Videos

Chicago Blackhawks should continue their tear down during the 2022 NHL DraftTodd Welteron July 7, 2022 at 5:19 pm

Use your (arrows) to browse

The Chicago Blackhawks head into the 2022 NHL Entry Draft with no first-round pick. That could change by trading a star player.

The Daily Faceoff’s Frank Seravalli is reporting that Alex DeBrincat days as a Blackhawk are numbered.

DeBrincat is a 40-goal scorer and only 24 years old. The Chicago Blackhawks only have him under contract through next season. While it would be nice to have a young star on the ice to get fans through this rebuild, DeBrincat is going to cost a good chunk of change to keep around long term.

It might be worth it in the long run to get a high first-round pick and some prospects instead of having DeBrincat take up a portion of the salary cap.

A rebuild the Chicago Blackhawks are undertaking can take at least a minimum of three years before you can mention being a possible Stanley Cup contender. The maximum time frame is “who knows when” depending on if the wrong decisions are made.

The Blackhawks could keep DeBrincat for life and possibly never come close to the Stanley Cup. To pay what DeBrincat will probably get in the open market, it is probably best to move the Hawks most valuable trade asset and replenish the prospect system.

Blackhawks general manager Kyle Davidson is interested in getting into the first round. The Chicago Blackhawks traded away their first-round pick, which turned out to be the sixth pick, to the Columbus Blue Jackets the last offseason as part of the Seth Jones deal.

The only way he is getting into the first round is by trading his young star.

There are rumors the Philadelphia Flyers are interested in sending the fifth pick in the first round to the Blackhawks for DeBrincat. The New Jersey Devils are also rumored to be dangling the second pick in the draft for DeBrincat.

On his 32 Thoughts podcast this morning, @FriedgeHNIC wonders if 2 years of control of Alex DeBrincat is enough for the NJ Devils to give up the No. 2 overall pick on Thursday night. #Blackhawks

Here’s the podcast:https://t.co/x0V9iZWFSH

— Bleacher Nation Blackhawks (@BN_Blackhawks) July 5, 2022

While the top of the year’s draft is not like next year’s class, the Chicago Blackhawks would still have a chance to add a talented player to their prospect pool. Plus, Davidson could come away with more picks and prospects from the Flyers or Devils.

<!–pageview_candidate–>

Use your (arrows) to browse

Read More

Chicago Blackhawks should continue their tear down during the 2022 NHL DraftTodd Welteron July 7, 2022 at 5:19 pm Read More »

Summer every day

Summer every day

Summer Tomatoes

Yes, there is beauty and we need to remember it now, like freedom, like peace.

Days of blue sky above clouds.

Nights of summer stars, the waxing moon and fireflies!

Days of bees in milkweed flowers,

Days of day lilies blooming in the alleys.

Days of ripening tomatoes.

Afternoons of summer chairs, the light through green leaves

the smell of grass, the smell of rain

Filed under:
astronomy, nature, seasons, weather

Advertisement:
Advertisement:

Welcome to ChicagoNow.

Meet
our bloggers,

post comments, or

pitch your blog idea.

Subscribe by Email

Completely spam free, opt out any time.

Monthly Archives

July 2022
June 2022
May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
April 2014
March 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
September 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013

Meet The Blogger

Weather Girl

I am originally a country girl from downstate Illinois. I was a Chicago girl in Rogers Park by the Lake. Now I live in Oak Park, by the Blue Line and the Congress Expressway. I write about the weather and other things.
I hope you enjoy and join in these observations. Welcome to Chicago Weather Watch!

Read these ChicagoNow blogs

Cubs Den

Chicago Cubs news and comprehensive blog, featuring old school baseball writing combined with the latest statistical trends

Pets in need of homes

Pets available for adoption in the Chicago area

Hammervision

It’s like the couch potato version of Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
Advertisement:

About ChicagoNow

FAQs

Advertise

Recent posts RSS

Privacy policy (Updated)

Comment policy

Terms of service

Chicago Tribune Archives

Do not sell my personal info

©2022 CTMG – A Chicago Tribune website –
Crafted by the News Apps team

Read More

Summer every day Read More »

Best Andre Drummond NBA games

Take a look at the newly acquired free agent, Andre Drummond, and his best games in the NBA

The Chicago Bulls added depth to their frontcourt by signing 28-year-old veteran big man, Andre Drummond this summer. Drummond is a well-known center in the league with ten years under his belt in the NBA. The 6’10”, 279-pound center has seen both his playing time and stats drop in the last couple of seasons and has played for four different teams in the past two years.

