Videos

Cubs hope to take advantage of Dodgers’ weakness against lefties

The formidable Dodgers actually have a weakness that the Cubs hope to exploit Saturday in a split doubleheader at Wrigley Field.

The Dodgers, who lead Major League Baseball with a plus-57 run differential while averaging 5.39 runs a game, are batting only .226 with a .657 OPS against left-handers.

That presumably has prompted the Cubs to start left-handers Drew Smyly and Daniel Norris against them.

Smyly’s start will be finalized once he’s officially activated from the bereavement list. Smyly has limited left-handed batters to a career .219 average, and he’s allowed only one hit in 12 at-bats against lefties this season.

Max Muncy and Justin Turner are each batting .087 (2-for-23) against left-handers, and Gavin Lux (.214) hasn’t fared much better.

Norris, who will be making his first start since 2020, has allowed one hit in 10 at-bats against lefties this season.

The teams will play a doubleheader at 12:05 p.m. and 6:40 p.m. after Friday’s game was postponed due to inclement weather.

Outfield outlook

Cubs President Jed Hoyer tempered expectations as early as last September when Brennen Davis, the organization’s top prospect, was concluding a dominant 2021 season at Triple-A Iowa.

Davis had reduced his strikeout rate by more than 8% to a 22.1% whiff rate in 68 plate appearances at Iowa following a promotion from Double-A Tennessee last summer. The assumption was that Davis was putting the finishing touches on a promotion to the majors in early 2022.

Hoyer’s warning has been validated by Davis’ 34.1% strikeout rate in 91 plate appearances at Iowa this season. Davis is batting .195 with two home runs and seven RBIs, so any hint of a promotion would occur after a cutdown in strikeouts and more production.

There’s no rush to promote Davis, who has only 661 professional at-bats.

The forecast currently is brighter for Nelson Velazquez, a fifth-round pick out of PJ Educational School in Carolina, Puerto Rico, in the2017 draft.

The Cubs placed Velazquez, 23, on the 40-man roster last November after a breakout season at South Bend, Tennessee and Mesa in the Arizona Fall League.

His .288 batting average with nine home runs and 17 RBIs in 22 games at Tennessee earned him a promotion to Iowa on Friday. Velazquez was ranked as the organization’s 15th top prospect by Baseball America.

Velazquez’s promotion was first reported by The Athletic.

Pete Crow-Armstrong’s start has raised optimism that the organization could finally develop a bonafide leadoff hitter. Crow-Armstrong, acquired from the Mets for Javier Baez last July, is batting .397 with a .495 on-base percentage and 1.123 OPS at Class-A Myrtle Beach.

Crow-Armstrong, who was selected by the Mets with the 19th overall pick in the 2020 draft, has produced four home runs, 16 RBIs and seven stolen bases after missing nearly all of last season after suffering a torn right labrum.

Read More

Cubs hope to take advantage of Dodgers’ weakness against lefties Read More »

Florence Price symphony review: the work receives triumphant Symphony Center debut with CSO, Riccardo Muti

Few if any composers in recent history have made a more spectacular comeback than Florence Price, whose music was all but forgotten after her death in 1953 but is rapidly being rediscovered and revived by myriad ensembles large and small.

Another milestone step in that revival came Thursday evening in the first of three concerts at Symphony Center, when Riccardo Muti and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra presented its first-ever performance of Price’s Symphony No. 3 in C minor. Put simply, this musical thunderclap from the past was a triumph.

Price’s posthumous obscurity was no doubt due in part to her melodic music being out of step with serialism and other avant-garde directions in 20th-century music, but it seems clear that the biggest reasons had to do with the double prejudice surrounding her being Black and a woman.

Chicago Symphony Orchestra; Riccardo Muti, conductor

What it did not have anything to do with was the high quality of the music, a truth that is only reinforced by this thrilling, substantial work that is emerging at last as one of the major American symphonies of the 20th century.

Although this performance came 82 years after the piece was written and one year shy of the 70th anniversary of the composer’s death, what was important Thursday night was that this tragically belated local debut finally happened at all.

It was especially significant for the CSO to present this work because Price lived in Chicago during the most productive years of her career and because the orchestra premiered her Symphony No. 1 in E minor in 1933, making it the first composition by an African-American woman to be presented by a major orchestra.

There are so many things to praise about this Third Symphony, starting with Price’s sophisticated use of elements from Black music — she writes that she was attempting to portray a “cross-section of Negro life” — without sinking into pastiche. Another is her inventive and quite progressive deployment of a wide range of percussion, including the use of just one emphatic note from the orchestral bells or glockenspiel as a kind of musical punctuation mark at strategic points.

