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First-round still cloudy for the Bulls, but here are likely scenarios

Alex Caruso let the media know on Monday, that while his back tightness was still an issue, the guard planned to play against Milwaukee.

Good thing, because with just four games left in the regular season and so much uncertainty with what the playoffs will look like for the Bulls, it’s all hands on deck.

With everyone idle for the NCAA Championship Game, and a complete meltdown from Miami very unlikely at this point, here are the three most logical matchups for the Bulls in Round 1 as it stood going into this last week:

Philadelphia 76ers

Games Left: Four (at Indiana, at Toronto, Indiana, Detroit)

Where They Stand: Philadelphia is the team that currently matches up with the Bulls in the first-round No. 4 vs. No. 5. The 76ers, however, also have the easiest schedule left in the Eastern Conference, so their seeding could change.

How It Went: Philadelphia swept the Bulls in all four meetings in the regular season, beating them by an average of 10 points. The closest game was the first meeting, in which the Bulls lost by five in the “City of Brotherly Love.”

Concerns for the Bulls: MVP-candidate Joel Embiid has owned the Bulls throughout his career, never losing in 11 previous meetings. This season alone, he’s averaged 32.8 points, 12.3 rebounds and 1.8 blocks, while shooting 52.9% from the field and 47.1% from three. The addition of Tristan Thompson was supposed to help the Bulls have another body to throw at Embiid, but the big man put up 43 against Thompson back in March, and has always dominated him.

The Bulls Can Win If: James Harden has a history of disappearing in the playoffs, but that still doesn’t give the Bulls any answer for Embiid. The other issue is Nikola Vucevic’s offense obviously goes stagnant against Embiid. Vucevic missed one of the games, but still only shot 36.6% from the field. DeMar DeRozan and Zach LaVine have scored the ball well in the four games, but need help. Vucevic would have to make Embiid work on the defensive end for any chance.

Milwaukee Bucks

Games Left: Four (at Chicago, Boston, at Detroit, at Cleveland)

Where They Stand: The Bucks own the tie-breaker with the 76ers. Realistically, however, the first round meeting for the Bulls could be their division rivals from the Central just based on the remaining schedule.

How It Went: The Bulls were actually competitive in two of the first three meetings, and still have a crack at the defending champions Tuesday at the United Center.

Concerns for the Bulls: The last meeting in Milwaukee was full of concerns for the Bulls, as DeRozan and LaVine were each held to 21 points in the blowout. Milwaukee’s Jrue Holiday is a lockdown defender, able to make life hard for either Bulls All-Star. Meanwhile, Giannis Antetokounmpo averaged 30 and 15 in the three games this season.

The Bulls Can Win If: Forget trying to stop Antetokounmpo. The Bulls don’t have the personnel to do that. It’s about letting him get his, keep him off the offensive glass, and try and slow down everyone else. Holiday has given the Bulls issues in all three games, so it feels like an Alex Caruso mission to slow him down. They also have to make sure Khris Middleton doesn’t get cooking.

Boston Celtics

Games Left: Three (at Chicago, at Milwaukee, at Memphis)

Where They Stand: The Celtics were holding the No. 2 seed down by a half-game, but also have the most difficult schedule left of the three potential Bulls opponents. That included what could be a playoff preview on Wednesday, when Boston comes to the United Center.

How It Went: The Bulls and Celtics split the first two games, with the rubber match this week. The Bulls stunned the Celtics in Boston back on Nov. 1, coming back from a 19-point second-half deficit to win by 14. The second meeting was a two-point Celtics win, but Zach LaVine did not play.

Concerns for the Bulls: No team in the East has been better than Boston since the All-Star Game, especially on the defensive end. The Celtics were a completely different team in the first two meetings, with coach Ime Udoka seemingly figuring out his personnel and how to best utilize it.

The Bulls Can Win If: The Robert Williams III knee injury was huge for Boston on both ends of the floor, but they still have a physical presence in the middle with veteran Al Horfrod and Daniel Theis. Where the Bulls can get Boston, however, is in experience. DeRozan has been to a conference finals, while Caruso has won it all. Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown showed an early-season tendency to live and die from three, so the Bulls can always hope the duo reverts back to that mentality.

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Cubs set top of rotation: Justin Steele to pitch Game 2, Marcus Stroman Game 3

MESA, Ariz. – The Cubs’ first three starters are set for their opening series against the Brewers this week, after manager David Ross announced Monday that lefty Justin Steele would start Game 2 and right-hander Marcus Stroman Game 3.

