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White Sox swept by Blue Jays in Toronto

TORONTO — It’s to the point where the White Sox and their non-threatening lineup are just trying to keep their heads above water on this road trip against two tough American League East teams.

But the Sox aren’t even doing a good job of that.

Their 8-3 loss to the streaking Blue Jays Thursday afternoon at Rogers Centre capped a three-game series sweep for Toronto, which won for the eighth time in a row.

The Sox fell to 23-26, losing for the sixth time in eight games. They started the day tied with Cleveland for second in the AL Central and trail the Twins by 4 1/2 games. The Sox are banged up with numerous core players injured, and the feeling on the coaching staff and in the clubhouse is that better results are ahead.

They also know they can’t afford to let themselves get buried in June. A series at the Rays is next, followed by the Dodgers at home.

After being dominated by early season Cy Young contender Alek Manoah for seven innings Thursday, the Sox made a game of it in the eighth, cutting a 4-0 deficit to 4-3 on Luis Robert’s two-run double with two out in the eighth and Yoan Moncada’s RBI single.

But it was brief. The Jays responded with four runs in the eighth against Reynaldo Lopez and Aaron Bummer to make it 8-3, putting the game on ice.

The Sox had one good early shot against Manoah, and that was in the first inning when Leury Garcia and Robert opened the game with singles. Moncada, starting for the first time in eight days, popped out on the first pitch and Jose Abreu struck out on a slider beneath the strike zone. After Gavin Sheets walked to load the bases, Yasmani Grandal struck out looking to end the inning.

Grandal’s strikeout started a streak of 16 batters retired in a row by Manoah, who allowed three runs over 7 2/3 innings.

Sox veteran right-hander Johnny Cueto, in his fourth start, allowed four runs (three earned) in six innings. The unearned run, the first run of the game, scored in the third when Raimel Tapia doubled and advanced to third onr right fielder Gavin Sheets’ throwing error on a toss that bounced through shortstop Garcia.

After Bradley Zimmer was hit by a Cueto pitch, Tapia scored when Santiago Espinal bounced into a double play. Tapia scored the second run on Espinal’s double in the fifth, and Teoscar Hernandez’ two-run homer in the sixth put the Sox in a 4-0 hole.

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How the Chicago Bears wide receivers stack up in NFC NorthTodd Welteron June 2, 2022 at 9:30 pm

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The Chicago Bears are being projected to be amongst the worst teams in the NFL this season.

Those predictions are largely thanks to an offseason where new general manager Ryan Poles assessed a 6-11 roster and hit the full-out rebuild button.

Gone are roster mainstays in Khalil Mack, Eddie Goldman, Allen Robinson, James Daniels, and Akiem Hicks. All were either traded (Mack), cut (Goldman), or allowed to leave via free agency (Robinson and Daniels).

Poles is using this offseason to fix a salary cap mess left behind by previous general manager Ryan Pace. The Chicago Bears are carrying over $52 million in dead cap space.

The goal is to have a better ledger going into the 2023 offseason to build up the roster into a playoff contender.

Right now, the Chicago Bears are +7500 according to WynnBet to win the Super Bowl. Pro Football Focus has the Chicago Bears as the second to worst team in the NFL. They list the Bears under their rebuilding category. Their two main reasons are the Bears’ offensive line and wide receiver group.

On paper, it is not like Poles has done a ton to quell those doubts.

Poles signed Lucas Patrick to be the starting center. Dakota Dozier was signed in the offseason and is currently penciled in as the starting right guard. Poles also used four late-round draft picks to add depth.

Not exactly uplifting moves for an offensive line that allowed 58 sacks last season.

The wide receiver room is being perceived as possibly the worst in the NFL. It is also considered one of the team’s biggest area for concern.

Ranking the positions by concern … with a very early 53-man Bears roster projection.

My annual exercise https://t.co/dw3rCq6WqI

— Adam Jahns (@adamjahns) May 31, 2022

Darnell Mooney is the only receiver returning who has caught a pass from starting quarterback Justin Fields. Second-year receiver Dazz Newsome is the only other receiver on the roster who has a reception while wearing the navy blue and orange.

