Boy, 17, critically wounded in Gresham shooting — fourth minor struck by gunfire in less than 6 hours on South Side

A 17-year-old boy was critically wounded in a shooting Sunday night in Gresham — the fourth minor wounded by gunfire in less than six hours on the South Side.

About 7:45 p.m., the boy was in the 8400 block of South Parnell Avenue when he was shot in the abdomen and leg, Chicago police said.

He was taken to Comer Children’s Hospital in critical condition, police said.

Another boy, 14, was wounded in a drive-by shooting around 7:10 p.m. in the 2500 block of West 70th Street, police said. He was hit in the side and buttocks and was taken to Comer in good condition.

A 14-year-old girl was wounded around 4:50 p.m. in a shooting at a home in Gresham, police said. She was shot in the face and taken to Comer in critical condition.

A man with a concealed carry license shot a 13-year-old boy who broke into his car in Bronzeville around 2:35 p.m. The boy was struck in the leg and taken to Comer in an unknown condition, police said.

The spate of violence came just two days after a Chicago Public Schools student was killed in a shooting Friday afternoon near Kenwood Academy High School in Hyde Park. Authorities identified the victim as 17-year-old Kanye Perkins, who lived in the neighborhood where he was slain, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

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Cubs not ruling out moving Nico Hoerner back to second base if they sign shortstop in offseason

Nico Hoerner was a National League Gold Glove finalist at second base in 2020, and he has played similar exceptional defense this season at shortstop.

But with the Cubs having the financial resources to acquire a top-notch free-agent shortstop this winter, the possibility of Hoerner returning to second base hasn’t publicly been ruled out.

Manager David Ross apologized for using the analogy of buying a new car when you don’t need to, but he elaborated on Hoerner’s athleticism and unselfishness.

”We’ve got a really good shortstop here,” Ross said Sunday. ”If something works out where they identify a middle infielder that is of value that they feel fits very well, everybody is on board with that, including myself and Nico.

”Those are good problems to have. We’ll let the front office kind of pick and choose on that.”

Among the top soon-to-be-free-agent shortstops the Cubs could pursue are Xander Bogaerts, Trea Turner, Dansby Swanson and Carlos Correa (if he opts out of his contract with the Twins).

But Hoerner seized the starting shortstop job from the start of spring training and entered play Sunday batting .287 with an 86.8% contact rate and was a plus-12 in defensive runs saved, according to Fangraphs.

The elimination of shifts starting next season will put a premium on range, and Hoerner has played exceptionally well when positioned on the right side of second base.

Madrigal raises winter stakes

After suffering his latest groin injury, second baseman Nick Madrigal declared this winter will represent ”the biggest offseason I’ve had the last couple of years.”

”I’m going to be doing some major changes,” Madrigal said, two days after suffering a mildly strained right groin while running to first base Friday. ”Obviously, my body is out of whack right now. All these injuries popping up. I’ve been talking to some people that are going to help.”

Madrigal spoke last week with Blaine Kinsley, the Cubs’ strength-and-conditioning coach, and he plans to make changes in several areas, including nutrition and strength. Madrigal was batting .283 in 27 games after returning from a strained left groin that sidelined him for nearly two months.

Madrigal, who is on the 10-day injured list, wants to return this season but said he won’t know whether he can until early next week.

”Anytime I’m out there with the guys, I feel like I’ve got things to prove and want to prove,” Madrigal said. ”But I know there’s another side about being smart.”

This and that

Right-hander Albert Alzolay, making his fourth rehab start for Triple-A Iowa, struck out four but allowed a home run in 2? innings in an 11-9 loss at Jacksonville. Alzolay has spent the entire season on the IL because of a strained right shoulder.

o Infielder Matt Mervis hit his 11th home run for Iowa and his 32nd of the season.

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Tony La Russa ‘uncertain’ about when he’ll return to White Sox

OAKLAND, Calif. — Tony La Russa walked through the visitors clubhouse in Oakland, shaking hands with players. It was the first time around them since he was abruptly told by doctors not to manage the White Sox in a game Aug. 30 against the Royals at Guaranteed Rate Field.

