Videos

Reader co-publisher Karen Hawkins to move to The 19th*Chicago Readeron May 24, 2022 at 11:00 am

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CHICAGO — Karen Hawkins, co-publisher and editor-in-chief of the Chicago Reader, is leaving the organization to become story editor with The 19th*, an independent, national nonprofit newsroom reporting on the intersection of gender, politics, and policy.

Hawkins started at the Reader in October 2018, when she joined incoming publisher Tracy Baim to help turn around the struggling, legendary alternative newspaper. The two had worked together more than 20 years prior at Windy City Times. After starting as the Reader’sfirst-ever digital managing editor, she moved up to co-editor-in-chief in 2019 and then added the title of co-publisher in 2020.

Hawkins’s last day with the Reader will be June 10. Reader culture editor Salem Collo-Julin will be promoted to managing editor, and other editorial changes will be announced soon.

“I wish Karen all the best at The 19th*,” said Baim. “Her new colleagues are getting an incredible addition to their team. I absolutely could not have done this work at the Reader without Karen by my side. We helped each other get through tremendous struggles to turn around the Chicago Reader. We inherited a company losing $1 million a year, with no business staff, then survived the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the most recent struggle to get to nonprofit independence. Karen has provided an invaluable partnership to me in this work, and I will miss her teamwork deeply.”

Karen Hawkins

“Karen has been a critical part of our work,” said Eileen Rhodes, chair of the board of the nonprofit Reader Institute for Community Journalism, which now operates the Chicago Reader. “She brought a commitment to strong journalism, diversified voices, and empathetic leadership. I can’t imagine doing this work without her, but I wish her the best at The 19th*.”

Hawkins is also founder of Rebellious Magazine for Women and the Feminist Media Foundation. She co-hosts the podcasts Of Course I’m Not OK and Feminist Erotica. She is an award-winning reporter and editor whose journalism background includes positions at The Associated Press and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. She also serves as a national board member for NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists.

Salem Collo-Julin

Salem Collo-Julin (she/they) has been on the editorial staff of the Chicago Reader since 2019. As culture editor, her areas of focus include the City Life section, visual arts and architecture coverage, and the literary arts. From 1999-2014, Salem was a member of the midwestern art group Temporary Services, and coedited the book Prisoners’ Inventions (Whitewalls, 2003). She also cofounded Temporary Services’ publishing imprint, Half Letter Press. Her writing has been found in Windy City Times, the Journal of Aesthetics and Protest, Lumpen, AREA Chicago, the book Organize Your Own (ed. Anthony Romero, Soberscove Press, 2016), and other publications. 

Read More

Reader co-publisher Karen Hawkins to move to The 19th*Chicago Readeron May 24, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

Drone adepts Pelt return to Chicago for the first time in a decadeBill Meyeron May 24, 2022 at 11:00 am

As we navigated shutdowns and venue closures throughout 2020, many of us observed that time seemed to slow down. But when it comes to dilating time, COVID-19 is a rank dabbler compared to Pelt. Even in their early incarnation as a Sonic Youth-inspired noise-rock band based in Blacksburg, West Virginia, they were prone to sludgy tempos. After the combo dropped rock forms in favor of open-ended improvisation, their penchant for fusing the keening sonorities of Appalachian old-time fiddling with the endless drones of early American minimalists La Monte Young, Tony Conrad, and Terry Riley earned them an honorific: the Hillbilly Theatre of Eternal Music. The effect of their bowed strings, groaning harmonium, drizzling piano, and tolling metal percussion is to make it seem as though time has evaporated, and the quartet (currently multi-instrumentalists Mike Gangloff, Mikel Dimmick, Nathan Bowles, and Pat Best, who are spread across four states) can go years without playing a concert. Nonetheless, Pelt have their own peculiar life cycle—they often emerge from hibernation in response to a summons from a music festival. In April, Pelt played for the first time in five years at an event celebrating the 20th anniversary of Three Lobed Recordings, which last year released their fantastic LP Reticence/Resistance. Duly awakened, Pelt now return to Chicago for the first time since 2011 to play two concerts. On Thursday, the group will perform at SPACE as part of WNUR’s Transference Fest. On Friday, they’ll headline the Hideout; for the opening set, Bowles and local guitarist Bill MacKay will belatedly celebrate their debut LP, Keys, released last year by Chicago-based label Drag City. If Pelt’s music taps into the cosmic beyond, the reflective guitar-and-banjo instrumentals and gospel vocal numbers on Keys quietly but resoundingly affirm traditional musical values.

