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A side of Mike Royko that liberals don’t want to recall.

A side of Mike Royko that liberals don’t want to recall.

“He’s losing it”

A timely article as abortionists and their supporters lie about what’s in Justice Samuel Alito’s draft overturning Roe v. Wade.

The recent arrival of the twenty-fifth anniversary of Mike Royko’s death engendered moving and beautiful articles celebrating the talents of the iconic newspaper columnist.

Mostly, the celebration featured columns that could be classified as liberal or leaning liberal. But as he grew older like many people (including myself) his outlook sometimes appears to have shifted, to more conservative. But for that, he wasn’t celebrated. In Chicago’s newsrooms I heard it myself: “Mike Royko is losing it.”

A prime example was his passionate attack on the abortion industry and the media for covering up the brutal procedure called partial birth abortion in which the live infant’s brains are sucked out to make delivery easier. It can be done in the final days of gestation.

First, we were instructed with the certitude of a papal decree that the procedure was never used. When the evidence of its use couldn’t be denied, the abortion industry’s “disinformation” campaign insisted that it was “rarely used, for example, when the child is already dead.

Among the most vocal defenders of the “rarely used” line was Ron Fitzsimmons, head of the National Coalition of Abortion Providers and longtime, prominent industry figure.

Until he later took it all back. Maybe it was his conscience, but in his confession he admitted to “lying through my teeth.” The procedure is frequently used, not just to save the woman’s life. In effect, it was used for any purpose until birth.

The lying angered Royko so much that he did something rare: writing back-to-back columns on the same subject. Those columns are reproduced in their entirety below. It’s followed by my own Chicago Sun-Times column. You might conclude that little has changed when it comes to abortion, the media, disinformation and science. If Royko were alive today and wrote this, the same crew that tried to censor Tribune columnist John Kass would have their boiling tar and feathers at the ready.

NEWS MEDIA, OTHERS SWALLOWED ABORTION LIE HOOK, LINE AND SINKER

By Mike Royko

When I started this job a few decades ago, a veteran columnist at the next desk offered advice. One rule was: “Never write about a subject when you’re mad. Wait until you calm down.”

Sensible words, and I usually try to follow them.

But on this day, there weren’t nearly enough hours left until my deadline for me to calm down about a whopper of a lie that a public figure named Ron Fitzsimmons has finally admitted telling.

Fitzsimmons runs the National Coalition of Abortion Providers.

And he says his conscience has nagged him into admitting “lying through my teeth” when he made public statements in 1995 that the controversial “partial birth abortion” was rarely used. And that it was used only when a woman’s life was in danger or the fetus was already severely damaged.

You probably remember the big debate on this issue. Those against this late-term procedure wanted it outlawed because they said it killed healthy, normal fetuses that were well into full development.

Partial birth abortion (Center for Medical Progress)

And the procedure is barbaric, they said. The fetus is partially delivered feet first, then a device is used to suck its brain out to collapse the head.

Fitzsimmons now admits that most such abortions are done on women who are healthy and fetuses that are healthy, but not because the woman is in danger or the fetus is unhealthy.

The abortion is performed for the same reason as other abortions: The woman wants it.

Fitzsimmons says he and others lied because the truth might have hurt the cause of abortion rights.

They were right. If it hadn’t been for those lies, eagerly accepted and passed along as gospel by the printed press and broadcast news, President Clinton would not have dared veto a bill that outlawed the procedure. And Congress wouldn’t have buckled and failed to override his veto.

Heaven forbid that the newsroom should offend any of the “don’t tell me what to do with my body” crowd.

That’s what is so infuriating: the silence of those in the medical field who knew it was a lie but failed to thunderously refute it.

And the willingness of the press to accept the lie and pass it along as fact. If more sheep are cloned, don’t be surprised if some come out looking like modern journalists.

A few physicians spoke up. Two wrote a piece for the op-ed page of The Wall Street Journal that shredded the line peddled by people like Fitzsimmons. But they were ignored, probably because the Journal’s opinion sections are viewed by the rest of journalism as hopelessly conservative.

The press swallowed the lies like worms by a bass because the lies fit so neatly into what is sometimes referred to as a “world view” that is shared by those in the mainstream news media.

Part of that view seems to be that anyone who questions the need for the vast number of abortions performed each year is some kind of right-wing, bomb-tossing, gun-toting religious nut.

