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White Sox pitcher Michael Kopech reinstated from paternity list; Ryan Burr optioned to Charlotte

NEW YORK — The White Sox optioned right-handed reliever Ryan Burr to Triple-A Charlotte Friday and returned right-hander Michael Kopech from the paternity list.

Manager Tony La Russa said Thursday that he was expecting Kopech to be ready to start Sunday night against the Yankees, who host the Sox for three games starting Friday night.

Kopech is 0-1 with a 1.54 ERA and 33 strikeouts in seven starts over 35 innings this season. He went on the Paternity List Tuesday.

Burr (6.00 ERA) allowed six earned runs over nine innings in eight appearances this season. He owns a 4.08 ERA over 66 appearances including two starts during parts of four seasons with the Sox.

Left-hander Dallas Keuchel is starting Friday night, with Johnny Cueto set to make his second start Saturday. Kopech was originally penciled in for Saturday but because of uncertainty over his return, he was tentatively moved to Sunday’s game, which will be broadcast on ESPN.

“With all the uncertainty with Kopech we’re going to move Cueto to Saturday,” La Russa said Thursday after the Sox defeated the Royals in Kansas City. “He threw his bullpen [Thursday]. So Keuchel, Cueto, then hopefully Kopech Sunday night. If not we can go with [Dylan] Cease [Sunday] which I’m hoping not to do.”

The Sox (19-19) lost three of four to the Yankees last week at Guaranteed Rate Field.

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Rojas goes deep 3 times, fuels HR-happy D-backson May 20, 2022 at 10:43 pm

CHICAGOArizona Diamondbacks third baseman Josh Rojas, who had yet to record a home run this season, hit three of them Friday afternoon in a 10-6 win over the Chicago Cubs, becoming the 13th player in team history to accomplish the feat.

It was the first three-homer game of Rojas’ career. He is the fourth player to go deep three times in a game this season, joining Boston‘s Trevor Story, the New York YankeesAnthony Rizzo and Toronto‘s Vladimir Guerrero Jr.

Rojas, 28, homered off Cubs starter Kyle Hendricks in the third and fifth innings, then hit one off reliever Mychal Givens in the seventh inning. He is the second player in Diamondbacks history to tally his first three home runs of a season in the same game, joining Erubiel Durazo in 2002.

The Diamondbacks and Cubs combined to hit 11 home runs Friday, tying the most ever in a game at Wrigley Field. It’s the fifth game in Wrigley’s history to feature 11 combined home runs, and first since 2006.

Arizona’s seven home runs — the last of which came off the bat of Christian Walker, who leads the National League with 10 — marked the most a team has hit in a game this season.

ESPN Stats & Information contributed to this report.

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What Johnny Cueto can bring to the White Sox rotation

Can Johnny Cueto help boost the Chicago White Sox rotation? We take a look at what he can bring to the South Side

The Chicago White Sox have been mired in mediocrity so far in the 2022 season. They currently sit in second place in the American League Central division, 3 games behind the Minnesota Twins.

One reason why the White Sox are around .500 and not worse has been their starting pitching. Dylan Cease, Lucas Giolito, and Michael Kopech have all been brilliant so far.  But there have been some rough spots at the back end of the starting rotation.

Dallas Keuchel and Vince Velasquez have not performed as well as fans hoped for. However, there is another name at the back end of the rotation who could end up bringing the stability they lack.

And that player is Johnny Cueto.

Fans were excited to see how Cueto would perform in a White Sox uniform given his pedigree as a two time All Star and former World Series champion, even at the age of 36. On Monday night in Kansas City, Cueto did not disappoint. He threw 6 shutout innings against the Royals while only allowing two hits and striking out seven.

The White Sox could not have asked for a better first outing from Cueto and he will take the mound again this Sunday night at Yankee Stadium.

Ah, Johnny Cueto is definitely a member of the White Sox. Pitch a great game only to get a no-decision.

Now, it is unlikely that Cueto will be this good every start for the White Sox, but it is exciting that they now have a back of the rotation starter. Cueto brings a high floor every fifth day and gives them a good chance to win.

A healthy starting rotation consisting of Giolito, Cease, Kopech, Cueto and Lance Lynn would arguably be the best in the American League. That would give the White Sox a great chance to make a deep postseason run.

Cueto brings a veteran presence, impressive resume and stability on the mound that Keuchel and Velasquez don’t, which should help the rest of the rotation perform at a high level. It should be an entertaining rest of the season for the White Sox, let’s hope Cueto can help them right the ship sooner rather than later.

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

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Potential free agent targets for the Chicago Bulls

The 2022 NBA Playoffs have continued to show us the importance of having a deep bench with players who can both shoot and make defensive stops. The biggest decision for the Chicago Bulls is the health of Zach LaVine. Will they give him a max deal after his surgery? Or will he head elsewhere?

Looking ahead into the potential free agency market, the Bulls will have some huge decisions to make if they want to get past some of the better teams in their conference. After a first round exit against Milwaukee, there are clear needs on this roster and it should be a very exciting offseason in Chicago.

Let’s take a look at some possible free agent fits for the Bulls here in a critical next few months.

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

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NIL evens the college sports playing field, and coaches don’t like that at all

Alabama coach Nick Saban says Texas A&M “bought” its talented 2022 recruiting class, leading Aggies coach Jimbo Fisher to call Saban “despicable,” causing Saban to respond with something along the lines of “am not” and … well, what did you expect? That college players finally getting paid for their talents would go well?

I’ve long been a proponent of “student-athletes” being compensated above board, but I’ve never been under the impression that it would be anything other than “Jurassic Park” when the money started flowing. You thought you were going to warm up the DNA from some T. rexes and their large, pointy, dripping teeth would behave?

Now that college athletes can get paid handsomely for their name, image and likeness (NIL), famous coaches don’t know how to handle it. In the good old days, a school booster surreptitiously handed a kid a bagful of money to do with as he pleased, and his coach could rationalize that neither he nor the university shelled out anything other than free tuition. The haves — the schools with the stellar football and basketball teams — smiled, and the have-nots wondered what an institution of high learning such as theirs had to do to get some alumni who were billionaire venture capitalists.

When the NCAA finally allowed athletes to sell their NILs to the highest bidder last year, it meant that the athletes had lassoed some control. And no one on earth likes total control more than your typical college football coach, whose best friends are an incredibly detailed schedule and the second hand on a clock. Coaches are so meticulous and so obsessive that anything that stands outside the lines they have painstakingly drawn are considered dangerous and subversive.

Saban has won six national titles at Alabama, usually has the top recruiting class in the country and sends more players to the NFL than anyone else. This year, Texas A&M had the consensus No. 1 recruiting class, which apparently hacked off Saban so much he declared that the Aggies had “bought every player” in their esteemed recruiting class.

I believe two things: 1) that, despite his later protestations, Saban meant exactly what he said about A&M buying players and 2) that he sees a new world approaching that won’t necessarily allow him to dominate the way he has. He’s the king of this one. Why would he want change?

“I’m not against NIL,” he said. “I’m against bidding for high school players. I’m against attorneys, collectives and others getting between the money and the players. Is that really what we want it to be in college football?”

Oh, please.

It would take an incredibly naive person — I’m thinking Forrest Gump levels here — to believe that the top programs weren’t illicitly paying off players before NILs arrived a year ago. But not every alum with money was corrupt. Some might have wanted their school to be great at football or basketball but didn’t have the stomach for a recruiting scandal involving their name, photo and place of business becoming public. NILs — corporate sponsorships, revenue from autographs, etc. — not only allow athletes to be paid overtly for their skills, it allows more alumni to give money without the taint of wrongdoing.

What Saban surely knows is that NILs will level the playing field a bit. He says he doesn’t want middlemen siphoning some of the money meant for the athletes, but he has to know that’s a con job. There have always been street agents getting a piece of recruits’ dirty money, the money that comes from boosters — the boosters who work back channels and alleys for the schools. What Saban really doesn’t like is the lack of control. He understood a loose, secretive system. He doesn’t understand this one. Or maybe he understands it too well.

He sees players getting paid a lot of money, which means he sees wealthy players who might not respond to a coach’s scare tactics anymore. He sees other schools offering NIL opportunities that might match Alabama’s. He doesn’t like what he sees.

So he said what he said about Texas A&M and the evil byproducts of NILs, leading Fisher to say what he said about Saban and … well, what did you expect? With an annual salary of about $10 million, Saban is the highest-paid college football coach in the country. There’s a reason for that. He regularly gets more of the best high school football players than anybody else.

But not this year, and he doesn’t like it. He also doesn’t like the idea of bidding wars for “student-athletes” and the idea of pliant, impressionable players not being so pliant and impressionable anymore, thanks to the big money that NILs can bring.

It’s not easy being the king, especially now that kids can get a king’s ransom from somebody else.

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White Sox, Yankees game postponed

NEW YORK — The White Sox’ scheduled game against the New York Yankees Friday night has been postponed due to a forecast of sustained inclement weather in the area.

The game will be made up as part of a doubleheader Sunday starting at 2:05 p.m. CT. The two teams were scheduled to play Sunday at 6:08 p.m.

The two teams play Saturday at 12:05 p.m. CT.

Dallas Keuchel was slated to start for the Sox Friday night.

Earlier Friday, the Sox optioned right-handed reliever Ryan Burr to Triple-A Charlotte and returned right-hander Michael Kopech from the paternity list.

Manager Tony La Russa said Thursday that he was expecting Kopech to be ready to start Sunday night against the Yankees, who host the Sox for three games starting Friday night.

Kopech is 0-1 with a 1.54 ERA and 33 strikeouts in seven starts over 35 innings this season. He went on the Paternity List Tuesday.

Burr (6.00 ERA) allowed six earned runs over nine innings in eight appearances this season. He owns a 4.08 ERA over 66 appearances including two starts during parts of four seasons with the Sox.

Johnny Cueto was the probable starter Saturday. Kopech was originally penciled in for Saturday but because of uncertainty over his return, he was tentatively moved to Sunday’s game, which will be broadcast on ESPN.

“With all the uncertainty with Kopech we’re going to move Cueto to Saturday,” La Russa said Thursday after the Sox defeated the Royals in Kansas City. “He threw his bullpen [Thursday]. So Keuchel, Cueto, then hopefully Kopech Sunday night. If not we can go with [Dylan] Cease [Sunday] which I’m hoping not to do.”

The Sox (19-19) lost three of four to the Yankees last week at Guaranteed Rate Field.

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Cubs unveil Fergie Jenkins statue at Wrigleyon May 20, 2022 at 7:54 pm

CHICAGO — The Chicago Cubs unveiled a statue of six-time 20-game winner and Hall of Fame pitcher Ferguson Jenkins during a ceremony outside Wrigley Field on Friday morning.

Jenkins, 79, was in attendance with family as the sculpture was unveiled next to those of other former great Cubs.

“The statue is sitting beside my fellow teammates, Ernie [Banks], Billy [Williams] and Ronnie [Santo],” Jenkins said during the ceremony. “Believe me, I’m humbled.”

2 Related

The sculptures are part of a new “statue row,” which resides just outside the third-base gates.

Jenkins played for the Cubs from 1966 to ’73, and then again from 1982 to ’83. He threw 154 complete games as a Cub, as well as a career-high 325 innings in 1971.

He’s one of 11 pitchers in MLB history with 4,500 innings pitched, to go along with more than 3,000 career strikeouts. He finished in the top six in Cy Young voting six times, taking home the award in 1971.

“I was looking at some of his stats, the 20-win seasons, they just jump off the page to me,” Cubs manager Davis Ross said. “What a big deal it was to get one [20-win season] of those in my playing era. Kudos to him.”

Ross noted the innings pitched as well. Jenkins threw 289 innings or more in six consecutive seasons.

“I think about what he might do to me if I took him out in the fourth or fifth inning,” Ross joked.

Of the 70 living Hall of Fame players, five were in attendance for the event: Jenkins, Andre Dawson, Ryne Sandberg, Williams and Lee Smith.

The statues of Santo, Williams, Banks and Jenkins now reside below the Cubs offices.

“I like what they’re doing out there,” president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer said. “I can look down from my office and see all [the] Mt. Rushmore of Wrigley right below me. Couldn’t be happier to see Fergie have his unveiling.”

Jenkins was a multisport athlete who also performed with the Harlem Globetrotters for several offseasons. He played hockey and lettered in track and field in his school years. His best performances, of course, came on the mound, where he’ll forever be a fixture outside Wrigley Field.

“I want to thank the [ownership] Ricketts family for this particular day and the statue,” Jenkins said. “And now my dreams have come true.”

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Cubs unveil Fergie Jenkins statue at Wrigleyon May 20, 2022 at 8:22 pm

CHICAGO — The Chicago Cubs unveiled a statue of six-time 20-game winner and Hall of Fame pitcher Ferguson Jenkins during a ceremony outside Wrigley Field on Friday morning.

Jenkins, 79, was in attendance with family as the sculpture was unveiled next to those of other former great Cubs.

“The statue is sitting beside my fellow teammates, Ernie [Banks], Billy [Williams] and Ronnie [Santo],” Jenkins said during the ceremony. “Believe me, I’m humbled.”

2 Related

The sculptures are part of a new “statue row,” which resides just outside the third-base gates.

Jenkins played for the Cubs from 1966 to ’73, and then again from 1982 to ’83. He threw 154 complete games as a Cub, as well as a career-high 325 innings in 1971.

He’s one of 11 pitchers in MLB history with 4,500 innings pitched, to go along with more than 3,000 career strikeouts. He finished in the top six in Cy Young voting six times, taking home the award in 1971.

“I was looking at some of his stats, the 20-win seasons, they just jump off the page to me,” Cubs manager Davis Ross said. “What a big deal it was to get one [20-win season] of those in my playing era. Kudos to him.”

Ross noted the innings pitched as well. Jenkins threw 289 innings or more in six consecutive seasons.

“I think about what he might do to me if I took him out in the fourth or fifth inning,” Ross joked.

Of the 70 living Hall of Fame players, five were in attendance for the event: Jenkins, Andre Dawson, Ryne Sandberg, Williams and Lee Smith.

The statues of Santo, Williams, Banks and Jenkins now reside below the Cubs offices.

“I like what they’re doing out there,” president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer said. “I can look down from my office and see all [the] Mt. Rushmore of Wrigley right below me. Couldn’t be happier to see Fergie have his unveiling.”

Jenkins was a multisport athlete who also performed with the Harlem Globetrotters for several offseasons. He played hockey and lettered in track and field in his school years. His best performances, of course, came on the mound, where he’ll forever be a fixture outside Wrigley Field.

“I want to thank the [ownership] Ricketts family for this particular day and the statue,” Jenkins said. “And now my dreams have come true.”

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Cubs unveil Fergie Jenkins statue at Wrigleyon May 20, 2022 at 8:22 pm Read More »

The Studebaker gets ready to roll

Last August, I caught up with Jacob Harvey just as he was taking over as the new (and first-ever) managing artistic director of theaters for the Fine Arts Building. At the time, he noted that with the loss of the Royal George as a midsize rental house, the soon-to-be-remodeled Studebaker Theater in the Fine Arts could be a good option for “an in-between place where a small tour or an out-of-town production can happen and sort of help fill that void.”

Earlier this week, I caught up again with Harvey in person to see what’s new at the Studebaker. As he gave me a tour, the crew for Skates, a new musical by Christine Rea and Rick Briskin described as “Grease meets Hairspray with a dash of Xanadu” (and starring American Idol alums Diana DeGarmo and Ace Young) hammered away at the set. (The show begins previews next week.) Skates was six days away from opening at the Royal George before the COVID-19 shutdown of 2020. Then the Royal George itself, a commercial rental house with four venues just across Halsted from the Steppenwolf campus, closed for good in 2021 after nearly 37 years of operation.

So that’s one item off Harvey’s wish list. But Harvey and the rest of the Fine Arts team still have big plans. Right before we met, NPR announced that the popular quiz show Wait Wait . . . Don’t Tell Me! was leaving its longtime home at the Chase Auditorium on South Dearborn and taking up residence at the Studebaker; the first live taping there is scheduled for June 16. (The Studebaker, which used to seat 725, now seats between 600-650; part of the renovation involved expanding legroom for the seats in the balcony.)

Erica Berger of Berger Realty Group, who oversees the Fine Arts Building (she’s the daughter of the late real estate mogul Bob Berger, who bought the building in 2005), was the catalyst for the Wait Wait coup. In an email, she explained, “Almost three years ago, our late building manager received a cryptic call about an NPR show interested in moving into our space. Knowing that I had a history with NPR through being a founding member on their young board Generation Listen (as a journalist and media executive), he called me; I immediately booked a flight home to Chicago to take the meeting. When I walked into the room, to our surprise, I knew the Senior Operations Manager of Wait Wait . . ., Colin Miller. . . . Like a wink from the universe, the synchronicity was hard to ignore.”

The renovations at the Studebaker actually began before Harvey took over back in 2014, but during our tour, he points out that a big part of what they’ve been focusing on is beefing up the technical infrastructure. “The most impactful but not visible portion of the renovation is all audio, video, and lighting and electrical. Berger Realty Group put some money into it as proof of concept six or so years ago, but it really in earnest hasn’t been a live theater since the late 70s.” From 1982-2000, the Studebaker housed the Fine Arts movie theaters. Since the Bergers took over the building, groups such as Chicago Opera Theater and Chicago Jazz Orchestra have performed there.

Harvey asked dramaturg Tanya Palmer, former producer and director of new play development at the Goodman and currently assistant dean and executive artistic director for Northwestern’s theater program, to research the tangled history of the Fine Arts Building and create a timeline. The story begins in 1883, with the purchase of land on Michigan Avenue by the Studebaker brothers of South Bend, with the aim of creating a Chicago branch for their carriage business. Architect Solon S. Beman designed the building, which originally opened in 1886 and expanded gradually over the years, until the building assumed its current footprint in 1898. It quickly became a hub for artists, teachers, musicians and the “little theater” movement of the early 20th century. Today, it’s still home to many creative endeavors, including the Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival, whose workshop looks out over the lovely little open-air Venetian Courtyard nestled in the center of the building on the fourth floor.

The Studebaker Hall itself opened in 1898 with a piano recital by Fannie Bloomfield-Zeisler, but business in the classical world was slow, so building manager Charles S. Curtiss convinced the Studebakers to convert it into a theater. In 1910, the Studebaker hosted the legendary Sarah Bernhardt in a two-week repertory engagement, featuring her signature roles in Camille, Phedre, and Jeanne D’Arc. (Unlikely that any of those performances involved roller skating.) Other big names who have appeared onstage at the Studebaker include Eartha Kitt, Henry Fonda, Peter O’Toole, Rex Harrison, an old Claudette Colbert, and a young Martin Sheen.

Upgrading the technical bells and whistles not only helps NPR (Harvey showed me the private tech booth for Wait Wait . . ., right next to the spacious main booth for Studebaker shows), but also enhances the ability for livestreaming performances—a practice which has become even more important since the COVID shutdown. Harvey points out that there are now three cameras installed in the balcony that provide that capability.

The Studebaker is the crown jewel for the Fine Arts performing venues, but smaller groups will also soon have a potential performing space once the former Playhouse Theater next door completes its renovations. That venue, renamed Carriage Hall as a nod to the building’s origins, will function as a flexible multidisciplinary and event space. Harvey notes that there are ongoing conversations with local theater and dance companies about the possibilities of establishing residencies for that space. 

All of these plans reconnect the Fine Arts Building and its theaters to the vibrant history uncovered by Palmer. The Studebaker’s physical renovations, including art deco-style wallpaper, also provide a vintage throwback feel alongside the new technical improvements. 

But Harvey says he remains committed to the vision of the Fine Arts as a downtown incubator of the nonprofit arts. And he hopes that both the Studebaker and the Carriage House, as well as other spaces in the Fine Arts Building (including the second-floor bookstore, Exile in Bookville, run by Javier Ramirez and Kristin Enola Gilbert and the successor to the former Dial bookshop) can provide an integrated approach to giving Chicago artists of all kinds access to audiences and resources. 

“How does a for-profit entity operate as a mission-driven organization, where we can act in service of the community, we can help build community?” asks Harvey. “We can sort of figure it out on our own terms as to how we can create the most impact and be the most beneficial, while also opening the doors as much as possible.”

Exterior of the Court Theatre in Hyde Park Joe Mazza/Bravelux

Tony time at Court

Earlier this week, Court Theatre found out that they’re joining the growing list of Chicago theaters honored with the prestigious Regional Theatre Tony Award, which is selected by the Tony committee of the American Theatre Wing, based on recommendations from the American Theatre Critics Association. The award will be presented during the Tonys ceremony at Radio City Music Hall on June 12 (though in recent years, the regional award hasn’t been part of the main broadcast).

The regional Tony honors companies outside of New York City (well, and also off-Broadway), and comes with a $25,000 purse, as well as bragging rights. Court is the sixth Chicago company to win the prize. The others are: Steppenwolf (1985), Goodman (1992), Victory Gardens (2001), Chicago Shakespeare (2008), and Lookingglass (2011). By my math, that makes Chicago the city most recognized by the Tonys. 

This weekend, Court opens a revival of August Wilson’s Two Trains Running (the 1960s entry in the late playwright’s Century Cycle of plays about Black American life in the 20th century), directed by resident artist Ron OJ Parson. The company’s 67-year history began with amateur outdoor summer theater at University of Chicago produced by Marvin E. Phillips and Paul Sills (the latter the original director of Second City). Their permanent home on the UC campus was built in 1981. In 2013, current artistic director Charles Newell initiated the Center for Classic Theatre at the university to deepen Court’s ties to the research and academic resources available at UC. 

In a press statement, Newell said, “Since my start at Court in 1993, it has been my life’s joy to be a member of this vibrant, fertile community. This award belongs to them. It belongs to the Court community, the South Side community, and the University of Chicago community. It belongs to everyone who has fought to see themselves onstage and to everyone who has been moved by the power of storytelling. That is why we do what we do. Any recognition for that—let alone recognition of this caliber—is a delightful and thrilling gift.”

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White Sox pitcher Michael Kopech reinstated from paternity list; Ryan Burr optioned to Charlotte

NEW YORK — The White Sox optioned right-handed reliever Ryan Burr to Triple-A Charlotte Friday and returned right-hander Michael Kopech from the paternity list.

Manager Tony La Russa said Thursday that he was expecting Kopech to be ready to start Sunday night against the Yankees, who host the Sox for three games starting Friday night.

Kopech is 0-1 with a 1.54 ERA and 33 strikeouts in seven starts over 35 innings this season. He went on the Paternity List Tuesday.

Burr (6.00 ERA) allowed six earned runs over nine innings in eight appearances this season. He owns a 4.08 ERA over 66 appearances including two starts during parts of four seasons with the Sox.

Left-hander Dallas Keuchel is starting Friday night, with Johnny Cueto set to make his second start Saturday. Kopech was originally penciled in for Saturday but because of uncertainty over his return, he was tentatively moved to Sunday’s game, which will be broadcast on ESPN.

“With all the uncertainty with Kopech we’re going to move Cueto to Saturday,” La Russa said Thursday after the Sox defeated the Royals in Kansas City. “He threw his bullpen [Thursday]. So Keuchel, Cueto, then hopefully Kopech Sunday night. If not we can go with [Dylan] Cease [Sunday] which I’m hoping not to do.”

The Sox (19-19) lost three of four to the Yankees last week at Guaranteed Rate Field.

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