’S FUTURE?

A 24-hour window two summers ago displayed the difference between Chicago and Colorado.

On July 23, 2021, the Blackhawks inked Seth Jones, 27, to an eight-year deal worth $76 million. The next day, the Avs signed Cale Makar, 23, for six seasons at $54 million. Both are defensemen.

“It seemed like the teardown was going well, then the Blackhawks signed Jones to that ridiculous contract,” says Davis. “They’re already trying to dump him a year later. Who would take him?”

Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane are a combined $21 million cap hit. Davis expects at least one, maybe both, to be dealt by the March 21 deadline. Centers Andreas Athanasiou and Max Domi are both on single-season $3 million deals.

That’s $27 million of salary room next summer, even with the Jones anchor.

“Right now, they only have money allocated for three players for 2024-25,” says Davis. “It’s a few years before this team will be relevant. To expect this team will be in the playoffs in two years, that’s just too far-fetched.

“And it will be hard for them to sign big-name free agents, knowing it’s a few years away.”

Davis isn’t completely sullen about the Blackhawks’ future. He does like defenseman Jake McCabe and 20-year-old German left wing Lukas Reichel.

And if Chicago were to draft Bedard, whom The Hockey News four years ago called the future of the game?

“The generational No. 1 pick,” says Davis. “By all accounts, this kid is the next real deal.”

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What will it take for Blackhawks to be NHL’s worst team?

Finishing last in the NHL in 2022-23 would guarantee the Blackhawks a top-three draft pick. Even if neither their 25.5% chance of winning the lottery for the first overall pick nor their 18.8% chance of gaining the second pick hit, they couldn’t fall further than third.

General manager Kyle Davidson likely won’t outright declare that his goal for the season, but the organization would be pleased if it happened. Regardless of one’s opinions about the ethics of tanking and whether the draft system encourages it, the Hawks clearly are committed to this route.

But how bad would the Hawks have to be to finish last? And how likely is it they can succeed in being that bad?

After all, the Hawks were rather dismal last season, too, yet still finished ahead of five other teams. Their 68 points exceeded that of the Devils (63), Flyers (61), Kraken (60), Coyotes (57) and Canadiens (55).

That 13-point margin between the Hawks and last-place Canadiens wasn’t much smaller than the 16-point gap between the Hawks and the Islanders, a projected playoff team entering last season that finished 20th overall. So for as bad as the Hawks were last season, they would need to be significantly worse this season.

The Hawks also aren’t the only team tanking. The Coyotes and Canadiens also would very much enjoy another top-three pick in 2023. Both of those teams — especially the Coyotes — might be actively built to lose just as much as the Hawks are, and they proved better than the Hawks at losing last season.

Davidson will count on the Hawks’ trade-deadline and offseason fire sale, which gutted the roster of most of its talent, making the difference. Evaluating players by point shares, an all-inclusive numerical evaluation of seasonlong impact created by Hockey Reference, the Hawks lost three of their top five and 10 of their top 17 contributors from last season.

All told, the Hawks’ returning players were cumulatively responsible for just 26.5 point shares last season, and the Hawks’ new additions were cumulatively responsible for 11.4 point shares on their former teams last season, adding up to a total of 37.9. The Coyotes return 42.4 point shares and added 6.7 for a total of 49.1. The Canadiens return 39.5 and added 12.0 for a total of 51.5.

That comparison is an inexact science because it doesn’t take into account how players’ abilities and roles change year-to-year. For instance, Taylor Raddysh, as a promising young forward primed for more playing time, likely will produce significantly more than the 1.7 point shares he produced last season. Canadiens star rookie Juraj Slafkovsky, for another example, isn’t even included in those calculations.

Nonetheless, the sizable difference in those numbers — with the Hawks landing more than 10 points below the other two teams — indicates Davidson’s aggressive trading might indeed be enough to put the Hawks over the top, so to speak.

Unlike the Hawks, the Coyotes and Canadiens certainly didn’t also jettison five of their seven highest-scoring forwards and both of their goaltenders.

New Canadiens GM Kent Hughes actually executed a bold offseason plan, bringing in Slafkovsky, Kirby Dach, Sean Monahan, Evgenii Dadonov and Mike Matheson. Carey Price’s continued absence and the Canadiens’ nonexistent defensive depth will hold them back, but they nonetheless look improved from last season.

The Coyotes laid low this summer yet retained their entire young core — if one can call it that — of Jakub Chychrun, Clayton Keller, Nick Schmaltz, Lawson Crouse and Barrett Hayton.

The Flyers and Sharks, meanwhile, could be wild cards in the race to the bottom.

