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Nikola Vucevic’s Bulls teammates need to continue remembering his value

At 6-foot-10, 260 pounds, Nikola Vucevic should be very hard to miss.

Should be.

Even when he’s working next to the other frontcourt players on the Bulls roster in practices and shootarounds, Vucevic carries a different appearance. More mass, more presence. The type of body that screams, “Dang right I shop at the Big & Tall Store!”

It’s about time his teammates started noticing that.

“We’re just trying to do a better job playing through Vooch,” veteran DeMar DeRozan said after the team’s latest win. “Especially with me and Zach [LaVine] getting pressured so much. Once [Vucevic] gets going, it makes everybody else’s job easier.”

Kind of the point Vucevic has been insisting all season long.

Even in scoring 27 points against the Wizards on Tuesday, there were at least five instances where Vucevic either got cross-matched with a smaller defender or had a defender sealed, and was ignored.

He could have easily finished that game with close to 40.

But this has been an on-going storyline throughout most of the season, and especially since the Memphis loss in late February, where veteran Tristan Thompson pointed out as the game in which the Grizzlies had success with a defensive blueprint to beat the Bulls, and sent the video out to the rest of the league.

True? Conspiracy theory? Who knows?

At times it’s Tristan’s world and everybody else is just visiting.

“I don’t need to take shots, but I think I can make everyone’s life easier if I get touches,” Vucevic told the Sun-Times last week.

He’s not wrong.

The Bulls will enter Thursday’s game with the Los Angeles Clippers with a .579 winning percentage on the season. In the 30 games in which Vucevic took 17 or more shots the Bulls were 20-10 (.666). In the 28 games in which the 31-year-old handed out four assists or more the record was 19-9 (.678).

Coincidence?

Maybe.

In the last six games against teams with a winning percentage of .600 or higher, however, only once did Vucevic get 17 or more shot attempts – the Memphis loss – and the Bulls lost all six.

“You have to make a decision on how you are going to guard us,” DeRozan said. “Vooch is capable of making plays, shots, shooting threes, mid-range; teams have to make a decision. It’s a tough cover.”

That’s why come playoff time, there might not be a player more important than Vucevic, especially with the way DeRozan and LaVine will be guarded in the postseason. Now, if only the rest of the team would start realizing it.

No matter who the Bulls draw in the first-round of the playoffs, whether it’s Boston, Miami, Philadelphia or Milwaukee, they all have defensive-minded wings to throw at LaVine and DeRozan to try and make life difficult on the two All-Stars.

They also have bigs that will try and play Vucevic with some physicality. Even with Boston losing Robert Williams III with a knee injury, they still have Al Horford and Daniel Theis. But what makes Vucevic different is his ability to hit threes, and oh by the way, he’s done at a 50% clip the last six games (11-for-22).

“I know when I play one-on-one I’m usually able to score against a lot of guys,” Vucevic said. “And if they start double-teaming me, it opens up a lot for us playing inside-out, which is important. You have to play inside-out in this league. You can’t just hang on the perimeter. That’s sometimes something we struggle with and our offense gets stagnant.

“I was able to attack [against the Wizards] and most important we got the win.”

Hopefully, a game-plan Vucevic’s teammates don’t forget.

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Blanca Burns bursts open NBA doors as first Mexican-born female NBA official but keeps eyes on global objectiveson March 30, 2022 at 3:49 pm

Blanca Burns worked her first game as an NBA referee earlier this season, a clash between the Utah Jazz and San Antonio Spurs on Dec. 27. Before the night was over, she found herself on the receiving end of several loud complaints from legendary Spurs coach Gregg Popovich.

For Burns, that potentially intimidating moment was offset by plenty of experience dealing with far more menacing nitpickers: parents of middle school athletes.

“They’re pretty fierce and they don’t hold back,” Burns told ESPN. “Putting myself in those intense situations at the lower levels [has helped in the NBA].”

The first Mexican-born female referee to officiate an NBA game, Burns understandably wants to go down in history as a solid pro. She also wants to officiate at the Olympic Games, fulfilling a lifelong dream of representing Mexico at the international level. However, she believes her ultimate legacy lies in being a trailblazer who can inspire the next generation, and hopefully, bring more Latin American women into the fold.