However, the Bulls did not hesitate to offer him a 2-year 6.6 million dollar contract heading into the 2022-2023 season. With centers such as Nikola Vucevic, Tristan Thompson, Marko Simonovic, and Tony Bradley, the acquisition may help Chicago around the glass, while also giving the team some much-needed size down low.

Andre Drummond has quite the resume if you ignore his low-basketball IQ plays and clumsiness around the rim. There was a time when Drummond was dominating the paint for multiple seasons behind his blocking and rebounding skills. The two-time All-Star has led the league in total rebounds and rebounds per game for four consecutive years (2015-2019).

For those unfamiliar with Andre Drummond and what he could possibly bring to the table, you’ve come to the right place, as we take a look at his best performances throughout the past ten years.

Next page

For More Great Chicago Sports Content

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

Read More

Best Andre Drummond NBA games Read More »

FOCO Releases Super Limited Christopher Morel Cubs Rookie Bobblehead

A new Christopher Morel bobblehead has been released by FOCO

What was expected to be a rebuilding season for the Chicago Cubs has been exactly that. At the time of writing this article, the Cubs record stands at 34-48, all but erasing any thoughts of postseason baseball for the Cubbies. But not all has been bleak for the team this season as a few players have put together solid first half campaigns including Ian Happ, Wilson Contreras, and David Robertson. While some (if not all) of these players will be traded away to a contender prior to the MLB trade deadline, there is one player who has really emerged as a potential future star that the Cubs will not be dealing, Christopher Morel.

Morel has put together a potential Rookie of the Year campaign over the course of the first half of the season. He has a slash line of .272/.343/.489 to go along with his 8 home runs and 23 RBIs. His offensive stats are impressive but Morel is a complete player, with above average defensive skills and versatility with the ability play the infield and outfield at a high level. 

FOCO just released a super limited Christopher Morel Chicago Cubs Rookie Bobblehead that has just 72 pieces. The bobblehead features Morel in an action pose as he stands atop a thematic rookie base. It stands at 8in tall and retails for $70. 

Like all FOCO bobbleheads, each one is handcrafted and hand painted, so no two are the same. With the bobblehead being so limited, it is going fast, so don’t wait to preorder yours from FOCO.com here! While you’re there, check out the rest of their Cubs gear!

For More Great Chicago Sports Content

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

Read More

FOCO Releases Super Limited Christopher Morel Cubs Rookie Bobblehead Read More »

‘All I feel is loss’

This interview is being co-published with The TRiiBE, a digital media platform that is reshaping the narrative of Black Chicago

After enduring pretrial electronic monitoring (EM) for more than 22 months, Jeremey “Mohawk Johnson is no longer on house arrest. A Cook County judge released him from EM on Tuesday, June 28. Johnson is still awaiting trial. 

I first interviewed Johnson in January 2021, five months after he was arrested at a defund CPD and anti-ICE protest in the Loop. I’ve spoken to him off and on in the ensuing months as he waited for his case to go to trial and struggled with a plethora of EM problems that had the potential to put him in prison—including a faulty GPS system that frequently lost track of him as he slept in bed and sent hundreds of false alarms.  

Even as Johnson faced the possibility of prison time because of a faulty ankle monitor, I could always count on him to talk about his EM experience—or his life, or Pokémon, or whatever else was on his mind—in great detail. I’d never heard him as quiet and disconsolate as I did when I spoke with him Friday, July 1, three days after he got off EM. I interviewed him briefly for this story, and our conversation has been edited for length and clarity. 

You had court the other day and got off EM. Why did the judge let you off?

He said that he was working with limited information when he put me on house arrest.

How are you feeling now?

I don’t feel good. It feels like I’m supposed to be happy, but I’m not.

How’s it been the past few days?

I’ve been deeply overwhelmed. 

