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Swin Cash is still adding to her Hall of Fame resumeon September 7, 2022 at 1:28 pm

As the New Orleans Pelicans’ vice president of basketball operations, Swin Cash is one of the highest-ranking women in the NBA. Charles Rex Arbogast/AP Photo

PRESIDENT AND CEO John Doleva was making what has become a routine phone call for him after more than 20 years with the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

On the other end of the line was New Orleans Pelicans vice president of basketball operations Swin Cash.

Cash had cleared her schedule on March 28 to be available during the window that Doleva was supposed to call. But as time ticked away, Cash realized her youngest son, Syer, needed a diaper change. So Cash, who had been waiting years for this exact call, politely put Doleva on hold.

When the call resumed, Doleva told Cash to let Syer know that his mom is a member of the Basketball Hall of Fame class of 2022.

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“This literally sums up my life right now,” Cash told ESPN while recalling the moment. Cash, along with 12 other members will be enshrined in the Hall of Fame on Saturday evening in Springfield, Massachusetts.

Since her playing career ended, Cash — the two-time NCAA champion and All-American, three-time WNBA champion and four-time All-Star, and member of the WNBA’s 20th and 25th anniversary teams — has been wearing different hats.

As a mom to 1-year-old Syer and 5-year-old Saint, and the vice president of basketball operations for the Pelicans, Cash has juggled motherhood and breaking into the NBA executive world.

Throughout her career, Cash has set goals. She set out to achieve those goals as an All-American at McKeesport Area High School in her hometown of McKeesport, Pennsylvania, which is 15 miles southwest of Pittsburgh. She did so when she won national titles at UConn. And she did so during her 15-year WNBA career that also included a few championship rings.

Along the way, Cash became one of the highest-ranking women in the NBA. As she enters her fourth season in the Pelicans’ front office, her latest goal is to make sure that this is only the beginning.

BEFORE HER PROFESSIONAL playing career, Cash was a standout at UConn for coach Geno Auriemma. Cash said that Auriemma and her time with the Huskies prepared her for where she is today.

Auriemma, who was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2006, said when Cash stepped on campus, her level of competitiveness set her apart from her teammates.

“She tried to win every possession,” Auriemma told ESPN. “That was evident in high school. That was evident the very first day of our workouts when she got to Connecticut as a freshman. Of all the big kids that came in, no one competed harder or played with more energy than she did.”

Cash was a part of two national championship teams at UConn, in 2000 and 2002. Her 2002 team featured Sue Bird, Tamika Williams, Asjha Jones and Diana Taurasi. That squad went 39-0, with Cash earning Most Outstanding Player in the 2002 NCAA tournament. She capped off her college career with a 20-point, 13-rebound performance in the national title game.

Cash was the No. 2 pick in the 2002 WNBA draft — Bird went No. 1 overall, Jones was No. 4 and Williams No. 6 — and headed to the Detroit Shock.

She led Detroit to WNBA titles in 2003 and 2006 and won her third and final championship with Seattle — and Bird — in 2010. Cash played with Detroit, Seattle, Chicago and Atlanta before ending her career with the New York Liberty in 2016.

Cash (left) and Theresa Weatherspoon first crossed paths as WNBA players and now work together with the New Orleans Pelicans. Gerald Herbert/AP Photo

It was in New York that Cash began working closely with Teresa Weatherspoon, who is now an assistant coach with the Pelicans. The two had squared off toward the end of Weatherspoon’s WNBA career, which ended in 2004, but a bond began to form when Weatherspoon was working with the Liberty as the director of player development toward the end of Cash’s playing days.

In 2017, Cash was named the Liberty’s director of franchise development in a role that gave her a chance to work with both business and basketball operations.

“You knew that if she ever went into that executive position, she knew how to take a team to the next level,” Weatherspoon told ESPN. “Everyone has to fit into that culture. She understood that. And then to carry that over into the executive level, she’s doing a hell of a job.”

While Cash was beginning her front office role with the Liberty, she also worked for Turner Sports as an on-air analyst. It was there that she met David Griffin, who had left the Cleveland Cavaliers‘ front office in 2017 and was working with Turner as a broadcaster.

During their time at Turner, Griffin and Cash watched games together in the green room. Griffin liked how Cash viewed the game and her ideas of unifying family and team together.

