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James Michael Tyler, Gunther on ‘Friends,’ dies of prostate cancer at 59Bryan Alexander | USA TODAYon October 24, 2021 at 10:09 pm

James Michael Tyler appears as his “Friends” character, Gunther, in 2004. | Warner Bros.

The actor revealed in June he was undergoing chemotherapy treatment

James Michael Tyler, the actor famous for playing Central Perk manger Gunther on “Friends,” has died of prostate cancer. He was 59.

Tyler died “peacefully in his home” on Sunday, according to a statement from Tyler’s manager Toni Benson.

“The world knew him as Gunther the seventh ‘Friend,’ but Michael’s loved ones knew him as an actor, musician, cancer-awareness advocate, and loving husband,” the statement said. In June, Tyler revealed he was undergoing chemotherapy treatment after being diagnosed with Stage 4 prostate cancer.

“I’m sorry to say that I’m not appearing today with you to announce that there’s a ‘Friends’ movie,” Tyler told the “Today” show. “Actually, I’m here to let you know that in September of 2018, I was diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer.”

For all of the sitcom’s 10-season run, Tyler played the bleach-blond coffeeshop worker who served the six principal characters and pined for Rachel (Jennifer Aniston). Though Tyler had hoped to attend May’s HBO Max’s “Friends” reunion in-person, he explained he was only able to appear virtually due to his health.

“I wanted to be a part of that, and initially I was going to be on the stage, at least, with them, and be able to take part in all the festivities,” Tyler explained. “It was my decision not to be a part of that physically and make an appearance on Zoom, basically, because I didn’t wanna bring a downer on it, you know? I didn’t want to be like, ‘Oh, and by the way, Gunther has cancer.’ “

Read more at usatoday.com

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James Michael Tyler, Gunther on ‘Friends,’ dies of prostate cancer at 59Bryan Alexander | USA TODAYon October 24, 2021 at 10:09 pm Read More »

Notre Dame coach Niele Ivey relishing role as women’s basketball underdogJohn Fineran | APon October 24, 2021 at 10:10 pm

Coach Niele Ivey would like nothing better than to put the Fighting Irish back into the NCAA Tournament. | Matt Kelley/AP

After back-to-back disappointing seasons, the Fighting Irish have been picked to finish sixth in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — The competitiveness inside Notre Dame women’s basketball coach Niele Ivey was put there by the woman she succeeded, Hall of Famer Muffet McGraw.

Ivey would like nothing better than to put the Fighting Irish back into the NCAA Tournament, which was pretty much an annual rite of March under McGraw. During her 32 years in South Bend, Notre Dame qualified for 26 NCAA tournaments, including 24 in a row, and McGraw’s teams captured two championship rings in 2001 and 2018.

Now after back-to-back disappointing seasons — 13-18 in McGraw’s final season and 10-10 last season in Ivey’s first after a season as an assistant coach with the NBA’s Memphis Grizzlies — Notre Dame is in unfamiliar territory. They are barely receiving votes in the preseason Associated Press Top 25, and they have been picked to finish sixth in the Atlantic Coast Conference race.

In short, they’ve gone from being a top dog to being an underdog. That’s just fine with Ivey and her team.

“I love the energy — it’s electric,” Ivey said of her team. “Everyone is committed and has worked so hard to come back. They are playing with a sense of urgency and a hunger. That’s from having a bad taste in their mouths and not being able to make the tournament. It will be our motivation.”

Ivey was an All-America point guard on the 2001 championship team and later an assistant to McGraw. She mentored the guards, including Arike Ogunbowale, who hit buzzer-beater shots at the Final Four against Connecticut and Mississippi State to win the program’s last NCAA title.

“This year we’re flying under the radar,” said 6-foot-3 sophomore forward Maddy Westbeld, the ACC Rookie of the Year last year who averaged 15.2 points and 7.9 rebounds. “But people are going to know who we are.”

Senior guard Abby Prohaska, one of three players (juniors Anaya Peoples and Sam Brunelle are the others) who have played for both McGraw and Ivey.

“They are pretty much on the same wavelength,” she said. “It’s exciting to have someone who has played under coach McGraw, coached under coach McGraw and now stepped into her role as a head coach.”

