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With suspect in custody, North Coast Music Festival no longer under threat, police say

A man who police say made threats targeting the North Coast Music Festival is facing charges Wednesday night.

Daniel Susma, 28, was arrested and now faces unrelated charges of multiple counts of aggravated battery and domestic battery, according to McHenry County Sheriff’s Office records. Algonquin Police confirmed Wednesday that Susma allegedly made the threats on social media.

A tweet circulated Tuesday — which included screenshots of what appeared to be a Facebook post and a photo — that threatened the festival, prompting the fest’s organizers to respond.

The festival’s Twitter account on Tuesday posted a statement in response to a warning of a shooting at the festival, saying organizers had contacted law enforcement and were “handling it with the utmost seriousness.”

“Regardless of this issue, NCMF will have extra security on hand to put the health and safety of everyone who attends the Festival as our top priority,” the statement said.

Susma will be barred from purchasing tickets or entering the festival, organizers said.

The electronic and hip-hop music event is set for Labor Day weekend, Sept. 2-4 in Bridgeview.

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Chicago’s Craft Beer Weekend, July 15-17

Chicago’s Craft Beer Weekend, July 15-17

Kroll’s Beer Garden, Berlin, 1900. If you cross your eyes, you can see the 3D.

Another sort-of buyout in the beer world this week. Avery Brewing of Boulder, CO has sold a minority stake in its brewery to Spanish brewing conglomerate Mahou San Miguel. The investment comes after Avery built a $30 million brewing campus, and has been cutting back on seasonal release to focus on year-round brands. Mahou San Miguel previously purchased a 30% stake in Founders Brewing in 2014. (Westword)

In more local news, Lake Effect Brewing has given up after six years on its plans to take over a firehouse in Jefferson Park as a new tap room and kitchen Owner Clint Bautz posted that many delays in permitting left the brewer with little time before the lease on the current space, 4727 W. Montrose Ave., expires. Instead, Lake Effect has leased a storefront in the Avondale neighborhood with plans to open by the first of the year. (BlockClubChicago)

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White Sox’s Jimenez exits with right leg tightnesson July 14, 2022 at 4:11 am

White Sox outfielder Eloy Jimenez came up limping after catching Jose Ramirez‘s liner to end the sixth inning and was removed from Chicago’s 2-1 win over Cleveland with tightness in his right leg.

He was 0 for 3 with two strikeouts before coming out of the game to start the seventh inning. The team said he is day-to-day.

He recently returned to action after being out since injuring his hamstring while running to first base in late April. The team has been taking it slow with his return, deploying him both in left field and as the designated hitter.

Jimenez has been oft injured over the past two seasons, rupturing a pectoral muscle in spring training last year before injuring his hamstring this season. He has a career 116 OPS-plus but has only 270 plate appearances over the past two seasons.

Jimenez smacked 31 homers as a rookie in 2019 and followed that up by hitting .296 with 14 home runs in 55 games during the pandemic-shortened 2020 season. He was limited to 55 games last year after he was injured trying to make a catch on a home run during a spring training game.

ESPN’s Jesse Rogers and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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White Sox’s Jimenez exits with right leg tightnesson July 14, 2022 at 4:11 am Read More »

Jhon Duran sparks Fire to 2-0 victory over Toronto FC

After waiting for his chance to start, striker Jhon Duran is showing why he’s an internationally known prospect. His athleticism, speed and strength have stood out since he was added to the starting lineup, all of which are starkly different attributes than what benched Kacper Przybylko was bringing to the Fire.

Unfortunately for the Fire, Duran’s emergence is probably way too late to save their season.

Duran scored both goals in the Fire’s 2-0 win Wednesday over Toronto FC in front of an announced Soldier Field crowd of 10,450. Signed in Jan. 2021 but ineligible to join the Fire until this year due to FIFA age rules, Duran sat for most of the season as coach Ezra Hendrickson waited for Przybylko to find a scoring groove and show why the team invested so much in the veteran striker.