“I told her, ‘If I ever get back into it, I’m going to call you,'” Griffin said. “And she thought I was kidding.”

Griffin was hired by the Pelicans as the executive vice president of basketball operations in April 2019. Less than two months later, Cash was officially on board.

“She’s got a really good eye for talent,” Griffin said. “I love the way she thought about the game. She’s a multiple-time champion on multiple levels. She understands what that level of sacrifice looks like. She’s good at realizing who is going to be willing to make that sacrifice.”

FOR MONTHS, WEATHERSPOON had been telling Cash, “That call is coming, that call is coming.” So when Cash finally got the call, she wanted to let Weatherspoon know in person.

She found Weatherspoon situated near a row of seats between two practice courts on one of the Pelicans’ off days.

Cash asked her longtime friend and coworker if she had any plans come September.

Weatherspoon — who was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2019 — didn’t hesitate.

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“I don’t want to be nowhere but there,” Weatherspoon said, still thinking her friend’s question was hypothetical.

After a split second, it clicked for Weatherspoon.

She leapt off the bench, threw a basketball across the gym and sprinted toward Cash, who was standing on the court. She wrapped her friend in a hug, a moment Weatherspoon called “true, genuine emotion.”

Weatherspoon continued to yell as she wrapped up Cash on the Pelicans’ fleur-de-lis logo that sits in the middle of the practice court floor.

“That was dope, I’m not even gonna lie,” Cash said.

Weatherspoon will be one of five Hall of Famers on stage with Cash when she is presented on Saturday, along with Auriemma, Isiah Thomas, Tamika Catchings and Tina Thompson. And as she watches her friend continue to grow in the latest stage of her basketball career, Weatherspoon knows “greater things are ahead.”

Cash is now setting her sights on making history as the first woman to lead an NBA front office.

“That would be the goal,” Cash says.

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Swin Cash is still adding to her Hall of Fame resumeon September 7, 2022 at 1:28 pm Read More »

Chicago-based sound artist Dorothy Carlos refreshes drone textures on Circuit Spectre

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Cellist and sound artist Dorothy Carlos moved to Chicago last year to begin an MFA in sound at the School of the Art Institute, but she’s got a foot planted on the east coast. She studied cello performance and anthropology at New York University, and she recorded all of the new Circuit Spectre (American Dreams) in Brooklyn. She collaborated with instrument builder Brian Oakes, aka Untitled Sound Systems, whose synthesizers look like visual art that could hang in a gallery on South Halsted. In Carlos’s hands, his synths can sound like a hummingbird’s heartbeat wired through a PA system (“A New”) or the comforting buzz of a didgeridoo amplified until it blocks out the whole horizon (“And Found”). She teases out resonant textures, prodding humming drones till they shriek (“I Started”) or making nuanced textural shifts that feel as rejuvenating as a hint of cool lakeside breeze on a hot July evening. Throughout Circuit Spectre, she sustains that subtle tug-of-war.

Dorothy Carlos’s Circuit Spectre is available through Bandcamp.

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Chicago-based sound artist Dorothy Carlos refreshes drone textures on Circuit SpectreLeor Galilon September 7, 2022 at 11:00 am

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

Cellist and sound artist Dorothy Carlos moved to Chicago last year to begin an MFA in sound at the School of the Art Institute, but she’s got a foot planted on the east coast. She studied cello performance and anthropology at New York University, and she recorded all of the new Circuit Spectre (American Dreams) in Brooklyn. She collaborated with instrument builder Brian Oakes, aka Untitled Sound Systems, whose synthesizers look like visual art that could hang in a gallery on South Halsted. In Carlos’s hands, his synths can sound like a hummingbird’s heartbeat wired through a PA system (“A New”) or the comforting buzz of a didgeridoo amplified until it blocks out the whole horizon (“And Found”). She teases out resonant textures, prodding humming drones till they shriek (“I Started”) or making nuanced textural shifts that feel as rejuvenating as a hint of cool lakeside breeze on a hot July evening. Throughout Circuit Spectre, she sustains that subtle tug-of-war.

Dorothy Carlos’s Circuit Spectre is available through Bandcamp.