Following the 82-81 loss to Baylor in the 2019 NCAA championship game, McGraw saw Ogunbowale and four other starters taken among the first 18 picks in the WNBA draft and lost two others to transfers. She retired after the following season.

Four players transferred after Ivey’s first season, but Ivey likes what she has returning.

In addition to Westbeld, Prohaska (4.2 ppg), Peoples (9.1 ppg) and Brunelle (8.7 ppg, 3.8 rpg), there’s senior point guard Dara Mabrey (11.3 ppg, 3.1 assists per game) along with 5-10 freshman guard Olivia Miles (9.3 ppg in six games) and 5-10 senior guard Katlyn Gilbert, who averaged just 3.8 points in nine games during an injury-plagued season.

Miles, who left Blair Academy early to play in the second semester last season, heads the newcomers who include 6-foot-3 grad-transfer Maya Dodson, who opted out of her senior season at Stanford, last year’s NCAA champion, but has rebounding and shot-blocking abilities; 6-5 sophomore forward Nat Marshall who sat out last season rehabbing a torn ACL; and 6-1 guard Sonia Citron, who averaged 13.3 points per game for the World Cup gold medal-winning U.S. under-19 team.

“We’re hoping to get a good mix of youth and experience,” Ivey said. “For us, it’s about chemistry and we developed a lot of that this summer by being together. I’m hoping that shows and transfers to the court.”

It’s also a benefit that McGraw, an ACC Network studio analyst, lives nearby and has watched practices and shared advice ahead of the season opener Nov. 9 at home against Ohio.

“I wanted her to watch practice and give me feedback,” Ivey said. “I honestly try to pick her brain as much as I can … and I got a lot of feedback.”

Did McGraw like what she saw? “She did,” Ivey said with a smile.

The underdogs soon may be barking again.

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Notre Dame coach Niele Ivey relishing role as women’s basketball underdogJohn Fineran | APon October 24, 2021 at 10:10 pm Read More »

Khalil Herbert ready for his next chance as the Bears’ lead backPatrick Finleyon October 24, 2021 at 10:28 pm

Khalil Herbert celebrates his first career touchdown Sunday against the Packers. | Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

If Herbert plays Sunday the way he did the previous two weeks — with a physical style that belies his 5-9, 212-pound frame and a patience beyond his 23 years — the Bears will be forced to find some role for him.

For the first time in a long time, Khalil Herbert isn’t playing fantasy football this year.

“I’ve got a lot going on,” he said with a smile.

His friends, though, still play. They picked up the Bears’ rookie running back off the waiver wire last week and started him against the Packers. And they were pleased with the results — 19 carries for 97 yards and Herbert’s first career touchdown. They texted him afterward about their teams.

“They’ve been sending me screenshots,” he said.

They’ll keep Herbert on their fantasy rosters again Sunday, even though he’s facing the NFL’s best rushing defense.

After the Buccaneers game, Herbert’s role is anybody’s guess. Running back Damien Williams figures will regain his complementary role after he returned from the reserve/COVID-19 list Saturday following a 10-day absence, the minimum allowed an unvaccinated player who tests positive. And top running back David Montgomery is eligible to return off injured reserve next week after recovering from a sprained knee.

If Herbert plays Sunday the way he did the previous two weeks — with a physical style that belies his 5-9, 212-pound frame and a patience beyond his 23 years — the Bears will be forced to find some role for him. But they aren’t yet ready to entertain how much he will play — if at all — once Montgomery comes back. This week, running backs coach Michael Pitre would only say the Bears will figure it out “when those guys are back and we’re presented with having some really good players” on the roster.

“You’ve seen [Herbert] grow throughout camp — you’ve seen him grow throughout the first few weeks of the season, too,” guard Cody Whitehair said. “He’s really seeing the field well. He’s seeing the running lanes really well. So we’re really excited about him.”

It all still feels a bit surreal to the sixth-round pick. Two years ago, Herbert decided to stop playing at Kansas four games into his senior season, just in time to be eligible for a redshirt. He eventually left the school altogether, calling it a “business decision” after coming to believe he “wasn’t used properly.” He landed at Virginia Tech as a graduate transfer and became the centerpiece of the Hokies’ offense. His 1,182 rushing yards were fifth-most in the country, and his 7.7 yards per carry were fourth-most.

