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Plus-minus is a flawed statistic — it reflects team performance far more than individual performance, yet is attached to individuals. But many players still care deeply about it.
Seth Jones is one of those players.
And when he looks at his unsightly minus-38 rating this season –the second-worst mark in the NHL and singlehandedly worse than his minus-25 rating from his first eight seasons combined –it bothers him.
“Any time you’re that ‘dash,’ it’s not a good thing,” Jones said Wednesday, using the hockey slang for minus. “I know a lot of guys are ‘dash’ on the team this year; we didn’t score a lot and we had a lot of struggles. But we really can all take better steps to be better defensively.”
Jones has been admirably honest when evaluating himself all year. His first season in Chicago hasn’t been anything like what he surely imagined, and he hasn’t been perfectly consistent either, but he has at least consistently owned up to those struggles and taken accountability for them.
And as the season winds down, Jones’ overall performance really doesn’t look bad at all in retrospect. His five goals, including zero on the power play, weren’t “good enough” –but thanks to 46 assists, his 51 points are still the second-most of his career and tied for 14th among defensemen league-wide.
Digging deeper, his analytics on defensive zone retrievals and exits and offensive zone entries are all fantastic. JFresh Hockey’s player card puts his WAR (wins above replacement) in the 91st percentile. Still, he’s personally not satisfied.
“I had some good moments in the year, and had some not-so-great moments,” he said. “I obviously have put a lot of pressure on myself to be the best player I can be. … [I’ll] watch a lot of video this summer on how I can be better in those areas and be that player that this team needs me to be.”
Interim coach Derek King, asked to assess Jones’ season, also gave a remarkably sincere answer.
“[At the] start of training camp, I was like, ‘Hmm, I don’t know why they signed this guy’ –honestly,” King said. “Just watching him, I was like, ‘Uhhh…’ But he got comfortable in his surroundings…and then he just took off.
“He’s an elite hockey player. He’s a stud. He impressed me a lot. If he were a little more vocal, too, which he’s starting to be, I wouldn’t doubt seeing him wearing a letter — like, a big letter — down the road, if ever an opportunity comes for him. Because he’s a class act.”
With his eight-year contract extension just kicking in this summer, that opportunity does seem likely to eventually come. Jones has said all the right things about wanting to anchor and lead the Hawks through their rebuild.
As soon as this season ends, however, he’ll promptly travel to Finland to play for the U.S. in the world championships.
Then he’ll head back home to Dallas for summer training, of which watching video will indeed be a big part. The Hawks as a team watched more video the second half of the season, which Jones thought helped them, and he wants to start reviewing his own clips more thoroughly — particularly on the power play.
“I don’t think I was aggressive enough [on the power play] the first half of the year, whether it was shooting the puck or acting like I was shooting the puck and moving it to create space for [Alex DeBrincat and Patrick Kane],” he said. “Because ‘Cat and Kane are so good at finding each other in that seam and making plays down low, and I kind of got caught watching [it] myself, like a lot of penalty kills do.
“When I got the puck the second half, I started shooting it a little bit more, trying to be more aggressive. That’s going to open up more space for them. That’s something I need to focus on.”
His younger brother Caleb will yet again train with him, and Jones predictably lobbied Wednesday for the Hawks to re-sign him, saying this season was “pretty special” together and he’s “looking forward to the future with him.”
Regardless of Caleb’s fate, though, Seth will undoubtedly hope the future brings better times in his Hawks career.
“It’s been very frustrating, obviously, when you’re not winning games,” he said. “Hopefully we can become better out of this…adversity.”
Seth Jones disappointed with Blackhawks debut season, but he hasn’t been the problem Read More »
What’s another minor physical issue when so many are major with the White Sox?
When it’s the closer, a little thing is a little more than that.
“We’re going to be careful with him,” manager Tony La Russa said.
Turns out Liam Hendriks served up that walk-off home run to Byron Buxton in Minnesota Sunday after tweaking his back in the clubhouse, and he hasn’t been available since, not that he was needed during an off day Monday and a 6-0 loss to the Royals Tuesday, the Sox’ eighth defeat in a row.
“Between the ninth and 10th [innings] I don’t know what happened,” Hendriks said Wednesday. “I went to grab a towel and walked slowly on the tile in cleats and just couldn’t stand up right after that. They tried to take me out and I just kept telling them no. Probably in hindsight it probably would have been a good thing. But my stubborn [butt] is going back out there no matter what.”
And pitching to Buxton no matter what, even with first base open.
“Don’t ever put anyone on when I’m on the mound,” Hendriks said.