The Flyers, while clearly more talented on paper, were one of the league’s most dysfunctional, inconsistent teams last year and doubled down on volatility by hiring John Tortorella as coach and trading for Tony DeAngelo. It wouldn’t be shocking if they blew up (in a bad way) this season.

The Sharks lost 33 of their final 45 games last season and bring back one of the NHL’s oldest rosters, headlined by 33-year-old Logan Couture, 32-year-old Erik Karlsson and 35-year-old Marc-Edouard Vlasic — any of which could hit an age wall at any time. But Couture, Tomas Hertl and Timo Meier still form a dangerous top line unmatched by any of these other bottom-feeders.

Gambling lines reflect that perceived hierarchy in the NHL’s basement entering the first week of training camps. The Hawks and Coyotes are tied for the lowest 2022-23 point total over-under line at 65.5 points, per Vegas Insider. The Canadiens are third-lowest at 71.5 points, followed by the Sharks at 74.5, Flyers at 76.5 and Sabres at 77.5.

It’s also worth pointing out that the NHL’s worst teams were worse than usual last season. In fact, the 2021-22 Coyotes (with 57 points) were the second-worst team in the salary-cap era (since 2005) to not finish in last place. The 2014-15 Coyotes coincidentally hold that distinction; they finished with 56 points while the Sabres finished with 54.

Throughout the cap era, the league’s second-to-last-place team has averaged 67 points and a minus-65 goal differential, and its last-place team has averaged 59 points with a minus-85 goal differential. Compared to those standards, even last season’s Hawks (68 points with a minus-72 goal differential) weren’t far off the necessary degree of awfulness.

Thus, a regression to the mean this season when it comes to leaguewide parity could help the Hawks’ last-place desires.

On the other hand, it’s feasible the Hawks themselves could be part of that upward regression.

Acclaimed new coach Luke Richardson could accelerate prospects’ development and light fires under the veterans. Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews could deliver vintage performances in their likely final seasons in Chicago. The Hawks could adopt a 2017-18 Golden Knights-type attitude and play every night with chips on their shoulders, driven to prove the doubters wrong.

All of that is unlikely but not impossible, and if it did happen, the Hawks could end up in the 20th-to-29th range of the league standings instead of 30th-to-32nd. That would be somewhat tragic from a long-term perspective, given that it would represent another year of misery and irrelevance not translating into a golden-ticket prospect, but Hawks players and coaches wouldn’t think of it that way. After all, they’re paid to try their best.

In this hypothetical scenario, it would be interesting to see what, if any, counter-moves Davidson would make. Would he try to trade Kane, Toews, Max Domi, Andreas Athanasiou and others sooner than planned — as in, a few months ahead of the trade deadline — to further handicap the roster? Or would he accept the team’s grittiness and resilience in overcoming their weaknesses as good signs for the future?

In any case, the Hawks’ 2022-23 season should provide an interesting — if outwardly bleak — case study of tanking and its behind-the-scenes dynamics.

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Blackhawks lose Dach in Prospect Showcase game vs WildVincent Pariseon September 17, 2022 at 11:00 am

The Chicago Blackhawks are in the midst of their 2022 Tom Kurvers Prospect Showcase. They have a lot of their best prospects out there practicing and showing off what they can do. All of them have high hopes of being in the NHL one day.

This 2022 showcase features the Blackhawks along with the Minnesota Wild. They played in their first game on Friday night. The Blackhawks went up 2-0 early in the game but the Wild scored five unanswered goals to take it by a final score of 5-2.

The Blackhawks dealt with the misfortune of some injuries during this game as well. For one, top prospect Lukas Reichel was hit by the boards. He took his helmet off upon reaching the bench and then went to the locker room. Of course, that is a terrible sign.

Luckily, he missed the rest of the second period but he returned in time for the third. Obviously, he is a highly touted player for them that they must keep healthy as much as they can. There is a good chance that he will play in the NHL a lot this season.

Here’s where Lukas Reichel (27) went down along the boards pic.twitter.com/RcXw62hLzb

— Scott Powers (@ByScottPowers) September 17, 2022

The Chicago Blackhawks lost more than just this Prospect Showcase game.

Unfortunately, there is another great prospect that went down. After scoring the first goal of the game just 23 seconds in, Colton Dach went out in an injury himself. Unlike Reichel, Dach didn’t come back in the game.

Colton Dach scores 23 seconds into the Blackhawks prospect game vs. the Wild pic.twitter.com/SZ98nIAYWD

— Scott Powers (@ByScottPowers) September 17, 2022

Anders Sorensen didn’t have an update on Colton Dach, said he’s being evaluated and they’lll know more tomorrow.