Burns’ own obsession with the game can be traced to her native Torreon, in the northern Mexico state of Coahuila. After her family moved to El Paso, Texas, then, Oklahoma, it only grew stronger.

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“Ever since I was a little girl, I always had a basketball in my hand,” Burns said. “I played the game at every level in school.”

Her talent eventually took her to Mid-America Christian University in Oklahoma City, where she played two seasons of NAIA ball as a point guard. Later, as a way to make ends meet during her time in college, she began working games featuring preschoolers at her local YMCA in Oklahoma City. At 25 dollars a pop, Burns often worked four games a day to earn an even hundred.

As Burns began moving up the ranks as a referee, her focus eventually shifted from playing to officiating. Since 2018, she’s balanced NCAA commitments with regular officiating duties in the G League and earned her first NBA assignment this season.

Through her first handful of games, Burns has already received high-profile assignments featuring some of the league’s biggest stars. Two nights after her debut in San Antonio, Burns was part of the crew calling the game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Memphis Grizzlies. Though refs are expected to be stoic, Burns was not above relishing the moment, even if she did so internally.

“You see LeBron [James] and Ja [Morant] there, and to actually be on the court with them — it’s something I’m never going to forget,” Burns said. “At the same time, you realize you’re there to do a job, so you check your emotions.”

Naturally, Burns’ next goal is to become a regular NBA referee.

Blanca Burns got an earful from Spurs coach Gregg Popovich during her NBA officiating debut in December, but she’s handled much tougher critics at lower levels of the game. Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images

This season, she is listed as one of nine part-time officials who also have responsibilities in the G League. Within its group of 75 full-time officials working the 2021-22 season, the NBA lists six women, the highest number in league history: Lauren Holtkamp-Sterling, Ashley Moyer-Gleich, Simone Jelks, Natalie Sago, Jenna Schroeder and Danielle Scott.

According to the NBA, 42% of G League referees are women. Thus, it won’t be any surprise to those watching closely when more women show up to call NBA games in the near future.

“It does take time to develop officials,” said Monty McCutchen, the NBA’s senior vice president, head of referee development and training, in an interview with NBA.com. “So my predecessors recognized this and put those seeds into the G League. Now, we’re bearing the fruit of this.”

The added presence of female officials at NBA games is consistent with the expanded role women in general are having in other areas of the league.

During Burns’ debut assignment in San Antonio, Becky Hammon — the WNBA’s Las Vegas Aces head coach who is also a Spurs assistant — sat at the front of the bench alongside Popovich, while analyst Holly Rowe (who works for ESPN as well as the Jazz) called the action on television.

“I would just say the NBA has done a great job of putting us out there. If that continues to happen, people won’t be surprised by seeing women as referees,” Burns said. “I can do just as good a job as a man can.”

The NBA’s efforts to expand into Mexico and the whole of Latin America could be an important tool to help Burns reach her goal of full-time status in the short-term. During the NBA’s last visit in 2019, commissioner Adam Silver announced the Mexico City Capitanes would become the first G League franchise to set up shop outside of the United States and Canada. The team made its debut in 2021.

Wednesday, March 30
Heat at Celtics, 7:30 p.m.
Suns at Warriors, 10 p.m.

Sunday, April 3
Mavs at Bucks, 1 p.m. (ABC)
Nuggets at Lakers, 3:30 p.m. (ABC)

All times Eastern

“That would be the dream, for sure. When the Capitanes came in, I told my family members in Mexico City all about it. After COVID, they’re ready to go to games. That would be awesome,” Burns said.

In the meantime, Burns is dedicated to putting herself out there as much as she can to ensure the next basketball-crazed young girl can trace a path to the highest echelons of pro basketball — even if it means taking the road less traveled.

“I try to go to summer camps and reach out to girls at the high school level and tell them it’s possible for women to do this,” Burns said.

“I need to continue giving myself exposure, so that they say ‘Oh my gosh, if she did it — I can do it.'”

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Blanca Burns bursts open NBA doors as first Mexican-born female NBA official but keeps eyes on global objectiveson March 30, 2022 at 3:49 pm Read More »

Gunfire strikes South Side grade school, man seriously wounded outside

A man was seriously wounded by gunfire Tuesday afternoon that also struck a South Side grade school, police said.

