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The Melanin Martha celebrates Juneteenth at Monday Night Foodball

“I’m really trying to think of ways for us to take the trauma that’s linked to our food and uplift it in ways that makes us feel good and connected to who we are and our cultural identity,” says Jordan Wimby, aka the Melanin Martha, the subject of my column this week.

You can see (and eat) that plan in action next Monday, June 20, when Wimby takes over the kitchen at the Kedzie Inn in Irving park for Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s weekly chef pop-up. That’s also the day after Juneteenth, and Wimby is celebrating Black foodways with a menu of “Ancestral Favorites Reimagined,” featuring, as promised, her favorite vegetable: okra—buttermilk-battered and deep fried with a rich, creamy sauce. She’s also bringing the sweet potato-fennel minced beef pies, infused with ginger, garlic, and orange peel that I watched her conjure on Instagram this week; along with catfish étouffée and Carolina Gold rice (with a cauliflower sub for vegetarians).

I was slightly off on my prediction for dessert—it’s bourbon sweet potato crème brûlée—but hibiscus makes its way into her strawberry-mint ice pops, and also the gin-radler cocktail special Jon Pokorny will be mixing up at the bar.

Preorders for this taste of liberation are on sale now, and walk-ins are welcome starting at 5 PM.

Meantime, behold a full summer schedule of Monday Night Foodball below:

6/27: Chinese-Viet-inspired barbecue from Charles Wong of Umamicue

7/4: Off for Independence Day

7/11: Dawn Lewis of D’s Roti & Trini Cuisine

7/18: Mazesoba from Mike “Ramen Lord” Satinover

7/25: Asian stoner snacks from SuperHai

8/1: Keralan food from Thommy Padanilam of Thommy’s Toddy Shop

8/8: Osker Singer aka Whole Grain Hoe (formerly Rye Humor Baking)

8/15: Dylan Maysick of Diaspora Dinners

8/22: Vargo Brother Ferments

8/29: the triumphant return of Funeral Potatoes

Kedzie Inn
4100 N. Kedzie
(773) 293-6368
kedzieinn.com

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The Melanin Martha celebrates Juneteenth at Monday Night Foodball Read More »

The Melanin Martha celebrates Juneteenth at Monday Night FoodballMike Sulaon June 11, 2022 at 3:01 pm

“I’m really trying to think of ways for us to take the trauma that’s linked to our food and uplift it in ways that makes us feel good and connected to who we are and our cultural identity,” says Jordan Wimby, aka the Melanin Martha, the subject of my column this week.

You can see (and eat) that plan in action next Monday, June 20, when Wimby takes over the kitchen at the Kedzie Inn in Irving park for Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s weekly chef pop-up. That’s also the day after Juneteenth, and Wimby is celebrating Black foodways with a menu of “Ancestral Favorites Reimagined,” featuring, as promised, her favorite vegetable: okra—buttermilk-battered and deep fried with a rich, creamy sauce. She’s also bringing the sweet potato-fennel minced beef pies, infused with ginger, garlic, and orange peel that I watched her conjure on Instagram this week; along with catfish étouffée and Carolina Gold rice (with a cauliflower sub for vegetarians).

I was slightly off on my prediction for dessert—it’s bourbon sweet potato crème brûlée—but hibiscus makes its way into her strawberry-mint ice pops, and also the gin-radler cocktail special Jon Pokorny will be mixing up at the bar.

Preorders for this taste of liberation are on sale now, and walk-ins are welcome starting at 5 PM.

Meantime, behold a full summer schedule of Monday Night Foodball below:

6/27: Chinese-Viet-inspired barbecue from Charles Wong of Umamicue

7/4: Off for Independence Day

7/11: Dawn Lewis of D’s Roti & Trini Cuisine

7/18: Mazesoba from Mike “Ramen Lord” Satinover

7/25: Asian stoner snacks from SuperHai

8/1: Keralan food from Thommy Padanilam of Thommy’s Toddy Shop

8/8: Osker Singer aka Whole Grain Hoe (formerly Rye Humor Baking)

8/15: Dylan Maysick of Diaspora Dinners

8/22: Vargo Brother Ferments

8/29: the triumphant return of Funeral Potatoes

Kedzie Inn
4100 N. Kedzie
(773) 293-6368
kedzieinn.com

Read More

The Melanin Martha celebrates Juneteenth at Monday Night FoodballMike Sulaon June 11, 2022 at 3:01 pm Read More »

‘You can’t just be out there missing a ton of calls’: Inside the NBA Finals officiatingon June 11, 2022 at 4:36 pm

The NBA playoffs are full of moments that can swing a series: a buzzer-beating 3-pointer, a late and-1 bucket or an alley-oop dunk in front of the home crowd.

Or in some cases, it might be the blow of the referee’s whistle, as a late-game block/charge call or an overturned bucket could help make the difference between who advances and who goes home.

With the Golden State Warriors and Boston Celtics headed for a best-of-three series in the NBA Finals, what will officials be watching the closest? Are any points of emphasis expanded when the games matter most?

ESPN NBA insider Tim MacMahon caught up with Monty McCutchen, NBA senior vice president for referee development and training, for the X’s and O’s of challenges, whether the last-two-minute reports should be expanded, how Finals officials are chosen and the protocols of removing points off the board after a review.

What is reviewable during an NBA game? Are any of those parameters expanded during the playoffs?

