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Tashaun Gipson on taunting flag: ‘I just clapped, man’Patrick Finleyon September 19, 2021 at 11:26 pm

Takeaways from the Bears’ 20-17 home opener win against the Bengals on Sunday:

Taunting?

The NFL’s offseason decision to crack down on taunting was apparent by the end of the first quarter Sunday. After Bengals rookie Ja’Marr Chase dropped a pass on third down, Bears safety Tashaun Gipson clapped in his face — and was flagged 15 yards. Rather than punt, the Bengals had a first down.

Less than four minutes later, Bengals safety Vonn Bell was flagged for taunting quarterback Andy Dalton after an incompletion.

“I just clapped, man. … ” Gipson said. “I don’t want to be out there if I can’t be happy for my guys when they make big plays. That’s what this game is about. It’s just adrenaline. It was costly. And that was something I just can’t do: put our team in that third down and it’s hard to get off the field.”

Montgomery moves

David Montgomery wasn’t as explosive as he was in Week 1, carrying 20 times for 61 yards. The Bears leaned on him, though, with a rookie quarterback under center.

“Just his mentality, I love it … ” Justin Fields said. “Playing with him, he gives the offense great confidence. And he’s awesome, for sure.”

Santos kicks

Cairo Santos made two chip-shot field goals — a 28-yarder and 22-yarder, both in the fourth quarter — to continue a franchise-best hot streak. Santos has made 28-straight regular-season field goals dating to Week 3 of last year, when he missed a 46-yarder wide left in Atlanta.

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Tashaun Gipson on taunting flag: ‘I just clapped, man’Patrick Finleyon September 19, 2021 at 11:26 pm Read More »

Riot Fest Day 4 reviews: Health, MelkbellySelena Fragassi – For the Sun-Timeson September 19, 2021 at 9:57 pm

Sunday at Riot Fest brought the closing ceremonies to one of Chicago’s best independent homegrown events as well as the true end to festival season. Already Riot is thinking of next year with banner ads running all weekend to get fans to sign the petition to bring ABBA to the grounds in 2022 and other promos for the other announced headliners, the original Misfits and My Chemical Romance. If the past four days are any indication, many are already counting down the days until the day Riot returns.

Health

We might never know if Health and Nine Inch Nails had planned to join forces on Sunday at Riot Fest for their collaborative track “Isn’t Everyone,” originally released in May to critical applause. The two acts also previously toured together. But of course NIN canceled its upcoming concert schedule and Riot Fest appearance that was slated for Sunday out of concerns over the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. In the wake, Health emerged, giving the summer goths in the crowd a hearty dose of the industrial-tinged noise rock that many were still craving. The experimental trio out of L.A. creates a real mood with its voluminous sound, a passive-aggressive mix of frontman Jake Duzsik’s ethereal vocals finding nooks within the brutal beats of drummer BJ Miller and bassist/noise tinkerer John Famiglietti’s feverish assault. In a flash, they can flip the switch from chilling cinematic scenescape to harsh existential dread while always sounding cohesive. They are a prime example of why it’s always good to get to the festival grounds early to catch the rising stars and unexpected gems.

Health performs Sunday at Riot Fest in Douglass Park.Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Melkbelly

Chicago’s fuzzy noise rockers Melkbelly took a minute to acknowledge another one of the big gaps on Sunday’s lineup with a tribute to the Pixies (who canceled their appearance a few weeks back), effortlessly covering their song “Gigantic” by bringing on stage a trio of friends only known as Wendy, Linda and Liz to help frontwoman Miranda Winters on the backup vocals. The strong female force was something Winters was quick to point out by the end of the short set as the rockers ripped through “Kissing Under Some Bats” from their April 2020 album “PITH.” Winters introduced the song by dedicating it to the ladies in the crowd or “anyone who wants to play music but is afraid.” Melkbelly — also featuring Bart Winters on guitar, Liam Winters on bass and James Wetzel on drums — upholds the lineage of noise-blaring rock acts from Chicago, showcased well in the performance. The Rebel Stage where they played was a frontrunner for some great local talent over the weekend, and also featured Chicago act Airstream Futures earlier in the day. Though Melkbelly claimed to have “dropped the ball” on merch for the festival, the band members did encourage the crowd to meet them by their van in the alley to pick up T-shirts and copies of the new album, and hopefully people were brave enough to do so.

