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The Bears made a huge mistake by letting this undrafted WR goVincent Pariseon May 2, 2022 at 10:28 pm

The Chicago Bears need more help on offense. They need to make Justin Fields their top priority in terms of keys for 2022 and getting him weapons is a big part of it. There are a few nice pieces there now that can help but they have a long way to go.

Unfortunately, they let a good one that they could have had slip away. Justyn Ross was supposed to be a first-round draft pick a few years ago. He is a wide receiver out of Clemson that has the talent to become a very good NFL player.

Ross has the talent and has used it on the football field more than once. He has had standout performances in some of the biggest college football games that one can pay in over the last four seasons. Despite all of this, he went undrafted in the 2022 NFL Draft.

Ross needed to have neck fusion surgery a few years back which is an incredibly dangerous injury. There is definitely a risk to taking someone who had that type of procedure done on that sensitive a body part.

The Chicago Bears should have considered bringing in free agent Justyn Ross.

Even besides that, he has a plethora of other things that he has dealt with in terms of injury. It is hard to pass on a guy like that, despite the injuries, because of how good he was when he was healthy. The problem is that nobody wants to have him go through that again.

Once he made it out of the draft without being selected, however, the Bears could have tried to sign him as an undrafted free agent. Instead, he is going to go to a rather ideal situation with the Kansas City Chiefs. They handle things there much better anyway so that is probably good for him.

If the Bears would have landed him though, he could have really helped them score more points if he stayed on the field. He also would have been a low-risk high-reward signing for Ryan Poles and his staff.

Now he gets to practice and maybe even play on a field with Patrick Mahomes which is certainly nice. He has big-game experience in the college ranks and could really become an impact player at the NFL level. Either way, he will be an easy player to root for from afar.

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The Bears made a huge mistake by letting this undrafted WR goVincent Pariseon May 2, 2022 at 10:28 pm Read More »

Ohtani’s next start up in air because of injuryon May 2, 2022 at 11:36 pm

CHICAGOLos Angeles Angels star Shohei Ohtani is not in the starting lineup on Monday against the Chicago White Sox but is available off the bench after suffering a minor groin injury running to first base on Sunday, according to the team.

“We got him out of the game yesterday, more as a precaution than anything,” athletic trainer Mike Frostad said Monday morning.

Ohtani’s injury did not require an MRI as the team is hopeful he’ll be back in the starting lineup in the next day or two.

“Nothing to rush on this yet,” manager Joe Maddon said.

Ohtani was scheduled to pitch on Tuesday in Boston but that will be pushed back until he’s ready to go. Maddon was asked if he’ll pitch at all in the three-game series against the Red Sox.

“I hope so,” he responded. “We’re going to wait a day or two to figure that out. He’s feeling pretty good today.”

Frostad added: “We’ll have to see how it plays out over the next couple of days. We’re not at a position right now, on Monday, to make a determination on his next start.”

Ohtani was pinch-hit for in the ninth inning of Sunday’s win over the White Sox after hitting into a double play two innings earlier. He slowed down as he approached first base, leading to him coming out of the game.

Ohtani ranks first in the American League with 17 runs scored and has a 4.19 ERA in four games started on the mound.

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Ohtani’s next start up in air because of injuryon May 2, 2022 at 11:36 pm Read More »

Dylan Cease dominant as White Sox beat Angels, 3-0

Right-hander Dylan Cease took his game to another level Monday — allowing one hit over seven shutout innings, with no walks, 11 strikeouts and one hit batsman –to lead the White Sox to a 3-0 victory over the Angels before 13,112 at Guaranteed Rate Field.

Cease (3-1) was in command from the start, retiring the first nine batters before allowing his lone hit — Taylor Ward’s hard-hit double that went over left-fielder AJ Pollock’s outstretched glove to lead off the fourth inning.

He matched a career high with the 11 strikeouts and struck out Mike Trout all three times he faced him. It was the 10th time Cease has struck out 10 or more batters in a game, tying him with Gary Peters and James Scott on the Sox’ all-time list of multiple double-digit strikeout games. He dropped his ERA to 2.84 for the season.