It feels like . . . the world kind of moved on without me, which it’s gonna do, regardless—like this shit’s gonna keep spinning whether I die or not. So many people have just moved on. I feel very left behind, about a lot. 

What’s next for you?

I don’t know. I lost two years, and all they had to say was, “We were working with limited information. Oops.” They took two years from me off of an “Oops.”

Is your monitor gone? 

Oh, it’s just gone. I paid my bail at the beginning of this, so the monitor is just gone. I still feel it sometimes—like, I check my leg all the time, still. 

What other lingering effects of being on EM are you dealing with right now?

I’m still afraid of my phone vibrating, because my monitor would beep and do other stuff, and sometimes make noises I had never heard it make before while I was at the house or at work. Whenever I hear a new noise, like a new alarm or something, I assume it’s them, and I don’t do well in those moments. I still don’t know how to sleep comfortably, fully, because I’m used to having to sleep half-upright with my leg hanging down from the bed, that way it doesn’t get covered with anything, or no part of the bed. Even, like, accidentally rolling over and laying on it would block the signal, and then you get a violation or it’d go off, because it’d lose you when you were asleep, and I’d toss and turn. So I’ve gotten used to sleeping very still and keeping my leg off of the bed. I don’t really know how to sleep comfortably, again.

Your case is still ongoing, what’s going on with it?

I don’t really have much to say about that, it’s just still going.

Two years of your life gone to house arrest—what do you want people to know about what you’ve been through?

It’s not any of the stuff that they say it is. 

They tell us that the GPS works, and it doesn’t. It just doesn’t. I’ve had phone conversations with people at the call center—and even with sheriffs—and they said that if I have the proof I should just bring up the proof that my monitor doesn’t work, because they’ve said personally that my monitor doesn’t work. 

The day that I got released from house arrest, the prosecutor again tried to argue violations from 2021 that got cleared up the day they happened. She mentioned dates that I specifically have videos of—of people at the call center saying, “That cleared up,” or “We’ll let the sheriff know that you didn’t leave and that you were indeed inside.” 

She said that I only had nine alerts, and we know that I have hundreds. We know that I had at least 20 in the last week and a half. So when we got into court, she was like, “Yeah, you had nine alerts.” And I was like, “Nah, it’s way more than that, so something about that information is off, because my monitor went off more than nine times.” 

I got called more than nine times—there’s a week period where they were giving me, like, two or three in a day. I had at least, like, 15 in the last week. She was like, “Yeah, he has nine,” and I’m like, “Nah, I’ve got way more than nine, I’ve got damn near 20 for the last week, and I’ve got video of all of those—I’m in the house.”

This is the second prosecutor that tried to use false violations to keep me on house arrest, so that’s just something they do. That’s just something they do to people. The sheriff will look you in the eye and tell you, “We know the monitor isn’t working,” and a prosecutor will go into court and tell a judge, “This guy snuck out” anyway. Because they can, and because it’s easy.

Anything you want to add?

Everyone kind of expects me to be happy, and all I feel is loss.


Ankle-monitor alerts garner phone calls and visits from sheriffs officers—­but more than 80 percent are bogus, according to a University of Chicago analysis.


Jeremey Johnson has chronicled nearly two years of pretrial house arrest.


CPD has tried to turn rapper and comedian Mohawk Johnson into a cautionary example to social justice protesters. He has other plans.

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.

Read More

‘All I feel is loss’ Read More »

‘All I feel is loss’Leor Galilon July 7, 2022 at 4:00 pm

This interview is being co-published with The TRiiBE, a digital media platform that is reshaping the narrative of Black Chicago

After enduring pretrial electronic monitoring (EM) for more than 22 months, Jeremey “Mohawk Johnson is no longer on house arrest. A Cook County judge released him from EM on Tuesday, June 28. Johnson is still awaiting trial. 

I first interviewed Johnson in January 2021, five months after he was arrested at a defund CPD and anti-ICE protest in the Loop. I’ve spoken to him off and on in the ensuing months as he waited for his case to go to trial and struggled with a plethora of EM problems that had the potential to put him in prison—including a faulty GPS system that frequently lost track of him as he slept in bed and sent hundreds of false alarms.  

