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Warriors installed as Finals favorite over Celticson May 30, 2022 at 4:46 am

The Golden State Warriors are the favorites in the NBA Finals over a Boston Celtics team looking to make underdog history.

Caesars Sportsbook installed the Warriors as -160 favorites over the Celtics (+140) in an intriguing best-of-seven series that tips off Thursday in San Francisco. Golden State opened as a 3-point favorite in Game 1 on Thursday.

The Warriors entered the season at 10-1 to win the championship at Caesars Sportsbook and were among the title favorites throughout the year. They knocked off the Dallas Mavericks in five games to reach their sixth NBA Finals in the past eight years, a feat accomplished by only three other NBA franchises: the Chicago Bulls, Los Angeles Lakers and the Celtics.

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While Golden State was among the top tier of title favorites, Boston began the season as a 50-1 long shot. Based on preseason odds, the Celtics would be the biggest long shot to win a title in the past 35 years, according to sports betting archive SportsOddsHistory.com.

Boston found its rhythm in the second half of the regular season and survived two Game 7s in the Eastern Conference playoffs to reach the Finals.

The Warriors and Celtics split their season series, each winning on the other team’s home court. Boston is the only team with a winning record against the Warriors since Golden State coach Steve Kerr took over in 2015-16.

Some big bets on each team are on the line heading into the NBA Finals. Two weeks ago, a bettor in Arizona placed a $25,000 bet on the Celtics to win the championship at 10-1 odds. The bet would pay a net $250,000 if Boston wins the title. In late October, a bettor in Iowa placed a $12,000 bet on the Warriors to win the championship at 10-1. The bet would pay a net $120,000. Both bets were placed with Caesars Sportsbook.

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Celtics win Game 7, will take on Warriors in Finalson May 30, 2022 at 4:46 am

MIAMI — Nothing about this Boston Celtics season has been easy. So, it stands to reason, making it to the NBA Finals wouldn’t be, either.

But at the end of a grueling seven-game series in the Eastern Conference Finals against the Miami Heat, that is exactly where the Celtics have returned to once again.

Behind a pair of terrific games from Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown, Boston won its third game at FTX Arena in this series, escaping with a 100-96 victory over the Heat in front of a sellout crowd that was thrilled by the exploits of the home team right to the game’s dying moments.

Ultimately, though, it wasn’t enough to prevent Boston from taking revenge on Miami after the Heat won this matchup two years ago. And with the win, the Celtics advanced to the NBA Finals for the first time in 12 years, where they’ll face the Golden State Warriors. The series will begin Thursday night at 9 ET on ABC at Chase Center in San Francisco.

Getting there, though, was excruciating — right down to nearly blowing a seven-point lead with a minute to play. But after Boston made one mistake after another in that final minute, including Brown being called for a charge, Marcus Smart flinging up a contested miss and Max Strus burying a 3-pointer to pull Miami to within two points with 44 seconds to go, Jimmy Butler — who had an otherworldly series, including an all-time great performance in Game 6 — pulled up for a 3-pointer on the break with a chance to take the lead with 17 seconds that every soul in this building not wearing green thought was going in.

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But it didn’t. And after Smart hit a couple of free throws with 11.4 seconds to go, Boston managed to just escape with its season still alive, and a trip to San Francisco and a date with the Warriors on the agenda.

At every turn, the Celtics have made things as difficult for themselves as possible – and that’s not even considering the fact that, as deep into the season as late January, it would’ve been unthinkable for Boston to be in this position. After a loss at TD Garden to the Portland Trail Blazers on Jan. 21, the Celtics were 23-24, had been playing .500 basketball for more than a season and a half and had an offense ranked among the bottom 10 in the NBA.

“We weren’t even thinking that far down the road honestly,” Celtics coach Ime Udoka said before Game 6. “We were thinking about getting healthy, understanding the system we were trying to put in place. We always had glimpses of success … we did see good things early on at times.

“We played really good against the big teams. We had some poor losses against some of the lesser teams. For the most part we were competing against the best teams. That boded well for the future.”

