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Sure in his steps, Bears coach Matt Eberflus is thinking long-term from the start

PALM BEACH, Fla. — Matt Eberflus looks and sounds like a man who expects to be coaching the Bears for a decade, and with that view of his situation, it’s easier to accept short-term hits in exchange for long-term gains.

He certainly isn’t complacent or lackadaisical, but he’s very much at ease. In the center courtyard at The Breakers, decked comfortably in a white dress shirt and khakis that could pivot easily from a staff meeting to walk on the nearby beach, he leans back in a white folding chair and talks about his big plans for the Bears with all the confidence in the world that he’ll be around long enough to see them materialize.

He wants to change everything and he wants it to last. That requires incremental work. And he won’t allow his lofty vision to be distracted by the urgency of knowing head coaches typically have a very brief window in which to prove themselves. He’s unshakably patient.

“It comes from, No. 1, your faith,” he said. “There are going to be storms and there are going to be things that hit our facility that are unforeseen. You can’t predict it. And I think you’ve got to stand on solid ground.

“No. 2 is you feel confident in your experiences. I’ve been doing this 30 years… I’ve seen a lot of ways to do it and a lot of ways not to do it, and I feel very confident in the way we’re going to do it.”

It helps, of course, that the pressure isn’t truly on him at this point. He hasn’t lost a game yet, and even if he incurs a mountain of losses this season, no one is demanding that he fix the Bears in his first year. If he can make something of the team this season, it’s a bonus.

Eberflus walked into the job with some inherent credibility simply by not being Matt Nagy.

But that aside, he seems genuinely certain of where this is headed.

As Eberflus eyed the opportunity to coach the Bears, star pass rusher Khalil Mack must’ve been the first thing he noticed about their defense. But when general manager Ryan Poles presented the case for clearing his salary and picking up a second-round draft pick by trading him to the Chargers, Eberflus saw the big picture and co-signed the move even while believing Mack is primed for a big season.

“You’ve gotta look at the whole roster,” he said. “Where are you going to add pieces? What can you do with the shifting and the allocation of funds? And where’s it going to go in the future? And I think that’s what the club looked at and that’s what we’re excited about going forward.”

A year ago, Bears general manager Ryan Pace and coach Matt Nagy landed in the unmanageable scenario of needing to make decisions in the team’s long-term interest while knowing they needed immediate results to keep their jobs. Those contradicting missions led to rampant dysfunction that their successors are trying to clean up.

Eberflus doesn’t want to get into that.

“That’s the past,” he said. “Our eyes are always forward. We’re looking at seeing how we can do the best moves now for the franchise. I don’t think, for us, it’s healthy to look back like that. We just want to look forward.”

Like Poles and virtually everyone else in Chicago, when Eberflus looks forward he imagines a future led by quarterback Justin Fields. The mess last season hindered him more than anyone.

Eberflus is practical when it comes to Fields. He’s not expecting him to win MVP, but he will insist upon improvement given that the situation around him is more favorable than it was during his rookie season. No team can wait forever. He expects a substantial step forward.

“It should be,” he said. “We’re looking for better technique, better fundamentals, better decision-making, better timing — everything. He’s all on board [with] that. He’s excited about where he is and he’s been working his tail off. That’s what we want: Just that big jump from Year 1 to Year 2.”

If that happens, it accelerates everything. But Eberflus intends to stay steady regardless. He trusts his and Poles’ plan and is willing to wait as it comes together. He waited three decades for this opportunity. No sense in rushing it now.

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College basketball transfer portal: The top 20 Chicago area players in the the transfer portal

The endless job of recruiting by college basketball coaches has been magnified more than ever before thanks to the NCAA Transfer Portal.

The college basketball transfer has evolved into the top recruiting priority for college programs, shifting the recruitment of high school players to the back seat. College coaches can’t afford to go too young these days when so many older, accomplished and ready-made players are available to them — in the hundreds — in putting together a roster each season.

The transfer is even more prevalent and important considering there are so many more players who are now available. The NCAA granting every player an extra year of eligibility because of the pandemic has enhanced the transfer trend.

If you look hard enough you can even find players approaching their mid-20s. The stark difference between going to battle with a 22, 23 or even a 24-year old rather than a teenager out of high school is enormous — and in some cases essential.

A fresh, new coach just hired and taking over a downtrodden program with a depleted roster? Hit the portal.

A coach who is in year four or five and on the hot seat due to losing more than winning? Hit the portal.

A coach who feels he’s just a player away from competing for a conference title and getting into the NCAA Tournament? Hit the portal.

The portal can be a big hit for some, but it can also be fool’s gold for others.

Among the many options for college coaches at all levels are former high school prospects out of Illinois who, for one reason or another, are on the move. There are some good ones out there. And there are some not so good ones.

Here is a ranking of the top transfer portal options out of the state of Illinois with, we are sure, more to come as the weeks, days — and even minutes — go by this spring.

1. Terrence Shannon Jr., Lincoln Park (Texas Tech)

The physical attributes are ones every high-major program salivates over. He’s a lengthy 6-6 gazelle who can run with guards in the open floor and elevates off the floor as well as anyone. He is a physical and athletic marvel.

Shannon, who was ignored out of high school despite finishing as the City/Suburban Hoops Report’s No. 5 ranked prospect in the Class of 2018, spent a year at IMG Academy in Florida before signing with Texas Tech.

