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Marc-Andre Fleury will play for Blackhawks in 2021-22: reportsBen Popeon August 1, 2021 at 3:38 pm

There’s nothing flowery anymore about the Blackhawks’ ambitions for 2021-22.

Reigning Vezina Trophy-winning goalie Marc-Andre Fleury has told the Hawks he will play for them this coming season, per multiple reports Sunday.

Fleury’s decision comes after four days of “taking time to discuss his situation with his family and seriously evaluate his hockey future,” in the words of his agent, Allan Walsh. He was blindsided Wednesday when the Golden Knights, his team for the past four seasons, traded him to the Hawks after he’d settled down in Vegas with his wife and three young kids.

But Fleury will honor, after all, the final year of his contract rather than retiring or forcing a trade to the Penguins, his team for his first 13 years.

Hawks general manager Stan Bowman will need to be creative — and potentially active again in the trade market — to fit Fleury’s $7 million cap hit, but it should be worth it for a goalie of his caliber.

Fleury went 26-10-0 for the Knights in 2020, ranking third in the NHL with a .928 save percentage and fourth with 20.2 goals-saved-above-average, and will instantly form one of the league’s best goalie duos alongside Kevin Lankinen in Chicago.

The Hawks’ once-cautious rebuilding plans have been thrown out the window this summer by the acquisitions of Fleury, Seth Jones, Jake McCabe and others, indicating the team intends to contend immediately.

This story will be updated.

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Marc-Andre Fleury will play for Blackhawks in 2021-22: reportsBen Popeon August 1, 2021 at 3:38 pm Read More »

Chicago Bulls Rumors: Bulls linked to free agent guard Bryn ForbesRyan Heckmanon August 1, 2021 at 3:00 pm

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Chicago Bulls Rumors: Bulls linked to free agent guard Bryn ForbesRyan Heckmanon August 1, 2021 at 3:00 pm Read More »

What you need an ID for in Texas? Plenty.on August 1, 2021 at 3:13 pm

The Barbershop: Dennis Byrne, Proprietor

What you need an ID for in Texas? Plenty.

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What you need an ID for in Texas? Plenty.on August 1, 2021 at 3:13 pm Read More »

Taylor Street Little Italy festival canceled again; organizer vows to return in 2022Manny Ramoson August 1, 2021 at 2:00 pm

The Taylor Street Little Italy Festa has been canceled for the second year, with organizers saying holding the event would put an additional strain on already struggling businesses.

The announcement was made jointly by the Little Italy Chicago Neighborhood Association and Onesti Entertainment — the organization that puts the event, which typically draws tens of thousands of people to the neighborhood.

“This setback is a function of the times,” Mary Howard, secretary of Little Italy Chicago Neighborhood Association’s board, said in a statement.

Ron Onesti, president of Onesti Entertainment, said it was a difficult decision to cancel the festival again, but he couldn’t host the event in good conscience.

“The main reason is our vendors, especially Taylor Street restaurants, are still struggling and are having a hard time finding help and workers,” Onesti said. “It is no secret that labor is a problem for everyone and on Taylor Street it is really prominent. Some businesses already have to close on Sundays or reduce their hours to get by.”

Onesti said the festival, normally held on the second or third weekend of August, would bring attention and much needed business to neighborhood restaurants and businesses, but that would come at a cost.

“I would be asking people to put their home-base restaurant at risk by moving their limited staff for hours at an outdoor stand,” Onesti said. “They can’t possibly manage both locations on a skeleton staff.”

There’s also a gamble with participating in the festival, Onesti said, given variables such as the weather.

“These people have already been shut down for months and I can’t in good faith ask them to risk any money, and if it were to rain, they are losing out on a lot of money,” Onesti said.

Then there is the adverse effect the festival might have on businesses along Taylor Street, Onesti said. Streets would be blocked off from traffic and other businesses, like a hardware store or a dry cleaner, could lose customers.

“With all these businesses closed for nearly a year, my conscience didn’t want to hurt anyone and the slightest chance of hurting any business didn’t sit well with me,” Onesti said.