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Riot Fest Day 4 reviews: Health, MelkbellySelena Fragassi – For the Sun-Timeson September 19, 2021 at 9:57 pm Read More »

Cubs’ Nico Hoerner wants to finish strong after frustrating seasonRussell Dorseyon September 19, 2021 at 10:42 pm

MILWAUKEE — Nico Hoerner was expected to be a big part of the Cubs’ plans this season, but the second-year infielder hasn’t been able to make the impact the team had expected due to injuries.

Hoerner has had three lengthy stints on the injured list this year suffering a left forearm strain in a collision, left hamstring strain while running the bases and a right oblique strain while swinging the bat. In total, he’s been forced to miss 90 games this season due to injury.

He started for the first time since July 29 in Sunday’s 6-4 win over the Brewers as the team activated him from the IL. Hoerner went 0-for-4 in his return.

“Definitely been a lot to take on this year,” Hoerner said on Saturday. “I think every year comes with challenges like that. I think we talked about just playing these last two weeks, and that being my focus right now, obviously. But definitely when this year is done, there will be a lot to reflect on.”

After his latest rehab assignment slowed after he felt discomfort in his oblique, it’s natural to wonder if the Cubs should just shut him down.

But after missing so much time, Hoerner looks at the final two weeks as an opportunity. Not only to finish the year healthy, but have something positive to go into the offseason with.

“It’s 10-15 games in the Major Leagues,” Hoerner said. That’s a pretty awesome chance to play some good baseball and finish the year on the field. Play some shortstop. Like there’s a lot of positives and things to learn in a situation like that.

“Every year has its challenges. Obviously, it’s been more on the physical side for me this year. And I’ve learned a lot in that process and put it to use these last two weeks.”

Hoerner has had a strange first few seasons in the big leagues and after dealing with injuries throughout his professional career, he’s yet to get a full season under his belt. It’s understandable why the Cubs would want Hoerner to finish the season out to continue to see him develop and play in games.

“If you’re a real competitor and you like your job, you want to play,” manager David Ross said. “I mean, at the end of the day, he’s a baseball player who wants to play baseball. So like, it doesn’t matter if it’s a game, you know?

“It helps us see and evaluate him and then still just like, let him be in an environment that is fun, and continue to see good pitching. And then like, [with the] short season last year and not a ton of games this year, injured a lot in the minor leagues, every game matters, you know? The at-bats and all that stuff is this healthy.”

Hoerner is a big part of the Cubs’ future and will be one of the players expected to make a big contribution to next season’s roster along with the likes of guys like Nick Madrigal and Willson Contreras.

Hoerner’s versatility is going to be an important part of that puzzle. While he’s moved around the diamond a lot over his first few seasons, he’s excited to get a chance to play shortstop everyday for the time being.

“To play short again is really exciting,” Hoerner said. “Being down there and playing the last four games at shortstop is a lot of fun. Something I’ve done my whole life and I love doing. So definitely excited to do that at this level a little more.”

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Cubs’ Nico Hoerner wants to finish strong after frustrating seasonRussell Dorseyon September 19, 2021 at 10:42 pm Read More »

Riot Fest 2021: Day 4 photo highlightsSun-Times staffon September 19, 2021 at 10:47 pm

Riot Fest presented its last music of the 2021 festival on a warm day in Douglass Park.

Slipknot, Machine Gun Kelly, the Flaming Lips and Devo were the scheduled headliners on a day that also was to include sets by Simple Plan, Anthrax, New Found Glory and many other acts.

It was a comeback for the event that was canceled in 2020 during the think of COVID-19 restrictions. This year there are plenty of COVID-19 safety protocols in place including hand sanitizing and handwashing stations throughout the park, and an onsite COVID vaccination station (courtesy of St. Anthony Hospital; Pfizer and J&J vaccines only).

In addition, all attendees had to show proof of a full vax or negative COVID test results (the latter within 48 hours of entry date) accompanied by a valid, government-issued photo ID to gain entry each day.

A carnival provided a break from the music.

Here are some of the sights and sounds at Day 2 of Riot Fest:

Festival-goers watch Health perform at the Riot Stage on day 4 of Riot Fest at Douglass Park.Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Melkbelly performs at the Rebel Stage on day 4 of Riot Fest at Douglass Park.Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Festivalgoers crowd under shade from trees during 90-degree temperatures on day 4 of Riot Fest at Douglass Park.Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

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Riot Fest 2021: Day 4 photo highlightsSun-Times staffon September 19, 2021 at 10:47 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears: Justin Fields might finally be the starting QBVincent Pariseon September 19, 2021 at 10:30 pm

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Chicago Bears: Justin Fields might finally be the starting QBVincent Pariseon September 19, 2021 at 10:30 pm Read More »

Lyric’s harrowing ‘Macbeth’ casts a spell on crowds eager for opera againNancy Malitz – For the Sun-Timeson September 19, 2021 at 9:06 pm

The ovations were enormous, even before the show itself started. Not for 18 months, in this era of COVID havoc, have crowds been able to gather at the Lyric Opera. Their Sept. 17 return at long last, in party mode by the diligently masked thousands, was for Verdi’s supernatural “Macbeth.”