Even as Johnson faced the possibility of prison time because of a faulty ankle monitor, I could always count on him to talk about his EM experience—or his life, or Pokémon, or whatever else was on his mind—in great detail. I’d never heard him as quiet and disconsolate as I did when I spoke with him Friday, July 1, three days after he got off EM. I interviewed him briefly for this story, and our conversation has been edited for length and clarity. 

You had court the other day and got off EM. Why did the judge let you off?

He said that he was working with limited information when he put me on house arrest.

How are you feeling now?

I don’t feel good. It feels like I’m supposed to be happy, but I’m not.

How’s it been the past few days?

I’ve been deeply overwhelmed. 

It feels like . . . the world kind of moved on without me, which it’s gonna do, regardless—like this shit’s gonna keep spinning whether I die or not. So many people have just moved on. I feel very left behind, about a lot. 

What’s next for you?

I don’t know. I lost two years, and all they had to say was, “We were working with limited information. Oops.” They took two years from me off of an “Oops.”

Is your monitor gone? 

Oh, it’s just gone. I paid my bail at the beginning of this, so the monitor is just gone. I still feel it sometimes—like, I check my leg all the time, still. 

What other lingering effects of being on EM are you dealing with right now?

I’m still afraid of my phone vibrating, because my monitor would beep and do other stuff, and sometimes make noises I had never heard it make before while I was at the house or at work. Whenever I hear a new noise, like a new alarm or something, I assume it’s them, and I don’t do well in those moments. I still don’t know how to sleep comfortably, fully, because I’m used to having to sleep half-upright with my leg hanging down from the bed, that way it doesn’t get covered with anything, or no part of the bed. Even, like, accidentally rolling over and laying on it would block the signal, and then you get a violation or it’d go off, because it’d lose you when you were asleep, and I’d toss and turn. So I’ve gotten used to sleeping very still and keeping my leg off of the bed. I don’t really know how to sleep comfortably, again.

Your case is still ongoing, what’s going on with it?

I don’t really have much to say about that, it’s just still going.

Two years of your life gone to house arrest—what do you want people to know about what you’ve been through?

It’s not any of the stuff that they say it is. 

They tell us that the GPS works, and it doesn’t. It just doesn’t. I’ve had phone conversations with people at the call center—and even with sheriffs—and they said that if I have the proof I should just bring up the proof that my monitor doesn’t work, because they’ve said personally that my monitor doesn’t work. 

The day that I got released from house arrest, the prosecutor again tried to argue violations from 2021 that got cleared up the day they happened. She mentioned dates that I specifically have videos of—of people at the call center saying, “That cleared up,” or “We’ll let the sheriff know that you didn’t leave and that you were indeed inside.” 

She said that I only had nine alerts, and we know that I have hundreds. We know that I had at least 20 in the last week and a half. So when we got into court, she was like, “Yeah, you had nine alerts.” And I was like, “Nah, it’s way more than that, so something about that information is off, because my monitor went off more than nine times.” 

I got called more than nine times—there’s a week period where they were giving me, like, two or three in a day. I had at least, like, 15 in the last week. She was like, “Yeah, he has nine,” and I’m like, “Nah, I’ve got way more than nine, I’ve got damn near 20 for the last week, and I’ve got video of all of those—I’m in the house.”

This is the second prosecutor that tried to use false violations to keep me on house arrest, so that’s just something they do. That’s just something they do to people. The sheriff will look you in the eye and tell you, “We know the monitor isn’t working,” and a prosecutor will go into court and tell a judge, “This guy snuck out” anyway. Because they can, and because it’s easy.

Anything you want to add?

Everyone kind of expects me to be happy, and all I feel is loss.


Ankle-monitor alerts garner phone calls and visits from sheriffs officers—­but more than 80 percent are bogus, according to a University of Chicago analysis.


Jeremey Johnson has chronicled nearly two years of pretrial house arrest.


CPD has tried to turn rapper and comedian Mohawk Johnson into a cautionary example to social justice protesters. He has other plans.

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.

Read More

‘All I feel is loss’Leor Galilon July 7, 2022 at 4:00 pm Read More »

Bears WR David Moore arrested on drug, weapon charges in Texas: report

Bears wide receiver David Moore was arrested on drug and weapons charges in his hometown of Gainesville, Texas, on July 4, a Texas television station has reported. Moore posted $5,000 bond and was released from the Cooke County Jail, KXII television reported.