That hasn’t happened for Przybylko, who was acquired from the Union for $1.15 million in allocation money but has scored just three times. If Duran, 18, keeps up the form he’s shown since taking Przybylko’s spot, the questions will come about whether the switch up top should’ve come sooner, since the win actually moved the Fire’s playoff chances up to 11% per FiveThirtyEight.

Duran, when he wasn’t on the ground after taking hits from Toronto FC players or making sliding challenges to stop their attacks, only fueled that storyline Wednesday with the kind of display the Fire have needed for most of 2022.

In the fourth minute, Duran gave the Fire a 1-0 lead after his pressure created a loose ball that went to teammate Chris Mueller. Mueller then played Duran in, and the young Fire forward used his speed to break free before beating Toronto goalkeeper Quentin Westberg with a cool left-footed finish.

The Fire (5-10-5, 20 points) doubled their lead in the 16th when Brian Gutierrez’s nifty aerial back-heel pass went to Duran just inside the offensive half. With plenty of work to do, Duran outmuscled and outran Toronto’s Chris Mavinga before scoring his second goal of the night, becoming the second-youngest player in team history to score twice in a match.

Whether or not Fire fans should get used to seeing Duran do this remains to be seen.

In October 2020, Duran was listed in The Guardian’s Next Generation 2020 as one of the 60 best young talents in world soccer, putting him firmly on the radar of some of the globe’s biggest teams. Duran has also been clear about his European aspirations, and performances like Wednesday won’t do anything to hurt his stock.

“It’s a city and a league that really help you grow as a player,” Duran told the Sun-Times in January. “They kind of buff you a little bit so you come out shining and as a player that is really helpful so I can come in here and grow as a person, grow as a player, do well and then from here make that leap to Europe.”

Sorting out Duran’s future will be one of many issues for the Fire this winter, but they had other things to worry about against Toronto FC as their season stands on the brink of disaster.

Wednesday night’s match was the Fire’s first since their crushing 3-2 loss to Columbus when they squandered a two-goal halftime lead. But unlike that game, the Fire were able to hold off lowly Toronto to earn their fifth win of the season and move out of last place.

NOTE: Midfielder Gaston Gimenez (yellow card accumulation) and defender Miguel Navarro (red card suspension) were not available. Mauricio Pineda started in place of Gimenez, and Jonathan Bornstein replaced Navarro.

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White Sox hold on for 2-1 victory, gain series split with Guardians

CLEVELAND — Tony La Russa says his sense of urgency is there every night, as much as it ever was over his Hall of Fame career.

“You treat every game like it’s the last game of your life,” the White Sox manager said Wednesday before the Sox defeated the Guardians 2-1 in a game they urgently needed. “That’s why I don’t feel like anything that was accomplished before matters with this job.”

Needing a win to get within two games of .500 and to stay within five games of the Twins, who walked off the Brewers Wednesday afternoon, the Sox beat Cleveland for only the third time in nine games. Lucas Giolito (6-5) allowed an unearned run in 6 1/3 innings, and Reynaldo Lopez, Kendall Graveman (perfect eighth) and Liam Hendriks (perfect ninth, 18th save) were spotless in relief. Jose Abreu and Andrew Vaughn drove in the Sox’ runs.

The Sox head to Minnesota to four games after splitting four against the Guardians thanks to wins in the last two, allowing just one run in those victories.

“Big wins, big wins,” Giolito said. “Considering where we’re at in our division. Splitting the series was big considering how the series started. We have good vibes going into this last series before the break.

“We want to obviously win the series, a sweep would be great. But we have keep playing with energy we brought the last two nights.”

On the day manager Charlie Montoya was surprisingly fired by the Blue Jays with a 46-42 record — the Jays, like the Sox, were considered by many as the favorites in their respective divisions — La Russa was asked if he evaluates his own performance, even with his Hall of Fame resume. The Sox are 43-45.

“You always do. Never stops,” La Russa said. “If you’re preaching accountability for the players you better start with yourself. I think our record should be better so I should manage better.”

La Russa’s performance has come under scrutiny for in-game decisions and lineup construction, and the unexpected lack of offense gives the team a flat appearance in losses that’s never a good look for the manager.