His transfer was controversial among Kansas fans. But it wound up being the best thing he’s ever done. He has thought about it the last few weeks while looking at Snapchat, which shows him photos of what he was doing at this time last year.

“I play that what-if game a lot, too: What if I stayed? What if I didn’t?” he said. “[Virginia Tech] really put me in a position to be where I am right now and helped me out a lot. It’s the biggest blessing, I feel like — going there and doing what I did.”

The Bears drafted Herbert to return kicks. But they were impressed by his running style in camp, marked by a willingness to plow forward but also cut the run back when he sees a hole.

“He’s a really quick decision-maker,” coach Matt Nagy said. “So when he makes decisions and sticks a foot in the ground and hits it with that low-contact balance, he’s hard to bring down.”

The Buccaneers bring rushers down better than any other team in the league. Herbert leans on the mantra used in the Bears’ running back room: “Famine, famine, feast.” Little runs beget longer ones.

“His confidence is going to grow every day, every snap he gets,” Nagy said. “And I just love his demeanor. He’s a team player. Not really vocal or loud or anything like that. But he’s just a really good running back.”

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Khalil Herbert ready for his next chance as the Bears’ lead backPatrick Finleyon October 24, 2021 at 10:28 pm Read More »

Why use guns in making movies and TV show? Some in Hollywood are asking after Baldwin tragedyJocelyn Noveck | APon October 24, 2021 at 10:40 pm

The executive producer of the ABC cop drama “The Rookie,” starring Nathan Fillion (center), says live weapons will no longer be used in the show’s production. | ABC

One cinematographer calls the practice ‘archaic’ in the age of ‘readily available and inexpensive computer graphics.’

NEW YORK — With computer-generated imagery, it seems the sky’s the limit in the magic Hollywood can produce: elaborate dystopian universes. Trips to outer space, for those neither astronauts nor billionaires. Immersive journeys to the future, or back to bygone eras.

But as a shocked and saddened industry was reminded last week, many productions still use guns — real guns — when filming. And despite rules and regulations, people can get killed, as happened last week when Alec Baldwin fatally shot cinematographer Halyna Hutchins after he was handed a weapon and told it was safe.

The tragedy has led some in Hollywood, along with incredulous observers, to ask: Why are real guns ever used on set, when computers can create gunshots in post-production? Isn’t even the smallest risk unacceptable?

For Alexi Hawley, it is. “Any risk is too much risk,” the executive producer of ABC’s police drama “The Rookie” announced in a staff memo Friday, saying the events in New Mexico had “shaken us all.”

There “will be no more ‘live’ weapons on the show,” he wrote in a note, first reported by The Hollywood Reporter and confirmed by The Associated Press.

Instead, he said, the policy would be to use replica guns, which use pellets and not bullets, with muzzle flashes added in post-production.

The director of the popular Kate Winslet drama “Mare of Easttown,” Craig Zobel, called for the entire industry to follow suit and said gunshots on that show were added after filming, even though on previous productions he has used live rounds.

“There’s no reason to have guns loaded with blanks or anything on set anymore,” Zobel wrote on Twitter. “Should just be fully outlawed. There’s computers now. The gunshots on ‘Mare of Easttown’ are all digital. You can probably tell, but who cares? It’s an unnecessary risk.”

Bill Dill — a cinematographer who taught Hutchins, a rising star in her field, at the American Film Institute — expressed disgust in an interview over the “archaic practice of using real guns with blanks in them, when we have readily available and inexpensive computer graphics.”

Dill, whose credits include “The Five Heartbeats” and “Dancing in September,” said there was added danger from real guns because “people are working long hours” on films and “are exhausted.”

“There’s no excuse for using live weapons,” he said.

A petition was launched over the weekend on change.org for real guns to be banned from production sets.

“There is no excuse for something like this to happen in the 21st century,” it said of the tragedy. “This isn’t the early 90?s, when Brandon Lee was killed in the same manner. Change needs to happen before additional talented lives are lost.” Lee, the actor son of martial arts legend Bruce Lee, was killed in 1993 by a makeshift bullet left in a prop gun after a previous scene.