Several gunshots rang out around 2:20 p.m. in the 4300 block of South Princeton Avenue, striking Thomas A. Hendricks Community Academy, police said.

A bullet struck a window and entered a classroom, police said. No one inside was injured.

A half hour later, a 24-year-old showed up at Saint Bernard Hospital with a gunshot wound to his chest, police said. He was listed in serious condition.

Police reported no arrests.

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Thriving with multiple sclerosis: Chris Wright’s remarkable hoops journeyon March 30, 2022 at 12:50 pm

IT’S JUST AFTER THANKSGIVING and former Georgetown University point guard Chris Wright, 32, is inside an Italian gym, picking up his kids from an after-school program. He hunts for some quiet to tell his life story, but squeaks of sneakers and yelps ricochet around us. His daughter vies for his attention, to which Wright patiently says, “Sit here, sweetie.”

Quiet is a monumental pursuit for a father of three, implausible when compounded by the grueling schedule of a professional basketball player. Wright stars for Derthona Basket, in one of the world’s best non-NBA leagues, in an Italian wine township at the foot of the Alps. He’s halfway around the world from Bowie, Maryland, where his basketball journey began, eventually leading him to Georgetown, Europe and the NBA.

He discovers a backroom, shelter from the noisy schoolchildren. Wright takes a deep breath, adjusts the camera, and shares the moment where that journey was nearly derailed 10 years ago.

It was 2012, and Wright was in Turkey playing for the now-defunct Olin Edirne. When he first arrived, he and his coach butted heads, so Wright was determined to mend fences. Sprint drills were completed with fervor, jump shots flicked with added panache, defense executed with floor-slapping zeal. In months, he’d gone from target to talisman. So, when he felt tingling in his right foot one day, he thought it was a casualty of overuse. He’d sleep it off, he reasoned. But, by the next morning’s shooting drills, it had spread to his right hand, then arm, then entire leg — his whole right side numb.

Then he couldn’t get out of bed.

“I couldn’t walk. I fell to the floor,” Wright says. “I was paralyzed.”

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Lying immobile and alone, 5,000 miles from everyone he loved, Wright was terrified, unsure of what was happening to his body. He didn’t know if he’d ever walk again, let alone hold a basketball.

Overnight, his livelihood and identity had been ripped away. He’d soon be diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, and doctor after doctor would tell him his career was over. Wright had every reason to turn bitter, but he refused. As he stands here now, a decade later, he remembers the decision he made then, and the resolve he found: He wouldn’t retire, he would relearn how to walk and run, and he’d damn sure play basketball again.

“I never cried one time, I never had that feeling it was over,” he says. “I just said, ‘We’re going to figure this out.'”

After he was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, Chris Wright was told by several doctors that his days playing basketball were over — but he never gave up his dream. Alessandro Grassani for ESPN

YEARS AFTER LEAVING MARYLAND, Chris Wright is still a local legend. He was a McDonald’s All American in 2007 and left St. John’s College High School as the school’s all-time leading scorer. While he found success at Georgetown — he’s still sixth in career assists — a lingering hand injury hampered him during pre-draft workouts, and he went unselected. Then the NBA locked out its players, so Wright joined the same Turkish league where Hedo Turkoglu, Ersan Ilyasova and Enes Kanter Freedom blossomed. He eventually blossomed too, playing the best basketball of his life, scoring 18-plus points in four out of his previous six games in Turkey.

A local doctor had looked at Wright, who was still unable to walk, and admitted he couldn’t find a culprit before clearing him to return to basketball.

“‘Go back to practice?'” Wright recalled. “‘I can’t f—ing move.'”

So he was referred to a specialist in Istanbul, a 3 1/2 -hour drive from Edirne. It wasn’t long before a diagnosis was delivered: “sclerosis multiplex” — Americanized for Wright’s benefit. Before he left the room, he was on his phone scouring medical websites. His heart sank.

As a friend drove him home, Wright’s diagnosis leaked in local media. He was in a dead zone — internet access but no cell reception — still researching the illness wreaking havoc on the wiring of his nervous system. Once back at his apartment, his phone erupted with 500-plus texts, calls and notifications from loved ones. He still couldn’t walk and certainly hadn’t talked to the media. “I don’t even know what I have, what it is yet,” Wright recalls thinking. “I just know I physically can’t do anything.”