“Literally want to win as much as I ever have as much in my life,” La Russa said.

“But I still respect and admire what’s in [the clubhouse] and how we keep pushing. And I believe it’s coming.”

La Russa has given his starters long leashes in some games but he pulled Giolito with a 2-0 lead after Franmil Reyes singled off the wall and Nolan Jones walked with one out in the seventh. Giolito threw 91 pitches, and had allowed five hits while striking out five.

“Just not going to push him,” La Russa said. “He gave us all he had.”

The move looked right as Lopez entered and retired Owen Miller on a forceout and would have escaped the jam if not for second baseman Josh Harrison’s error allowing the Guardians to get within 2-1.

It was Giolito’s last start before the All-Star break. The right-hander has had an uneven first half, bringing a 5.05 ERA into the game but a 3.86 mark over his previous three starts. He lowered his ERA to 4.69.

Giolito had a good trend going for him — a 4-1 record with a 0.92 ERA in his last nine starts against Cleveland. The Sox haven’t been able to sustain any positive trends, and need one going into the All-Star break following the Twins series.

“We’ve had some games where, ‘what the heck was that about,’ ” La Russa said. “But a lot of times we followed up with real gutsy performance that has kept us hanging around.

But there’s no getting around a losing record, La Russa said.

“No it’s not ok, [to] accept it. We had expectations for a reason. We’ve got talent. And when we get hurt, everybody gets hurt. And you have to win with what you got.

“There is nothing wrong with the guts and chemistry on this team is outstanding.”

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Eloy Jimenez exits White Sox game with tightness in right leg

CLEVELAND — Eloy Jimenez left the White Sox’ game against the Cleveland Guardians Wednesday with tightness in his right leg after making a running catch in the sixth inning at Progressive Field.

Jimenez, who returned to the team July 6 after tearing a hamstring tendon that required surgery on April 26, ran hard to glove Jose Ramirez’ liner to left center field to end the sixth inning, stranding Myles Straw at third base and preserving a 2-0 lead.

Jimenez walked off the field alongside center fielder Luis Robert. After sitting down in the dugout, he went to the clubhouse with training staff.

Jimenez was playing in his eighth game since coming back from the injury, and this was his fifth in left field.

Lucas Giolito took a shutout into the seventh inning. The Sox scored two in the sixth against lefty reliever Sam Hentges on Jose Abreu’s RBI double and Andrew Vaughn’s RBI groundout.

Cleveland righty Aaron Civale left the game after the first inning with right wrist soreness.

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Summer Fitness Tips

Summer Fitness Tips

BY SANDRA GUY

These picture-perfect days — OK, so the humidity can be a bit hard to take, but just think about wintertime — provide a great excuse to take a long walk to the lake, play tennis on a nearby public court or brave a kayak trip in the Chicago River.

Just remember your family worrier’s advice: Stay safe — from the sun, from getting dehydrated and from taking risks alone.

Here are some tips from the National Kidney Foundation on how to enjoy these too-short summer days:

Bring your water bottle, but remember that getting dehydrated starts before you even go outside. Have you drunk coffee, tea or alcohol? These diuretics can accelerate your getting dehydrated when you’re active outdoors.Check any medications to make sure none heightens dehydration.Wear sunglasses and a hat, preferably with a broad brim, and slather on a sunscreen with at least a 40 sun protection factor (SPF) that includes active ingredients such as octinoxate, avobenzone and octisalate. Never spray sunscreen on your face. And try to stay out of the sun during the day’s hottest hours, from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m.Wear light colors and synthetic fabrics that wick away sweat.Stay vigilant about food safety. When setting out food for the grill, consider lining up the most vulnerable items — such as meats and dairy — in the kitchen, and take them out to the grill rather than letting them sit outside.

After you’ve completed your checklist, relax and enjoy the warm sun, the fresh air and the freedom of moving outdoors. Bring the family, friends and others so you can share the bliss.