“Nothing is expanded. Our rules in the preseason in October are our rules in June for conference finals and [the NBA] Finals. That’s a really important distinction to be made.

“The reviewable matters are a little more difficult [to explain], because we have 16 triggers and each of them have their own set of reviewable matters. We’re looking to maybe unify that. For example, you can always look to see if a shot-clock violation took place or not. You can see whether someone [was out of bounds when they] jumped before the shot. You can see if there was an eight-second violation.

On coaches’ challenges, reviewable matters are out of bounds, goaltending and a foul called against your team. Let’s say that you think the opponent’s best player was the fouler, but they called it on their seventh man. You can’t challenge that thinking that it’s on their best player. It has to be called on your team.”

Can referees overturn another call they notice while reviewing something else?

“There’s a difference in whether it’s a challenge or whether it’s a review. If it’s a coach’s challenge, let’s say the official thinks it’s an offensive foul and we call it a defensive foul. We most certainly can get that play called correctly if it is clear and conclusive, but it must be tied proximate to the play. You can’t go over and see a play out of pick-and-roll and see some other play that you didn’t call — a guy pushed off in the corner — and get that play called correctly. It’s only what’s tied to the play that you’re challenging.”

Will a late call impact any of the remaining NBA Finals games between the Celtics and Warriors? Cary Edmondson-USA TODAY Sports

How have the review rules evolved in recent years? What is the process for reviewing a call?

“Any time we have a high-profile play, the competition committee takes it under consideration. When instant replay was put in, it was put in for last-second shots. It was one paragraph in our rulebook. It’s 4 1/2 pages now.

“Playoffs drive a lot of this, because it’s the most important time of the year. We noticed one season and postseason that we were incorrectly calling a lot of off-ball fouls as someone was shooting. So we added that one to help determine where the first illegal contact was, because often when you process the play, you see it’s illegal and it takes time to blow the whistle. In the meantime, the shot’s in the air, but the first illegal contact occurred prior to that.

“So play often dictates change, if we see the style of play starting to change to some degree. Clear-path fouls became very difficult to adjudicate in real time; therefore, it was added because it’s such an important penalty with two free throws and the ball. All of these things take place through an organic sense.”

What is the official protocol for retroactively removing points off the board, such as Max Strus‘ made shot during Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals between the Miami Heat and Boston Celtics? At what point does it become nonreviewable?

“We understand that there is a point of no return. This rule has been in place in excess of 15 or 20 years, but the way it used to work is [a referee] would do the little twirly-bird signal and they’d go look at the next timeout to see whether that was a 2-pointer or a 3. So if one happened at, let’s say, 11:52 of the third quarter, you might not get to that until 5:50, 6:50, somewhere under that seven-minute mark during that first mandatory timeout.

2 Related

“Several years ago, in an effort to speed up play so that we took less time, we instituted the fact that we were going to review all 2s and 3s, initiated by the replay center, not by referees. Therefore, you don’t see referees give the twirly-bird signal now, because every single 2 or 3 is triggered.

“When one happens in Game 7, it garnered more attention, but there were 15 other incidents where points were taken off the board this year from a team — including Miami, ironically — throughout the season. Now, there were probably hundreds of close calls to being out of bounds where they would have reviewed that in-house. Let’s say Strus, in that case, would have been inbounds by two or three inches. It still would have been reviewed.

“One of the key things that I’d like our fan base to know is that the process is much faster now. In my career, we were waiting on that mandatory timeout to go review it ourselves as referees on the floor. Now, instead of that mandatory timeout that occurred much later, we were able to communicate it back to the table and it was corrected at, I think, 8:28, saving several minutes off the old policy.

“We can’t announce those in live action. As the ball’s being dribbled up, no one wants an announcement that interrupts flow through disappointment. If you hear that while you’re going up for a layup and you’ve just lost three points, that can really impact play. Secondarily, if we did it in live action and just took points off without announcing it, you could well imagine the confusion that would take for the team to look up and think that they had three points without understanding why they don’t have three points and then arguing about it during live action. So we think the first dead ball is the first opportune time.

“Now, in Strus’ instance, there were two dead balls prior to when it was announced. Both were fairly quick, though. One was an out-of-bounds in the backcourt where we give them the ball as soon as they’re ready, and the other had some element of small confusion because there was a defensive three [seconds] involved, so it didn’t get announced. Those were about 30 seconds before it got announced, so it wasn’t in our view a material difference to the outcome of the game, those 30 seconds.”

Are points of emphasis sent to referees during the playoffs, and the Finals in particular?

Note: Teams are sent points-of-emphasis videos every month throughout the regular season and playoffs.

“The driving force of that is to allow teams to coach to it. If we do a good job of consistent work, from October to November to December, January, February, it’s really incumbent on my group to do the same things in April, May and June, because the teams have spent a lot of time coaching to that. We don’t change things up in the playoffs.

The Boston Celtics are tied with the Golden State Warriors 2-2 with the NBA championship on the line. You can catch the action on ABC and in the ESPN App.

Game 5: Monday, 9 p.m. ET, at GS
Game 6: Thursday, 9 p.m. ET, at BOS
Game 7: June 19, 8 p.m. ET, at GS*

*If necessary

“One of the things that I do in the playoffs is I remind our group that, hey, we were really good with non-basketball moves this year, right? Don’t let up. Because that’s one of the criticisms that you always hear: ‘Oh, they won’t call it in the playoffs.’ I think we’ve proven [that criticism wrong] over the past several years.

