It wasn’t immediately known the full extent of the trade package.
News of Pham’s addition came shortly after Boston agreed to send longtime catcher Christian Vazquez to the Houston Astros. But Boston moved quickly to replace Vazquez, acquiring catcher Reese McGuire and a player to be named later or cash from the Chicago White Sox for left-handed reliever Jake Diekman, the team announced.
Whether the Red Sox would be a buyer or a seller before Tuesday’s trade deadline had been one of the bigger question marks in baseball. Boston has struggled since the All-Star break, dropping to 51-52 and into last place in the AL East entering Monday. However, it’s just 3.5 games behind the final AL wild card spot.
Pham, 34, was hitting .238 with 11 home runs and 57 runs scored in his first season in Cincinnati — one in which he drew national headlines for a fantasy football dispute that turned physical in May with Joc Pederson of the Giants. Pham has a $1.5 million mutual option in his contract for the 2023 season.
McGuire, 27, has a .225 average in 53 games. He’s eligible for arbitration the next three seasons. A first-round pick of the Pirates in 2013, he’s thrown out 11 of 36 attempted base stealers this season, a 30.6% mark that ranks fourth best in the American League.
Diekman will give Chicago a solid lefty in the bullpen. He’s 5-1 with a 4.23 ERA in a team-high 44 games this season for Boston.
I’m not sure when ChicagoNow will stop existing, but I thought I would get this out to you ASAP.
I have no idea how this is going to work, but I decided to try Substack to see what happens. I do have other options which I’ll investigate eventually.
I’m going to keep my Catholic theme of writing going, but I’m also going to talk about navigating my senior years. I’ve been a senior for a while, so I have a bit of experience.
I exported all your emails to the new site (I don’t know if it even worked), but if you’re not interested, no hard feelings. Feel free to unsubscribe.
I’m still on Facebook so I welcome your interaction, following and sharing!
Patty Viverito has been the Missouri Valley Football Conference commissioner since the league’s inception in 1985. While she has seen change, today’s issues stand atop the mountain of transition.
“In my 40 years working in college sports, I have never witnessed so much uncertainty in the collegiate landscape,” Viverito said during Monday’s MVFC media days opening Zoom session.
“We’ve got the continuing pandemic. We’ve got the transformation committee working on issues that surround our transfer rules, our name, image and likeness rules,” she said, also noting conference realignment and legal issues.
Yet, Viverito does also see positives.
Patty Viverito
“Despite that upheaval, we didn’t just get through the 2021 season,” Viverito said, “we had unprecedented success.”
The 70-year-old commissioner then listed the MVFC’s many achievements from wins over FBS teams to establishing the league as the best at the FCS level to North Dakota State capping the year with yet another national championship.
She also noted that the conference is coming off a season in which six of its members made the 24-school playoff field, the highest total in its history. Southern Illinois was one of those six playoff qualifiers; in fact, the Salukis have made the postseason two straight seasons.
Illinois State and Western Illinois are also members of the 11-team conference. Murray State, in its final year in the Ohio Valley Conference, joins the football league next season.
The MVFC has reached the FCS title game 11 straight seasons. Of course that total is mostly thanks for North Dakota State, winners of nine national titles since 2011.
Moreover, that stronghold seems even greater as former FCS title rivals James Madison, Sam Houston State and Jacksonville State are transitioning to the FBS level.
Asked if the Bison dominance was good for FCS as a whole, Viverito said, “I think every time you win a national championship is a good thing. I’ll leave it at that.”
The future of FCS
Given the uncertainty of collegiate football as the FBS appears to be headed toward mega conferences, where do teams at the FCS level fit in?
“I think that is a league-wide discussion that will ultimately be decided by (university) presidents,” Viverito said. “I can tell you that each and every year I get to (each conference) campus and this year will be no exception.”
Viverito also shared that she will no longer be serving as league commissioner on a multisport level, thus giving her time to focus solely on football.
“This year I’ll be able to come early, stay late. I intend to meet with every coach, every AD and every president over the course of this fall,” she said. “As things unfold nationally, I think we have to have a game plan in place for how we will fit into whatever landscape develops.
“To me, the key to success across the entire division is that we maintain our ties to the highest level of Division I football. And that’s for the good of the game.”
