Videos

Strong and steadyIsa Giallorenzoon September 3, 2022 at 11:00 am

Modernity and tradition. Relaxation and tension. Chaos and order. Yin and yang—roughly speaking. These are complementary universal forces that can easily lose balance and therefore create trouble. But not at Hyun’s Hapkido and Tae Kwon Do School, a Bucktown martial arts storefront rooted in the same location for over 50 years; an unexpected harmony permeates the air in the school’s children-filled, sun-drenched, and action-packed quarters. That is thanks to Hyun’s owner and founder Grandmaster Kwang Seek Hyun, 77, who manages his business and its culture with a firm yet gentle hand. Anyone who needs some respite from a world saturated with screens and populated by people with bad manners will benefit from the old-school approach promoted by Grandmaster Hyun and his disciples. “In class, I always say that in order for you to become a martial artist, you must first have humility, righteousness, etiquette, wisdom, and sincerity. You need these five qualities to become the perfect martial artist or self-defender,” says Grandmaster Hyun, who values the mental aspects of his training as much as the physical ones. “Without confidence and alertness, there’s no self-defense,” he says. 

That confidence is practiced early on, as soon as Hyun addresses his prospective young students. When Hyun asks a question, he encourages kids to look straight into his eyes, speak loud and clear, and add a “sir” right after their answer. That is his first lesson right there, and it sets the tone for an environment where elders and instructors are thoroughly respected. There’s no place for improper behavior at Hyun’s school; kids who don’t follow the rules are simply not allowed in the classroom. 

Grandmaster Hyun was photographed in this pose for the Reader 40 years ago. Credit: Isa Giallorenzo

Respecting and loving oneself is also highly encouraged: it is actually Hyun’s first rule. “If you can’t love yourself, you can’t follow any of the other rules,” he says. With that kind of assertive posture, it is much easier to command respect and keep the bullies away. Hyun also teaches his students to stay alert and avoid trouble whenever possible: “Once you have confidence, you can see clearly they cannot hurt you, so you can walk away very easily and not feel bad about it. On the other hand, people who are not confident enough want to fight back. For example, if a five-year-old boy bothers you, you simply move away. But if someone your age bothers you, you want to fight back because your confidence level dropped,” Hyun explains. 

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.

Calm confidence is exactly what Hyun conveys, but that might come naturally for someone who is a tenth-degree black belt in hapkido. According to Hyun, he’s the only one in the world to have achieved that degree. 

Hapkido loosely translates to “the art of coordinated power,” and is a Korean martial art specifically designed for self-defense. Hence Hyun’s school’s motto (as seen on a well-loved sign that hung for years outside the school’s Western Avenue location): “martial art . . . not sport.” In hapkido, a fighter will do whatever he can to subdue his opponent—nothing is out of bounds. Hyun informs me that hapkido “seeks not to overpower an attacker with strength, but with techniques that turn an attacker’s force back on himself.” It includes elements from other martial arts such as kicks and punches from karate, joint-locking techniques like aikido, and throws like the ones used in jiujitsu and judo, making the original mixed martial art. 

Hyun’s Hapkido, Tae Kwon Do, and Self-Defense SchoolNorth side location: 2743 N. Western, 773-252-8300South side location: 3722 W. 79th St., 773-284-1300hyunshapkido.com

“It focuses on the psychology of the street fighter, making it a practical martial art for city dwellers,” Hyun advertises in his brochure. It is also great for self-defense for women, and for police and correction officers, of whom Hyun has trained plenty. 

Hyun at his office door, decorated with a 1980 photo of him mid-fight. Credit: Isa Giallorenzo

Hyun still teaches hapkido to the teens and adults who attend his school (along with other instructors), but children go to a different area to learn Tae Kwon Do with 46-year-old Kenneth Jeffries. Hyun likes to keep the two groups fairly separate to give the adults some rest. Tae Kwon Do means “the art of foot and hand techniques,” and lends itself to a safer practice for the little ones. A no-nonsense kind of person, Jeffries keeps his students in line and busy throughout the class. According to him, besides kicking, blocking, and punching, students also learn respect, courtesy, and self-control.  

Grandmaster Hyun himself started studying hapkido early on, back in Korea when he was 13 years old. At 13, he also met his wife Joanne Hyun, now 77. The Hyuns have two children, one of whom is a law professor. He later went on to study music at the Seoul National University and served in the Republic of Korea Air Force as a self-defense instructor before coming to the States in 1969. 

Hyun was invited here to teach martial arts at Carroll University in Wisconsin, but soon found his way to Chicago: “I’d been working [at Carroll] for about a year, but I really wanted to train the police department in Cook County. So I got a good recommendation letter from the dean, but during my interview with the police department, they said they didn’t have a budget for me. I told them I’d teach for free for a year, and I did. Once they had a budget they hired me, and I trained the Cook County Sheriff’s Police Academy Department for about 15 years. I always say that criminals never get old, but police officers do. So they’d better be in good shape,” Hyun prescribes. 