Much could be written about the symphony’s first movement alone, a big, sprawling section with complex, ever-shifting cross-currents, with certain moments that have a bluesy feel and others that almost seem to swing. Next comes a beautiful, slow second movement with long, flowing lines anchored by fulsome, full-bodied playing in the strings.

The heart of this work is arguably the fabulously spirited, kick-up-your-heels third movement which is based on the African-American juba dance and wonderfully accented with castanets, wood block and a xylophone solo featuring principal percussionist Cynthia Yeh. A sassy, driving, blues-tinged finale rounds things out.

Orchestras often present debuts on the first half of concerts and then return after intermission with a familiar classic, but for this program, Muti reversed that order, opening the concert with two staples by Ludwig van Beethoven — Overture to “Egmont,” Op. 84, and Symphony No. 4 in B flat Major, Op. 60 – and building toward Price’s symphony, the evening’s big pay-off.

The second half began with the orchestra’s first performances of “Mother and Child” (1943), by William Grant Still, another fine Black composer. He attended the same high school in Little Rock, Ark., as Price and the two were lifelong friends.

This 10-minute suite, which was originally written for violin and piano and later arranged for string orchestra, is a lovely, at times wistful, work written in a post-Romantic style with lilting melodies and plush harmonies.

Though in no way sad, it is nonetheless reminiscent in some ways of Samuel Barber’s famed Adagio for Strings, which is a string-orchestra arrangement of a movement from his String Quartet, Op. 11. The Adagio was written seven years earlier, and it seems plausible that Still was influenced by the work. Muti and the orchestra delivered a suitably ardent version of this work, with a handsome solo by concertmaster Robert Chen.

According to a symphony spokeswoman, Muti cracked his baton early in the concert and suffered a minor cut to one of his fingers. He could be seen holding what appeared to be a green handkerchief in his left hand during the Beethoven symphony, and he unflappably led most of that piece and the rest of the concert without a baton.

Read More

Florence Price symphony review: the work receives triumphant Symphony Center debut with CSO, Riccardo Muti Read More »

ChicagoNow’s Best Posts of April 2022

ChicagoNow’s Best Posts of April 2022

Each month, ChicagoNow holds a contest to determine the best posts that appeared in the previous month on ChicagoNow.com. Each blogger may vote. Of more than 1,000 posts which appeared during April, here are the 20 judged to be the best. (Any post from the blog Margaret Serious is nominated by other bloggers.)

Cheating Death Rage against the madness of war. (One billion killed!)

Chicago Board of Tirade Climate change denial: A primer for liars and fools

Chicago Weather Watch Brighter days ahead

Cubs Den Weekly Cubs recap: Offense continues to click as the pitching depth is challenged

Da’ Urban Rooster Foley Banner belongs in the Rafters

Getting More from Les I Just Lost in Wordle–Let It Be!

Getting More from Les I Want to Join a Posse. Got Room for Me on Yellowstone?

Hot Dog Diaries Lose Weight With Designer Hot Dog Water

I’ve Got the Hippy Shakes I found some surprising peace and serenity at the cemetary

Lipstick, Lollipops & Life Easter Sunday Yesterday & Today

Looking for the Good I did it!

Margaret Serious How to Write a Mystery (or Anything) with Style

Medium Rare The heavy sigh

Mom, I Think I’m Poignant! It’s been 35 years since Harold Washington ruled the City–and I’ll never forget the day he died.

Mysteries of Life How Realistic Should Sci-Fi Be?

Opinionated Woman I had a Will Smith moment. How about you?

Opinionated Woman What my Russian-American relatives have to say about Putin and the war in Ukraine

Purple Reigns: How to Live a Full Life with Lupus April is Autism Acceptance Month

The Quark In The Road One Fish. Two Fish. Yellow Fish. Blue Fish.

Retired in Chicago Still riding the “L”

Filed under:
Chicago Now Best Posts

Advertisement:
Advertisement:

Welcome to ChicagoNow.

Meet
our bloggers,

post comments, or

pitch your blog idea.

Meet The Blogger

Margaret H. Laing

I moved to Chicago from the south suburbs in 1986. I have diverse interests, but I love writing about what I’m interested in. Whether it’s a personal interest or part of my career, the correct words to get the idea across are important to me. I love words and languages — French and Scottish words enrich my American English. My career has included years as a journalist and years working in museums, and the two phases were united by telling stories. I’m serious about words and stories. So here I am, ready to tell stories about words and their languages.