Ross declined to explain his decision, but it made sense for a couple reasons. Stroman and Kyle Hendricks, the Opening Day starter, are still the leaders of the rotation. But pitching Steele in between Hendricks and Stroman separates the pair of crafty right-handers.

Hendricks and Stroman are also the most built up of any of the Cubs’ starters. So, pitching Steele second gives the Cubs a better idea of how to deploy their bullpen as the weekend progresses.

“It’s something I’ve always wanted to do,” Steele said of making the Opening Day roster. “I’m just a kid living in a dream out here.”

Steele made his major-league debut last April, serving as a reliever early in the year. But he came back in the last couple months of the season as a starter.

“To spend seven years in the minors – so it was a long journey, went to Tommy John surgery, went through some injuries to get to the big leagues, but it just made it all that [much] sweeter when I finally did make it,” he said. “And it’s been really cool to continue the journey.”

Steele posted a 2.70 ERA in Cactus League play this spring and made his last start in a intrasquad scrimmage Monday, opposite Stroman. That schedule lined them up for the second and third games, one pitcher on regular rest and the other with an extra day between starts.

Hendricks is set to take the mound at Wrigley Field on Thursday, followed by Steele on Friday and Stroman on Saturday. Ross has yet to announce Sunday’s starter, for the final game of the opening series. Lefty Drew Smyly and right-hander Alec Mills appear to be up for the spot.

After Ross’ announcement Monday, Stroman celebrated Steele’s start on Twitter with a series of congratulatory emojis.

“I’ll pitch day five, I really don’t care when I pitch,” Stroman said earlier this spring. “I’m going to be out there hopefully for 30-plus starts, and that’s the goal.”

Cubs make cuts

The Cubs made another round of camp cuts on Monday, assigning five non-roster invitees to Triple-A Iowa. Most notably, versatile infielder Ildemaro Vargas was among them.

The move makes first baseman/outfielder Alfonso Rivas the favorite infielder to replace Andrelton Simmons (right shoulder soreness) on the Opening Day roster if the shortstop begins the season on the injured list. Depending on the health of their pitching staff, the Cubs could also choose to carry 14 position players and 14 pitchers, rather than 13 and 15.

The Cubs also assigned right-handers Jonathan Holder and Robert Gsellman, and left-handers Steven Brault and Stephen Gonsalves to Triple-A.

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Barricaded man shot and killed by Chicago police after 2 people wounded, officers fired upon near Ford City Mall

A man was shot and killed by Chicago police Sunday afternoon after firing at officers and critically wounding two people during a chaotic hostage situation near the Ford City Mall on the Southwest Side, officials said.

About 1:15 p.m., officers responded to a call of a person shot in the 4200 block of West Ford City Drive and found a 48-year-old woman suffering from a gunshot wound to the neck, police spokesman Tom Ahern said.

Officers attempted to make contact with the suspected shooter when he barricaded himself inside an apartment, Ahern said. The man then fired at the officers, who weren’t struck and didn’t immediately fire back.

After a SWAT team tried to negotiate with the man and de-escalate the situation, officers shot him, Ahern said. No officers were wounded.

The man was brought to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where he was pronounced dead, Ahern said. He hasn’t been identified.

A 78-year-old man taken hostage suffered a gunshot wound to the shoulder, Ahern said. He and the wounded woman were both taken to Christ Medical Center in critical condition.

A revolver was recovered at the scene, according to Ahern, who posted a photograph of the gun on Twitter.

Officers had been initially called to a domestic disturbance, according to the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, the agency that probes officer shootings.

Officer body-cameras captured the initial interaction between the suspect and responding officers, but the SWAT members did not have body cameras and the fatal shooting was captured only partially by a Chicago police officer’s body worn camera, COPA said.

The officers involved in the shooting will be placed on administrative duties for at least 30 days, per departmental policy.

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Waiver wire: Top finds for final week of NBA seasonon April 4, 2022 at 7:14 pm

Working the waiver wire is pivotal to succeeding in fantasy basketball. With so many games, injuries and endless shifts in rotations throughout the marathon campaign, we’ll need to source stats from free agency to maximize imaginary rosters.

A willingness to entertain competition for the last few spots on your fantasy hoops roster can prove rewarding. When curating this fluid collective of statistical contributors, it helps to consider your end-of-bench players in direct competition with the talent floating in free agency.