Hyun proudly shows off his hapkido tenth-degree black belt certificate. Credit: Isa Giallorenzo

In 1971 Hyun opened his first school, in the same location he’s still at. His walls are covered with memorabilia from various honors he’s received from so many years of service. His promotional materials include multiple newspaper and magazine articles he’s been featured in, including two from the Reader in the early 80s. In one of them, reporter Michael Kiefer perfectly defines the object of martial arts: “[It] is not breaking bricks and is not intimidating others. The object is self-confidence and self-control, physical conditioning, and relaxation. The object is to be alert, to be ready without being paranoid, to learn how to take the crap the world has to offer without striking out before you have to.” Or, as Grandmaster Hyun wisely put it: “I avoid dog poop not because I’m afraid of it, but because it stinks.” 

Read More

Strong and steadyIsa Giallorenzoon September 3, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

Bears 2022 preview: Will the arrow be pointing up in January?

Where will Justin Fields rank among the NFL’s QBs this year?

Middle of the pack — 16th in passer rating. Even without a stellar wide receiver corps, Fields will make good use of his tight ends and running backs — and his own legs — in Luke Getsy’s offense. He’ll have more high moments like the second half of the Steelers game in 2021 and fewer low moments like the nine-sack disaster against the Browns — but a lot in between. Overall, he’ll make enough progress to keep hope alive that reinforcements in 2023 will lead to a giant leap.

Did Ryan Poles do enough this offseason?

Yes, considering the limited resources he had. His biggest job was cleaning house and he did that well — just 19 of the 77 players he inherited from Ryan Pace are currently on the 53-man roster. You can argue he should have gone offense in the draft, but cornerback Kyler Gordon and safety Jaquan Brisker already look ready to make an impact. Then again, if Mitch Trubisky turns George Pickens into a superstar, it won’t reflect well on Poles.

The most glaring need the Bears have is …

A wide receiver who can take the pressure off Darnell Mooney. The Bears will diversify their passing offense with Cole Kmet, David Montgomery and others, but they need another dependable downfield target for Justin Fields. With modest candidates, the pressure is on Luke Getsy’s offense to create the opportunity for someone to fill that void.

A rookie who will make the biggest impact is ….

Safety Jaquan Brisker. He looked the part on paper as a good fit for Matt Eberflus’ defense, and didn’t disappoint in training camp or his lone preseason game. He figures to get a lot of opportunities to make plays in this defense.

The team MVP will be ….

Roquan Smith. The defense will be the Bears’ anchor, especially early and Smith is an elite player who should blossom in the 4-3 scheme under Eberflus and Alan Williams. The 3-technique and slot corner are particularly valuable in this defense, so keep an eye on Justin Jones and Gordon as well.

How will Roquan Smith fare in a prove-it year?

Every factor points toward him reaching another level in this defense. He’s in his prime at 25. He’s coming off a second consecutive All-Pro season. He’s in a position in Eberflus’ defense where Shaquille Leonard blossomed into an All-Pro and Defensive Rookie of the Year in his first season in 2018. And of course, he’s motivated.

What will the Bears’ record be in Matt Eberflus’ debut season?

6-11, with the arrow pointing up heading into 2023. After a promising preseason of progress, reality figures to hit the Bears in the regular season. But with a playable schedule and an offensive scheme that gives Fields room to grow, the Bears are more likely to be a surprise team this year than a disappointing one.

Read More

Bears 2022 preview: Will the arrow be pointing up in January? Read More »

Bet on it: Brian Urlacher is still playing ‘D’ for Bears

LAS VEGAS — Brian Urlacher allowed barely a fraction of a second between the end of an inquiry and the start of his response late last Saturday afternoon in a Circa ballroom gathering of about 200.

“I have no issues betting against the Bears,” he said, eliciting one of the event’s largest eruptions of cheers and claps. “No. If I see a line I like, I’ll fire.”

The gambling crowd appreciated Urlacher’s candor.

He revealed that, as a player, he never knew the meaning of “those pluses and minuses” — the point spread that designates a game’s favored team and underdog. A wife would open that world to him after he retired.

“What’s ‘plus-four’? I mean, I had no idea,” he said. ”Obviously, now I understand it. Now I have no issue; if I like a game, I’ll bet it.”

He neither knew nor cared that the Colts were favored by seven against the Bears in Super Bowl XLI, which Indianapolis won and covered 29-17. Quarterback Peyton Manning surgically dismantled the Bears.

“They knew what we were doing [on defense] on every single play,” said Urlacher, 44. “It was hard to trick ’em. They would check, we would check, they would check back to something different.

“It was very frustrating with that play clock. They’d get you to check, knowing exactly how much time it took them to get back to the proper play to beat your man defense or zone, whatever it was.”

Invariably, a funny thing happens whenever the Hall of Fame linebacker does risk money on the Bears.

“They find ways to screw me, somehow,” he said. ”I try to stay away from their games. But if I like the line, I will bet against them.”

WE’RE NOT THAT BAD

Perched on tall stools, former NFL quarterback Shaun King, Circa Sports oddsmaker Chris Bennett and veteran betting scribe Adam Chernoff joined Urlacher under the spotlights.