Poles did not exactly add premium receiver talent in the offseason. He signed Byron Pringle and Equanimeous St. Brown in free agency. He also added journeymen receivers in Tajae Sharpe, Dante Pettis, and David Moore.

The Bears drafted 25-year-old rookie Velus Jones Jr who possesses tremendous speed.

The Chicago Bears head into the 2022 season with a collective of wide receivers who caught 169 passes for 2061 yards and 10 touchdowns in the NFL last season.

Mooney accounts for 48% of those receptions and 51% of those yards. He is being counted on to be Fields’ top target. There are some doubts Mooney is a legit WR1.

Is Darnell Mooney a top-20 wide receiver? pic.twitter.com/3Uvpw5dEYA

— PFF Fantasy Football (@PFF_Fantasy) May 26, 2022

There is not a lot of confidence in the Bears’ wide receivers. Then again, when you look at the rest of the division, maybe the Bears receiver situation is not as bad as you think.

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How the Chicago Bears wide receivers stack up in NFC NorthTodd Welteron June 2, 2022 at 9:30 pm Read More »

Charge that Florida manipulated Covid data is dubunked

Charge that Florida manipulated Covid data is dubunked

Has Twitter shut of the accounts of users who keep say that Florida cheated?

Woe is us in Florida. It’s a death trap, Creeping, Covid, misting and crawling into everyone’s nostrils. Florida has manipulated the data to look not so bad–undercounting hospitalization and deaths.

At least that’s what Floridians were told by the blue state sages and the media mouthpieces.

Yet, yet…

It’s bunk. Here’s the evidence: Florida’s Covid numbers were obviously right all along. Turns out the “whistleblower” Rebekah Jones couldn’t come up with evidence. Oh, I know, I’ve linked to one of those crazy right-wing rags, so the debunking must be bunk. And, consequently, debunked.

So, let’s turn to NBC News, which dug up the story:

Florida IG report: ‘Insufficient evidence’ for DeSantis critic’s claims of Covid cover-up

Three accusations by fired health worker Rebekah Jones were “unsubstantiated,” and officials she had accused of wrongdoing were “exonerated.”

A prominent critic of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Covid response made “unsubstantiated” and “unfounded” claims that state health officials had fired her because she refused to present manipulated data online, according to an inspector general’s report obtained by NBC News on Thursday.

Gee, no kidding?

I suppose the conclusions can be read like a “not guilty” jury verdict. Maybe she’s guilty, we just couldn’t get the goods. Here’s the full report. Have at it.

Here’s a link to the CNN report that backgrounds the story.

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Meet the Celtics fan who has already put his NBA Finals prediction in ink on his armon June 2, 2022 at 10:45 pm

The Boston Celtics are back in the NBA Finals for the first time since 2010, facing the Golden State Warriors. But long before Thursday’s Game 1 (9 p.m. ET on ESPN), one fan decided to get a tattoo celebrating something that he felt was just a matter of time: Boston Celtics, 2022 world champions.

A huge Celtics fan, Jack Bienvenue, 18, of Wellfleet, Massachusetts, got a tattoo of a championship banner his team hasn’t even won yet. Asked about how he decided to get the ink, Bienvenue points to the bounce back the Celtics had over the second half of the season.

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“It was March 21st, the exact day. We were on a winning streak of 10 games I guess. We were rolling a bit,” Bienvenue said. “It seemed like we were finally getting the pieces together. We were finally putting the puzzle together, and I thought it seemed like (a title) was destined to happen. That this team would make a historical run to the finals, which they have, and just gotta finish the job. We got four more to win.”

Bienvenue’s friends were shocked at the ink on his left arm.

“Everyone was like, …’this guy is crazy,” Bienvenue said. “Of course, I thought it was a little crazy myself. It was definitely a shock to most of my friends.