No one, however, would’ve envisioned what was about to happen. From that Portland loss through the end of the regular season, Boston was the NBA’s best team. It posted a record of 28-7, and had the NBA’s best offensive rating and defensive rating by significant margins. Boston’s net rating was a staggering plus 15.5 points per 100 possessions — almost double the Memphis Grizzlies (8.1) in second.

That allowed Boston to go from a team that was simply trying to stay in the NBA’s play-in tournament spots to one that finished the season as the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference. From there, the Celtics swept the Brooklyn Nets and survived a seven-game slugfest with Giannis Antetokounmpo and the defending NBA champion Milwaukee Bucks to make it to a sixth Eastern Conference finals in the past 11 seasons.

“I think we finally flipped the script, got healthy at the right time, and here we are,” Udoka said.

“Here” was in the Eastern Conference Finals against the Heat, a team that has grown to reach the level of the Los Angeles Lakers and Philadelphia 76ers in this historic franchise’s pantheon of foes. It’s the fifth time in 13 years the two teams have played in the playoffs — including the third time in the East Finals.

In what was a topsy-turvy series that, heading into Game 7, saw each team win on the other team’s home court twice through the first six games, with Boston controlling Games 2 and 5 here at FTX Arena while the Heat had impressive closing stretches to win Games 3 and 6 at TD Garden.

But unlike two years ago, when these teams met in the Eastern Conference finals inside the NBA’s bubble at Florida’s Walt Disney World Resort and Miami emerged victorious in six games, this time it was the Celtics who escaped with their season alive after being pushed to the absolute brink by the Heat — thanks to some truly incandescent performances by Butler, led by his 47-point, 9-rebound, 8-assist masterpiece in Game 6 to send this series back here for a do-or-die Game 7.

After Miami got off to a strong start on the road in Game 6, Boston turned the tables in Game 7. The Celtics held the Heat without the field goal for more than three minutes to start the game, and leapt out to a 20-7 advantage halfway through the first quarter on a straightaway 3-pointer from Tatum. Boston then closed the quarter with another 8-2 run, after Miami had gotten back to within 9, to give the Celtics a 32-17 lead after 1.

From there, Boston continued to employ the strategy that, when this team has played well in this series, has allowed it to repeatedly throttle the Heat: by playing suffocating defense at one end, and not turning the ball over at the other. In particular, when Boston took care of the ball in this series, things went very well for the Celtics. And in this one, Boston took care of the ball.

In opening up that early lead, the Celtics only committed two first quarter turnovers. And as they kept playing crisp basketball, they were able to maintain their advantage, even while Jimmy Butler had his latest fantastic performance in these playoffs just to keep Miami within contact.

Unfortunately for Butler, he couldn’t find anyone but Bam Adebayo to come along for the ride. In the first half, Heat players not named Butler or Adebayo were a combined 3-for-16 from the field.

Still, after Derrick White hit a 3-pointer with 4:30 to go in the half and Boston up 50-34, the Heat closed the half on a 15-5 run — including drawing three on-the-floor fouls with Boston in the bonus inside the final minute of the half that became five free points — to pull to within 55-49 at the halftime break.

It was a flattering scoreline for the Heat, given the struggles of everyone around Butler. But it had the home crowd celebrating, and breathed life into a Miami team that, earlier in the half, felt like it was hanging on by the slimmest of threads.

But like in the first half, the Celtics were the ones to start things off well in the third. After Miami kept Boston at a bogged down pace in the second quarter, the Celtics sped the game back up in the third, and prospered as a result.

Yet despite Boston again controlling play for most of the quarter, by the end of it, the score had hardly changed, as the Celtics took a seven-point lead into the fourth quarter thanks to Adebayo and Butler continuing to excel.

And when the Heat opened the fourth quarter with a pair of baskets to close the deficit to 82-79, Celtics coach Ime Udoka called a quick timeout with 10 minutes, 56 seconds remaining and the entire crowd standing and chanting.

But when the teams came back onto the court after that timeout, the Celtics used their defense to, once again, take the life out of the building. For more than four minutes, the Heat went without a single point, as Boston scored eight straight to push the lead back to double digits once again.