“I had [a heart] issue in spring training, so when they had some information they needed to address, and make it serious enough to where [they said] ‘get out of uniform, you can’t watch the game,’ ” La Russa said Sunday. “So I watched the game at home.”

Since then, the Sox have enjoyed their best stretch of the season, losing that night after bench coach Miguel Cairo took over managerial duties but winning nine of the next 11. La Russa, who reportedly had a pacemaker inserted for his heart, was cleared by doctors to attend Dave Stewart’s uniform retirement ceremony in Oakland and fly to Chicago with the team Sunday night, but not to resume managing.

“Health is nothing to mess with,” said La Russa, who turns 78 in October.

“They fixed it, now it’s a question of regaining strength. So don’t mess with health.

“I’ve had my issue fixed, I’m mending.”

If and when La Russa returns to managing “will depend on the experts,” he said.

“Reading the situation, they ask me how I feel because I do a little more and how do you respond to a little more affects it, so, I think it’s uncertain,” he said. “In the meantime the club will be fun to watch and stay in contention.”

La Russa said “don’t mess with health” but he often says “don’t mess with the baseball gods,” and if the Sox lose Sunday after winning four in a row, he said he wouldn’t go on the plane with the team after seeing them play in person and being in the clubhouse briefly.

La Russa seemed to be kidding but he is serious about trends and jinxes.

“Didn’t I just tell you if we lose I won’t be on the plane?” he said. “You think I’m kidding? I have a car rented, I’m going to drive back slowly.”

While fans have overwhelmingly pushed for the Sox to carry on with Cairo at the helm, La Russa wants to get back in uniform. But “it all depends,” he said.

“I’m here today, fly back with them and off [day] tomorrow. I don’t plan to be in uniform until they say it’s time to be in uniform,” he said. “I don’t know if they [doctors] want me at the park or not. The most important thing for me is you don’t want to be a distraction. I don’t want to be a distraction. That’s why it’s best to let it run its course, and in the meantime they’re concentrating on the game they’re playing.

“If I think I’m being a distraction upstairs like today watching them then I won’t watch them. It’s so simple, it’s ridiculous. It’s not complicated.”

La Russa has watched every game and says he calls Cairo at least twice a day and stays in contact with pitching coach Ethan Katz.

“They’re united, they pick each other up. But exciting games, those two comeback games [Wednesday in Seattle and Saturday in Oakland]. They key is they’re having the fun of contending, so it’s from here to the end now. It’s been fun to watch.”

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Athletics trounce White Sox, prevent 4-game sweep

OAKLAND, Calif. — Johnny Cueto gave up seven runs over 4 2/3 innings in an unusually poor outing, and the White Sox offense was quieted in a 10-3 trouncing from the Athletics Sunday. The result halted the Sox’ winning streak at four games and prevented a four-game series sweep against the American League’s worst team.

The A’s (51-90) had lost five straight and nine of 10.

The Sox head home feeling satisfied with a 5-2 road trip that began with a series win over the playoff-bound Mariners. The trip included two games of 20-plus hits, a comeback from four runs down against the Mariners and a five-run outburst in the ninth inning Friday that erased a 3-0 A’s lead.

“We’re going to keep doing what we’ve been doing, keep our heads up and play with a lot of energy,” Cueto said.

“It was outstanding, awesome to see the guys battling every day, coming back from being down,” said acting manager Miguel Cairo, who has guided the Sox to a 9-4 record in manager Tony La Russa’s absence. “We did everything the right right way.”

Not much went right Sunday, though, especially in a six-run A’s fifth. Vimael Machin doubled in two runs and Ramon Laureano got second life after third baseman Leury Garcia dropped a foul pop near the dugout and ended an 0-fo-18 skid with a two-run homer. Cuteo didn’t finish the inning, and alllowed eight hits and five earned runs.

Seth Brown dropped an RBI double in front of center fielder Adam Engel in the first after Engel broke late and a pop fly fell between shortstop Elvis Andrus, Garcia and left fielder AJ Pollock, plays Cairo attributed to what he called the toughest sun field in the majors.

In any event, it was the first time in 11 starts on the road Cueto failed to get a quality start, and his ERA climbed from 2.87 to 3.09.

“He was battling,” Cairo said. “A few pitches were flat and he had just one bad inning. That was the game.”