Blog co-authors Barry Bottino and Dan Verdun bring years of experience covering collegiate athletics. Barry has covered college athletes for more than two decades in his “On Campus” column, which is published weekly by Shaw Media. Dan has written four books about the state’s football programs–“NIU Huskies Football” (released in 2013), “EIU Panthers Football (2014), “ISU Redbirds” (2016) and “SIU Salukis Football” (2017).
Western Illinois opened fall camp this week under first-year head coach and WIU alum Myers Hendrickson. (photo courtesy WIU)
Football coaches often talk about wide open position battles this time of year. Perhaps that has never been more true than this fall under first-year head coach and Western Illinois alum Myers Hendrickson.
Graduation and the transfer portal left Hendrickson tasked with rebuilding a team that had just 58 players listed on the roster for April’s annual Bruce Craddock Memorial Spring Game.
“I’m really excited to be back at Western,” the 33-year-old Hendrickson said during Monday’s Missouri Valley Football Conference media days Zoom call. “We’re gearing up for fall.”
Part of that gearing up included adding players to the Leatherneck roster.
“We’ll be at 110 for fall camp,” Hendrickson said following a whirlwind of recruiting both transfers and high school athletes.
“Right now our strength lies in competition, so right now our players know where we stand and there’s open competition at every position,” Hendrickson said. “In fairness to the team and the players, I’m not going to pinpoint any position group here this afternoon.”
“What I tell the team is to look at challenges as opportunity. We’ve got a huge opportunity in front of us,” he said. “You look at where we were at in the winter (when I got hired). I felt like we had a great spring.”
Hendrickson further explained that his staff broke the roster into off-season team-building units.
“We competed in everything that we did — the classroom, community service, weight room competitions. In college football you get the student-athletes on the field for such as small period of time, so I think we really grew that way in our team chemistry and program development.
“That led us into a strong spring ball . . . and then summer. Our players were here and worked really hard.”
The Leathernecks began fall camp Monday in preparation of their season opener Sept. 1 at UT-Martin.
WIU visits the University of Minnesota Sept. 10 and then has its home opener Sept. 17 against Southern Utah, a nonleague opponent from the Big Sky Conference.
The Leathernecks host Northern Iowa to begin the Missouri Valley schedule Sept. 24 at Hanson Field in Macomb.
“It’s such a thin line between what your record is. From being 2-9 or 6-5 it’s just an incredibly thin line,” said Hendrickson, who played for the Leathernecks from 2009-11 when his father Mark was the Western head coach.
A winning track record
Henrickson is accustomed to success. He accumulated a 30-4 record, which included two Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference (KCAC) championship titles, at NAIA Kansas Wesleyan prior to being hired at WIU.
Being a new coach is one thing. Being a new coach with nearly an entirely rebuilt roster is another. Does that put added importance on the fall camp practices?
“Absolutely,” Hendrickson said. “Now our roster has doubled (since spring). So now the challenge to our staff is as we plan every period and every rep of practice to make sure that we improve every single day.
“You only get one practice a day during camp according to the NCAA rules so we have to be precise and very efficient. We have to make every practice count as we get ready for Tennessee Martin.”
Blog co-authors Barry Bottino and Dan Verdun bring years of experience covering collegiate athletics. Barry has covered college athletes for more than two decades in his “On Campus” column, which is published weekly by Shaw Media. Dan has written four books about the state’s football programs–“NIU Huskies Football” (released in 2013), “EIU Panthers Football (2014), “ISU Redbirds” (2016) and “SIU Salukis Football” (2017).
Justice Burke said, under the 2019 IL …Act, abortion is a fundamental right…But, under IL law and science, fetuses are viewed as viable about 20-22 weeks into a woman’s pregnancy. In such cases, Justice Burke said a doctor may provide an abortion only if the life or physical, mental or emotional health are at issue. On the other hand, Burke said people commonly refer to IL as permitting abortion on demand, up to…
Justice Burke said the Bar Association assessments and attorney reviews show his judicial approach to be one of applying… the facts and the law to the issues at hand, not …
Part 1 of the “Public Affairs” Interview with Justice Michael Burke, GOP IL S CT Nominee, 3rd District, airs on Cable:
Tonight, in Chicago, 8:30 pm & midnight on Ch 21 (CAN TV)Tuesday night in Chicago, 9:32 pm, Ch 21 (The third segment of the two hour IL Channel package that runs in Chicago, 9 pm to 11 pm). Tonight, in Aurora, also on Wednesday & Saturday, 6 pm on ACTV-10, aka Ch. 10 Thursday night in Rockford & surrounding suburbs, 8:30 pm on Ch. 17. And, as the third segment of this week’s IL Channel two-hour package, airing around the State on Cable.
