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Cubs’ Javier Assad debuts, Nicholas Padilla 27th man in doubleheader vs. Cardinals

The Cubs called up a pair of rookie pitchers to the roster for their doubleheader against the Cardinals on Tuesday.

Before the first game, they selected Javier Assad from Triple-A Iowa to make his major-league debut as the Cubs’ Game 1 starter and added Nicholas Padilla as the 27th man. To make room on the roster, the Cubs optioned reliever Kervin Castro to Triple-A and transferred outfielder Jason Heyward from the 10-day IL to the 60-day.

Assad held the Cardinals scoreless for four-plus innings. The 25-year-old recorded his first major-league strikeout against Cardinals superstar Albert Pujols. Assad also showed resolve with traffic on the bases. In the third inning, Assad walked back-to-back hitters, on eight straight balls, but worked out of the bases-loaded jam.

Padilla, 25, started the season in Single-A South Bend, but he quickly climbed the ladder, arriving in Triple-A in late July and posting a 1.69 ERA since then.

“Been hearing his name for a little while now,” Cubs manager David Ross said. “Somebody throwing strikes, the numbers are really good. I think it’s time to reward some of those guys. when you get an opportunity, that are performing and seeing what they can do with this level.”

Ross greeted both Tuesday morning. Assad was getting ready for his start, locked into his pregame routine. But Padilla had a little more time to take in the new environment.

Ross said when he congratulated Padilla, “he just lit up.”

Ross continued: “That authentic, ‘what is going on in my life’ when you get called to the big-leagues and how awesome those moments are [warm] your heart.”

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George Pickens proof the Bears needed to draft a WR in Round 2

George Pickens must have jumped off the screen to Bears coaches when they watched film of the Seahawks in advance of their second preseason game.

The 6-3, 200-pound rookie receiver split right near the end of the first quarter of the Steelers’ Aug. 13 opener against the Seahawks. On third-and-13, the Seahawks gave Pickens a social distance-friendly seven yards to run off the line of scrimmage along the right flank.

Taking a shotgun snap, quarterback Mason Rudolph put his right heel on the 34 and lofted a fade pass to the back right corner of the end zone. Pickens didn’t do anything fancy, save for a stutter-step, as he sprinted past Seahawks cornerback Coby Bryant. Pickens used his left arm to push Bryant away and then, in motion, cradled his two arms to catch the pass. He stomped his right foot down and tapped his left toe in bounds right before the back right pylon.

Touchdown.

The Steelers’ receiver has been so undeniably impressive this offseason that, on Friday, he became the prohibitive favorite to win NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year. BetOnline installed him at 6:1, ahead of everyone else in his draft class.

He could have done it at Halas Hall. New Bears general manager Ryan Poles, though, didn’t draft a receiver in Round 2.

It’s understandable that the Bears took Kyler Gordon at No. 39; cornerback was as great a position of need as receiver. Travel 10 spots down the draft, though, and the Bears are a lot easier to scrutinize. The coaching staff has been impressed with rookie Jaquan Brisker, the second of their second-round draft picks. Chosen at No. 48, Brisker has been the starting strong safety since his arrival — and will be in Week 1, provided he returns from last week’s thumb surgery as quickly as he believes he can.

Picking Brisker came with an opportunity cost, though. At a position where the Bears need even more help.

When they decided against drafting a receiver, the rest of the league exhaled. Four wideouts were taken in the six spots after the Bears drafted Brisker:

Tyquan Thornton, who caught a touchdown pass in the Patriots’ first preseason game before hurting his collarbone Friday night. He’s expected to miss the start of the season.Alec Pierce, who’s had three catches for the Colts in two preseason games.Skyy Moore, who had three catches for 23 yards against the Bears in Week 1 of the preseason.And Pickens, whose stock fell in part because of the ACL injury that limited him to Georgia’s final four games last season.

It’s not just about Pickens, though. What’s concerning is how off-trend the Bears are. Hunting big-name receivers is mandatory in the modern NFL. Unless third-round pick Velus Jones shocks the world, the Bears didn’t do that during an offseason that showed, more than any other, how valuable receivers are. Five of the top six leaders at the position in total contract value signed a new deal during a six-week span during March and April.

On draft night, six receivers were drafted in the first round for the second time in three years — and the ninth time in league history. If receivers were going to cost more in their second contract, general managers wanted to exploit the market inefficiency by getting them on rookie deals.

The Bears are left with Darnell Mooney and question marks, including injured receivers Byron Pringle and N’Keal Harry.