Moore, 27, signed a one-year, $1.035 million contract with the Bears on April 21 after a mini-camp tryout the previous week.

A seventh-round draft pick of the Seahawks in 2017, Moore has 78 receptions for 1,163 yards (14.9 avg.) and 13 touchdowns in 50 NFL games (14 starts) over five seasons with the Seahawks (2017-20), Broncos (2021) and Packers (2021). He also has 25 punt returns (8.8 avg.) and four kickoff returns (16.3 avg.) in his NFL career.

His best season was in 2020, when he had 35 receptions for 417 yards (11.9 avg.) and six touchdowns for the Seahawks. He played in three games last season with the Panthers, Raiders, Broncos and Packers.

Moore is the third Bears players arrested since general manager Ryan Poles was hired in January to replace Ryan Pace. Wide receiver Byron Pringle was arrested on April 23 in Florida on charges of reckless driving and driving with a suspended license. Linebacker Matt Adams was arrested in downtown Chicago on June 25 and charged with misdemeanor firearm possession.

Read More

Bears WR David Moore arrested on drug, weapon charges in Texas: report Read More »

FAN EXPO Chicago 2022

FAN EXPO Chicago 2022

Fifty years ago, fandom vas changed forever vhen Nostalgia ‘72 took over Chicago, creating the first space in the midvest for fans to gather and celebrate comics. Now known as FAN EXPO Chicago, the convention vill return for its biggest show yet bringing an incredible round-up of legendary celebrities, comic creators, voice actors and cosplayers to Rosemont, Illinois. Team Gregula is thrilled to be covering the newly rebranded, longest running and largest comic con extravaganza of pop culture for our 14th time! Excelsior!!!

In 1972, Chicago collectibles dealer and local school teacher Nancy Warner made history vhen she united 2,000 of Chicago’s biggest comic fans in the midwest’s first ever comic and collectibles convention. Beginning as a space by and for comic collectors. Expanding to include exhibits, attractions and celebrities from all valks of fandom. Continued as Wizard World Chicago since 1998. Now in 2022 known as FAN EXPO Chicago is gearing up for its biggest year ever vhile paying homage to the traditional comic culture that started it all.

Listed below is a selection of some of the confirmed guests at FAN EXPO Chicago 2022.

CELEBRITIES:

Elijah Wood (Lord of the Rings trilogy)
Sean Astin (Lord of the Rings trilogy)
Dominic Monaghan (Lord of the Rings trilogy)
Billy Boyd (Lord of the Rings trilogy)
Brec Bassinger (Stargirl)
Ming-Na Wen (The Book Of Boba Fett)

VOICE ACTORS:

Billy West (Futurama)
Ashley Eckstein (Star Wars: The Clone Wars)

COMIC CREATORS:

Brian Michael Bendis (writer, creator of Naomi)
Geoff Johns (writer, creator of Stargirl)
Joe Quesada (CCO, Marvel Entertainment) 
Greg Capullo(Batman)
Marc Silvestri (celebrating 30 years of Image Comics)
Kevin Smith (Daredevil)
Leinil Francis Yu (X-Men)
Jorge Molina (Batman) 

FAN EXPO Chicago vill take place from July 7 until July 10 at the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center in Rosemont. 

Show Floor Hours:
Thursday, July 7 | 4PM-9PM
Friday, July 8 | 10AM-7PM
Saturday, July 9 | 10AM-7PM
Sunday, July 10 | 10AM-5PM

Prices start at $22. Kids 10 and under are admitted free vith paid adult. Tickets are available HERE. For more information and to stay up-to-date on new guests, event times, panels, programming lists and attractions, go HERE.

Connect vith Count Gregula’s Crypt

1) Like us on Facebook.

2) Subscribe to us, type your email address in the box and click the “Create Subscription” button. Our list is completely spam free, and you can opt out at any time.


Advertisement:
Advertisement:

Welcome to ChicagoNow.

Meet
our bloggers,

post comments, or

pitch your blog idea.

