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Ime Udoka applying Gregg Popovich’s championship strategy in NBA Finalson June 5, 2022 at 11:03 pm

Not one uniformed member of the Boston Celtics had played in an NBA Finals game before Game 1 on Thursday night. Much was made of this, partly because of the vast Finals experience of the Golden State Warriors but mostly because storylines at this stage must be truffle hunted until no soil is unturned.

There has to be something to this experience thing, right? The lights are brighter, the stakes are higher and the Warriors’ core is in its sixth Finals in the past eight years, attempting to win their fourth. The question was asked, in just about every form possible, and the Celtics players responded by shrugging and repeating some versions of “basketball is basketball.”

The one exception was their coach, Ime Udoka. When asked before Game 1 to do his part to further the narrative, he said, as gently as possible, “Well, our staff has some experience. I’ve been to two myself … but I’d say [experience] is overrated in general.”

Those two sentences are related. Udoka’s experience — to a degree — negates the inexperience of his players. He played two seasons with the San Antonio Spurs and was an assistant coach under Gregg Popovich for the Spurs’ trips to the Finals in 2013 (a loss) and 2014 (a win).

Udoka clearly paid attention.

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Arms folded, he stands on the sideline exuding a calmness that approaches serenity, as if there’s nothing that might happen in a basketball game that would either surprise or confuse him. His most difficult moments of his first season as a head coach came when his team was foundering (with a record of 16-19 at one point) and everyone around him wondered why he wasn’t screaming at his players and throwing things around the room. It turns out he didn’t destroy the room because he was too busy reading it.

It’s Udoka’s ability to project calm — as much as Al Horford‘s wide-open lunch run 3s, Marcus Smart‘s defense and Jayson Tatum‘s ability to pivot from shot-maker to playmaker — that has changed the conversation and put the Celtics up 1-0 in the series heading into Game 2 on Sunday (8 p.m. ET, ABC and on the ESPN app).

“In general, we have guys who stay even-keeled and don’t get rattled easily,” Udoka said during Saturday’s media availability.

They proved it in Game 1, running their opponent off the court with a fourth-quarter onslaught that wilted the experienced, battle-tested Warriors.

The Celtics started the fourth down 12 — and no longer interested in missing shots. At one point, they scored 17 unanswered to run their lead to 14. It was many things — remarkable, stunning, seemingly unending — and Udoka never once changed his expression.

Celtics coach Ime Udoka led his team to a game-winning surge in the fourth quarter of Game 1 of the NBA Finals against the Warriors. Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images

“He’s obviously had to work his way to get here,” Tatum said of his coach. “He carries that sense of toughness with him and does instill that into the group every day.”

During Boston’s fourth-quarter run, Udoka made two unconventional moves: He called timeout, and he did it twice in 30 seconds while his team was rolling. At the time, it felt like Udoka was doing Warriors coach Steve Kerr — a man in possession of one measly timeout — a favor, playing the role of a cooler at a craps table.

With Udoka’s team up six at 109-103 with 3:47 left (nine points into their 17-point run), he responded to a missed Stephen Curry 3 and a Payton Pritchard rebound by calling the first timeout. He called another one 30 seconds later, after the Celtics had scored again and Draymond Green had missed two free throws.

The Celtics had four timeouts before he called the first, so Udoka was going to lose both in the final two minutes. Still, it’s counterintuitive to stop the flow of a massive run — twice! — by pulling your team aside to reassess the moment.

The Boston Celtics lead the Golden State Warriors 1-0 in the Finals, with Game 2 set to tip off Sunday (8 p.m. ET, ABC) in San Francisco.

o Series keys | Experts’ picks | Betting odds
o Boston’s win was one year in the making
o Game 1: Celtics beat Dubs at their game
o Lowe: Celtics-Warriors could be epic
o Shelburne: Reconstruction of the Warriors
o Why star duos will decide these Finals

But it was Udoka’s way of making sure his team knew the job wasn’t finished as well as an obvious sign of respect for the opponent. Everyone knows how the Warriors operate: They’re never more than a quick miss and a turnover away from stringing together a few 3s of their own and reenergizing the crowd. Any lapse of concentration can spell trouble. It’s one thing to make a ton of 3s — the Celtics hit seven in a row to start the fourth — and another to start expecting it. By disrupting the cadence of the game, the man whose first name means “patience” did his part to keep the floor from becoming scattered and allowing the Warriors back into it.