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Chicago-based sound artist Dorothy Carlos refreshes drone textures on Circuit SpectreLeor Galilon September 7, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

The Chicago Bears can pile the pressure on Trey Lance in Week 1Ryan Heckmanon September 7, 2022 at 11:00 am

Sunday, the Chicago Bears kick off their season in a much-anticipated matchup between two first-round quarterbacks from a year ago.

Of course, Justin Fields enters his second season with Chicago and, by many accounts, has all odds against him. The lack of weapons and protection added this offseason by Ryan Poles is one of the main reasons he’s already being counted out in 2022.

Meanwhile, the San Francisco 49ers have officially ushered in the Trey Lance era. But, are the 49ers 100 percent sold on their young quarterback’s immediate future?

Don’t hold your breath.

The Chicago Bears defense could start the process of a quarterback conundrum in San Francisco.

After the 49ers decided to keep Jimmy Garoppolo around on a rich deal for an NFL backup, Pro Football Focus’ Doug Kyed stated that this has more to do with a “cautious optimism” surrounding Lance, more than anything else.

In fact, Kyed had this to say about the situation:

“One AFC scout isn’t buying the 49ers’ trust in Lance and believed San Francisco’s decision to retain Garoppolo rather than outright releasing him was a ‘bad sign’ for the North Dakota State product.”

Sure, the market wasn’t reportedly what the 49ers would have hoped for when attempting to trade Garoppolo. But, keeping him around rather than releasing him and “doing good” by Garoppolo does seem to be more of an indictment on Lance, the more you think about it.

If the 49ers were really that confident in Lance, and wanted to do what was best for Garoppolo as well, then they would have released the veteran. Kyle Shanahan and John Lynch have stated that this “is Trey’s time” now, but just how cemented is that notion when you have a 30-year-old backup on the roster that’s led his team to a Super Bowl recently?

Not to mention, Garoppolo is good enough to start elsewhere in this league.

With that said, the Bears are a team that’s already been counted out of this coming season. Nobody is giving them a shot to be competitive, nor to beat the 49ers on Sunday — outside of maybe just a handful of guys, namely NFL Network’s Adam Rank, whom Bears fans can always count on.

But, the point is, Chicago isn’t supposed to win this game. This is supposed to be an upper echelon type of team in San Francisco. However, if this defense is truly bought into what Matt Eberflus has preached, then times might get tough on Lance this coming Sunday.

And, if the Bears beat him up a little bit, then the whispers for Garoppolo will have already started on the outside. Surely, on the inside, they want it to be Lance. But, Chicago Bears fans know how the quarterback conundrums go, if any fans do.

The Bears were one of the top teams in all of football in terms of sacks last season, and return the man who set the franchise record in Robert Quinn. Their defensive line is full of guys who are more equipped to rush the passer than even last year’s line was, and starting the season at home could give them a little extra juice.

Look, Lance isn’t going to lose his job in one week. However, the Bears have a huge opportunity to pile on the pressure for what could be a big-time quarterback decision looming later on this season for Kyle Shanahan. Here’s to hoping this Bears defense can wreak a little havoc in Week 1.

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The Chicago Bears can pile the pressure on Trey Lance in Week 1Ryan Heckmanon September 7, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

Wrist injury forces White Sox’ Luis Robert to leave game early

White Sox outfielder Luis Robert insisted his left wrist felt ”100%” when he returned to the lineup Monday, but he exited in the fifth inning Tuesday. Adam Engel took over in center field.

Robert was hit by a pitch on the left wrist in the second. X-rays were negative, and he’s day-to-day with a bruise. Robert initially stayed in the game, striking out twice. His left hand came off the bat on his final swing, as it had while he was battling soreness in the joint two weeks ago in Baltimore.

”Of course, I want to contribute to what the team is doing here, and I know the way to contribute is being in the lineup,” Robert said before the game. ”That’s what we want to do, to make the playoffs.”

”[Robert] told me that he was fine,” acting manager Miguel Cairo said before the game. ”So I’m going to listen to what he says. We’re going to take it day by day. He says he wants to play, so I’m going to put him in to play. But I’m going to be smart, too. If he’s hurting or if he’s got something that he can take a day, we’re going to give him a day.”