Wright knew what he needed to do: return home to Maryland.

ORLANDO WRIGHT ISN’T SURE where his son Chris would be if it weren’t for John Thompson III. He not only coached him through 88 wins in four years, Thompson also gave the Wright family access to the Georgetown team’s medical staff when Wright returned home from Turkey in 2012.

“That was so fortunate,” Orlando says. “It opened doors for us. Most of these [specialists], you couldn’t get appointments for six months; we [got] appointments within a week.”

Wright quickly met with several doctors to get an assessment of his condition. They explained that multiple sclerosis, also known as MS, is an autoimmune disease that attacks the protective covering of nerve fibers called myelin, causing scar tissue or lesions. This leads to communication issues between the brain and the rest of the body.

At least half a dozen doctors told Wright to retire, except for one: Dr. Heidi Crayton.

In 2007, Crayton opened the Multiple Sclerosis Center of Greater Washington, located about 20 minutes from Georgetown. She’d come a long way from the neurology fellow at Medstar Georgetown University Hospital who initially balked at her mentor’s suggestion to specialize in MS. Though the first suspected case of multiple sclerosis was discovered around 1400, the first FDA-approved medicine to treat MS didn’t hit the market until 1993. Quantities were limited and there was a lottery for patients to obtain it. Two more medicines came out in 1996, but they were physically draining and often completely sapped patients.

Chris Wright shows a book written by neurologist Filippo Martinelli Boneschi, who devotes an entire chapter to Chris’ story. Alessandro Grassani for ESPN

These medications slowed the degenerative process and combated future lesions, but reversing damage wasn’t yet possible. The general consensus is that life expectancy for multiple sclerosis patients is, on average, 7 to 14 years shorter. “It was diagnose and adios,” Crayton says. “People were told in the prime of their life that they had this degenerative condition and nothing could be done.”

But Crayton loved puzzles and, to her, few were as necessary to solve as the one around MS. She wound up an investigator in clinical trials for a once-a-month injection called TYSABRI in the early 2000s. One study says nearly 70% of patients who received the injection remained relapse-free, while 97% developed no new lesions.

“It was a game-changer,” Crayton says.

Crayton met Wright in 2012. He was despondent, but she was optimistic about his chances of recovery. She was on the cutting edge of MS research, knew treatments had evolved and that Wright hadn’t quite fulfilled his destiny.

“His dad said, ‘You don’t understand: Basketball is his life, his identity,'” Crayton recalls.

Wright wasn’t walking properly and his tingling had morphed into excruciating pain. Ten days of steroid shots allowed him to begin an aggressive treatment plan after bloodwork. Patients who go on TYSABRI need to be screened for the John Cunningham virus, or JCV, which is harmless in others but problematic for MS patients. Being above a certain threshold, when combined with TYSABRI, could lead to a rare brain infection called progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), long-term disability and even death.

But Wright was negative. He’d start monthly injections immediately and continue the treatment for close to a decade.

Armed with a game plan and being stateside post-NBA lockout, he set his sights on a return. He retaught himself how to move first, then play basketball, a day at a time.

“I kept grinding out, told myself I would walk again, run again, jump, shoot, dribble, everything,” he says. “[Relearning] was the hardest part, but it happened quick.”

Wright wound up on the D-League’s Iowa Energy in 2012-13, averaging 15.5 points, 7.0 assists, 4.3 rebounds and 1.6 steals. By season’s end, he was an all-star, scoring 15 points and dropping a game-high seven dimes in the contest.

On March 13, 2013, his persistence was rewarded when the Dallas Mavericks signed him to a 10-day contract. Two days later, he made his debut, becoming the first-known NBA player with multiple sclerosis. In a year, Wright went from nearly paralyzed to sharing a court with Dirk Nowitzki and Vince Carter.

“The universe spoke to me,” he says. “Making the NBA solidified it for me. I did it [and] it wasn’t supposed to be done. This is a live universe and I’m living testimony to that.”

When he returned home a year prior, the universe spoke in another way, too. One that might have saved him just as equally as Crayton, medicine or basketball.

He fell in love.