Pelt Part of Transference Fest, presented by WNUR. Evie the Cool, Carinae, Pelt, Morinda, Fri 5/27, 7:30 PM, SPACE,1245 Chicago, Evanston, $15, all ages

Pelt, Bill MacKay & Nathan Bowles, Sat 5/28, 9:30 PM, Hideout, 1354 W. Wabansia, $15, 21+

Read More

Drone adepts Pelt return to Chicago for the first time in a decadeBill Meyeron May 24, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

June’s art fests will get your summer rolling

June’s art fests will get your summer rolling

Spring has been a display of Mother Nature toying with our emotions. Summer is around the corner (think positive), so June is a great time to welcome some excellent art festivals. Think live painting, music, vendors, food, and more. My favorite part is watching the artists in action. What do you love most?

Get your calendar ready for a fun-filled month!

Heavy Weights Graffiti Art Festival
June 4 and June 5
11 am until sundown
Crawford Steel Company at 3141 W 36th Pl

57th Street Art Fair
June 4 from 11 am – 6 pm
June 5 from 10 am – 5 pm
57th Street between Kenwood and Woodlawn Avenues, and between 56th and 57th on Kimbark Ave in Hyde Park

Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art Maker’s Market
June 11 and June 12
11 am – 5 pm
2320 W Chicago Ave in Ukrainian Village

Wells Street Art Festival
June 11 and June 12
10 am until dusk
Wells Street corridor in Old Town

Jarvis Square Artisan Market
June 18 
10 am – 2 pm
Jarvis and Greenview in Rogers Park

Gold Coast Art Fair
June 18 and June 19
10 am – 5 pm
Grant Park’s Butler Field (S Lake Shore Dr and E Monroe St)

Grab your comfy shoes, bring an appetite, and support local artists!

Advertisement:
Advertisement:

Welcome to ChicagoNow.

Meet
our bloggers,

post comments, or

pitch your blog idea.

Meet The Blogger

Sher

Activist / Street Art Addict / Beer Snob / Artist Promoter.
Follow my street art findings on Instagram @willtravel4art and catch me on Twitter @Sherblogsss.
Art heals the soul and makes the world a better place.
I love promoting artists, so send me an email if I can help!
And, where would we be without craft beer? I particularly love stouts, barrel-aged beers, and hazy IPAs.

Monthly Archives

May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018

Subscribe by Email

Completely spam free, opt out any time.

Latest on ChicagoNow

June’s art fests will get your summer rolling

from Chicago’s Art and Beer Scene by Sher
posted today at 8:44 am

“It’s So Quiet, It’s Loud” -Ryan Adams

from Cut Out Kid by radstarr
posted today at 6:14 am

My ten-year plan goals at age seventy is to live long enough to make another ten-year plan

from I’ve Got The Hippy Shakes by Howard Moore
posted today at 6:11 am

Four cast members leaving is not the end of Saturday Night Live

from I’ve Got The Hippy Shakes by Howard Moore
posted Monday at 12:16 pm

The Third Soup

from Pantry to Plate by Barbara Revsine
posted Monday at 10:31 am

Read these ChicagoNow blogs

Cubs Den

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

Pets in need of homes

Pets available for adoption in the Chicago area

Hammervision

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

About ChicagoNow

FAQs

Advertise

Recent posts RSS

Privacy policy (Updated)

Comment policy

Terms of service

Chicago Tribune Archives

Do not sell my personal info

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

Read More

June’s art fests will get your summer rolling Read More »

Chicago Bears QB Justin Fields knows his wide receivers aren’t great

The Chicago Bears lost some talent at wide receiver but are hoping the depth works out to their advantage for quarterback Justin Fields

Elite wide receivers are expensive, and for the Chicago Bears, they’re hard to come by right now. Allen Robinson leaving the Bears receiving core to go to the Los Angeles Rams this offseason has the Bears looking at their roster without a definite number 1 wide receiver.

Darnell Mooney was the best wide receiver on the roster that’s returning this season, but many analysts don’t know if he’s a number 2 receiver on most NFL teams. Second-year quarterback Justin Fields was gifted Velus Jones Jr. in the 2022 NFL draft’s third round. This offseason, the Bears acquired Byron Pringle and a slew of other wide receivers in free agency to bring the depth at the position to 14 by OTA’s.