Shannon has a vast amount of high-level experience, which is awfully attractive for college coaches. That includes being at the very minimum a part-time starter for three NCAA Tournament teams, including 21 starts for the 2020 Final Four team as a freshman.

Despite some modest numbers this past season, which included 10.4 points and just 2.6 rebounds and two assists, Shannon helped the Red Raiders to 27 wins and a Sweet Sixteen berth.

Shannon is one of the top players in the country in the transfer portal and could flourish as a senior in the right situation.

2. Antonio Reeves, Simeon (Illinois State)

The most coveted player in basketball right now is the shot-making player who can space the floor with consistent three-point shooting ability. They are at an absolute premium, and it’s exactly what Reeves provides.

Reeves was lightly recruited and overlooked as a senior at Simeon. He was uncommitted throughout a breakout senior campaign for coach Robert Smith and the Wolverines. While Wisconsin was a high-major that flirted with Reeves as a senior, it was Illinois State that jumped in hard, albeit late, and nabbed the blooming 6-5 guard.

After putting up some whopping numbers this past season as a junior, dozens of high-major programs across the country, including several high-profile ones, have been calling and clamoring for his services for next year.

The silky smooth Reeves averaged 20.1 points this past season– second in the Missouri Valley Conference — and has already scored nearly 1,200 career points in three years.

But what really makes Reeves one of the most desired players in the portal is his shooting ability. He made 76 three-pointers as a junior while shooting a very respectable 39 percent from beyond the arc.

3. Xavier Pinson, Simeon (LSU)

The slithery but slender 6-2 point guard surprised many with his production at the high-major level while at Missouri.

In his junior season at Mizzou, his last season there prior to transferring to LSU, Pinson averaged 13.6 points and 2.9 assists a game. That came after putting up 11.1 points as a sophomore.

This past season for the fired Will Wade, Pinson was a starter in the SEC and averaged 9.8 points while upping his assist and steals numbers to 4.8 and 1.9 a game, respectively.

There is certainly some high-major production for Pinson, though improving his three-point shooting numbers would go a long way in being a more impactful player at that level next season. He’s a career 30 percent three-point shooter who shot just 24 percent from beyond the arc this past season for the Tigers.

Pinson will take advantage of being a “super senior” next season, thanks to the extra year of eligibility that’s been granted to every college player.

4. Jeremiah Williams, Simeon (Temple)

Just as he did throughout his high school career at St. Laurence and Simeon, Williams is a stat-sheet stuffer. The 6-5 guard is as versatile as they come, capable of playing and defending multiple positions.

After two years at Temple, where he started 37 games, Williams is a seasoned player who will be sought after by both mid-major and high-major programs. With his size, length and mindset, Williams is an elite defensive player.

Offensively, while Williams struggled shooting the basketball from the perimeter, he managed to average 9.3 points as a freshman and 9.5 points as a sophomore. His two-year career numbers of 9.4 points, 3.5 rebounds and 4.2 assists a game show his overall productivity.

5. Dante Maddox Jr., Bloom (Cal State-Fullerton)

The City/Suburban Hoops Report called Maddox one of the biggest recruiting steals out of Illinois in the Class of 2020. He had name recognition early in his career while playing at Bloom, but the big-bodied guard broke out as a senior after signing with Cal-State Fullerton.

The strong, athletic 6-2 guard put together a heck of a freshman season two years ago. Maddox averaged 11.9 points, 2.1 rebounds and 1.8 assists a game while shooting 43 percent from three and 90 percent from the line.

Maddox battled some nagging injury issues and a bit of a change in offensive philosophy and his numbers regressed this past season as a sophomore. He averaged 6.8 points a game while his shooting numbers tumbled to 25 percent from three. But he took more three-point attempts as a freshman, when his numbers were eye-opening for a freshman, in seven fewer games played.

Maddox is being hunted by mid-major programs across the Midwest in hopes of getting him back home on the rebound from the West Coast. He’s physical, competes and brings all the right intangibles as a willing defender with offensive punch, character and solid academics.

6. Tamell Pearson, Morgan Park (Western Illinois)

The 6-10, 225-pound Pearson, who was a part of two state championships at Morgan Park, brings legitimate size college programs desperately need. He also brings a ton of experience as an added attraction.

Pearson began his career at UAB and was a part-time starter as a sophomore. He made the move to Western Illinois and produced these past two seasons as a starting big man.

As a junior Pearson averaged 10.4 points and 6.9 rebounds. This past season he was again a double-figure scorer averaging 10.1 points, added 5.9 rebounds and really improved his shooting percentage from 45 percent as a junior to 58 percent as a senior.

7. Jayson Kent, Oak Forest (Bradley) — Committed to Indiana State

The classic late-blooming player in high school. Kent’s game, production and physical dimensions all came together late in his career at Oak Forest. He went from a no-namer to an all-state caliber player in a matter of a year, growing into a multi-dimensional 6-7 wing with a promising jump shot with range.

Bradley signed the high-upside Kent. He wasn’t quite physically ready for the grind of the Missouri Valley Conference as a freshman, playing just 10 minutes a game as a freshman.

But Kent found his way on the floor this past season as a sophomore, starting 15 games and playing over 20 minutes a game. Kent averaged 6.9 points and 2.9 rebounds. The jumper, which shows the potential to be a weapon, must become more consistent going forward as he shot just 26 percent from beyond the arc (24 of 91 from three).