Chris Wright signs autographs before a Dallas Mavericks game on March 15, 2013. Brandon Wade/Fort Worth Star-Telegram/Getty Images

WRIGHT, VIA ZOOM thousands of miles away, stops himself.

“Family … that’s been my lifeline,” he says. “They’re the reason I’ve [done] something there’s no blueprint to.”

Wright met his wife, Erin, at 13. They dated sporadically in high school, but grew apart and lost each other’s number.

Had Wright not fallen out of that bed in Turkey, they wouldn’t have reconnected. During early dark days back home, when walking wasn’t a given, let alone an athletic career, those closest to Wright say Erin weathered the storm.

“Their lives kept coming back together,” says Diane Wright, his mother. “He’s blessed.”

Erin played basketball at the University of Richmond and Morgan State University. She was about to be named an assistant coach at High Point University in 2012 when her father ran into Chris at a Maryland mall. He’d just started treatment and her father insisted he call Erin — so he did.

“My dad would never hook me up with a guy,” Erin says. “That says something about Chris’ character.”

On their first date as adults, Wright told Erin about his diagnosis. While they ate, she googled MS under the table and felt the same dread that he initially felt. She asked if he was sure he’d be OK.

“He confidently responded ‘yes,’ in true Chris Wright manner,” Erin says. “We pretty much decided after the first date that this was forever.”

MS or not, they wouldn’t fall out of touch again. His diagnosis was theirs.

“He really wasn’t sure what was going to happen,” Diane says. “[Erin] stepped right in.”

Turkey was the last place abroad Wright played without Erin. They married in 2015 and have three kids: CJ, 9; Charlotte, 6; and Camilla, 2.

The stint with the Mavericks, on top of being named a D-League all-star, had given Wright back his basketball life. After CJ was born, a team in France called, then Italy. Then it was off to Puerto Rico, then Israel, before Italy called them back.

“It can’t be overlooked that — while traveling the world, still playing basketball — he keeps his family close and they go everywhere together,” Thompson says. “It’s unique.”

“I kept grinding out, told myself I would walk again, run again, jump, shoot, dribble, everything,” Wright says. “[Relearning] was the hardest part, but it happened quick.” Alessandro Grassani for ESPN

Wright helped Italy’s Victoria Libertas survive a relegation battle in 2015, then was denied insurance in Israel before facing doping allegations in Italy. He’d tested positive for the banned substance Modafinil, an ingredient in TYSABRI also used to treat narcolepsy. He was blacklisted, then defended himself in court all summer of 2016 while facing an 18-month ban. When his name was cleared, he’d missed free agency.

“All the jobs I was up for were gone,” Wright says, exasperated.

Stipulations are written into Wright’s contracts tying his employment to not missing games due to MS complications — a challenge he welcomes. In Trieste, Italy, a two-year deal finally materialized; he was getting paid well and on time for the first time in his career.

“My wife loved that city, my kids are in school, we were immersed in the community,” Wright says. “[Then] the owner” — Luigi Scavone, eventually implicated in large-scale tax evasion — “was found fleeing the country with 10 million euros in a Gucci bag.”

In March 2020, the Wrights were in Poland when the COVID-19 pandemic shut down borders. Two hours after his season ended, one in which Wright averaged 18.6 PPG on 51.7% shooting with 6.7 APG in the Basketball Champions League, his family frantically packed up and fled as the country closed down around them.

Later that year, a deal materialized, in Turkey of all places. Wright had barely been back since 2012. This time, Erin and her relentless optimism, not to mention their kids, were with him. “They kept calling and I had to conquer that,” Wright says. “When I got off the plane, I broke down.”

He led the league in assists and posted a career-high 39.3% from deep.

“I knew he would play for a long time,” says Thompson, now the VP of player engagement for Monumental Basketball, which includes the NBA’s Washington Wizards and WNBA’s Mystics. “The basketball gods still smile on him.”

Wright laughs. “It’s been a roller coaster.”

“And not one of those new, metal smooth-riding ones,” Erin adds. “A wooden, squeaking ride.”

Wright is, no surprise, the motor of Derthona, currently fifth in Italy’s Serie A. The NBA door might be closed, but he says he has valuable years left before the coaching talk. For now, he’s all ball.