The victory gave the Sox (9-13) a split of their four-game series with the American League West-leading Angels (15-9) and was their third victory in six games following an eight-game losing streak. They open a two-game series with the Cubs at Wrigley Field on Tuesday night

Pollock had an RBI ground out and Jake Burger a bases-loaded sacrifice fly in the first inning that gave the Sox a 2-0 lead. Adam Engel’s RBI double that scored Jose Abreu from first base made it 3-0 in the sixth inning.

Kendall Graveman pitched a scoreless eighth inning and Liam Hendriks pitched a 1-2-3 ninth — striking out Trout looking to end it –for his fifth save in six opportunities to clinch the victory.

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Cubs’ Seiya Suzuki named NL Rookie of the Month for April

Less than four weeks ago, Cubs right-fielder Seiya Suzuki made his Major League Baseball debut. Now, he’s already hauling in Rookie of the Month honors for his performance in April.

“This is the best pitching in the world, and you would expect somebody to struggle just a little bit,” Cubs manager David Ross said earlier this month, after Suzuki’s first player of the week honors, “and inevitably every player does, but so far, the fact that he’s gotten off to such a great start and we’ve faced really good pitching has been impressive.”

Partial-season awards are one thing on their own, but in Suzuki’s case, they represent a hot start as he’d made the transition from Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball to MLB. And the qualities that the Cubs raved about when they signed Suzuki this spring to a five-year, $85 million contract — his power and sense of the strike zone — have been on display in the first month of the season.

Suzuki posted a .279/.404/.529 slash line last month with four home runs and 14 walks. He has one of the best April performances of any Cubs rookie all-time, ranked No. 4 in OPS (.934) and tied for No. 2 in extra-base hits (nine).

The award also positions Suzuki, a five-time All-Star in NPB, as the early frontrunner for NL Rookie of the Year.

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National analyst praises Chicago Bears fifth round selection

The Chicago Bears had a busy day three of the 2022 NFL Draft. One pick is grabbing the attention of the national media.

After being silent on day one, and picking what was on their board on day two, new general manager Ryan Poles spent Saturday making moves by trading picks for extra picks, bringing the Bears to 11 total selections.

During round 5, the Bears took beefy offensive tackle Braxton Jones, Southern Utah, with the 168th pick.

Robert Zeglinksi writes:

“At this point in the draft, it’s all about taking guys with high ceilings. Few of the prospects available on Day 3 have more appealing raw tools than the former Thunderbird book-end. A blocker with a mean streak and ideal size at tackle (6-foot-5, 310 pounds, 35-plus inch arms), Jones has the build/skeleton of a perennial Pro Bowler. Now it’s about getting him ready for a massive step up in competition at the next level — which won’t be easy. If the Bears implement the right program for Jones, then Justin Fields’ jersey just got a lot cleaner.”

The Bears will need a couple of offensive linemen they drafted or signed in the offseason to step up this year in order to give new offensive coordinator Luke Getsy’s offense a chance to work in the fall. The Bears offensive line last year gave up the most sacks, 58, of any NFL team in 2021. The good news is that they have depth on the line and can sort that out as the offseason continues on. The hope is that someone emerges and Jones is a legit candidate to do so.

Poles, a former offensive lineman himself, has said he’s a fan of homegrown talent, and the Bears hope Jones will be able to grow into a perennial pro bowl talent. Chris Morgan, the Bears offensive line coach, will have a new stable of draft picks to mold this season.

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

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Woman killed, another wounded when man opens fire during argument outside Near North bowling alley

A shooting outside a Near North bowling alley that killed one woman and wounded another over the weekend occurred during an argument involving an ex-boyfriend, Chicago police said Monday.

The man was in a car with a woman outside the 10pin in the 300 block of North State Street when he got out and shot the women around 1 a.m. Saturday, according to Chief of Detective Brendan Deenihan.

He did not go into details about the confrontation, only calling it “domestic.”

A 26-year-old woman was shot in the chest and taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital, where she was pronounced dead, police said. Her name hasn’t been released yet.

A 31-year-old woman was shot in the left thigh and taken to the hospital in good condition, officials said.

No one was in custody.