Subscribe by Email

Completely spam free, opt out any time.

Monthly Archives

May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014

Read these ChicagoNow blogs

Cubs Den

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

Pets in need of homes

Pets available for adoption in the Chicago area

Hammervision

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

About ChicagoNow

FAQs

Advertise

Recent posts RSS

Privacy policy (Updated)

Comment policy

Terms of service

Chicago Tribune Archives

Do not sell my personal info

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

Read More

ChicagoNow’s Best Posts of April 2022 Read More »

Cubs need longer workdays from their pitchers

Cubs ace Kyle Hendricks threw a perfect 0-2 pitch Wednesday night to Gavin Sheets.

The pitch sailed barely below the outside corner of the strike zone where Hendricks couldn’t be hurt. But Sheets wisely didn’t chase.

Hendricks’ next pitch nearly dotted the low, outside corner, but it was located close enough for Sheets to calmly poke the pitch through a vacated left side of the infield for a game-tying single that eventually helped the White Sox to a 4-3 win.

While Hendricks provided in quantity with 5 2/3 innings following Tuesday’semergency start by Scott Effross, the Cubs veteran didn’t supply enough quality for a rotation that has been extremely inconsistent.

Left-hander Wade Miley, who threw four innings and 41 pitches Thursday in his first rehab start for Triple-A Iowa, will provide experience and potential efficiency once he joins the rotation before the end of the month — provided he fully recovers from a sore elbow.

After a rocky start, Marcus Stroman allowed two earned runs in 13 innings against the world champion Braves and defending National League Central champion Brewers. Stroman will start Sunday’s series finale against the Dodgers with two extra days of rest.

But the rotation has been largely unpredictable, as reflected by its 5.16 ERA that ranks 12th in the NL and is averaging less than 4 2/3 innings per start.

Instances like Effross filling in Tuesday night after Drew Smyly was placed on the bereavement list have contributed to the short starts.

This remains a curious time for the Cubs, who need to stabilize the back end of the rotation while trying not to tax valuable reliever Keegan Thompson, who is often used by manager David Ross as a middle-inning stopper and has the same ERA (0.89) and WHIP (0.89) in 20 1/3 innings.

Smyly (2.79 ERA) has pitched poorly in only one of his four starts, but he needs to pitch past the five-inning barrier Saturday when he starts the first game of a split doubleheader against the Dodgers at Wrigley Field.Bad weather forced the postponement of Friday’s game and created the need for the doubleheader.

The Cubs’ bullpen, which has a respectable 3.27 ERA, will be well-rested, but it cannot continue to lean frequently on the likes of Effross (1.59) and Thompson for middle-inning bailouts.

Left-hander Daniel Norris will make his first start since Aug. 2, 2020 (with Detroit) in Saturday’s second game. Norris hasn’t pitched longer than 1 2/3 innings in any of his five appearances, so it’s safe to assume he’ll be in an opener role.

But more revealing is that left-hander Justin Steele isn’t scheduled to pitch in this series. Steele displayed tremendous promise last September with five innings of one-hit ball against the Twins and seven shutout innings against the Pirates to complete his rookie season.

After blanking the Brewers over five innings in his 2022 debut, Steele hasn’t pitched past the third inning in three consecutive starts and will wait at least eight days before making his next start, likely next week at San Diego.

Miley may need two more starts before he’s ready to be activated, and prized prospect Caleb Kilian hasn’t pitched past the fifth in any of his five starts at Iowa.

After the San Diego series, the Cubs are scheduled to play 14 games without a day off against the Diamondbacks, Pirates and Reds — all second-tier NL foes.

Miley should be ready at the end of that stretch. And if there is no overall improvement in their rotation, and the Cubs need to further stimulate their prospect-crazed fan base, they could promote Kilian and his 1.83 ERA as trade talks involving their veterans start toaccelerate in June.

Read More

Cubs need longer workdays from their pitchers Read More »

Please, White Sox, throw us a bone, unbroken, and start playing better

I’m not sure if the White Sox fully grasp how much Chicago needs them right now, or at least how much the city needs the idea of someone like them.

The big idea was that the Sox were going to help sports fans forget the ugly blot of rebuilding projects going on around town. They were going to get us through the miserable spring weather and, along with the defending WNBA champion Sky, were going to help put further distance between us and the memory of the pandemic’s isolation.

The kind-of important part of the equation was that the Sox had to win games in order for them to obtain the civic healing properties I’m trying to bestow on them. As of Friday afternoon, they were 11-13, which isn’t as bad as it was before they took two games from the lowly Cubs.