The message was clear: The heavy lifting is done; don’t squander all that hard work.

The Warriors walked away attempting to convince themselves that they “dominated the game for the first 41, 42 minutes,” as Green put it. But from there, when it mattered most, the Celtics dominated while Udoka orchestrated it.

“He coached with the greatest ever to do it in Pop,” Smart said. “He’s a sponge. Every place he went, he soaked it all in, put it into his game and brought it over here to us.

“It’s all about energy. If the energy’s right, you’re going to rock with it. If it’s not, then you’re not. It’s plain and simple: I think the energy has been contagious to us all.”

It might seem unconventional, but sometimes it’s best to direct that energy toward controlling everybody else’s. It’s the kind of move that looks a lot like the product of experience.

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Ime Udoka applying Gregg Popovich’s championship strategy in NBA Finalson June 5, 2022 at 11:03 pm Read More »

As numbers dip, White Sox’ Gavin Sheets adjusting in second year

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — When he batted .250/.324/.506 with 11 homers in 54 games as a rookie last season, Gavin Sheets made an impression, enough of one for White Sox management to trust him as a needed left-handed power hitting piece in their 2022 lineup.

Sheets was supposed to blend in with the Sox lineup core of Tim Anderson, Yoan Moncada, Luis Robert, Jose Abreu, Yasmani Grandal and Eloy Jimenez, but the struggles or absence of four of them has cast a brighter glare on the .206./273/.328. hitting line Sheets took into the Sox’ game against the Rays Saturday.

“I need to put some consistent at-bats together,” Sheets told the Sun-Times.

Sheets made adjustments working in the hitting cage recently, studied video from last season and has detected differences in his setup and moves he was making. The big thing, he said, is how pitchers, armed with expanded scouting reports on him, adjusted.

“It’s tough, they’re pitching me a little differently, I have to adjust to that,” he said. “It’s a game of adjustments.”

The Sox were questioned for not going outside the organization for an impact left-handed bat in the offseason, and as the team slogs around the bottom of numerous offensive categories, the questions still stand. Sheets’ showing in 2021, the depth of the Sox lineup around him and the desire to progress his development were reasons why they didn’t.

Sheets’ .608 OPS is .220 points lower than last season.

“I proved I can do damage on the fastball last year,” he said. “Not getting as many fastballs, so it’s about picking out offspeed pitches you can do damage with. Just trying to be aggressive in the zone. I can get stuck sometimes when I get too passive.”

A first baseman by trade, Sheets has played in 16 games in right field, three in left field and nine at first base. He has DH’d 13 times but was out of the lineup Sunday against a left-handed starter.

Trainer’s room

Right-hander Lance Lynn is slated for his third start for Charlotte on a rehab assignment (knee) Wednesday.

“Depends on how he feels, but there’s a chance,” manager Tony La Russa said.

At Detroit June 13 would be earliest possibility for Lynn’s first start.

*Eloy Jimenez played his first rehab game in left field at Charlotte after DHing his first four. Jimenez came out of his first game with soreness in his right hamstring area and his return doesn’t appear imminent.

“They don’t feel his legs are ready yet,” La Russa said.

Jimenez and La Russa have exchanged multiple texts. “Full of life, lots of advice,” La Russa said.

*Tim Anderson (groin) is getting daily treatment while traveling with the team and gradually increasing his work. He did some running Saturday and Sunday.

Dodgers next

The Sox are off Monday. Michael Kopech (Tuesday), Johnny Cueto (Wednesday) and Dylan Cease (Thursday) are the probable starters for the Dodgers series at Guaranteed Rate Field. Mitch White, Tony Gonsolin and left-hander Tyler Anderson are scheduled for the Dodgers.