At a lectern, Circa executive Mike Palm moderated the two-hour Circa football preview. The NFL and betting dominated, and Palm selected online questions from all over North America.

Most impressive, Circa owner Derek Stevens, who owns two other downtown properties, several times shuttled questions on index cards, from guests seated at round tables or standing rows deep on the periphery, to Palm.

For his hustle, Stevens, a Michigan native, suffered a jab or two from his star panelist about his beloved Lions.

Informed that the Bears had the longest odds to win the NFC North, Urlacher bristled. The Bears are +1850 (bet $100 to win $1,850) to win the division, looking up at the Lions (+1000), Vikings (+245) and Packers (-180).

Also at Circa Sports, the Texans are the longest shot (650-to-1) to win Super Bowl LVII, followed by the Falcons (400-1) and, at 300-1, the Bears.

“I don’t think we’re the third-worst team,” Urlacher said. “Dang. Behind Detroit, too [in the division]. Right? Dang, we’re not that bad.”

The crowd laughed.

“Minnesota, they’re usually pretty good,” he said. ”Obviously, Green Bay. But I think we should be able to beat out Detroit.”

He glanced at Stevens:

“Derek, sorry.”

More laughs. Stevens grinned.

Chernoff doubled down, calling the Bears the worst team in football.

“Worse than Jacksonville?” Urlacher said.

Chernoff said the Jaguars are trending up and called the Bears’ play-calling under former coach Matt Nagy “troublesome.”

Said Urlacher, “He went to the playoffs two out of four years.”

Chernoff countered that the conservative, defensive-minded approach of new coach Matt Eberflus is “not what you want in 2022.” He saw preseason issues with offensive coordinator Luke Getsy.

“Many signs don’t point in a good direction for putting [Justin] Fields through another scheme change,” Chernoff said. “So I have concerns about [the Bears], for sure.”

Bennett noted that the betting public “absolutely hates the Bears,” citing those aforementioned huge odds.

King tried to mitigate the onslaught, telling Urlacher that the Bears should have the most salary-cap space “after this terrible, atrocious season.”

Urlacher wasn’t buying.

“It isn’t a big draw, playing in that cold weather,” he said. ”People love coming there.”

The crowd caught his sarcasm and laughed.

“Free agents. Yeah. Great,” he said.

INDOOR BEARS?

Some of the questions Urlacher fielded weren’t gambling-related.

Asked about all that ails the once-proud franchise that has one winning season in the last nine years and a single playoff victory in the last 15 seasons, he sighed.

Since Lovie Smith, for whom he relished playing, the franchise is on its fourth coach in Eberflus. That’s no recipe for stability, Urlacher said.

Neither is frittering away first-round picks. After six seasons, the Bears released cornerback Kyle Fuller in March 2021. Three days later, he signed with the Broncos. This year, he’s in Baltimore. Quarterback Mitch Trubisky will start in Pittsburgh.

“It really frustrates me when we get rid of guys in whom we invested time and draft picks, and we do that quite often.”

Roquan Smith, the stellar linebacker out of Georgia selected in the first round in 2018, sat out much of this preseason before electing to suit up for a final contract year.

Urlacher touted him as the team’s best defender, maybe it’s best overall player, and recommended forking over a fat extension: “He’s earned it.”

He sounded as if it would be sacrilege for the Bears to ever consider playing indoors, saying, “That would hurt my feelings.”

A dome, however, might be inevitable as the franchise explores options — which could include playing host to a future Super Bowl indoors — in Arlington Heights.

Soldier Field makes no sense to the team’s bottom line, Urlacher said, because the city reaps all the parking, concession and suite revenues. “And downtown Chicago is not as safe . . . that might play into it.”

PERPLEXING SPREADS

Do former NFL players have an advantage, in retirement, betting on the games? Maybe, said King, who cited certain specifics such as identifying a live underdog.

“I wish,” Urlacher said. “I’d be a better bettor. I’ll have a good couple of [wagering] weekends, I think, every year. But it’s so hard.”

He glanced to his left at Bennett.

“I don’t know how y’all get those lines so close,” he said. ”It drives me crazy when I bet, and I know I’m on the wrong side of it before they even start the game. But it’s fun for me.

“Not a lot of [ex-players] I know bet — maybe 10 or 15% — for fun like I do. I’m definitely not a pro at it. But I enjoy watching games in which I have money on the line.”

King believes most players “wouldn’t know what a ‘middle’ is.” If I have Team A +5 at one shop and Team B -3 at another, and B wins by four, I’ve successfully middled that game.

It might seem Urlacher would know about such tactics because brother Casey was involved in gambling shenanigans that would ultimately see him win a pardon from former President Donald Trump.

The two Urlachers, apparently, never discussed sports betting.

Asked to pick a team they expect to perform above expectations, Urlacher took the Raiders. King (who played at Tulane) selected the Saints. One that will under-perform? Urlacher tapped the Titans; King said the Bucs.