The contract extensions given wideouts have all but wiped out the 2023 free-agent market. While veterans are sure to be cut before March, the best 2023 free-agent receiver might be the Patriots’ Jakobi Meyers, who had 866 receiving yards last season.

The Bears, then, will have to draft their next receiver.

That’s something they should have done in Round 2.

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From the archives: Kobe Bryant’s NBA farewellon August 23, 2022 at 9:03 pm

This story was originally published on April 13, 2016.

LOS ANGELES — The clock ticked toward midnight Wednesday. The sold-out stands had emptied hours earlier.

Now, ushers, security guards and cleaning crews swept mounds of purple and gold confetti, streamers and balloons into white trash bags. But Kobe Bryant remained on the court.

In a black Los Angeles Lakers hoodie, sweatpants and a pair of his sneakers, the 37-year-old gathered his family — his wife and two young daughters — on the Staples Center hardwood, and posed for pictures beside the team’s half-court logo.

As shutters snapped and flashes popped, Bryant smiled, lingering in the place where he had delivered the most perfect farewell, one so fitting and surreal that it too will linger in the vivid memories of those who watched it almost impossibly unfold.

In the final game of his storied 20-season career, Bryant scored 60 points and hit the winning shot with 31.6 seconds left. He scored 15 of the Lakers’ final 17 points. He outscored the opponent by himself (23-21) in the fourth quarter.

And, to round out the storybook ending, Bryant led the Lakers to a 101-96 victory against the Utah Jazz in his 1,346th and final regular-season game, punctuating a season-long farewell tour with a performance that even he couldn’t fathom.

“It’s hard to believe that it happened this way,” he said after notching the sixth game of 60-plus points in his career. “I’m still in shock about it.”

In October, Bryant’s first shot of the preseason in Hawaii hit the side of the backboard, foreshadowing a season of struggle.

Kobe Bryant gave his fans a farewell performance to remember. He scored 60 points in his last game as a Laker. Harry How/Getty Images

The tribute videos, standing ovations and chants still poured in, even though Bryant kept misfiring, earning comparisons to Willie Mays with the New York Mets and Johnny Unitas with the San Diego Chargers, stars in their twilight who had become shells of their former selves.

Bryant’s 20th season ultimately amounted to a living wake, but unlike some aging icons, he never retreated from the spotlight. Instead, he remained the Lakers’ sole focus, especially as they clung to him for relevancy during their worst season in franchise history (17-65).

And he was never more the focus than Wednesday, starting with the fact that Bryant attempted a career-high 50 shots, his most since taking 47 in 2002.

According to Elias Sports Bureau, Bryant became the first player since Rick Barry in February 1967 to attempt at least 50 shots in a game.

Bryant took 58.8 percent of his team’s 85 shots, the highest percentage of his team’s shots that he has ever taken in a game, even more than when he scored 81 points. In essence, Kobe’s final game was so Kobe. He has always been a gunner, firing away as much as he pleases, even excessively.

And he has had an ultra green light during this season, but never more so than in his finale, and he took full advantage. “My teammates were just continuing to encourage me, [telling me] ‘Shoot, shoot, shoot, shoot,'” Bryant said.

Bryant played as if he were trying to drain every shot from his basketball soul, satisfying fans who didn’t spend thousands to come see him pass anyway. He said his nerves affected him some, but to keep his emotions in check, he had planned to follow his typical game-day routine, busying himself by focusing on the matchup.

“It didn’t work out that way,” he said with a laugh. “There were so many people to talk to and items to be signed and pictures to be taken. I just gave myself up to that. I just said, this is fine, this is cool. Just let it go, let it ride. Just enjoy it. It was fun.”

Several times, Bryant’s sentiments nearly overtook him, such as when he put on his socks, shoes and jersey or ran out of the tunnel. “OK, you’ve got to block that out because none of that makes a difference whatsoever if you come out here and completely lay an egg,” he told himself. “So you have to concentrate and focus and then you can be nostalgic all you want later on tonight and tomorrow.”

In terms of his tomorrow, Bryant said he plans to work out, if only to avoid falling into bad habits. He’ll work out of his corporate office, where he is ferociously hell-bent on building Kobe Inc. into an empire that one day overshadows his mythical basketball legacy.

Many Lakers fans and others no doubt will want to see him play basketball again, somehow. They might catch a glimpse on social media, he says, but he affirmed that he’ll never play in the NBA again. His body simply can’t take any more.