Fields, in an interview with Scott Polacek for a Bleacher Report exclusive interview, acknowledged the Bears don’t have an elite play at wide receiver this year. Here’s what Fields told Polacek:

“We don’t have an Odell [Beckham Jr.] or a Cooper Kupp on our team, but at the end of the day I think if everybody is on their P’s and Q’s, and we’re on top of everything and not making mistakes, the players we have right now are good enough,” he told Bleacher Report in an exclusive interview. “The front office thinks that, too. The fans outside of the facility, they don’t know what’s going on at practice. Just because we don’t have a big-name guy, doesn’t mean those guys aren’t talented. I have plenty of confidence in myself and my teammates that we’re going to get the job done.”

Good enough

Fields understands that with the lack of elite play, the pressure will be on him and the wide receivers they have to be near damn perfect on every route and throw this season with little margin for error. “Good enough” isn’t exactly a ringing endorsement for an NFL group. It certainly isn’t as comforting as say, great.

To make the NFL, players who make rosters for training camp have to have talent. That’s not much for the quarterback to say, because it’s doubtful he’d call out members of the unit to the media that would cause division in the locker room.

While Bears fans aren’t seeing what’s going on in practice outside of a few tweets—exceptions being the pass rookie Trestan Ebner dropped in practice last week—they can read reports of “struggles” the offense had during voluntary minicamp.

Justin Fields dropping dimes on Matt Eberflus’s birthday. #Bears https://t.co/Gff4xhN6qb

It’s great that Fields thinks they can get the job done, even if he admitted the Bears’ best receiver isn’t as good as the Rams trio of Robinson, Kupp, and Beckham Jr. But a player as smart as Fields knows his skills are not being elevated to what they could be with an elite receiver such as Beckham Jr. (Note, Fields used the Super Bowl-winning Rams has his example, a team that pulled all the stops to make Mathew Stafford look competent again.) Beckham Jr. would be the perfect player for the Bears to go after this offseason if they can negotiate with him in free agency.

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

Read More

Chicago Bears QB Justin Fields knows his wide receivers aren’t great Read More »

5 Chicago Bears players with the most to prove this yearRyan Heckmanon May 24, 2022 at 1:33 pm

Use your (arrows) to browse

The Chicago Bears are a team that many love to hate — especially the national media.

If you believed a word any of those talking heads said, you’d think the Bears are in for an 0-16 season and Justin Fields is going to end up like Cade McNown.

But, this is a Bears team under new leadership with a new attitude — and that attitude is of a strong work ethic and resilience. Under Matt Eberflus and his staff, this team is now out to prove everybody wrong.

General manager Ryan Poles has not done as much as many would have liked in terms of adding talent to this roster in his first year. But, maybe the first-year GM has done enough for Fields, specifically, and we just can’t see past the simple-minded negativity.

The Chicago Bears have much to prove in 2022, but a few select players will have the most pressure.

Poles put a great coaching staff in place who will surely get the most out of this roster. It’s hard to gauge just how much of a difference this new staff will make, and that’s why it’s easiest to nitpick and criticize at the moment. After all, it is only May, and we haven’t even gotten to training camp yet.

The Bears still have a lot of talent on this roster, especially if a few particular players step up to the plate. We know what we’re going to see out of guys like Roquan Smith and David Montgomery — two of the hardest-working players on this roster. They’re leaders. They’re consistent.

What about the rest of the team? Maybe, just maybe, the Bears actually have a competent roster. It will require plenty of work from everyone involved, and a handful of key guys are going to have to quiet the doubters. But, there is a competitive team here, deep down.

Five specific players are under some pressure in 2022, and must perform in order to silence some of the constant criticism coming Chicago’s way. Let’s dig into what might be the five biggest X-factors for the Bears this year.

Use your (arrows) to browse

Read More

5 Chicago Bears players with the most to prove this yearRyan Heckmanon May 24, 2022 at 1:33 pm Read More »

Reader co-publisher Karen Hawkins to move to The 19th*

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CHICAGO — Karen Hawkins, co-publisher and editor-in-chief of the Chicago Reader, is leaving the organization to become story editor with The 19th*, an independent, national nonprofit newsroom reporting on the intersection of gender, politics, and policy.

Hawkins started at the Reader in October 2018, when she joined incoming publisher Tracy Baim to help turn around the struggling, legendary alternative newspaper. The two had worked together more than 20 years prior at Windy City Times. After starting as the Reader’sfirst-ever digital managing editor, she moved up to co-editor-in-chief in 2019 and then added the title of co-publisher in 2020.