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Should we send TucKKKer Carlson and Perjury Taylor Greene to Gitmo?

Should we send TucKKKer Carlson and Perjury Taylor Greene to Gitmo?

Inarguably, TucKKKer Carlson and Marjorie Taylor Greene are enemy combatants, so the only question remaining is what to do with them.

If anyone asks (not that they would), I vote to send them to Guantanamo Bay for a decade or two.

America is sending billions of dollars in humanitarian and military aid to Ukraine. They are fighting for their freedom, for self-determination and for democracy itself.

Back in the 1950’s, when Superman first appeared on TV, they called it Truth, justice and the American way. Obviously, truth and justice have ceased to be the American way, but at least the 30-year old nation has a shot at democracy.

Ukraine has been invaded by a heretofore uber powerful military machine. This is not a cold or ideological war, it’s an all out shooting war, destroying cities, displacing millions, killing thousands and inflicting all manner of deprivation and depravity on an innocent, civilian population.

War crimes are being committed by Vladimir Putin’s ruthless, blood thirsty minions, many of them taking out their frustrations with being poorly equipped and unfed on the helpless and unarmed. Some are convinced by a lying dictator that Ukraine is filled with Nazis who deserve to be killed, mutilated and raped.

The tragedy of this war should not be just another political football, even to those who routinely side with our enemies, with dictators and even with diseases that infect and kill us.

This should be an obvious choice for Americans of all persuasions.

There are however, those among us who see democracy as a human frailty, a weakness that needs to be eradicated. Among the more vocal are lying liars TucKKKer Carlson and Marjorie Taylor Greene.

The former, a talking asshat of Fox “News” and the latter a grate (sic) orator from the grate (sic) state of Georgia.

Ms. Greene, AKA MTG, says that we should not be sending our money to Nazis. Her accusation of Ukrainians being Nazis, of course, comes without any factual basis whatsoever, her charge of Nazism leveled at Ukraine’s Jewish president.

Apparently, Vladimir Putin using the subterfuge of de-Nazifying Ukraine as the impetus for his invasion is all the proof Ms. Greene needs.

Carlson, with an estimated audience of over 4 million viewers is the defacto face of White nationalism in America. His is also the face of a dog trying to figure out a magic trick, but that only makes his popularity all the more curious.

TucKKer is a long time fan of Vladimir Putin and authoritarian leaders, such as Hungary’s Viktor Orban. Carlson produced a documentary of sorts depicting Hungary as some sort of idyllic Utopia under constant attack from the villainous George Soros, a common foil for the radical Right.

So blatant is Carlson’s treachery that his denigration of democracy and support of Putin is looped on Russian state media.

Hungary has notoriously blocked negotions between Ukraine and NATO since 2018, accusing Ukraine of unfairness to ethnic minorities for making Ukrainian the official language of Ukraine.

The irony (hypocrisy) of siding with Hungary on the issue of language is that in 2006 a Republican Senate voted to make English the official language of the U.S. in an ill-fated ammendment to a bill that was ultimately passed without that edict.

Predictably, Carlson, with all the humanity he can muster, supports Putin’s war of atrocities. It’s enough to make you wonder how many rubles he has in the Cayman Islands.

It may be overreaching, but if we can’t lock up Carlson and Greene for their relentless attacks on American democracy, we should at least be able to find some justice for their overt aid to our foreign enemies.

Будем здоровы! (BOOdym zdaROvy – Let’s be healthy)

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Should we send TucKKKer Carlson and Perjury Taylor Greene to Gitmo? Read More »

Ryan Poles failed to find Justin Fields a stud in 2022 NFL draft; So now what?

Spiraling balls go through Chicago Bears wide receivers hands, fans hold their collective breath as Justin FIelds holds his chest while being helped off the field as the next image on their TV screen —this is the team general manager Ryan Poles inherited this offseason.

Poles talked a big game leading into the 2022 NFL Draft, but failed to make significant changes to the offense at quality positions in the early rounds of the draft. Not entirely off-the-wall decision making, but just the standard sort of moves that get general managers eventually canned.