Both are playing Circa Survivor, with a $6 million prize pool. For $1,000, participants pick a team a week to win outright. That squad can’t be used again. The three Thanksgiving and Christmas games are weeks unto themselves.

One loss, adios.

Urlacher said he became intrigued with sports wagering a couple of years after he retired, around 2015, via wife Jennipher Frost, a former “America’s Next Top Model” contestant.

After the event, he inked a few autographs, posed for a photograph or two. My interruption didn’t seem to bother him.

Does Jenn have a keen feel for the point spreads?

“I don’t think anyone understands the lines,” Urlacher said. “She dabbled in there, and I just started watching that stuff. It’s fun.”

They live in the Phoenix area, and Arizona legalized sports betting in September 2021.

“Oh, super-happy,” he said of that legislation. “Yeah, it’s neat. She started showing me how. That was it.”

Finally, does betting present a unique challenge to someone who so mastered the game?

“No, I just . . . it’s fun for me,” he said. ”I’m not trying to get rich off Vegas. It’s just nice to have something on a game you’re watching with no desired outcome, to have a little bit riding on a game. That’s all.”

Read More

Bet on it: Brian Urlacher is still playing ‘D’ for Bears Read More »

Kyle Davidson cherishes quiet moments in life as Blackhawks general manager

When he’s not doing the frantic, non-stop job of running one of the NHL’s most prominent franchises, Kyle Davidson’s favorite activity is sitting on a boat and fishing in one of the many lakes surrounding his hometown of Sudbury, Ontario.

It’s quite a contrast.

“I do love the big city, and I love traveling to [other cities] during the season with the team,” Davidson said. “But it’s always a great refresher just to get up to Northern Ontario, enjoy the great outdoors, do some fishing, do some hiking, just be by the lake and enjoy some quiet time.”

Since his promotion to Blackhawks interim general manager 10 months ago and to permanent general manager six months ago — two life-changing moments for the 34-year-old Canadian –carving out that time for relaxation and reflection has become especially vital for his well-being.

Doing so has always been important, though. Stress and anxiety aren’t healthy for anyone, but they’re especially problematic for Davidson.

That’s because he was born with a congenital heart defect known as Tetralogy of Fallot (TOF), which –in spite of three open-heart surgeries –will always be part of who he is.

“It’s something that’s always there in the back of my mind,” he said. “To make sure I’m living right, eating right, getting good sleep and trying not to run too hot with the stress levels, which is sometimes a little tough in this position.”

Two of those open-heart surgeries came as an infant, and growing up in Sudbury — a town of 170,000 located about four hours north of Toronto –he was slightly restricted in terms of cardiovascular capacity but nonetheless able to play all the sports he wanted.

His TOF remained a relative afterthought as he moved to Chicago in 2010, right out of college, for an unexpected Hawks internship –it was a “pretty big culture shock,” he admitted –and as he used his versatility, innovativeness and salary-cap expertise to steadily climb the Hawks’ front-office ladder.

But right as Davidson returned from the Hawks’ 2019-20 season-opening trip to Prague, he received startling news from his Northwestern doctors: His pulmonic valve needed to be replaced.

“Honestly, I didn’t really have that much time to think about it,” he said. “It was, ‘OK, you need to get this done. Do you want to do it now, or do you want to wait a little bit?’ And by ‘wait,’ I mean like a couple weeks or a month, not years. I said, ‘Let’s get in, get it done and let’s start the healing process.'”

As someone with “full, full confidence in people in the medical profession,” Davidson insisted fear never crept in, and indeed, the November 2019 surgery was successful. As a silver lining, the following six weeks he spent recuperating –with help from his now-wife, Angelica –ended up giving him a head start adjusting to a work-from-home lifestyle. The pandemic began shortly after he recovered.

Although he’ll always have TOF, and checkups will always be on his yearly calendar, his heart should now be functional for good. He feels more energy when exercising, in particular.

Given his activity so far as GM, he evidently also feels more energy when negotiating trades. But while his vision for rebuilding the Hawks has been executed aggressively, Davidson’s own personality is more matter-of-fact and down-to-earth than aggressive and ruthless.

The significance and honor of the position he holds and of the power he wields is certainly not lost on him.

“Coming up, I didn’t ever think, ‘I’m going to be a GM,'” he said. “I just wanted to be in a front office and contribute exciting work. It’s not that I didn’t believe I could be a GM on my way up. It was more trying to be realistic with myself that there were 30 of those jobs. … There’s so little opportunity, and the stars have to align for that to happen. It happened for me, and I’m fortunate and very thankful.”

Most invigorating about this role is the chance to do things differently than anyone has before. His investment in the Hawks’ analytics department and his hiring of assistant GM Jeff Greenberg –to help the Hawks build a new information processing system — already serve as examples.

The GM role, and his plans for the Hawks, have become something of a lifestyle for Davidson, too. After all, there aren’t many serene forests or fish-laden ponds near the United Center.

But entering his second season in command, he’s working on finding new ways to squeeze those needed moments of decompression into his routine.