‘Macbeth’: 4 out of 4

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David McVicar’s harrowing, witch-ridden production made its debut inside an auditorium that had been magnificently freshened. The hall’s legendary gilding is still intact, of course, but all is soothed by the fresh balm of gently circulating air, plush new seats that are staggered for better sight lines, and serenely smooth, ankle-friendly carpets and aisles. All the better to be scared out of our wits by a brilliant opera of grand proportions.

The company’s new music director, Enrique Mazzola, an Italian opera specialist, was in splendid form at the helm, before an orchestra quite capable of sounding otherworldly or glorious, as needed, despite the long break. And a welcome Lyric Opera familiar, the great Verdi soprano Sondra Radvanovsky — Berwyn-born — went all in as the ambitious wife who seizes on the prophecy that her husband is to become king and goads him into considerable bloody business by way of hurrying things along. Note to would-be kings and queens: When it comes to prophecy, consider the source, and listen better to details.

McVicar’s unsettling new production, his 10th at the Lyric, takes place entirely in a Scottish chapel, a dark space that would normally welcome a devout community, but instead intertwines rapture and horror. Its resident coven of witches delivers a startling prophecy to Macbeth and Banquo, who are friends, both of them successful generals in King Duncan’s army: Macbeth will be king, but Banquo will be the father of kings, the witches say.

Almost immediately, these two become suspicious of each other. Meanwhile, no small detail, King Duncan is still very much alive. The gory events that follow will play out, one by one, in McVicar’s creepy sacred space. These superb rivals — bass-baritone Craig Colclough, in his Lyric Opera debut as stunned Macbeth, and bass-baritone Christian Van Horn, well-known to Lyric audiences, as Macbeth’s now-uneasy rival Banquo — complete the grand trio that will, with Radvanovksy, drive the show into glories of triumph, terror, murder and madness.

The severe and commanding sets, designed by John Macfarlane, include an ominous painted drop that suggests the doom that awaits the gullible protagonists at their end. And the harbingers of Macbeth’s downfall are immediately on display in the strong performances by all three principals. The vocal artistry is top-notch throughout here.

Colclough’s voice is capable of an alarming edge, a mercurial menace that his Macbeth can wield with easy fury. But from the very beginning, we also see him, hear him, lose his grip in what was an impressively relentless and deeply probing characterization. After botching the midnight murder of King Duncan by failing to plant evidence that will finger the servants, and then also turning Banquo’s murder into a very messy business, Macbeth is seen as drunk, tyrannical, abusive, and distracted in the very first minute of the banquet scene. His increasingly strange behavior was unhingement to behold. Van Horn’s Banquo, by contrast, provided the deep weight, the gravitas of a principled man who recognizes the true danger of Macbeth as a ruthless rival; Banquo must attempt the all but impossible protection of his son. Chicago audiences know Van Horn as a former Ryan Center alum. He has matured into a splendid artist.

Christian Van Horn plays Macbeth’s rival Banquo.Ken Howard

As for the dark psychological journey of Radvanovsky’s ambitious Lady Macbeth — alive with an almost sexual thrill in her relish of glory and power in “Vieni t’affretta,” and even more compelling as she falls relentlessly into madness — the grotesque nature of her dreadful circumstance is tragically apparent in the arc and color of each phrase. This was a performance by an artist in command of her full powers. The sleep-walking scene, “Una macchia e qui tuttora!,” when she hallucinates that the blood of their victims won’t come off her hands, was spell-binding.

Through it all, an exceptional chorus of witches, including some children, performed as Verdi’s sinister hags. They added bleak resonance to this evening of great theater.

Before an audience that was genuinely hungry for it, in a newly upgraded magical space, one could not ask for more.

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Lyric’s harrowing ‘Macbeth’ casts a spell on crowds eager for opera againNancy Malitz – For the Sun-Timeson September 19, 2021 at 9:06 pm Read More »

Bears QB Andy Dalton hurts knee, but Bears don’t fear ACL tearPatrick Finleyon September 19, 2021 at 9:50 pm

Bears quarterback Andy Dalton hurt his left knee while scrambling for 14 yards in the second quarter Sunday at Soldier Field. After returning to play in the next series, Dalton walked to the Bears locker room and was ruled questionable to return.