The goal of this weekly series is to identify players at each position available in free agency in around a quarter of ESPN leagues. Some nominations are specialists capable of helping in one or two categories, while others deliver more diverse and important statistical offerings. In the breakdowns below, I’ve ordered players at each position with the priority of acquisition in mind, rather than roster percentage in ESPN leagues.

Point Guard

Davion Mitchell, Sacramento Kings (Rostered in 44.2% of ESPN leagues):In the final edition of this column for the season, it’s fitting to tout one of the league-winning free agent forces of the fantasy campaign. Mitchell came on strong immediately in the wake of injuries to De’Aaron Fox and Domantas Sabonis and even when his shot isn’t falling, there’s elite passing production and ball-hawking defensive rates. Theo Maledon is an alternative to Mitchell for those in deeper leagues. Maledon has similarly assumed a huge leap in offensive responsibilities for the Thunder with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander out.

Alec Burks, New York Knicks, (33.2%): Burks is a force on the glass even from the backcourt, ranking 48th in the NBA in defensive rebounds. Burks has slashed for 16.6 PPG, 6.6 RPG, and 3.3 APG, to go with 3.4 3PM over his past seven games, all starts. We know that Tom Thibodeau likes to ride with his trusted vets and Burks absolutely qualifies as a high-minute cog in New York’s rotation.

Killian Hayes, Detroit Pistons (40.6%): Hayes is finally flashing some fantasy value and has been empowered with Cade Cunningham and Jerami Grant ailing. Even if Cunningham returns soon, Hayes has enough creation duties in Detroit to help those in 12-team leagues over the final days of the season.

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Shooting Guard

Donte DiVincenzo, Sacramento Kings (37.9%): DiVincenzo has been flying under the radar in most formats, providing a versatile collection of numbers lately. He has produced 13.3 PPG and 10 combined assists and rebounds per game with volume from beyond the arc and one of the better steal rates available.

Malik Monk has taken over scoring production for the Lakers with LeBron James and Anthony Davis out. Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

Malik Monk, Los Angeles Lakers (32.4%) Monk’s revival season has him on pace to become one of just four Lakers ever to hit at least 39% from 3-point range on at least five shots from beyond the arc per game, joining Jodie Meeks, Nick Young, and Glen Rice. Monk has been one of the rare bright spots for Los Angeles this season and has averaged nearly 19 points over his last six games.

Small Forward

Aaron Gordon, Denver Nuggets (57.8%):Gordon has thrived as a complementary scorer next to reigning MVP Nikola Jokic. He has averaged 20 points and nearly 10 combined rebounds and assists over his past six games. You can be confident Gordon plays heavy minutes down the stretch on a Nuggets roster that relies heavily on his defensive versatility,.

Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Washington Wizards (23.7%): Caldwell-Pope has thrived amid Kyle Kuzma’s injury and has posted 23.8 PPG over his past five games. KCP is one of the better wings to target for this final week on a roster light on scoring production. Matisse Thybulle leads the NBA in steal percentage and ranks in the top 20 in block percentage for those in deeper leagues or chasing stocks in a roto format.

Power Forward

Drew Eubanks, Portland Trail Blazers (35.5%): Eubanks cleaning the glass and proving competent offense has been the main constant for a struggling Trail Blazers team. As the wings and guards around him change due to injuries, Eubanks will have plenty of evaluation opportunities playing heavy minutes for Portland this week.

Aleksej Pokusevski, Oklahoma City Thunder (9.4%): Pokusevski is an elite pickup to consider in all leagues fresh off an impressive first-career triple-double over the Suns. The Thunder have shut down several key starters already, supporting heavy usage for this unique talent.

2 Related

Center

Andre Drummond, Brooklyn Nets (59.6%): It’s hard to imagine there’s a stronger rebounding force this widely available, as Drummond has pulled 12.6 boards per game the last five games to go with two steals and one block per contest. With Brooklyn relying on him down low, Drummond remains a rewarding option. If Drummond is already rostered, look to Sacramento’s Damian Jones or Cleveland’s Moses Brown, as both are playing tons of minutes and producing in return.

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Blackhawks interested in re-signing Sam Lafferty, who would ‘love to come back’

Sam Lafferty, a pending unrestricted free agent, is likely to stay with the Blackhawks this summer.

Both Hawks general manager Kyle Davidson and Lafferty himself sound eager to work out a new contract.