Hawkins’s last day with the Reader will be June 10. Reader culture editor Salem Collo-Julin will be promoted to managing editor, and other editorial changes will be announced soon.

“I wish Karen all the best at The 19th*,” said Baim. “Her new colleagues are getting an incredible addition to their team. I absolutely could not have done this work at the Reader without Karen by my side. We helped each other get through tremendous struggles to turn around the Chicago Reader. We inherited a company losing $1 million a year, with no business staff, then survived the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the most recent struggle to get to nonprofit independence. Karen has provided an invaluable partnership to me in this work, and I will miss her teamwork deeply.”

Karen Hawkins

“Karen has been a critical part of our work,” said Eileen Rhodes, chair of the board of the nonprofit Reader Institute for Community Journalism, which now operates the Chicago Reader. “She brought a commitment to strong journalism, diversified voices, and empathetic leadership. I can’t imagine doing this work without her, but I wish her the best at The 19th*.”

Hawkins is also founder of Rebellious Magazine for Women and the Feminist Media Foundation. She co-hosts the podcasts Of Course I’m Not OK and Feminist Erotica. She is an award-winning reporter and editor whose journalism background includes positions at The Associated Press and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. She also serves as a national board member for NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists.

Salem Collo-Julin

Salem Collo-Julin (she/they) has been on the editorial staff of the Chicago Reader since 2019. As culture editor, her areas of focus include the City Life section, visual arts and architecture coverage, and the literary arts. From 1999-2014, Salem was a member of the midwestern art group Temporary Services, and coedited the book Prisoners’ Inventions (Whitewalls, 2003). She also cofounded Temporary Services’ publishing imprint, Half Letter Press. Her writing has been found in Windy City Times, the Journal of Aesthetics and Protest, Lumpen, AREA Chicago, the book Organize Your Own (ed. Anthony Romero, Soberscove Press, 2016), and other publications. 

Read More

Reader co-publisher Karen Hawkins to move to The 19th* Read More »

Drone adepts Pelt return to Chicago for the first time in a decade

As we navigated shutdowns and venue closures throughout 2020, many of us observed that time seemed to slow down. But when it comes to dilating time, COVID-19 is a rank dabbler compared to Pelt. Even in their early incarnation as a Sonic Youth-inspired noise-rock band based in Blacksburg, West Virginia, they were prone to sludgy tempos. After the combo dropped rock forms in favor of open-ended improvisation, their penchant for fusing the keening sonorities of Appalachian old-time fiddling with the endless drones of early American minimalists La Monte Young, Tony Conrad, and Terry Riley earned them an honorific: the Hillbilly Theatre of Eternal Music. The effect of their bowed strings, groaning harmonium, drizzling piano, and tolling metal percussion is to make it seem as though time has evaporated, and the quartet (currently multi-instrumentalists Mike Gangloff, Mikel Dimmick, Nathan Bowles, and Pat Best, who are spread across four states) can go years without playing a concert. Nonetheless, Pelt have their own peculiar life cycle—they often emerge from hibernation in response to a summons from a music festival. In April, Pelt played for the first time in five years at an event celebrating the 20th anniversary of Three Lobed Recordings, which last year released their fantastic LP Reticence/Resistance. Duly awakened, Pelt now return to Chicago for the first time since 2011 to play two concerts. On Thursday, the group will perform at SPACE as part of WNUR’s Transference Fest. On Friday, they’ll headline the Hideout; for the opening set, Bowles and local guitarist Bill MacKay will belatedly celebrate their debut LP, Keys, released last year by Chicago-based label Drag City. If Pelt’s music taps into the cosmic beyond, the reflective guitar-and-banjo instrumentals and gospel vocal numbers on Keys quietly but resoundingly affirm traditional musical values.

Pelt Part of Transference Fest, presented by WNUR. Evie the Cool, Carinae, Pelt, Morinda, Fri 5/27, 7:30 PM, SPACE,1245 Chicago, Evanston, $15, all ages

Pelt, Bill MacKay & Nathan Bowles, Sat 5/28, 9:30 PM, Hideout, 1354 W. Wabansia, $15, 21+

Read More

Drone adepts Pelt return to Chicago for the first time in a decade Read More »

2 killed, 7 wounded by gunfire in Chicago Monday

Crime
News
Chicago

SHARE
2 killed, 7 wounded by gunfire in Chicago Monday

Sun-Times file photo

Two people were killed and seven others were wounded in shootings across Chicago Monday.