“He’s got all the talent in the world. But I’ve been able to beat him on pitches in similar locations before in my career [Buxton was 0-for-2 against Hendriks] and I know that I trust my stuff no matter what. I’m never thinking about putting somebody on base or pitching scared, because that’s when you get into trouble.”
Hendriks was able to humbly recognize the bigness of the 469-feet blast but liked his chances knowing Buxton, who struck out three times earlier against Lucas Giolito and homered against Aaron Bummer, is a free swinger. In hindsight, a slider would have been a better option instead of a fastball.
“If I get it into a better location, he doesn’t do that much damage with it,” Hendriks said. “And then I have a chance of facing a guy who I have always had tough at-bats with, with [Luis] Arraez on deck. I’m not trying to put a guy on for a contact guy with the winning run on second base.”
Hendriks’ competitive nature and pushing it for a team that badly needed a win on the last day of a winless road trip ruled the moment, but a lot of his pitches were probably related to a back issue that crops up occasionally but often goes away quickly, he said.
“Still no excuses for what happened in that game,” Hendriks said.
As for the current April swoon, Hendriks agreed with La Russa and hitting coach Frank Menechino that players are putting too much pressure on themselves, wanting to be the guy who saves the day. They stood a good chance of breaking the skid after Dylan Cease opened Wednesday’s game with four perfect innings and was staked to a 3-0 lead.
“Just stay within yourselves,” Hendriks said. “I’m at fault as much as anybody else.
“Its been tough. The results haven’t been great. The injuries have been tough emotionally. It’s something if this happens in the middle of the year, nobody really bats an eye depending on how we’ve done before that. That’s just, it’s unfortunate it’s happening at the start. But I have complete faith in this group. We got a bunch of bench guys on this team who on any other team are starters. That’s a tribute to the talent level in this clubhouse and what we are able to do.
“Right now, it’s just, when it rains it pours. If we get those couple of dink hits that will fall in or make a pitch or a line out here and there, the entire kind of vibe changes. Talked to Jey Hey [Josh Harrison] about it yesterday. We still need to remain that cocky, that arrogant, that confident group because no matter what we know we’ve got the talent in this clubhouse and we can go on a run like more than any other team. We need to make sure we set ourselves up to full take advantage of that rather than self pitying.”
White Sox closer Liam Hendriks still dealing with back issue Read More »
Chicago Bears general manager Ryan Poles has been coming up with “creative” ways to get the team more picks in the upcoming 2022 NFL Draft.
Rumors have been circulating the past few weeks the Bears might be trying to trade linebacker Robert Quinn for more picks. Tuesday night, reports came out the Bears were not activley trying to trade Quinn, who broke the Franchises single-season sack record in 2021 with 18.5 takedowns.
The Bears are not currently shopping Robert Quinn, per source.
Quinn said in an espn article published Tuesday that he wanted to remain in Chicago and didn’t suspect he would be traded, but that the NFL is a “crazy business.” This is good news for Bears fans who’d like to keep the productive defender. He’s a leader on the defense, and Quinn said he belives the team has high expectations for the upcoming year.
However, the Bears could certainly use more draft picks and Quinn should be able to gain a valuable pick from a team in need of a serious pash rush. The 3-time pro bowl athlete will be 32 heading into the 2022 season, and one wonders how many peak seasons the vet has left.
Make sure to check out our Bears forum for the latest on the team.
Report: Chicago Bears NOT shopping Robert Quinn ahead of NFL draft Read More »
Patrick Finley, Jason Lieser and Mark Potash break down what new GM Ryan Poles said about the draft and whether the Bears will make any surprising moves in Round 2 or later.
New episodes of “Halas Intrigue” will be published regularly with accompanying stories collected on the podcast’s hub page. You can also listen to “Halas Intrigue” wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Luminary, Spotify, and Stitcher.
Halas Intrigue Bears Report
Bears draft preview podcast: Take a receiver? Make a trade? Read More »
As Ryan Poles heads into his first draft as Bears general manager on Thursday, he’s thinking big — not big as in making a splash this week, but big picture. There’s no urgency to fill holes on a team that’s almost certainly a year or more away from competing.
He is urging discipline when it comes to prioritizing his long-term plan for the Bears, and that was evident as he restrained himself in free agency as well as his apparent disinterest in trading for a wide receiver like the 49ers’ Deebo Samuel. If Poles gets this draft right, he can find his own version of Samuel at a fraction of the cost and his grand ideas in play for 2023 and beyond.