“Now, don’t interpret my enthusiasm for consistency with perfection. We miss calls. When we miss calls it’s really easy for everyone to say, ‘Oh, see, they’re not calling it in the playoffs,’ when in fact we are. “It’s really important that we don’t feed into the idea that, ‘Oh, that’s a playoff foul.’ … I don’t drive that.”

How are referees evaluated? What criteria determine which referees call the Finals?

“The process is the same to determine who referees playoff games in the first round as it is to referee the Finals. We run through the process every round.

“Referee operations consists of myself, Joey Crawford, E.F. Rush, Mark Wunderlich, Bennett Salvatore and Bernie Fryer. There are six of us that make up referee operations as the quote-unquote “experts.” I use that term without any sense of hubris, but we have dedicated our lives to this and we do care about it deeply, and we really have worked at knowing the nuances of our craft.

“We make up a percentage, the teams make up a percentage and [so does] the analytical department. That is independent reviewers. That is not ex-referees, it’s trained reviewers. They have every call and non-call graded for a referee all season long — thousands and thousands of decisions per referee.

“We put it into the matrix and it spits out 36 names. Then we go to 28 for the second round, 20 for the third and 12 [for the Finals].

REFNBA Finals APP.Tony Brothers11thJames Capers11thMarc Davis11thKane Fitzgerald4thScott Foster15thJohn Goble6thDavid Guthrie5thCourtney Kirkland2ndEric Lewis4thJosh Tiven3rdJames Williams2ndZach Zarba9th

“If someone is .0008 separated in our matrix, we talk it out as a group. That means the analytical team and my team — obviously the [NBA] teams aren’t involved in that. But [president of league operations] Byron Spruell, Joe Dumars in his role [as executive vice president, head of basketball operations], which used to be Kiki VanDeWeghe, when [referees] are minutely close together via the matrix, we hash out what intangibles each person brings.

“You can’t just be out there missing a ton of calls and expect your strength or courage as an intangible to override that. Then we as experts know where people should be standing, know whether they show up in the fourth quarter or overtime, which is an important factor in the playoffs because the decisions are so difficult to make and the pressure is so high. Some people handle pressure a little better than others, and we have to recognize that. We have to grow those that don’t handle it, and they don’t get the best opportunities until they do handle it.

“It’s very analogous to what coaches do with their younger players, developing them until they can become part of a rotation.”

The last-two-minute (L2M) reports become huge news the mornings after NBA Finals games. Has there been discussion to expand that time frame, and what has the overall assessment been of the success of those reports?

“We’ve been very successful being transparent. We’re very honest about those. We hash those out every single day. Every day, we go in and minutely look at very slow replays and everything else. We take it very seriously.

“Right now, it takes 15 reviewers eight hours to nine hours to do one full game that we give to the teams. There’s no way we can get that out the next morning by 9 a.m. if we expand that on a 13-game night and 12 of them go to a L2M report that would turn into a whole-game report or a fourth-quarter report. It’s truly a logistical issue against training proper people to give out meaningful reports.

“We think the two minutes is the one that signifies. It mirrors our rulebook well with all the rule changes that take place within two minutes. We had to choose a line, and that was the line. Expanding the reports is discussed, but right now, it’s not feasible to go longer and get it out in a timely manner.”

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‘You can’t just be out there missing a ton of calls’: Inside the NBA Finals officiatingon June 11, 2022 at 4:36 pm Read More »

The three unlikely players who could determine the NBA Finalson June 11, 2022 at 4:36 pm

BOSTON — Steve Kerr has made a lot of high-pressure, large-stakes decisions during his NBA career. Like that afternoon in 1995 when he got fed up with Michael Jordan in a Chicago Bulls practice and made the choice to throw a forearm and ended up with a black eye.

The Golden State Warriors‘ coach had another big one with seven minutes left Friday in a vital Game 4 of the NBA Finals when he decided to pull Draymond Green out of the game. The Warriors were down five points to the Boston Celtics and in danger. It was as simple as Green not playing well and the player he went to, Kevon Looney, was.

The Warriors went on an 11-3 run over the next five minutes with Green out and they took the lead for good. Then Kerr decided to play Green on defense only as much as possible in the final minutes, once even calling a timeout to take him out of the game. In the more limited role, Green made several impactful plays and had one of his best stretches in the series as the Warriors closed out the 107-97 victory to even the series at 2-2.

On their face, these Finals look like Stephen Curry’s greatness against the Celtics’ youthful exuberance that will perhaps manifest itself in volume 3-point shooting and modern pick-and-roll coverage. But as this turns into a three-game series, the title might hinge on an old-school scenario: the big men.

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It will come down to how Kerr manages what could end up being a prickly situation with Green on one side. And the health of Celtics defensive ace Robert Williams III, who looked like he aggravated a knee injury late in Game 4 in what has the potential to be a turning point in the series.

Both Kerr and Celtics coach Ime Udoka probably know these realities and their willingness to punt them until later on told the story after the game.

“I didn’t see anything with Rob and haven’t heard anything,” Udoka said.

This felt like a canard considering Williams came up lame with four minutes to play and signaled to the bench to ask out of the game. A few moments later he was pulled and never returned. The Warriors outscored the Celtics by seven points in those final three-plus minutes.