“It was kind of a spontaneous idea, too. I didn’t even have the whole thing planned out. I was already thinking about doing something for a Boston tattoo. I knew this artist and I wanted to do it, then a just called him and said ‘I had a great idea for a tattoo, I’ll be right there after school. So I drove there. It didn’t even take me a little to convince him to put it in my arm.”

Golden State is the favorite to win the series.

It will be only the second time the Warriors and Celtics have met in the NBA Finals. The last time was the 1964 finals when Golden State was called the San Francisco Warriors and led by Wilt Chamberlain. On the other side, Boston was led by Bill Russell and coming off five titles in a row. The Celtics won that series, 4-1.

The Boston Celtics and Golden State Warriors are set to meet with the NBA championship on the line. You can catch all the action on ABC and the ESPN app.

Game 1: Thursday, 9 p.m. ET at GS
Game 2: Sunday, 8 p.m. ET at GS
Game 3: Wednesday, 9 p.m. ET at BOS
Game 4: June 10, 9 p.m. ET at BOS
Game 5: June 13, 9 p.m. ET at GS*
Game 6: June 16, 9 p.m. ET at BOS*
Game 7: June 19, 8 p.m. ET at GS*

*If necessary

Bienvenue, of course, believes that the Celtics will win this season, but not easily.

“I’ll say Celtics in 7 (games). It’s not going any less than 6 games,” he said. “It’s going to be a very fun series to watch, very competitive. Steph Curry wants to keep his legacy and Jason Tatum wants to kind of get his to start. It will be a battle for sure.”

Lucas Cunha contributed to this report.

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Meet the Celtics fan who has already put his NBA Finals prediction in ink on his armon June 2, 2022 at 10:45 pm Read More »

Timelines overlap, worlds warp, and dreams become reality

There was a time when I would talk to people in the U.S. about anime and I’d get one of two responses: either a slightly orientalizing over-enthusiasm, or a blank stare, usually followed by the suggestion that surely animation was for children and not serious moviegoing adults. Thankfully, that era is behind us. From all of Hayao Miyazaki’s films streaming on HBO Max to English-language live-action adaptations of shows like Death Note and Cowboy Bebop, anime has entered the cinematic mainstream. 

If there’s one quibble I have, it’s that in the U.S., with a few exceptions, it’s hard to watch anime on the big screen, where the animation has a chance to become so vivid it almost swallows its viewer. (I write this from Tokyo now, with imminent plans to see Masaaki Yuasa’s most recent film Inu-Oh at a movie theater tomorrow night.) But this month, Chicago filmgoers are lucky enough to experience not one but four genre-defining anime classics on the silver screen as part of Anime Auteurs, a series put on by Facets. 

To begin with is a Mamoru Oshii double feature, starting with his seminal 1995 film masterpiece Ghost in the Shell. A tightly wound sci-fi thriller, the film follows the story of a government agent named Major Motoko Kusanagi. It’s 2029 and she is trailing something or someone known as “the Puppet Master” that infects humans with a computer virus. In a way, this may be both the most straightforward and the most subtle of the offerings. Oshii uses the archetypal mystery to ask questions about the nature of life—who is alive and who gets to decide? Here is a film that not only changed the course of anime but altered film as a whole; viewers may recognize sequences in the film that inspired live action classics like the Wachowski sisters’ Matrixtrilogy. (In Japanese with subtitles, 83 min.)

Following Oshii’s Ghost in the Shell is a lesser known film called Angel’s Egg. A collaboration with Yoshitaka Amano, this film sharply contrasts the narrative drive of Ghost in the Shell, dwelling instead in imagistic meditation. Awash in blue, gray, and creamy off-white, in a way the plot of this film is timeless and simple: girl meets boy. Of course, one must then factor in the foggy decrepit future setting, the mysterious egg the girl is protecting, and the questionable motives of the boy she comes across. There is also very, very little dialogue, a feature which in other films may cause confusion but in this one allows the viewer’s own imagination to roam free within the frame. (In Japanese with subtitles, 71 min.)