Rookie Justin Fields took his place for the rest of the game.

Afterward, coach Matt Nagy said he didn’t believe Dalton tore his anterior cruciate ligament, which would have been season-ending.

“They’re looking at that [Monday] and the next couple days,” he said. “But I’m pretty sure we can rule that out.”

Dalton pointed to Fields to enter the game after he scrambled out of bounds along the Bears sideline. When Dalton emerged from the injury tent, he tested his injury on the sideline by jogging and practicing dropbacks. He then decided he could enter the game — and played four plays before the Bears punted.

Dalton was sharp against the Bengals, leading the Bears to a touchdown on their first drive. He completed an 11-yard scoring pass to Allen Robinson to go up 7-0 in the Bears’ home opener; unlike last week, Fields did not play on the first drive.

Dalton went 9-for-10 for 56 yards and scrambled twice for 25 yards against the Bengals, his former team. Dalton spent nine seasons in Cincinnati before joining the Cowboys as a backup last season and signing a $10 million contract with the Bears in March.

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Bears QB Andy Dalton hurts knee, but Bears don’t fear ACL tearPatrick Finleyon September 19, 2021 at 9:50 pm Read More »

Chicago Cubs: Patrick Wisdom breaks Kris Bryant’s recordVincent Pariseon September 19, 2021 at 9:21 pm

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Chicago Cubs: Patrick Wisdom breaks Kris Bryant’s recordVincent Pariseon September 19, 2021 at 9:21 pm Read More »

QB Justin Fields brings thrills back to Bears, and it only gets better from hereJason Lieseron September 19, 2021 at 7:56 pm

For the first time in two years, it feels like the Bears are actually headed the right way.

It’s weird for outlook to be so bright after a 20-17 win over the middling Bengals, but it’s all about Justin Fields now. It’s the best thing that could happen to the Bears.

Their offensive line is still a mess, it’s an ongoing fight against time for the defense and it’s hard to trust Matt Nagy. But the Fields adventure is underway.

The Bears slow-played his development because they were so committed to Andy Dalton as their starter, but now that Dalton is sidelined by a knee injury, Fields is where he should’ve been along. Nagy can now abandon his insufferable quarterback merry-go-round and do what’s best for the Bears’ future.

It might even be what’s best for his own future.

It’s going to be choppy for Fields, but the sooner he get through the typical rookie turbulence, the better off the Bears will be. He hit a few of those snags coming out of halftime with two false starts — he jerked his leg as if to start running before the ball was snapped — and fumble at his own 33-yard line that nearly turned into a scoop-and-score for Bengals linebacker Logan Wilson.

The only thing between nearly and definitely was Fields, who lunged from flat on the ground to slap the ball from Wilson and get the ball back so the Bears could punt it away on fourth down.

Athletic. Smart. Gutsy.

Heroic, even? Sure.

That’s how the play will be remembered despite Fields’ loose handling of the ball being the reason the fumble happened in the first place. That’s how good everything feels for the Bears now that the right guy is playing quarterback.

Soldier Field was booming already with fans returning for the first time since 2019, and Fields cranked up the volume.

Exhilaration surged through the seats as he lofted what would’ve been a 23-yard pass to Darnell Mooney in the third quarter. The roar downshifted into a moan as the ball deflected off Mooney’s hand for an incomplete pass, but the roar was unmistakable. It happened again on an almost 35-yard touchdown heave to Allen Robinson that slipped through his hands.

Few fan bases deserve some excitement as much as this one after sitting through 16-16 over the last two seasons and some of the sleepiest offense in the NFL.

The best news for the Bears and their audience: Fields will only get better.

It’s almost irrelevant that Fields completed just 6 of 13 passes for 60 yards, led the Bears to a paltry pair of field goals in five possessions and nearly threw the game away with an interception in the final minutes.

Riding that out is part of the process with any rookie quarterback, and good for Fields that his defense created a safe space to struggle. Best-case scenario for this season is that Roquan Smith and the defense give him enough margin to make mistakes without blowing a game.

Dalton’s bid to hang on to his career wasn’t thrilling anybody. At best he’d be serviceable as the Bears tried to stay afloat and at worst he’d spiral his way out of the job and leave Fields to inherit a midseason mess.

The Bears have been promising you for two years it’s going to be better. Now it actually will.

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QB Justin Fields brings thrills back to Bears, and it only gets better from hereJason Lieseron September 19, 2021 at 7:56 pm Read More »

Bears, Justin Fields ride defense to win 20-17 winPatrick Finleyon September 19, 2021 at 7:59 pm

The Justin Fields Era started Sunday afternoon.