“I don’t feel like I’m losing a step,” Wright says. “I want to keep playing, I want to win.”

Wright takes a photo of a Derthona Basket poster that features his image in Tortona, Italy. Alessandro Grassani for ESPN

By 2019, Wright had responded so well to treatment that he and Crayton decided to wean him off TYSABRI. In retesting, he’d marginally eclipsed the threshold for JCV, terrifying his family. But medicines had advanced since 2012. Wright knew he could handle a change.

“It’s hard for me not to get misty every time I see him,” Crayton says. “I’ve seen him blossom.”

Crayton suggested Mavenclad, a treatment comprised of 20 pills over a two-year period. When it came to market, it was the only FDA-approved drug for relapsing MS, with 10 years of safety data.

“It doesn’t wipe out your immune system like other drugs. It’s [a] reboot,” Crayton says. “It takes away the bad guys and lets the good kids come out to play.”

Wright just finished his second year of treatment. Ten years after his diagnosis and relearning how to walk, he’s medication-free. Crayton anticipates MS being “a nonissue” for the rest of his life. But she also knows it feels too good to be true. This is, after all, the illness so bleak it seemed fruitless to devote her career to 15 years ago. Now it is, in some respects, beatable.

“This is why you do this, right?” she asks.

Chris Wright drives past a defender in Milan, Italy, on Jan. 9, 2022. Roberto Finizio/Getty Images

IT’S JUST BEFORE CHRISTMAS and presents and holiday decor fill Wright’s Zoom backdrop. Erin’s parents are visiting and, off-screen, they fuss with their grandchildren riding a yuletide high. Extra hands or not, Wright seems at peace.

I ask how it feels being medication-free considering how ludicrous that seemed 10 years ago. It’s not lost on him that March, the anniversary of his diagnosis, happens to be MS Awareness Month.

He peppers his reflections with wisdom from Socrates, Ta-Nehisi Coates and Malcolm X. He’s elegiac and unabashed, noting that life is meant to be lived with dignity and decency.

“It’s about the endless pursuit of self,” he concludes.

The concept of time — truly healthy time — is novel. Crayton anticipates Wright’s post-medication life will be devoid of medical community fanfare. Normal. Boring even.

As a spouse and father, Wright knows he can’t obsess over basketball like he once did. At least for not much longer. “As a parent, you got to leave it at the door,” he says. “You’re in constant motion — what is time, really? [Other than something] to make the most of.”

After Wright’s diagnosis, some urged Erin to distance herself — but she ran toward what scared her. “People are amazed he’s playing with MS,” Erin says, “[but] I see playing as helping his MS.”

Those closest to Wright say he’s a coaching natural and believe he would thrive with a college program.

“If you want your soul to be felt through eternity,” Wright says. “You teach.”

One day, but not yet. Wright has faith in whatever lies ahead.

“At the end of the day,” Wright says, “what’s faith without any work?”

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Thriving with multiple sclerosis: Chris Wright’s remarkable hoops journeyon March 30, 2022 at 12:50 pm Read More »

Man charged with shooting Chicago police officer in exchange of gunfire that also left him wounded

A man was accused of shooting a Chicago police officer and injuring another on the West Side.

James Callion, 28, was arrested after he was wounded in a shootout with officers in the800 block of South Sacramento Boulevard about 9:15 p.m. Monday, police said.

He faces charges of attempted first degree murder, unlawful use of a weapon, and aggravated battery of a police officer, authorities said.

He was scheduled to appear in bond court Wednesday.

Officers had conducted a traffic stop after watching Callion commit multiple traffic violations, police said.

As they walked up to the car, Callion rammed into one of the officers, pinning him against the squad car, Chicago police Supt. David Brown said at a press conference in front of Stroger Hospital.

Callion opened fire, striking one officer in the left pinky finger. The officers fired back, striking him, police said. He was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital in serious to critical condition, officials said.

Brown said a second person was arrested, but a police spokesperson later clarified that only the alleged shooter was in custody. Two guns were recovered from the car, police said.

The incident is being investigated by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability. The officers involved were placed on routine administrative duties for thirty days.