Of all the films on display at Facets, Masaaki Yuasa’s Mind Game is the only film I do not have prior viewing experience or a screener for, so I can’t say much except that the trailer looks incredible. (And if you’ve seen Japan Sinks: 2020 on Netflix, he directed that, so you may have an idea of the kind of precise, devastating work he’s capable of.) Mind Game also takes a simple premise—a feckless man has a crush on his childhood sweetheart—and turns it inside out. In this case, the man dies, which catalyzes a series of metaphysical transformations which Mind Game illustrates by employing several sharply contrasting types of animation. (In Japanese with subtitles, 103 min.) 

Anime Auteurs screening series
​​Ghost in the Shell: Friday, June 3, 7:30 PM
Angel’s Egg: Friday, June 3, 9:30 PM
Mind Game: Friday, June 17, 7 PM
Paprika: Thursday, June 30, 7 PM
Facets, 1517 W. Fullerton; $12 general admission, $10 Facets members; facets.org/programs/anime-auteurs

Finally, there’s Satoshi Kon’s Paprika, a poignant, heart-expanding mind-whirling film that follows a psychoanalyst who uses a device called a DC Mini to enter her clients’ dreams. There, she transforms into her alter ego known as Paprika, who must act to stop a group of terrorists who are making people go insane by twisting their dreamscapes. (If the story sounds familiar, it may be because Christopher Nolan’s Inception was inspired by and/or borrows heavily from Kon’s film.) Ambitious, fast-paced, endlessly entertaining, and thought-provoking in equal measure, Paprika helps elucidate the boundary between reality and fantasy, asking us to think deeply about the moments in our day-to-day life that are rooted in our subconscious. The film is especially bittersweet when considering it was Kon’s last full-length feature before his sudden death from pancreatic cancer, acting as a fabulist taste into what the future of animation may have held if only he had been with us for longer. (In Japanese with subtitles, 90 min.)

Taken together, Oshii, Yuasa, and Kon’s work all showcase how cutting edge animation can be, precisely because it is not bound by the dreary laws of physics. Here, in these hand- and digitally drawn worlds, timelines overlap, worlds warp, and dreams become reality. Perhaps it’s the singular power of animation and anime that, because it is not bound by the particulars of the everyday, it can ask fundamental questions of our existence through fantastic universes and provocative stories.

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Timelines overlap, worlds warp, and dreams become realityNina Li Coomeson June 2, 2022 at 8:05 pm

There was a time when I would talk to people in the U.S. about anime and I’d get one of two responses: either a slightly orientalizing over-enthusiasm, or a blank stare, usually followed by the suggestion that surely animation was for children and not serious moviegoing adults. Thankfully, that era is behind us. From all of Hayao Miyazaki’s films streaming on HBO Max to English-language live-action adaptations of shows like Death Note and Cowboy Bebop, anime has entered the cinematic mainstream. 

If there’s one quibble I have, it’s that in the U.S., with a few exceptions, it’s hard to watch anime on the big screen, where the animation has a chance to become so vivid it almost swallows its viewer. (I write this from Tokyo now, with imminent plans to see Masaaki Yuasa’s most recent film Inu-Oh at a movie theater tomorrow night.) But this month, Chicago filmgoers are lucky enough to experience not one but four genre-defining anime classics on the silver screen as part of Anime Auteurs, a series put on by Facets. 

To begin with is a Mamoru Oshii double feature, starting with his seminal 1995 film masterpiece Ghost in the Shell. A tightly wound sci-fi thriller, the film follows the story of a government agent named Major Motoko Kusanagi. It’s 2029 and she is trailing something or someone known as “the Puppet Master” that infects humans with a computer virus. In a way, this may be both the most straightforward and the most subtle of the offerings. Oshii uses the archetypal mystery to ask questions about the nature of life—who is alive and who gets to decide? Here is a film that not only changed the course of anime but altered film as a whole; viewers may recognize sequences in the film that inspired live action classics like the Wachowski sisters’ Matrixtrilogy. (In Japanese with subtitles, 83 min.)