Time — and medical evaluations — will determine if it continues uninterrupted.

The Bears’ rookie quarterback replaced an injured Andy Dalton in the second quarter Sunday against the Bengals. In front of 60,840 fans at Soldier Field, the Bears rode their defense to a 20-17 win.

The Bears made it look easy — until they didn’t. After their defense landed four-straight takeaways, the Bears gave up a 42-yard touchdown pass to Bengals receiver Ja’Marr Chase. Nursing a 10-point lead with 3:50 to play, Fields threw an interception to Bengals linebacker Logan Wilson, who returned the ball 18 yards to the Bears’ 7. The Bengals scored on the next play on a pass to Tee Higgins. Within one minute’s time, they scored 14 points to cut the lead to 20-17.

On third-and-9 with 2:55 to play, though, Fields scrambled left for a 10-yard gain. The Bears ran the clock out.

Fields’ numbers weren’t flashy: he finished 6-for-13 for 60 yards, one interception and a 27.7 passer rating. He ran eight times for 37 yards.

Dalton hurt his left knee in the second quarter when he scrambled for 14 yards and ran out of bounds along the Bears sideline. He tripped and stepped awkwardly.

Fields took over, handing the ball off three times and turning the ball over on downs. Dalton went to the injury tent before returning for a four-play drive in which he was sacked and looked uncomfortable. He then went to the Bears’ locker room.

Fields was uneven in the first extended playing time of his career — which is to be expected from a rookie — but the Bears rode a dominant defensive showing to the win. The Fields-led offense produced only two fourth-quarter field goals, though he wasn’t helped when Allen Robinson dropped what would have been a fourth-quarter touchdown.

Dalton watched the second half from the sideline in uniform. It’s unclear how much time he could miss, but it’s fair to wonder if he’ll ever start again for the Bears. Even if he sits out for a few weeks, would the Bears want to stall Fields’ development by sitting him back down?

If the Bears defense plays the way it did for most of Sunday, though, the Bears will happily deal with Fields’ growing pains.

The defense pitched a first-half shutout. After giving up a field goal in the third quarter, the Bears ended four-straight Bengals drives with takeaways.

They didn’t give up their first points until midway through the third quarter, when Kevin McPherson made a 53-yard field goal to make the score 7-3. That they got any points at all was a testament to the Bears’ stupidity. On third-and-16 from the Bengals’ 29, Burrow scrambled left and ran harmlessly out of bounds — and into the Bears sideline — for no gain. Outside linebacker Robert Quinn bumped him two steps after he ran out of bounds. Rather than punting, the Bengals had 15 yards and a first down.

The Bears got their first takeaway of the season late in the third quarter, when safety Eddie Jackson forced a Tee Higgins fumble on a 14-yard completion. The ball bounced into Tashaun Gipson’s arms and he returned it 13 yards. After a disjointed drive — Fields was twice called for a false start but showed his promise when he zipped a pass to Darnell Mooney for 21 yards — the Bears had first-and-goal at the 8. David Montgomery ran for a loss of three, Fields scrambled for six yards and then the rookie quarterback flinched before the snap for the false start flag. On third-and-goal from the 10, he threw incomplete to Allen Robinson. Cairo Santos kicked a 28-yard field goal to go up 10-3 eight seconds into the fourth quarter.

The second takeaway came less than five minutes later, when linebacker Roquan Smith picked Burrow on third-and-3 and returned it 53 yards down the left sideline for a touchdown. That sealed the game with 10:55 to play.

The Bears forced a takeaway on their third consecutive drive when cornerback Jaylon Johnson picked Burrow two plays later, giving them the ball at the Bengals 36. The fourth takeaway came when nose tackle Angelo Blackson caught a pass tipped by linebacker Alec Ogletree and returned it to the Bengals’ 9.

Fields’ best play of the game came midway through the third quarter. He fumbled when he was sacked on third down. Bengals linebacker Logan Wilson ran to scoop up the ball at the Bears’ 33 and could have returned it all the way for a touchdown. But Wilson whiffed on the scoop and Fields Army-crawled to the ball and covered it up.

Dalton marched the Bears to a touchdown on the first drive of the game, earning some goodwill from a fan base eager to cheer Fields in the home opener. Dalton converted three third downs in the first drive. The last one was a touchdown — on third-and-5, he found Robinson for a 11-yard score.

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Bears, Justin Fields ride defense to win 20-17 winPatrick Finleyon September 19, 2021 at 7:59 pm Read More »