8. Tyler Cochran, Bolingbrook (Ball State)

The big-bodied 6-2 versatile guard has been a pretty productive college player in his three seasons — first at Northern Illinois and then at Ball State. But in both places his head coach was fired before he had exhausted his eligibility.

After averaging 15.5 points, 7.3 rebounds and two assists as a do-it-all sophomore guard at NIU, Cochran transferred to Ball State. This past season he averaged 11.6 points, 5.6 rebounds and 2.2 assists while also markedly improving his three-point shooting.

Cochran is now a mid-major veteran who still has two more years of eligibility.

9. Dusan Mahorcic, Notre Dame (Utah)

Finding the right fit — and level — for the 6-10, 230-pound Mahorcic is the goal. He’s now played at four different schools and four distinctly different levels.

A late bloomer who came on as a senior at Notre Dame, he started his career at Division II Lewis in Romeoville. After a year there he spent a season at a junior college before signing with Illinois State.

With Dan Muller’s Redbirds, the mobile big man put up decent numbers in 22 games during the Covid season of 2020-21, averaging 9.9 points and 7.2 rebounds in 24 minutes of action.

He transferred to Utah and played in just 13 games. He played 14 minutes a game and put up a pedestrian 5.5 points and 4.1 rebounds.

Mahorcic’s size and experience, however, will be desirable once again on the open market.

10. Sherif Kenney, Orr (La Salle) — Committed to Bryant

He arrived in Chicago to play his final year of high school at Orr and ultimately signed with La Salle where he did put in some work over the past three years. He’s been a regular contributor as a big, strong 6-4, 225-pound guard.

After averaging 8.7 points, 2.2 and 1.8 assists in three seasons in the Atlantic 10 Conference, Kenney is headed to Bryant, a program that reached the NCAA Tournament this past season.

11. Myles Baker, Young (Eastern Illinois)

Baker began producing immediately as a college player, playing 21 minutes a game as a freshman at Central Connecticut State and averaging 8.6 points. He came back and averaged 10.4 points and two rebounds as a sophomore before he decided to transfer.

Now, after playing just one game in one season at Eastern Illinois, the 6-2 guard is back in the portal.

12. Chris Payton, Bloomington (Pitt)

A real wild card going forward after barely playing for Pitt in the ACC this past season. He saw meaningless minutes in only 13 games and scored a grand total of 10 points.

The still raw but physically and athletically gifted Payton will be the definition of a college program getting older. He was part of a Bloomington team that finished third in the state in 2017, so there is some age to Payton as he’s already been out of high school for five years.

The 6-7 Payton was a heavily recruited junior college prospect as recently as two years ago when he averaged a double-double at Indian Hills Community College.

13. Zion Griffin, Hinsdale South (UIC)

The 6-6 forward started his career at Iowa State where he played minimal minutes with little production. As a sophomore with the Cyclones he averaged three points and two rebounds a game.

He then came home, transferring to UIC where he’s played 26 minutes a game the past two seasons. This past season Griffin averaged 11.1 points and four rebounds for the Flames.

14. Nana Akenten, Bolingbrook (Southeast Missouri State)

This is the older, seasoned college veteran who has one year of eligibility remaining and offers age, experience and having been through a college basketball season’s grind.

Akenten, a 6-6 forward and former all-stater at Bolingbrook, played two years at Nebraska where he saw very little time. He sat out a year while redshirting at Southeast Missouri State before starting a total of 27 games the past two seasons.

After averaging 9.3 points and 5.8 rebounds in his first season of action at SEMO, Akenten averaged 7.1 points and 4.2 rebounds this past season.

15. Joey St. Pierre, Richmond-Burton (UW-Milwaukee)

The numbers won’t jump out at you, but the size will. And big men are a commodity. St. Pierre is a legit 6-10, 275-pound back-to-the-basket behemoth who was mildly productive in his first taste of Division I basketball this past season.

Following three seasons at Division II Wisconsin-Parkside — and sitting out a year after transferring to UW-Milwaukee — he started 29 games and played 24 minutes a game for the recently fired Pat Baldwin this past season.

He averaged 6.3 and 5.7 rebounds while converting 59 percent from the field. But his free-throw shooting (25 of 52) is cause for concern.

16. Maurice Commander, Curie (UIC)

The 5-11 point guard is on the move after spending two years at Tennessee-Chattanooga and the past two seasons at UIC.

After averaging double figures (10.5 ppg) for the Flames in just 15 games, including 12 starts, a year ago, he missed this past season with a season-ending hip surgery. Prior to his surgery, Commander played in a lot of Division I basketball games.

Before his transfer to UIC, Commander started all 32 games as a sophomore for Chattanooga, averaging 6.2 points and 2.2 assists.

17. Colton Sandage, Bloomington (Western Illinois)

A sleeper in high school who flew under the radar, Sandage went to Vincennes Junior College for two years where he helped them to a NJCAA national championship.

He didn’t waste much time in becoming a major factor at Western Illinois. He started all 31 games this past season as a senior after averaging 20 minutes a game as a junior.

The 6-2 guard showed he’s more than just a shooter. While he did connect on 35 percent of his threes and knocked down 65 of them this past season, Sandage averaged 13.4 points.

18. Zion Young, Simeon (Oakland)

There are some up-and-down numbers to sift through as he has now played two seasons at Western Illinois and two at Oakland.