Eloy Jimenez had a double and single to account for two of the Sox’ four hits a day after the Sox had 20 hits and three days after they piled up 21. Jimenez is 13-for-25 with three homers, two doubles and nine RBI in his last six games.

Anderson seeing specialist Tuesday

Tim Anderson is seeing a hand specialist Tuesday, awaiting the go-ahead to begin catching and swinging a bat. Recovering from surgery on the middle finger of his left hand, Anderson has been limited to throwing and conditioning and hopes to be available for the last week or so of the season.

No Moncada, Robert, Harrison

Third baseman Yoan Moncada was given a day off and center fielder Luis Robert missed his fifth straight game with a sore left wrist and hand.

“[Moncada] played five [games] on the road after coming back from the hamstring injury,” Cairo said. “A precaution. Make sure he gets today and [Monday off day] so he’ll be there Tuesday.”

Jose Harrison was slated to play third base but was a late scratch due to flu-like symptoms and was replaced by Garcia.

Robert hit in the cages again but Engel started in center.

“For Tuesday, for sure, if everything goes well [Sunday], Tuesday [at home against Colorado] I think he’s going to be in the lineup,” Cairo said.

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Some Bears fans, South Loop business owners have mixed feelings about potential move to Arlington Heights

As the Bears faithful gathered ahead of the team’s rain-drenched opening win on Sunday, the specter of a potential move to Arlington Heights loomed like the storm clouds over Soldier Field.

The matchup with the San Francisco 49ers came just three days after a pivotal community meeting in the northwest suburb, where Bears Chairman George McCaskey vowed the team would “be good neighbors” while conceding the massive development would rely, in part, on taxpayer money.

Hundreds of those fans were at Reggies Chicago, 2105 S. State St., before. Reggies owner Robby Glick hopes the team stays put.

“I’m a Chicagoan, I’m a Bears fan,” said Glick, a season ticket holder. “I don’t want them to move. I want the team to be in the city. I would love to see the Bears stay at Soldier.

“But I say that selfishly. I want the business, and I don’t want to go all the way out to Arlington Heights.”

Reggies was packed by 9:40 a.m., with over 400 people circulating through the bar, a standard crowd for home games. Fans who clamored for cocktails and the bar’s $15 all-you-can-eat buffet were eventually offered free rides to and from the stadium aboard old school buses.

Bears fans get on a bus outside Reggies Chicago on Sunday for a free ride to Soldier Field.

Brian Rich/Sun-Times

Glick said he understands why the Bears want to leave, even if it would cut into his game-day business. Other fans made similar concessions, spouting off a laundry list of grievances.

They complained the stadium is one of the smallest in the league; there’s dome protecting fans from inclement weather; lines for restrooms and concessions are too long; there’s never enough parking; the train stops are too far away.

Kevin Conley stopped by Reggies with his brother before heading to Soldier Field. Weather aside, Conley was thrilled to head to the game, his first as a season-ticket holder.

But he’s also excited about the prospect of a possible new stadium with more seats, better amenities and easier access.

“I’m all in for it,” said Conley, who lives in the city. “It’s a pain to get to the stadium now, plus it’s old and small. It would be equally as time consuming getting here as it is to get out to the new stadium.”

Other fans weren’t so optimistic.

“I’m not too happy about it,” said Blake Neal, a South Loop resident. “It’s unfortunate if they end up moving. We live right here and just became season-ticket holders. And with Reggies, we’re able to hang at the bar then take the bus straight to the stadium.”

It might be closer for people in the suburbs, Neal said, but it won’t be as close for people on the South Side.

Bears fans watch Sunday’s game at Kroll’s South Loop.

Brian Rich/Sun-Times

Just a few blocks away at Kroll’s South Loop, 1736 S. Michigan Ave., Bears fans were also split.

Jeremy Balfe, a Hyde Park resident who stopped in to watch the game, said he’s all for a new home field.

“Chicago deserves a bigger, better stadium,” Balfe said. “It’s an outdated stadium for many reasons. There needs to be a dome for bad weather days like today.It’d be great if Soldier could be improved and they could stay here, but I just don’t think that’s feasible.”