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WTTW’s Curious Contradiction

WTTW’s Curious Contradiction

Something about automobile commercials drives me to vexation. (I’ll get to PBS later).

In the polished TV commercials for –let’s say, using but one example– Lincoln, I hear the authoritative-toned voiceover (frequently an accomplished actor) address me –acting under the assumption that I am a reflective adult—with a healthy measure of respect for my powers of comprehension.

On the other hand, in the radio and TV spots produced by the prototypical Lincoln dealer ,the voice blasting from the announcer is coated in condescension. It is the nagging bleat one elects in speaking to a barely sentient nitwit. Yet, both potential Lincoln consumers–national and local– are one in the same, aren’t they?

So why aren’t their messages delivered similarly? My postulate on this: The marketing/ sales relationship between manufacturer and dealer is structured for collision. The dealer’s elastic pricing policy–cheered on by the manufacturer– ends up arranging an adversarial haggling duel, hence a climate of mutual distrust. The showroom salesperson’s aim is to earn the highest commission possible by squeezing out the highest price possible from the customer, thus certifying –as the dealer is convinced– that the customer is irretrievably dim. And so the system produces two different identities in the same human being.

And now to turn the page to PBS in the interests of uncovering a similar cognitive disconnect between viewer and station. As a teen ager I was weaned on the soothing, patriarchal presence of Alistair Cooke as he hosted Masterpiece Theater in his matchlessly courtly manner. After Cooke, there was professorial Russell Baker to make me want to turn out even half as learned as he. And who could forget the fetching vocal instrument of Masterpiece Mystery host, the surpassingly sophisticated Diana Rigg, who–even at middle age–revived my Emma Peel infatuation. And it’s easy or me to set in motion a crush on Masterpiece host Laura Linney with her rich melding of winsomeness and intellect. Other hosts as well have demonstrated a gift for making me feel I was being addressed as an intelligent grownup.

Contrast those extraordinary hosts with the ordinariness of those WTTW spokespersons who, as you probably recall, periodically break into programming , trying–with synthetic exuberance– to wheedle donation pledges from us. You say none of them exactly reminds you of any Masterpiece host, do you, eh? Yes, in a different manifestation of condescension, they persistently address their pleas to the below-average seven year old. Just as in the example of automobile advertising, WTTW all at once drives the dizzied audience in two opposite directions, first to sanctuary of adulthood, next to the sand box of morning TV. None of their patronizing blandishments, though, deter me from forking over my annual donations. But I do it as I imagine Alistair Cooke politely coaxing me to do so.

Oh, and if you’re looking to me for another illuminating postulate that untangles the twisted WTTW contradiction–sorry, I’m stumped for any kind of rational explanation.

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“We must make sure that…” and other political cliches we must cancel.

“We must make sure that…” and other political cliches we must cancel.

How many politicians who said he’ll make sure of something, actually “made sure” that what he promised actually and surely happened? How many actually meant that he was going to make sure of something? Get rid of it. Cast it into lingo hell.

Some others:

“Make no mistake that…”

Google turned up 1,000,000,000 hits in .47 seconds of this time-worn warning. Don’t you think that this is somewhat arrogant? Especially when what follows “make no mistake that…” is more empty promises.

“The root cause of…”

The perfect dodge. When a pol says “we have to find the root cause of” something, it means he’s “kicking the can down the road,” (another cliche that should be dispatched). When a politician invokes “Let’s examine the root cause”, it is supposed to look like he’s serious, thoughtful, comprehensive (another cliche) smart. What it actually means is that “I don’t have a solution to this immediate, pressing problem.” Hear that Kamala?

“Read my lips…”

Oops, this should not be on the list. President George H.W. Bush cremated this cliche when he said his lips were saying. “No new taxes.”

“Tbe perfect storm….”

Duck. Take cover. Disaster is approaching. Kind of like Jamie Dimon JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon warning that an “economic hurricane” is spinning our way, caused by inflation. And by the Fed’s policy that inflation is only transitory.”