The fact that he walked off the court Wednesday is almost as miraculous as his point total. After all, his past three seasons were cut short by injury, and even Bryant admitted there were times this season when his body failed him to the point where he worried he might not reach the finish line.

Such concerns arose after the Lakers played the Dallas Mavericks earlier this season, Bryant said. Despite all the physical therapy and treatment he received on a daily basis, his body still felt terrible, still ached and stiffened up.

He wondered then, “Maybe this is Father Time and this is just what happens. That was a very tough moment for me,” Bryant said. “I didn’t know if I could pull myself [together].”

He missed games to rest. He played limited minutes in others. Late this season, he was so heavily wrapped in heat packs on the bench that he looked mummified.

The ultimate goal: help him escape his last game unscathed so that he can walk off on his own.

“It’s surreal,” he said of leaving the court for the last time. “It’s hard to describe. It’s almost like you’re in a fog and everything is moving extremely slow yet extremely fast. You’re trying to look and take it all in. You’re trying to observe and you’re not quite sure where to look to just take it all in. Very difficult to do. But it’s like a dream.”

Bryant had told his young daughters that he used to put up big numbers like that quite often. “Really?” they asked him. “YouTube it,” he told them.

Wednesday didn’t mark the perfect ending, because, for him, perfect would’ve been a sixth championship. But the Lakers are stuck in the NBA’s basement, so all he could do was try to put on a show, which he did in glorious fashion, once more.

As he sat on the dais before a packed news conference, with 450-500 media credentialed for his final game, Bryant donned his jersey. It seemed like he didn’t want to take it off, to move on and leave his lifelong obsession behind, but he laughed at the notion. “I just figured, tonight I’d come in here early since I know you [media] have deadlines and stuff,” Bryant said. “It’s not like I have to ice. What takes a long time is I have to ice, I have to stretch, [receive physical therapy]. [But] what am I doing that for? The treadmill tomorrow? I figured I’d come in here a lot faster and get going.”

Then Bryant paused. He spoke about how his teammates sprayed him with champagne when he came into the locker room after the game. ‘”That’s only for championships,” he told them, “but all right.”

He could smell the champagne on his jersey, just as he could in past Junes when the Lakers were dominant. Then Bryant admitted it. He wasn’t ready to move on. “Taking it off is going to be very strange,” he said.

When he sank a 20-footer in the final minute to give the Lakers a 97-96 lead, the crowd erupted, delirious that Bryant gave them one more clutch shot. His final point came at the free throw line, just as his first point did in New York on Nov. 5, 1996.

Bryant played all but 4.1 seconds in his final frame, checking out to another ovation and more deafening roars. After hugging teammates and former teammates, a sweat-soaked and worn-down Bryant came to half court and addressed the crowd. “You know, I can’t believe how fast 20 years went by,” Bryant said. “This is crazy.”

Video tributes had featured Jack Nicholson and Snoop Dogg, Shaquille O’Neal and Phil Jackson, Kevin Durant and LeBron James, and Magic Johnson called Bryant the greatest Laker ever.

After all that, Bryant told the fans how much he appreciated them remaining loyal through his career. He told them how much it meant to only play for the Lakers, a team he loved ever since childhood. “What can I say?” Bryant said with a huge smile. “Mamba out.”

Then, hours later, Mamba returned. On one side of the court, Bryant autographed the commemorative No. 8, signing, simply, “Kobe.” On the other side, he signed the commemorative No. 24 with “Laker for Life! Kobe 24.”

He took pictures, shook hands, hugged and said goodbye. Bryant received numerous farewell gifts throughout the year, but none topped what the Lakers gave him — an entire season to do with what he pleased.

To return the favor, Bryant’s poor play often helped his team lose, giving the Lakers a better shot at keeping their top-three protected first-round draft pick this summer. It marked the oddest irony of this season-long spectacle, this yellow brick road that stretched from October to April and ended on spring night in downtown Los Angeles, where Staples Center rocked as if good days were here again, where thousands of fans gathered outside as if a championship had been won.

At 12:20 a.m., with Wednesday faded into Thursday, the newest ex-Laker left the court, but not before he knelt down and slapped the Lakers’ logo, twice. He had given the team and this city scores of memories, as well as more than half his life, and now he had given everyone a farewell gift of his own — a night to remember forever.