He had a breakthrough season for the Leathernecks in the Summit League as a sophomore in 2019-20. The powerfully built guard averaged 13.2 points, chipping in 4.5 rebounds a game while starting 25 games.

He played mostly off the bench as a junior following a transfer to Oakland in the Horizon League, averaging 7.8 points, and was limited to just seven games this past season due to an injury.

19. Kejuan Clements, Simeon (Eastern Illinois)

After a couple of seasons playing junior college basketball, including his final year at Triton Junior College, Clements headed to Eastern Illinois. In one season there the tough, competitive guard averaged 8.3 points and 4.5 assists a game. But he made just 18 of 79 from the three-point line.

20. Kenny Strawbridge, Rockford Lutheran (Alabama State)

After redshirting for a year at UMKC and then playing a season at Western Nebraska in the junior college ranks, Strawbridge landed at Alabama State and just finished his second season there.

The 6-4 guard averaged 10.5 points a game in each of the past two seasons. While the points came in a high-volume way with poor shooting numbers, he also averaged 5.6 rebounds and 1.8 assists combined in those two seasons.

Other players in the transfer portal from Illinois:

Kani Acree, Carbondale (Ball State)

Trey Boston, Downers Grove North (Louisiana-Monroe)

Tyler Chisom, Proviso East (South Dakota) — Committed to Prairie View A&M

Brandon Hall, Thornton (East Tennessee State)

Bobby Harvey, Hillcrest (IUPUI)

Jamere Hill, Joliet West (Toledo)

Jaheim Holden, Evanston (Tarleton State)

Malcolm Townsel, Evanston (Holy Cross)

Trey Boston, Downers Grove North (Louisiana-Monroe)

Barlow Alleruzo, De La Salle (Eastern Illinois)

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CSO 2022-23 season: end of music director tenure of Riccardo Muti

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra on Tuesday announced its 2022-2023 season, a season filled with milestones and milestone performances.

Most prominent, the CSOs 132nd season will mark the conclusion of the tenure of Zell Music Director Riccardo Muti, marking the end of his 13-year artistic affiliation with the orchestra. Programming for the CSO season will feature the symphonies of Schubert and Tchaikovsky, and Prokofiev’s Fifth Symphony, which Muti will conduct for the first time with the orchestra, and Rachmaninov’s Second Symphony, which he performs for the first time. Other highlights include the U.S. premiere of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s “Solemn Prayer”; and Mussorgsky’s “Pictures from an Exhibition,” which Muti conducted for his CSO podium debut at Ravinia in 1973.

The season concludes with Muti conducting the CSO, Chicago Symphony Chorus and soloists for Beethoven’s Missa solemnis (June 23-25, 2023).

Other season highlights include the annual CSO at the Movies series, featuring screenings of critically acclaimed films with the orchestra performing the score live. The lineup includes: “Amadeus” (Oct. 13-16), Constantine Kitsopoulos, conductor; “The Princess Bride” (Nov. 25-27), with a new score arranged by Dire Straits frontman/guitarist Mark Knopfler; “An Evening with John Williams,” with John Williams conducting (March 24, 2023); and “Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens” (June 29, 2023), with David Newman, conducting.

As part of the season’s Symphony Center Presents Jazz series, highlights include the Oct. 18 arrival of Chucho Valdes presenting his four-movement suite La Creacion (The Creation), for big band, Afro-Cuban percussion and vocals.

The Joffrey Ballet returns to Symphony Center for a program (Nov. 10-12) with the CSO conducted by Harry Bicket, and featuring two world premiere commissions: Cathy Marston’s ballet set to Wagner’s Siegfried Idyll, and Annabelle Lopez Ochoa’s work set to Rameau’s Suite from Platee).

The Symphony Center Presents Orchestras series opens Nov. 16 with the Berliner Berliner Philharmoniker performing Mahler’s Symphony No. 7. conducted by Kirill Petrenko.

The CSO MusicNOW series returns with four concerts curated by Mead Composer-in-Residence Jessie Montgomery (Oct. 24 and Nov. 21, 2022; and Feb. 20 and April 24, 2023).

Chucho Valdes.|

OCP Photography Miami

The season’s chamber music series will include the Emerson String Quartet, joined by pianist Emmanuel Ax, making its final Chicago concert appearance on June 4, 2023.

And the annual holiday programming will include the classical music vocal ensemble Chanticleer in concert at the Fourth Presbyterian Church (126 E. Chestnut, Dec. 6-7); and the Chicago Symphony Chorus, members of the CSO and conductor Alastair Willis for the family-friendly musical offering “Merry, Merry Chicago!” (Dec. 16-17 and 20-23).

For ticket information call (312) 294-3000 or email [email protected].

The complete season lineup is available at cso.org.

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Ex-Bears QB Andy Dalton signs with Saints to backup Jameis Winston

PALM BEACH, Fla. — Former Bears quarterback Andy Dalton is signing a one-year, $3 million with the Saints, a source said, which almost certainly slots him as Jameis Winston’s backup.

The Bears, who signed Dalton to a $10 million contract last year, might end being the last team to offer him a starting job as he winds down his career. The Saints are his third team in three seasons since the Bengals released him.

Bears general manager Ryan Pace and coach Matt Nagy thought signing Dalton, now 34, was the key to unlocking the struggling offense. Instead, he was a symbol of the team’s overall dysfunction and poor planning.