Before I get to what ails the Sox – hint: “ails” is the crucial word here – let’s visit the teardown outbreak that is Chicago sports.

The Cubs refuse to use the word “rebuilding,” but if that isn’t what they’re doing, then their three victories in the last 14 games suggest that they might want to start. They’re not going to be lifting any trophies anytime soon at Wrigley Field

The Blackhawks have hired former Cubs executive Jeff Greenberg as an associate general manager, and nothing says “rebuild” quite like hiring a baseball guy with an Ivy League law degree to break down the numbers for you. They’ve gone so far as to say it might take three to five years to turn things around, which wouldn’t stretch the patience of Hawks fans so much as it would put them on a medieval rack.

The Bears are … I don’t know what the Bears are doing. Actually, yes, I do. The Bears are doing the Bears. They’re in that part of the cycle in which hope centers around a new coach and a new general manager. Happens every five or six years at Halas Hall. They finished 6-11 last season, and they’re asking fans for patience during this difficult time. They haven’t won a Super Bowl in 36 years. “This difficult time” is on a continuous loop in Lake Forest.

After a very nice start, the Bulls petered out down the stretch this season, losing eight of their final 10 games, including four of five against the Bucks in a first-round playoff series. The early taste of success was great, but how the season ended lacked flavor and nutritional value. The arrow might still be pointing up for the Bulls, but it could use some major sharpening in the offseason.

So, um, White Sox? Yeah, you’re needed. Immediately. And by “immediately,” I mean, “like three weeks ago.” So far, the season has been 10 shades of awful. Even if a Chicago sports fan doesn’t have a dog in this fight – even if you’re a Cubs fan who wishes despicable things upon the Sox – what’s transpired in the first month of the season for the South Siders has been ridiculous. A plague of injuries has taken down Eloy Jimenez, Yoan Moncada and Andrew Vaughn, among others. Flamethrower Garrett Crotchet underwent Tommy John surgery in early April. Lance Lynn hurt his knee during spring training and has yet to pitch this season.

In non-injury bad news, the Sox have had trouble fielding the ball. They haven’t been able to score runs. They probably have bad breath. It’s been an almost total system shutdown.

The good news? Jose Abreu and Tim Anderson are hitting well. Dylan Cease has looked like the pitcher he was supposed to be when the Sox acquired him in the 2017 Jose Quintana trade. But there’s not enough good news, not nearly enough.

The Sox don’t have the full weight of Chicago’s hopes, dreams and need for escape on their shoulders, only about 20,000 tons of it. The injuries have been a massive problem, obviously, but the Sox haven’t been taking care of the things that have nothing to do with tendons, ligaments and muscles. Their 22 errors in (24) games heading into Friday’s series in Boston were tied for the most in the big leagues. Anderson has seven of them at shortstop. That reflects poorly on manager Tony La Russa, who prides himself on running a tight ship. So far, he’s piloting a riverboat casino.

Whenever there was a preseason conversation about World Series contenders, the Sox were in it. It’s much too soon to write them off, but it’s well past time for them to get their act together. Injuries hurt them last season, and injuries have helped bury their dream of a fast start to this season. But that doesn’t fully explain a puny .221 team batting average. Or a major league-low 51 walks.

The weather figures to improve soon (please?). People figure to be out and about more after two-plus years of relative confinement. If the Sox figure things out, it’ll be a nice communal mood boost. No pressure, guys.

Read More

Please, White Sox, throw us a bone, unbroken, and start playing better Read More »

Halo Top ice cream: Can ice cream that’s good for you actually be good?

Halo Top ice cream: Can ice cream that’s good for you actually be good?

Halo Top ice cream–”the better for you ice cream”–hit the market in 2012 as a low-calorie alternative to regular ice cream.

The brainchild of ex-lawyer Justin Woolworth and a $20 ice cream maker, the ice cream company started small but grew to be the number one selling ice cream in grocery stores across the United States by July 2017.

The ice cream brand became a favorite of celebrities including the Kardashians who praised it on social media.

In addition to its great flavor, a big part of the draw, is its low calorie count and healthy ingredients.

Whereas the Ben & Jerry’s of the world contain 1000+ calories in a pint, Halo Top runs around 300 calories per pint.

According to a recent press release from Halo Top: “The better-for-you ice cream just got better!”

It seems that Halo Top has made a change to their Dairy Light Ice Cream recipe, making it even creamier while still keeping the calorie count low. 

Halo Top is debuting its new recipe with a brand new flavor, Chocolate Cake Batter – a chocolaty cake batter light ice cream with colored sprinkles designed “to transport you back to your childhood kitchen–sneaking batter straight from the bowl.”