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From the archives: Kobe Bryant’s NBA farewellon August 23, 2022 at 9:03 pm Read More »

NBA Insiders: Where Kevin Durant and the Nets go from hereon August 23, 2022 at 8:53 pm

Kevin Durant and the Brooklyn Nets are running it back.

In a statement released Tuesday, Nets general manager Sean Marks said the past MVP and two-time NBA champion will remain with the franchise after originally requesting a trade on June 30. (Durant’s four-year, $198 million extension kicks in this season.)

“[Coach] Steve Nash and I, together with [governors] Joe Tsai and Clara Wu Tsai, met with Kevin Durant and Rich Kleiman in Los Angeles yesterday,” Marks said. “We have agreed to move forward with our partnership. We are focusing on basketball, with one collective goal in mind: build a lasting franchise to bring a championship to Brooklyn.”

Where does the news leave Durant, Kyrie Irving, Brooklyn and the Eastern Conference? Are the Nets the new favorites over East juggernauts such as the Boston Celtics and Milwaukee Bucks?

And what lies ahead for KD, Kyrie and Brooklyn beyond the 2022-23 season?

Our NBA Insiders are breaking down every angle of yet another twist in the Durant-Nets summer saga.

MORE: How KD’s latest decision impacts NBA Power Rankings

1. What’s your biggest takeaway from KD deciding to stay in Brooklyn?

Tim Bontemps: This is a recognition of the reality of the situation. Durant is under contract for four more years. No one is coming close to giving Brooklyn what it wants. The two choices Durant had were to either play or try to hold out. This is the only logical option for both sides.

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Jamal Collier: Well, that was a fun waste of time. Even though this outcome has felt inevitable for a while, I’m still skeptical about the longevity of this partnership. Everyone may be on the same page for now, but I don’t think we’re heading toward a redemption story like Kobe Bryant and the Lakers in 2007.

Nick Friedell: The drama never stops with the Nets — they put Durant’s Boardroom logo on the news release! The big question I have after seeing the statement is: How long will this last? That was a miserable team to be around at times last season, and now they’ll be able to rebuild their culture as training camp nears? That would be a stretch.

Andrew Lopez: The market didn’t shape up the way anyone wanted. Initially, it seemed Brooklyn could get a haul for one of the NBA’s all-time greats. Instead, teams weren’t even willing to put their second-best assets on the table to land KD.

Bobby Marks: This is not surprising. The Nets were waiting for a perfect trade package that never came. The lingering question was whether Durant was going to hold out during training camp and become a distraction. That was put to bed when both sides wisely ended any trade speculation.

2. Fill in the blank: The biggest loser in the Durant saga is _____?

Collier: Durant. We so rarely see anyone walking back a public trade request like that. For these past few years, during which one of the game’s great players has been at the top of his game, it would be nice to see him compete for championships instead of being mired in dysfunction. This “outcome” feels like it’s only setting up more drama.

Bontemps: Durant. I’m sure he didn’t anticipate the Nets not getting the kind of offers necessary to get a deal done. But they didn’t, his image has taken a hit and he didn’t get what he wanted. The Nets, by contrast, are big winners for merely still having him on the team.

Marks: The Eastern Conference champions. The Celtics were having a relatively uneventful offseason when they were linked to Durant at the end of July. Now, Boston has some damage control to do with Jaylen Brown.

Lopez: Jaylen Brown, Mikal Bridges and Pascal Siakam, among others. A number of players heard their names dangled in trade talks and now everyone has to act like everything was fine from the beginning. Of course, teams will act as if those players were never actually available, but having to hear your name floated around for weeks could take a toll.

Friedell: The NBA offseason. The Nets gave a huge jolt to a normally quiet time in the sports calendar. The soap opera that usually surrounds this team carried two months’ worth of programming around the league. The media will miss all the rumors and rumblings — all of which ultimately led to no movement at all.

3. Where do the Nets rank in the East heading into this season?

Lopez: Even with a part-time Kyrie Irving, Durant playing 55 games, James Harden getting dealt from Brooklyn and Ben Simmons not suiting up at all, the Nets still won 44 games last season and reached the first round of the playoffs. A healthy mix of Irving, Durant and Simmons should be worth a few more wins, certainly enough to challenge for home-court advantage in the playoffs.

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Friedell: Assuming health for their key players — and most importantly, a drama-free run in the regular season, I think the Nets sit in third right now. I don’t believe they are better than the Bucks and Celtics — and I have serious questions as to how long this will last before the next internal blowup — but with Durant, Irving and Simmons, they have a core in place that has the ability to get better together over time.