The Boston Celtics are tied with the Golden State Warriors 2-2 in the Finals, with Game 5 Monday (9 p.m. ET, ABC) in San Francisco.

GAME 4: GS 107, BOS 97
o Curry’s epic game changes series

GAME 3: BOS 116, GS 100
o Celtics use size, quickness to regain control
o Curry in unfamiliar underdog territory

GAME 2: GS 107, BOS 88
o Steph was a problem for the Celtics
o C’s lament more third-quarter woes

GAME 1: BOS 120, GS 108
o Boston’s win one year in the making
o Celtics beat Dubs at their game

o Series keys | Experts’ picks | Odds

Williams has the best defensive metrics in this series by far. When he was on the floor in Game 4, the Celtics outscored the Warriors by six points. When he was off, they were outscored by 16. Udoka might have been aware he wasn’t available down the stretch.

Williams has 12 blocks and five steals in the series. He had a playoff career-high 12 rebounds Friday. When he has been on the floor, the Celtics are +20 in the four games. In Games 3 and 4, he looked as spry as he has in weeks. He was covering immense ground, swatting shots and generally causing the Warriors to cower.

Recovering from knee surgery late in the season and a bone bruise in his left knee, Williams’ life has been all about playing and treatment on the knee for weeks. He gets several deep-tissue massages in his calf and the front of the knee daily. Bags of ice by the ton, electric muscle stimulation treatment and a process called blood-flow restriction, which involves putting a ring around the knee that squeezes to promote healing.

It has been working: After missing seven of the Celtics’ first 14 playoff games, he has played in eight in a row. But it’s now a matter of how severe the aggravation might be, and it’s also unclear how he will feel Monday in San Francisco for Game 5 (9 p.m. ET on ABC) in what could end up being a massive variable.

The Boston Celtics are tied with the Golden State Warriors 2-2 with the NBA championship on the line. You can catch the action on ABC and in the ESPN App.

Game 5: Monday, 9 p.m. ET, at GS
Game 6: Thursday, 9 p.m. ET, at BOS
Game 7: June 19, 8 p.m. ET, at GS*

*If necessary

“It’s up and down,” Williams said about his knee before Game 4. “Adrenaline energy kind of carries me.”

Then there’s the brewing scenario with Green, who has been so limited on offense in these Finals that Williams will often guard him because it allows freelancing elsewhere. But around his benching, he was truly effective in the fourth quarter, posting five of his nine rebounds and three of his eight assists in limited minutes.

Kerr made it sound like it was the plan all along to reduce Green’s minutes; the power forward played a series-low 33. And Kerr did take Looney out of the starting lineup in part so he could set a rotation that would allow Looney to play more in the fourth quarter.

Kerr still had to make the call in the moment, and it was one of the best moves he has made in the series. It might even rise to the level of “season-saving.” Looney had played six minutes total in the fourth quarter in the first three games of the series; he played nearly eight minutes in the vital fourth quarter of Game 4.

“Like most coaches, if you’ve got a group that’s going well, you just stay with it,” Kerr demurred when discussing the choice. “I didn’t play [Looney] enough in Game 3. That was my mistake. It was important to get him out there, and he had a huge impact on the game.”

Looney is a whopping +36 in the series after going +21 in Game 4. He’s been the team’s best rebounder and rim defender while limiting mistakes. He’s gotten a bunch of baskets around the rim, shooting 13-of-18 as he gets putbacks and dump-offs when attention goes elsewhere. It stands in stark contrast to Green’s 6-of-26 shooting.

“I’m definitely never thrilled coming out of the game with seven minutes to go in the fourth quarter in a must-win game,” Green said. “But, at the end of the day, if that’s what coach decides, then you roll with it. You know, I had to keep my head in the game.”

If the same situation arises in Games 5 or 6 or maybe even 7, Kerr might have to do it again. Looney has been the Warriors’ best big man. Though Green and Looney often play together, for Golden State to have its best offense out in crunch time Kerr can only play one.

Though they’ve had their battles over the years, Kerr has stood by Green even as his temper and withering offense in recent years has made it harder. That’s getting tested in a major way right now and it’s only going to get more intense.

For both sides with these big men, it’s all a big part of this Finals.

“I don’t ever want our players to be happy if I take them out,” Kerr said. “Draymond is incredibly competitive. Whatever it takes in Game 5, that’s what we’ll do.”

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The three unlikely players who could determine the NBA Finalson June 11, 2022 at 4:36 pm Read More »

Fire still paying for Georg Heitz’s 2020-21 offseason

The poor results of Fire sporting director Georg Heitz’s 2019-20 offseason are well known. And if the Fire can’t reverse this year’s slide, his moves last winter will face heavy scrutiny.

Perhaps overlooked is what Heitz did between the 2020 and ’21 seasons, a period that wasn’t as splashy but continues to haunt the Fire.

After the Fire narrowly missed the expanded 2020 playoffs, Heitz decreed that continuity would bring better results. Instead of making big additions, he added right back Jhon Espinoza, striker Chinonso Offor and winger Stanislav Ivanov before the 2021 season. He also signed prospect Jhon Duran, who wasn’t eligible to join until 2022. Meanwhile, Heitz sent Homegrown winger Djordje Mihailovic to Montreal for up to $1 million in allocation money and didn’t bring back veteran striker CJ Sapong.

