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Undrafted Linebacker Jack Sanborn Cracks Bears’ 53-Man Roster

Preseason standout and local product Jack Sanborn has made the Bears’ 53-man roster

With every NFL team forced to cut their roster down to 53 players today, The Chicago Bears decided to keep undrafted rookie Jack Sanborn as one of their seven opening-day linebackers.

Jack Sanborn is a local product who attended Lake Zurich High School before becoming a standout college player at the University of Wisconsin.

Although a bad performance at the NFL Combine would lead to Sanborn going undrafted, many people were excited to see what he could do with his hometown Bears.

Sanborn would make the most of his opportunity with the Bears by dominating the first preseason game against the Chiefs. Sanborn finished the game with seven tackles, one tackle for loss, an interception, and a fumble recovery between defense and special teams.

Sanborn quickly became a fan-favorite player for this performance as it helped distract from the ongoing Roquan Smith holdout.

Since Sanborn has shown the ability to contribute on both defense and special teams, he has become an intriguing addition to this rebuilding Bears roster. Sanborn will definitely be a player to watch this year as there will be plenty of opportunities for the young linebacker to shine in this new Bears defense.

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Chicago Cubs star Ian Happ supportive of Minor League unionization

Cubs’ Union Representative Ian Happ wants minor leaguers to have a voice

Earlier this week, the MLB Player’s Association sent authorization cards to minor league players which could, and likely will, initiate an election that opens the door for MLBPA membership. 30% of players will need to sign union authorization cards for the MLBPA to trigger a vote. If a majority of those who vote in this election choose for union representation, the MLBPA will henceforth collectively bargain with the MLB on behalf of minor leaguers.

Privy to behind-the-scenes developments, MLBPA union rep for the Cubs Ian Happ weighed in, “For these guys in the minor leagues, you want them to have better compensation, better work environments, and the biggest part is just having them be able to have a voice in what that looks like and the construction of that.”

“For those guys, that voice at the table, as we’ve seen, there’s been more minor-league teams that have been eliminated and the draft being compressed and all these things,” Ian Happ added. “It’s important for those guys to have a voice in what it looks like going forward.

“This group is as together as we’ve ever been. I think we understand, as the game has trended for the last six years, that there’s more power in looking out for the guys that have less of a voice and there’s more power in getting guys paid younger and being a little bit selfless on the back end and what that means for future generations.”

Happ is indeed a gamer on and off the field. In addition to his MLBPA role, the 2022 All-Star is batting .278 with 15 HR and 62 RBI.

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Plenty ‘still up in the air’ regarding Teven Jenkins’ future with Bears

If there were times over the last tumultuous month for Bears offensive lineman Teven Jenkins when you wondered whether he’d still be on the team at this point, you weren’t alone.

Jenkins did, too. Often. In fact, he was still wondering it after making the roster Tuesday even as he is presumed to be the team’s starting right guard.

“I still say it’s up in air,” Jenkins said of his status with the Bears. “Nothing’s solidified right now. It doesn’t mean you’re going to be here tomorrow.

“There were many times I was wondering [about his future]. I was even wondering that today. I wasn’t sure about my future at all.”

Jenkins has been in jeopardy seemingly since the day general manager Ryan Poles and coach Matt Eberflus walked into Halas Hall.

Ryan Pace drafted him in the second round last year to be the franchise’s left tackle for the next decade, but the new staff quickly shifted him to right tackle and eventually — amid widespread speculation that he’d be traded or cut — gave him a shot at right guard.

Jenkins was ambivalent about the move. It was undoubtedly his fastest route to playing, but it’s not necessarily what he envisioned.

“I still think of myself as a tackle that can go down and play guard,” he said. “As of right now, is it be better for my career to be a guard? Yeah, probably. So that means I’m all for it right now. I also label myself as a tackle.”

The entire ordeal early in training camp lingers. He missed seven practices with an unspecified injury, trade rumors abounded and he bristled at what he said was an unfounded assertion that he had friction with coaches. He hasn’t buried it yet.

“I need to do that, [but] it’s really hard,” Jenkins said. “I’m still trying to wrap my mind around it right now and trying to get past what happened and trying to look forward to the season.”

Rookie Braxton Jones, a fifth-round pick from Southern Utah, took hold of the starting left tackle job over the offseason and never slipped. Larry Borom, a fifth-rounder who came in with Jenkins, is the starting right tackle.

The Bears closed the preseason with Jenkins at right guard while Sam Mustipher played center. When they started camp, Mustipher was at right guard. The team anticipates center Lucas Patrick coming back from a broken thumb before the Sept. 11 opener, which would then force a choice between Jenkins and Mustipher.