Shortly after signing Dalton, the Bears traded up to draft Justin Fields at No. 11 overall, then Nagy declared there would be no competition. Dalton, was his starter, and he planned to keep Fields on the bench for the entire season.

That plan fell apart quickly. Fields took over in Week 2, but was in an awkward position after having spent the entire offseason on second string and was then being asked to play in an offense that wasn’t designed to fit his strengths.

Dalton ended up playing eight games and finished with a 76.9 passer rating, which was worse than any of Mitch Trubisky’s four seasons and worse than Nick Foles’ disappointing 2020 performance. He had eight touchdown passes and nine interceptions.

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White Sox acquire OF Adam Haseley from Phillies

GLENDALE, Ariz. — The White Sox acquired outfielder Adam Haseley from the Phillies in a minor trade Tuesday, sending right-handed pitching prospect McKinley Moore to Philadelphia.

Haseley, 25, started in center field and batted eighth in the Phillies Opening Day lineup last season but appeared in only nine games before leaving the team for personal reasons on April 15. He appeared to have an outside shot at making the Phillies Opening Day roster this season.

A left-handed hitter and thrower, Haseley owns a .264/.322/.373 hitting line over three seasons, appearing in 160 games with 355 plate appearances and playing all three outfield positions. He was drafted eighth overall in the 2017 draft, three selections ahead of White Sox first-rounder Jake Burger.

Moore, a hard-thrower posted a 4.20 ERA between Advance A Winston-Salem and Low-A Kannapolis with high strikeout and walk rates, was ranked 28th per MLB Pipeline among White Sox prospects.

The Sox outfield received a blow Sunday when Adam Vaughn was sidelined with a hip pointer, and Haseley adds to their depth chart. Defensively, Haseley would probably fall behind Luis Robert and Adam Engel and ahead of the remaining Sox outfield core that includes Eloy Jimenez, converted first basemen Vaughn and Gavin Sheets and Leury Garcia.

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‘Moulin Rouge’ actress says musical role is ‘dream come true’

For musical theater actress Courtney Reed, the road to Broadway started with a mouse and a precocious red-headed girl in productions at Children’s Theatre of Elgin.

“My first role was as a mouse in ‘Cinderella’,” Reed says with a laugh. “I remember being very nervous.”

But the moment Reed realized she was never happier than when she was on stage came at around the age of 10, when she performed the lead in the popular musical “Annie.”

“I loved every part of it; I loved the community of it,” Reed recalls. “I was heartbroken when the show was over. I felt I could be my true self when I was on stage and among people who were kind of weirdos like me.”

Reed, who grew up in Elgin, attended Larkin High School’s Visual and Performing Arts Academy and the Chicago College of Performing Arts at Roosevelt University. She performed in a few Chicago shows (at Noble Fool and Pheasant Run) before quickly landing in “Mamma Mia!” on Broadway.

Now, after more Broadway success (“Aladdin,” “In the Heights”), Reed is back in town leading the first national tour of “Moulin Rouge! The Musical” as Satine, the love-starved courtesan. The stage adaptation of Baz Luhrmann’s 2001 movie musical also stars Conor Ryan as Christian, the young composer who falls in love with Satine.

“I love that I get to flex my muscles with this role,” Reed, 37, says. “In the past, I’ve portrayed some amazing characters, but they didn’t necessarily get into the nitty gritty the way that I think Satine does. She is so broken and doesn’t have the ability to just fall in love like Christian does.”

The winner of 10 Tony Awards, “Moulin Rouge” is directed by Alex Timbers and features a book by John Logan and choreography by Sonya Tayeh. Described as “sensory overload,” it’s set in a world of splendor, romance and excess filled with Bohemians and aristocrats who inhabit Belle Epoque Paris at the turn of the 20th century.

The show’s music, like the movie, is drawn from more than 160 years of popular music including 70 songs from artists including Beyonce, Rihanna, Elton John, Katy Perry, Lady Gaga, The Rolling Stones and many more. (The song list has been updated to include popular songs released since the movie’s debut.)

The one original song in the show, “Come What May,” sung with her co-star Ryan, is Reed’s favorite: “It’s such an incredible duet. Conor is such an amazing singer and I love all these moments with him.”

Timbers, a longtime fan of Reed, says she is the proverbial triple threat — “an incredible singer, dancer, actor” — but adds that she’s really “a quadruple threat.”

“She has this grit and tenacity but also wit, which is something we don’t think about these days,” he says. “She’s very clever, and she finds ways to turn the language and twist the lyrics in ways that really surprise you.”

After college, Reed planned on trying her luck in Los Angeles: “I thought there was no way I was going to get on Broadway; it’s so competitive.”

Instead, her 2001 move to New York proved to be fast and furious. Reed assumed she was auditioning for the touring company of “Mamma Mia!,” but it was actually as a replacement and understudy in the Broadway run. Until then, she’d never been to New York nor seen a Broadway show.

“I was 22-years-old and here I was packing my bags,” Reed recalls. “I was so young and so green. I didn’t know a lot of things, and I learned so much in those first few years.”

Reed went on to perform as a replacement in Lin-Manuel Miranda’s “In the Heights” and landed her first leading role in the 2014 Broadway debut of Disney’s “Aladdin,” where she originated the role of Jasmine, her favorite Disney princess.

“Jasmine was the first real, true ethnic Disney princess and with her long dark hair and olive skin I really identified with her growing up,” says Reed, whose mother is Vietnamese. “Plus, she’s sassy, very independent and says what she believes in.”