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Chicago Blackhawks make history by promoting Meghan Hunter

Have You Heard? Chicago Blackhawks make Meghan Hunter the fourth woman in NHL history to be promoted to assistant GM

On June 22, 2022, Meghan Hunter of the Chicago Blackhawks became the fourth woman in history to be promoted to assistant general manager.

#Blackhawks announce Meghan Hunter has been promoted to Assistant GM. Karilyn Pilch has been promoted to Director of Player Personnel.
Mark Eaton remains as Assistant GM. Brian Campbell’s official title is Advisor, Hockey Operations.

This tweet from Frank Seravalli, an NHL reporter, on June 22nd marks the announcement of not only Hunter’s promotion but also Karilyn Pilch to the Director of Player Personnel.

Meghan Hunter has a long history of hockey under her belt already. Along with being a Wisconsin Badger women’s hockey alumni, she has been an assistant women’s hockey coach at Niagra University and the University of Maine, the Director of Group Sales at the London Knights Hockey Club, and if that wasn’t enough already she was the manager of the female national team for Hockey Canada.

According to ESPN, when asked about the decision to promote Hunter, acting GM Brandon Davidson responded, “Our goal is to be best-in-class in all we do, and organizing a structure and defining roles behind the scenes is an important step,” Davidson said in a statement. “I have a lot of faith and trust in this leadership team, along with the staff who works under them, and I look forward to working with our entire group to build a successful team on the ice.”

This isn’t the first of these promotions, and definitely won’t be the last in terms of staff changes for the Chicago Blackhawks.

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Cubs’ Matt Swarmer optioned, Daniel Norris activated; Kyle Hendricks has long road ahead

Cubs rookie Matt Swarmer is headed back to Triple-A, but this time with a bullpen role in focus.

“There’s growth there,” manager David Ross said of his impression of Swarmer. “He’s still very young in his career. And he’s got to evolve like everybody else, come up, learn how hard it is being able to land that slider for a strike consistently out of the bullpen.”

Optioning Swarmer to Triple-A after the Cubs’ 4-2 loss to the Orioles on Tuesday cleared space on the active roster for the Cubs to activate lefty reliever Daniel Norris (left index finger strain) off the 15-day injured list on Wednesday.

Swarmer, 28, climbed through the Cubs’ farm system as a starter, and he debuted in late May as a rotation fill-in. He had mixed results in five starts and then transitioned into a relief role.

“I was definitely surprised at first,” Swarmer told the Sun-Times a couple weeks ago. “But it’s just a game of adjustments. I’ve got to just get ready faster for these relief appearances.”

Swarmer mostly deploys a two-pitch mix, which is more common for relievers than starters at the major-league level. But his ability to manipulate his slider makes it behave almost like two different pitches.

“That’s his money pitch,” Ross said. “He’s got to be able to land that [in the strike zone] at will. And sometimes when you can’t do that, you’re going to get exposed, especially against teams that don’t chase outside of the zone.”

He’ll have the chance to develop that part of his game in Triple-A.

Hendricks will be a while

It will be “a little bit” before veteran right-hander Kyle Hendricks returns from the 15-day injured list, Ross said. He didn’t have an exact timeline but estimated that Hendricks (right shoulder strain) would need at least two to three weeks of rest and rehabilitation before he even started playing catch.

Hendricks is one of two veteran Cubs starters still on the mend as the All-Star break approaches. Lefty Wade Miley continues to progress in his throwing program – he was scheduled for light catch on Wednesday – after shutting it down in recent weeks.

Roberts undergoes Tommy John

Rookie right-hander Ethan Roberts underwent successful Tommy John surgery on Wednesday in Arlington, Texas, the team announced.

“He’s such a good kid,” pitching coach Tommy Hottovy said last month, when the Cubs announced that Roberts was heading for surgery. “He’s going to come back from this great, and we still expect really big things from him in the future.”

Roberts claimed a spot on the Opening Day Roster, but in late April he landed on the injured list with inflammation in his right shoulder. On his road back from the injury, in his first rehab outing, Roberts tore the ulnar collateral ligament in his elbow.

Madrigal slowed

Cubs second baseman Nick Madrigal (strained left groin), after leaving his last rehab outing with groin tightness, is set to remain in Chicago this week. He’ll use the time before the All-Star break to build up extra strength and volume, the team said.