So when those who present themselves as social progressives say that only women who face death and fetuses who face life as vegetables are involved in partial birth abortions, the press is comforted and lets it go at that. Heaven forbid that the newsroom should offend any of the “don’t tell me what to do with my body” crowd.

It isn’t the first big lie that the media have bought and resold.

Some years ago, gay organizations and public health people launched an intense “We’re All at Risk” campaign. This meant that we were all equally vulnerable to the threat of AIDS.

Common sense and existing evidence said otherwise: If you didn’t have anal intercourse with a man or borrow a needle from a dopehead, what put you at risk?

But those who launched the propaganda campaign later admitted that they believed the fear would create sympathy for gays and spur increased spending on AIDS research.

Eventually, a few skeptical reporters shot holes in the campaign. But not until others who questioned it had been labeled bigots and homophobes. One journalist who wrote a book on the subject lost his newspaper job, and his book, despite impressive hardcover sales, couldn’t attract a paperback publisher. It was politically correct censorship.

More recently, there was the media hysteria over the burning of black churches. Remember? Night riders were thought to be galloping all over the country, burning black churches. A massive racist conspiracy, possibly inspired by the oratory of political conservatives like Pat Buchanan.

Clinton, concerned frown and all, visited churches and recalled similar evil arsons in Arkansas when he was a youth–memories that turned out to be pure fiction.

Proposals were made to use federal funds to rebuild churches. Rich do-gooders kicked in money to organizations that made the most victimization noise.

Turned out it was more smoke than fire. After the nation’s press spread the arson story, calmer heads took a closer look. Most of the fires weren’t arson. No conspiracy. Black arsonists as well as white arsonists were arrested, proving that a nut is a nut, regardless of color. It was as if no one in an American newsroom knew that an old wooden rural church can actually have bad wiring. Not when Jesse Jackson is dishing out hot quotes about the second coming of the Ku Klux Klan.

Now we have Fitzsimmons blowing the whistle on himself. His conscience? Or was it that the truth was going to come out anyway?

Maybe from people such as the anti-abortion physician who will be the subject of Friday’s column.

Copyright Chicago Tribune Co. Feb 27, 1997

DOCTORS SEE LIES BEHIND REASONS FOR LATE-TERM ABORTIONS

By Mike Royko

Leading abortion advocates are circling their wagons, and poor Ron Fitzsimmons, once one of them, seems to have been shoved outside the tight circle.

Fitzsimmons is the conscience-stricken head of the National Coalition of Abortion Providers who now admits that he took part in telling Americans the big lie about so-called partial–birth abortions.

During the national debate on the late-term brain-sucking procedure, Fitzsimmons was one of many pro-abortionspokespersons and media dupes who assured the nation that almost all late-term abortions were done to preserve the health of the mother or because the fetus had serious abnormalities.

Now, Fitzsimmons said, “I lied through my teeth.” And that most late-term abortions were done for the same reason as early abortions–because women wanted to end pregnancies.

Fitzsimmons‘ confession was barely out of his mouth when he was whopped by fellow abortion advocates, who held a news conference to say, in effect, that he was being truthful when, he now says, he was lying. But now he is lying when he says he is finally being truthful.

Typical was Kate Michelman, president of the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League. She said: “If he thinks he lied, that’s his problem to deal with. We have not lied.”

Gloria Feldt, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said Fitzsimmons had been “mixing up gestation with procedure.”

Whatever the heck that means.

While they squabble about who did or didn’t lie, let’s listen to someone else for once–genuine physicians, rather than the pro-abortion lobbyists and other non-medical spin experts who seem to get all the invitations to yap on TV.

One is Dr. Pamela Smith, former director of medical education in obstetrics and gynecology at Mt. Sinai Hospital. She recently resigned that post to do anti-abortion public-health work in the community and practice medicine at the Lawndale Health Center.

The only thing that surprised her about Fitzsimmons‘ confession was that he made it.

“Most of the time, there is nothing wrong with the baby or the mother (when late-term abortions are performed),” she said. “People have known about this for a decade.

“There is a clinic in New Jersey that said of the 3,000 abortions it did last year, 1,500 were late-term.

“So we went from being told that only 200 a year were being done in the entire country to one clinic saying it does 1,500 a year. Obviously, the actual number (of late-term abortions) is in the thousands.

“The media believe what they want to believe. And because a lot of doctors who have testified in support of the partial–birth ban have been pro-life, the knee-jerk response is that it is a pro-life/pro-choice thing.