As for Nicole Steinmetz, the bar’s owner, the move from Soldier Field would be devastating for her business. Kroll’s is reliably packed before and after Bears games, Steinmetz said, and the bar stays busy with people coming by to watch.

“Home games make a huge difference for us,” she said. “I understand why they are looking to leave, but it would be awful for local businesses here.”

Chicago Bears fans endured a heavy rainfall in the fourth quarter of the team’s 19-10 win over San Francisco on Sunday. Among some fans’ complaints about Soldier Field? No roof.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times

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Justin Fields does enough for Bears to beat 49ers 19-10, but it’ll take more to keep winning

Some games show exactly where a team stands and where it’s headed.

Others are simply a mess.

The Bears splashed and sloshed to a 19-10 season-opening win over the 49ers on the watery grass at Soldier Field. The game was as sloppy and gray as the weather, making it impossible to draw big-picture conclusions about quarterback Justin Fields, the reconfigured defense or the rebuilding Bears’ trajectory.

By the end, there was standing water all over the field and the yard lines were runny and warped. It looked more like a Van Gogh painting than an actual field as the Bears ran down the clock and turned the end zone into a Slip ‘n Slide.

“That was awesome,” Fields said. “That was a snapshot moment, for sure.”

It certainly was an epic celebration, but what the Bears celebrated was more of an escape than a triumph — especially for the offense. They survived the weather and outscored the 49ers 19-0 over the last quarter and a half to win.

They’ll always take it, but regularly replicating that will be tough.

They got their first touchdown on a broken play in which the 49ers’ secondary raced to stop Fields from running and left Dante Pettis open for 51 yards. Fields went left, stopped before the line of scrimmage and threw a pop-up back to Pettis all alone on the opposite side.

The next came on an 84-yard drive in which the 49ers gave them 20 yards and two first downs by committing third-down penalties. Fields wrapped the drive with a flawless lob to Equanimeous St. Brown on a beautifully designed play in the red zone for an 18-yard touchdown to go up 13-10.

The Bears closed it out when safety Eddie Jackson intercepted Trey Lance near midfield and brought it back to the 49ers’ 21-yard line. Five run plays later, Khalil Herbert was in the end zone for a 19-10 lead with seven minutes left.

Fields completed 8 of 17 passes for 121 yards with two touchdowns and an interception for an 85.7 passer rating, plus he ran 11 times for 28 yards.

Nobody could spin that into sounding like a great game, and he’ll need to play much better to have a chance against Aaron Rodgers at Lambeau Field next week. It was good enough Sunday, but typically it won’t be.

However, it’s reasonable to account for the circumstances that hampered Fields.

It was his debut in the new offense under coordinator Luke Getsy, and it might take time before everything clicks. His offensive line faltered across the board. And few quarterbacks play to their peak in a downpour.

“Some throws you have full control, and then some throws, [it’s] so wet that you don’t have as much grip,” he said. “It just differs every play.”

His first pass was a short one to running back David Montgomery, which got away fromandfluttered over Montgomery’s head toward two defenders.

Fields started the game barehanded, then switched to wearing gloves. Neither was ideal.

On a throw midway through the third quarter, he tried to hit St. Brown on the right sideline, but threw short and inside, allowing 49ers safety Tashaun Gipson to step in front of it. Gipson might’ve had a pick-six if he hadn’t dropped it.

Were those near-interceptions alarmingly inaccurate passes, or merely byproducts of the deluge? With Fields’ minimal track record, it’s difficult to discern.

“It was rough sledding in the first half,” coach Matt Eberflus said. “We were trying to find our way.”

One highly problematic play was his first-quarter interception over the middle. Fields needs to rise above imperfect circumstances rather than compound the offense’s deficiencies with errors.

He was looking for Darnell Mooney on third-and-seven and didn’t seem to see 49ers safety Talanoa Hufanga drifting toward the eventual path of his pass. He also admitted he bypassed open tight end Cole Kmet in the flats.

Fields caught a break on that interception when cornerback Jaylon Johnson ended the 49ers’ ensuing drive by punching a fumble out of the hands of 49ers receiver Deebo Samuel.

Several things went Fields’ way, and that’s how the Bears flipped the game in the second half. The takeaways were vital.But they won’t always be there, and a big part of what he needs to prove this season is that he can sustain drives.