“I think he caught it in time,” Ross said. “I don’t think there’s anything really pressing that he has to take a ton of time off [for].”

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Our 2022 MLB All-Star Players for the Cubs and SoxDrew Krieson July 14, 2022 at 12:32 am

We’ve reached the midway point of the 2022 MLB season, and this can only mean one thing. It’s time for the MLB All-Star game! This year, our teams received three All-Star nods, with one South Side snub we aren’t too happy about. The Cubs will send two players to the game next Tuesday, and the Sox will send one. Let’s see who made the cut!

The Cubs MLB All-Stars

Up first are the two Cubs All-Stars that will represent our city for the National League team: Ian Happ and Willson Contreras. Happ was voted in by the players as a reserve, while Contreras was named the NL’s starting catcher.

For Contreras, this is his third All-Star game appearance in seven seasons. His first two came in 2018 and 2019. And this year, he made his way with a batting average of .266, 13 HRs, and an OPS of .862. While there’s been a slew of rumors and talk surrounding Contreras being traded, we couldn’t be more proud to have him representing the Cubs in the Midsummer Classic this year. His third appearance in the game has some more importance this year, as it will be the first time in the past 30 years that two brothers play in the same All-Star Game. Willson Contreras’ brother, William Contreras, is a catcher for the Braves, so both him and Willson will suit up behind the plate for the NL. William will act as a reserve to his brother, and he’ll also take the lead DH spot to replace an injured Bryce Harper.

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As for Ian Happ, this is his first MLB All-Star game appearance in his sixth season in the big leagues. After being told the news by manager David Ross, it was reported that Happ cried tears of joy. And considering where he was about a year ago, all the emotion with the moment makes sense. Around this time last year, Happ had a .183 batting average, a .296 OBP, and a 29% strikeout rate. To make things worse, he was just about to lose some playing time as a starter. Instead of letting the slump continue, Happ turned it around, and now he’s having the best seasons of his career. He’ll take his now .276 BA and 41 RBIs straight to the NL’s reserve unit, and we’ll be rooting for him all the way!

The Sox All-Star Situation

This year for the White Sox, they’ll be sending one lone All-Star to the game next week. That man is the one and only, Tim Anderson or TA7, for short. But before we talk about Tim, let’s get to the snub.

The big snub for the White Sox comes with starting pitcher Dylan Cease, who wasn’t named to the MLB All-Star game this year, and isn’t going to act as a reserve or an injury replacement either. Numbers-wise Cease has the fifth-lowest ERA in the league and has the second highest strikeout rate. Unfortunately for him though, the Sox aren’t doing too hot, which means guys like him and Abreu are likely to be left off the roster. It’s an unfortunate reality for Cease, but he’s only in his fourth season, and if continues at his current pace, we still think he’s got a shot at a Cy Young.

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Now let’s turn to Tim Anderson, who will be making his second All-Star game appearance in back-to-back seasons. Through 60 games in 2022, Anderson is sitting comfortably with a .311 batting-average and .766 OPS. While he dealt with a minor injury earlier in June, it’s clear that Anderson and his bat are recognized as one of the best out there, and thus, he received the All-Star nod once again. Look for him out at shortstop when he suits up for the American League next week.

The 2022 MLB All-Star Schedule

While the All-Star game isn’t until Tuesday, July 19, the entire All-Star weekend starts on Saturday with the All-Star Futures game followed by the All-Star Celebrity Softball game. (We’re betting on Snoop Dogg for our MVP in that one)

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On Sunday, the MLB will host day one of their draft during All-Star weekend in LA. Then on Monday, the sluggers will take the field for the Home Run Derby. By the time 6:30 PM on Tuesday rolls around, the 2022 MLB All-Star game will begin! We sure can’t wait to watch our Chicago guys take the field.

Featured Image Credit: Chicago Cubs Instagram

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Our 2022 MLB All-Star Players for the Cubs and SoxDrew Krieson July 14, 2022 at 12:32 am Read More »