— Scott Powers (@ByScottPowers) September 17, 2022

The Hawks did say that they will know more about his status on Saturday. He has a long way to go before he has a chance t be an NHL player but the Hawks certainly want him to be healthy enough to develop so they can see what they have in him.

There is a rematch between these two groups of prospects on Sunday so we will see if Dach is good enough to participate in that. Either way, he will use 2022-23 as a year to get better so he can take a run at a roster spot one day.

Although the game didn’t go the way that you wanted in terms of the score and there were some injuries, it is nice to have hockey back. Developing these kids (in addition to adding more of them) is the key to this team getting back into the playoffs.

Both the Wild and the Hawks clearly have a lot of players to be excited about going forward. With other notable prospects there trying to make an impact, the rest of the event should surely be fun.

We can only hope that this is all helping them get better and it seems like it is. Once the event is over, it will be even easier to evaluate what we just witnessed as there will be more practice and another game to see how they are doing. The Hawks are in “prospect mode” more than they have been in a long time.

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Bears, Justin Fields trying to take as much as possible from Packers, Aaron Rodgers

The Bears aren’t fooling anyone by insisting they’re unconcerned with the Packers.

The closest they’ve come to admitting otherwise was when general manager Ryan Poles said, “The most important piece is we’re going to take the North and never give it back,” at his introductory news conference. He didn’t mention the Packers by name, of course, but everyone knew from whom he intended to wrest the division and to whom he would not be returning it.

But while coach Matt Eberflus endlessly repeats that the Bears’ focus is solely on themselves and various other clich?s to that effect, the truth is that they’re trying to steal from the team that has dominated them for three decades.

Each of the last three Bears coaches has failed miserably against the Packers, which factored significantly into their firings. Eberflus will take his first swing Sunday night at Lambeau Field, and he’ll do so with some personnel he poached from the archrival.

Eberflus’ biggest move was luring quarterbacks coach Luke Getsy from the Packers to be the Bears’ offensive coordinator, and Getsy has made it his mission to teach Justin Fields everything that Aaron Rodgers knows. The Bears now use essentially the same offensive system, and no one runs it more prolifically than Rodgers.

The Bears want Fields to take as much of that as possible. They want him to play the percentages and make a habit of taking the easy passes. They want him to use his mobility, but not make it the foundation of his game. They want him to know opposing defenses better than the defenders themselves do. And he spent much of his offseason studying Rodgers’ film to glean what he could from the future Hall of Famer.

“I like how he plays quarterback — that’s just me being real,” Fields told the Sun-Times. “I know we have a big rivalry and of course I want to beat him, but that’s just what it is.

“I want to beat the Packers this year. But [people] want me to dislike him? For what? There’s no reason for me. He’s a great quarterback. He plays the game very efficiently, for sure.”

He appreciates him on a more personal level, too, after Rodgers pulled him aside following the Packers’ 45-30 win at Lambeau Field last December.

“This offseason, just focus on a few things to get better at and just keep stacking on it,” Fields quoted Rodgers telling him.

To Fields’ point, why wouldn’t he try to emulate Rodgers? His consistency and efficiency put him in a class by himself, and that style of play ages fantastically.

Over the last four seasons, as Rodgers strode into his late 30s, he completed 65.8% of his passes and was intercepted on just 0.7% of them. There have been eight quarterbacking seasons in NFL history with 400-plus passes and less than 1% getting picked, and Rodgers delivered three of them (2018, 2019 and 2021).

The only players to throw more touchdown passes than Rodgers’ 136 from 2018 to 2021 were Tom Brady (137) and Patrick Mahomes (156), but they each had more than double his 16 interceptions.

Last season with Getsy, Rodgers led the NFL with a 111.9 passer rating, was third in completion percentage at 68.9 and was fourth with 37 touchdown passes to win his fourth MVP. He did that while averaging just 7.6 air yards per throw. Again, it’s all about efficiency and prudence.

Fields is well aware.

“I have that mindset of just keeping the ball safe and giving ourselves a chance, holding on to the ball and just getting little gains: boom, completion, boom, completion — moving on,” he said, contrasting it to being overly aggressive last season. “I watched a bunch of Green Bay film this offseason, and that’s all A-Rod does: boom, dump it off to the back in the flat, boom, they break tackles, boom, get 10 yards off of a two-yard throw. That helps you out.”

A lot went wrong for Fields last season, and much of it was related to the dysfunction around him. But he contributed plenty to a rookie line with a completion percentage of 58.9, seven touchdown passes, 10 interceptions and a 73.2 passer rating. That was the lowest rating by a Bears quarterback who threw at least 200 passes since Matt Barkley’s 68.3 in 2016.