And the Heat, while continuing to fight valiantly, simply ran out of gas, becoming the latest team to be slowly ground down by the physicality of the Celtics over the course of a seven-game series.

But only by the slimmest of margins.

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Celtics win Game 7, will take on Warriors in Finalson May 30, 2022 at 4:46 am Read More »

Suenos Music Festival 2022: PHOTO GALLERY

Music
Entertainment and Culture

The first-ever Latin reggaeton music festival in Grant Park brought thousands of fans to Grant Park over the Memorial Day weekend.

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Suenos Music Festival 2022: PHOTO GALLERY

Jhay Cortez played one of the most energetic sets of the weekend at Sue?os Music Festival on Sunday in Grant Park.

Kate Scott/for the Sun-Times

The weather cooperated, the fans turned out by the thousands and music filled the air on Saturday and Sunday in Grant Park for the Suenos Music Festival, the first-ever Latin reggaeton music festival held in the park.

Here’s a look at some of the sights and sounds of the two-day music, food, art and culture festival:

Thousands of music fans packed Grant Park for the Suenos Music Festival on Saturday, May 28, 2022.|

Kate Scott/For the Sun-Times

Ozuna performs at the Suenos Music Festival on Saturday, May 28, 2022, at Grant Park in Chicago.|

Rob Grabowski/Invision/AP

Farruko brought the heat to his set at Sue?os fest on Saturday.|

Kate Scott/for the Sun-Times

Fans take in the sights and sounds of the Suenos Music Festival in Grant Park on Saturday, May 28, 2022.|

Kate Scott/For the Sun-Times

Reggaeton rapper Myke Towers drew some of the biggest crowds on Saturday’s Sue?os Fest.|

Kate Scott/for the Sun-Times

An all-female mariachi band played for guests in between sets on the main stage.|

Kate Scott/for the Sun-Times

La Gabi performs at the Suenos music festival on Sunday, May 29, 2022, at Grant Park in Chicago.|

Rob Grabowski/Invision/AP

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Marcus Stroman’s strong start can’t save Cubs from taxing bullpen in loss to White Sox

The good news for the Cubs in a 5-4 loss to the White Sox on Sunday: Marcus Stroman threw one of his best games of the season.

The bad news: The 12-inning game stretched their bullpen, with two double headers on the schedule this week.

In a normal game, Stroman’s seven shutout innings would have put the Cubs in good position for a doubleheader against the Brewers on Monday. But the Cubs needed four relievers to wrap up Sunday’s game, even with Robert Gsellman taking the mound for the 11th and 12th innings.

“It’s a tough one to swallow because we had a great game,” Cubs reliever David Robertson said. “Stroman threw a hell of a game.”

Stroman held the White Sox scoreless through seven innings, allowing three hits, all singles.

It was Stroman’s third start since coming back from the COVID-19 related IL a week and a half ago. And it was the closest he’s been to replicating his peak performance this season, seven shutout innings against the Brewers before he hit the IL.

“I’m still not there body-wise, mechanics-wise,” Stroman said. “Taking [18] days off, it’s a lot … especially when you can’t workout or train a lot of those days. So, it’s been tough to get my body in position, but I felt pretty good out there.”

Stroman also made one of the Cubs’ best defensive plays of the game, only rivaled by center fielder Christopher Morel’s eighth-inning catch at the wall.

Two innings before, White Sox infielder Danny Mendick’s sacrifice bunt attempt should have moved the go-ahead run to third base. But Stroman was thinking third the whole way.

“That’s in the back of my mind,” he said. “I’m usually off the mound pretty quick. So, if it’s not a perfect bunt, I usually feel like I have an opportunity to get the guy at third. I kind of peaked real quick while I was running over there, and I knew I had a chance.”

Stroman cut off the bunt, barehanded it, spun and made an on-target throw to third baseman Patrick Wisdom just in time for the tag.

“I don’t want to say you expect him to make that play,” Robertson said, “but when he makes it, you’re not surprised because he’s that good at defending the mound.”

The Cubs seized a one-run lead in the seventh inning as Rafael Ortega drew a walk, stole second base and scored on an error.