The Bears didn’t get farther downfield than their own 35-yard line until shortly before halftime, and stalling that long against someone like Rodgers could bury them. They’ve seen it before.

The offense produced just 204 yards, less than it had in all but one game under Matt Nagy last season. Of the Bears’ six longest plays of the game, there was Pettis’ touchdown against blown coverage and two scrambles by Fields aided by 15-yard penalties. And the running game averaged 2.7 yards per carry.

This is only sufficient offensively if there’s a lot of help, and that’s not a sustainable formula. Fields was good enough, but what they really need is for him to be flat-out good.

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Two takeaways from Bears game vs. 49ers: That’ll work

Four plays into their opening drive of the 2022 season, the Bears’ defense already was defending the red zone — with the 49ers driving to the 16-yard line after Trey Lance’s 31-yard pass to wide-open receiver Brandon Aiyuk.

But on the fifth play, the Bears defense responded and lived up to its promise to back up all their hustle and intensity and playing smart under coach Matt Eberflus by executing the key element of Eberflus’ H.I.T.S. principle by taking the ball away.

On first-and-10, the 49ers went to a pet play — a handoff to elusive wide receiver Deebo Samuel, who gained four yards before Bears cornerback Jaylon Johnson “Peanut punched” the ball from Samuel, with rookie safety Jaquan Brisker recovering at the Bears’ 12-yard line.

Just like that, a mindset became a reality.

“I think getting the ball out confirms the H.I.T.S. principle,” linebacker Nick Morrow said following the Bears’ 19-10 victory over the 49ers on Sunday. “And I think [it] taught guys to really believe it — like ‘Here it is.’ Because [the 49ers] got out a little bit. They got to the edge a little bit. But guys were running to the ball, got the ball out and we recovered. That’s huge.”

The Bears’ defense was more efficient than spectacular against a 49ers offense with a new quarterback in Trey Lance and without injured All-Pro tight end George Kittle. But what the Bears did looks repeatable. They allowed 331 yards — higher than last year’s average of 316.7. They allowed 8-of-17 third-down conversions (47.1%) — higher than last year’s average of 38.4%. They allowed 176 rushing yards — higher than last year’s average of 125.

But they allowed only 10 points, well below last year’s average of 23.9. When the Bears allowed 331 yards last season — against the Seahawks and Vikings — they allowed 24 points.

They did it by being good when they had to be and making their turnovers count. After the Bears rallied to take a 13-10 lead with 12:45 left in the fourth quarter, Eddie Jackson muted the 49ers’ response by stepping in front of Samuel for an interception at the 49ers 47-yard line and returning it 26 yards to the 21. The fired-up Bears offense scored five plays later for a 19-10 lead. Mother Nature — on the Bears’ side, interestingly — did the rest.

That Jackson made the key play was not insignificant. After tough luck and subpar play the past two seasons, the pressure is on him to produce difference-making plays. And he did.

“It felt good,” said Jackson, whose last interception was in the 2019 season finale against the Vikings. “Honestly, I wish I would have scored. That one’s on me. I owe them something. But if felt good, especially coming in a situation like that.”

A lot went right for the Bears against the 49ers — from the 49ers committing ill-timed penalties to Kittle not playing to the weather. But they weren’t about to turn this one down.

“It’s just a good start. We’ve still got 16 games,” Johnson said. “Just a good start for sure. I thought there was a lot of doubt going into this game. To get this statement game was really good against a very, very good team and a good organization.”

But the Bears earned a right to crow a little.

“Nobody’s surprised in the locker room. Everyone outside is more surprised than we are,” Jackson said. “We know what we’ve got. I feel like we’re gonna shock a lot of people with the way we work –[nobody] works harder and the mindset we have as a team and what we’re building is something special.”

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Bears bites: Surprises on offense, trampling Trey Lance and Dominique Robinson shines

The Bears’ season-opening 19-10 win over the 49ers was a wild one and gave coach Matt Eberflus a rollicking start to his tenure.