Following Oshii’s Ghost in the Shell is a lesser known film called Angel’s Egg. A collaboration with Yoshitaka Amano, this film sharply contrasts the narrative drive of Ghost in the Shell, dwelling instead in imagistic meditation. Awash in blue, gray, and creamy off-white, in a way the plot of this film is timeless and simple: girl meets boy. Of course, one must then factor in the foggy decrepit future setting, the mysterious egg the girl is protecting, and the questionable motives of the boy she comes across. There is also very, very little dialogue, a feature which in other films may cause confusion but in this one allows the viewer’s own imagination to roam free within the frame. (In Japanese with subtitles, 71 min.)

Of all the films on display at Facets, Masaaki Yuasa’s Mind Game is the only film I do not have prior viewing experience or a screener for, so I can’t say much except that the trailer looks incredible. (And if you’ve seen Japan Sinks: 2020 on Netflix, he directed that, so you may have an idea of the kind of precise, devastating work he’s capable of.) Mind Game also takes a simple premise—a feckless man has a crush on his childhood sweetheart—and turns it inside out. In this case, the man dies, which catalyzes a series of metaphysical transformations which Mind Game illustrates by employing several sharply contrasting types of animation. (In Japanese with subtitles, 103 min.) 

Anime Auteurs screening series
​​Ghost in the Shell: Friday, June 3, 7:30 PM
Angel’s Egg: Friday, June 3, 9:30 PM
Mind Game: Friday, June 17, 7 PM
Paprika: Thursday, June 30, 7 PM
Facets, 1517 W. Fullerton; $12 general admission, $10 Facets members; facets.org/programs/anime-auteurs

Finally, there’s Satoshi Kon’s Paprika, a poignant, heart-expanding mind-whirling film that follows a psychoanalyst who uses a device called a DC Mini to enter her clients’ dreams. There, she transforms into her alter ego known as Paprika, who must act to stop a group of terrorists who are making people go insane by twisting their dreamscapes. (If the story sounds familiar, it may be because Christopher Nolan’s Inception was inspired by and/or borrows heavily from Kon’s film.) Ambitious, fast-paced, endlessly entertaining, and thought-provoking in equal measure, Paprika helps elucidate the boundary between reality and fantasy, asking us to think deeply about the moments in our day-to-day life that are rooted in our subconscious. The film is especially bittersweet when considering it was Kon’s last full-length feature before his sudden death from pancreatic cancer, acting as a fabulist taste into what the future of animation may have held if only he had been with us for longer. (In Japanese with subtitles, 90 min.)

Taken together, Oshii, Yuasa, and Kon’s work all showcase how cutting edge animation can be, precisely because it is not bound by the dreary laws of physics. Here, in these hand- and digitally drawn worlds, timelines overlap, worlds warp, and dreams become reality. Perhaps it’s the singular power of animation and anime that, because it is not bound by the particulars of the everyday, it can ask fundamental questions of our existence through fantastic universes and provocative stories.

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Timelines overlap, worlds warp, and dreams become realityNina Li Coomeson June 2, 2022 at 8:05 pm Read More »

U.S. marshal, K-9 dog hit by gunfire during shootout between police and gunmen on Northwest Side

A U.S. marshal and his K-9 dog were hit by gunfire during a shootout between police and two gunmen on the Northwest Side Thursday afternoon, authorities said.

The two shooters were arrested, Chicago police spokesman Tom Ahern said in a text message.

The shooting happened around 1:20 p.m. in the 5200 block of West Belmont Avenue, and the marshal rushed the K-9 to the MedVet Chicago clinic about 3 miles east near Belmont and California avenues, Chicago Fire Department Larry Langford said.

The marshal then realized he had been shot in his hand and called for an ambulance, Langford said. Paramedics were en route around 2 p.m., he said.

The condition of the dog and officer, and further details about the shooting were not immediately released.

On Wednesday, a Chicago police officer was shot and seriously wounded while trying to make a traffic stop in Englewood on the South Side. The gunman, who has been identified by police, remains at large.