In the day’s first fatal attack, a man was killed and another critically wounded just before 3 p.m. Monday in Lawndale on the West Side. The men were in the 2800 block of West Polk Street when someone drove by in a silver sedan and opened fire, police said. Brandon Foley, 32, was struck in the head, back and leg and was pronounced dead at the scene. The second man, 43, suffered gunshot wounds to the legs and was transported to Mount Sinai Hospital in critical condition.A man, 27, was fatally shot in his home in Gresham on the South Side around 11:30 p.m. He was inside his home in the first block of South Emerald Avenue when someone fired shots, police said. He was hit in the abdomen and was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where he was pronounced dead. His name hasn’t been released.Two men were struck by gunfire in Avalon Park on the South Side around 9 p.m. They were were in the 800 block of East 79th Street when someone fired shots, police said. One of the men, 26, was struck in the buttocks and was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center in good condition, police said. The other man, 25, was shot in the leg and foot and went to the same hospital in good condition.

At least four others were wounded in the city Monday.

Most Read

The Latest

Crime

Man fatally shot in Gresham home

The 27-year-old was inside his home about 11:30 p.m. in the first block of South Emerald Avenue when a male suspect fired shots.

City Hall

One of Lightfoot’s closest City Council allies abruptly resigns

The surprise departure of Ald. Michael Scott Jr., Education Committee chairman, gives Mayor Lori Lightfoot the ability to appoint her second alderperson. The first was 11th Ward Ald. Nicole Lee, who replaced Patrick Daley Thompson.

Read More

2 killed, 7 wounded by gunfire in Chicago Monday Read More »

Jimmy Butler and the Miami Heat need help to get back to the NBA Finalson May 24, 2022 at 1:23 pm

BOSTON — Midway through the third quarter Monday night as the Celtics were pushing their lead to as much as 32 points, Rudy Gobert couldn’t resist.

“This Boston defense is tough” the Utah Jazz center tweeted.

This was both innocuous and accurate at a time when the Celtics were smothering the Miami Heat and rewriting a slew of records on their way to a 102-82 victory that tied the Eastern Conference finals at 2-2.

But Gobert, it sure seemed, was subtweeting. He had a point, though maybe not his preferred one.

Gobert was noting the Celtics looked great on defense even though Defensive Player of the Year Marcus Smart was out because of an ankle injury.

Gobert, a three-time DPOY, appears to still be salty that Smart beat him for the award.

What Gobert was saying without saying, though, is the Heat were powerless to score against Boston in the half court, Smart’s absence notwithstanding.

The Heat are hurting at the moment, and they look like they’re going to need some help to take two out of the three games left to reach the Finals. Be it the injury gods, the Celtics themselves or some yet to be discovered offensive savior.

2 Related

They don’t see it this way, at least publicly. They projected a strong and satisfied front after the loss, looking forward to going back home for Game 5 with home-court advantage.

“This is part of the playoffs, there are these extreme highs and lows,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “We’ve proven that we can find solutions offensively in a lot of different ways.”

Spoelstra is speaking the truth. The Heat have shown throughout the season they can manage adversity. They were walloped by injuries and constantly changing lineups, yet in the end still had the No. 1 seed in the East.

Spoelstra was once again a Coach of the Year candidate for his ability to consistently piece together a functional engine. The situation Miami is in at the moment, though, is a real test of that track record.

Three of their most important offensive players are dealing with bothersome injuries. Tyler Herro, the Sixth Man of the Year, missed Game 4 because of a groin injury and is having trouble running without pain. Jimmy Butler is playing through inflammation in his right knee and looked to have issues getting lift and separation, and shot just 3-of-14.

After getting to the line 26 times in the first two games, Butler has been there just twice in the past three halves as the knee issue has flared up. Kyle Lowry is still coming back from a hamstring injury and is just 5-of-17 shooting in the two games since returning to the lineup.

There is just one day’s rest between games in the conference finals — it has long been such for television purposes, the effect of the quality of play notwithstanding — and three hours of flying on the off days. The injuries don’t have much time to heal.

The NBA75 celebration continues with the NBA playoffs, which runs through June, when the league will crown a champion for its milestone season.