“Whether you’re a competitive person or you just care about getting this right, it brings that level of pressure and stress that you put on yourself,” he said. “To make sure you’re…putting the franchise in the best position moving forward, you do carry that a little bit [with you].

“I do want to run 24/7, and most of the time, I do. But [sometimes] I have to take a step back and get away, whether it’s taking a couple hours off to watch a different sporting event or enjoying a night out with family or a nice dinner with my wife. And I maybe will shut the phone off.”

Hawks updates

Neither Patrick Kane nor Jonathan Toews have approached Davidson with trade requests and there’s “nothing new on that front,” Davidson said, despite rampant rumors about potential Kane trade destinations.

Both Davidson and new coach Luke Richardson have had “good conversations” this summer with the two veterans, and all parties are “excited to get to training camp and see how the season plays out.”

The NHL has been investigating this summer an allegation that eight men, including some members of Canada’s 2017-18 World Juniors team, sexually assaulted a woman in June 2018. Current Hawks forwards Taylor Raddysh and Boris Katchouk were on that team. Raddysh posted a statement on social media in July that he was not involved; Katchouk has not yet commented publicly.

The Hawks are deferring to the NHL on the investigation but have been in communication with the league about it, Davidson said.

The Jack Johnson signing, which gave the Hawks six established NHL defensemen, will provide a “good presence in the room,” Davidson said. But it won’t block prospects like Alex Vlasic, Alec Regula and Ian Mitchell from earning NHL playing time.

“They have to earn their spot, and we believe they’re going to put their best foot forward,” Davidson said. “We know injuries happen, we know opportunities arise, and there’s going to be plenty of that along the way.”

The Hawks are still waiting for firm health updates on Jujhar Khaira –who finished last season on injured reserve after February back surgery — and a “couple” other players regarding their readiness for training camp, Davidson said.Read More

Kyle Davidson cherishes quiet moments in life as Blackhawks general manager Read More »

Chicago Bulls: These 3 are now under pressure after Mitchell tradeAnish Puligillaon September 3, 2022 at 11:00 am

Use your (arrows) to browse

The Chicago Bulls already made a risky move this offseason by choosing to stand pat and run it back with their core that cruised to the 1 seed in the East before injuries derailed their season.

Hidden within their bounce-back season was a disastrous record against the top teams in the NBA as the Chicago Bulls went 2-20 against playoff teams.

This paved the way for what much of Bulls Nation thought would be an exciting offseason but while the competition above and below them in the East made moves to get better, the Bulls stayed quiet.

Now, going into this season, and in light of the Cavaliers’ acquisition of Donovan Mitchell, the Chicago Bulls objectively have the 7th best roster in the East, slightly ahead of Toronto and Atlanta in my estimation.

However, the 7th best team in the East suggests they’ll have to rely on the play-in tournament to find their way into the postseason for the second consecutive year.

On top of that, the Chicago Bulls have to reckon with the fact that within their own division, neither their short-term nor long-term outlook compares with that of Milwaukee or Cleveland.

The Chicago Bulls will have to rely on player development to keep up in 2022-23.

What follows here are the three Chicago Bulls under the most pressure in light of the new Eastern Conference power rankings. I break down why they are under pressure, what the expectations are, and what stands to happen in both the best and worst-case scenarios:

<!–pageview_candidate–>

Use your (arrows) to browse

Read More

Chicago Bulls: These 3 are now under pressure after Mitchell tradeAnish Puligillaon September 3, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

‘Same page’: Cubs’ Seiya Suzuki, interpreter Toy Matsushita face rookie MLB seasons together

There’s another story hidden behind Seiya Suzuki’s viral “Mike Trout, I love you,” moment in his introductory press conference.

The press conference, in a packed media room at the Cubs’ spring training complex in Mesa, Arizona was also the first public appearance Suzuki had shared with his interpreter Toy Matsushita.

Joel Wolfe, Suzuki’s agent, was there with them and could tell how nervous Matsushita was.

“We were winding him up a little bit, like, ‘Toy, don’t don’t screw up,'” Wolfe said.

That playful ribbing didn’t quite put him at ease. But Suzuki found a way to break the tension. When asked why he chose No. 27, he pulled the microphone in front of him, stared into a TV camera and switched from Japanese to English: “Mike Trout I love you.”

Laughter flitted around the room, and Matsushita’s focussed expression unfurled into a wide smile.

The player-interpreter relationship goes far beyond interviews and press conferences. For an MlB rookie like Suzuki, who is living and working in the United States for the first time, an interpreter not only bridges the language barrier between the player and his teammates and coaches, but also serves as a de facto guide through an unfamiliar league and country.

So, how is it spending all that time together?

“A lot of stuff is new for both of us,” Suzuki said through Matsushita. “… I feel that this year is really important as a stepping stone. I’m trying to learn things here, and he’s trying to learn things, too. So, we’re both on the same page.”