Said Davidson on Friday: “I think he can [fit into our future], for sure. He has been great. He has really impressed and fit in, and his style of play is endearing. It’s not dissimilar to the [Brandon] Hagel discussion, that that style of play is admired and coveted around the league. And so, as a UFA, he’s got the right to explore if he wishes. But I’d say we’d be interested in bringing Sam back.”

And said Lafferty on Sunday: “I’d love to come back. I love it here. It’s a really good fit. I love the city. I love the team, the organization — everything.”

The 27-year-old forward is currently finishing up a two-year contract with a $750,000 salary cap hit that he signed with the Penguins in 2020.

This will be his first time as a UFA –“I’m new to this,” he admitted Friday –and he hasn’t decided yet what length of term he’d prefer. He plans to leave most of the work to his agent, Pete Rutili. But he should be fairly affordable to re-sign regardless.

After all, he’d fallen out of favor with the Penguins and was acquirable just three months ago for the low cost of Alex Nylander, who has not yet made a single NHL appearance in Pittsburgh (he has tallied 23 points in 35 games for their AHL affiliate). Lafferty’s on-paper production — nine points in 44 games this season, including seven in 34 for the Hawks — is hardly eye-catching, either.

But his work ethic, forechecking ability and surprising deceptiveness have all stood out beyond the statistics, and he lately seems to make at least one beautiful play slicing through the opposing defense every game.

He’s a clearly underrated player with the potential for a breakout next season, which is exactly what the Hawks should be looking for at this early stage of their rebuild.

“I’m getting more comfortable in certain areas, like holding onto the puck a little longer,” he said. “My offensive game is growing. There’s a need here for that, and I hope to be able to build [on that] and help the team that way.”

He’s the most likely to return among the Hawks’ small UFA class, which also includes Calvin de Haan, Erik Gustafsson, Kevin Lankinen, Collin Delia and Kurtis Gabriel. Outside of possibly the two goalies, Lankinen and Delia, it’d be very surprising to see any of the others re-signed.

Meanwhile, the Hawks’ restricted free agent class –composed of Dylan Strome, Dominik Kubalik, Kirby Dach, Philipp Kurashev, Reese Johnson and Caleb Jones on the NHL roster, plus four more (including Wyatt Kalynuk) in the AHL –is far more interesting.

Strome, Kubalik, Johnson and Jones hold arbitration rights, which gives them additional leverage and will make Davidson a bit more wary of extending them qualifying offers. The arbitration angle of this –something that notably didn’t apply to Strome and Kubalik in 2020, the last time they were RFAs –is indeed not to be overlooked.

“It’s a really complicated thing when players have salary arbitration and [we have to guess] what that [salary award] number might look like,” Davidson said about Kubalik specifically. “And it’s even more complicated when that contract year was maybe not what it has been in the past.

“We’ll get into that with their agent and see where things land and try to determine if that fits the [Hawks’ preferred] financial structure.”

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White Sox tap Lucas Giolito, Dylan Cease, Michael Kopech to open season

GLENDALE, Ariz. — As expected, Lucas Giolito was named the White Sox starter for Opening Day Friday in Detroit. Sox manager Tony La Russa also said Monday that Dylan Cease will start the second game and Michael Kopech will start the third game of the season.

Lance Lynn, who would have been La Russa’s choice to start Friday, is having surgery on his right knee Tuesday and will be out at least eight weeks.

It will be Giolito’s third consecutive Opening Day start.

The Sox open at home next Tuesday against the Mariners after an off day. La Russa wouldn’t go deeper into naming his starters past the weekend, saying only that Dallas Keuchel would get the fourth or fifth game of the season. Giolito could pitch the fifth game on four days rest, but pushing starters early in the season seems unnecessary.

Vince Velasquez, who starts against the Cubs today in the second to last Cactus League game, is a possibility, as is Reynaldo Lopez. But those two might be needed in relief with Kopech not expected to go deep in his first start. Kopech starts the Cactus League finale Tuesday but is slated for only three innings in his second start.

La Russa didn’t rule out using Kopech in relief in the first two games.

“We’re going to be very open minded,” La Russa said. “It’s a very different first two months for a lot of reasons.

“All hands on deck that first weekend.”

The three and a half week spring training means most pitchers go into the season with lighter buildups to the regular season than usual.

Giolito will be equipped to throw 90 pitches, although he’s an exception.

“The most important thing, the work he did to get ready for this camp has really been impressive,” La Russa said. “He came in ready to pitch. That’s what you look for at the top of the rotation. Lance did the same thing. They came in ready, they’re accountable, it’s classic stuff.”