The petition appealed to Baldwin directly “to use his power and influence” in the industry and promote “Halyna’s Law,” which would ban the use of real firearms on set. As it stands, the U.S. federal workplace safety agency is silent on the issue and most of the preferred states for productions take a largely hands-off approach.

Hutchins, 42, died and director Joel Souza was wounded Thursday on the set of the Western “Rust” when Baldwin fired a prop gun that a crew member unwittingly told him was “cold” or not loaded with live rounds, according to court documents made public Friday.

Souza was later released from the hospital.

The tragedy came after some workers had walked off the job to protest safety conditions and other production issues on the film, of which Baldwin is the star and a producer.

In an interview, British cinematographer Steven Hall noted that he worked on a production this year in Madrid that involved “lots of firearms.”

“We were encouraged not to use blanks, but to rely on visual effects in post [production] to create whatever effect we wanted from a particular firearm, with the actor miming the recoil from the gun, and it works very well,” he said.

He noted, though, that special effects add costs to a production’s budget. “So it’s easier and perhaps more economic to actually discharge your weapon on set using a blank,” said Hall, a veteran cinematographer who has worked on films like “Fury” and “Thor: The Dark World.” But, he said, “the problem with blanks is, of course … something is emitted from the gun.”

Besides financial concerns, why else would real guns be seen as preferable? “There are advantages to using blanks on set that some people want to get,” said Sam Dormer, a British “armorer,” or firearms specialist. “For instance, you get a [better] reaction from the actor.”

Still, Dormer said, the movie industry is likely moving away from real guns, albeit slowly.

The term “prop gun” can apply to anything from a rubber toy to a real firearm that can fire a projectile. If it’s used for firing, even blanks, it’s considered a real gun. A blank is a cartridge that contains gunpowder but no bullet. Still, it can hurt or even kill someone who is close by, according to the Actors’ Equity Association.

That’s why many are calling to ban blanks as well, and use disabled or replica guns.

“Really there is no good reason in this day to have blanks on set,” director Liz Garbus wrote on Twitter. “CGI can make the gun seem ‘real,’ and if you don’t have the budget for the CGI, then don’t shoot the scene.”

Broadway actor and playwright Harvey Fierstein wrote that the tragedy certainly made him wonder why Hollywood wasn’t leaning more on special effects.

“Why, with all of the Hollywood magic available, are they still firing off gun powder? They know that they are going to goose-up the gunshots in post production,” he wrote on Facebook. “Why chance an accident in the first place?”

But he also said the death raised even broader questions.

“With all of that Hollywood talent and imagination are we still writing stories about shooting one another?” he asked. “Do we really have nothing better to spend millions of dollars on than the glamorization of gun battles?”

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Why use guns in making movies and TV show? Some in Hollywood are asking after Baldwin tragedyJocelyn Noveck | APon October 24, 2021 at 10:40 pm Read More »

Bears’ Khalil Mack, Allen Robinson to face BucsPatrick Finleyon October 24, 2021 at 7:01 pm

The Bears ruled Akiem Hicks out Saturday. | Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

Mack has been dealt with a foot injury for a month or so. Robinson and Grant have ankle injuries.

TAMPA, Fla. — Outside linebacker Khalil Mack, receiver Allen Robinson and returner Jakeem Grant will play for the Bears on Sunday despite being listed as questionable.

Mack has been dealt with a foot injury for a month or so. Robinson and Grant have ankle injuries.

Outside linebacker Robert Quinn remains on the league’s reserve/COVID-19 and will not play.

The Bears ruled out defensive lineman Akiem Hicks on Saturday with a groin problem. On Friday, they said that safety Tashaun Gipson would not play because of a hip injury.

Third-string quarterback Nick Foles and receiver Breshad Perriman were the Bears’ only two healthy scratches.

The roster is limited because of coronavirus outbreaks throughout the team. On Sunday morning alone, the Bears ruled out starting right tackle Elijah Wilkinson and inside linebacker Caleb Johnson when they put them on the reserve/COVID-19 list. They join Quinn and tight end Jimmy Graham, who were put on the list this week.