They maintained the lead until the ninth.

White Sox slugger Gavin Sheets hit a double up the left field line. Then, Adam Engel chopped a ground ball to Robertson’s right, which he fielded cleanly. But his spinning throw to first base was wide, and A.J. Pollock, pinch running for Sheets, advanced to third on the single. He scored on a wild pitch soon after.

“It’s just a tough inning,” Robertson said. “It happens in baseball, it’s a hard game. A couple of things didn’t go my way. … I would have loved to come in there and shut that down real quick, but it just didn’t happen this afternoon.”

In extra innings, with the automatic runner on second base in play to start each frame, the score swung wildly back and forth, and the Cubs reached deeper and deeper into their bullpen.

Finally, in the 12th inning, White Sox rookie Jake Burger hit a walkoff single into left field.

“Long one, especially going into a long day tomorrow,” Stroman said. “I thought the team played incredibly well, it just didn’t work out in our favor.”

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White Sox have all the baggage they need — and then some — for upcoming road trip

A week ago, a Sunday doubleheader sweep at Yankee Stadium was supposed to be the thing that ignited a White Sox hot streak. And how did that work out? With a 2-3 homestand that would’ve been worse — embarrassingly worse — had the Sox failed to pull off multiple rallies one Sunday later in a 5-4, 12-inning win against the tomato-can Cubs.

So, will this one be the igniter?

Don’t bet on it. The Sox have all kinds of baggage as they travel to Toronto and Tampa for six games against a pair of strong teams, and it’s packed with shirts, socks, toothbrushes, an injured Tim Anderson, an injured Eloy Jimenez, the ghost of Dallas Keuchel and a pitching rotation still without Lance Lynn. And that’s just some of it.

The heat — at least from the public — on Tony La Russa is pretty high, too. Can’t forget about that.

And then, after this trip? The Sox get to come home and face the mighty Dodgers.

A bash-happy lineup was supposed to make this a fun, comfy season. But, boy, has it been a meat grinder. Who had the big hits Sunday? Gavin Sheets, Danny Mendick, Adam Engel, Jake Burger. Talk about a who’s-who of “who?” OK, and Jose Abreu had a timely knock, too.

But the Sox are going to need the no-names to lead them, or at least help keep them afloat. A hot streak? Check back in after the All-Star break and maybe we can talk about hot streaks.

Here’s what’s happening:

MON 30

Brewers at Cubs (12:05 p.m., 6:40 p.m., Marquee)

After failing to prove beyond a doubt they’re the best team in the city, the Cubs try to sweep a doubleheader and at least prove they’re the best team in the NL Central.

Rangers at Hurricanes, Game 7 (7 p.m., ESPN)

New York is 4-0 in elimination games this postseason, but Carolina is 7-0 at PNC Arena. Somebody’s about to take a dreaded “1” in the loss column.

TUE 31

Mercury at Sky (6 p.m., ESPN2)

The Sky aren’t really shining yet, the Mercury definitely aren’t rising and Phoenix’s Brittney Griner remains in detention in Russia. The first two of those things just don’t seem to matter much as long as the last one is true.

Draisaitl (left) and McDavid are kind of good at hockey.

Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

Oilers at Avalanche, Game 1 (7 p.m., TNT)

Two players entered the week with 26 points — a whopping 10 more than any else had — and what makes it doubly impressive is that they are teammates. Aside from all that, though, Edmonton’s Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl really haven’t been very good.

WED 1

White Sox at Blue Jays (6:07 p.m., NBCSCH)

The Jays are a winning team with a negative run differential. How do they do it? By being great in close games. Sox better mind those Ps and Qs.

Lightning at Hurricanes/Rangers, Game 1 (7 p.m., ESPN)

Seriously, does it even matter which team takes on the two-time defending champs? All the Bolts know how to do is win.

THU 2

Cardinals at Cubs (7:05 p.m., Marquee)

Finally, the first meeting of the season for these age-old rivals. And speaking of age-old: Nice to see you again, Albert Pujols.