Bontemps: Either third or fourth, behind Milwaukee and Boston and on par with Philadelphia. Could the Nets win the East? It’s not impossible. But there are too many questions to put them above the two rock-solid contenders at the top of the conference.

Collier: I’m still putting Brooklyn a tier below the four conference semifinalists — Boston, Milwaukee, Miami and Philly — because I don’t believe the Nets will have a normal year with KD, Kyrie and Ben Simmons on the floor. If they do, they’re contenders.

Marks: On paper, the Nets should be in the top three in the East. However, paper does not mean anything when it comes to regular-season games, and Brooklyn should be on the outside of the top four. The Nets are too much of a wild card with Durant, Ben Simmons and soon-to-be free agent Kyrie Irving to trust them as conference favorites.

After a tumultuous offseason, both Kyrie Irving and Kevin Durant remain on the Brooklyn Nets’ roster heading into the 2022-23 season. Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images

4. Fact or fiction: KD will spend all four years of his remaining contract as a Net

Lopez: Fact. It feels like the Kobe Bryant situation in Los Angeles in 2007. The trade request is eventually rescinded, and everyone tries to move on. If change does come to Brooklyn, it seems like it comes elsewhere on the roster (or the coaching staff) before Durant does get moved.

Bontemps: I’ll say fact, but who knows how this will play out. Given all the drama in Brooklyn over the past few weeks — and years — it is foolish to make any firm calls either way on how this will play out between now and 2026, when Durant’s contract will expire.

Marks: Fiction. What happens if adversity strikes this season and Brooklyn struggles? Do we even know if Durant will be in a Nets uniform come next offseason?

Friedell: Fiction. How could anyone believe after what has occurred that KD will be there for four more years? The bigger question in the short term is whether he will be there the whole 2022-23 season, or will something else occur that will change his mind again?

Collier: Fiction. I wouldn’t even take that bet confidently if you’ve said for four months.

5. Fact or fiction: Kyrie Irving will be with the Nets after the 2023 trade deadline.

Marks: Fact. Unless things truly implode, Irving will be with Brooklyn in mid-February. The big question is whether the Nets reward Irving with a four-year, $209 million extension before the season ends.

Wednesday, Oct. 19

Knicks vs. Grizzlies, 7:30 p.m.Mavericks vs Suns, 10 p.m.

Friday, Oct. 21

Celtics vs. Heat, 7:30 p.m.Nuggets vs Warriors, 10 p.m.

*All times Eastern

Bontemps: Fact. With Durant on the roster, Irving isn’t going anywhere this season. There was plenty of noise about Irving’s status back in June — remember when the “will he or won’t he” was just about Kyrie? — but now he and Durant, in theory, are locked in for this season.

Collier: Fiction. Once one goes, I believe the other will follow. I’m not in the business of ever predicting where Kyrie will be at any given time.

Lopez: Fiction: Because of Brooklyn’s lack of draft picks, it could wheel and deal with players to try to improve the roster. If Irving has his eyes set on leaving Brooklyn, doesn’t it make some sense to get something for him to improve the current situation?

Friedell: Who knows? Trying to chart Irving’s professional course at this point is a fool’s errand. If I had to bet today, I would guess “fact” only because of the Durant news, but everything can change in an instant.

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NBA Insiders: Where Kevin Durant and the Nets go from hereon August 23, 2022 at 8:53 pm Read More »

Bears CB Jaylon Johnson defends play — and playing time

Two days after defensive coordinator Alan Williams said he couldn’t say for sure whether he could trust any of his cornerbacks, Jaylon Johnson defended his play–and his playing time.

Williams said Sunday was that he couldn’t make such a declaration because none of his cornerbacks, by design, had played a full game in the Bears’ new defense yet. He hinted that Johnson was the obvious choice as the one he trusted the most.

Johnson played 16 snaps in the preseason opener and, in a sign that the Bears have few concerns about him, six Thursday against the Seahawks.

Johnson sounded confused at first when told of Williams’ comments.

“There ain’t nothing I can do about the number of snaps I get,” Johnson said. “I feel like there haven’t been times where I had an opportunity and I didn’t show up. So I mean, maybe I’m not even having enough snaps to even prove that? I dunno.”

He playfully said he’d look into it.

“I gotta figure out what he doesn’t trust me with and figure out a way to gain that trust,” he said, drawing laughter. “I don’t know too much about that. That’s news to me.”