Part 1 of the interview with Justice Michael Burke can also be watched 24/7 by clicking here.
***********************************
Show host Jeff Berkowitz, in Part 1 of his 3-part interview with GOP nominee for the 3rd Dist. IL S CT seat, Justice Michael Burke, focuses on Burke’s qualifications for the S CT, whether he is and would continue to be a “Fair Justice,” and his views on the current state of IL’s abortion law.
If the GOP wins the 2nd and 3rd Dist S CT seats, they will have a majority (4-3) on the IL S CT for the first time in 60 years.
Burke was appointed by the IL S CT two years ago to replace retiring Justice Bob Thomas in the 2nd Dist, but due to redistricting, Justice Burke is running in the 3rd District, which includes his long-time home town of Elmhurst and the rest of DuPage County.
The S CT’s 3nd Dist consists of Bureau, DuPage, Grundy, Iroquois, LaSalle, Kankakee and Will counties. Only voters in those counties can vote in the 3rd District S CT election.
Justice Burke has extensive trial experience as a DuPage prosecutor and trial Judge. This trial experience along, with “High marks” by the attorneys who appeared before him, said Burke, support the argument he would be skilled and fair if he continues as a S CT Justice.
Justice Burke said the Bar Association assessment and attorney reviews show his judicial approach to be one of applying in each case the facts and the law to the issues at hand, not deciding matters by personal opinion or bias.
Burke, a textualist, said he has never and would never legislate from the bench.
Justice Burke said under the 2019 IL Reproductive Health Care act, abortion is a fundamental right that women in IL have. But, under the IL law and science, fetuses are viewed as viable about 20-22 weeks into a woman’s pregnancy. In such cases, Justice Burke said a doctor may provide an abortion only if the life or physical, mental or emotional health are at issue. On the other hand, Burke said people commonly refer to IL as permitting abortion on demand, up to just before a mother delivers her child.
Justice Burke said the U.S. S CT’s reversal of Roe didn’t affect IL’s abortion law, at all. Burke said Dobbs just sent the abortion issue back to the state legislatures. He said Gov Pritzker might try to strengthen IL’s abortion rights, and in various other states, the legislatures might try to weaken abortion rights.
Next week’s “Public Affairs” show features Justice Burke in Part 2 of the interview with Berkowitz.
FOLLOWING is comedy happening only in Chicago this week! I also have a supermegalist of Advance Ticket Alerts from now ’till the end of the year. I add every time I hear about another great show. Please always check all details as COVID is still giving us a plandemic. Please confirm everything before leaving home. Heartfelt thanks to everybody who drops in to read CDG! Thank you to the Chicago comedy community for making this blog possible!
THIS WEEK:
Zanies Chicago: Case of the Mondays, Super 6 Showcase, Rocky Dale Davis, Michael Blaustein, Calvin Evans, Chrissy Chlapecka
Zanies Rosemont: New Material Night, Michael Blaustein, Rocky Dale Davis
Riddles: Will Hill hosts Open Mic Night, Robert Kane “Improv vs. Battle”, Pierre, Robert Kane’s Sunday Night Funny
Playtime at Wills North Woods Inn, 8:00 p.m. All headliner lineup! Steven Haas (Zanies), Sarah Perry (Laugh Factory, Comedy Bar), Marty DeRosa (Comedians You Should Know), Calvin Evans (Conan, NBC, Comedy Central). Produced by Joe Fernandez, Brandon Keiffer, Grace Leishman.
Lisa Beasley at Laugh Factory, 8:00 p.m. The Unpolitical Women Comedy Show with Mayor Lightfoot, Vice President Kamala Harris and Toni Preckwinkle. Comedic versions, that is. Tickets to Lisa Beasley’s shows sell out fast.