While Halo Top’s classic Birthday Cake has been a long-standing favorite for in their lineup of flavors, the new Chocolate Cake Batter invites chocolate lovers to enjoy all the flavor of their favorite cake in an even creamier 330 calories.

The new recipe promises all the flavor Halo Top old revipe with an increase in creaminess,” said Pete Gargula, Halo Top brand manager. The ingredients include ultrafiltered skim milk, low sugar and other high-quality ingredients.

Learn more about Halo Top’s at www.halotop.com

Filed under:
ice cream

Advertisement:
Advertisement:

Welcome to ChicagoNow.

Meet
our bloggers,

post comments, or

pitch your blog idea.

Subscribe by Email

Completely spam free, opt out any time.

Meet The Blogger

Carole Kuhrt Brewer

Arts, entertainment and dining journalist..

Follow me on Pinterest

Recent posts

Halo Top ice cream: Can ice cream that’s good for you actually be good? »

Carole Kuhrt Brewer on Chicago Eats
Posted today at 1:01 pm

Price of Guinness in every state »

Carole Kuhrt Brewer on Chicago Eats
Posted March 10, 2022 at 9:53 am

What are the most popular desserts in every state »

Carole Kuhrt Brewer on Chicago Eats
Posted February 28, 2022 at 9:54 am

NÜTRL Vodka Seltzer in a can »

Carole Kuhrt Brewer on Chicago Eats
Posted February 5, 2022 at 1:43 pm

Celebrate dry January with zero proof cocktails at some of Chicago’s trendiest restaurants »

Carole Kuhrt Brewer on Chicago Eats
Posted January 7, 2022 at 3:13 pm

Monthly Archives

May 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015

Categories

Chicago restaurants (43)
Chicago food landscape (16)
Uncategorized (15)
Restaurant reviews (12)
New restaurants (11)
al fresco dining (10)
Chicago’s Best (8)
Food trends (7)
Chicago Chefs (7)
Ballpark food (7)

Read these ChicagoNow blogs

Cubs Den

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

Pets in need of homes

Pets available for adoption in the Chicago area

Hammervision

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

About ChicagoNow

FAQs

Advertise

Recent posts RSS

Privacy policy (Updated)

Comment policy

Terms of service

Chicago Tribune Archives

Do not sell my personal info

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

Read More

Halo Top ice cream: Can ice cream that’s good for you actually be good? Read More »

Bears S Jaquan Brisker on scout Chris Prescott’s ‘Ph.D.’ quote: ‘Not really who I am’

The Bears got off to an uncomfortable start in welcoming second-round pick Jaquan Brisker to the organization the night he was drafted when scout Chris Prescott described him as “a Ph.D. — poor, hungry and desperate,” while describing his passion for football.

Brisker responded to that comment when asked about it during his introductory press conference Friday and said he hadn’t paid much attention to it.

“I don’t really let things like that get to me because I’ve already been through a whole lot,” Brisker said. “People say a lot of things. But that’s not really who I am.

“You can’t judge a book by its cover. I’m actually a great person, great football player, and I also graduated from college at Penn State. I overcame a lot of things, but I don’t let little things like that get to me.”

When asked if it offended him, Brisker said no.

“It really just brushed off my shoulders,” he said. “I’m good. I’m fine. It’s time to play football.”

Prescott parted with the Bears after the draft, but it was unclear whether he resigned or was fired.

Even if he was dismissed, it’s possible it was part of general manager Ryan Poles’ overhaul of the scouting department. When a new general manager takes over, he typically waits until after the draft to make changes. Poles has not spoken to the media since reshaping his staff.

The Bears drafted Brisker at No. 48 overall coming off a strong college career in which he had five interceptions, nine other pass breakups and 151 tackles in 34 games.

Read More

Bears S Jaquan Brisker on scout Chris Prescott’s ‘Ph.D.’ quote: ‘Not really who I am’ Read More »

It’s that Time of Year in Indy

It’s that Time of Year in Indy


It’s that time of year again when Indianapolis comes the most alive it is during any time of the year. Race car drivers will be coming in from all over to compete in the 106th running of the Indy 500, Sunday May 29. Thirty-three drivers, 500 miles, 200 laps. No wonder they call it a spectacle.

All fans have their favorite drivers and pace cars over the years. I came across a story written by the Daily Consumer Guide, the Daily Drive section  colleague Tom Appel (2021). Tom and fellow auto writers reminisced about their favorite Indy Pace Cars. These are some of the Guide’s choices:

Jack Stewart: 1930 Cord L-29, driven by Wade Morton.