Those decisions aren’t paying off.

Espinoza is still behind starter Boris Sekulic and has struggled defensively when he’s seen the field. Offor is the Fire’s third-choice striker, and Duran has shown some promise but his lack of polish has kept him from seriously challenging Kacper Przybylko.

Ivanov’s struggles are the most glaring.

After missing the first half of last season with a knee problem, Ivanov began this season as a starter. But with the additions of Chris Mueller and Jairo Torres, the emergence of Brian Gutierrez and coach Ezra Hendrickson’s trust in Fabian Herbers, Ivanov seems like the odd man out. He hasn’t played in the Fire’s last four matches, and Hendrickson has chosen to use the more defensive-minded Herbers instead even when the team has needed a goal.

On May 25, Hendrickson said Ivanov is “still in the mix” but then picked Herbers in the 75th minute of the Fire’s 3-2 loss to Toronto when the match was even at 2.

“Right now, we’re in a situation where we feel like we’re putting the best players that we have on the pitch,” Hendrickson said before the Toronto match. “He had a bad run of form right before we got the additions, so that didn’t help his cause. But we want to play the guys who are performing, and that goes from what they do in training, also from what they do when they get their opportunities in games.”

For whatever reasons, Ivanov, Espinoza and Offor haven’t improved since coming to Chicago. At best, the trio give the Fire some depth, but their bit parts and minimal impact make that a hard argument to win, stretching a top-heavy team even further.

Now in Nashville, Sapong remains a dependable scoring option. More painfully for the Fire, Mihailovic has become one of the league’s most dangerous attackers. Since the start of 2021, Mihailovic has 11 goals and 20 assists and recently earned a call-up to the U.S. national team before pulling himself off the squad because of injury.

While it’s unclear whether Mihailovic would’ve reached those heights in Chicago, his breakout is a stark reminder of Heitz wasting the 2020-21 offseason. Unfortunately for the Fire, seeing a former Homegrown player flourish elsewhere isn’t the only consequence of Heitz’s mistakes that winter.

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Sportsbooks paint pessimistic picture for Bears

LAS VEGAS — The Bears will again be up against some formidable odds this season, according to many sportsbooks and bettors who bolster their beliefs with their bankrolls.

Chicago’s victory total has been widely set at 6.5, so experts forecast a ninth non-winning campaign in 10 seasons.

In its preseason release of every lined 2021 NFL game, the Westgate SuperBook had the Bears favored just four times. They went 6-11, overall and against the spread.

In fact, according to TeamRankings.com, the Bears are 89-105-3 against the number since 2010 for a .459 winning percentage, fifth-worst in the league. Blindly betting against the Bears over that span has been profitable.

For ’22, the SuperBook has Chicago favored just twice.

On its NFL MVP odds sheet, Station Casinos lists 55 players. Not one is a Bear. Of 74 players, the SuperBook has quarterback Justin Fields 19th, at 80-to-1 odds and tailback David Montgomery 63rd at 500-1.

At Circa Sports, the Bears are +400 (risk $100 to win $400) to make the playoffs, -550 (wager $550 to win $100) to miss the postseason.

Rex Beyers, an industry veteran and head of wagering at PlayUp USA, envisions a six-win season as the Bears’ best-case scenario, 5-12 or 4-13 being more likely.

“That’s the worst team in a bad division,” he says. “And the quarterback can’t play, which we will find out most likely, once and for all, over the course of several long fall 2022 Sundays.”

Handicapper Bill Krackomberger relished finding a 7.5 total, very early, and hammered Under at -145. The consensus of his expert staff predicts “a tough season” for Chicago.

“I know it’s really popular to bet Bears futures every year, amongst gamblers. But that’s just it — they are gamblers rooting and betting with their hearts. Good people in Chicago. I love them and the city.

“[But] sorry, Bears fans. We need the ’85 Bears to return to their glory.”

He says something akin to, Where have you gone, Mike Ditka and Buddy Ryan?

SELLING IT

Some aren’t so sour on the Bears, or Fields. Without Andy Dalton over his shoulder, DraftKings sportsbook director Johnny Avello expects the 23-year-old quarterback to settle down.

“I liked him at Ohio State,” Avello says. “Thought he was terrific.”

About the axiom that Buckeyes quarterbacks don’t pan out in the NFL, Avello pauses.

“That might be true, but Ohio State is such a great collegiate program. People always have high expectations for them when they get to the next level. Sometimes it just doesn’t work out. Sometimes it’s about the right system.”

He mentions Tom Brady, who didn’t portend professional superstardom at Michigan but soared in New England to become the game’s most accomplished quarterback.

“Sometimes it’s about the right break, the right coaching, the right mentor,” Avello says. “So I don’t hold that against anybody.”

Long Island ‘capper Tom Barton concurs and considers this Fields’ second rookie season. Nathan Peterman and Trevor Siemian are Chicago’s reserve quarterbacks. A lifelong Bears fan who divorces his head from his heart in pursuit of profit, Barton likes what he has heard from Luke Getsy.

New coach Matt Eberflus hired Getsy from Green Bay, where he worked with quarterback Aaron Rodgers and the Packers’ passing schemes, to be the Bears’ offensive coordinator.

Getsy champions a 1-2 running attack, with Montgomery and Khalil Herbert, and play-action wrinkles to allow the quarterback to hit a single option, highlighting tight end Cole Kmet or receiver Darnell Mooney.