“I truly believe in homegrown talent,” Poles said. “I truly believe in drafting the right players and developing them here, and that will help us in the long run.
“It’s being disciplined in both keeping draft capital to draft the right players and develop them, as well as the financial commitment. There’s consequences for all of those actions.”
When Poles took the job, he held a second- and third-round pick, then two fifths and a sixth. That’s not much help to fix a team rife with deficiencies. He traded Khalil Mack to add another second-rounder, so the Bears are scheduled to pick at Nos. 39, 48 and 71 on Friday.
There are significant needs at cornerback, wide receiver and on the offensive line.
It’s highly unlikely Poles will trade up into the first round Thursday, instead saying he’d “be in the business [of] moving back and trying to create more [picks],” if the right offers present themselves.
As he worked to ensure that he gets this right, Poles had to blend his philosophy with the scouting staff he inherited. If he wants to make changes in that department, he’ll do it after the draft.
One new approach he tried was anonymity. In the process of finalizing the team’s draft rankings, Poles put scenarios up on the video screen and had his scouts vote for a selection with their cell phones in order to take self-consciousness out of the equation.
“You just want to remove groupthink,” he said. “If I polled everyone and you had to raise your hand, sometimes you look around. It just removes that… I put [the results] on the screen and you could hear the oohs and ahhs. It was a really cool exercise.”
He also tested his staff by running simulations of the draft to see who they’d pick based on who was available at those spots and had someone call in with various trade proposals.
Once he’d gone through all that, Poles was essentially done. He had a meeting scheduled Tuesday and then planned to step away ranking and analyzing until it was time to make some actual picks.
“You can talk yourself into anything at this point, he said. “That’s why I’m notovercookingthis board. I’m taking a step back. Sometimes you keep staring at it and you keep sliding guys around and doing crazy stuff.”
There’s no margin for crazy stuff. The Bears have too many problems and too few picks for that.
GM Ryan Poles brings fresh approach to Bears heading into first NFL Draft Read More »
Seemingly everyone in Chicago is down on the Sox right now, and with good reason. But let me tell you about the 1962 expansion New York Mets. The brand new Metropolitans started the inaugural season by losing their first nine games. After that, well it kind of went downhill.
To the National League fans in New York, who were still seething after the Giants and Dodgers abruptly left for California following the 1957 season, the Mets were a welcome sight indeed. They were losers but they were loveable ones. Almost 1 million fans packed into the old Polo Grounds that first season.
Those original Mets were made up of popular but aging stars like Gil Hodges, Gus Bell, and Richie Ashburn, and young castoffs from other teams. But if one player could symbolize this team’s strangely wonderful ineptitude, it was Marv Throneberry.
The 28-year-old former Yankee was known for making incredible physical and mental mistakes. Throneberry once hit a triple but was called out for missing first base. When Manager Casey Stengel came out to argue the ump stopped him in his tracks: “I hate to break it to you Casey, but he missed second too.”
Throneberry quickly became a fan favorite while not quite earning his nickname, “Marvelous Marv.” Never has such a bad baseball player and/or team been so beloved by so many. With a record that first year of 40-120, they are forever immortalized in the annals of baseball lore for having the worst single season record in modern baseball history.
And so, White Sox fans, take heart. And rest assured the south siders will win at least 41 games (lol). We hope.
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Don’t Fret Chicago The White Sox Are Not Yet The ’62 Mets Read More »
I’m not big on cemeteries. I’m sure it has everything to do with my feelings about death. I admit I don’t understand it. I’m not ready for it. The whole idea of it scares me to ….well…death. A cemetery is just a stark reminder of all of those things.
My father died in 1982. Forty years ago. Shortly after his death, I moved to California. I lived there for close to fifteen years. Each time I returned to Chicago for a visit, there didn’t seem to be time or a reason to head to the cemetery. I was fine with that.
When my family moved back into the area, I didn’t feel any urgency to go there. A few years later, when my wife and daughters were out of town for a weekend, I thought it might be a good time to pay my dad a visit. I didn’t tell anyone; I just went.
It wasn’t so bad until I accidentally found the grave of one of my cousins. She died when she was only fourteen. Leukemia. It shook me up more than a little. I decided it would be my last visit for a while.
A few years later my family thought going to the cemetery would be a good way to spend Father’s Day. My mother had died since my last visit and they wanted to visit. Plus, they had never seen my dad’s grave and were kind of…okay…more than kind of pissed off that I had gone before without them. This way they visit both at the same time. I told them that I felt going to brunch was a better Father’s Day activity. I was outvoted.