Matsushita stood out in his initial interview with Suzuki and his representation. Matsushita already was familiar to Wolfe and his agency, Wasserman. Matsushita was lined up to serve as Tomoyuki Sugano’s interpreter when he posted for MLB teams in 2021, but Sugano decided to return to Nippon Professional baseball. That left Matsushita in a sort of limbo.

He interviewed with Suzuki twice over Zoom and then a couple more times in Japan.

Suzuki said that his first impression of Matsushita was that he was young. At 25 years old, he’s not that much younger than Suzuki, who turned 28 a couple weeks ago.

Matsushitathought Suzuki seemed nice and laid back.

“It was like love at first sight,” Wolfe said.

They quickly developed an almost brotherly dynamic, which was clear to see when they set up at UCLA this spring for a couple weeks of workouts, as Suzuki navigated free agency.

Suzuki would get Matsushita to lift weights with him. More than once, while spotting Matsushita on the pull-up bar, Suzuki walked away and left him hanging there, with a long way to the ground.

“He just wants me to get stronger,” Matsushita said with a smile.

Suzuki agreed: “He was a little too skinny back then, so I wanted him a little bit bigger.”

Did his methods work?

“No,” Suzuki said. “No change.”

The first day that Wolfe came to UCLA to meet up with Suzuki, he walked up to see Suzuki and Matsushita playing catch – a skill that would come in handy when Suzuki sprained his left ring finger in late May and needed someone to catch the ball for him while he was recovering.

Wolfe sent retired second baseman Chase Utley, another one of Wolfe’s clients, out from the batting cages to work with Matsushita. Utley told Matsushita to think of a bow and arrow as he pulls his hand back, and then let it loose.

Suzuki was a tough critic in that department, too: “Zero” improvement. With a dry delivery, he’d later rate Matsushita’s baseball talents as “worse than a child.”

Matsushita’s ability to speak in, and translate, baseball vernacular has impressed Wolfe. It’s a specialized skill that isn’t easy to find. And it’s necessary for a player’s development. If an English-speaking coach has identified a swing adjustment, for example, that information has to effectively pass through the interpreter.

“So, just knowing the language is not enough,” Wolfe said. “And Toy has picked that up very quickly, and he’s worked at it really hard.”

Now, during batting practice, Matsushita might be spotted on the outside of the rollaway backstop taking video on his phone for Suzuki to analyze after.

Cubs manager David Ross also gave Matsushita a vote of confidence and brought up his feel for different situations – in the dugout during the game versus in Ross’ office for more serious conversations.

“He’s got a good energy about him,” Ross said. “He’s always in a good mood, he’s smiling, he’s able to communicate baseball terminology, and he understands the environment.”

Matsushita never played baseball, but his late grandfather, Yoji Suzuki, passed on his love for the sport. Born in Tokyo and raised in Guam, Matsushita would watch the Yankees with his grandfather, who would teach him the ins and outs of the game.

Now, he has his dream job, at the same time that Suzuki is fulfilling a longtime dream of his own: establishing himself in MLB.

“Straight off, when I met him, I knew he was a really nice guy,” Matsushita said. “And he was really determined to come over here, so that really motivated me to make sure I did my part helping him. He’s really dedicated in what he does, and he puts his all every single day into the game. … I’m just learning from him.”

The finger injury disrupted Suzuki’s adjustment to the league. But now, to go along with his red-hot start to the season, Suzuki has finished August strong.

Suzuki joked early in the year that he’d have to learn English quickly so he could fire Matsushita. But he’s been too focussed on baseball lately.

Does that mean they’re stuck together?

Suzuki responded in Japanese, prompting an incredulous smile from Matsushita, who repeated Suzuki’s answer back to him. Suzuki wasn’t budging.

“He said if I’m like this next year, then I’m done,” Matsushita said.

Suzuki nodded. He always knows how to break the tension.

Read More

‘Same page’: Cubs’ Seiya Suzuki, interpreter Toy Matsushita face rookie MLB seasons together Read More »

High school football: Notre Dame’s Ricciardi twins grant mom’s wish and beat St. Patrick

The renewal of one of the state’s best rivalries, St. Patrick vs. Notre Dame, was undoubtedly a major topic of conversation in households, bars and group text chats all over the North Side.

But it is unlikely that anyone was as focused as Linda Ricciardi. Her twin sons are the offensive heart and soul of the Dons. Vincenzo is the quarterback and Francesco is the running back.

“When I woke up on Monday morning my mom had put posters up in our kitchen that said ‘Beat Pat’s,'” Francesco Ricciardi said. “She was definitely really into it.”

The brothers are taking a win home to mom. They combined for four touchdowns to lead Notre Dame to a 35-14 victory against St. Patrick on Friday in Niles.

“I can’t even tell you how she’s going to react,” Francesco Ricciardi said. “But I can’t wait to see her.”

Vincenzo Ricciardi was 10-for-13 passing for 158 yards. He connected with Howard Williamson on a 31-yard touchdown pass in the first quarter that opened the scoring and seemed to set the tone for the game. Ricciardi was also a threat on the ground, scoring three-yard and four-yard rushing touchdowns.