Casting for the touring version of “Moulin Rouge,” began just before the pandemic hit when everything was put on hold. Reed moved back to Chicago to be near her family and now lives in Lakeview. She’s thrilled to be bringing the show to Chicago audiences and still a bit amazed that she’s playing Satine (Nicole Kidman starred in the film version).

“I was a huge fan of the movie, but when word got out that it was going to be a musical I never thought I would be cast,” she recalled. “I don’t look anything like Nicole Kidman. I just feel so lucky; it’s a dream come true to dig into the heart of this role.”

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Revisiting the Chicago Bears’ trade for Justin FieldsJACOB GRANTon March 29, 2022 at 11:00 am

With the 2022 NFL Draft fast approaching, it marks almost one year since the Chicago Bears made the trade for Justin Fields. Sadly, the trade for Fields was one of the best moments in Bears history. A Bears history littered with poor quarterback play leading inept offenses.

Now, you may think that Bears history is a touch extreme but let me share a fact. The Bears and the New York Jets were the only two franchises in the 16-game era to not have a quarterback throw for 4,000 yards in a single season. For reference, the 16-game era lasted 42 years.

Understandably, passing yards isn’t the end all be all when it comes to a teams offensive success. What that stat does say is that the Bears have lacked explosion and playmaking at the quarterback position for quite some time: Until now.

Looking back, the Chicago Bears won the trade with the New York Giants when they acquired Justin Fields in the NFL Draft.

Prior to the 2021 NFL Draft, there were was one thing for certain: Trevor Lawrence was going to be the number one pick. From there on, the quarterback projections were all over the board.

The options were two athletic projects in Zach Wilson and Trey Lance. A National Champion with mobility deficiencies in Mac Jones. Finally, the athletic freak with a long throwing motion in Fields.

Thankfully for the Bears, Wilson and Lance were quickly off the board going second and third overall respectively. This caused a shocking slide for Fields outside the top 10, giving the Bears a chance to make the deal to land their franchise quarterback.

In the deal with the Giants, the Bears received the 11th pick in the 2021 draft, and sent the No. 20 pick to the Giants, along with a 2022 first-round pick, a 2022 fourth-round pick and a fifth-round pick for 2021.

The Bears original draft position of 20 did not provide them much value in hindsight. The Giants selected wide receiver Kadarius Toney who played in only ten games his rookie season and was held out of the endzone.

Furthermore, the rest of the first round selections were lackluster. The Bears could have addressed other team needs if they potentially selected Michigan DE Kwity Paye, Northwestern CB Greg Newsom III or Virginia Tech OT Christian Darrisaw. Though, none of which would go on to have rookie seasons causing any regret.

As far as the rest of the picks are concerned, the Bears gave up a lot of capital for a team with many holes to fill. Although, when glancing at the 2022 draft board, there will be a sense of relief that they have their quarterback of the future as opposed to being in quarterback purgatory.

The 2022 quarterback class leaves much to be desired as the Bears pick would have been number 7 overall. When looking at the 2022 quarterback class, Fields is head and shoulders above the likes of Malik Willis, Kenny Pickett and Matt Corral. To go a step further, Fields would be the consensus number one pick in the 2022 draft and there is no debate.

The value of getting the projected number one pick had he stayed in college one more year, at pick 11, cannot be overlooked. As bad as a GM as Ryan Pace was, he did leave Ryan Poles and this Bears organization a franchise quarterback.While the stats weren’t all that, there were enough flashes from Fields to show he has what it takes to excel at the NFL level.

With 2021 in the rearview mirror, Fields will look to take that ever important second year leap this upcoming season under a new regime in Chicago. Poles and new Head Coach Matt Eberflus will do everything they can to help Fields succeed in 2022 and beyond.

The Bears took their shot in 2021 and if built right, they can look back and point to this trade as the start of something new. Quarterback play that this city has not seen in the existence of the franchise.

To that we say thank you and good riddance Mr. Pace. While the cupboard may be bare, we got the right guy at the helm to change the narrative of Bears football for the foreseeable future.

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Revisiting the Chicago Bears’ trade for Justin FieldsJACOB GRANTon March 29, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

The Chicago Bulls lacking leadership and a voice is their downfallRyan Heckmanon March 29, 2022 at 1:41 pm

The Chicago Bulls are reeling right now, and are a far cry from the team we saw open the 2021-2022 season.

The problem is very clear. The Bulls are 4-11 over their last 15 games, yet head coach Billy Donovan’s demeanor on the sideline would lead you to believe that they’re 11-4 in that stretch.

Now, there is something to be said about remaining calm and level-headed during tough times. Donovan has seen it all over his career, and one of his strengths is being able to stay patient and smart during the hard times.

However, that’s now becoming his downfall. Donovan is currently coaching one of the most talented teams he’s ever seen, and if he doesn’t do something soon, these Bulls will be looking at one of the biggest collapses the league has ever seen.

The Chicago Bulls are severely lacking vocal, passionate leadership from two key people.

Just a little over a month ago, the Bulls were sitting in first place in the Eastern Conference. As we speak, they are the fifth seed and one loss away from dropping to number six. Chicago has lost games to Sacramento, New Orleans and New York in the past two weeks — all games they should have convincingly won.

The team continues to be unable to beat the best teams in either conference, but that’s nothing new and, quite frankly, towards the bottom of the worry list at the moment. The biggest issue for these Bulls is with Donovan. He absolutely must switch things up.