Again, seeing my parent’s graves was fine. However, as we were leaving we ran into one of my oldest daughter’s former teachers. When I asked why she was there, she told me she came every Sunday. She cleans up the grave and has a talk with her daughter, who also died of Leukemia at a young age.
That was enough for me. As I walked away with tears in my eyes, I made a vow to myself that I wasn’t returning. I pretty much kept that vow. Yeah, there was an occasional trip for a funeral, but on those occasions, I was in and out of the facility as fast as possible.
But that changed on Tuesday. I mentioned earlier that it was forty years since the death of my father. That milestone was yesterday. I took it as a sign that I should visit the cemetery. It was time. It was past time. Way past time.
At noon, I started the journey. It took only fifteen minutes to arrive at the destination. My first stop was the main office. I needed directions to my parent’s graves.
When someone came to the front desk to help me, her first question was who was I looking for? After I told her, she looked up my father’s name on her computer. After finding it, she looked at me and said, “Boy, he’s been dead for a long time.” How f’ing comforting.
She followed up with what seemed to be convoluted directions to their graves. I was starting to rethink the entire thing. I got back in the car and in less than one minute I reached the gravesite. Okay…there’s another sign. This may not be as bad as I thought.
When I decided to do this my plan was to have a chat with my parents. I was going to catch them up on everything that had occurred over the last ten or so years. Plans change. I looked at their headstone for a couple of minutes and decided to move on. But, I wasn’t quite ready to leave.
I started to look around and noticed how pretty the grounds were. Lots of green grass with plenty of trees and bushes. It gave me a sense of peace and serenity in a location that usually fills me with doom and anxiety. I then decided to take a walk and check out some of the other graves. If the woman at the office thought my dad had been gone a long time, I could only imagine what she would have to say about those who had died fifty and sixty years ago. There were plenty of those.
I also wondered what she would say about the final stone. Someone named Debbie. She was born in 1957. She died in 1977. Debbie was only twenty years old. Damn. There’s always one.
Before leaving, I took one last look at my parent’s stone. It looked fairly dirty. I ran my shoe over it and dried mud started to come off. I was thinking about how to clean it but I didn’t have any supplies. It was also too cold. As I left I thought I should come back and do that. I am going to come back and clean it. Sooner than later.
I was calm and at peace when I was making those plans. These plans aren’t going to change.
Related Post: On the fortieth anniversary of my father’s death, there’s still room for gratitude
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Every five years or so I decide to update this section. I can’t believe I’ve been doing this for close to ten years. The last time I did this I was close to sixty years old. Now I’m just a few months away from the big 7-ZERO. Scary AF!!! I’m pretty sure I won’t be doing an update when I hit 80, but you never know. But until then, lets just be grateful.
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I found some surprising peace and serenity at the cemetery Read More »
In a dimly lit and sparsely populated health club, a bearded man in sweats and over-the-ear headphones grinds it out on a treadmill that’s facing the parking lot. A hooded figure emerges from the pounding rain and the murky night, steadily approaching the window and pulling out a gun with a silencer–and just like that, the running man is a dead man, crumpled up on the gym floor.
It’s a scene of elegantly constructed, final violence, and it’s one of the many moments when the taut revenge thriller “Memory” proves to be a little more elevated than just another B-movie actioner starring the nearly 70-year-old Liam Neeson, who can still cut to the chase with a sharp line reading and still take down cocky henchmen half his age in hand-to-hand combat. (When will these henchmen ever learn!)
In the 14 years since the first “Taken” movie with Neeson as retired CIA operative Bryan Mills telling his daughter’s captors about his “very particular set of skills,” cementing Neeson’s status as an all-time Action Movie Icon, the great Irish thespian has appeared in close to 50 films, alternating between prestige projects and often entertaining but fairly disposable action fare. Not a year goes by where we don’t see another poster with a steely-eyed Neeson wielding a gun, with slogans such as:
TAKE BACK YOUR LIFE (“Unknown”)NEVER STEAL A MAN’S SECOND CHANCE (“Honest Thief”)JUSTICE COMES DOWN TO HIM (“The Marksman”)LIVES ARE ON THE LINE (“The Commuter”)
‘Memory’
Now comes “Memory,” and the poster tells us “HIS MIND IS FADING. HIS CONSCIENCE IS CLEAR.” At first blush, this might seem to be another in the long assembly line of Neeson actioners–but hold on. Neeson’s co-stars include such first-rate talents as Monica Bellucci, Guy Pearce and Ray Stevenson, the director is the veteran Martin Campbell, who gave us one of the best Bond movies ever in “Casino Royale” (2006), and this is a remake of the 2003 Belgian gem “The Memory of a Killer,” so there are signs indicating this could be something more than another formulaic vehicle.