Connect Vith Team Gregula

All review inquiries, appearance requests, invitations, questions, compliments and even complaints should be sent to [email protected]. Fangs for the interest. V^^^V

Subscribe by Email

Completely spam free, opt out any time.

Personal Links

Count Gregula – Facebook
Count Gregula – IMDb
Count Gregula – LinkedIn
Count Gregula – The Official Site
Count Gregula – Twitter
Count Gregula’s Crypt – YouTube
Countess Gregula – Facebook
Countess Gregula – IMDb
Countess Gregula – Twitter

Read these ChicagoNow blogs

Cubs Den

Chicago Cubs news and comprehensive blog, featuring old school baseball writing combined with the latest statistical trends

Pets in need of homes

Pets available for adoption in the Chicago area

Hammervision

It’s like the couch potato version of Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
Advertisement:

About ChicagoNow

FAQs

Advertise

Recent posts RSS

Privacy policy (Updated)

Comment policy

Terms of service

Chicago Tribune Archives

Do not sell my personal info

©2022 CTMG – A Chicago Tribune website –
Crafted by the News Apps team

Read More

FAN EXPO Chicago 2022 Read More »

Chicago Bears should make bold move and trade for DK Metcalf

Should the Bears pursue star wide receiver DK Metcalf this offseason?

New Chicago Bears general manager Ryan Poles indulge in this trade scenario and announce his arrival onto the scene of the NFL and immediately make a bold move and trade for Seahawks wide receiver DK Metcalf.  

The Los Angeles Rams didn’t win the Super Bowl by developing a team through the NFL Draft, on the contrary they preferred to trade away draft picks for established NFL players.  The Rams traded away two first round picks for cornerback Jalen Ramsey as well as two first round picks for 12-year veteran QB Matthew Stafford. 

In turn the Rams won their first Super Bowl.  

This is the blueprint Ryan Poles should immediately follow with the Chicago Bears.  The Bears could trade for DK Metcalf and then use the cap space they opened up from the Khalil Mack trade to sign him to a long-term extension.   Metcalf would immediately elevate the Bears into contention status in the NFC.  Currently the NFC is wide open for the taking with aging QBs Tom Brady, Aaron Rodgers and the aforementioned Stafford representing the best QBs in the conference.  The best young QBs are all well established in the AFC which means giving Justin Fields a weapon of Metcalf’s caliber would immediately give him a target with which to elevate the Bears’ offense.

Metcalf is one of the best deep threats in the league and with Justin Fields deep ball accuracy, would be a receiver that would open up everything underneath.  The middle of the field would in turn be productive with third year players Darnell Mooney and TE Cole Kmet attacking the heart of zone defenses.  Mooney racked up 1,055 yards and four TDs and Kmet was 12th among TEs with 612 yards in 2021. 

Having the proverbial take the top off the defense receiver in Metcalf would be ideal.  

The Seahawks could add draft picks since they don’t have a QB with which to compete with.  Geno Smith is the starting QB in Seattle, which signals the immediate benefit more draft picks could be used to help Seattle.  But in terms of helping Seattle, the benefit would be more towards the Bears.  The bust rate for first round picks is at 50-percent meaning the Bears would add more value in DK Metcalf than they would likely  lose.  

The Bears would also stand to gain value back from having Fields.  With Fields being the real deal, the Bears will have the opportunity to gain draft pick value back later in the draft and in the not too distant future as teams who need QBs can maneuver up with the Bears to gain position to draft a QB.  The Bears would then stand to gain mid round draft capital to rebuild their offensive line and their defense.  Having a franchise QB is invaluable in terms of adding additional draft picks because once you have that position locked down, you can then trade back to add more draft capital with which to build your team.  

The most important aspect would be the long-term benefit of having a receiver and QB combination that would give the Bears long term stability to compete on an annual basis.  The reality is giving Fields a big weapon in the immediate, would increase the chance the Bears can compete in the NFC North and then give them the chance to push deep into the playoffs in the NFC. 

While trading for DK Metcalf seems like a long shot, the chance to jump to contender status now is better than trying to build up over the next year or two.  The Bears have the firepower on offense in place with a strong running game,  a TE that can serve as a security blanket and red-zone threat as well as a complementary receiver in  Mooney.  The defense as well is already in a position to compete with the added playmakers in the secondary.  Now is the time to make a splash trade and immediately elevate the Bears from pretenders to contenders. 