Montgomery a maybe

David Montgomery wants to play in the preseason finale against the Browns, and Eberflus wouldn’t rule it out.

“We’ll see where he is,” he said. “If he’s working and he feels good, then we’ll reassess later in the week. But we feel good about where he is right now.”

Montgomery has yet to play a preseason game because of an undisclosed injury, though Eberflus said the Bears were knew they needed to “be smart” about him getting hit unnecessarily at the start of a long season.

Sunday, Montgomery said he finds value in exhibition games.

“Just getting hit and just actually getting tackled, seeing different looks, kind of getting the pace of the game. It’s completely different from practice,” he said. “So just being able to get live looks and get hit is really the main thing for me.”

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That ’90s look: Suns bringing back classic ‘sunburst’ jerseyson August 23, 2022 at 7:44 pm

Phoenix Suns

For the first time since the 1990s, the Phoenix Suns are bringing their purple “sunburst” look back to their regular uniform rotation. The look will serve as the team’s Classic Edition uniform throughout the 2022-23 season.

The sunburst uniform, which is celebrating its 30th anniversary this year, debuted on opening night of the 1992-93 season which ended with a trip to the NBA Finals. The remake features a more form-fitting and lighter weight design.

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“Everything was new going into that season,” said Mark West, a center for the Suns for eight seasons who now serves as the team’s charity ambassador. “It was impressive, just to have something new. It was really all about the anticipation for the new year.”

After then-general manager Jerry Colangelo fronted a new ownership group that purchased the Suns in 1987, a series of new initiatives were launched and culminated for the 1992-93 season.

The team was set to move out of Veteran’s Coliseum and into its new downtown arena, former Suns All-Star Paul Westphal was named head coach, and Dream Team power forward Charles Barkley was acquired via trade from the Philadelphia 76ers.

“It was the first season after the Barcelona Olympics with the Dream Team, and the NBA was put on the global map,” said Graham Wincott, the Suns senior director of marketing. “[Getting Barkley] really put (the Suns) over the edge, [finishing] with the best record in the league and he won MVP. It told a lot of the world who the Suns were.”

“Jerry Colangelo really wanted to see a new, clean, modern look,” said Tom Ambrose, the Suns’ former VP of marketing. “Our old uniforms had a western style typeface and a sunburst, but it was on the side of the shorts. He wanted a change. He wanted to see some ideas.”

As Ambrose recalls, he kicked off an exploratory jersey design meeting with Colangelo and team executives by first holding out a toy rubber chicken.

“Don’t be chicken,” he joked to the group. “Don’t be afraid of making a change.”

From there, the group glanced through sketches that featured everything from a font-less tank top dominated by a sunburst atop word-heavy shorts, to purple or black looks with the sunburst emanating from the corner of the jersey.

Phoenix Suns

While purple and orange have been the team’s colors since the franchise was founded in 1968, the original re-design pitch to Colangelo also included a wild card option — overhauling the colors to dark blue and silver.

“That got shot down pretty quickly,” laughed Ambrose. “I’ll be honest. I don’t like the Dallas Cowboys, but I like their uniforms. That’s why I thought, ‘Well, let’s give it a shot, if they want to make that big of a change.'”

Instead, the purple and orange remained, with the sunburst graphic eventually being reversed from a lower corner placement to a more prominent placement across the chest, as per distinct feedback from Colangelo and Ambrose. The front tank text was switched from “Phoenix” to “Suns” and the jersey number placed under the basketball.

Throughout the 1990s, sizable, sublimated graphics became the norm, whether that be an oversized Dino atop the center of the expansion Raptors’ uniforms, or a “Big Hawk” dominating the center of a gradient fading Atlanta jersey.

The Suns were also one of the first teams to opt for the new mesh application process, making for a defining look throughout the decade.

“We loved it,” beams Ambrose. “We loved being on the cutting edge. Once we fought through that, ‘Well, let’s not change it too much’ feeling that we all had, then we said, ‘Let’s go all in.'”

Before annual alternate jerseys were the norm, the Suns had just two options, and donned their purple sunburst jerseys on 52 road occasions during the 1992-93 regular season and playoffs. According to Wincott, the league now requires its teams to wear their Classic Edition for a minimum of four games throughout the season, though the Suns are already planning for far more.

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“We’re going to go way beyond that,” said Wincott. “As it stands now, we’re going to wear them for at least a quarter of our home games. Once we see what our road opponents have selected, then we’ll definitely slot it in for some road games too.”