Kopech likely to start today

The Sox likely will get a key piece of their rotation back for their series finale Wednesday against the Mariners. And now that right-hander Michael Kopech is ”rejuvenated” after a stint on the injured list with knee soreness, the hope is that he will be ready for the rest of the season.

Kopech’s return will come at a good time, with the Sox trailing the first-place Guardians by two games in the American League Central entering play Tuesday. Kopech said he expects to be reinstated from the IL and start Wednesday.

Kopech has been sidelined since he left his start Aug. 22 against the Royals in Kansas City with a strained left knee. He had been dealing with soreness in his right knee, too, but ”is feeling quite a bit better” and is ”ready to go.”

Kopech (4-9, 3.58 ERA) has pitched a career high 110? innings, so the break for his arm and body came at a good time. He said that the knee felt good a few days after the injury and that he has ”really cleaned up some things mechanically.”

Kopech pitched a simulated game Friday and a bullpen session Sunday, shaking off some rust. His pitch count will be watched as he builds back up toward deeper starts.

”I’d imagine it would be shortened,” he said. ”I’m going to go out there and give it what I’ve got [Wednesday], and they’ll come get me when they feel it’s ready.”

Moncada returns to lineup

Third baseman Yoan Moncada, who came off the IL on Monday after dealing with a strained hamstring, returned to the lineup and lined a single to center against right-hander Logan Gilbert in the first inning. Moncada has struggled, batting .197/.269/.313 with seven home runs in his first 80 games.

He started the season on the IL with a strained oblique and hasn’t found a rhythm.

”Those are things that you can’t control,” he said of the injuries. ”You prepare and you try to do your best and try to stay on the field as much as you can, but injuries are there. Now I’m feeling good. I’m just trying to stay healthy and help the team as much as I can in this final stretch.”

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Mariners shutout drops White Sox three games behind Guardians in AL Central

SEATTLE — Johnny Cueto did what he could.

It just wasn’t enough against Mariners right-hander Logan Gilbert, and the White Sox fell back to three games behind the Cleveland Guardians in the American League Central standings after a 3-0 loss Tuesday night.

Gilbert (12-5, 3.23 ERA) was a handful, striking out nine and walking one over six innings of five-hit ball as Seattle (77-59) evened the three-game series which concludes Wednesday afternoon.

Cueto was right there battling Gilbert, allowing one run over six-plus innings, his team-high 16th start of six or more innings. Cueto lowered his ERA to 2.87, allowing five hits, three walks and striking out three. It was a 1-0 game until Cal Raleigh’s two-run homer in the eighth against Reynaldo Lopez with two outs.

The Sox (68-68) were 1-for-7 with runners in scoring position and left nine runners on base.

The Mariners got their run in the fourth when Ty France led off with a double, took third on Mitch Haniger’s fly ball and was awarded home when right fielder Gavin Sheets’ throw to third got past third baseman Yoan Moncada and went beyong Cueto’s reach backing up and out of play off a TV camera.

Moncada tried to make a swipe tag but probably had no play and haphazardly let the ball get by him.

Matt Brash, Andres Munoz and Paul Sewald finished up with scoreless relief as the Mariners (77-59) won after having a seven-game winning streak snapped Monday. The Sox lost for the second time in seven games.

Luis Robert was struck by a pitch from Gilbert on his left hand during his first at-bat and left the game after his second at-bat. X-rays were negative, Robert has a bruise, and he’s day-to-day.

Robert has been dealing with a sore left wrist which, along with a brief paternity leave, kept him out of the lineup for two weeks. When he took his left hand off the bat on a swing, it appeared he might be dealing with the same issue, but the hit by pitch only complicated things.

He was replaced by Adam Engel, who led off the seventh against Brash with a single but was promptly thrown out stealing for the first out.

Moncada had two singles in his first two at-bats after coming off the injured list.

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Cubs place Contreras on IL with sprained ankleon September 7, 2022 at 3:59 am

CHICAGO — The Chicago Cubs on Tuesday placed All-Star catcher Willson Contreras on the 10-day injured list because of a left ankle sprain.

The team also activated left-hander Wade Miley from the 60-day IL ahead of his start Tuesday night against the Cincinnati Reds.