In his two games against the Packers, Fields completed 56.7% of his passes with three touchdowns, three interceptions and a lost fumble. Rodgers, meanwhile, was nearly perfect with six touchdown passes, a touchdown run and a 136.5 passer rating while sweeping the Bears by a total of 25 points.

Fields likes to say that he’s not competing head-to-head with Rodgers because they’re not on the field at the same time, but he is in the sense that he’s trying to keep up with him. And there’s quite a gap to overcome.

Getsy has some of the clues for how to do it, but don’t get this twisted: He didn’t make Rodgers. If anything, the assumption could be that getting the chance to work alongside Rodgers catapulted his career.

“Think of how much they both learned from each other,” said Chargers Pro Bowl center Corey Linsley, who was with Getsy in Green Bay for six seasons. “I couldn’t think of a better guy to help a young quarterback grow.

“He has a great grasp on every facet of the game. Being in meetings with guys, you can tell who’s full of [nonsense] and who’s not. And he’s absolutely not.”

Getsy was a 26-year-old graduate assistant at Pitt when Rodgers won a Super Bowl and was coaching in the FCS when Rodgers captured his first MVP. That’s not to discredit him from making any contribution to Rodgers’ career once he became his position coach in 2019, but it’s very likely Getsy learned more from his player than the other way around.

And that’s actually fine as far as the Bears are concerned, as long as Getsy can relay it all to Fields.

One of the main points he has tried to transfer is the way Rodgers uses his mobility. While he doesn’t have anything close to Fields’ speed, he always has been opportunistic as a runner and moved well behind the line of scrimmage to buy time and surprise a defense by rolling out. Again, he and Fields don’t have identical repertoires, but Fields can extract something from that film.

“Just looking at things he does well, like get the ball out fast,” Fields said. “Just his footwork. He’s great at that. He’s a Hall of Fame quarterback, so there are a lot of things I can take from his game and try to incorporate into mine, for sure.

Fields might not have much time left to land punches against Rodgers in the rivalry, though. Rodgers is under contract through 2026, but he’ll turn 39 by the end of the season and already has talked openly about post-football life. There’s more pride for Fields in taking him down rather than merely waiting him out, but he’ll have to make up a lot of ground very quickly to do that.

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High school football: Mount Carmel defense, accurate Blainey Dowling too much for Marist

Marist has never beaten Mount Carmel. The South Side Catholic schools only became conference rivals recently, so there haven’t been a ton of matchups between the schools.

But the institutions compete for students and a rivalry is starting to blossom. The Caravan players are well aware of the record, which is now 11-0 after a dominating 42-7 win on Friday.

“Everyone on the team knows Marist has never beaten us and it is important to keep that going,” Mount Carmel senior Damarion Arrington said.

Arrington is an outside linebacker and the captain of the Caravan’s ferocious defense. He was on the field when Marist scored a touchdown early in the fourth quarter. It’s the only touchdown Mount Carmel has allowed all season.

“It came after my pick which was a horrible read on my part,” Caravan quarterback Blainey Dowling said. “So that’s really on the offense. I wouldn’t even put it on the defense.”

Dowling has emerged as a serious Player of the Year candidate. The senior was 17-for-22 passing for 273 yards with four touchdowns and one interception.

“He’s a very accurate thrower so far this year,” Marist coach Ron Dawczak said. “He’s getting the ball to his playmakers in space and letting them run. He really has taken a step forward this year.”

It’s the second year starting for Dowling, which is huge. According to Dowling the Mount Carmel defense isn’t just dominating opponents. It’s making Dowling and the offense better.

“They are mean, they are a mean group,” Dowling said. “It’s scary to see them. We go against them every day and that’s why I feel like our offense is so explosive. They make us 20 times better.”

Senior Denny Furlong caught five passes for 149 yards and three touchdowns and Darrion Dupree had seven receptions for 77 yards and two touchdowns.

Dupree had nine carries for 134 yards, including a spectacular 55-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter.

Mount Carmel (4-0, 1-0 CCL/ESCC Blue) debuted a new replay system on the video board at the stadium. It provided nearly instant highlights. Dupree’s run was so fast that it was hard to properly appreciate live. The replay highlighted every cut and broken tackle.

“We need to keep playing hard and practicing hard every day,” Dupree said. “None of these highlights are important if we don’t make it to state.”

Marist’s touchdown came on a 15-yard pass from senior Dermot Smyth to Nolan Baudo. Smyth was 10-for-20 passing for 94 yards with one interception.