East finals: Heat 2, Celtics 2
o Boston’s defense is too much for Miami
o Celtics’ ‘sense of urgency’ fuels G4 rout
o How Boston keeps bouncing back

West finals: Warriors 3, Mavs 0
o Mavs’ Doncic reflective after 40 in loss
o ‘OMG WIGGS’: Reaction to poster dunk
o The best version of Draymond Green

MORE: Scores, full schedule and more

“No excuse for how I played tonight. It don’t got nothing to do with my knee,” Butler said, despite what the results showed. “I’ve just got to be better. I will be better. I’m not too worried about it.”

Said Heat star Bam Adebayo: “Injuries is a part of this, it’s a part of playoffs. You learn to adapt … you’ve just got to find a way to win.”

This attitude under the circumstances is part of the Heat’s long-standing mantra: “We have enough.”

That has been Spoelstra’s guiding principle when faced with adversity through the years, and it remains so now. But against this Celtics team and this defense, which has been the star of their playoff run and impressive enough for an expert such as Gobert to offer approval, the Heat’s optimism is a harder sell.

When the Heat pulled out the surprising Game 3 win on Saturday, they were aided by a load of Celtics turnovers that fueled offensive chances, leading to an astounding 33 points. Even then, the game wasn’t decided until the final minutes.

The Celtics shut off that spigot on Monday; they turned the ball over just three times in the first half and gave up just seven points off turnovers for the game. With Butler slow, Lowry slower and Herro in courtside couture, that wasn’t survivable.

Miami started the game incredibly 0-of-14 from the field and only marginally improved from there, finishing at just 33% shooting.

Derrick White, in the starting lineup for a third time this postseason in place of Smart, was spectacular in protecting the perimeter for Boston, notching three steals. Jayson Tatum, Al Horford and Robert Williams III combined for eight blocks.

And everyone wearing green and white was locked in on the game plan, which included keeping bodies in front of Adebayo and forcing midrange shots. Miami had a measly eight points in the paint in the first half — when the game was decided.

Spoelstra, as is his nature, batted the worrisome situation away and termed it temporary.

“We are not making any excuse,” the coach said. “We can do it in the mud. We can win it ugly. We can win it when the floodgates come open hitting 3s. We can do it with Jimmy taking over a game. We can do it when he’s facilitating. We have the mental fortitude and the collective toughness to be able to embrace what we have. It’s just a very competitive, good series.”

This Heat team has thrived all season on disrespect. At the start of the playoffs, sportsbooks had them as low as fifth in the odds to win the East despite their top seed. Adebayo was furious he didn’t get recognized in the top three for Defensive Player of the Year — Gobert took the last finalist spot. The Celtics were the significant favorite coming into this series, but the Heat have yet to trail.

Doubting them here could indeed be a mistake. But there are red lights all over the dashboard now, and pulling this out might take something special.

“This is what you want,” Spoelstra said. “We’ll take this hit. We’ll do this together and then we’ll get back to Miami and we’ll get ready for Game 5.”

Read More

Jimmy Butler and the Miami Heat need help to get back to the NBA Finalson May 24, 2022 at 1:23 pm Read More »

3 players that the Chicago Bears can still add for depthJosh De Lucaon May 24, 2022 at 11:00 am

Use your (arrows) to browse

The first wave of the offseason is over for the Chicago Bears. Teams all over the National Football League have changed identities. From full coaching staffs being revamped to teams changing various starters on both sides of the ball, this offseason has been crazy.

All of the big named stars and massive contracts have already been signed. With that being said, many proven veterans who can step in and contribute right away are still available for a variety of positions.

The best part is, at this point in free agency, almost everyone is available at a cheap price tag. The Bears have already been busy this offseason, already coming to terms with multiple free agents on both sides of the ball. On top of that, Ryan Poles was able to turn a small number of draft picks into 11 new players in this year’s draft.

He also brought in many different players on both sides of the ball early in free agency that will be able to bring an immediate impact to this young Bears team. Not all will be a part of the starting lineup but depth in the NFL is one of the most important things any team can have.

The Chicago Bears could still use some more help by adding free agents.

However, on the Bears’ current roster, there does still seem to be some depth and talent issues at a few positions that could still possibly be filled by a player who is not already under contract. I don’t think Poles and the Bears are done quite yet. Here are the three veterans that the Bears should look into acquiring:

Use your (arrows) to browse

Read More

3 players that the Chicago Bears can still add for depthJosh De Lucaon May 24, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »