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Chicago Bulls concerned about Lonzo Ball’s knee issuesMichael Labellarteon May 18, 2022 at 12:00 pm

The Chicago Bulls front office has expressed concerns about Lonzo Ball regarding his knee injury that forced him to miss 47 games this past season. NBCS Chicago’s David Kaplan discussed on his ESPN1000 show how the lack of progress has become an area of serious concern for the front office and coaching staff.

“I am hearing that there are serious concerns within the front office of the Chicago Bulls that Lonzo Ball’s knee is NOT getting better,” Kaplan said. “They’ve been out for two weeks — he couldn’t play in that series. If they were starting the Eastern Conference Finals on Tuesday, he could not play.”

Lonzo Ball suffered a small meniscus tear in January and also had a bone bruise in the same knee. He underwent surgery and the initial timetable for return was about two months but every time his conditioning was ramped up, he suffered setbacks which forced him to miss the end of the regular season and the entire playoff series versus the Milwaukee Bucks.

Ball told the media in his exit interview that he planned to see a specialist in the offseason that is outside of the Bulls organization.

The Chicago Bulls are worried about the long-term status of Lonzo Ball’s knee.

The goal is to revamp his workload in preparation for the next season. It remains to be seen how the knee is going to progress under a heavier routine and Ball said he would be open to another surgery if it was completely necessary.

The Bulls desperately missed Lonzo at the end of the regular season and in the playoffs. His defensive versatility and three-point shooting would have helped the Bulls a lot. The slump at the end of the regular season was in a large part because of the defensive struggles.

With Ball and Alex Caruso healthy early in the year, the Bulls were a top-five defensive team. After Ball and Caruso went down, the Bulls struggled to guard the perimeter without the “Lockdown Brothers.”

While having Ball during the playoffs would not have single-handedly won the Bulls the series, they could have made it a lot more competitive.

The Bulls lacked a knock-down shooter in the playoffs and struggled to contain Giannis Antetokounmpo while not leaving shooters open. Ball would have helped in both of those areas.

The Bulls still have good depth at the point guard position with names like Coby White, Ayo Dosunmo, and Alex Caruso on the roster but the Bulls paid Ball to be their starting point guard.

Hopefully, with a full offseason to heal up and condition, Ball can be ready by the start of next year but his lingering knee issues are clearly an area of concern for the team.

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Chicago Bulls concerned about Lonzo Ball’s knee issuesMichael Labellarteon May 18, 2022 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Cave In rise from the ashes with their most direct and focused release to date

The title and story behind Cave In’s 2019 LP, Final Transmission, led many to believe that the eclectic rock band’s two-and-a-half-decade run had come to an end. Following the tragic passing of bassist and vocalist Caleb Scofield in 2018, the group fleshed out the last demos they’d made with him and turned them into a complete record. It seemed like a fitting conclusion to the band’s arc as well as a heartfelt goodbye to the man who’d given them so much of their heart and soul. But to the delight of Caveheads such as myself, the band have decided to carry on. Their new album, Heavy Pendulum (Relapse), isn’t just another collection of songs in their catalog; it’s another step in the evolution of a band whose shifting sound is one of their biggest assets and most defining features. 

Cave In emerged from the mid-90s Boston hardcore scene, and their 1998 debut LP, Until Your Heart Stops, essentially reinvented metalcore with unrelenting, knotty, incredibly complex dual-guitar shredding topped with the even more shredded vocals of front man Stephen Brodsky. Finding out what new musical moves a Cave In record would contain soon became one of the most exciting things about following the band: In 2000, they issued their prog-rock space-metal masterpiece, Jupiter, where Brodsky traded in his scream for a velvety falsetto. They toyed with shoegaze-adjacent indie rock on 2003’s Antenna, then blended sludge metal with space rock on 2005’s Perfect Pitch Black and 2011’s White Silence. Since Scofield’s death, Converge bassist Nate Newton has stepped in, and his grimy, groovy low end is a perfect fit. Heavy Pendulum is Cave In’s most straightforward, focused release to date, with direct heavy-metal riffing laying the groundwork for Brodsky’s signature vocal hooks (and the occasional trade-off with Newton’s menacing growl). Cave In’s beloved stargazing space-guitar leads are less of a presence, but the record is fun, catchy, and heavy as hell—once again, the band show us a fresh new side of their sound rather than something expected. Still, when 12-minute album closer “Wavering Angel” kicks in with “Stairway to Heaven”-style flutes and guitar leads worthy of Steve Hackett from Genesis, you’re immediately reminded that the opulent, prog-loving, metalhead side of Cave In that you’ve loved all along hasn’t gone anywhere.

Cave In’s Heavy Pendulum is available through a Bandcamp.

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Cave In rise from the ashes with their most direct and focused release to date Read More »

MAGA hate

Generally, I like to tell a joke or two in these columns, looking to underscore the absurdity of politics with a little dark humor.

But no joking this time.

On Saturday, an 18-year-old white supremicist armed with a semiautomatic rifle walked into a grocery store in Buffalo, New York, and started shooting people.

Black people, mostly. 

Payton Gendron was there to kill Black people. Or as Buffalo’s mayor, Byron Brown, told reporters: “This individual came here with the express purpose of taking as many Black lives as he possibly could.”

Before police arrested Gendron, he’d killed ten. Injured three others. And then he pleaded not guilty, even though he’d been livestreaming his rampage, perhaps looking to “inspire” other white suprecimists to do the same. As he himself was “inspired” by white supremacists who came before him.

Crazy, crazy shit.

Most of the country—or the relatively sane people—reacted with horror at this senseless slaughter brought on by racial hate.

And then there was Laura Loomer, who I will now quote, as much as I don’t want to. ’Cause sooner or later we have to confront this shit. Writing on her Telegram social media page, Loomer said . . .

“Planned Parenthood has still targeted and killed more black people than the Buffalo supermarket shooter.”

Wow. More crazy.

Karen Hawkins, my editor, and I talk a lot about the batshit crazy that swamps our country. But Loomer’s comments go beyond routine crazy.

Her comments are an attempt to minimize the slaughter—or rationalize it. Next Loomer and others like her will turn Gendron into some kind of hero who was taking some kind of stand. Like they did with Kyle Rittenhouse up in Kenosha.

I need to point out that Loomer is no ordinary asshole chiming in on social media.

No, she’s a Republican candidate for Congress in the 11th Congressional District in Florida. A self-proclaimed “Islamophobe,” as though that’s something to be proud of, she has a decent chance of winning the August 23 Republican primary.

She’d then join Marjorie Taylor Greene, Matt Gaetz, Madison Cawthorn, Lauren Boebert, Paul Gosar, and all the other wackos in the Republican congressional caucus.

Oh, yes—and Congresswoman Elise Stefanik in New York, don’t forget her. Once upon a time, she passed for a moderate. Now she’s running with the herd.

Like Stefanik, Loomer subscribes to a theory gaining strength in Republican circles. It’s called white replacement—or great replacement—and the essential theme is that Democrats are conniving to replace real Americans (i.e., white ones) with Black or Brown people.

Black or Brown people who will never be real Americans, the theory goes, no matter how long they or their ancestors have lived here.

Perhaps the most prominent apostle of a version of this theory is the most passive-aggressive one—Tucker Carlson, the FOX talking head. 

I call him passive-aggressive because he pretends he’s not espousing hate, even as he is.

The original proponents of white replacement made no attempt to hide their hate. And they didn’t limit themselves to blaming Democrats.

They blamed it on “the Jews.” And so in 2017 we had Nazis marching through the streets of Charlottesville chanting “Jews will not replace us.”

That’s the first time I became aware of this so-called theory. Several prominent Republicans denounced the Nazis. But not Donald Trump. He said there were “very fine people, on both sides” of the protests. Fine Nazis? And with that the hate seeped deeper into the bloodstream of the Republican Party.

As I said, Gendron is a proponent of white replacement. It’s all there in the 180-page manifesto he wrote.

That seems to be the thing with these deranged murderers. They not only feel compelled to slaughter people, but they apparently want others to follow in their footsteps.

So it was that Robert Bowers justified shooting 11 congregants at a synagogue in Pittsburgh in 2018.

And Patrick Crusius did the same when he gunned down 23 Latino people at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas, in 2019.

And Brenton Tarrant killed 51 people at two different mosques in New Zealand in 2019.

Jewish, Black, Latino, and Muslim people—senselessly slaughtered for being who they are.

Now, you’d think that mainstream politicians would want to be far removed from white replacement theory.

But at the moment it’s gaining popularity in the Republican Party. Polls show that nearly 50 percent of Republican voters think it’s real.

That leaves mainstream politicians in a quandary. If they denounce it, they risk alienating their base. So many stay silent. They crawl under a metaphorical table, pretending they don’t see the hate that’s there in front of their face.

Obviously, the lunatics with the high-powered weaponry are the greatest danger. But the silent bunch are also a threat. In their silence, they enable the shooters.

As I write this, the highest-ranking Republican elected official to speak out against white supremacy is Congresswoman Liz Cheney of Wyoming, daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney.

“The House GOP leadership has enabled white nationalism, white supremacy, and anti-semitism,” Cheney tweeted on Monday. “History has taught us that what begins with words ends in far worse. @GOP leaders must renounce and reject these views and those who hold them.”

Obviously, I’ve had my issues—to put it mildly—with the Cheneys over the years. But at this moment I can’t be picky about my allies in the fight against fascist white supremacy.

So thank you, Congresswoman Cheney. Now what about the rest of you Republicans?

Right here in Illinois we have five Republican frontrunners clamoring to be the party’s nominee in November’s general election against Governor J.B. Pritzker.

Their names are Richard Irvin, Darren Bailey, Paul Schimpf, Gary Rabine, and Jesse Sullivan. 

I’m still waiting for one of them to denounce white replacement theory.

In their silence, with each passing day, those Nazis marching through Charlottesville become closer to the center of the Republican Party.

Illinois Republicans, time to crawl out from under the table and take a stand.

The Latest from the Ben Joravsky Show

Live At The Hideout: Aldermen Carlos Ramirez-Rosa & Rod Sawyer
01:28:32

“Bean Curfew” and Maya Dukmasova & Abdelnasser Rashid
01:14:11

Achy Obejas—Susan Nussbaum Tribute
53:17

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Cave In rise from the ashes with their most direct and focused release to dateLuca Cimarustion May 18, 2022 at 11:00 am

The title and story behind Cave In’s 2019 LP, Final Transmission, led many to believe that the eclectic rock band’s two-and-a-half-decade run had come to an end. Following the tragic passing of bassist and vocalist Caleb Scofield in 2018, the group fleshed out the last demos they’d made with him and turned them into a complete record. It seemed like a fitting conclusion to the band’s arc as well as a heartfelt goodbye to the man who’d given them so much of their heart and soul. But to the delight of Caveheads such as myself, the band have decided to carry on. Their new album, Heavy Pendulum (Relapse), isn’t just another collection of songs in their catalog; it’s another step in the evolution of a band whose shifting sound is one of their biggest assets and most defining features. 

Cave In emerged from the mid-90s Boston hardcore scene, and their 1998 debut LP, Until Your Heart Stops, essentially reinvented metalcore with unrelenting, knotty, incredibly complex dual-guitar shredding topped with the even more shredded vocals of front man Stephen Brodsky. Finding out what new musical moves a Cave In record would contain soon became one of the most exciting things about following the band: In 2000, they issued their prog-rock space-metal masterpiece, Jupiter, where Brodsky traded in his scream for a velvety falsetto. They toyed with shoegaze-adjacent indie rock on 2003’s Antenna, then blended sludge metal with space rock on 2005’s Perfect Pitch Black and 2011’s White Silence. Since Scofield’s death, Converge bassist Nate Newton has stepped in, and his grimy, groovy low end is a perfect fit. Heavy Pendulum is Cave In’s most straightforward, focused release to date, with direct heavy-metal riffing laying the groundwork for Brodsky’s signature vocal hooks (and the occasional trade-off with Newton’s menacing growl). Cave In’s beloved stargazing space-guitar leads are less of a presence, but the record is fun, catchy, and heavy as hell—once again, the band show us a fresh new side of their sound rather than something expected. Still, when 12-minute album closer “Wavering Angel” kicks in with “Stairway to Heaven”-style flutes and guitar leads worthy of Steve Hackett from Genesis, you’re immediately reminded that the opulent, prog-loving, metalhead side of Cave In that you’ve loved all along hasn’t gone anywhere.

Cave In’s Heavy Pendulum is available through a Bandcamp.

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Cave In rise from the ashes with their most direct and focused release to dateLuca Cimarustion May 18, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

MAGA hateBen Joravskyon May 18, 2022 at 11:00 am

Generally, I like to tell a joke or two in these columns, looking to underscore the absurdity of politics with a little dark humor.

But no joking this time.

On Saturday, an 18-year-old white supremicist armed with a semiautomatic rifle walked into a grocery store in Buffalo, New York, and started shooting people.

Black people, mostly. 

Payton Gendron was there to kill Black people. Or as Buffalo’s mayor, Byron Brown, told reporters: “This individual came here with the express purpose of taking as many Black lives as he possibly could.”

Before police arrested Gendron, he’d killed ten. Injured three others. And then he pleaded not guilty, even though he’d been livestreaming his rampage, perhaps looking to “inspire” other white suprecimists to do the same. As he himself was “inspired” by white supremacists who came before him.

Crazy, crazy shit.

Most of the country—or the relatively sane people—reacted with horror at this senseless slaughter brought on by racial hate.

And then there was Laura Loomer, who I will now quote, as much as I don’t want to. ’Cause sooner or later we have to confront this shit. Writing on her Telegram social media page, Loomer said . . .

“Planned Parenthood has still targeted and killed more black people than the Buffalo supermarket shooter.”

Wow. More crazy.

Karen Hawkins, my editor, and I talk a lot about the batshit crazy that swamps our country. But Loomer’s comments go beyond routine crazy.

Her comments are an attempt to minimize the slaughter—or rationalize it. Next Loomer and others like her will turn Gendron into some kind of hero who was taking some kind of stand. Like they did with Kyle Rittenhouse up in Kenosha.

I need to point out that Loomer is no ordinary asshole chiming in on social media.

No, she’s a Republican candidate for Congress in the 11th Congressional District in Florida. A self-proclaimed “Islamophobe,” as though that’s something to be proud of, she has a decent chance of winning the August 23 Republican primary.

She’d then join Marjorie Taylor Greene, Matt Gaetz, Madison Cawthorn, Lauren Boebert, Paul Gosar, and all the other wackos in the Republican congressional caucus.

Oh, yes—and Congresswoman Elise Stefanik in New York, don’t forget her. Once upon a time, she passed for a moderate. Now she’s running with the herd.

Like Stefanik, Loomer subscribes to a theory gaining strength in Republican circles. It’s called white replacement—or great replacement—and the essential theme is that Democrats are conniving to replace real Americans (i.e., white ones) with Black or Brown people.

Black or Brown people who will never be real Americans, the theory goes, no matter how long they or their ancestors have lived here.

Perhaps the most prominent apostle of a version of this theory is the most passive-aggressive one—Tucker Carlson, the FOX talking head. 

I call him passive-aggressive because he pretends he’s not espousing hate, even as he is.

The original proponents of white replacement made no attempt to hide their hate. And they didn’t limit themselves to blaming Democrats.

They blamed it on “the Jews.” And so in 2017 we had Nazis marching through the streets of Charlottesville chanting “Jews will not replace us.”

That’s the first time I became aware of this so-called theory. Several prominent Republicans denounced the Nazis. But not Donald Trump. He said there were “very fine people, on both sides” of the protests. Fine Nazis? And with that the hate seeped deeper into the bloodstream of the Republican Party.

As I said, Gendron is a proponent of white replacement. It’s all there in the 180-page manifesto he wrote.

That seems to be the thing with these deranged murderers. They not only feel compelled to slaughter people, but they apparently want others to follow in their footsteps.

So it was that Robert Bowers justified shooting 11 congregants at a synagogue in Pittsburgh in 2018.

And Patrick Crusius did the same when he gunned down 23 Latino people at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas, in 2019.

And Brenton Tarrant killed 51 people at two different mosques in New Zealand in 2019.

Jewish, Black, Latino, and Muslim people—senselessly slaughtered for being who they are.

Now, you’d think that mainstream politicians would want to be far removed from white replacement theory.

But at the moment it’s gaining popularity in the Republican Party. Polls show that nearly 50 percent of Republican voters think it’s real.

That leaves mainstream politicians in a quandary. If they denounce it, they risk alienating their base. So many stay silent. They crawl under a metaphorical table, pretending they don’t see the hate that’s there in front of their face.

Obviously, the lunatics with the high-powered weaponry are the greatest danger. But the silent bunch are also a threat. In their silence, they enable the shooters.

As I write this, the highest-ranking Republican elected official to speak out against white supremacy is Congresswoman Liz Cheney of Wyoming, daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney.

“The House GOP leadership has enabled white nationalism, white supremacy, and anti-semitism,” Cheney tweeted on Monday. “History has taught us that what begins with words ends in far worse. @GOP leaders must renounce and reject these views and those who hold them.”

Obviously, I’ve had my issues—to put it mildly—with the Cheneys over the years. But at this moment I can’t be picky about my allies in the fight against fascist white supremacy.

So thank you, Congresswoman Cheney. Now what about the rest of you Republicans?

Right here in Illinois we have five Republican frontrunners clamoring to be the party’s nominee in November’s general election against Governor J.B. Pritzker.

Their names are Richard Irvin, Darren Bailey, Paul Schimpf, Gary Rabine, and Jesse Sullivan. 

I’m still waiting for one of them to denounce white replacement theory.

In their silence, with each passing day, those Nazis marching through Charlottesville become closer to the center of the Republican Party.

Illinois Republicans, time to crawl out from under the table and take a stand.

The Latest from the Ben Joravsky Show

Live At The Hideout: Aldermen Carlos Ramirez-Rosa & Rod Sawyer
01:28:32

“Bean Curfew” and Maya Dukmasova & Abdelnasser Rashid
01:14:11

Achy Obejas—Susan Nussbaum Tribute
53:17

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MAGA hateBen Joravskyon May 18, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

3 amazing head coach options for the Chicago BlackhawksVincent Pariseon May 18, 2022 at 11:00 am

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The Chicago Blackhawks have a lot of work to do during the offseason if they ever want to be an elite team in the National Hockey League. They are bad and some people have yet to come to terms with that just yet. The glory days are over and it is time to move on.

It is impossible to rebuild the right way when you hang onto pieces that helped you 10 years ago instead of building for the next ten years. The Chicago Blackhawks certainly have that issue on the horizon with a few different guys. How they handle that will certainly be a big story over the next year or so.

To help them along with these decisions, they need a new head coach. Derek King is probably in the mix as he was the interim guy for the remainder of the 2021-22 season after they fired Jeremy Colliton. The team wasn’t so good, however, with King that they feel the need to just hire him without seeing other people too.

Who they hire is going to be very telling when it comes to the direction of the team. There are some coaches that come to town with the intent to win and then there are some who know they are there to help them build something from the ground up.

The Chicago Blackhawks are looking for someone to be their new head coach.

If the Blackhawks do move on from King, there are a lot of people for them to consider. These are three of the very best options for them to consider as they look for someone new to lead them from the bench:

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3 amazing head coach options for the Chicago BlackhawksVincent Pariseon May 18, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

Kevin Durant and LeBron James debate which 1990s centers would be MVPs in the modern NBAon May 18, 2022 at 5:54 am

Over the past few seasons in the NBA, big men have made a resurgence. In fact, the last four MVPs have been paint-oriented players. Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic secured his second consecutive MVP a few weeks ago, and Milwaukee Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo also won it in back-to-back years from 2019-2020.

1 Related

With the big man renaissance in full effect, Brooklyn Nets forward Kevin Durant took to Twitter with a debate-worthy question. What center from the 1990s era would be in contention for Most Valuable Player honors in the modern NBA? He suggested Basketball Hall of Famers Patrick Ewing, David Robinson and Hakeem Olajuwon. The latter two won the MVP hardware in their playing days, with Olajuwon winning it in 1994 and Robinson securing the honor the following season.

Basketball Twitter had a plethora of answers, including some from players of past and present. Rayford Young, the father of Atlanta Hawks guard Trae Young, only had one name in mind in response to Durant’s question. The elder Young played for Texas Tech in college from 1996-2000 and then professionally in France.

A little later, Los Angeles Lakers superstar and four-time MVP LeBron James chimed in with his choices. He and Durant agreed on Robinson and Olajuwon, but The King selected Shaquille O’Neal over Ewing. Shaq won MVP in 2000 when he played for the Lakers.

Although it is great conversation to have, we’ll never know if these old school centers could truly contend for the MVP hardware in today’s NBA. Who would make your list?

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Kevin Durant and LeBron James debate which 1990s centers would be MVPs in the modern NBAon May 18, 2022 at 5:54 am Read More »

Cubs’ Christopher Morel, Brandon Hughes make fairytale debuts

Cubs rookie Christopher Morel told Willson Contreras and Alfonso Rivas that he was going to hit a home run an inning before he walked up to the plate for his first major-league at-bat.

He didn’t even know for certain that he was going to pinch hit in the eighth inning against the Pirates.

“But I’ve got to be ready,” he said with a smile. “That’s what I told [manager Dvid] Ross, ‘If you’re going to need me, I’m going to be ready for this moment.'”

Just as he predicted, Morel launched a home run over the left-field bleachers.

In a 7-0 win against the Pirates on Tuesday, two Cubs rookies had major-league debuts fit for Hollywood scripts. Morel became the first Cub to homer in his first MLB at-bat since Contreras in 2016. And left-hander Brandon Hughes became the first pitcher in the modern era to record five-plus outs in his major-league debut with all of them being strikeouts, according to Stats Perform.

“I’ve seen a lot of cool stuff and in baseball,” Cubs manager David Ross said, “that was a really cool day.”

Contreras believed that Morel would make an impact with his first at-bat.

“But I was thinking of a base hit,” Contreras said. “Just a base hit, just a blooper, just something positive. And once I saw the ball going out, I was like, ‘That was a no-doubter. That kid had some pop in his bat. … Hopefully this is the start of a huge career for him.”

Morel, pinch hitting for third baseman Patrick Wisdom in the eighth, fell behind 0-2.

“So, I concentrated,” he said, “and I said, ‘I can do it. I could do it before, so I can do it right now.'”

Morel worked a full count and then blasted a high fastball to left, clearing the top row of the bleachers.

Outside the dugout, Contreras leapt up and down in his catcher’s gear.

“I know what kind of guy he is,” Contreras said. “He’s always smiling, and he’s always looking forward to winning a game. I have known this guy for a really long time, and it makes me proud.”

Earlier in the game, Hughes was called in for his debut, in a unique situation.

Veteran lefty Daniel Norris had replaced starter Keegan Thompson to open the sixth inning. But on his fourth pitch, Norris took a nimble step after the follow through. The Cubs would later announce that he’d left the game with right achilles soreness.

Hughes was watching from the dugout and starting working his arms with resistance bands.

“But not thinking I was gonna get called,” he said. “Then, the phone rnag, and they say, ‘Hughes.’ And it just, whoosh, hit me.”

He warmed up on the mound – rather than in the bullpen – for the first time ever, keeping in mind his coaches and teammates’ advice to take it slow. Then, he picked up the at-bat against Pirates leadoff hitter Josh VanMeter where Norris left it: two balls, no strikes.

He threw two more balls, and the walk was credited to Norris. Then, Hughes struck out five of the next six batters he faced.

“That was really special to watch,” Thompson said,” and a really cool moment for him.”

Two moments, especially stuck with Hughes.

“Walking off the mound and saying, ‘Let’s go, Willy,’ and pounding his chest gear, and he’s just like, ‘Nice job, kid,’ Hughes said. ‘I think that’s what I’ll remember. And then shaking Rossy’s hand after he said I was done.”

Morel got two moments with the fans, first a curtain call right after the home run, when Contreras pushed Morel back out of the dugout. And then a hat tip when he took the field in the ninth inning.

“I tried to do this because when I hit that home run, and I heard the fans so loud, I said, ‘This is my moment,'” he said, “So, I need to do it.”

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Cubs’ Keegan Thompson mows down Pirates in second start of the season

Cubs right-hander Keegan Thompson high-fived a line of fellow relievers in left field as he headed for the dugout and they strode out the bullpen. Usually he’d be going with them, this close to game time. But not Tuesday.

Thompson made his second start in a week, in the Cubs’ 7-0 win over the Pirates on Tuesday at Wrigley Field.

Cubs manager David Ross reiterated after Thompson’s last start that for now the club likes the 27-year-old in a multi-inning relief role. And Thompson has thrived in that role to start the season. He entered Tuesday with the lowest ERA (1.17 in seven relief appearances) of any major-league reliever with at least 20 innings this season.

“There’s real value in bringing that guy back every three or four days rather than five,” Ross said Tuesday. “The value he’s bringing, and a lot of the reasons why we’ve been in games and been able to fluctuate how guys are healthy and ease guys into the mix, has been [in a large] part because Keegan’s had a lot of success. … He’s definitely starter depth for us, but he’s also really valuable in the role he’s been filling for us.”

The Cubs again needed someone to open Tuesday’s bullpen day. Thompson was a natural choice.

He threw five shutout innings.

“This guy over here is something else,” Cubs catcher Willson Contreras said after the game, pointing to Thompson at his nearby locker. “This guy can pitch from the bullpen and can start some ballgames. Attacking the zone early in the count, making the right pitch, executing with two strikes, that was making him really good.”

In an efficient outing, Thompson allowed four hits and didn’t walk a batter. A couple inning-ending double plays helped speed along his start even more.

Thompson faced the minimum in the first inning, thanks to a strike ’em out, throw ’em out double play. Then, in the fourth inning, Pirates designated hitter Daniel Vogelbach tried to tag on a fly ball to right field. Cubs outfielder Seiya Suzuki’s throw beat him by several steps.

Vogelbach and Contreras, who were minor-league teammates coming up through the Cubs’ farm system, exchanged words after the tag at the plate. Benches briefly cleared.

“It kind of surprised me, to be honest,” Contreras said. “Suzuki made a great throw, I put the tag on him, and I was just basically checking on him.”

The Pirates defense, on the other hand, gave the Cubs a boost with a series of miscues in the fourth inning, as the Cubs put together a five-run rally, their biggest of the game. They also scored on homers from Jonathan Villar, his first as a Cubs, and Christopher Morel, in his first major-league at-bat.

Thompson’s success in his past two starts has come in part from sticking with the mentality and routine that’s worked all season.For both, he even got warm in the bullpen as if he was getting the call in the middle of a game.

“I’ve started before, but the whole year I’ve been on a bullpen routine,” he said last week after limiting the Padres to two runs in four innings, “so I didn’t want to change something up today just for one outing.”

It ended up being two starts in a row. On Tuesday, Thompson’s five innings were a season high for him. He handed the ball over with a six-run lead.

Cubs lefty Daniel Norris replaced him to start the sixth inning, but Norris walked off the field with an athletic trainer after four pitches. The team later announced he’d left the game with right achilles soreness .

Left-hander Brandon Hughes took the mound next, making his major-league debut. Hughes struck out five in 1 2/3 innings. Right-hander Mark Leiter Jr. finished off the shutout of the Pirates with two scoreless innings.

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WATCH: Christopher Morel hits first career home run with Chicago Cubs

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WATCH: Christopher Morel hits first career home run with Chicago Cubs Read More »