The only poll that matters is the one on Election Day,” and “It all comes down to turnout”

It all comes down to a stumped commentator not knowing what to say next, as a substitute for the honest answer: “How the hell should I know?” Might as well pronounce, “We’ll have to wait and see.”

“Climate change caused it.”

Never mind that the climate has always changed, from the moment Earth’s atmosphere formed. I just wish they’d say what they really mean: “Global warming caused by human activity.” Another euphemism for actually describing, something, just as pro-abortion groups have successfully defined the killing of a pre-born person or a potential human being as a “choice.” I saw a Chicago Tribune story that posited that “climate change” was causing Lake Michigan waters to lower (while the oceans are rising), causing lakefront erosion, thanks to climate change. The story suggests that “scientists” agree that any bad weather or natural phenomenon is the fault of climate change. Did climate change cause Covid-19?

If I might digress: Notice that every rebranding by the political left makes the language less accurate. Substituting “they” for the singular third person “he,” fogs the meaning of “they.” Now we have to find another term that explains that “they” really means a single person.

As long as we’re discussing cliches, I have to mention one that really riles me: at high risk of….” Google took less than half a second to come up with about 7,120,000,000 uses of “at risk of.” That cliche shows up not just in political discourse, but just about everywhere. E.g. Climate change puts humans at high risk of….(fill in the blank). Why not say “jeopardizes”, imperils or endangers? E.g. Climate change imperils or endangers mankind? Shorter, more direct, stronger.

Here’s an invitation to post your own annoying cliche below in comments.

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Tony La Russa after White Sox’ poor start: ‘We’ll see if I still know how to do it or not’

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Tony La Russa recounted Sunday how being in baseball but out of uniform before White Sox Jerry Reinsdorf brought him back into one drove him crazy.

“I don’t know how general managers do it,” La Russa said Sunday.

In his second season of his second go-around managing the Sox, La Russa found himself at the helm of a preseason World Series contender that was in third place in its division during the first week of June.

“We’ll see if I still know how to do it or not,” La Russa said.

The Sox have been slammed by injuries, but they have not played good baseball with the healthy players they have. When that happens, the manager will be scrutinized, Hall of Fame resume or not.

La Russa was asked if he self evaluates.

“Sure. That’s part of the bottom line, isn’t it?” he said. “That’s what you show the people you work for and the fans. And that’s why I mentioned there has never been a day where I dodge accountability. Never. What the record is, we pitch, we hit, whatever decisions. You take the heat and if that bothers you, you do something else for a living.

“But I know if you’re going to accept accountability then you hold yourself accountable and them [players] accountable. And then you get the best by what you got. That hasn’t changed.”

La Russa has maintained the Sox are good enough to win with what they have. But there’s no getting around the reality of dealing with season-long injury issues that, at present, include Tim Anderson, Eloy Jimenez, Lance Lynn and Joe Kelly on the IL.

“I’ve always felt and I’ve seen this, sometimes ownership, front office [is] not realistic with expectations for the guys downstairs, right?” La Russa said. “But you have to be realistic. Pressure’s got to be fair. If you’re missing some key pieces then you have to expect it to be a struggle. If you don’t give in to it, come out of it, you have to survive and all of a sudden then you still have a shot, right?

“It’s not fun but it’s the challenge of all this. Keep pushing. Because you always have a shot.”

The Sox are in the midst of a nine-game stretch against the Blue Jays, Rays and Dodgers, all likely playoff teams. They got swept by the Jays and split the first two games against the Rays on the first five games of a road trip. They gave Lucas Giolito a six-run lead in the second inning, raising hopes for a series victory before heading home to play the Dodgers starting Tuesday.

It’s apparent watching La Russa every day that he still hates to lose and loves to win at age 77.

“It’s exciting to have that shot to compete,” he said. “If that excitement’s not there then I would never cheat anybody. I’m as nervous [as ever].”

La Russa mentioned Jake Burger’s go ahead pinch homer Saturday that helped the Sox snap a four-game losing streak on a tough trip. It was exhilarating.