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White Sox’s La Russa out with medical issueon August 31, 2022 at 1:02 am

CHICAGOWhite Sox manager Tony La Russa missed Tuesday night’s game against the Kansas City Royals with an unspecified medical issue.

The team said the 77-year-old manager would skip the game on the recommendation of his doctors and would undergo further testing Wednesday.

La Russa’s absence was announced about one hour before the first pitch. The Hall of Famer showed no signs of health issues during his pregame session with reporters and while talking to Chicago general manager Rick Hahn and former Oakland Athletics pitching great Dave Stewart before the game.

Bench coach Miguel Cairo, who went 2-0 as the White Sox’s acting manager last season, stepped in for La Russa.

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White Sox’s La Russa out with medical issueon August 31, 2022 at 1:19 am

CHICAGOWhite Sox manager Tony La Russa missed Tuesday night’s game against the Kansas City Royals with an unspecified medical issue.

The team said the 77-year-old manager would skip the game on the recommendation of his doctors and would undergo further testing Wednesday.

La Russa’s absence was announced about one hour before the first pitch. The Hall of Famer showed no signs of health issues during his pregame session with reporters and while talking to Chicago general manager Rick Hahn and former Oakland Athletics pitching great Dave Stewart before the game.

Bench coach Miguel Cairo, who went 2-0 as the White Sox’s acting manager last season, stepped in for La Russa.

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White Sox’s La Russa out with medical issueon August 31, 2022 at 1:19 am Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show

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.

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


Hocus-pocus

All the usual TIF lies come out on both sides in the debate for and against the Red Line extension.


State of anxiety

Darren Bailey’s anti-Semitic abortion rhetoric is part of a larger MAGA election strategy. Sad to say, so far it’s worked.


MAGA enablers

Andrew Yang and his third party lead the way for Trump.

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Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon August 30, 2022 at 8:20 pm

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.

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


Hocus-pocus

All the usual TIF lies come out on both sides in the debate for and against the Red Line extension.


State of anxiety

Darren Bailey’s anti-Semitic abortion rhetoric is part of a larger MAGA election strategy. Sad to say, so far it’s worked.


MAGA enablers

Andrew Yang and his third party lead the way for Trump.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon August 30, 2022 at 8:20 pm Read More »

At discretion of doctors, White Sox manager Tony La Russa to miss game Tuesday

At the discretion of his doctors, White Sox manager Tony La Russa will miss Tuesday night’s game against the Royals, the club announced about 45 minutes before the first pitch.

La Russa is scheduled to undergo further medical testing tomorrow in Chicago. The Sox said they expect to provide an update on La Russa’s status before to tomorrow night’s game against the Royals.

Bench coach Miguel Cairo will manage the team in La Russa’s absence.

La Russa, 77, held his daily meeting with media at about 4 p.m. and seemed normal. He was also seen talking to general manager Rick Hahn on the field before the game and going through his normal routine.

Cairo, 48, went 2-0 as the White Sox acting manager in 2021.

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‘Girlfriend’ review: musical is a winning mix at PrideArts

Can teenagers today understand what it once meant to make someone a mixtape? The careful selection and sequencing of tracks, maximizing the available space on each side of the cassette, fervently hoping you could convey the right tone and coded message through other people’s music. For those who came of age in the ’80s and ’90s, the act of putting together a mixtape was a labor of love, and sometimes a confession of it.

“Girlfriend,” playwright Todd Almond’s sweet and inventive rock musical now on stage at PrideArts, hinges on the gifting of a mixtape; it’s also, in itself, a narratively enhanced example of the form.

‘Girlfriend’

Almond’s chosen tracks all come from the same artist: Matthew Sweet, the power-pop troubadour who found success on the modern rock charts in the early 1990s. Almond pulls mostly from Sweet’s 1991 breakthrough album, also titled “Girlfriend,” which the singer famously wrote in the midst of a divorce from his first wife.

With titles like “I’ve Been Waiting,” “Reaching Out,” and “I Wanted to Tell You,” Sweet’s songs vibrate with the kind of longing and vulnerability that make them well-suited for communicating with a crush or for musical theater. And three decades ago, they spoke to Almond, then a closeted gay teenager in small-town Alliance, Nebraska, who heard something in the music and lyrics of fellow Nebraskan Sweet that felt like a lifeline.

“Girlfriend,” the musical, is not coincidentally set in Alliance, Nebraska, in 1993. It centers on 18-year-olds Will (Joe Lewis) and Mike (Peter Stielstra), who strike up an unexpected friendship in the summer following their high school graduation.