“[Vincenzo] executed really well, especially on our zone reads,” Francesco Ricciardi said. “And our linemen really helped us just keep the ball moving and running it down their throats and wearing them out.”

Francesco Ricciardi had 18 carries for 76 yards and a touchdown.

“We controlled the line of scrimmage,” Notre Dame coach Mike Hennessey said. “That’s what really won us the game.”

The Dons had a down season last year and missed the playoffs for the first time since 2014. But Hennessey’s squad made the most of the postseason it had, beating Kenwood to win the school’s first Prep Bowl.

“Winning begets winning and that was a tremendous confidence builder,” Hennessey said. “And that spurred on a great offseason. We gined some weight and some strength and now we’re sitting real nice.”

The Dons (2-0) led 29-0 early in the fourth quarter.

“[Linebacker] Randy Russ came back from injury and did a tremendous job,” Hennessey said. “Nick Thome and Karl Schmalz both put a lot of pressure on their quarterback. We saw against St. Ignatius when he got loose he was trouble.”

Notre Dame limited St. Patrick quarterback Nick Dustin to nine carries for 34 yards. He was 15-for-27 passing for 98 yards with two interceptions.

The schedule doesn’t get any easier for the Dons. They host top-ranked Mount Carmel next week. Expect Linda Ricciardi to have her boys ready to take on the Caravan.

“Last week after our win she made a team breakfast,” Vincenzo Ricciardi said. “This week she’s planning on a team dinner. She loves the guys and she really does it all for us.”

Read More

High school football: Notre Dame’s Ricciardi twins grant mom’s wish and beat St. Patrick Read More »

High school football: How the Super 25 fared in Week 2

1. Mount Carmel (1-0)

Saturday vs. Phillips at Gately

2. Loyola (1-0)

Saturday vs. United

3. Lincoln-Way East (2-0)

Won 31-16 vs. No. 4 Batavia

4. Batavia (1-1)

Lost 31-16 at No. 3 Lincoln-Way East

5. Bolingbrook (1-0)

Saturday vs. Simeon at Gately

6. Glenbard West (2-0)

Won 42-7 vs. Downers Grove South

7. Warren (2-0)

Won 19-17 at No. 9 Maine South

8. Neuqua Valley (1-1)

Lost 10-7 (OT) vs. Wheaton-Warrenville South

9. Maine South (1-1)

Lost 19-17 vs. No. 7 Warren

10. Prairie Ridge (2-0)

Won 63-28 at Burlington Central

11. Marist (1-1)

Won 49-6 at Richards

12. St. Rita (2-0)

Won 17-12 vs. Brother Rice

13. Naperville North (2-0)

Won 28-13 at No. 16 Glenbard North

14. Prospect (2-0)

Won 52-20 vs. Barrington

15. Lockport (2-0)

Won 44-10 vs. Metea Valley

16. Glenbard North (1-1)

Lost 28-13 vs. No. 13 Naperville North

17. Nazareth (1-1)

Lost 24-17 vs. No. 24 Lemont

18. Cary-Grove (1-1)

Lost 43-39 vs. Crystal Lake South

19. Joliet Catholic (2-0)

Won 23-22 vs. IC Catholic

20. Notre Dame (2-0)

Won 35-14 vs. No. 25 St. Patrick

21. Kankakee (1-1)

Won 42-0 vs. Washington, Ill.

22. Crete-Monee (0-1)

Saturday at Andrean, Ind.

23. Jacobs (2-0)

Won 35-14 vs. Crystal Lake Central

24. Lemont (2-0)

Won 24-17 at No. 17 Nazareth

25. St. Patrick (1-1)

Lost 35-14 at No. 20 Notre Dame

Read More

High school football: How the Super 25 fared in Week 2 Read More »

White Sox show fight, rally to beat Twins in 9th

Miguel Cairo made a clear distinction in his first day as acting White Sox manager by saying that he goes with his gut when he makes decisions, as evidenced by allowing veteran Lance Lynn to pitch seven innings and face opposing batters for the third time Wednesday night.

But relying on his instincts goes only so far. With Tony La Russa continuing to undergo medical tests in Arizona, more chefs got involved in concocting a recipe to beat the Twins entering Friday night’s American League Central showdown.

Joe Kelly was used as an opener, with Davis Martin switching to the role of bulk pitcher. The move didn’t work so well, as Kelly labored during a 34-pitch first inning and yielded a two-run double to Nick Gordon.

But the tension turned to relief and revenge, as the Sox pulled out a zany 4-3 win on Jose Abreu’s fielder’s choice in the ninth.

Abreu’s game-winning grounder, which Gordon knocked down but resulted in only a force at second, allowed Romy Gonzalez to score the winning run.

The game-winning play occurred after a replay reversed what was called a hit-by-pitch on Abreu. One pitch earlier, Andrew Vaughn was hit by a pitch from Jorge Lopez on his left shoulder to load the bases, prompting the benches to empty and gather near the mound. Cairo and Twins counterpart Rocco Baldelli were yelling at each other from close range before Cairo was ejected by third-base umpire Ron Kulpa for arguing a warning.