“Fields can sell,” Barton says. “Watch his Ohio State tape, which I’ve done. He can sell that play-action.”

TOUGH SLATE

Barton has reviewed what Eberflus and Getsy have undoubtedly seen in last season’s video — that Fields doesn’t pick up blitzes well.

“Always been his problem,” Barton says. “He doesn’t have that sixth sense. He doesn’t feel the pressure. And it’s his perception … if he doesn’t trust they’re going to pick up the block, that’s going to be an issue.”

Chicago quarterbacks were sacked 3.4 times a game last season, tied for next-to-worst in the NFL. Barton says Fields would get hit early, question himself, dump it off or scamper.

Eberflus and Getsy have a remedy.

“They’re saying, ‘Do a lot of play-action. Someone will bite.’ Now all Fields has to worry about is, Who’s the [defender] biting?” Barton said. “Now you have one-on-one coverage, and you can take advantage.”

He pegs Week 5 at Minnesota, though, as Danger Week. He expects the Bears to be 1-4 after that Vikings game. Then comes Washington, at New England, at Dallas.

Said Barton: “They could be sitting there with one win going into Week 9.”

He recommends savvy fantasy players to consider key Bears, two months into the new system, at this point, with the Dolphins at home followed by the Lions, then at the Falcons and Jets.

Maybe four consecutive triumphs, Barton said. But he has the Bears winning only six or seven games, and he despises the late Week 14 bye, in the second week of December.

He hasn’t invested in Bears futures tickets and advises nobody to do so.

“No Super Bowl, no NFC championship,” Barton says. “I saw people take 100-to-1 on Fields to win MVP. ‘Dude, what are you doing?’ What does he have to do to win the MVP, win 12, 13, 14 games? Yeah, that’s not happening.

“To me, lay off, don’t go near and don’t touch.”

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Will Cubs’ Willson Contreras be traded before the Aug. 2 deadline?

Another Cubs selloff? Is that what we’re headed toward?

Not that the Cubs have the same level of assets that they had at the time of their 2021 capitulation, when president Jed Hoyer traded Kris Bryant, Javy Baez and Anthony Rizzo, among others, at the deadline. But they do have Willson Contreras — one of the best catchers in baseball — bound for free agency at season’s end, and his abundant talent would be greatly missed.

In this week’s “Polling Place,” your home for Sun-Times sports polls on Twitter, we asked whether or not the Cubs will deal their best player before the Aug. 2 deadline.

“He’s a foundation piece they should build around,” @JeffreyCanalia commented.

But @PleaseTalkToMe1 countered, “He’s a 30-year-old catcher. It’s a risky proposition to build around that.”

We also asked voters to place Contreras into the pecking order of Cubs catchers. And finally: In what year will the Cubs have their next winning season?

“In the year 2525,” offered @RonaldVoigt4, a real wisenheimer.

On to the polls:

Poll No. 1: Will the Cubs trade Willson Contreras before the Aug. 2 deadline?

Upshot: “If I happen to get traded, I hope it’s to a good team that has a chance to go to the World Series,” Contreras told the Sun-Times this week. “If a trade doesn’t happen, I’ll be happy to stay. … As of right now, I’m still a Chicago Cub. And I’m proud of that.” Let’s be honest, Cubs fans: It doesn’t sound that promising. And that’s probably because it’s not.

Poll No. 2: Contreras is the best Cubs catcher since:

Upshot: Davis — like Contreras, a two-time All-Star — was terrific. Hundley, ever unsung while playing alongside four future Hall-of-Famers, was the definition of a workhorse. The great Hartnett, swatter of the “Homer in the Gloamin,’ ” is enshrined in Cooperstown. Contreras absolutely ranks as one of the best the Cubs have had. Anybody else belong in this discussion? Michael Barrett, according to @Micflowin, but we’ll take Contreras all day in that head-to-head comparison.

Poll No. 3: In what year will the Cubs next have a winning season?

Upshot: Prospect-wise, keep in mind how young the big names are. Infielders Cristian Hernandez and James Triantos are 18 and 19, respectively. Outfielders Pete Crow-Armstrong and Kevin Alcantara are 20 and 19. Pitcher Caleb Kilian is more seasoned and recently made his first big-league start — and looked good — but the Cubs’ No. 1 prospect, Triple-A outfielder Brennen Davis, is out for the season after back surgery. This is going to take a while, folks.

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Will White Sox’ Danny Mendick stick in this big leagues this time?

Long before Danny Mendick rose up and met the moment of his baseball career in 2022, before he broke into the big leagues as a September call-up in 2019, before the White Sox decided he was worth a 22nd-round draft pick in 2015, before a brand-new Division I college program offered him a partial scholarship heading into his junior year in 2013, there was the unforgettable pro day at Monroe Community College in Rochester, New York.

Pro scouts came to campus to look at, well, whoever might be worth looking at. It turned out that five Tribunes baseball players hit, fielded and ran — chased their dreams — in front of the scouts that day, but Mendick, a smallish sophomore infielder from the area, wasn’t one of them.

”I wasn’t even invited,” he recalls.

Under the radar. Underappreciated. Undeterred.

Mendick was used to it. He had been a good player as a boy — the rare kind who understood the game, knew what base to throw to and when to try to hit a ball the other way — but he wasn’t one to elicit ”oohs,” ”aahs” and ”whoas!” from the parents parked on metal bleachers. By the time he was a senior in high school, he had developed enough to make all-Monroe County, but the college scholarship offers that rolled in? He could count them on zero hands.