Contreras, 30, has been dealing with the issue since rolling the ankle while running the bases in the Field of Dreams game against the Reds last month. He has a career-high 128 OPS+ in 107 games this season, his last before becoming a free agent.

Miley, 35, has been on the injured list since mid-June because of left shoulder issues that have limited him to only four starts this season. He was claimed off waivers from Cincinnati last offseason after spending 2020 and ’21 with the Reds. He has a 2.84 ERA in 19 innings pitched this year.

The Cubs on Tuesday also activated outfielder Michael Hermosillo from the injured list and designated pitchers Luke Farrell and Nicholas Padilla for assignment.

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Cubs place Contreras on IL with sprained ankleon September 7, 2022 at 3:59 am Read More »

Michael Kopech ready to return to White Sox’ rotation

SEATTLE — The White Sox likely will get a key piece of their starting rotation back for their series finale Wednesday against the Mariners. And now that right-hander Michael Kopech is ”rejuvenated” after a stint on the injured list with knee soreness, the hope is that he will be ready for the rest of the season.

Kopech’s return will come at a good time, with the Sox trailing the first-place Guardians by two games in the American League Central entering play Tuesday. Kopech said he expects to be reinstated from the IL and start Wednesday.

Kopech has been sidelined since he left his start Aug. 22 against the Royals in Kansas City with a strained left knee. He had been dealing with soreness in his right knee, too, but ”is feeling quite a bit better” and is ”ready to go.”

”Giving myself a chance to get rested and recovered,” Kopech said Tuesday. ”Hopefully I can come in this last month or so with a rejuvenated body and mind.”

Kopech (4-9, 3.58 ERA) has pitched a career high 110? innings, so the break for his arm and body came at a good time. He said that the knee felt good a few days after the injury and that he has ”really cleaned up some things mechanically.”

Kopech pitched a simulated game Friday and a bullpen session Sunday, shaking off some rust. His pitch count will be watched as he builds back up toward deeper starts.

”I’d imagine it would be shortened,” he said. ”I’m going to go out there and give it what I’ve got [Wednesday], and they’ll probably come get me when they feel it’s ready.”

Moncada returns to lineup

Third baseman Yoan Moncada, who came off the IL on Monday after dealing with a strained hamstring, returned to the lineup batting second and lined a single to center against right-hander Logan Gilbert in the first inning. Moncada has struggled, batting .197/.269/.313 with a .581 OPS and seven home runs in his first 80 games.

He started the season on the IL with a strained oblique and never has found a rhythm.

”Those are things that you can’t control,” he said of the injuries. ”You prepare and you try to do your best and try to stay on the field as much as you can, but injuries are there. Now I’m feeling good. I’m just trying to stay healthy and help the team as much as I can in this final stretch.”

Robert update

Outfielder Luis Robert insisted his wrist felt ”100%” when he returned to the lineup Monday, but acting manager Miguel Cairo exercised some caution, keeping him in the seventh spot for a second consecutive day.

”He told me that he was fine, so I’m going to listen to what he says,” Cairo said. ”We’re going to take it day by day. He says he wants to play, so I’m going to put him in to play. But I’m going to be smart, too. If he’s hurting or if he’s got something that he can take a day, we’re going to give him a day.”

It didn’t help that Robert was hit by a pitch on the left wrist in the second inning. Robert was checked by trainer James Kruk and stayed in the game.

”Of course, I want to contribute to what the team is doing here, and I know the way to contribute is being in the lineup,” Robert said. ”That’s what we want to do, to make the playoffs.”

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White Sox winning — and having more fun — in first week of September

SEATTLE — When he was managing, Tony La Russa said it over and over again: August and September are where the real fun is.

September is here, but La Russa isn’t because of health issues. Are the White Sox having fun yet?

They finally are, although they know the good times can be fleeting, as they’ve proved time and again during a sloppy, offensively challenged season that saw them take a 68-67 record into their game Tuesday against the Mariners.

The Sox had won five of their last six games and five of seven since bench coach Miguel Cairo assumed acting-manager duties after La Russa left the team last week to undergo medical tests. They say they are having more fun, and whether it’s simply because they’re winning or because of a change of leadership is impossible to know.

We do know this: Sox fans who booed La Russa and called for his firing from the home seats this season weren’t having a good time. Same for those guys holding the SELL THE TEAM sign at Guaranteed Rate Field.