Those signs are worth heeding.
Leeson’s Alex Lewis is the obligatory Hired Assassin With a Mysterious Past who is struggling with advancing memory loss. After FBI Agent Vincent Serra (Guy Pearce) rescues a 13-year-old immigrant girl named Beatriz (Mia Sanchez) from a sex trafficking ring, the nefarious and powerful crime boss Davana Sealman (Monica Bellucci) orders Alex to wipe out all loose ends that would tie her to the ring–including the young girl. Alex doesn’t hurt children, but he has no qualms about taking out a number of assorted bad guys who are trying to take HIM out. But when Beatriz is murdered, Alex can’t be sure if he’s the one that pulled the trigger. In the meantime, we can’t be sure about the loyalties of Ray Stevenson’s local police detective. It’s a tangled film noir web they’ve weaved!
As Alex’s memory continues to betray him, he strikes up an alliance with Vincent, and it’s a great callback to Christopher Nolan’s “Memento” when Alex scribbles pertinent information on his body, just as Pearce’s Leonard did in that 2000 neo-noir classic. Neeson never phones in his performances, but he’s particularly invested this time around, playing a guy who can be a pure killing machine one moment, and as lost as a child the next. Pearce and Bellucci headline the terrific supporting cast, and the 78-year-old Campbell proves he can still direct the hell out of a slick and engrossing thriller.
‘Memory’ review: Liam Neeson fires off another action movie, and this one hits the mark Read More »
Before the league’s health and safety protocols tapped Zach LaVine out of Game 5 of the first-round playoff series, the Bulls guard was walking a fine line when discussing his left knee issues.
LaVine was doing his best to downplay the severity of the pain he’s been dealing with, but at the same time reminding everyone that the player everyone was seeing at the start of this season was not the same player on either side of the ball by the end.
Not easy to do considering what’s at stake for LaVine this offseason, as he walks into unrestricted free agency and his expected first huge pay day.
Maybe that’s why LaVine wasn’t completely transparent with the injury.
Back in early March, LaVine was discussing the severity of the discomfort and said, “me at 80%, 70%, whatever it is, I’m still one of the best players in the NBA and damn sure one of the best players on the court when we play.”
According to a source close to the situation, however, LaVine’s knee was “more like 50% and that’s on a good day.”
The source also said the maintenance of the knee the past few months was an all-day ordeal, and that there would have been a good number of All-Star-type players that would have shut it down for the season with all LaVine had to deal with.
And while LaVine wouldn’t come out and say for sure he was headed for off-season surgery — likely a scope — the source said he will in fact have surgery almost immediately this offseason. One scenario that had been ruled out, according to the source, was that the knee was degenerative and LaVine would be dealing with this long-term.
Good news for both the Bulls and LaVine, who by all expectations will sit down at some point together to discuss a max contract to keep LaVine a Bull. That doesn’t mean executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas deems LaVine untouchable from a sign-and-trade if an unexpected deal presents itself, but as of now the two sides seem to be on the same page with the direction of the roster.
The leap of faith the Bulls will be taking in this is that they will be extending the LaVine they watched play last summer with Team USA, and the one they had through December, before the knee really started swelling and giving the guard discomfort.
The numbers on both sides of the ball, especially defensive, tell the story of just how much LaVine was hampered.
While it was only six games in October, LaVine served notice to everyone how serious he was about playing on both ends of the floor, coming out and averaging 25.5 points per game on 48.1% shooting, but more impressively posting a 105.1 defensive rating, according to StatMuse.
The best defensive efficiency rating of LaVine’s career came in the 2019-20 season, when he posted a 110.4, so he was on pace to completely smash that.
By the time the knee started becoming a daily issue at the end of December, however, LaVine’s defense went out the window. In January, the efficiency was 117, by February 119.9, and in his 14 games played in March it was up to 121.5.
Obviously, the schedule was tougher in March, but LaVine’s offensive numbers were also down across the board in the second half.
So is maxing LaVine a dangerous gamble for the Bulls? Not if the LaVine they are investing in is the one they saw in the first few months of the season.
NOTE: Alex Caruso will miss Game 5 of the series, unable to test out of the concussion protocol. Caruso had to leave in the second quarter of Game 4 when he took a blow to the head.
Bulls guard Zach LaVine is headed for knee surgery Read More »