Here are three points beyond the obvious from their 19-point rally at the end:

Surprise contributors

The Bears’ most productive offensive players were wide receiver Dante Pettis and running back Khalil Herbert. That was quite a departure from expectations that they’d be led by running back David Montgomery (26 yards on 17 carries), wide receiver Darnell Mooney (one catch for eight yards) and tight end Cole Kmet (one target, no catches).

Rookie rolls

The Bears drafted Dominique Robinson out of Miami-Ohio in the fifth round at No. 174 overall, but he’s far from an afterthought. Robinson dropped Trey Lance for a sack in the first quarter and teamed up with Roquan Smith for another in the third.

Lance’s laments

Lance, the No. 3 overall pick of the 2021 draft, kicked off his first season as the 49ers’ starter with an awful performance: 13 of 28, 164 yards, no touchdowns, one interception, a fumble and a 50.3 rating. Last season, Jimmy Garoppolo put up a 100.6 rating and rushed for two touchdowns to beat the Bears.

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Fittingly, Bears coach Matt Eberflus got his first win the hard way

After Sunday’s slippery, shocking 19-10 win against the 49ers, Matt Eberflus’ H.I.T.S. system stood for: He Isn’t Terribly Surprised.

He might be the only one. The Bears pulled the biggest upset of Week 1.

“I’m not surprised,” Eberflus said after his first regular season game as a head coach, at any level. “I thought the guys executed. I thought that they hung in there. That’s what you’ve got to do in the NFL. It’s never going to be perfect. It’s always going to be hard.”

That’s a handy reminder as the Bears embark on a rebuilding season. Sunday wasn’t pretty; their offense thrived on broken plays and defense took advantage of 49ers quarterback Trey Lance starting his third career game.

Eberflus’ debut, though, set the perfect tone for his coaching style. The Bears were sloppier than their playing surface in the first half, but, with rare exception, stuck to the discipline that their new coach preached with religious zeal all offseason long. That’s the way they have to win games this year–they’ll be outgunned most weeks.

The Bears won the turnover battle 2-1. Cornerback Jaylon Johnson punched the ball away from the 49ers at the Bears’ 12 on their first drive. In the fourth quarter, safety Eddie Jackson picked off a pass, allowing the Bears to pad their three-point lead.

In each of Matt Nagy’s last two seasons, the Bears finished top half of the league in most penalty yards against them. Sunday, the Bears had three penalties for 24 yards. The 49ers were flagged 12 times for 99. The Bears gained six first downs by rushing, four by passing — and five via penalty.

“You give yourself a chance,” Eberflus said. “We’ve said from the onset that we’re going to play smart, aggressive football. …

“If you go over the line, you see that, whether it’s hitting after the whistle, pushing, hitting quarterbacks out of bounds, all those types of things that beat you. You beat yourself that way, and we just don’t want to do that.”

The day he was introduced as head coach, Eberflus told his players to “get your track shoes on.” He’s harped on speed and endurance ever since. Sunday, the Bears outscored the 49ers 19-0 in the game’s final 21 minutes.

“Coach always says it’s mental and physical stamina,” quarterback Justin Fields said. “Who can play the longest the hardest? … I think we won this game with mental and physical stamina.”

The victory should reinforce the beliefs built his program around during the offseason — and the practices that Johnson considers the hardest he’s ever experienced.

“It just gives you more want-to to go out there and keep doing it,” Johnson said. “It’s hard to go through hard things and keep waking up having a positive mindset about doing hard things like that. For anybody, that’s a tough thing.

“I feel like it definitely gives us more confidence and more willingness to keep going out there and pushing ourselves mentally and physically, and to buy into what they’re telling us.”

The Bears have taken on the personality of their head coach.

“We just kept pushing as a team,” rookie left tackle Braxton Jones said. “It’s a 12-round fight. Not six rounds. Not eight rounds.”

The same could be said of what might still be a long season for the rebuilding Bears. Eberflus planned to enjoy his first win in typical subdued style — with family and with friends such as former Missouri mentor Gary Pinkel, who stood in the back of the room during his postgame news conference and embraced him afterward.

“I go with the people that love me,” Eberflus said, “and I love them.”

One thing Eberflus wasn’t going to do: the Slip ‘n Slide routine with his players in the north end zone after the final gun.

“There was no belly flop,” he said.

Now that would have been surprising.

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