“It’s exactly how I felt for years,” he said. “I don’t look down at the [World Series] ring and say ‘what’s the big deal?’ No, that’s when I know I’m excited to be there.”

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It’s from the Bees. Why You Should Try Propolis Sunscreen

It’s from the Bees. Why You Should Try Propolis Sunscreen

BY SANDRA GUY

It’s time to get serious about sunscreen — and you can help the endangered bee while you’re at it.

Bees could certainly use your help. Forty percent of the bee colonies that beekeepers oversee die each year because of toxic pesticides and development that destroys bee-nourishing plants.

Yet bees serve such vital functions, not just by pollinating plants, but also by making propolis, or bee glue, from poplar and cone-bearing trees.

Propolis — a sticky, reddish-brown glue — comes from beeswax combining with resin, pollen, balsams and tree sap that bees collect while they flit from plants to tree buds.

The glue holds beehives together, and research has shown its components can be effective as broad spectrum UVB and UVA photo-protection sunscreens. UVA exposure penetrates the skin more deeply than does UVB and contributes to wrinkles by degrading collagen.

Sunscreen with propolis got a boost in 2021 when Black-ish actress Tracee Elllis Ross told Marie Claire magazine that her favorite was Epicuren’s X-Treme Cream Propolis Sunscreen SPF 45+.

But be careful. Test a small amount first if you are allergic to bee stings.

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How hurricanes got their names

How hurricanes got their names

Hurricane Katrina–Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA/GSFC

There were hurricanes before there were names for hurricanes. But each year, the world Meteorological Association makes a list of the storm names for the hurricane season, which begins officially on June 1.

This year, NOAA predicts an active season with La Niña persisting, and warmer than average temperatures in the Atlantic. As I write this, a tropical storm is battering Cuba, Key West, and South Florida. Even if it has not yet strengthened to hurricane force winds, there are still torrential rains.

The storm is predicted to move up the Atlantic Coast of the United States, and if it strengthens to a hurricane, it will be the first named storm of the season–Hurricane Alex.

Here are the names for the Atlantic Hurricanes for 2022—

AlexBonnieColinDanielleEarlFionaGastonHermineIanJuliaKarlLisaMartinNicoleOwenPaulaRichardSharyTobiasVirginiaWalter 

Storms that are especially destructive have their names retired. You may remember Dorian, Katrina and Sandy. These are some of the 96 retired Hurricane names.

But why name the hurricanes? And how did they get their names? Naming the storms seems like a good way to keep track of them, especially if there are several storms or potential storms active at the same time. At first they had military names–Abel, Baker, Charlie. Then, in 1950, they were given women’s names.

The story goes that the meteorologists first named the storms after their wives, an attitude of the time that women were unpredictable–moody, temperamental as the weather. It was funny, and disrespectful in a way.

But maybe storms got female names the same way ships were and still are called “she, ”

Then, in the 1970’s, when women were fighting for equal rights, respect and recognition, hurricanes got men’s names, too.

While naming the storms may seem frivolous, a name is a way of relating to them in a personal way–a more human way, much as our ancestors named the forces of nature, the mystery, beauty and terror, and called them goddesses and gods.

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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!

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Ime Udoka applying Gregg Popovich’s championship strategy in NBA Finalson June 5, 2022 at 1:19 pm

Not one uniformed member of the Boston Celtics had played in an NBA Finals game before Game 1 on Thursday night. Much was made of this, partly because of the vast Finals experience of the Golden State Warriors but mostly because storylines at this stage must be truffle hunted until no soil is unturned.

There has to be something to this experience thing, right? The lights are brighter, the stakes are higher and the Warriors’ core is in its sixth Finals in the past eight years, attempting to win their fourth. The question was asked, in just about every form possible, and the Celtics players responded by shrugging and repeating some versions of “basketball is basketball.”

The one exception was their coach, Ime Udoka. When asked before Game 1 to do his part to further the narrative, he said, as gently as possible, “Well, our staff has some experience. I’ve been to two myself … but I’d say [experience] is overrated in general.”