Marist (2-2, 0-1) lost a tight game to highly-regarded Glenbard West in Week 1 and dominated Richards and Nazareth, two strong programs, the past two weeks.

But after the first quarter, the RedHawks seemed outmanned against the Caravan.

“[Mount Carmel] looked like a well-oiled machine,” Dawczak said. “They have a lot of weapons. IT looked like they were bringing in three or four subs at a time and bring in playmakers. That second wave on defense and offense has athletes.”

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High school football: How the Super 25 fared in Week 4

1. Mount Carmel (4-0)

Won 42-7 vs. No. 9 Marist

2. Loyola (3-0)

Saturday vs. Brother Rice

3. Lincoln-Way East (4-0)

Won 42-0 vs. Andrew

4. Warren (4-0)

Won 35-16 at Stevenson

5. Glenbard West (4-0)

Won 51-12 at Proviso West

6. Naperville North (3-1)

Lost 29-16 at Neuqua Valley

7. Simeon (4-0)

Won 42-0 at Brooks

8. Maine South (2-2)

Lost 42-41 vs. No. 12 Prospect

9. Marist (2-2)

Lost 42-7 at No. 1 Mount Carmel

10. Prairie Ridge (3-1)

Lost 42-35 at No. 17 Jacobs

11. Wheaton North (3-1)

Lost 22-21 at St. Charles North

12. Prospect (4-0)

Won 42-41 at No. 8 Maine South

13. Lockport (3-1)

Lost 35-20 vs. Homewood-Flossmoor

14. Lemont (4-0)

Won 48-19 at Bremen

15. Joliet Catholic (4-0)

Won 49-14 at Providence

16. Bolingbrook (3-1)

Won 41-14 vs. Sandburg

17. Jacobs (4-0)

Won 42-35 vs. No. 10 Prairie Ridge

18. Palatine (3-1)

Lost 43-42 vs. Glenbrook South

19. Lyons (4-0)

Won 38-13 at Oak Park

20. St. Rita (2-2)

Won 41-12 at Benet

21. Batavia (2-2)

Won 42-0 vs. Lake Park

22. Kankakee (3-1)

Won 49-0 vs. Manual

23. Hersey (4-0)

Won 56-17 at Highland Park

24. York (4-0)

Won 24-17 (OT) vs. Downers Grove North

25. Notre Dame (3-1)

Won 22-17 at Nazareth

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Tigers walk off White Sox in 10 innings

Miguel Cairo has enough on his plate. He’ll leave the scoreboard watching to others, because he’s got enough on his plate managing a team for the first time. And in a pennant chase, no less.

“No. I’ve got to concentrate on this one,” Cairo said when asked if he’d sneak a peek at the Guardians-Twins scores this weekend. “This game, every game is important. Every game you’ve got to go about your business. Whatever happens, happens. We’ve got to take care of [Tigers right-hander Mattt] Manning today and go from there.”

Cairo was right. The Sox needed to take care of Manning but got shut out for seven innings by the 25-year-old right-hander in a stinging 3-2 loss in 10 innings to the Tigers (55-89), one of baseball’s worst teams. Scoreboard watchers saw the American League Central leading Guardians erasing a 3-0 deficit for a riveting 4-3 win.

At Comerica Park, the last-place Tigers won when free runner Ryan Kreidler scored from third on Victor Reyes’ sacrifice fly against closer Liam Hendriks. Kreidler got to third on a sacrifice bunt by Willi Castro, who was safe at first on Hendriks’ throw in the dirt.

The Tigers led 2-0 on Jonathan Schoop’s homer against reliever Jimmy Lambert with two outs in the sixth, and the Sox tied it in the eighth on Jose Abreu’s two-run double down the third base line against reliever Joe Jimenez, scoring Josh Harrison and Elvis Andrus.

The score remained tied in the bottom of the inning when Sox reliever Joe Kelly struck out Spencer Torkelson on a breaking pitch that bounced off catcher Yasmain Grandal’s shin guard toward the front of the mound, giving an aggressive Javy Baez a chance to score from third. But Kelly scooped the ball and flipped it with his glove to Grandal, who tagged out Baez for the third out.

The Sox were 2-for-12 with runners in scoring position, the most painful one seeing pinch runner Luis Robert not moving from second in the 10th as Alex Lange struck out Harrison, Andrus and Yoan Moncada in order.

The Tigers were trying drop the Sox four games behind the Guardians and five down in the loss column with 17 to play.