It isn’t in his character to get more animated or aggressive in his coaching style, but you know what they say: the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again, expecting different results.

Donovan is a veteran coach and he has got to start trying to get ahold of these guys. The team has been extremely soft for most of the season, and their demeanor proves exactly that. Night-in and night-out, it’s either DeMar DeRozan or Alex Caruso showing the most passion and effort. Zach LaVine is up there, too, but he decides when he does and doesn’t want to play on defense.

Not only do the Bulls need Donovan to step up and be more vocal, demanding more from these guys than he’s seeing, but the Bulls have to see someone do the same on the floor. This team needs DeRozan to step into more of a Chris Paul role. He’s the veteran on this team, and he’s the one handling the ball more often than not.

DeRozan is as cool as they come, but this is now the time for him to find his voice on the court. This team does not have a vocal leader at the moment, and if they are going to do anything in the playoffs, they’ll have to find one.

This is on DeRozan and Donovan to bring these guys together, and put forth a more respectable effort each night. No more giving up easy offensive rebounds. No more lazy offense. No more playing with a half-hearted mentality. If the Bulls are going to do anything beyond these next seven games, it’s time for a dramatic change.

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The Chicago Bulls lacking leadership and a voice is their downfallRyan Heckmanon March 29, 2022 at 1:41 pm Read More »

NBA MVP straw poll: Why the Joker could be getting a sequelon March 29, 2022 at 12:56 pm

Last season, the Denver NuggetsNikola Jokic surpassed Philadelphia 76ers big man Joel Embiid in the closing weeks of the NBA’s regular season to win the Most Valuable Player award, as injuries to Embiid and Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James cleared the path for Jokic to become the first center to win the award since Shaquille O’Neal in 2000.

As the 2021-22 regular season winds down, it appears Jokic has the inside track to repeat.

After Jokic finished just behind Embiid in the previous edition in mid-February, the four-time All-Star claimed 62 of 100 first-place votes in the third and final iteration of ESPN’s MVP straw poll, giving Jokic a clear — though narrow — lead over Embiid and Milwaukee Bucks forward and most recent back-to-back MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo.

To gauge where the race stands with less than two weeks remaining in the regular season, ESPN asked 100 media members to participate in an informal poll that mimics the postseason awards voting. To make the balloting as realistic as possible, there were at least two voters from each of the league’s 28 markets, as well as a cross section of national and international reporters. Votes were collected from Thursday to Saturday.

2 Related

As with the NBA’s official vote at the end of season, voters were asked to submit a five-player ballot, and results were tabulated using the league’s scoring system: 10 points for each first-place vote, followed by seven points for second place, five points for third, three points for fourth and one point for fifth.

Jokic finished ahead of the pack with those 62 first-place votes and a total of 860 points, followed by Embiid, who had 29 first-place votes and 719 total points, and Antetokounmpo, who had nine first-place votes and 593 total points. They were the only players to be named to all 100 ballots and the only ones to receive a first-place vote.

Jokic, Embiid and Antetokounmpo have so clearly separated themselves from the field that they claimed 291 of the 300 votes for first, second and third place in the poll. (Antetokounmpo had six fourth-place votes, and Jokic had three fifth-place votes.) No other player was named to even half of the ballots.

Following the three unanimous selections was Memphis Grizzlies guard Ja Morant, who finished with 103 total points and received one of the two second-place votes recorded for someone besides Jokic, Embiid or Antetokounmpo. (Phoenix Suns guard Devin Booker received the other.) Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum placed fifth with 93 points, Dallas Mavericks guard Luka Doncic was sixth with 87 points and Booker seventh with 82. Morant, Tatum and Booker were the only players to receive third-place votes outside of the top three finishers.

After leading the first edition of the straw poll this season, Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry finished eighth with 34 points, followed by Brooklyn Nets forward Kevin Durant (13) and Suns guard Chris Paul (seven).

James, the NBA’s current scoring leader who hadn’t received a single vote in either of the first two polls, got one fourth-place and two fifth-place votes to finish 11th with five points, followed by Chicago Bulls guard DeMar DeRozan and Atlanta Hawks guard Trae Young.

The MVP race could once again come down to a battle between Nikola Jokic and Joel Embiid. Mitchell Leff/Getty Images

Outside of James entering the mix, the focus remains on the top of the ballot, where Jokic has once again gained a slight advantage heading into the season’s final weeks after he and Embiid were in a virtual dead heat six weeks ago.

Essentially, the difference this time is Jokic taking 16 of the first-place votes Embiid carried in the previous poll and getting back on the five ballots he was left off in that round of voting.

There is still more uncertainty remaining in this race than there usually is at this time of the year. Many voters stressed how tough it was for them to choose which way to go, both among the positioning of top-three finishers and fourth and fifth places.

And while the leader in the final version of this straw poll has gone on to win the league’s MVP award the past four years it was conducted, there is reason to believe Jokic still has work to do to officially sew up consecutive awards.

This year’s voting most closely mirrors the 2017 race, the first year that this straw poll was conducted. In that year’s final ballot, then-Houston Rockets guard James Harden held a similarly narrow lead over then-Oklahoma City Thunder guard Russell Westbrook with a few weeks to go, only for Westbrook to capture the MVP by becoming the first player since Oscar Robertson in 1961-62 to average a triple-double for a season.