“There’s been all this propaganda that it is done only because women need it. So people said: `If my wife needs to have this to save her life, she should have it.’ The problem is that it is not this procedure versus your wife’s life. It’s really infuriating to me to hear that women medically need this.”

One of the arguments for the late-term procedure is that it helps a woman preserve her fertility. Smith describes that as “fantasy.”

The future-fertility risk was one of the excuses offered by President Clinton when he vetoed the bill that would have outlawed the procedure.

Clinton said: “There are a few hundred women every year who have personally agonizing situations where their children are born or are about to be born with terrible deformities which will cause them to die either just before, during or just after childbirth.

“And these women, among other things, cannot preserve the ability to have further children unless the enormous size of the baby’s head is reduced before being extracted from their bodies.”

Which is bunk, according to Dr. Nancy Romer, chairman of obstetrics at Miami Valley Hospital in Dayton and a clinical professor at Wright State University.

“I don’t understand that argument about fertility at all,” she said. “We have no idea what happens to women who have this procedure down the road. We don’t have a clue. There is no scientific evidence that shows that procedure will preserve the fertility of women.”

“Those who opposed the legislation have a much broader agenda, and that is to have totally unrestricted access to abortion. They will defend abortion rights blindly, regardless of the facts of the matter. Any legislation, if it’s anti-abortion, they are against it.

Dr. Curtis Cook, who specializes in maternal fetal medicine at Butterworth Hospital in Grand Rapids, Mich., said: “I can’t think of any situation where the procedure would be preferable over existing techniques. I question why it is not being taught or performed by the majority of people who specialize in these pregnancies.”

As for the propaganda campaign that led Clinton to veto the bill outlawing the procedure, Romer believes she understands it:

“Those who opposed the legislation have a much broader agenda, and that is to have totally unrestricted access to abortion. They will defend abortion rights blindly, regardless of the facts of the matter. Any legislation, if it’s anti-abortion, they are against it.

“They don’t think, `Is this procedure appropriate, who is doing it and why are they doing it?’ They don’t care about the details. They won’t acknowledge the truth of what we are saying because it defeats their larger agenda.”

So the whole battle is going to be fought in Congress one more time. And if a bill passes and gets to Clinton’s desk, maybe he can ask the CIA or the FBI to find out who is telling the truth before he makes any more somber pronouncements.

Copyright Chicago Tribune Co. Feb 28, 1997

The big lie

By Dennis Byrne

If I tried to recount here all the inaccuracies, half-truths and flat-out lies issued by the abortion industry in the 20 months I’ve been reporting on the fight over partial-birth abortions, there’d be no room in the paper for the Bulls’ score.

But I confess that in all that time I’ve never been as amazed, frustrated and angry as I was this week when a prominent abortion-rights advocate confessed that he was “lying through his teeth” when he repeated the industry’s prattle about how the procedure is rarely performed, and then just to save the lives of mothers or health of mothers bearing doomed or severely deformed infants. Angry not at the brave and honest Ron Fitzsimmons, executive director of the National Coalition of AbortionProviders, but at the way the abortion industry, embodied by Kate Michelman, is trying to continue the fakery.

One thing, though – you can’t accuse the industry of trying to float the same lie throughout. Counter one lie with facts, up pops another, as when I first wrote about the procedure on June 22, 1995. Immediately, the nasty messages arrived from industry toadies, accusing me of making the whole thing up. I didn’t have to. The grisly procedure had been detailed in the American Medical Association’s newspaper, the American Medical News. Proudly describing the technique was the doctor who invented it and another who used it. Together they used it hundreds of times a year. The reasons included mothers suffering from agoraphobia to fetuses having a cleft lip.

Unable to deny the existence of the procedure, the strategy switched. We were informed by Michelman, president of the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League, that the procedure isn’t so gruesome because the fetus was earlier killed by the anesthesia. As I reported Dec. 12, 1995, the American Society of Anesthesiologists was nearly blind with rage, saying her assertion had “absolutely no basis in scientific fact,” and that this type of misinformation could harm pregnant women . They told it to Congress, but drew little media mention.

And so it went: The abortion industry said it was done rarely, even though no one compiles reliable nationwide statistics on abortions. The industry claimed it was done only for the most serious of health reasons; that it was used only on severely deformed fetuses; that it was the only way to save a mother’s health or reproductive capabilities; that it was a safe procedure for women; that it was done only on late-term fetuses. Unchecked the disinformation flowed, repeated uncritically, as I have noted, by, among others, NBC and ABC, newspapers and the Associated Press, commentators and politicians.