The Sox, who beat the Guardians in a one-game stop at Cleveland Thursday to get within three games, had won six of eight games and 11 of 15 in a desperate push to save a disappointing season. They have three games left against the Guardians, Tuesday through Thursday at Guaranteed Rate Field.

Needing at least two wins and flirting with thoughts of a three-game sweep against a 54-89 team they had beaten five times in a row at Comerica Park, the Sox had one of their worst offensive nights of the month.

Cairo pulled Giolito after Baez tripled to the right-center field wall with two outs in the fifth and Jimmy Lambert proved him right by striking out Tigers cleanup man Eric Haase. Baez scored the Tigers’ run against Giolito in the first when he singled with two outs, moved up on a walk to Haase and scored on Spencer Torkelson’s single.

Giolito, the Opening Day starter who has regressed to No. 5 starter status, needed 96 pitches to navigate 4 2/3 innings, walking three and allowing four hits.

The young Guardians (77-66), beating the Twins in the first of a five-game series in Cleveland, got back on the winning track after seeing their six-game losing streak halted by the Sox Thursday.

“They’re a very athletic club they’re really good defensively, they play smart and have a really good bullpen,” Sox coach Jerry Narron said. “They don’t hit the ball out of the park but they generate runs going first to third, scoring from first on a double because they’re so athletic. We were talking about the Guardians lineup and they run out the same lineup every day.”

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Charlotte Hornets, Los Angeles Lakers latest to reveal Statement Edition uniforms for 2022-23 seasonon September 16, 2022 at 10:33 pm

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Stephen A.: The only question surrounding KD is his leadership (1:55)Stephen A. Smith says Kevin Durant has proved he’s an elite scorer, but has yet to show he can lead the Nets to an NBA championship. (1:55)

The 2022-23 NBA season might still be a ways off, but that doesn’t mean we can’t start mentally preparing by feasting our eyes upon some swoon-worthy new threads.

First introduced in 2016, the City Edition jerseys are updated each year. While some teams have stuck with the same design for multiple seasons, others continually switch it up. Or, if you’re the Utah Jazz, you do a little bit of both. At least one team (s/o Washington Wizards) coordinated with its MLB counterpart on the aesthetic.

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In addition to the much-ballyhooed City Edition looks, some teams, such as the San Antonio Spurs, are throwing it back next season. Cue the Classic Edition jerseys, which pay homage to the franchise’s origins.

Here is a look at the latest uniform updates as they’re released by the teams.

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Purple power

The Charlotte Hornets stay in purple with their Statement Edition uniforms. The design on the shorts is made to look like a stinger.

It’s all in the details

The Los Angeles Lakers have joined the Statement Edition uniform party. The Lake Show might be making a statement, but they’re still staying on brand with their aesthetic, as their new jerseys are purple and, you guessed it, gold.

Not your traditional Timberwolves

On Thursday, the Minnesota Timberwolves revealed their 2022-23 Statement Edition look. According to the team, the uniform, which features a green and grey colorway, was “inspired by a wolfpack’s nighttime journey under the eye and vibrancy of the Northern Lights.”

We can dig it.

Fans will get a first look at the uniform in action on Oct. 21 when the team hosts the Utah Jazz. Minnesota will don the Statement Edition uniform at home 18 times throughout the upcoming season.

Back in black

The Brooklyn Nets understood the Statement Edition assignment. The franchise revealed a new 2022-23 black-on-black look that is entirely on brand with the fashion aesthetic of Brooklynites.

New-look Pistons

The Pistons are making a statement with a new design inspired by a fan’s voicemail to the organization.

35 years in the 305

The Miami Heat entered the NBA in 1988. Now, 35 years and three NBA titles later, the Heat are bringing back their original uniforms.

From San Diego to Houston

Marking 55 years since the team was founded, the Houston Rockets are bringing back their green, gold and white uniforms from their time as the San Diego Rockets.

Future legend Pat Riley was the franchise’s first-ever draft pick. The team played in Southern California until moving to Houston in 1971.

Sunbursts, stars and stripes

The Phoenix Suns dipped into the Charles Barkley era with the return of the purple sunburst uniforms.

Read more about them.

The Brooklyn Nets are also bringing back a classic look. One from across the state lines when they played in New Jersey.

Vintage-look Lakers

The Los Angeles Lakers are celebrating their 75th season by revisiting their Minneapolis roots. The MPLS uniforms were worn from 1948 to 1958 and used as throwbacks in the 2001-02 and 2017-18 seasons.

The powder blue will make its return this upcoming season.

Welcome back, Run TMC

Tim Hardaway, Mitch Richmond and Chris Mullin only played two seasons together on the Golden State Warriors, but their 1990-91 campaign as the highest-scoring trio in the league earned them the “Run TMC” nickname.