Those two sentences are related. Udoka’s experience — to a degree — negates the inexperience of his players. He played two seasons with the San Antonio Spurs and was an assistant coach under Gregg Popovich for the Spurs’ trips to the Finals in 2013 (a loss) and 2014 (a win).

Udoka clearly paid attention.

2 Related

Arms folded, he stands on the sideline exuding a calmness that approaches serenity, as if there’s nothing that might happen in a basketball game that would either surprise or confuse him. His most difficult moments of his first season as a head coach came when his team was foundering (with a record of 16-19 at one point) and everyone around him wondered why he wasn’t screaming at his players and throwing things around the room. It turns out he didn’t destroy the room because he was too busy reading it.

It’s Udoka’s ability to project calm — as much as Al Horford‘s wide-open lunch run 3s, Marcus Smart‘s defense and Jayson Tatum‘s ability to pivot from shot-maker to playmaker — that has changed the conversation and put the Celtics up 1-0 in the series heading into Game 2 on Sunday (8 p.m. ET, ABC and on the ESPN app).

“In general, we have guys who stay even-keeled and don’t get rattled easily,” Udoka said during Saturday’s media availability.

They proved it in Game 1, running their opponent off the court with a fourth-quarter onslaught that wilted the experienced, battle-tested Warriors.

The Celtics started the fourth down 12 — and no longer interested in missing shots. At one point, they scored 17 unanswered to run their lead to 14. It was many things — remarkable, stunning, seemingly unending — and Udoka never once changed his expression.

Celtics coach Ime Udoka led his team to a game-winning surge in the fourth quarter of Game 1 of the NBA Finals against the Warriors. Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images

“He’s obviously had to work his way to get here,” Tatum said of his coach. “He carries that sense of toughness with him and does instill that into the group every day.”

During Boston’s fourth-quarter run, Udoka made two unconventional moves: He called timeout, and he did it twice in 30 seconds while his team was rolling. At the time, it felt like Udoka was doing Warriors coach Steve Kerr — a man in possession of one measly timeout — a favor, playing the role of a cooler at a craps table.

With Udoka’s team up six at 109-103 with 3:47 left (nine points into their 17-point run), he responded to a missed Stephen Curry 3 and a Payton Pritchard rebound by calling the first timeout. He called another one 30 seconds later, after the Celtics had scored again and Draymond Green had missed two free throws.

The Celtics had four timeouts before he called the first, so Udoka was going to lose both in the final two minutes. Still, it’s counterintuitive to stop the flow of a massive run — twice! — by pulling your team aside to reassess the moment.

The Boston Celtics lead the Golden State Warriors 1-0 in the Finals, with Game 2 set to tip off Sunday (8 p.m. ET, ABC) in San Francisco.

o Series keys | Experts’ picks | Betting odds
o Boston’s win was one year in the making
o Game 1: Celtics beat Dubs at their game
o Lowe: Celtics-Warriors could be epic
o Shelburne: Reconstruction of the Warriors
o Why star duos will decide these Finals

But it was Udoka’s way of making sure his team knew the job wasn’t finished as well as an obvious sign of respect for the opponent. Everyone knows how the Warriors operate: They’re never more than a quick miss and a turnover away from stringing together a few 3s of their own and reenergizing the crowd. Any lapse of concentration can spell trouble. It’s one thing to make a ton of 3s — the Celtics hit seven in a row to start the fourth — and another to start expecting it. By disrupting the cadence of the game, the man whose first name means “patience” did his part to keep the floor from becoming scattered and allowing the Warriors back into it.

The message was clear: The heavy lifting is done; don’t squander all that hard work.

The Warriors walked away attempting to convince themselves that they “dominated the game for the first 41, 42 minutes,” as Green put it. But from there, when it mattered most, the Celtics dominated while Udoka orchestrated it.

“He coached with the greatest ever to do it in Pop,” Smart said. “He’s a sponge. Every place he went, he soaked it all in, put it into his game and brought it over here to us.