In some of a dozen columns I wrote on the subject, I cited physicians and scientists whose challenges to the disinformation were ignored. They ran from local experts, such as Dr. Pamela Smith, medical education director in Mount Sinai Hospital’s Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, to national ones such as Dr. C. Everett Koop, former U.S. Surgeon General. They agreed: The procedure – which was never peer reviewed by the medical profession and for which no safety data exist – was n ot medically necessary. Worse, it poses a medical risk to the mother.

Yet, I’ve watched the industry and its media pals push ahead with the lies, oblivious to the brutality and danger of it all, self-satisfied in their assertions of heightened compassion, unconscious of how the lie cheapens them, not us.

It’s not for me that I’m angry. It’s for those who, having labored for months to save thousands of infants-in-waiting, have had to put up with this nonsense. Still they rose, in the belief that someone has to speak for these children.

Dennis Byrne is a member of the Sun-Times editorial board. E-mail: [email protected]

(c) Copyright Dennis Byrne

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A side of Mike Royko that liberals don’t want to recall. Read More »

White Sox pitcher Johnny Cueto will make first start Monday vs. Royals

Right-handed pitcher Johnny Cueto will make his season debut for the White Sox tonight in Kansas City.

The Sox on Monday purchased the contract of two-time All-Star from Class AAA Charlotte and optioned infielder Danny Mendick to Charlotte.

Cueto, 36, pitched 51/3innings of three-hit ball for Triple-A Charlotte on Wednesday.

Cueto lacks velocity, but he makes up for it with crafty pitching, and he has been known to vary his tempo at extreme rates to keep batters off-balance. Cueto is 135-97 with a 3.45 ERA in 15 seasons with the Reds, Royals and Giants.

The move plugs a hole in the rotation with Lucas Giolito still on the COVID-19 injured list after a positive test Friday. On top of that, the Sox and Royals are scheduled to play a split doubleheader on Tuesday.

Juggling the rotation has been a constant theme for the Sox since the start of the season.

Lance Lynn hasn’t pitched because of surgery on his right knee. Giolito missed two starts in April because of an abdominal strain suffered in the season opener in Detroit, where he pitched four scoreless innings and struck out six. Jimmy Lambert made a spot start April 14 and started the second game of a doubleheader in Cleveland after consecutive days of rainouts.

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White Sox pitcher Johnny Cueto will make first start Monday vs. Royals Read More »

16-year-old boy shot dead in Millennium Park had big plans for his family and for his music ‘if I make it to 21.’

At 16, Seandell Holliday had big plans ahead of him: He wanted to provide for his family and, a drummer, he wanted to make his own music and open his own studio.

“If I make it to 21,” he added in a list of goals he drew up for a mentoring class at Gary Comer College Prep on the South Side.

“I asked him, ‘Why did you put that?'” said the teacher of the class, Vondale Singleton. “He said because there are a lot of things that happen in Chicago, you see so many kids lose their lives at early ages … He couldn’t even make it to 17.”

Seandell was shot in the chest during a chaotic scene in Millennium Park around 7:30 p.m. Saturday. Video shows him bleeding badly as he lay near “The Bean” sculpture, other teens screaming and running past him. He was pronounced dead at Lurie Children’s Hospital a mile and a half away.

A 17-year-old, Marion Richardson, was arrested as he ran from the scene and dropped a gun from his waistband. Richardson came to the park with a girl and began arguing with someone from another group who recognized him from an “altercation” at a previous mass gathering, a prosecutor said in court Monday.

Richardson quarreled with a girl in the group and, as he was being pulled away, Seandell jumped him from behind and punched him in the head, prosecutors said. Another boy came up and swung at Richardson, who took out a gun and shot Seandell once in his chest.

Richardson was arrested in the grass at Millennium Park by officers who were nearby, and allegedly told them, “You guys ain’t going do nothing anyways. A hundred (racial slur) walking towards me. What am I supposed to do? You all just sitting there, bro.”

A judge ordered him held on $250,000 cash bail on a count of second-degree murder.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot responded to Seandell’s murder — and the crowds of teens fighting each other — by banning minors from Millennium Park on weekend evenings unless accompanied by an adult.