Running back Damien Williams returned from the list Saturday and will play Sunday. Mike Furrey will coach receivers Sunday after returning from his coronavirus-related absence Thursday.

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Bears’ Khalil Mack, Allen Robinson to face BucsPatrick Finleyon October 24, 2021 at 7:01 pm Read More »

Four Downs: News and notes from Week 9 in high school footballMichael O’Brienon October 24, 2021 at 5:50 pm

Brother Rice’s Jack Lausch (8) throws a pass in the end zone to for the two-point conversion against Marist. | Kirsten Stickney/For the Sun-Times

Why doesn’t Jack Lausch have a scholarship? Mid-Suburban League questions, Naperville’s stellar season and Fenwick doubters.

The Player of the Year race is always in the back of my mind. Decisions must be made.

Brother Rice quarterback Jack Lausch started to make a case for himself in the Crusaders’ wild loss to Loyola. He was spectacular in a loss to Joliet Catholic a few weeks later.

But those were losses and losing games doesn’t win awards. So Brother Rice’s win at Marist on Friday was a major step forward for Lausch’s candidacy. He was explosive on the air and the ground.

Lausch opened the third quarter with a 70-yard touchdown run and had 19 carries for 164 yards and three touchdowns. Lausch was 14-of-18 passing for 189 yards and one touchdown. He connected with seven different receivers.

“Jack Lausch has all the intangibles,” Brother Rice coach Brian Badke said. “He is the player of the year, I don’t think there is any question. Obviously I’m biased and I haven’t seen everybody. But there is no one better as a leader. He’s the guy. What he does running and throwing the ball is incredible. If you are open he is going to get it to you.”

Lausch is currently planning to attend Notre Dame and play football and baseball. He’s a preferred walk-on with the football team. Cole Kmet and Jeff Samardzija recently excelled in both sports for the Fighting Irish.

“[Lausch] is special,” Badke said. “For him not to have a full Division I football scholarship right now, that’s ridiculous. I know it has to do with the pandemic and everything but he’s by far the best player in the state.”

Naperville’s stellar season

What a season it has been in Naperville. Neuqua Valley and Naperville Central have spent most of the season ranked, while Naperville North has played the role of spoiler.

The Huskies suffered three consecutive losses this season. They beat Benet in the season opener and then dropped games to Glenbard North, Woodhaven, MI, and Neuqua Valley.

Naperville North has rebounded well from that speed bump. The Huskies beat Naperville Central in Week 6 and handed Neuqua Valley it’s first loss in a thriller on Friday.

The IHSA brackets have not been kind. Naperville North and Naperville Central will have a rematch in the first round of the Class 8A playoffs this weekend. The game will be played at North for the first time since 1999, it is usually at North Central College.

MSL questions

There is no doubt that the Mid-Suburban League plays quality football. So why isn’t there an MSL team in the Super 25 right now? It’s because I have no clue which team is the best in the league.

Keep an eye on all of these teams in the playoffs though: Palatine, Prospect, Hoffman Estates, Barrington, Buffalo Grove, Hersey and even Rolling Meadows. They will all be difficult teams to eliminate.

Fenwick believers

Fenwick was in the preseason Super 25 and has been ranked the past several weeks. But boy did the Friars have doubters around the state this season. That may have changed after they knocked off St. Ignatius 28-20 on Friday.

Fenwick is led by quarterback Kaden Cobb, one of the area’s most talented players. The Ball State recruit threw for two touchdowns and rushed for one at St. Ignatius.

The Friars are a number two seed in the Class 5A playoffs but are the most battle-tested team in the entire field and the favorites to win the trophy.

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Four Downs: News and notes from Week 9 in high school footballMichael O’Brienon October 24, 2021 at 5:50 pm Read More »

House Democrats discuss renaming the U.S. Capitol Benghazion October 24, 2021 at 5:31 pm

The Chicago Board of Tirade

House Democrats discuss renaming the U.S. Capitol Benghazi

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House Democrats discuss renaming the U.S. Capitol Benghazion October 24, 2021 at 5:31 pm Read More »

Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 high school football rankings for Week 10Michael O’Brienon October 24, 2021 at 4:54 pm

Brother Rice’s Jack Lausch (8) and Luke Niksic (22) celebrate Niksic’s touchdown against Marist. | Kirsten Stickney/For the Sun-Times

A tumultuous Week 9 led to a major shakeup all over the rankings.