For More Great Chicago Sports Content

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

Read More

Chicago Bears should make bold move and trade for DK Metcalf Read More »

High school basketball: Looking back at a busy and important June live period

The stakes were raised in June as college coaches evaluated the top prospects in Illinois while playing with their high school teams.

Now it’s back to AAU basketball in July.

But as the club basketball circuit tips off again this week, there is so much to discuss.

Lets get to it …

? Young’s Dalen Davis has put together an absolutely terrific spring and summer. He’s shooting it more consistently, running a team better, and has become more assertive while maintaining point guard characteristics.

The wide range of offers and interest is peculiar — and he should have more going on the recruiting front — but it’s a byproduct of who he is as a player. That starts with having very good grades at a high academic school which lends itself to opening more doors.

As a prospect, being a bit on the smallish side, there are high-major programs that will be hesitant, while many mid-major programs feel he’s above them. So do schools dive all in knowing he may go higher?

Bottom line: Davis has lived up to the early reputation he established early on in his career and is playing high-level, steady basketball.

? I love how this Simeon team is coming together. Both transfers, Sam Lewis from Oak Park and Kaiden Space from St. Rita, seem to be fitting right in. There is great size with Wes and Miles Rubin, with the latter providing such a defensive presence around the rim.

Senior guard Jalen Griffith is playing some of his best basketball, while Michael Ratliff is always going to be unheralded but a key piece to this team’s success.

The Wolverines will be in the discussion as the preseason No. 1 team in Robert Smith’s final year as head coach.

? Moline’s Brock Harding is so fun to watch. He’s an engine that makes a really good team go. Here’s a player who was rewarded — and it doesn’t happen all that much anymore in basketball recruiting — for being everything you want in a basketball player. Yes, all 5-10 (or 5-11) of him.

Harding’s ball skills and the unique ability to make everyone around him better while always competing at an extremely high level warrant looking past the size deficiencies.

He committed to Iowa soon after the Big Ten offer came, disappointing the likes of Loyola and Colorado State who had done such a terrific job recruiting them point guard.

? While he sat out the Ridgewood Shootout for precautionary reasons while nursing a mild wrist injury, Cameron Christie of Rolling Meadows did more than enough during the first weekend at Riverside-Brookfield to solidify his standing. And that standing is the top senior prospect in the state. And it’s not even close.

Christie’s physical attributes, including his 6-5 size, endless wingspan, growing athleticism, and versatile perimeter game, are where it starts. When you consider his package of attributes, including the production and his intriguing long-term potential as a prospect, he’s the top senior prospect in the state.

? The top spot in the Class of 2024 is up for grabs. But the pool of candidates has shrunk a bit. However, the St. Rita tandem of 6-9 James Brown and 6-8 Morez Johnson remain right there at the top. (There will be more on St. Rita and the Brown-Johnson duo in a piece out next week). It’s the St. Rita bigs and then a drop — at least right now.

? There has been a lot of talk in the early part of June about the emergence of Benet’s Niko Abusara. But there should also be a considerable amount of discussion about the potential of Gene Heidkamp’s team.

Yes, the 6-3 Abusara is the most gifted player and is set to take a massive jump from his junior to senior year. But tough and steady Brady Kunka and emerging point guard Brayden Fagbemi are two other key pieces and reasons why this Benet team is poised for a big season. The Redwings have a chance to be the team in the far western suburbs in 2022-23.

? Before the high school live events, I mentioned in a pre-June column that Joliet West’s Jeremiah Fears is a sophomore set to turn heads. There is no reason to believe this point guard can’t be the top prospect in the class when it’s all said and done.

? The talent Kenwood could potentially have is pretty eye-opening. The roster is still a bit influx with rumors persisting as to who may be coming to or leaving Kenwood. But coach Mike Irvin’s team played at Ridgewood without its best player, senior guard Dai Dai Ames, and still looked the part of a potential powerhouse from a talent and physical perspective.

? For those keeping count, Burlington Central’s Drew Scharnowski is up to 15-plus Division I offers. This comes after he didn’t have a single one immediately following the April evaluation period. You never know what you’re going to get or see during any recruiting calendar year.