Seandell was a freshman, “a pretty quiet kid, really sharp, always witty… Deep dialogue. I knew he had a lot in him,” Singleton said.

The teen spent much of the last year in the Champs Male Mentoring class within the high school, with Singleton his teacher and mentor. Singleton said Seandell helped him grow as a mentor.

“The biggest lesson I learned — from all of my mentees really — is that I don’t have all the answers,” he said. “I have a philosophy that we’re co-experts. You’re teaching me, we’re all getting better. Seandell taught me the authenticity of being yourself. He wasn’t a crowd follower.”

Singleton said he spoke with Seandell’s mother on Sunday. “She said, ‘The one time I let him out, he gets killed. He doesn’t go outside. He never goes outside. And the one time he goes outside, he gets killed.'”

On Monday, Singleton said he faced Seandell’s classmates, who are “heartbroken, just crushed.”

“I opened up (class) with tears in my eyes. I said this time is for anyone who wants to share,” Singleton said. “This time is about Seandell Holliday, who sat in this space with us as our brother. There was silence for a couple minutes, but then you couldn’t get them to stop talking and sharing their emotions, their feelings about him and their own lives.”

Singleton said the boy’s murder “impacts and affects everyone. Not just Seandell and his family, but his peers and people who live in the area. People who tried to make sense of it.”

“We all want to find clear cut answers, but it’s complex,” he said about the scenes of teens fighting in Millennium Park Saturday evening. There are financial issues in Black and brown communities, as well as lack of structure and true opportunities, he said.

Many children seek safe spaces they can’t find in their own communities, and downtown sometimes serves that purpose. Seandell’s murder is a lesson for the city “in terms of safety and creating structures to help organize our young people. They deserve to be downtown.”

The city needs to help children feel invested in the city, he added. “Businesses need to adopt interns… They don’t feel like they’re invested. They’re not taking care of the community because they don’t feel part of the community.”

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16-year-old boy shot dead in Millennium Park had big plans for his family and for his music ‘if I make it to 21.’ Read More »

Chicago Bulls need Zach LaVine to become a Jayson TatumRyan Heckmanon May 16, 2022 at 1:00 pm

Sunday afternoon, basketball fans thought they would be in Game 7 heaven, with two crucial matchups. Without the Chicago Bulls in the postseason, still, Bulls fans had one major rooting interest.

To see the Milwaukee Bucks’ Championship dreams come to an end.

The Boston Celtics were able to make that happen, defeating the Bucks and sending them packing. Leading the charge was 24-year-old superstar Jayson Tatum, who finished the game with a modest 23 points, eight assists and six boards.

The Celtics, as a team, dominated Milwaukee in this game. But, over the entirety of the series and, well, the whole postseason thus far, it’s been Tatum leading the way.

Jayson Tatum is proving to Chicago Bulls fans what they need to see out of Zach LaVine.

In Game 6, and on the brink of elimination down 3-2 in the series, Tatum stepped to the plate and poured in his best game of the postseason so far. In that Game 6 victory, Tatum scored 46 points to go with nine boards and four assists.

It was truly the Jayson Tatum show, as he and Giannis Antetokounmpo went toe-to-toe in an exciting game.

What Tatum has evolved into at just 24 years old is exactly what the Bulls have desired to see out of Zach LaVine. Three years the elder, LaVine just experienced his first playoff series. While Tatum has been to five-straight NBA postseasons, he’s still a younger player than LaVine and has truly become one of today’s superstars.

In his first series against the Bucks, LaVine was very hesitant — and maybe for good reason. His knee injury had been ailing him for weeks now, and he’ll end up getting that taken care of during the offseason. LaVine wasn’t himself down the stretch this year, and especially not in the playoffs.

Boston has an excellent one-two punch in Tatum and Jaylen Brown. The Bulls very well could have the same thing in LaVine and DeMar DeRozan, even though DeRozan is a bit older than all of these guys.

What Tatum has done, though, is nothing short of spectacular. He’s become unafraid of the moment, taking the big shots and taking over games. LaVine has a similar skill set, getting hot from beyond the arc ever so often and being able to attack the hoop. He is more than capable of becoming a guy who can do what Tatum does for the Celtics.

Once his knee is healthy and free agency is decided, of course, this next year for LaVine and DeRozan is crucial. Assuming he stays in Chicago, LaVine has to finally take that big step into superstardom. After all, if he stays with the Bulls, he’ll be getting paid the max — superstar money.