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Celebrating the 40th anniversary of Steve Stone’s first baseball broadcast

Steve Stone announced his retirement from baseball on June 2, 1982, at Memorial Stadium in Baltimore. The former Orioles right-hander, who won the American League Cy Young Award in 1980, had been hampered by tendinitis in his elbow and shoulder. In the news conference, an emotional Stone lamented that his age, then 34, and the low success rate of surgery made the decision for him.

Afterward, a team secretary approached him with two phone messages. One was from David Hartman, the host of ABC’s “Good Morning America,” who wanted Stone to appear on the show. The other was from Chuck Howard, an executive at ABC Sports.

The secretary told Stone to call Howard first. “I think he has a job for you,” she said.

Sure enough, Howard offered Stone the chance to join the “Monday Night Baseball” booth for three games. But the first would be a Cardinals-Expos game in Montreal in five days, and Stone hadn’t been in the National League in six years. Howard asked if he’d be comfortable with the assignment.

“Chuck, I’ll do Japanese baseball,” Stone said. “Just put me on the air.”

Tuesday will mark the 40th anniversary of Stone’s first baseball broadcast. That night, he’ll be in the White Sox’ TV booth with Jason Benetti for the game against the Dodgers at Guaranteed Rate Field. But on June 7, 1982, he sat with Al Michaels and Don Drysdale in the Olympic Stadium booth for the season premiere of “Monday Night Baseball.” (It was the B game behind Athletics-White Sox at Comiskey Park.)

“I knew that two months out of baseball, it was going to be ‘Steve who?’ ” Stone said recently. “That was my shot. I had never had the headset on; I had never thought about doing a game. But I figured worse comes to worst, I look like an idiot in front of 30 million people, and then I go home after three games. But it didn’t work out that way. I’m still here.”

Michaels wasn’t surprised that Stone joined him shortly after retiring. Television titan Roone Arledge was running ABC, and Michaels said it was typical of Arledge to bring in someone topical. In the late 1970s, he put Mark Fidrych in the booth while the Tigers pitcher was on the disabled list. “The Bird” had become a celebrity with his success and quirky antics, but it didn’t translate to the broadcast.

“He’d never been in a broadcast booth in his life, and I’m on the air with him,” Michaels said. “He had no idea what he was doing. What I remember about Steve is that he was not fazed by anything. He seemed to be very comfortable right off the bat.”

Stone, 74, attributes his broadcast career to his Cy Young season, when he had a 14-game winning streak en route to a 25-7 record. He said if not for that year, ABC executives never would have heard him in interviews, in which he sounded cogent and capable of speaking on the air.

“They knew I could get the sentences out; they knew I had something to say,” Stone said. “I don’t know what prompted them to give me a call. I do know that I was the biggest name who was retiring in the middle of that season. I might’ve been one of the only, but I certainly was the biggest.”

“Steve parlayed one unbelievably fantastic year into a 40-year broadcasting career,” Michaels said. “If you look at the rest of Steve’s career, it’s workmanlike. But he had that one year, pretty much like Fidrych. You look at all of Steve’s numbers, and you go, ‘What?’ ”

Stone also caught the attention of the Cubs, who were looking for a partner for Harry Caray on WGN TV. Word of the search spread, and Stone recalls the team having to weather a Sun-Times poll that asked fans to choose from the incumbent radio duo of Lou Boudreau and Vince Lloyd, Tony Kubek and Stone.

“It was like 98% Vince and Lou,” Stone said. “They’re wonderful guys.”

But the team chose Stone, who played for the Cubs from 1974 to ’76, sandwiched between stints with the White Sox in 1973 and 1977-78. Other opportunities came Stone’s way while he was at WGN, including TV analyst jobs with the Yankees and Angels, but he couldn’t bring himself to leave Chicago.

Former WGN Radio boss Dan Fabian even tried to pilfer Stone, offering him the Cubs’ lead play-by-play job.

“I thought about it for a couple of weeks, and I said to him, ‘I really think this Harry and Steve thing is going pretty well,’ ” Stone said. ” ‘I think I want to play this out and see where it goes.’ “

It ended up going very well and very far. But it all began June 7, 1982, in Montreal.