“It’s all about energy. If the energy’s right, you’re going to rock with it. If it’s not, then you’re not. It’s plain and simple: I think the energy has been contagious to us all.”

It might seem unconventional, but sometimes it’s best to direct that energy toward controlling everybody else’s. It’s the kind of move that looks a lot like the product of experience.

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Ime Udoka applying Gregg Popovich’s championship strategy in NBA Finalson June 5, 2022 at 1:19 pm Read More »

The Brandon Hagel trade is looking really nice for the BlackhawksVincent Pariseon June 5, 2022 at 11:00 am

The Chicago Blackhawks needed to have a very good 2022 NHL Trade Deadline. Most would say that they did okay but they did particularly well in one trade. Nobody wanted to see Brandon Hagel go but they did it anyway and the results are amazing so far.

With Chicago, in an advanced role, he thrived. He scored 21 goals and added 16 assists for 37 points in 55 games played. That is excellent for a guy of his status and role on the team. Then, the Hawks traded him to the Tampa Bay Lightning.

Things are different in Tampa Bay. They have Hall of Famers at every position and a legit chance to win the Stanley Cup every year (they have won the last two). A guy like Hagel is important there but his role was reduced by a lot.

In 22 regular-season games played there, he had four goals and three assists for seven points. It isn’t like he was completely useless there but he wasn’t on the same pace as he was in Chicago. That isn’t his fault, Tampa just is that good.

The Chicago Blackhawks need this trade to work out in their favor.

The Blackhawks got a really nice return for him. In addition to Hagel, they gave up a fourth-round pick in 2022 for Tampa Bay’s first in 2023, first in 2024, Boris Katchouk, and Taylor Raddysh. Two first-round picks and two NHL-ready young players is a huge haul for this guy.

Raddysh came in and was just as productive as Hagel in the regular season from that moment on and Katchouk is a 23-year-old depth winger. This was just an amazing trade for Kyle Davidson and one that could really help this team for a long time.

Chances are that Tampa Bay goes deep in 2023 and 2024 as well so the picks will be in the 20s but grabbing as many firsts as you can is a great way to try and rebuild your organization. If the Blackhawks scouting and developing does a good job, they could each turn into really good players.

Tampa, of course, won’t be mad at the trade if they win the Stanley Cup but they have also won the last two. They are trying to get the most out of their current core and you have to respect it. No prospect drafted in 23 or 24 is going to help them win now. Brandon Hagel can.

There is a really good chance that we look at this trade years down the line and see it as one that helped both teams for a long time. It would be cool to see Hagel win the Cup which is very possible but it would be even better to see the Blackhawks successfully rebuild.

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The Brandon Hagel trade is looking really nice for the BlackhawksVincent Pariseon June 5, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

Cubs top pitching prospect Kilian makes debuton June 5, 2022 at 7:07 am

CHICAGO — The Cubs called up their top pitching prospect, righty Caleb Kilian, and started him in Game 2 of their doubleheader against the St. Louis Cardinals on Saturday evening.

Kilian went five innings in his major league debut, giving up three runs on three hits. He walked two and struck out six.

Kilian, 25, was acquired from the San Francisco Giants last July in exchange for former MVP Kris Bryant.

Kilian is 2-0 with a 2.06 ERA in nine starts for Triple-A Iowa this season. He had 41 strikeouts in 39 1/3 innings before being called up.

The Cubs are in the midst of a busy schedule, having two doubleheaders this week with veterans Wade Miley and Drew Smyly both on the injured list.

Kilian was acquired with outfielder Alexander Canario last July 31 for Bryant as part of the Cubs’ roster tear down. He has a career 2.08 ERA in three minor league seasons after being drafted in the eighth round by the Giants in 2019.

To make room on the 40-man roster, the Cubs DFA’d pitcher Conner Menez. They also recalled righty Anderson Espinoza to serve as the team’s 27th man for the doubleheader. Kilian will be the team’s eighth player to make his major league debut this season.

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Cubs top pitching prospect Kilian makes debuton June 5, 2022 at 7:07 am Read More »