The Bulls have some key talent amongst their core, but it will ultimately be on the shoulders of LaVine, who’s been the leader of this team for a few years now. This next year, it’s LaVine’s time.

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Chicago Bulls need Zach LaVine to become a Jayson TatumRyan Heckmanon May 16, 2022 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears QB Justin Fields faces key measuring stick within 2022 scheduleRyan Heckmanon May 16, 2022 at 2:00 pm

When the Chicago Bears announced their official schedule for the 2022 NFL season last week, we had already known their opponents. However, now we know the order and which games are home versus away.

Now, we can start to predict where the Bears will end their season if we so choose — but we all know how much good it does to try and predict these things in May.

What’s most intriguing, right now, is looking at key games under the microscope.

For second-year quarterback Justin Fields, there are a handful of matchups on the schedule which will be an opportunity to prove himself more than others.

Chicago Bears quarterback Justin Fields will face off against four other fellow quarterbacks from the 2021 draft class.

Last year’s quarterback class was far greater than that of the 2022 draft, and this year, we could end up seeing Fields take on four of the top six from a year ago.

Just for context, as a rookie Fields threw for 1,870 yards, seven touchdowns and 10 interceptions in 10 starts. He also ran for 420 yards and two scores.

Starting out in Week 1, the Bears take on the San Francisco 49ers at home. The continued storyline for the 49ers, this offseason, has been in regards to quarterbacks Jimmy Garoppolo and Trey Lance. Many still believe it will be Lance who supplants Garoppolo as the starter.

If that’s the case, Fields will have a chance to take on a quarterback drafted eight picks ahead of him in 2021. Last season, Lance did not play much. He ended the year with 603 passing yards, five passing touchdowns and two picks. He also ran for 168 yards and a touchdown.

JUSTIN FIELDS ARE YOU SERIOUS?! #DaBears

?: #SFvsCHI on FOX
?: NFL app pic.twitter.com/i8nVWJPukV

— NFL (@NFL) October 31, 2021

If the Bears can come out and win this tough game against a good defense, it would help Fields’ confidence going forward. Even if the Bears don’t win, to see Fields play well against the 49ers defense will be a big accomplishment.

In Week 3, the Bears host the Houston Texans and second-year quarterback Davis Mills, who performed admirably as a rookie last year. In 11 starts, Mills threw for 2,668 yards with 16 touchdowns and 10 interceptions.

Week 7 will be one to watch, as the Bears travel to take on the New England Patriots on Monday Night Football. Obviously, that means Fields vs. Mac Jones — the quarterback taken after Fields was drafted.

Last year, Jones was by far and away the most accomplished rookie quarterback, starting all 17 games for New England. Jones threw for 3,801 yards, 22 touchdowns and 13 interceptions. That prime time matchup will be extremely difficult, as Bill Belichick is historically good against rookie and second-year quarterbacks.

Finally, in Week 12 the Bears travel to New York to take on last year’s number two overall pick in Zach Wilson and his much-improved Jets. A few weeks ago, you could have argued that the Bears and Jets have similar weaponry. Following this year’s draft, though, the Jets now have some serious firepower for Wilson to work with in rookies Garrett Wilson and Breece Hall.

Wins and losses, here, are essentially meaningless. We know the Bears aren’t going to be a very good team — unless they surprise us, which would be a pleasant happenstance.

If Fields can step up and play well against his peers from last year’s draft, then the Bears know they have found their guy. These four games are going to be pivotal in terms of how we grade Fields going forward.

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Chicago Bears QB Justin Fields faces key measuring stick within 2022 scheduleRyan Heckmanon May 16, 2022 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears rookie Jaquan Brisker is training with the best in the NFLRyan Heckmanon May 16, 2022 at 3:00 pm

This offseason, Chicago Bears general manager Ryan Poles has taken a different approach to rebuilding the team.

While fans have been starving for big name additions at wide receiver and offensive line, Poles opted to go a different route when it came to the 2022 NFL Draft.

The Bears held two picks in the second round, and without a pick in the first, these were crucial selections. With the first pick, the Bears took Washington cornerback Kyler Gordon.

Then, with their second pick in the round, Poles went for one of the best safeties in this class: Penn State standout Jaquan Brisker. And, if his young offseason is any indication, Brisker is already destined for greatness.