Lynn felt a pop and burning sensation throwing a pitch Saturday night in a game against the Diamondbacks.

On Sunday, the Sox announced that Lynn has a partial tear in a tendon in his right knee. He was on the injured list last September with right knee inflammation.

“You look at what I was dealing with at the end of last year, it’s in the exact same spot,” Lynn said Monday. “Sounds like it was going to go eventually anyways. Better now than at the end of the season and I’ll be ready for the playoffs.

“If we play our cards right, we can get back in the middle of season and make a run.”

Hopefully I should be ready in June or so if everything goes perfect.”

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White Sox’ Lance Lynn to have knee surgery; Lucas Giolito named Opening Day starter

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Lance Lynn was the likely candidate to be the White Sox’ Opening Day starter, but Lynn’s first start will have to wait about two months, the team learned Sunday.

Instead, Lucas Giolito will take the mound on Opening Day Friday in Detroit.

Lynn has a minor tear in a tendon in his right knee and will have a 30-minute procedure done Tuesday in Chicago that will keep him off a mound for about four weeks. He’ll need another four weeks to build up strength after that, the big blow coming a week before the season opener in Detroit to a team with World Series aspirations.

Manager Tony La Russa named Giolito the season-opening starter on Monday. This will be Giolito’s third consecutive Opening Day start. Dylan Cease and Michael Kopech will start the weekend games against the Tigers.

Reynaldo Lopez and Vince Velasquez will be asked to step up in a combination of starting and long-relief roles to shoulder some of the burden.

“Obviously, it’s unfortunate that we have to spend the first several weeks without Lance,” general manager Rick Hahn said. “It’s an opportunity for some of the other arms we’ll be carrying with the expanded roster to fill some of that void.

“It’s part of the game. We have a very deep and talented roster.”

La Russa said he had two Opening Day options in Lynn and Giolito but also said he knew who would start. Most indications pointed to Lynn. He also will be without prized lefty reliever Garrett Crochet, who is having Tommy John surgery Tuesday.

“It’s kind of the same as last year,” Giolito said of a team that lost Eloy Jimenez to a pectoral tear in spring training. “After we found out about Garrett, Tony addressed the clubhouse much in the same vein as Eloy last year. It always sucks, but that’s just how the game goes sometimes. And so the focus is on the here and now. We have a very good team. We have depth despite losing key players. So we just keep pushing forward, and we know that we are really good with what we have.”

Hopping on his left leg, limping toward the dugout and bending forward with both hands on his thighs, Lynn exited his last Cactus League start Saturday night against the Diamondbacks after 3,, innings and 79 pitches.

“I think he just landed wrong,” La Russa said. “Or it seemed like it.”

“This was the first time whatever was apparently ailing him gave and led to a tear,” Hahn said.

After the season, Hahn said Lynn “got treatment, and it was addressed various ways. And again, there was no tear at the time, so a surgical procedure wasn’t called for until this happened.”

With a shortened spring leading to the season, and with Kopech having only a two-inning start under his belt, the Sox — like all 30 teams — already faced concerns about pitching manpower with innings limits. Lynn’s injury only complicates matters and heightens the importance of Velasquez and Lopez as “backup” starters behind Giolito, Cease, Kopech and Dallas Keuchel.

The Sox have a heavy American League Central slate of games in April and May and play the Rays, Red Sox, Yankees and Cubs outside the division.

“All morning long, we’ve been talking about ‘what-ifs’ and how we would cover, and I just think that the priority is going to be the series you are playing,” La Russa said Sunday morning, uncertain at the moment of the severity of Lynn’s injury.

Starters are not expected to go much past four, five or six innings depending on pitch counts, La Russa said.

“It might rain tomorrow, snow the next day,” he said. “So we are going to ‘what-if,’ but the priority will be the first three games against Detroit.”

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Chicago Bulls bolster roster by finally calling up Marko SimonovicRyan Heckmanon April 4, 2022 at 3:00 pm

At the moment, the Chicago Bulls are in the midst of a fiercely competitive playoff positioning battle in the Eastern Conference.

Sitting at the fifth seed, the Bulls have the opportunity to avoid the play-in tournament on Tuesday, should they beat the Milwaukee Bucks or the Cleveland Cavaliers lose to the Orlando Magic.

As the Bulls prep for a playoff run, they are finalizing their roster by bolstering their depth in a certain area.