1969 Chevy Camaro SS/RS, Driven by Jim Rathmann

1977 Olds Delta 88, Driven by actor James Garner

1977 Olds Delta 88, Driven by James Garner

1979 Ford Mustang

Playing Indy 500 Trivia is a great pastime. One of the most often asked questions is ‘what is the fastest average speed at the Indy 500?” Records note it was Tony Kaan in 2013 at an average speed of 187.433 mph. Imagine how sharp a driver has to be to steer this car at such top speeds and navigate each turn.

If you’re a regular (in which case you have yearly tickets), or a racing fan, you have to be there at the Indy 500 once in your life. This year, 2022, the race will be held Sunday May 29, starting at 12:45 pm. There are also all kinds of regular activities (listed below) that you may want to take advantage of (below). Indy live and breathes the Indy 500, the Biggest Spectacle in Racing. With lots of new things going on, changes in venue and new offerings, you’ll want to get involved.

All the information you’ll need about the race you can find here:

www.indianapolismotorspeedway.com

Phone: 800-822-4639; local: 317-492-6700

[email protected]

In person at ticket office, 4790 W. 16th St. Indy 46222 (9-5 pm)

Events:

                May 20: Indy practice

                May 21: Qualifying Day

                May 22: Indy 500 Qualifying Day

                May 27: Miller Lite Carb Day

                May 28: Legends Day

                May 29: Race Day, Sunday 12:45 pm

Parade: Telecast WTHR, Livestream, TV, NBC Sports. Channel 13 and nationally on NBC Sports Network

The parade festival begins Saturday 28 at 11:45 A.M. downtown

Grab your beer, your suntan lotion, a hat and sunglasses for this momentous pastime. Thirty-three drivers, 200 laps and 500 miles.

Filed under:
Uncategorized

Advertisement:
Advertisement:

Welcome to ChicagoNow.

Meet
our bloggers,

post comments, or

pitch your blog idea.

Recent posts

It’s that Time of Year in Indy »

vettegal on Girls Go Racing
Posted today at 12:04 pm

CarShield: Good or Bad »

vettegal on Girls Go Racing
Posted March 10, 2022 at 2:37 pm

It’s that Time: The Chicago Auto Show »

vettegal on Girls Go Racing
Posted February 7, 2022 at 10:23 am

2021 Lexus IS 350 AWD Sedan »

vettegal on Girls Go Racing
Posted January 26, 2022 at 1:15 pm

The Great Model-T Race »

vettegal on Girls Go Racing
Posted January 6, 2022 at 12:59 pm

Subscribe by Email

Completely spam free, opt out any time.

Meet The Blogger

vettegal

Building esteem for women (and men) through passion for the sports car. Brought to you by a certifiable car nut by night and weekends, who happens to be a veteran psychotherapist by day.

Read these ChicagoNow blogs

Cubs Den

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

Pets in need of homes

Pets available for adoption in the Chicago area

Hammervision

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

About ChicagoNow

FAQs

Advertise

Recent posts RSS

Privacy policy (Updated)

Comment policy

Terms of service

Chicago Tribune Archives

Do not sell my personal info

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

Read More

It’s that Time of Year in Indy Read More »

‘What even is that pitch?’ An oral history of Kerry Wood’s 20-K dayon May 6, 2018 at 2:30 pm

Editor’s note: This story originally ran on May 6, 2018 for the 20th anniversary of Kerry Wood’s 20-strikeout game

It was an otherwise nondescript day. In fact, it was a forgettable one. Overcast and rainy, the Cubs were hosting the Houston Astros in an early May matinee. School was still in session, so just 15,758 fans were in attendance. How many stayed to see history is unknown, as the rain picked up throughout the day.

That didn’t stop 20-year-old Kerry Wood from a magical performance. He produced the highest game score in baseball history, posting a pitching line of 9 IP, 1 H, 0 BB, 20 K’s. He did it with a dynamic fastball and a slurve, which the Astros would call unhittable. Here are the memories of some of those involved, including Wood. Current Cubs pitchers Jon Lester and Kyle Hendricks add their two cents as well after watching the highlights in arguably the greatest-pitched game in Wrigley Field history. It was May 6, 1998 — 20 years ago.

Kerry Wood: “I remember specifically having low energy that day. I don’t know why. Maybe it was a day game or the overcast skies. I was dragging at the ballpark. It wasn’t jumping right away, the way I wanted. I felt sluggish.”

Cubs manager Jim Riggleman: “I do remember him saying that after the fact. He didn’t have a great warm-up.”