Because of how compact the races are in both conferences, where Jokic and Embiid finish in the standings is likely to play a role.

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

Jokic’s Nuggets sit in sixth place in the Western Conference, two games ahead of the Minnesota Timberwolves in seventh and a half game behind the Utah Jazz in fifth. All three voters who placed Jokic in fifth highlighted his team’s position in the standings as a contributing factor.

In the Eastern Conference, Embiid’s 76ers and Antetokounmpo’s Bucks are among the four-team logjam near the top, with both one game behind the No. 1-seeded Miami Heat.

Jokic is averaging 26.3 points, 13.6 rebounds and 8.0 assists per game, ranking 12th, second and eighth, respectively, and is the only player in the top 12 in all three categories. Embiid is averaging 29.9 points, 11.4 rebounds and 4.2 assists, as he pushes to become the first center to lead the NBA in scoring since O’Neal in 2000. Antetokounmpo is averaging 29.7 points, 11.6 rebounds and 5.8 assists.

All three have excelled while dealing with challenges. Jokic has played all season with the team’s two other max players — Jamal Murray and Michael Porter Jr. — either not playing at all or missing significant time. Embiid had to lead the 76ers through the roller coaster that was the Ben Simmons trade saga, while Antetokounmpo has navigated Milwaukee through a series of injuries to key contributors, most notably center Brook Lopez.

The uncertainty at the top of the ballot also is likely to trickle down the list: The Grizzlies announced Thursday that Morant will miss most of the regular season’s final two weeks with knee soreness.

Tatum and Doncic, meanwhile, have been two of the hottest players on two of the hottest teams in the league over the past couple of months, while Booker has picked up plenty of support for how he has led the Suns with Paul sidelined for more than a month due to a thumb injury before his return late last week. All three could easily surpass Morant in the final stretch.

It all sets up a frenetic finish of the regular season, with plenty to play for — on both team and individual levels.

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NBA MVP straw poll: Why the Joker could be getting a sequelon March 29, 2022 at 12:56 pm Read More »

Blackhawks have amassed sizable yet complicated collection of draft picks

Right now, the Blackhawks have five picks in the first three rounds of the 2022 NHL Draft and another five in the first three rounds of the 2023 draft.

That’s a good thing, and those numbers might increase further as general manager Kyle Davidson continues the Hawks’ rebuild with future trades.

But the specifics of those picks — with conditions attached to four of them — are unusually complicated. With the 2022 draft in Montreal just more than three months away (July 7-8), the Hawks’ scouting department can’t be certain yet exactly which picks they’re scouting for.

The highest-stakes condition involves the Hawks’ own first-rounder, which will go to the Blue Jackets unless they win the lottery for the first or second overall pick. In that case, the Hawks’ 2023 first-round pick will go to the Jackets.

The Hawks, who entered play Monday sitting 25th in the league standings, currently have a 5.8% chance of getting the No. 1 pick and a 6.2% chance of getting the No. 2 pick. That gives them a 12% chance of keeping the pick.

The Hawks getting the No. 2 pick would spark a fascinating, albeit irrelevant, argument about whether they would be better off relinquishing it and keeping their 2023 first-rounder (not that they would have that option).

The 2022 class has a stud top prospect in Shane Wright, but it drops off significantly after that. Logan Cooley, Matthew Savoie, Juraj Slavkovsky, Simon Nemec, David Jiricek, Joakim Kemell, Danila Yurov and others will be in the conversation for No. 2.

The 2023 class, conversely, is considered much deeper. And the Hawks probably will be equally bad — if not worse — next season, setting themselves up for another high pick, provided they still own it.

On the other hand, even the worst team in the league has only a 44.4% chance of getting a top-two pick in the lottery (and the second-worst team only a 25.7% chance), so the Hawks statistically would be better off with a locked-in No. 2 pick. And the dynamics of the 2023 class might evolve as players’ stocks rise and fall next season, as well.

The condition on the first- or second-round pick the Hawks received from the Wild for goalie Marc-Andre Fleury, meanwhile, leaves nothing up to debate.

The Hawks would benefit from the Wild advancing to the Western Conference finals with Fleury winning four-plus games in the first two rounds. That would activate the first-round condition. The Athletic’s playoff probabilities give the Wild a 26% chance of making it that far right now.

But the Wild making it that far also would guarantee the pick would fall between 29th and 32nd. If they’re eliminated before then, the pick would fall between 49th and 60th. That gap surely poses a planning and scouting challenge.

The Lightning’s first-round pick in 2023 (as well as 2024) is top-10-protected, which only would apply if they somehow missed the playoffs. That seems highly unlikely, but it still creates slight uncertainty.

The third round in this coming draft might be rather chaotic for the Hawks, too.

They traded their own third-rounder to the Hurricanes for a 2021 third-rounder, which they used to select defensive prospect Taige Harding, but they own the Maple Leafs’ pick from the Nikita Zadorov trade, the Golden Knights’ pick from the Mattias Janmark trade and the Oilers’ pick from the Duncan Keith trade.

And if the Oilers somehow make it to the Stanley Cup Final with Keith occupying a top-four defenseman role through the playoffs, that pick becomes a second-rounder. So, in an ideal world, the Hawks want a Wild-Oilers matchup and an Oilers victory in the Western Conference finals.

It’s all part of an atypically convoluted set of draft assets with which the Hawks are working. But at least they have those assets.

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