“Working with Al Michaels was a dream,” Stone said. “The six guys who worked [at ABC], it was like the Hall of the Hall of broadcasters. The two play-by-play guys were Al Michaels and Keith Jackson, and the four analysts were Don Drysdale, Bob Uecker, Howard Cosell and me. First-time broadcaster with those five guys. That was a great learning experience.”

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U.S. marshal, K-9 dog hit by gunfire during shootout between police and gunmen on Northwest Side

A U.S. marshal and his K-9 dog were hit by gunfire during a shootout between police and two gunmen on the Northwest Side Thursday afternoon, authorities said.

The two shooters were arrested, Chicago police spokesman Tom Ahern said in a text message.

The shooting happened around 1:20 p.m. in the 5200 block of West Belmont Avenue, and the marshal rushed the K-9 to the MedVet Chicago clinic about 3 miles east near Belmont and California avenues, Chicago Fire Department Larry Langford said.

The marshal then realized he had been shot in his hand and called for an ambulance, Langford said. Paramedics were en route around 2 p.m., he said.

The condition of the dog and officer, and further details about the shooting were not immediately released.

On Wednesday, a Chicago police officer was shot and seriously wounded while trying to make a traffic stop in Englewood on the South Side. The gunman, who has been identified by police, remains at large.

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U.S. marshal, K-9 dog hit by gunfire during shootout between police and gunmen on Northwest Side Read More »

White Sox catcher Yasmani Grandal ‘frustrated’ by slump

TORONTO — Yasmani Grandal had an awful first two months of the season at the plate.

A middle of the lineup bat who should be carrying his weight while the Sox play through a rash of injuries, Grandal knows he’s not.

“It will get anybody frustrated when you’re not able to do what you know you can do,” Grandal told the Sun-Times Thursday.

The Sox (23-25) have missed a slew of games from Eloy Jimenez, Yoan Moncada, Luis Robert, Andrew Vaughn, AJ Pollock and now Tim Anderson because of injury and illness and have one of the worst offenses in the majors, something no one saw coming. Grandal played in his 43rd game but he’s hitting a dreadful .163/.271/.218. with two homers.

Grandal’s swing has looked a bit long, and he’s been late on hard stuff from pitchers, which he attributes to his legs not being at full strength. Grandal had knee surgery July 5 to repair a torn tendon and a cleanup procedure after the season.

“[Not] being able to fire with the lower half,” Grandal said before out to take batting practice before Wedenesday’s series finale against the Blue Jays. “Hopefully it starts coming along.”

Grandal struck out looking with the bases loaded and two outs in the first inning against Alek Manoah (5-1, 1.77 ERA).

“It’s not so much about cage work, it’s more about weight room more than anything, to get the strength I need back in my legs so that I can use them the way I should be using them,” Grandal said. “That sounds pretty simple but it’s actually much harder than it is. I’ve been feeling better and better, the strength has gone up, which is huge. So hopefully things change a little bit in the coming weeks.”

While going through physical therapy for his knee during the offseason, Grandal said he was told it usually takes from six to eight months to regain full strength.

How bad has it been? Grandal’s .488 OPS ranks 162nd, or dead last, among qualified hitters. The 161st ranked player is Rangers $175 million free agent Marcus Semien, which goes to show that odd stuff happens. Grandal signed the richest contract in Sox history, $73 million for four years before the 2020 season.

“I look back to last year, he got off to a slow start and after his injury he came back really strong,” said Sox coach Jerry Narron, who works with catchers. “Over 162 games you’re going to seek your level. So at some point he’s going to get hot. It’s just a matter of when.

“Yas is going to hit. We like seeing Yas come up to bat. We feel like something has a chance to happen and at any point it’s going to click and he’s going to get it going. He’s one of those guys who can put up big numbers real quick.”

NOTE: The Sox will take a two-hour bus ride to Buffalo after their game Wednesday for the flight to St. Petersburg, Fla., for their series against the Rays. Crossing the border on ground avoids having to show negative results of COVID tests and the risk of leaving anyone behind. Other teams leaving Toronto have done the same thing.

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