Now that the path to a state title has been revealed, it is easy to overlook what happened in Week 9. Not here in Super 25 world. Week 9 matters.

Glenbard West, Marist, Prospect and Glenbard North all took losses and drop out of the rankings. That’s likely to be pretty controversial in Glen Ellyn and at Pulsaski and 115th, but you can’t coast on being a historical power forever.

The Hilltoppers were shut out on Saturday and don’t have a marquee win this season. It’s the same for Marist. All three of the RedHawks’ losses are to CCL/ESCC Blue teams, but they weren’t really in any of the games at the end. Meanwhile, teams like St. Ignatius and Fenwick have battled those same teams tough and even pulled off some wins.

I’ve given Glenbard North the benefit of the doubt most of the season. I think the DuKane might be better than most people thought early on.

Naperville North, which is just 6-3 but has beaten Naperville Central and split a pair of games with Neuqua Valley, jumps into the rankings for the first time this season.

Also joining are three undefeated teams on the outskirts of the coverage area that deserve some recognition for stellar seasons: Kankakee, Richmond-Burton and Morris.

Week 10’s Super 25

With record and last week’s ranking

1. Loyola (9-0) 1

8A: vs. Downers Grove South

2. Joliet Catholic (9-0) 2

4A: vs. Marengo

3. Brother Rice (7-2) 3

7A: vs. Wheaton Warrenville South

4. Maine South (8-1) 6

8A: vs. New Trier

5. Cary-Grove (9-0) 5

6A: vs. Rockford East

6. Batavia (9-0) 8

7A: vs. Lake Zurich

7. Warren (8-1) 7

8A: vs. Barrington

8. Wheaton North (8-1) 9

7A: vs. Larkin

9. Neuqua Valley (8-1) 3

8A: vs. Bartlett

10. Mount Carmel (6-3) 11

7A: at Thornwood

11. Naperville Central (6-3) 14

8A: at Naperville North

12. Hinsdale Central (8-1) 16

8A: vs. Sandburg

13. Fenwick (7-2) 23

5A: vs. Kaneland

14. St. Ignatius (8-1) 10

6A: vs. Bremen

15. St. Rita (7-2) 13

7A: vs. Rolling Meadows

16. Lincoln-Way East (7-2) 15

8A: vs. Oswego East

17. Lockport (8-1) 17

8A: vs. Lyons

18. Lemont (9-0) 18

6A: vs. Kennedy

19. South Elgin (9-0) 19

8A: vs. Edwardsville

20. Bolingbrook (7-2) 20

8A: vs. Glenbard North

21. York (8-1) 21

8A vs. Minooka

22. Naperville North (6-3) NR

8A: vs. Naperville Central

23. Kankakee (9-0) NR

5A: vs. Carbondale

24. Morris (9-0) NR

5A: vs. LaSalle-Peru

25. Richmond-Burton (9-0) NR

4A: vs. Sullivan

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Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 high school football rankings for Week 10Michael O’Brienon October 24, 2021 at 4:54 pm Read More »

No Bull – Lonzo Ball and Alex Caruso are all about the art of chaosJoe Cowleyon October 24, 2021 at 1:15 pm

It’s only three regular-season games, four preseason games, and a handful of intrasquad practices, but Ball and Caruso are showing that getting hands on the basketball on the defensive end is an art form that leads to disruption for the opposing team.

The Ball brothers didn’t have much of a choice.

As Lonzo explained it, dad, LaVar, often had them playing up, so more times than not they were on the basketball court with bigger, stronger kids.

If they wanted the ball in those youth leagues they had to take it.

That’s where Lonzo Ball started working on his craft. When taller players pull down a rebound, position yourself underneath them as they bring the ball down, and slap up. Against players his size, use the long wingspan to tap at the ball, but always play with hands out.

Alex Caruso’s journey was a bit simpler.

Just be an irritant, by all means necessary.

Both have become artists at deflection and disruption, and they just might be painting their “Starry Night” now playing for the Bulls.