Chicago Bears rookie safety Jaquan Brisker is already surrounding himself with the NFL’s elite talent.

If the Bears are to compete in the near future, they will need a defense. No matter how much offense is talked about, the Bears will still need to stop their opponents. And, although a defense isn’t made with just one player, if it’s the right player, one guy can surely make a huge difference.

If there’s any team that knows how important just one player is, it’s the reigning Super Bowl champions. Los Angeles Rams defensive tackle Aaron Donald has won NFL Defensive Player of the Year three times, and has become arguably the best defensive player of the past decade.

Donald is a unicorn of a player due to his bull-like strength and the speed of a linebacker. That speed has kept up, in part, due to some serious training. This year, some of his training sessions have featured the Bears’ rookie safety working out alongside him.

They say if you want to be the best, you have to train like it. Well, how about training with the best?

Being able to call Donald an early friend and workout partner in his young career will end up proving to be one of the most valuable relationships Brisker will have throughout his time in the league.

Donald is destined to be a Hall of Fame inductee one day, and if Brisker continues to push himself to the level of a Hall of Fame defender, he could be on track to get there some day as well.

The Bears have lacked intensity on the defensive side of the ball for a couple of years now, and specifically in their secondary. Brisker is going to help lift the energy levels of this group tremendously, and bringing some of Donald’s nastiness to the defensive back field is one sure fire way to improve this group.

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Chicago Bears rookie Jaquan Brisker is training with the best in the NFLRyan Heckmanon May 16, 2022 at 3:00 pm Read More »

This horrible Chicago Blackhawks trade keeps coming upVincent Pariseon May 16, 2022 at 4:21 pm

The Chicago Blackhawks made a horribly bad trade after the 2016-17 season that set them back for years. They traded Artemi Panarin and Tyler Motte to the Columbus Blue Jackets in exchange for Brandon Saad, Anton Forsberg, and a fifth-round pick.

The trade was basically (for all intents and purposes) Saad for Panarin. The Blackhawks felt that they needed to bring back someone who was really good for them which makes sense. Saad is a great player and was even better back then.

However, Panarin was and still is a superstar, and anybody could have seen it coming. We were reminded of how bad this trade was on Sunday night when Panarin scored in overtime of game seven to send the New York Rangers to the second round. It was a power-play goal.

He signed with New York for a big-ticket because of how good he was in Columbus. The key is that he continued to be a star despite no longer having Patrick Kane on his line anymore. The Blackhawks let an 11 million dollar player go when he was on a team-friendly deal for two more years.

The Chicago Blackhawks’ mistake of trading Artemi Panarin continues to loom.

They might have even been able to extend him for less than 11 million dollars because of the fact that they had the Kane argument on their side. He also might have taken the hometown discount had they never traded him away.

There were a million ways for Chicago to make it work in terms of the salary cap. The salary cap is no excuse for letting Stan Bowman off the hook with this one. It was the worst trade that he made during his entire tenure as general manager and it isn’t even close.

Now, the Hawks traded Saad last year to the Colorado Avalanche and he finished out his contract with them. Last offseason, he signed with the St. Louis Blues and had a really good year. Chicago literally lost three Brandon Saad trades.

Now, both Saad and Panarin are in the second round while the Hawks have one of the bleakest futures in the National Hockey League. It is honestly a shame when you think about what has happened to this team.

Trading Panarin really led to a major downfall and it is going to take a long time to recover. Now, he and the Rangers will face the Carolina Hurricanes in the second round of the playoffs. Teuvo Teravainen (who they traded to get rid of Bryan Bickell) awaits him after having a dominant game seven himself over the Boston Bruins to get them there. This is brutal for Hawks fans.

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This horrible Chicago Blackhawks trade keeps coming upVincent Pariseon May 16, 2022 at 4:21 pm Read More »

The Dallas Stars also exposed a big mistake made by Chicago BlackhawksVincent Pariseon May 16, 2022 at 5:46 pm

The Chicago Blackhawks were made to look like a really foolish franchise on Sunday night. It is mostly because of the fact that Artemi Panarin scored in overtime of game seven against the Pittsburgh Penguins to send the New York Rangers to the second round.

Now, Panarin is going to meet Teuvo Teravainen (who the Hawks mistakenly traded to get rid of Bryan Bickell’s contract) and the Carolina Hurricanes. It is just a really bad look for this team and it is going to take a long time to move on.