No trades were made by the Bears until the third day of the draft. Poles seemed to take the draft board Friday like a bumbling intern making their first decision after railing against the status quo—stone-faced fear to make a bold call for fear of failing. All of the mock sims in the world couldn’t prepare Poles for the second day of the draft.

The Bears had their highest two picks in the second round, and Poles spent them on the secondary. Poles chose cornerback Kyler Gordon and safety Jaquan Brisker (with the pick from the Khalil Mack trade) over the glaring needs at wide receiver and offensive line.

He offered no red meat for a fan base starving in want of a functioning offense, instead bringing berries from the woods, thistles in tact.

He waited in the third round before setting his appetite on a 24-year-old (the same age as A.J. Brown, traded from the Tennessee Titans to the Philadelphia Eagles in the last year of his rookie contract) wide receiver, Velus Jones Jr., predominately a kick returner during his six seasons college.

Post Friday’s press conference, Poles, quickly becoming a Yogi Berra figure, claimed there were still offensive linemen available, if not in the draft, in the streets, as if he thinks there’s some 6-foot-5, 314-pound free agent about to waddle up Michigan Ave.

Poles bothered to move back starting in round five, gaining extra 6th and 7th round talent. He went after a mix of positions including the offensive line (after seeing the Green Bay Packers and Detroit Lions take defensive linemen with their first-round picks) with the bravado of a 20-year-old who just discovered the margin feature on Robinhood. Poles likened the Bears to a remodel vs a rebuild, but this seems like he replaced outdated furnishings with the clearance rack at IKEA.

Poles can claim these moves were to stay disciplined, but they’re the sort of moves scouting rooms who aren’t sure of themselves make, failing to target quality players at a high value, and instead, they have to play a numbers game, hoping a few of these guys make the cut.

While it’s entirely possible some of those offensive picks will be gems, it doesn’t appear to be a safe bet.

Put it another way, is anyone but the opposition really excited to watch the Bears offense play after this draft?

The second-round picks in retrospect will likely be solid, but they undermined the mission Poles needs to be successful at his job. He needs to develop the player the Bears have invested the capital in that put the Bears in the spot where they didn’t have many picks coming into the draft.

Those two players will not fix the fact the Bears averaged 18.3 points per game in 2021. Fields is going to need an offensive line to give him time to throw to receivers who can run routes (reports on Jones say he struggles with this) and catch his passes. Poles has acknowledged Fields needs that help.

Poles has hinted that moves will be made in the future, via trades or other methods to help the young quarterback. After how he played up the draft following a boring free agency, that hope seems hollow.

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

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Ryan Poles failed to find Justin Fields a stud in 2022 NFL draft; So now what? Read More »

Chicago White Sox awful April explained

The first month of the season for the Chicago White Sox was a bad one, to say the least. The team entered the season as heavy favorites to win the American League Central Division and expected to compete for the World Series. Instead, the White Sox went 8-12 in April and struggled across the board. Moreover, both the Cleveland Guardians and the Minnesota Twins swept them as part of a brutal eight-game losing streak.

The White Sox haven’t played themselves out of contention. In fact, despite the awful month, the team is only 4.5 games behind the Minnesota Twins in the division. However, the disappointing start raised questions about the White Sox. How good is this roster? Did the baseball world overlook their underlying issues, and could the struggles continue to hurt the team?

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

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Teen fatally shot when gunfire erupts during argument inside Streeterville hotel

A teen was shot to death inside a Streeterville hotel over the weekend when people who were allowed in through a side door began arguing and shooting at each other, according to police.

A group of woman had rented a room at the Sonesta ES Suites at 201 E. Walton Pl. and had opened an emergency door to allow a group of men in early Sunday, according to Chief of Detectives Brendan Deenihan.

There was a confrontation and shots were exchanged, he said. Officers were called to the hotel around 5 a.m. and found an 18-year-old man wounded on the second floor. A gun was lying next to him, Deenihan said.

The teen was taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital and pronounced dead, police said.

No one was in custody, but Deenihan said police were tracking the car used by the gunman.

The victim’s name hasn’t been released.

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Teen fatally shot when gunfire erupts during argument inside Streeterville hotel Read More »