Now, the uniform from their era is set to return and even received a stamp of approval from Stephen Curry.

Statement made

San Antonio Spurs

San Antonio released its fifth uniform for the 2022-23 season with its Statement Edition combination.

The jersey features a new “SATX” wordmark and a Texas outline containing the Spurs’ logo is displayed on the shorts. Modern patterns inspired by traditional Mexican serapes and saddle blankets run down the sides of the uniform.

“Our new Statement Edition uniform embodies the evolution of our team’s roots while celebrating fans across the entire region,” said Becky Kimbro, VP of brand engagement for Spurs Sports & Entertainment. “Through the intricate serape pattern, we’re blending our 50-year legacy with our vibrant culture that we celebrate on and off the court.”

Revival of a classic

Detroit Pistons

The Pistons are bringing back the teal era in the 2022-23 season with their “Classic Edition” uniforms. Detroit wore a seemingly identical combination from 1996 to 2001.

The uniform’s primary color is teal, and a horse with a multicolored flame as a mane is prominently displayed on the jersey. Detroit announced the news with a video featuring several tweets from fans who called for the design’s return.

The clean design in Cleveland

The Cleveland Cavaliers might have an advantage in the uniform game. In 2020, the team hired artist Daniel Arsham as creative director. Arsham is a contemporary artist who works as a sculptor and designer. He helped redesign the team’s uniforms and lettering.

“It’s a very clean, reductive, modern design that pays homage to all of the players and fans that have been a part of our team’s remarkable journey in becoming who we are today,” Arsham told the team’s website.

They put on for their city

Washington Wizards

For the Wiz Kids, it’s all about the cherry blossoms. The Wizards unveiled their tribute to the iconic flowers of the nation’s capital back in March but won’t debut their pink alternate uniforms until the 2022-23 season.

The team’s MLB counterpart, the Washington Nationals, revealed a similar City Edition uniform set, as the franchises collaborated to create a unified alternative look across sports. The Nike collaboration marks the first uniform campaign between MLB and NBA teams from the same market.

Hopefully the cherry blossom look bodes better for the Wizards — as of Monday, the Nationals were in last place in the NL East (30-58).

Keeping it classic

San Antonio Spurs

The Spurs are going back to the beginning. In recent years, the Spurs’ City Edition jerseys had featured a camouflage pattern and, most recently, a white canvas with the iconic “fiesta stripe” on the sides based on the team’s popular warm-ups from the 1990s.

Now, in honor of San Antonio’s 50th season, the team is rolling out Classic Edition uniforms that pay homage to the team’s storied legacy. The look, made popular by Spurs legend George Gervin, features “San Antonio” across a black-on-black jersey chest.

“The Spurs Classic Edition uniform is a symbolic way for us to honor our legacy, players and loyalty to the city of San Antonio while giving our fans what they’ve been asking for — we hear you,” said Becky Kimbro, VP of brand engagement for Spurs Sports & Entertainment.

Old school meets new school

Utah Jazz

New uniforms but make it ’90s. The Jazz are switching things up while simultaneously throwing things back. Utah revealed its primary colors for next season will be black, yellow and white. But the team also announced three purple jerseys, two of which won’t be worn until 2023-24.

The Jazz enlisted the help of a video to tease its new purple mountain uniform set coming back for the 2022-23 season. Utah also teased a new purple mountain uniform for the following year, along with a classic jersey reminiscent of the original Jazz jersey design from when the team first moved to Utah from New Orleans.

If it seems like the Jazz are rolling out a lot of ensembles, it’s because they are.

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Charlotte Hornets, Los Angeles Lakers latest to reveal Statement Edition uniforms for 2022-23 seasonon September 16, 2022 at 10:33 pm Read More »

Tim Anderson eyes return to White Sox

DETROIT — Tim Anderson is taking ground balls, and he took batting practice with the White Sox Friday, hitting two balls over the wall at Comerica Park.

That seemed to be a good sign his strength will be there when he returns from hand surgery, but he was somewhat measured about sharing a target day he might have in mind for rejoining the team.

“I want to make sure I’m 100 percent when I do come back,” Anderson said Friday, talking with media for the first time since he tore the sagittal band on the middle finger of his left hand checking his swing on Aug. 7 in Texas. “Make sure I have all my strength, for sure.”

General manager Rick Hahn said Tuesday that Anderson could return next week. Elvis Andrus’ steady defense, veteran presence and .308/.351/.539 hitting line with six homers in 25 games in his absence has more than softened the blow of losing an All-Star and batting champ, and the biggest question seems to be how will Andrus adjust to second base if he’s moved to a position he hasn’t played during his career.