Throughout the course of the season, home games featuring the Classic Edition jersey will also host “an immersive 90’s experience,” according to Wincott, with former players on hand, NBA Jam-themed graphics and music playlists from the era.

While the team only sparingly wore the black Sunburst jersey again during the 2012-13 season as a “Hardwood Classics” look, Mitchell & Ness has often released Suns throwback jerseys featuring former players in each of the original purple, white and black colors.

The brand even launched an elevated $400 black version with luxury sportswear designer Don C as part of its “No Name” series in 2018, that removed all lettering from the uniform to focus on the sunburst graphic.

Actor Jonah Hill’s casual stroll in the jersey immediately went viral in 2018.

“We do intend on shipping him another one,” joked Wincott.

In recent years, the team’s “Valley” alternate jerseys have become the most popular look since the team overhauled its uniforms in 2000. Wincott said that on the first day that the “Valley” jerseys were available, the team sold more jerseys in one day than it had throughout the entire prior season. Despite the fanfare, the Suns won’t be wearing the black and gradient fading “Valley” jerseys during the 2022-23 season. They are also a fan favorite whenever the team polls supporters about the uniforms.

“It doesn’t hurt to replace the current most popular jersey with the most popular jersey of all time,” he said.

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That ’90s look: Suns bringing back classic ‘sunburst’ jerseyson August 23, 2022 at 7:44 pm Read More »

The Chicago Bears odds to win Super Bowl LVII just plummeted

The Chicago Bears aren’t impressing bettors

The Chicago Bears’ odds to win the Super Bowl weren’t great to start the 2022 offseason. The team offloaded a bunch of elite talent as the franchise reloads with a new general manager and head coach. As the preseason comes to a close, bettors are losing even more favor with the Bears.

Justin Fields faces an uphill battle in his second NFL season with no elite help at the Bears’ skilled or offensive linemen positions. Injuries have continued to decimate the team during training camp. Vegas is taking notice.

The Bears are now +10000 to win the Super Bowl this season, according to Action Network. The team’s odds fell considerably from where they opened.

The Chicago Bears opened at +6600 to win the Super Bowl @BetMGM
They are now +10000 and have the third-fewest bets to hoist the Lombardi Trophy 📉 https://t.co/iM9LDxwbgY

The Chicago Bears’ preseason performance wasn’t enough

Bettors must not be impressed with the results coming from the Bears’ first two preseason games. The Bears have won both contests, but the starters haven’t dominated the first team units of the Kansas City Chiefs or Seattle Seahawks.

News from training camp hasn’t been great with the number of injuries the team has sustained. The Bears were already lacking NFL starting talent all over the roster before camp started. The moves general manager Ryan Poles has made so far this offseason and in the weeks leading up to the start of the season aren’t impressing bettors either.

(If the drop has been this precipitous, maybe Poles has made the team worse off this season?)

Many Bears fans are willing to make the jump that because former general manager Ryan Pace and head coach Matt Nagy are gone the team will automatically be better this season. It appears as if the nerds in Vegas aren’t taking that bait.

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High school football: Top-ranked Mount Carmel sets sights on 14th state championship

Several programs in the city have come for Mount Carmel’s crown over the past few years, but the Caravan remains the king of Chicago high school football. Mount Carmel has won 13 state championships.

The controversial pivot from legendary coach Frank Lenti to Jordan Lynch in 2018 refreshed the program and the construction of an on-campus football stadium has helped take things to another level.

Mount Carmel was 11-2 in Lynch’s first season and won the Class 7A title with a perfect 14-0 record in 2019. A repeat bid was impossible due to COVID.

Last season was a rebuilding year. But how many teams beat St. Rita, Marist and Batavia while reloading?

Lynch has 18 starters back from that squad that went 8-4 and lost to Brother Rice in the quarterfinals of the Class 7A state playoffs.

Most importantly, he has Blainey Dowling back at quarterback.

“[Dowling] is a winner,” Lynch said. “The stadium is named after his uncle. He knows what this place is about. There is no better competitor.”

Dowling (6-1, 200 pounds) has added 25 pounds since last season, which should make a significant difference when he’s running the ball.

“If you look at the film from Week 1 last year and then look at Week 11 or 12 you see the difference,” Lynch said. “He made gains every week. And he really protected the football.”

Junior Darrion Dupree (5-11, 195 pounds) is the breakout talent on offense. He should be one of the state’s best running backs.

“The thing that makes Dupree so special is you can’t tell if he has 16 offers or zero,” Lynch said. “He’s working harder now than he ever has.”