The coaches, broadcasters and blue- and white-collar workers at 35th and Shields all have had more enjoyable seasons. As one team source told the Sun-Times recently, everyone from the players to the coaching staff to the front office felt ”drained” by the climate surrounding a team that had World Series aspirations in spring training, as well as its record.

In the last seven days, however, things have turned for the better, and everyone is asking about a different vibe around the clubhouse.

”We’re having fun,” said veteran shortstop Elvis Andrus, who was acquired Aug. 19. ”The first week that I was here, it was a lot of tense, a lot of guys trying to make things happen. Lately, we’ve been able to just let our talent go out there and compete.”

To say the absence of La Russa, 77, has allowed for that doesn’t seem to correlate. Players have spoken affectionately of him during his absence, complete with ”Win for Tony” talk.

They also talked among themselves, sorted some things out and challenged each other in a players-only meeting Thursday.

”There’s some strong leadership presence in this locker room,” pitcher Michael Kopech said, citing pitchers Lance Lynn and Johnny Cueto, outfielder AJ Pollock and infielder Josh Harrison, among others.

With La Russa not present, Kopech said: ”It made us want to work for him, but we also realized it’s our clubhouse now, and we have to do what’s necessary to get the work done. And we’ve done a good job of that.”

”The energy has been good,” Pollock said. ”Baseball is day-to-day, though. You don’t want to start analyzing four or five games. But it’s been good. If you can do it for a game or two, you keep at it. The good teams get after it every single day, so that’s the goal.”

For most of the season, almost every day has been fraught with some or all of the following: a lack of power, bad baserunning, poor defense, injuries and moments of poor effort. None of it looks good on the players, manager or coaches.

Despite all of it, the Sox had gone from six games out of first place in the American League Central on Aug. 30 to two games out Tuesday. They have four games left against the first-place Guardians, including three at home Sept. 20-22, and nine left against the second-place Twins, including six of their last nine.

And they might make the final push with La Russa back in charge, although the Sox remain mum about the possibility of him returning or when that might happen.

After the series against the Mariners, the Sox have a four-game series against the Athletics in Oakland. Dave Stewart, who pitched for La Russa during their heyday with the A’s and partnered with him and Dave Dombrowski in an effort to bring a major-league team to Nashville, Tennessee, will have his number retired.

La Russa will want to be there, so stay tuned. And keep your eyes on these Sox.

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Former Bears QB revealed to be a Pittsburgh Steelers captain

Mitch Trubisky is a likely starter in Week One for the Pittsburgh Steelers

The Pittsburgh Steelers were keeping the status of their Week One starting quarterback a secret. Reports came out this week that the starter will be former Chicago Bears quarterback Mitch Trubisky. Trubisky recently received a significant honor from his teammates.

Trubisky was the Bears’ quarterback from 2017-2020 after the team traded up to draft him as the second overall pick of the 2017 NFL Draft. He struggled in John Fox’s and Matt Nagy’s systems before he spent 2021 as Josh Allen’s backup with the Buffalo Bills.

Trubisky signed a two-year deal with the Steelers this offseason. Not long after Trubisky was signed, the Steelers took quarterback Kenny Pickett in the first round of the 2022 draft. The two were competing for the starting job in the preseason. Trubisky beat the rookie out for now. We’ll see how long as Steelers fans were already impatient with Trubisky at the start of training camp.

However, it appears Trubisky has won over the support of his teammates. According to Brooke Pryor of ESPN, Trubisky was named a team captain for the Steelers. Trubisky was honored to be named a captain:

“It’s a tremendous honor,” Trubisky said of being named a captain. “Anytime you’re voted by your peers and your teammates, it obviously means a lot. I just come in here, try to lead by example, earn the trust of my teammates, and for them to vote me captain, it definitely means a lot.”

Trubisky could have a good season with the Pittsburgh Steelers

The Pittsburgh Steelers offense has a chance to be highly successful with Trubisky as the starter. The team has the talented wide receiver Diontae Johnson and a potential young star in rookie George Pickens. Pickens had an amazing preseason. If Trubisky can master the offense this season, we might not see Pickett for a while. Pickett was overrated coming out of college.

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