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3 players for Chicago Blackhawks to trade over the summerVincent Pariseon March 30, 2022 at 11:00 am

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(Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

The Chicago Blackhawks are not a good hockey team at all. They need to continue rebuilding their team as they have already started last week at the trade deadline. They were able to get good returns for guys like Marc-Andre Fleury, Brandon Hagel, and Ryan Carpenter but more is needed.

They didn’t trade everyone that they should have and now they may lose some of them for nothing. Kyle Davidson needs to have a big summer in order to really get this team back on the right track once again. One way to do that is to make trades.

The Hawks have shown that they can get future assets for pieces that can help contenders win now. They still have a bunch of players that can help a good team win and even play prominent roles in doing so. The reason that the team is bad is that they have no depth.

Rebuilding the right way means saying goodbye to some names that you have come to know and love over the past decade. That could be the reality for some of these players this summer when they continue to try and move this thing forward.

The Chicago Blackhawks need to make some big moves this upcoming summer.

There are going to be some moves made. It will start in the week leading up to the draft, the actual draft weekend itself, and the weeks leading up to the free agency period. A few players seem more likely to be moved than others but it is fun to think about who may be on the block. These are the three players the Hawks should consider trading this summer:

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3 players for Chicago Blackhawks to trade over the summerVincent Pariseon March 30, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

What are the rules and what’s the schedule? Here’s everything you need to knowon March 30, 2022 at 4:46 am

As the NBA’s 2021-22 regular season draws to a conclusion on April 10, teams near the middle of the standings are battling for postseason seeding with a special focus on the league’s play-in tournament.

Held before the first round of the 2022 NBA playoffs, the play-in tournament adds an exciting wrinkle to the end of the regular season. Teams were already less incentivized to tank games down the stretch because of the flattened lottery odds instituted in 2019. Now that the top 10 teams in the standings will finish the regular season with at least a chance to make the playoffs, more franchises will stay in the mix for longer.

The play-in tournament will be held April 12 through April 15.

Here’s everything you need to know about the setup this season. (Matchups will be added once they are decided):

MORE: Current NBA standings

How does the NBA play-in tournament work?

There will be six total games involving eight teams as part of the play-in tournament, split up between the two conferences.

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The teams that finish Nos. 1-6 in each conference will be guaranteed playoff spots, while team Nos. 7-10 in the standings will enter the play-in. Any team that finishes worse than No. 10 will be in the lottery.

Here’s how the games will work:

Game 1: The No. 7 team in the standings by winning percentage will host the No. 8 team, with the winner earning the No. 7 seed in the playoffs. The losing team gets another chance in Game 3.

Game 2: The No. 9 team will host the No. 10 team, with the winner moving on to Game 3. The loser is eliminated and enters the NBA draft lottery.

Game 3: The loser of the No. 7 vs. No. 8 matchup will host the winner of the No. 9 vs. No. 10 matchup, with the victor grabbing the No. 8 seed in the postseason. The loser of Game 3 also enters the lottery.

This means that the teams with the seventh-highest and eighth-highest winning percentages will have two opportunities to win one game to earn a playoff spot, while the teams with the ninth-highest and 10th-highest winning percentages need to win two straight games to advance.

What’s next after the play-in?

Once the play-in winners, seeded No. 7 and No. 8 from each conference advance, the 2022 NBA playoffs will begin on April 16. Game 1 of the NBA Finals is June 2.

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What are the rules and what’s the schedule? Here’s everything you need to knowon March 30, 2022 at 4:46 am Read More »

Big man Nikola Vucevic to the rescue, as Bulls down the Wizards

Style points went out the window awhile ago for the Bulls.

It probably happened sometime during the flight to Philadelphia in early March, when coach Billy Donovan’s crew was looking more like a pretender than a serious threat in the Eastern Conference.

Since then, it has become about doing whatever it takes to try to scrape out victories.

That was the case Tuesday against the host Wizards. The Bulls finally woke up at the start of the fourth quarter and gave a subpar Wizards team the treatment it deserved en route to a 107-94 victory.

They can thank center Nikola Vucevic for keeping them afloat.

Getting the ball to Vucevic early has been a game plan the Bulls have used often this season, but there have been far too many games in which they then seemingly have forgotten he’s on the team.

That didn’t happen against the Wizards, however. Vucevic made a layup to start the game, then made a three-pointer, a hook shot and another layup. Just like that, it was Vucevic 9, Wizards 7.