Mount Carmel has added another major talent in the backfield. Junior Alonzo Manning, a standout at Marist last season, has transferred in.

“He’s a stud,” Dowling said. “He started off slow here. You could tell he still had that Marist in him. We got that out of him real quick. He’s going to be really important for us.”

Manning isn’t the only significant addition to a team that already returned 18 starters. Senior Nolan O’Brien is back after missing last season with an injury.

“He’s ready,” Dowling said. “He’s a South Side guy that has been working hard for this. He’s one of the freak athletes on this team. I’m excited to see him play.”

Mount Carmel’s Dennis Furlong looks on during practice.

Kirsten Stickney/For the Sun-Times

For the first time, every player in the program came to Mount Carmel to play for Lynch.

“Your first group is always a special group,” Lynch said. “These are the guys that we brought in and we’ve watched them from freshman year all the way until now. They took tremendous strides.”

Lynch expects safety Owen Schickel to be the vocal leader of a defense that includes linemen Danny Novickas, an Ohio recruit, and Asher Tomaszewski, a Kansas State recruit.

The Caravan hosts rival St. Rita to open the season. It’s the 100th meeting between the schools and is expected to be the first step towards a possible state championship.

“That’s how it is here every year,” Dowling said. “But especially this year.”

Mount Carmel schedule

Aug. 26 vs. St. RitaSept. 2 vs. Phillips at GatelySept. 9 at Notre DameSept. 16 vs. MaristSept. 23 vs. St. IgnatiusSept. 30 at Brother RiceOct. 7 at St. LaurenceOct. 14 vs. St. ViatorOct. 22 at Loyola

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NCAA women’s basketball title game moves to ABC

The NCAA women’s basketball title game will be broadcast this season on ABC for the first time.

The championship game, which usually airs in prime time, will be played at 3 p.m. Eastern on April 2. The women’s Final Four is in Dallas this year.

“Scheduling the Division I Women’s Basketball Championship on ABC has been a goal for quite some time in our ongoing efforts to maximize the exposure of women’s sports in collaboration with the NCAA,” said Burke Magnus, ESPN’S president for programming and original content. “Women’s NCAA Championships continue to generate strong audiences across the ABC/ESPN networks and this move represents yet another unique opportunity to showcase this marquee event and the student-athletes who are competing for a national championship.”

ESPN said that it would look at moving the game back to prime time in the future but currently has commitments to entertainment shows the night of the game.

Last season’s championship game, in which South Carolina beat UConn, was the most viewed women’s title game in nearly two decades, drawing 4.85 million viewers. The national semifinals averaged 2.7 million viewers, up 21% year over year, and was the most viewed semifinals in a decade. The full tournament averaged 634,000 viewers, up 16% from the previous year’s coverage.

ESPN has aired NCAA women’s tournament games on ABC for the past two seasons but not the title game.

“It’s a benchmark announcement for women’s basketball in being able to showcase the national championship game in Dallas for an expanded audience on ABC for the first time in 2023,” said Beth Goetz, chair of the NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Committee and athletic director at Ball State. “We are grateful to ABC/ESPN for the partnership in the continued growth of the game and championship.”

The NCAA Tournament expanded to 68 games last season and this season will have its regionals in two sites, with eight teams playing in Greenville, South Carolina, and the other eight in Seattle. The tournament will follow this format through 2027.

The Division II and Division III championship games also will take place in Dallas on the same weekend as the Division I Final Four. It’s the first time that the three championships have been played in the same city since 2016.

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Bears QB Justin Fields, LB Roquan Smith to play vs. Browns in preseason finale

Bears coach Matt Eberflus plans to play his starters in the preseason finale against the Browns on Saturday. That includes the preseason debut of linebacker Roquan Smith and what figures to be the most extended action of the preseason for quarterback Justin Fields.

Fields played three possessions in the opener against the Chiefs and one last week against the Seahawks. Eberflus said the plan against the Browns is for him to play the entire first half.

Over his four series in the preseason, Fields has completed 9 of 14 passes for 87 yards. The Bears punted on his three possessions against the Chiefs and got a field goal in Seattle.

Eberflus said starters will play “up to” halftime Saturday, with select veterans likely to exit well before that. He was noncommittal on running back David Montgomery, who hasn’t played this preseason.

Smith was on the sidelines for the first two games amid his contract standoff with the team. He returned to practice Saturday and is progressively expanding his workload.

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