Heat/Celtics at Warriors, Game 1 (8 p.m., Ch. 7)

Have you watched the Dubs play lately? When Steph Curry isn’t taking over, Klay Thompson is. When Thompson isn’t, Jordan Poole is. When Poole isn’t, Andrew Wiggins is. Just raise the banner already.

FRI 3

White Sox at Rays (6:10 p.m., NBCSCH)

Pop quiz: Name the Florida-based team that’s good all the flippin’ time yet overlooked all the flippin’ time? Sorry, no, not the Marlins.

SAT 4

French Open women’s final (8 a.m., Ch. 5, Peacock)

Will there be a seventh straight first-time champion? Suffice it to say, there is no Rafael Nadal on the women’s side.

Pujols is still at it — and back at it with the Redbirds.

Photo by Justin Berl/Getty Images

Cardinals at Cubs (12:20 p.m., Marquee, 6:15 p.m., Fox-32)

Another double dip for the Cubs, who won’t have a busier week all season. But that’s why we pay ’em the big bucks.

SUN 5

French Open women’s final (8 a.m., Ch. 5, Peacock)

Nadal has won at Roland-Garros an amazing 13 times in the last 17 years. To put it another way: He’s the Packers of this tournament, and everybody else is the Bears.

USMNT vs. Uruguay (4 p.m., Fox-32, Univision)

A high-level foe is expected to put its biggest stars on the field for this friendly in Kansas City, Kansas. And, no, Luis Suarez biting an American opponent would not be friendly at all.

Mystics at Sky (5 p.m., Marquee, Amazon Prime)

Nothing much happened the first time these teams met other than the Sky winning by nine and — oh, yeah — Candace Parker getting her second career triple-double. She should really feel free to do that again.

Cardinals at Cubs (6:08 p.m., ESPN)

These teams are still going at it? The fifth and final game of a five-game series gets the “Sunday Night Baseball” treatment.

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White Sox walk-off victory comes at a big price

The White Sox’ 5-4walk-off win in 12 innings against the Cubs wasn’t well played or executed but it was entertaining. And it saved their fans among a sellout crowd of 38,038 the humiliation of getting swept by the North Siders.

But oh, the price of victory.

Tim Anderson strained his right groin hours before a team celebration around Jake Burger after Burger atoned for a costly error with a game-winning single in the 12th. The severity of the injury is unknown, but Anderson is going on the injured list.

The Sox’ All-Star shortstop, .356 hitter, energy source and leader went down after making a throw from the outfield grass in the fifth inning.

An underperforming team struggling to piece together hits and runs, and playing without Eloy Jimenez, Luis Robert and Yoan Moncada because of injury or illness Sunday now loses its top player.

Just in time for a tough road trip against the Blue Jays and Rays.

“It’s terrible,” said Danny Mendick, who replaced Anderson at shortstop, contributed two singles and scored the winning run as the free runner.

“You don’t ever want to see a teammate get hurt. When it happens, everyone knows we still got a ballgame to play.”

.Anderson went down on the outfield grass after ranging to his left and throwing across his body to get Cubs catcher P.J. Higgins. He walked off the field with his arms over the shoulders of two trainers.

He will be further evaluated Monday, an off day.

“Tim’s a great player having a great year,” manager Tony La Russa said. “Now he’s going to have to recover. Recovering from any injury is not fun. But for us, we just got to look around at who we send out [to play]. We’ve got a lot of guys who can help win a game. That’s our attitude.”

Anderson will join five key teammates on the injured list: Right-handers Joe Kelly (right hamstring strain) and Lance Lynn (right knee surgery), left-hander Garrett Crochet (Tommy John surgery) and outfielders Jim?nez (right hamstring tendon tear) and Robert (COVID).

“It’s obviously sad and you hate to see it but we have to keep playing with what we have,” said Dylan Cease, gave up one run – unearned – in seven innings.

“An extra inning win like that can be a momentum builder. It’s going to be a way happier night than if the other option happened.”

But bittersweet without Anderson on the plane for Toronto.

“It’s devastating,” Burger said. “We were all around him. You saw all nine guys out there around him. It’s tough. He’s such a leader and such an impactful person in this clubhouse that it will be tough. But he’ll always be with us no matter what it is.”