However, later in the evening, the Dallas Stars took advantage of another major mistake made by Stan Bowman and the previous Chicago Blackhawks front office. This is a story that people are just now starting to realize.

At the 2017 NHL Draft, the Chicago Blackhawks traded down from pick 26 to pick 29 from the Dallas Stars in the first round that was being held at the United Center. With pick 29, the Blackhawks drafted Henri Jokiharju.

The Dallas Stars are the latest team to clown the Chicago Blackhawks.

With that pick at 26, the Dallas Stars selected goaltender Jake Oettinger. This is prominent right now because he had a playoff for the ages. The Stars had a legit chance to defeat the Calgary Flames which would be a major upset and it was mostly thanks to this kid.

The game went to overtime tied at two. Eventually, Johnny Gaudreau scored the game-winner on Oettinger which ended a marvelous game. It was the 67th shot of the night on Oettinger and only the third one that got past him. Making 64 saves on 67 shots is absolutely incredible.

The Stars themselves had only 28 shots. They were outplayed hard by the Flames and still had a chance to win. That is all because of the heroic goaltending from young Jake Oettinger. He is going to be a Stallworth in Dallas’s net for a long time.

If only the Chicago Blackhawks had a goalie like that. They had Corey Crawford at the time of this draft mistake but it is clear that they never had his inevitable long-term replacement waiting in the wings. They traded down to take a mediocre defenseman and allowed the Stars to land this guy.

It gets even worse when you remember what the Hawks did with Jokiharju. They traded him to the Buffalo Sabres in exchange for Alex Nylander who was awful for them. Landing Oettinger would have been nice but the fact that they don’t even have Jokiharju makes it worse. This team will take a long time to recover from the Stan Bowman era.

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The Dallas Stars also exposed a big mistake made by Chicago BlackhawksVincent Pariseon May 16, 2022 at 5:46 pm Read More »

A ticket from the game where ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’ was filmed just sold at auctionon May 15, 2022 at 3:26 am

One of the most memorable scenes in 1986’s “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” takes place at Wrigley Field.

Ferris, his friend Cameron and Ferris’ girlfriend, Sloane, have skipped school to have a memorable day out in Chicago. As part of their adventures, they take in a Chicago Cubs game at Wrigley Field, where Ferris catches a foul ball. He’s almost seen by his nemesis, Dean Ed Rooney, but Rooney just misses catching a glimpse of him as the camera cuts away from his catch.

Now, at least one lucky fan has purchased a piece of that particular bit of history.

Heritage Auctions had acquired a ticket from the game where the scene was filmed. The ticket ended up selling Friday for $1,050.

“Some fan at the game held on to their ticket and [it] turned out to be a good decision,” Mike Provenzale, sports operations supervisor and auctioneer at Heritage, told ESPN.

The game took place Sept. 24, 1985, with the Expos beating the Cubs 17-15. Future Baseball Hall of Famer Andre Dawson was the biggest star for the Expos, going 4-for-6 with three home runs and eight RBIs.

Tickets to high-profile sporting events have sold for quite a bit of money in the past. Heritage auctioned off a ticket from Jackie Robinson’s MLB debut for $480,000 in February, Provenzale said.

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A ticket from the game where ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’ was filmed just sold at auctionon May 15, 2022 at 3:26 am Read More »

Cueto joins White Sox, to make ’22 debut vs. KCon May 16, 2022 at 8:36 pm

The Chicago White Sox have purchased the contract of veteran pitcher Johnny Cueto, who will make his season debut Monday against the Kansas City Royals.

Cueto, 36, joined the White Sox last month on a one-year deal worth up to $4.2 million and has made four starts at Triple-A Charlotte, posting a 5.17 ERA and 17 strikeouts over 15 2/3 innings.

The White Sox hope Cueto, a two-time All-Star, will help stabilize their short-handed starting rotation.

Lance Lynn, who pitched to a 2.69 ERA last season, is still recovering from knee surgery in April and hopes to rejoin the team later this month, while Lucas Giolito is currently on the COVID-19 injury list and also missed two starts last month because of an abdominal strain.

Cueto went 7-7 with a 4.08 ERA last season in 22 games — 21 starts — with the San Francisco Giants. The White Sox optioned infielder Danny Mendick to Charlotte to create a roster spot for Cueto.

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Cueto joins White Sox, to make ’22 debut vs. KCon May 16, 2022 at 8:36 pm Read More »