”Not one,” he says. ”It’s true.”

He would hit .268 as a freshman at Monroe, not exactly exploding onto the scene. Anyone who had been around him recognized that he played hard, took the game seriously and deeply loved it, but it had taken all that just to get him to Monroe. Was he really cut out to go far above and beyond that?

Danny Mendick at Monroe CC.

Courtesy of Bill Mendick

”There weren’t a lot of people who saw it,” Mendick says, ”but I saw it. My parents saw it.”

Bill Mendick sure did. Danny and his dad took their breakfast with a side of ”SportsCenter” in the early years, and one morning, when Danny was in middle school, a highlight reel was showing the best defensive plays of the previous night.

”Is there anything they’re doing out there that you can’t do?” Bill asked.

The boy shook his head no.

”Don’t you ever forget that, Danny.”

Mendick believed it before UMass-Lowell took a flyer on him and after the Sox spent a potentially meaningless pick — No. 652 — on him and has continued to believe it while toggling between Triple-A Charlotte and the majors since 2019. And since May 29, when star shortstop Tim Anderson was injured in a game against the Cubs — coincidentally, a day after Mendick was recalled from Charlotte — Mendick has been getting a chance to put his cards on the table.

The Sox were a vulnerable team even before losing Anderson for at least a few weeks, but it’s a potentially catastrophic break in the lineup when a batting champion goes down. Enter Danny Duct Tape, who has hit .333 (11-for-33), scored six runs and kept his seasonlong errorless streak intact. At a time when the Sox desperately needed him to be good, he has been better than that.

”I’m proud and happy that all the hard work is paying off,” he says.

But what will it amount to in the end? Mendick knows his shortstop duties will end the second Anderson is able to play. If and when the Sox reach full strength — with this team, one can’t count on that happening at any point — it’ll be a numbers crunch like the ones that used to stress Mendick out as he ”played GM” and tried to figure out his impending lot. Jake Burger is mashing the ball. Leury Garcia is signed through 2024.

Harsh but true: Mendick could hit .400 while Anderson is out, and it wouldn’t guarantee him squat.

”Getting to the big leagues is one thing,” he says. ”Staying is the hardest thing. But I know I can do that.

”I’d like to believe, in my journey, the goal is always to put pressure on my bosses, right? Put pressure on them to make decisions they weren’t prepared to make. I want to be able to help this team get to the postseason and win a World Series.”

Young Danny.

Courtesy of Bill Mendick

Mendick manages the stress much better now, thanks in large part to Bill, mom Patti and sister Nicole. There are close families, then there are the Mendicks. To wit: After every game Mendick plays — no matter where, no matter how late in the night — he calls home. Bill and Patti watch the game and then wait up, and none of them wants it any other way.

”That we talk daily, we’re thrilled, yes,” says Bill, 64. ”It keeps everybody grounded, in good times and bad. . . . Danny is a very good kid, a very good person.”

And he still has a very big dream: to really be somebody in baseball. To be on everybody’s radar. To be appreciated. He hasn’t tired of fighting for it.

”I love this game and everything that goes into it,” he says, ”the smells, the sounds, everything. If I look back on my life, that love is what got me here. I love the game, and I don’t know what I’d do without it.”

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Chicago Bears should entertain Robert Quinn Trade for D.K. Metcalf

Chicago Bears need to shop Robert Quinn and could use D.K. Metcalf

New general manager Ryan Poles most significant failure this offseason was bungling the opportunity to trade Chicago Bears linebacker Robert Quinn before the 2022 NFL Draft. Poles could remedy the situation by trading the veteran player for wide receiver D.K. Metcalf if he can strike a reasonable deal for the Bears.

Reports are coming out that Metcalf wants out of the Seattle Seahawks locker room. They’re coming at the same time rumors of Quinn wishing to leave the Bears for greener pastures as well. Quinn has been a great asset to the Bears’ defense since joining the team in 2020. Last year, he set the Bears’ single-season sack record to go along with four nifty interceptions.

Even with all he’s accomplished, the Bears should at least see what he and what else the Seahawks would be wanting in return for a valuable prize like Metcalf. With Justin Fields in need of elite playmakers, Metcalf would bring the tools to be a true “X” wide receiver. It’s something Fields and the Bears desperately need.

Quinn’s value will never be higher after 2021

The 11-year NFL veteran, Quinn, turned 32-years old this May. There are only so many good years he will have left producing numbers we saw last season. Let’s not forget, that he had his worst sack season statistically in 2020 with the Bears.

With Quinn coming off an electric 2021, many Bears fans were hoping they could use that success as leverage and get the Bears more value in the draft. Because with Khalil Mack gone and Akiem Hicks wanting to sail off into the sunset, there was no point keeping Quinn over younger, cheaper, players for a new system.

Instead, Poles played the cards he was dealt like a rookie’s hand at UNO. He missed playable moves while picking up more cards and still fumbling the Bears’ overall leverage. Since Poles whiffed at his first offseason job of building a successful foundation for Fields, Quinn has skipped out on the Bears’ voluntary workouts altogether. With signs pointing to Quinn’s eventual absence from the Bears roster, one of the team’s best options would be leverage for Metcalf.