TUESDAY, AUGUST 2
Bobcat Goldthwait at Lincoln Lodge, 7:30 p.m. Wow, what a great opportunity for comedy fans! Like Drew Michael earlier this summer, Bobcat Goldthwait has a special residency at the Lincoln Lodge this month working out new material.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3
PM Unscripted at Wild Blosson Meadery, 6:00 p.m. “Unscripted, unplanned, unexpected and spontaneous clean comedy.”
Comedy Bang Bang at The Chicago Theatre, 7:00 p.m. Every show will be different during this 13th Anniversary tour with host Scott Aukerman (Between Two Ferns), Paul F. Tompkins (Bojack Horseman), and a cast of characters improvising “humanity’s podcast” live onstage.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 4
Gwen La Roka at Aguijon Theater, 7:30 p.m. The premiere of Gwen La Roka’s one-woman show Mi Casa es Tu Casa. This HBO-award winning Chicago comedian is in demand all around the country. Her show runs through August 21 and tickets are sure to sell out quickly. Advance purchase recommended!
Great Altercations at Second City, 8:00 p.m. The premiere of Second City’s 46th e.t.c. revue.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 5
After Hours at The Laugh Academy, Glenview, 8:00 p.m. Hari Rao hosts Katie Meiners and headliner Vince Carone (Gilda’s Laughfest winner). A Funnier By The Lake Production.
Ron Funches at The Den Theatre, 7:30 p.m. Ron Funches is a comedian, actor and writer. He’s voiced characters on Trolls, Bob’s Burgers, and Adventure Time and appeared on The Goldbergs, Black•ish, New Girl, Transparent, Conan, The Tonight Show, Comedy Central andmany more.
<iframe title="Ron Funches On The Subtle Differences Between Chicago & Oregon
I’m not sure when ChicagoNow will stop existing, but I thought I would get this out to you ASAP.
I have no idea how this is going to work, but I decided to try Substack to see what happens. I do have other options which I’ll investigate eventually.
I’m going to keep my Catholic theme of writing going, but I’m also going to talk about navigating my senior years. I’ve been a senior for a while, so I have a bit of experience.
I exported all your emails to the new site (I don’t know if it even worked), but if you’re not interested, no hard feelings. Feel free to unsubscribe.
I’m still on Facebook so I welcome your interaction, following and sharing!
Patty Viverito has been the Missouri Valley Football Conference commissioner since the league’s inception in 1985. While she has seen change, today’s issues stand atop the mountain of transition.
“In my 40 years working in college sports, I have never witnessed so much uncertainty in the collegiate landscape,” Viverito said during Monday’s MVFC media days opening Zoom session.
“We’ve got the continuing pandemic. We’ve got the transformation committee working on issues that surround our transfer rules, our name, image and likeness rules,” she said, also noting conference realignment and legal issues.
Yet, Viverito does also see positives.
Patty Viverito
“Despite that upheaval, we didn’t just get through the 2021 season,” Viverito said, “we had unprecedented success.”
The 70-year-old commissioner then listed the MVFC’s many achievements from wins over FBS teams to establishing the league as the best at the FCS level to North Dakota State capping the year with yet another national championship.
She also noted that the conference is coming off a season in which six of its members made the 24-school playoff field, the highest total in its history. Southern Illinois was one of those six playoff qualifiers; in fact, the Salukis have made the postseason two straight seasons.
Illinois State and Western Illinois are also members of the 11-team conference. Murray State, in its final year in the Ohio Valley Conference, joins the football league next season.
The MVFC has reached the FCS title game 11 straight seasons. Of course that total is mostly thanks for North Dakota State, winners of nine national titles since 2011.
Moreover, that stronghold seems even greater as former FCS title rivals James Madison, Sam Houston State and Jacksonville State are transitioning to the FBS level.
Asked if the Bison dominance was good for FCS as a whole, Viverito said, “I think every time you win a national championship is a good thing. I’ll leave it at that.”
The future of FCS
Given the uncertainty of collegiate football as the FBS appears to be headed toward mega conferences, where do teams at the FCS level fit in?