“What I saw was Lopez saying something to Vaughnie,” Cairo said. “Vaughnie said nothing.”

Cairo said he and Baldelli were merely protecting their players.

Nevertheless, the Sox (66-66) moved to within three games of the division-leading Guardians with 30 games left.

The Sox got a lift from Martin, who threw five scoreless innings that allowed the Sox to rally for two runs in the fifth.

A throwing error by third baseman Josh Harrison allowed the Twins to take the lead in the eighth, but Yasmani Grandal countered with a game-tying towering home run down the left-field line.

As for the decision to start Kelly for one inning, “believe me, I go with my gut,” Cairo said before the game. “But the information that we get from the front office, the information that’s happening in the game, it’s important, too. You’ve got to mix it up. It’s a balance. That’s what counts.”

Finding balance has been a yearlong challenge for the Sox. Their power-challenged offense started without Eloy Jimenez because of his sore surgically repaired right leg, and Cairo reiterated La Russa’s earlier forecast that Jimenez would likely see less of left field because of his legs.

“Eloy being a designated hitter gives him a little time to rest instead of standing in the outfield and not moving that well,” Cairo said. “So being a DH gives him a little time to sit down, keep his legs loose and moving in the cage. We just hope that [Saturday] he’s feeling way better.”

Jimenez grounded out as a pinch hitter in the eighth.

Meanwhile, the Sox theorized that Kelly’s high 90 mph sinker and sharp breaking pitch would harness the best hitters at the top of the Twins’ order. But the strategy failed as American League batting leader Luis Arraez hit a single that left fielder Leury Garcia bobbled for an error, before two walks and a wild pitch set up Gordon’s double.

The Sox used an opener once this season, when Reynaldo Lopez pitched two scoreless innings, and Martin followed with five innings of three-hit ball in an 8-3 victory against the Rangers on June 10.

Read More

White Sox show fight, rally to beat Twins in 9th Read More »

Signal Records, Lynyn, and music festivals

Chicago simply cannot have enough record shops. It just can’t. Every one that opens is a treasure—including the latest vinyl vault, Signal Records (3156 W. Diversey). From now on, they’ll be open noon-7 PM seven days a week, and today and tomorrow they’re celebrating their grand opening with DJ sets all day. Saturday’s lineup includes Valdez, Lorelei, MTZ, Steve Summers, and Beau Wanzer; and Sunday’s lineup includes Millia, Alissa Reynolds, St. Stephen, N.O.D., and Redhot Khulman. A friend told me it’s one of the best places on the northwest side to find rarer and more affordable dance vinyl. Do you agree? Give me your full report on Twitter! (MC)

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.

Festivals, music-focused and otherwise, are on tap again this weekend. We mentioned the 44th annual Chicago Jazz Fest a few times this week: go here for recommendations for today and tomorrow (and go here to read Reader contributor Bill Meyer’s preview of William Parker’s headlining set tonight at 7:45 PM at Jay Pritzker Pavilion, 201 E. Randolph). Jazz Fest isn’t the only free bill in town today: consider heading up to Rockwell and Irving Park for the Rockwell Blues & Jazz Street Stroll, featuring a slew of local jazz and blues acts playing for free behind Burning Bush Brewery (4014 N. Rockwell). There’s also plenty of dance music in town, as ARC Music Festival continues today and tomorrow at Union Park (1501 W. Randolph, 2-10 PM). Go to ARC’s website to purchase passes and see scheduled acts; Saturday highlights include Carl Cox, DJ Lady D, and Honey Dijon. Southwest side and south suburban readers looking for a different kind of dance and electronic experience might want to check out North Coast Festival at SeatGeek Stadium (7000 S. Harlem, Bridgeview, today from 2 PM-midnight, Sunday 2-11 PM); single day tickets for Saturday (including a headlining set by Diplo) are sold out, but full festival ticket packages are still available. And if you’re looking for something heavy, check out the last night of Scorched Tundra XII (8:30 PM at Empty Bottle, 1035 N. Western). Reader contributor Monica Kendrick previews the bands here, and tickets are available through Eventbrite. (SCJ)

If you follow my writing or event recommendations with any regularity, you know I love electronic music, so I’m pretty excited for the Sleeping Village (3734 W. Belmont) album release show for Lexicon by Lynyn, the solo synth project of Monobody guitarist and Nnamdï producer Conor Mackey. Mackey is a classically trained musician and composer who, as Lynyn, makes music that sounds like it belongs in a time-bending video game about hip-hop and ballet. Reader music writer Leor Galil described Lexicon as “exuding a crazed restlessness without dissolving into entropy.” Lynyn will be joined by Hausu Mountain superstar Fire-Toolz, whose prodigious output realizes meme culture and glitch art as audio, and the melancholy, pop-infused stylings of Warm Human. Tickets are $16 ($14 in advance). The show is open to those 21 and older and kicks off at 9 PM. (MC)

Read More

Signal Records, Lynyn, and music festivals Read More »