Metcalf can bring a lot to the Bears’ offense

Since joining the league in 2019, Metcalf has been near impossible for defenses to defend. He’s caught 216 balls for 3,170 yards and scored 29 receiving touchdowns. The Pro Bowl athlete is 6-foot-4, 235-pounds, which is a size mismatch for corners.

Imagine pairing his skillset with the speed of Darnell Mooney, Byron Pringle, and Velus Jones. That speed trio will keep most secondary on their toes trying to keep up. It’s going to take at least two defenders to take on Metcalf’s size in the open field. That combination could be lethal if Fields has time to make accurate throws.

The Bears shouldn’t give too much for D.K. Metcalf

As much as the Bears need a wide receiver, the team shouldn’t get conned into giving up a first-round draft pick. Although the Bears know they are getting a true stud, the Bears will likely be drafting high in the first round next year. Rookie contracts are cheaper than what Metcalf will be when his contract is up after this year.

Poles and the Bears need to continue their plan of building homegrown talent, and the Bears need to see that talent coming from the first round, as they provide the Bears with the best players for the price. The Bears have not had a first-round pick in the last three of the past four drafts. That has cost the Bears in cap space.

The Bears should certainly look to shop Quinn and a second and a fourth-round pick though. A second-round pick alone will likely not be enough. Metcalf can be a young, key piece that for sure provide more to the Bears than most round two and four talent. Because Quinn is showing signs of wanting out anyways, this just adds extra icing for the Seahawks and doesn’t cost the Bears much.

Getting Metcalf is probably a longshot for the Bears

The Seahawks would want good value for giving up a 24-year-old Pro Bowl athlete. With Quinn 8-years his senior, the Bears would need to give up more for the trade. The Bears would need to consider a high price in terms of draft picks to make it worth the Seahawks’ time. The elite-upgrade-trigger-averse Poles seems unlikely to make a deal giving up valuable picks.

Even if the teams wanted the player swap, Metcalf and Quinn might not be happy with the new destination. Metcalf is running from a team that traded away Russell Wilson and will have to rebuild. Granted, Fields is a better quarterback than Geno Smith or Drew Lock, but the Bears are rebuilding. They also have a poor history of keeping wide receivers happy. Quinn is likely wanting to leave the Bears for a championship contender like Mack and Hicks. The Seahawks are anything but that.

The Bears have nothing to lose by throwing their name in the hat and trying to gain an exceptional wide receiver. The least the organization could do to pacify the fanbase would be to leak a story the team is going after Metcalf. Bears fans need a little assurance the team is trying to remedy the offense instead of just blowing smoke in press conferences.

Make sure to check out our Bears forum for the latest on the team.

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Anthony Rizzo’s first game vs Cubs post-trade was actually insaneVincent Pariseon June 11, 2022 at 12:00 pm

The Chicago Cubs have seen a lot of historically good players come through and call Wrigley Field home. Anthony Rizzo is one of those guys as he was the face of the franchise for a very long time. Bringing him in all those years ago was one of the smartest moves in the history of the organization.

Unlike all of the other great faces that came before him, Rizzo actually helped what was a helpless team win the whole thing. Rizzo and the Cubs won the World Series together in 2016 so you know that he is forever connected to the squad.

Unfortunately, the business side of baseball (and some boneheaded decisions by the management team) forced them to trade Rizzo in 2021. He was dealt to the New York Yankees for future assets.

Rizzo and the Yankees were defeated by the Boston Red Sox in the 2021 Wild Card Game so his time there was looking like it might come to a quick end because of the fact that he was an unrestricted free agent.

Anthony Rizzo faced off against the Chicago Cubs on Friday night at Yankee Stadium.

He ended up staying there on an extension so he was able to face his old team on Friday. It was the first time that the Cubs paid a visit to Yankee Stadium since 2014. It was truly cool to see these two historic teams match up against one another.

It wasn’t the same as it will be when Rizzo returns to Wrigley Field as a road player but it was still odd to see him line up against the Cubs. Seeing him stand on first base next to Frank Schwindel was just odd (Schwindel took Rizzo’s spot after the trade).

Rizzo didn’t collect a hit (0-4) but he did draw a walk and was hit by a pitch in his six plate appearances. It wasn’t his best night offensively but Cubs fans know that he is still dangerous even when the ball isn’t getting through.

The game beyond the Rizzo story was absolutely insane. New York won 2-1 thanks to some 13th-inning magic. It was tied at one for a very time and it took a while to get it settled. You don’t see games get this far in terms of innings anymore but they both managed to get really good pitching in extra innings.

Former Cubs prospect Gleyber Torres hit a solo shot for the Yankees which is where they got their first run. The Cubs received their run thanks to a solo shot of their own from Jason Heyward. In the 13th inning, the Yankees scored thanks to some pinch-hitting and pinch-running.

Joey Gallo was the pinch-runner in the game and Jose Trevino hit the game-winner to score him. It was a crazy game. It was also a game where this very subpar Chicago Cubs team kept up with one of the best teams in the league.

It was an amazing way to see Rizzo play against the Cubs for the first time since the 2021 trade. Winning this one would have been awesome for the Cubs but they were lucky to even be in it. The rest of the series should be a lot of fun.

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Anthony Rizzo’s first game vs Cubs post-trade was actually insaneVincent Pariseon June 11, 2022 at 12:00 pm Read More »