“I think that is a league-wide discussion that will ultimately be decided by (university) presidents,” Viverito said. “I can tell you that each and every year I get to (each conference) campus and this year will be no exception.”
Viverito also shared that she will no longer be serving as league commissioner on a multisport level, thus giving her time to focus solely on football.
“This year I’ll be able to come early, stay late. I intend to meet with every coach, every AD and every president over the course of this fall,” she said. “As things unfold nationally, I think we have to have a game plan in place for how we will fit into whatever landscape develops.
“To me, the key to success across the entire division is that we maintain our ties to the highest level of Division I football. And that’s for the good of the game.”
Blog co-authors Barry Bottino and Dan Verdun bring years of experience covering collegiate athletics. Barry has covered college athletes for more than two decades in his “On Campus” column, which is published weekly by Shaw Media. Dan has written four books about the state’s football programs–“NIU Huskies Football” (released in 2013), “EIU Panthers Football (2014), “ISU Redbirds” (2016) and “SIU Salukis Football” (2017).
Western Illinois opened fall camp this week under first-year head coach and WIU alum Myers Hendrickson. (photo courtesy WIU)
Football coaches often talk about wide open position battles this time of year. Perhaps that has never been more true than this fall under first-year head coach and Western Illinois alum Myers Hendrickson.
Graduation and the transfer portal left Hendrickson tasked with rebuilding a team that had just 58 players listed on the roster for April’s annual Bruce Craddock Memorial Spring Game.
“I’m really excited to be back at Western,” the 33-year-old Hendrickson said during Monday’s Missouri Valley Football Conference media days Zoom call. “We’re gearing up for fall.”
Part of that gearing up included adding players to the Leatherneck roster.
“We’ll be at 110 for fall camp,” Hendrickson said following a whirlwind of recruiting both transfers and high school athletes.
“Right now our strength lies in competition, so right now our players know where we stand and there’s open competition at every position,” Hendrickson said. “In fairness to the team and the players, I’m not going to pinpoint any position group here this afternoon.”
“What I tell the team is to look at challenges as opportunity. We’ve got a huge opportunity in front of us,” he said. “You look at where we were at in the winter (when I got hired). I felt like we had a great spring.”
Hendrickson further explained that his staff broke the roster into off-season team-building units.
“We competed in everything that we did — the classroom, community service, weight room competitions. In college football you get the student-athletes on the field for such as small period of time, so I think we really grew that way in our team chemistry and program development.
“That led us into a strong spring ball . . . and then summer. Our players were here and worked really hard.”
The Leathernecks began fall camp Monday in preparation of their season opener Sept. 1 at UT-Martin.
WIU visits the University of Minnesota Sept. 10 and then has its home opener Sept. 17 against Southern Utah, a nonleague opponent from the Big Sky Conference.
The Leathernecks host Northern Iowa to begin the Missouri Valley schedule Sept. 24 at Hanson Field in Macomb.
“It’s such a thin line between what your record is. From being 2-9 or 6-5 it’s just an incredibly thin line,” said Hendrickson, who played for the Leathernecks from 2009-11 when his father Mark was the Western head coach.
A winning track record
Henrickson is accustomed to success. He accumulated a 30-4 record, which included two Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference (KCAC) championship titles, at NAIA Kansas Wesleyan prior to being hired at WIU.
Being a new coach is one thing. Being a new coach with nearly an entirely rebuilt roster is another. Does that put added importance on the fall camp practices?
“Absolutely,” Hendrickson said. “Now our roster has doubled (since spring). So now the challenge to our staff is as we plan every period and every rep of practice to make sure that we improve every single day.
“You only get one practice a day during camp according to the NCAA rules so we have to be precise and very efficient. We have to make every practice count as we get ready for Tennessee Martin.”
Blog co-authors Barry Bottino and Dan Verdun bring years of experience covering collegiate athletics. Barry has covered college athletes for more than two decades in his “On Campus” column, which is published weekly by Shaw Media. Dan has written four books about the state’s football programs–“NIU Huskies Football” (released in 2013), “EIU Panthers Football (2014), “ISU Redbirds” (2016) and “SIU Salukis Football” (2017).
Leave a comment