Or maybe for the opposition it looks more like Edward Munch’s “The Scream.”

“Hell yeah, it disrupts the rhythm of it, even if they’re not getting steals,” All-Star guard Zach LaVine said, when discussing what Ball and Caruso do to another team’s offensive possession.

And that’s the goal.

Get hands on the ball as often as possible on the defensive end. If it leads to a steal like many did in the 97-82 win over the Pistons on Saturday? Great. The Bulls finished with 13 in that win, with Ball and Caruso combining for eight of them.

But causing chaos in those 24 seconds the opposition has to get into an offensive rhythm is the true goal. In just three games and a handful of intrasquad practices LaVine is a believer in the benefits that chaos causes.

“[Ball and Caruso are] so active [defensively] you’ve got to be aware of them,” LaVine said. “Even for guys like me and DeMar [DeRozan], it helps us be in the passing lanes more, get some extra rebounds because then guys’ rhythm is off. They’re effort and energy bleeds throughout us as a team.”

And bleeds out the opposition when it comes to scoring. Yes, it’s only three games, and yes, beating Detroit twice and a winless Pelicans squad doesn’t scream contender yet, but allowing just 94 points per game so far and finishing with the best defense in the preseason isn’t just luck.

“It’s just trying to change the culture,” Caruso said of what he’s trying to add defensively. “Defense is all care. It’s just care-factor, effort and execution. Our effort and our care-factor is high. It just comes down to execution. We have all the tools, players and desire to do it.

“I think Lonzo and I have the same mindset on defense, just try and be pests. Blow-up plays, get deflections, anything to start the break, because when we’re in transition you’ve all see we’re really lethal. It’s just about getting stops and getting out there.”

Caruso entered Sunday with 4.7 deflections per game, which was third in the league. Ball led the Bulls in blocks and was second to Caruso in steals.

And it’s not like the Bulls only want them to be handsy on the defensive end, they need them to be. The concern with this roster coming into the season was the lack of size. Disruption is the equalizer to that shortcoming.

“I think we just know that we’re smaller than a lot of teams so we have to use our quickness and our athleticism to our abilities,” Ball said. “And that kind of translates into using hands and coming down and doubling, and when you see the ball, going for it.

“I think everybody has that mindset right now, and I think that’s why we’re getting a lot of deflections as a team.”

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No Bull – Lonzo Ball and Alex Caruso are all about the art of chaosJoe Cowleyon October 24, 2021 at 1:15 pm Read More »

Wicker Park club owner says police were called twice to disperse unruly crowd — they never showed, and 5 people were later shotSophie Sherryon October 24, 2021 at 12:31 pm

The Point, a bar and music venue at 1565 N. Milwaukee Ave. in Wicker Park. A shooting outside the bar early on Sunday, Oct. 10 left one person dead and four others wounded. | Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

“We were told it is because the resources were being stretched too thin, but it doesn’t change the fact that someone died,” said Point owner Jun Lin.

The bar staff had a bad feeling.

Milwaukee Avenue, always a busy strip, was clogged with cars and people and was getting noisier and more crowded by the hour.

Finally, just before 3 a.m. Oct. 10, the staff at The Point called police and asked for squad cars to clear the block in front of the Wicker Park club.

When no officers responded, the staff called again at 3:34 a.m., according to phone records provided by the club. Then, they shut down the bar.

“We called, and no one showed up,” owner Jun Lin told the Sun-Times.

The shooting started about 10 minutes later.

As many as four gunmen opened fire as people ran through traffic, ducked behind cars or limped down the street. One person was killed, and four others were wounded.

It was another mass shooting in a year that was already far outpacing each of the last five years, according to a Sun-Times analysis. And it’s one Lin and others believe could have been prevented had police stuck with a plan worked out with the neighborhood.

Following complaints from residents and business owners over the summer, the city instituted an overnight parking ban on weekend nights to discourage unruly crowds.

Lin said it’s an effective plan, but it’s not always carried out.

“Some weekends it was happening, some weekends they weren’t,” Lin said. “We were told it is because the resources were being stretched too thin, but it doesn’t change the fact that someone died.”

In those early morning hours that Sunday, surveillance video shows Milwaukee Avenue packed with parked and idling cars.