The Sox ran into outs, made two errors, gave up three stolen bases, allowed three unearned runs and blew multiple chances to walk it off before Burger did. They were 5-for-20 with runners in scoring position (the Cubs were 1-for-10).

After Gavin Sheets started something with a double, the Sox tied it 1-1 in the ninth on David Robertson’s wild pitch, and both teams scored in each of the extra innings until Matt Foster held the Cubs scoreless in the 12th.

The Sox tied it in the 10th on Andrew Vaughn’s sacrifice fly and Jose Abreu’s single for his 808th RBI – tying him with Minnie Minoso for fifth on the Sox all-time list – and tied it in the 11th on Adam Engel’s RBI single. They thought they won it when Cubs pitcher Robert Gsellman fielded Leury Garcia’s bunt and threw one through first baseman Alfonso Rivas at first base. But Garcia was called out for running inside the baseline and Engel, who had crossed home, was sent back to second.

After getting back to .500, it was back to thinking about life without Anderson.

“We’re not nearly as good without him, but we’re going to have to be good enough to win,” La Russa said. “He’s a great player. But I think maybe we get [Luis] Robert back sometime soon. The games count, we’ll figure out a way.”

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Lupus made me a walking pharmacy

Lupus made me a walking pharmacy

Lupus is an autoimmune disease where the immune system gets confused, attacking its own tissues. With that being said, lupus may cause damage or potential damage to internal and external organ systems.

I was officially diagnosed with lupus in 1999 but prior to my diagnosis I suffered from so many other ailments. I had mixed connective tissue disease and thrombocytopenia (a bleeding disorder) and I was constantly in and out of the hospital due to flares in my condition.

I needed blood and plasma transfusions each time I was hospitalized not to mention the tedious medication regimen I was on. I became a walking pharmacy as I still am until this day.

I’m longing for the day when there’s a cure for lupus or at least one pill that would do the trick for controlling the symptoms. At least I would get back to some kind of normal.

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Sabrina Nixon

I’m an author and playwright of urban fiction, a mom of two boys with autism, and have lupus. I lived my formative years in the Cabrini-Green Housing Projects. I have an article about my thoughts of the demise of Cabrini-Green on Page Four of the Chicago RedEye titled “Eyesore yes, but public housing was our home” (April 2010) and a lupus article titled “Butterfly is more than some ink on my leg” (May 2010).

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White Sox walk off Cubs in 12 innings

Jake Burger singled home free runner Danny Mendick from third base in the 12th inning, and the White Sox gained a split of their two-game crosstown series with Cubs with a 5-4 victory Sunday before a sellout crowd at Guaranteed Rate Field.

The Cubs used five infielders with Burger, who was 0-for-4 with a walk in his first five plate appearances, lined a single to left against Robert Gsellman after Andrew Vaughn moved Mendick to third with a ground ball to the right side.

Burger’s error in the seventh gave the Cubs their only run against Dylan Cease, breaking a scoreless duel with Marcus Stroman.

“I made that error and I put that on me and I wanted to be the guy who turned it around for us,” Burger said.

Sox All-Star shortstop Tim Anderson left the game in the fifth inning with a strained right groin.

“We wanted to win that one for Tim,” Burger said.

After the Sox tied it 1-1 in the ninth on David Robertson’s wild pitch, both teams scored in each of the extra innings until Matt Foster held the Cubs scoreless in the 12th.

Alfoso Rivas’ sacrifice fly against Aaron Bummer in the 11th inning gave the Cubs a 4-3 lead.

The Sox tied it on Adam Engel’s RBI single in the 11th and thought they won it when Cubs pitcher Robert Gsellman fielded Leury Garcia’s bunt but threw one through first baseman Rivas at first base. But Garcia was called out for running inside the baseline and Engel, who had crossed home, was sent back to second.

Free runner Nico Hoerner scored the Cubs second run of the game on a White Sox fielding error in the 10th inning, and Christopher Morel added another run with an RBI single in the 10th.