Will has accepted that he’s gay, and tells himself he’s accepted the ostracism that comes with it. He couldn’t be more thrilled to be done with the social hell of high school, as he tells us in one of his frequent asides to the audience; it may be the middle of June, but he declares it “New Year’s Day.” Yet in his focus on reaching the school finish line, Will doesn’t seem to have given much thought to his plans for the new year.

Mike, whose inner thoughts we do not get to hear, is more of a puzzle — for us and for Will. Mike’s in with the popular crowd, a star baseball player headed to college in the fall on a full-ride scholarship. But in the waning weeks of senior year, Mike approached Will with a cassette tape full of songs he thought the latter boy might like.

Mike professes to have a girlfriend — one who “doesn’t go to our school” and “lives far away.” While it isn’t made explicit, this unseen girlfriend is likely a defensive fiction. Meanwhile, their shared taste in music provides an excuse for Mike to keep asking Will to hang out, and a safe-ish way to test new waters: When they sing along in Mike’s car to the title track’s refrain of “I’d sure love to call you my girlfriend,” how much extra meaning is under the surface?

The pairing of Out Nerd and Closeted Jock is almost its own queer coming-of-age trope at this point, powering stories from Jonathan Harvey’s 1993 play “Beautiful Thing” to this year’s Netflix hit “Heartstopper.”

The casting of Lewis and Stielstra in director Jay Espa?o’s production subtly subverts expectations, though. Rather than a sensitive hunk who finds something unexpectedly awakened in him, Stielstra’s Mike is just as neurotic as Lewis’ Will. (In his Chicago debut, Stielstra has an ethereal magnetism and a killer falsetto that mark him as one to watch.)

Mike doesn’t have to have his eyes opened to the closed-mindedness of his friends; instead he’s practically pleading for Will to hear the signals he’s sending out, on tape and in real life, and pull him to the safety, and the danger, of being himself. It’s a compelling twist on the formula, and the two actors have the chemistry — and the honey-sweet harmonies — to pull it off.

Espa?o’s production has some practical drawbacks. Sight lines are a particular problem, which seems like something that should be avoidable at a storefront scale, and he and scenic designer Isabella Noe could work to make scene transitions smoother. And the onstage band, led by music director Robert Ollis, doesn’t quite exude rock-star vibes.

But looking at the track list as a whole — quirky conceit, endearing characters, captivating actors and clever soundtrack — “Girlfriend” is a winning mix.

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Chicago White Sox prospect Norge Vera Is turning heads

Chicago White Sox prospect Norge Vera has been promoted to double-A Birmingham

Last week a slue of White Sox prospects were promoted to double A Birmingham in a movement called “Project Birmingham”. This movement included seeing top prospect overall Colson Montgomery and NO.5 overall prospect Bryan Ramos making the jump to double A. While it is exciting to see a team’s best prospects rise through the ranks, sometimes in all the hype surrounding some of the top prospects, others get overlooked.

While Norge Vera is not necessarily overlooked being the White Sox No.6 overall prospect. He is proving that he wants a piece of that potential future star hype himself. Vera has turned heads ever since he has entered the organization. In the Dominican summer league in 2021 Vera struck out 34 batters in 19 innings and only allowed 9 hits. That is a 16.1 SO/9 clip. Clearly Vera has electric stuff. Vera backed up his performance in the summer league in 2022 by being promoted three times in a single season. So far in the 2022 season Vera has pitched 30 innings and struck out 44 batters while only allowing 15 hits posting a filthy 13.2 SO/9.  Vera has also struck out 50% of the batters he’s faced so far in double A (small sample size). Norge Vera also limits the long ball. He has only given up a single homer so far this season which is exactly what you want to see with someone that has the potential to be a future closer.

Norge Vera has serious roots in Cuban baseball history

Norge Vera was signed by the White sox out of the 2020-21 international class for $1.5 million. Vera is the son of Cuban baseball star Norge Luis Vera. Vera’s father won 9 gold medals including a gold medal at the 2004 olympic games. Norge Vera Sr also completed one of the best seasons a pitcher in professional baseball can have. In the 1999-2000 season Vera Sr went 17-2 with 12 of those wins being complete games and 8 of the complete games being complete game shutouts. Vera also pitched to the tune of an unholy 0.97 ERA. He was practically invincible on the mound. If Norge Vera Jr can pitch anything like his father, the White Sox have an absolute stud just waiting in the wings.

Here’s a youtube video if you want to know more about Vera and his background.

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Follow us on Twitter at @chicitysports23 for more great content. We appreciate you taking time to read our articles. To interact more with our community and keep up to date on the latest in Chicago sports news, JOIN OUR FREE FACEBOOK GROUP by CLICKING HERE

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