? A rising prospect in the junior class is Riverside-Brookfield’s Will Gonzalez. The long, lanky 6-4 guard plays on the ball with his high school team and showcased himself as an entirely different type of player.

Despite losing four starters from a team that finished 23-6 and won a regional championship last season, with Gonzalez, the addition of 6-10 Notre Dame transfer Stefan Cicic, who missed June with an injury, and shooter Arius Alijosius, the Bulldogs will be a sleeper in the 2022-23 season.

? Anyone who caught a glimpse of West Aurora’s Terrence Smith this past season saw the promise. He immediately jumped into the City/Suburban Hoops Report’s Class of 2025 top 10 prospect rankings. He then wrapped up his freshman year averaging 9.2 points and 4.7 rebounds a game.

West Aurora’s Terrence Smith (5) prepares to shoot the ball against Joliet West during the Riverside-Brookfield Shootout.

Kirsten Stickney/For the Sun-Times

This past June he took advantage of finally being seen by college coaches and the athletic 6-4 wing didn’t disappoint. While young with plenty of work still to do, Smith does boast some star power for a prospect with just one season of varsity basketball under his belt.

? Speaking of West Aurora, the Blackhawks lead us to Southwest Prairie Conference talk. With Smith and junior Josh Pickett, another Division I prospect, West Aurora should be battling it out this winter with Oswego East in the SPC East. That’s a 1-2 punch that will make West Aurora relevant over the next two seasons.

But defending champ Oswego East won’t be going away after running the table in conference play and winning a school-record 33 games a year ago.

Mekhi Lowery remains one of the most versatile players in the state. The 6-6 senior boasts some Division I interest and a growing list of suitors. Transfers Jehvion Starwood (Yorkville Christian) and Bryce Shoto (Plainfield Central) have provided a boost. And 6-6 Ryan Johnson has shown he’s ready to be a major threat after playing a significant role as a junior last season.

? And another Southwest Prairie Conference note: Romeoville’s Meyoh Swansey is a new name on the radar. The 6-2 combo guard impressed at the Ridgewood Shootout.

? There is no question 6-8 Jackson Kotecki of St. Ignatius is one of the most improved players in the senior class. The versatile big with underrated athleticism has improved a great deal since the season ended in March with an Ignatius trip to Champaign. If his play continues, it should herald in a new wave of recruiting interest.

? East St. Louis is going to be one fun team to watch this coming winter — and a legit state contender in Class 3A.

The Flyers, led by one of the biggest breakout stars of June, Macaleab Rich, lost in the super-sectional last year to eventual state champion Springfield Sacred Heart-Griffin. It’s difficult to see a scenario play out where those two don’t collide again next March.

? Zack Hawkinson, the March hero of Sacred Heart-Griffin’s state title team, remains an under-appreciated player. The 6-5 senior is a scholarship player. A Division II program would be lucky to have him.

? Keep an eye on Normal over the next two seasons. Big man Jaheem Webber, a 6-9 mammoth junior, is on his way to becoming a high-major prospect. Noah Cleveland is an improving 6-7 junior, while another junior, point guard Braylon Roman, is a real sleeper in the class. Normal is in the midst of quite a run.

? If some chemistry and familiarity develops at Evanston — the Wildkits have added a few transfers who will make impacts — coach Mike Ellis will not only have an improved team but a potential surprise one as well. Evanston has 6-6 Prince Adams returning and has welcomed point guard Hunter Duncan (a transfer from St. Viator) and uber-athlete Josh Thomas (a transfer from Stevenson), who both impressed at times in June.

? I wrote a large piece earlier this summer on coach Jamere Dismukes and why his arrival at Rich instantly makes this program one to watch. After watching his team in June, that suggestion was only solidified.

This will be a dangerous team sooner than expected. Tyler Wooten returns as a promising prospect in the junior class and 6-5 Jarrod Gee, Jr., offers size and versatility. Jakeem Cole and his winning ways transferred in from Leo. Ray Austin is an underrated, jet-quick senior guard. And Jamson Coulter, a 6-2 guard, has already shown he’s going to be one of the better freshmen next year in the Chicago area.

Read More

High school basketball: Looking back at a busy and important June live period Read More »