Vaughn’s sacrifice fly and Jose Abreu’s RBI single against Scott Effross in the Sox’ 10th tied it.

The Sox, limited to no runs on three hits in seven innings against Stroman, tied it 1-0 in the ninth when pinch runner AJ Pollock scored on Robertson’s wild pitch.

Hoerner scored when Sox reliever Reynaldo Lopez fielded P.J. Higgins’ bunt and heaved it over the head of first baseman Jose Abreu. Higgins advance to second and scored on a single by Christopher Morel, who extended his hitting streak to eight games.

Rafael Ortega scored from second base on Burger’s fielding error in the seventh for the Cubs’ only run against Dylan Cease. All three Cubs runs were unearned.

Stroman, lowering his ERA to 3.95, gave up three hits and two walks and struck out two in seven innings.

Ortega scored from second on Burger’s error with two outs. Ortega walked and stole second, and after Hoerner was walked intentionally, Burger unsuccessfully tried to backhand Higgins’ bouncer, allowing Ortego to score.

Cease allowed two hits and walked four while striking out five. Bouncing back from a three-inning stint in which he gave up seven runs to the Red Sox Tuesday, Cease (3.69 ERA) threw a season high 108 pitches.

The Sox loaded the bases against Stroman in the seventh with one out but catcher Reese McGuire struck out on a pitch below the strike zone and Josh Harrison lined out to second.

The Sox also had a good scoring chance when Harrison led off the sixth with a walk and advanced on a wild pitch. But Stroman fielded Danny Mendick’s sacrifice bunt attempt and threw out Harrison at third for the first out of the inning.

Mendick, who replaced Anderson at short, had two hits. He singled leading off the eighth against Mychal Givens, but Vaughn struck out, Burger’s fly ball to the warning track in center was caught by Morel — who held on after banging into the wall — and Abreu, swinging at what would have been fall four, hit a weak grounder to Givens.

The Cubs beat the Sox 5-1 Saturday in the first of two games at Guaranteed Rate Field.

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Person charged with setting ‘Walking Man’ on fire while he slept on Lower Wabash Avenue

A person has been charged with setting a homeless man, known for walking the streets of the Loop, on fire last week while he slept on Lower Wabash Avenue.

Joseph Guardia, 27, was charged with attempted murder and arson after pouring a flammable liquid on Joseph Kromelis, 75 — known as “The Walking Man” and “The Walking Dude” –and igniting it Wednesday morning in the 400 block of North Lower Wabash, Chicago police said.

Security officers from a nearby building found Kromelis with third-degree burns over 65% of his body. He was taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital in critical condition.

Officials said his chances of survival were not considered good. “We were just told he’s most likely to die,” one law enforcement source said.

Police released surveillance video of Guardia getting on a Blue Line train at the Clark and Lake CTA station. He was arrested Friday in the 2400 block of West Belmont Avenue.

Kromelis is well known to people who frequent downtown Chicago, easily recognized by his tall frame, striking facial features, long flowing hair and bushy mustache.

Six years ago — on May 24, 2016 — he was brutally beaten by someone with a baseball bat in the 400 block of East Lower Wacker Drive. The two were struggling over the bat when police arrived.

Officials have not released any additional information on Kromelis’ condition.

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White Sox’s Anderson helped off, headed to ILon May 29, 2022 at 10:36 pm

CHICAGOWhite Sox shortstop Tim Anderson left Sunday’s game against the Cubs after fielding a ground ball in the top of the fifth inning.

Anderson, 29, fell to the ground after throwing catcher PJ Higgins out at first base. He limped off the field with the help of the White Sox training staff with an apparent leg or groin injury.

Anderson went 1 for 2 with a first-inning single and ranks among the league leaders with a .356 batting average.

Anderson is hitting .356 as an offensive catalyst for the second place Sox who are in the midst of another injury riddled season. The team is currently without stars Luis Robert (COVID-19), Eloy Jimenez (hamstring), Yoan Moncada (hip) and starter Lance Lynn (knee). In fact, Jimenez had to leave is first rehab game in the minors on Saturday.

Infielder Danny Mendick replaced Anderson at shortstop.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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