On Sunday evening, the Bulls finally chose to recall big man Marko Simonovic from the Windy City Bulls of the G League. Simonovic, a second-round pick back in 2020, has hardly played in his first two years with the franchise.

Marko Simonovic gives the Bulls a versatile option in their front court going into the playoffs.

Roster Update: We have recalled C Marko Simonovic from the @WindyCityBulls. pic.twitter.com/dozjdN7Jpy

— Chicago Bulls (@chicagobulls) April 3, 2022

This season, with the Windy City Bulls, Simonovic has averaged 17.0 points on 53 percent shooting, including 27 percent from three-point range. He’s also averaged 9.8 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 0.8 steals per game.

Simonovic dressed for nine games earlier in the season when the Bulls were ravaged by injuries, but only played roughly four minutes on average. Now, he’ll get the chance to help the Bulls as they make a push for Eastern Conference supremacy once again, just as they did early on in the season.

Although he may not play a whole lot, Simonovic could be a better bench option than Tony Bradley, who doesn’t offer much offensively and has been very soft on the defensive end this season.

Simonovic gives the Bulls a pick-and-pop shooting option who has range as far out as 18-20 feet and can occasionally knock down the three. He’s also accustomed to performing well in the pick-and-roll.

For the Bulls, they need an extra scoring option in their front court. As Patrick Williams gets adjusted, the Bulls’ only real offensive option in their front court is Nikola Vucevic. Should Simonovic get his opportunity, he could provide some scoring relief off the bench.

We’ll see if he gets any significant playing time in the near future, but for now, he will at least give the Bulls some insurance going forward.

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Chicago Bulls bolster roster by finally calling up Marko SimonovicRyan Heckmanon April 4, 2022 at 3:00 pm Read More »

5 moves Ryan Poles can make to turn around the Chicago Bears offseasonRyan Heckmanon April 4, 2022 at 2:00 pm

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Chicago Bears (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

To say that this first NFL offseason has gone well for Chicago Bears general manager Ryan Poles would mean that someone truly understands his strategy and gives him the benefit of the doubt.

Poles has been extremely patient, to the point where it almost hurts from the fans’ perspectives. Sure, Poles’ desire is to be able to have a lot of freedom when the 2023 offseason rolls around and the Bears are currently set to have over $100 million in cap space.

But, some fans feel as though Poles has not done anything to surround franchise quarterback Justin Fields with enough talent to take a second-year leap.

Bringing in a decent, starting-quality center was a strong move. Lucas Patrick is a good football player. Even signing Byron Pringle was an above-average move, as he’s a quality slot receiver. But, are these two moves enough to help Fields take that jump?

There is plenty of time left for Chicago Bears general manager Ryan Poles to turn this offseason around.

While a lot of the bigger offensive free agents have been signed, and the Bears seem to be left with the picked-over pile remaining, Poles does have some options moving forward.

Let’s set the scene, first. The Bears have three locked-in starters on the offensive line. They have a clear need at either their wide receiver one or two, depending on how you view Darnell Mooney. Now, whether they go after those needs with remaining players in free agency or via the 2022 NFL Draft is another story.

Those are the clear needs remaining if Poles wants to give Fields everything he possibly can in order to develop at the highest rate in year two. If we’re focusing mostly on the offensive side of the ball, Poles still has five moves he can make in order to make this Bears offseason a real success.

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Young girl among four hurt in South Austin apartment fire

A young girl was among four hurt in a fire Monday morning in South Austin on the West Side.

Police and fire crews responded to the blaze on the first floor of an apartment complex in the 500 block of North Central Avenue just after midnight, Chicago police said.

The girl suffered burns and was taken to Stroger Hospital, where she was in “grave” condition, according to officials. Fire officials said the girl was 3, while police said she was 3 to 5.

A 53-year-old man was taken to West Suburban Hospital for smoke inhalation and was listed in fair condition, police said.

A woman, 83, suffered smoke inhalation and was taken to Loyola University Medical Center, where she was in serious condition, officials said.

A 57-year-old woman was taken to the same hospital for burns, authorities said. She was also listed in serious condition.

Further details weren’t immediately available.

A little over an hour later, an elderly man was hospitalized after a fire about five miles southeast inside a Lawndale house on the West Side.

Someone smelled smoke from inside of the home in the1800 block of South Hamlin Avenueabout 1:30 a.m., police said.

Everyone inside made it out of the home and a man, 73, was taken to an area hospital as a precaution due to smoke inhalation, police said. He was listed in fair condition, officials said.

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