Astros second baseman Craig Biggio: “Our minor league [scout] said, ‘Hey, he has a good fastball, OK curve and be patient with him.’ We watched him warm up, and it was like, ‘OK, no big deal.’ Then the game started, and the kid put on his Superman costume, and the next thing you know, he struck 20 of us out.”

Wood: “I was all over the place in warm-ups. I was erratic. Every other pitch in the bullpen, I was getting another ball because I was throwing it to the screen or bouncing it in. I didn’t throw one strike. The first pitch of the game, it didn’t change. I hit [plate umpire] Jerry Meals in the mask. I didn’t have the feel.”

Plate umpire Jerry Meals: “To this day, I don’t think I’ve ever had that happen again. It’s the first pitch of the game, so things start going through my head. ‘Is there something I need to be addressing? Is there some bad blood? How do you get crossed up on the first pitch? What the hell is going on here?'”

Wood: “I went to 2-0 on Craig Biggio, then struck out the side. I absolutely surprised myself. After the first I felt great, but I had zero of those feelings warming up.”

Biggio: “He had a nice, smooth delivery. The ball was electric. I could relate it to [Craig] Kimbrel. He’s got that ball where he throws it and it pops in the glove, and it’s heavy and hard and firm. He was on.”

Jon Lester: “In that game, it wasn’t a lot of long at-bats. You see a lot of swings-and-misses and takes, not a lot of foul balls. Nowadays, you know the spin rate and all this stuff, that would have been plus-plus. That’s the biggest thing, the way those pitches broke.”

Ron Vesely/Getty Images

After four innings, Wood had eight strikeouts. An infield hit by Astros shortstop Ricky Gutierrez ruined any chance of a no-hitter, but by then, he was locked in and thinking about a complete game.

Wood: “Bagwell’s second at-bat, I know I get to 3-1, and I throw hook-hook and buckle him back-to-back. After that, I knew I had a chance to finish this.”

Meals: “He had everything working. He had a good-hitting team just baffled. They were flailing on the breaking stuff and couldn’t catch up to the fastball.”

Kyle Hendricks: “The movement on his pitches was incredible. What even is that pitch [the slurve]? I don’t know how you snap that off. No clue. You can just see how much spin is being created. Those guys didn’t have a chance.”

Biggio: “We didn’t have the technology they have today. Now you know everything about a guy. What he throws, how hard and stuff like that. You got everything. And you can go look at your at-bats as the game is going on.”

Lester: “The only information you had back then was facing the guy.”

Riggleman: “Somewhere around his 13th strikeout, [third-base coach] Tom Gamboa said, ‘You know how many strikeouts he has?’ It became interesting. … I didn’t know 20 was a record.”

ESPN Stats & Information

Meals: “The weather turned crappy in the sixth. The grounds crew did a good job.”

Wood: “My goal was not to walk anyone. That’s what I heard my whole minor league career and my short time in the big leagues: Just don’t walk anyone. In a 1-0 game, I was just focusing on not putting the tying run on base.”

Biggio: “We’re one swing away from tying the game, so we’re not thinking about the strikeouts. But when you go out there, you see the fans throwing up the K’s, and you’re like, ‘Holy shoot, how many strikeouts does this guy have?’ You start counting them up. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 … I think they ran out of K’s.”

During one stretch, Wood struck out five in a row looking.

Wood: “With two strikes maybe they thought I was trying to trick them with off-speed, so a lot of those fastballs were them not pulling the trigger, thinking off-speed.”

Hendricks: “The fastball is obviously electric. It rides up in the zone. A few of these breaking balls to a lefty, it goes up and in to him. The spin rate would have been unbelievable. It makes it more fun to watch, without all those stats on the screen.”

Biggio: “We had 102 wins that year. That was no weak lineup. He carved us up like we didn’t belong there.”

Riggleman: “This is probably a little bit of an indictment of everyone that managed in that period, I was probably thinking like 135 pitches for him. I have to let him try and finish this thing.

“I didn’t want to take him out with men on base. That’s when you give life to the other club. Maybe at the end of the inning. I’m not sure we ever got anyone up though.”

Wood: “Being from Texas and following Roger Clemens, I knew he had the major league record, but it’s not one of those numbers you think is attainable. … I didn’t know how hard I was throwing or how many pitches I had thrown. We didn’t have that back then.”

Riggleman: “There were games [in which] after six or seven [innings], he had 13 or 14 strikeouts, the pitch count was high, and we would take him out. I would get booed like crazy for taking him out. Later, when he was hurt, it was, ‘Oh, you pitched him too much.'”