By the end of the first quarter, the Bulls led 28-23, and Vucevic had 15 points on 7-for-11 shooting.

The Bulls needed Vucevic to step up because guard Zach LaVine was questionable going into the game with soreness in his left knee and forward DeMar DeRozan looked like a player running on empty.

The Bulls led 51-46 at halftime, but DeRozan had only nine points on 2-for-12 shooting from the field and LaVine was scoreless. Vucevic had 20 of their 51 points on his way to a 27-point night.

”We talked about it a little bit [Tuesday] morning at the breakfast meeting,” Donovan said. ”Just trying to get [Vucevic] going early. I thought we had an opportunity to play through him in the post in the first half. They started trapping him [late in the second quarter] to get the ball out of his hands.

”He got off to a great start and really carried us in the first half because we really struggled to shoot the ball. His 20 points were really important going into the locker room.”

And appreciated — both by Vucevic and his teammates. He had been asking to get more touches during the Bulls’ five-game road trip, and they finally heard his request.

”We just tried to do a better job playing through [Vucevic], especially with me and Zach getting doubled so much,” DeRozan said. ”Once he gets it going, making baskets, it just makes everybody’s job easier.”

Very little seems to be easy for the Bulls these days, however. Like they’ve done far too often lately, they turned a good start into a head-shaking performance early in the third quarter. In less than two minutes, the Bulls’ five-point lead had turned into a two-point deficit.

Their sleepwalking continued through most of the quarter, leaving the Bulls with a two-point lead and some work to do going into the fourth. That’s when DeRozan took over, shooting 6-for-7 from the field and scoring 14 of his game-high 32 points.

”For me, especially in the fourth quarter, I just try and erase the previous three quarters, shot-wise,” DeRozan said. ”I feel a switch when the fourth quarter starts. It’s like a different game for me. I try and approach it with a different mentality, where you know everything is going to pick up and I try and do the opposite and slow down. You can feel the game is completely different come the fourth quarter.”

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White Sox get OF Haseley in trade with Phillieson March 29, 2022 at 9:33 pm

GLENDALE, Ariz. — The Chicago White Sox acquired outfielder Adam Haseley in a trade with the Philadelphia Phillies on Tuesday.

Chicago sent minor league pitcher McKinley Moore to Philadelphia for Haseley, a .264 hitter over parts of three big league seasons. Outfielder Blake Rutherford was designed for assignment by the reigning AL Central champions to make room on their 40-man roster.

The White Sox lost Andrew Vaughn on Sunday when he got hurt making a diving catch in the outfield. The 23-year-old Vaughn, the No. 3 pick in the 2019 amateur draft, was diagnosed with a hip pointer, but he could start playing in games again in one to two weeks.

Haseley was selected by Philadelphia with the No. 8 overall pick in the 2017 amateur draft. He made his big league debut in 2019, batting .266 with five homers and 26 RBIs in 67 games.

Haseley opened last season as the Phillies’ center fielder, but he appeared in just nine games with the big league club. He hit .233 in 56 games in the minors.

Moore, 23, was selected by Chicago in the 14th round of the 2019 draft. The 6-foot-6 right-hander went 2-2 with a 4.20 ERA in 37 games in the minors last year.

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Brewers tab Cy Young winner Burnes for openeron March 29, 2022 at 7:46 pm

PHOENIX — Corbin Burnes‘ Cy Young Award-winning performance last year has resulted in him getting the Opening Day assignment for the Milwaukee Brewers.

Brewers manager Craig Counsell announced Tuesday that Burnes would start the Brewers’ April 7 opener against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field. The Cubs haven’t yet named their starting pitcher.

Burnes, 27, has been one of baseball’s best pitchers the past two seasons after struggling through a difficult 2019 campaign.

He went 1-5 with an 8.82 ERA in 2019 but followed that up by going 4-1 with a 2.11 ERA in the pandemic-delayed 2020 season. Last season, Burnes went 11-5 with an MLB-leading 2.43 ERA and struck out 234 while issuing only 34 walks in 167 innings.

This will be Burnes’ first Opening Day start. Brandon Woodruff started the Brewers’ season opener each of the past two years.

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