Officers who would have been ticketing and helping to clear those cars had been pulled for another assignment, a carjacking not far away, according to Ald. Daniel La Spata (1st).

La Spata acknowledged the need for greater coordination among police, the Department of Streets and Sanitation, and the Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection “to really make sure that this is … a vibrant community with vibrant nightlife that is also safe and healthy.”

Police officials had no comment.

Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times
After residents and business owners complained, the city imposed an overnight parking ban on weekend nights along a stretch of Milwaukee Avenue in Wicker Park to discourage unruly crowds. Jun Lin, owner of The Point, said it’s an effective plan, but it’s not always carried out.

‘War zone’

Fernandos Johnson Jr. was heading out of The Point, 1565 N. Milwaukee Ave., when the shooting began.

He had just finished playing a show at nearby Subterranean and went over to the late-night bar as he had done many times before. After the lights came on and staff began ushering people out the door, Johnson stayed behind, talking with a friend until security told them they had to leave.

He was nearing the front door when he heard someone fire off four or five shots.

“I ducked behind the wall,” Johnson said. “You hear people screaming, running around the club … It was a wild couple of minutes.”

Surveillance video shows a guard guiding people back inside the building, where they ducked down and hid or rushed out the back exit. One staff member is seen helping a wounded woman inside, as another works to apply a tourniquet to her leg.

“It was a war zone,” Lin said. “Everybody was shooting everybody.”

About three minutes after the first shots, the bar’s surveillance footage shows police cars arriving in front.

The Chicago Police Department later released a statement saying the shooting followed “an altercation inside the bar,” but Lin said the only “altercation” police could be referring to took place a few minutes before the bar shut down, Lin said.

Footage shows two men stepping close to each other as a woman steps in between. A crowd begins to form but dissipates about 30 seconds later. A security guard comes over, and later the two men are seen hugging and smiling.

Lin said his bar had already decided to close before the exchange because of the large crowds outside. Minutes later, lights go on in the venue, and patrons begin to exit.

The club’s security cameras catch a man in a ski mask standing near a car outside and firing a gun, apparently shooting back at someone across the street. Police say in all, four men were involved in the shootout.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
Staff at The Point scans ID cards, pats down male patrons and uses metal-detector wands to check women. But allowing cars to park on the street grants people easy access to stashed guns. “What more can I do?” asked club owner Jun Lin asked.

Stashed guns

The first shots were fired by Raymond R. Jones at a group of people outside the club, according to police. Someone from the group returned fire, striking the 32-year-old Jones in the chest as he fell between two parked cars.

Twenty seconds after the first round of shots, Teanius Sykes entered the car of his girlfriend, a security guard, and took her handgun from the glovebox, police say. Sykes was captured on surveillance video shooting into the crowd by The Point. Someone from the crowd again returned fire, prosecutors have said.

A woman walking nearby was shot in her shoulder as she ran for cover. One of two people who got out of a car when the shooting started was hit in the leg, prosecutors said. Two others were wounded before the shooting ended before police arrived.

Lin said his head of security performed CPR on Jones, but he died. The other four survived. So far this year in Chicago, nearly 300 people have suffered gunshot wounds in mass shootings; that’s more than all of last year and more than double 2019’s toll.

Lin said his staff scans ID cards, patting down male patrons and using metal-detector wands to check women. But allowing cars to park on the street grants people easy access to stashed guns.

“As a business owner, what more can I do?” Lin asked. “Other than fold up and go away. But I have 40 employees I am responsible for … I have my life savings in these businesses.”

Lin believes the solution is very simple: Tow the cars and station squad cars on the ends of the block during weekend overnight hours.

The weekend after the shooting, police and city agencies showed up to enforce the parking ban in the 1500 block of North Milwaukee Avenue and shut down an “illegal party,” according to La Spata.

Lin was pleased with the police presence but hopes the police will be more consistent with its enforcement.

“We’ve had two meetings with the police so far,” he said. “We’re told that at a minimum they’ll be ticketing and towing the cars off the street.”

Read More

Wicker Park club owner says police were called twice to disperse unruly crowd — they never showed, and 5 people were later shotSophie Sherryon October 24, 2021 at 12:31 pm Read More »