Wood: “In the seventh inning, I thought the umpires might call it for a moment due to rain. And I knew at that point, if there is a delay, I’m done. I remember thinking, ‘Don’t call that game.'”

The Cubs scored an insurance run in the eighth, giving them a 2-0 lead. Wood had 18 strikeouts yet still did not know he had a chance at a record.

Wood: “I remember thinking in the eighth inning I just wanted to get back out there and finish this up. We scored another run, and I know I just wanted the inning to end. A young player should want his team to score as much as possible.”

Lester: “That would be so hard now. I don’t know if you’ll see 20 again in the future. With bullpens and specialization. … He was very unique. How big and tall he was and he had the levers working. When you think of Kerry Wood, you think of someone special.”

Biggio: “He hit his spots and made his pitches that day. It was just a man amongst boys right there.”

Keep track of the Japanese phenom’s bid for greatness on both sides of the ball. Story >>

Wood (on getting strikeout No. 20 against Derek Bell): “His first swing in that at-bat, I knew I could throw the rosin bag up there and he would swing at it.”

Meals: “I was thinking about almost calling a no-hitter. The crew chief pointed out he had 20 strikeouts. I had no idea. I wasn’t paying attention to the fans holding up the K’s.”

Wood: “My fist-pump on the mound was about no walks and completing the game. I hugged [reliever] Terry Adams and say something to him, because before the game, he said, ‘Hey rook, why don’t you pitch more than five innings. You’re killing us.’ But no one said anything about 20 strikeouts.”

Meals: “[Umpire] Terry Tata was at first base. He says, ‘You had 19, I had one.’ Because he rang one up on a check swing. That was when I realized 20.”

Wood: “Thirty seconds after it’s over, they bring me over to the camera, and my hands are shaking. My adrenaline is racing. That’s when I found out I struck out 20 and tied the record. I didn’t have anything to say, though.”

Biggio: “You’re bummed out you lost, but 20 punchouts is pretty amazing.”

Riggleman: “You meet a lot of people that say they were there that day, but it was a rainy day in May. Maybe it was 18,000.”

Hendricks: “And to do it that young. He must have been in one of those once-in-a lifetime zones.”

Riggleman: “[Former Cubs] Billy Williams and Ron Santo were at Wood’s game that day and said that it was even more dominating than Sandy Koufax’s perfect game [against the Cubs in 1965]. They were at that one, too. You could make a case, as old as that stadium is, that could be the greatest game anyone has ever pitched there.”

Read More

‘What even is that pitch?’ An oral history of Kerry Wood’s 20-K dayon May 6, 2018 at 2:30 pm Read More »

With Dallas Keuchel struggling, should White Sox make a change?

The Chicago White Sox have lofty expectations for the 2022 season. Anything less than at least a World Series appearance would be a disappointment after losing to the Houston Astros in the ALDS last season.

While the White Sox are off to a good start here in May, there is still a massive weak link they need to shore up in the back end of their starting rotation. And that weak link is starting pitcher Dallas Keuchel.

Keuchel has been very disappointing for the past calendar year and the White Sox may need to cut ties with him if they don’t want to fall out of the division race.

Keuchel was signed to a 3-year deal worth $55.5 million with a vesting option for a 4th year prior to the 2020 season. He was great in 2020 with a 1.99 ERA but struggled last year with a 5.28 ERA and currently has an 8.40 ERA this year so far. His numbers are not helping the White Sox and they need to find a better option to help them win games.

The #WhiteSox have a Dallas Keuchel problem. The team should DFA him because he’s a sunk cost. It’s the easiest answer. They might actually do it because rostering him along with Velasquez and Cueto on a 26-man will take some gymnastics.

Thankfully, there is a veteran in their minor league system they can call up to take his place, Johnny Cueto.

The 36-year-old righty has a 6.10 ERA in Triple-A Charlotte but has only pitched in 3 games for a total of 10.1 innings. Cueto’s MLB resume is impressive, with 2 All-Star nods and a World Series ring with the Kansas City Royals in 2015. It would be wise for the White Sox to call him up as soon as possible and see if he can provide a jolt to the pitching staff with what he still has left since Keuchel is struggling mightily.

Cueto shouldn’t be relied on to pitch as he did in his prime, but him even pitching at an average level would cement the White Sox as a legitimate World Series favorite with a healthy starting rotation including Lucas Giolito, Dylan Cease, Lance Lynn, and Michael Kopech in addition to Cueto.

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

Read More

With Dallas Keuchel struggling, should White Sox make a change? Read More »