“He’s been playing pretty well,” Anderson said. “It ‘s been fun to watch. He just brings something different to the game, and he’s been competing.”

There’s no question, though, that Anderson, batting .301/.339/.395 with six homers in 79 games, will return at shortstop.

“Heck yes,” acting manager Miguel Cairo said. “I don’t think there’s any problem with that. He’s definitely our shortstop.”

As for whether Anderson would lead off — Andrus is excelling in that spot, too — Cairo said, “Right now, just one day at a time. Right now it’s Elvis. When he comes back, we’ll see what we can do.”

“Believe me, we need that bat and he comes back and he’s got that bat that we need, it’s big,” Cairo said.

Anderson will need a short rehab stint and with the regular season ending Oct. 5, might me back in time for 10 games or so.

“For the most part it’s just about how I feel really, that’s where we’re at,” he said. “The more I feel comfortable, the better chance for me to get back in there.”

Robert misses second straight start

Center fielder Luis Robert (sore left wrist) was held out of the lineup for a second straight game.

“He’s doing good,” Cairo said. “We just want to give him another day. Day-to-day. Just got to wait to see how he feels.”

Tony-no

As expected, manager Tony La Russa isn’t with the team in Detroit as he awaits medical clearance to return.

Cairo said he doesn’t need definitive word from the front office that he’s going to finish the season as manager or if La Russa will return.

“No. I’m just doing my job,” he said. “I’m the bench coach, because of medical reasons right now I’m the manager, interim manager. I just go day to day. We prepare. When he comes back, he’s going to be the manager and I’m going to do my duties. It doesn’t change anything.”

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Tim Anderson eyes return to White Sox Read More »

Former Cubs star Kris Bryant optimistic about recovery from foot injury

The encouraging news for former Cubs slugger Kris Bryant is that the platelet-rich plasma injection in his left foot three weeks ago allowed him to run Friday for the first time since being placed on the injured list Aug. 1.

“And it felt good, so we’re moving in that direction from here on out,” Bryant said Friday.

How soon Bryant, 30, will rejoin the Rockies is uncertain, adding another learning lesson to his mercurial career.

“[Former Cubs pitcher] John Lackey told me in 2019 that you’re not going to have a great year every year, you’re not going to be healthy every year, and that means you’ve played the game for a long time,” said Bryant, the 2015 National League Rookie of the Year and 2016 NL Most Valuable Player.

“I really took that to heart when we talked then. You realize that you’ve played the game for a while. Everything can’t be perfect every year. It sucks but it happens.”

Bryant, has played only 42 games in the first year of a seven-year, $182 million contract with the Rockies due to back stiffness and plantar fasciitis in his left foot.

There is no timetable for his return this season, but Bryant said the experiences during his 6 1/2 seasons with the Cubs have helped him navigate through his first year with the Rockies. If fully healed, he plans to train sooner than normal this winter in hopes of embarking on a fast start, as he did in spring training in 2015 with the Cubs.

“He’s got such a great track record,” said Rockies outfielder Connor Joe, who played with Bryant at the University of San Diego. “I know how frustrated he is and how much he wants to help this team and how much he wants to be on the field.”

Hoerner on hold

Shortstop Nico Hoerner was scheduled to meet with team doctors after undergoing an MRI Thursday to determine the extent of his right biceps tightness that has sidelined him since Monday. Christopher Morel, Hoerner’s primary replacement, made two exceptional plays Friday.

Rookie Heyden Wesneski will start Saturday in place of left shoulder Wade Miley, whose start has been pushed to Monday. X-rays on right fielder Seiya Suzuki’s left hand were negative, and he played the ninth as a defensive replacement. Catcher Willson Contreras (left ankle sprain) performed agility drills but will be sidelined for at least another week, Ross said. Pitcher Alec Mills underwent a lower-back discectomy Wednesday. Mills hasn’t pitched since July 2.

Another setback for Amaya

Miguel Amaya, the Cubs’ top catching prospect,is scheduled to travel to Chicago next week to be examined by a foot specialist, a source said. Amaya hurt his left ankle Sunday for Double-A Tennessee and likely won’t play in the Arizona Fall League.

Outfielder Brennen Davis, first baseman Matt Mervis and pitchers Bailey Horn, Zac Leigh, Riley Martin and Sheldon Reed and Mesa coach Eric Patterson will represent the Cubs for Mesa in the AFL.

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Former Cubs star Kris Bryant optimistic about recovery from foot injury Read More »