The other factor in their decision to cancel this year’s festival was rising COVID-19 case numbers and the emergence of the Delta variant.

“Sure, Lollapalooza is going on right now but I don’t have control over Lollapalooza,” Onesti said. “For me it was much more of a personal reason regarding the health safety of our guests.”

Onesti said he can’t predict what the pandemic has planned for Chicago over the next year, but for now, he plans to bring the festival back in 2022.

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Taylor Street Little Italy festival canceled again; organizer vows to return in 2022Manny Ramoson August 1, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bulls Rumors: Bulls could land Lonzo Ball and Derrick RoseRyan Heckmanon August 1, 2021 at 1:00 pm

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Chicago Bulls Rumors: Bulls could land Lonzo Ball and Derrick RoseRyan Heckmanon August 1, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears Training Camp: New wrinkle in defense a major hitRyan Heckmanon August 1, 2021 at 12:00 pm

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Chicago Bears Training Camp: New wrinkle in defense a major hitRyan Heckmanon August 1, 2021 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bulls Free Agency: Top 5 realistic point guard optionsRyan Heckmanon August 1, 2021 at 11:00 am

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Chicago Bulls Free Agency: Top 5 realistic point guard optionsRyan Heckmanon August 1, 2021 at 11:00 am Read More »

Why did Lollapalooza go forward in a pandemic? It’s about the moneyLaura Washingtonon August 1, 2021 at 10:00 am

Lollapalooza is on the books. Now ahead, comes the major COVID-19 outbreak, super-spreader style. That’s not just the likely outcome of Chicago’s just concluded four-day music festival. It’s a certainty.

It will be fueled by the extremely dangerous Delta coronavirus variant and ushered in by Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, who implacably declared that the show must go on, under, they assured, the tightest of restrictions.

Concert-goers were required to produce their proof-of-vaccination cards, or evidence of a negative coronavirus test within 72 hours of entering the show. The unvaccinated were required to wear face masks. And no worries, an outdoor event is much safer in a pandemic.

So party on, they cheered, at a time when the state’s COVID-19 positivity numbers are at their highest point in months.

On Friday, Cook County Health officials said they now recommend “‘universal masking” in all indoor public spaces, due to what the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention called “substantial” COVID-19 transmission.

Our elected officials stared down warnings from respected health experts like Dr. Emily Landon, who said a mass gathering like Lolla, even outdoors, was unsafe.

“So, I think continuing to have Lolla at that level of capacity was a bad idea even before there was a pandemic, and I’m shocked that we’ve agreed to go back to that same level of capacity, ” Landon, the executive medical director of infection prevention and control at the University of Chicago Medicine, said last Monday in an interview with NBC-5 Chicago.

You don’t need the experts. Just look at those overhead news videos of the monster crowds in Grant Park, knee to jowl, shouting and singing their little hearts out.

Watch, as I did, festival-goers flooding the city’s trains, maskless, on their way to the fun and frolic. And take a gander at the photos and videos of hundreds of thousands of happy, bare faces at the party.

For four days, 100,000 people a day, a huge, sweaty swath of humanity, will pack Grant Park for hours on end, day into night.

On the Monday morning after, questions remain.

How many of those young revelers presented real, valid paperwork? The FBI and watchdog groups have been calling out the proliferation of fake vaccination cards for months.

How many tested positive one day, then were infected the next?

What happened to the old Lori Lightfoot? The Lightfoot who, last year, sternly tweeted, scolded, even threatened us to obey the COVID rules, for our own good and for the sake of our lives?

On Day 1 of the festival, its Twitter feed crowed: “Great job, Lollapalooza fans! More than 90% of you showed us your proof of vaccination today!” Another 8% of attendees presented “proof” of a negative COVID test, the festival’s sponsors reported, and 600 were turned away because they had no paperwork.

Meanwhile, a Chicago Sun-Times photographer captured signs posted at the festival’s main entrance that read: “An inherent risk of exposure to COVID-19 exists in any public space where people are present.” By attending Lollapalooza, the sign advises, “you voluntarily assume all risks related to exposure to COVID-19,” which “can lead to severe illness and death.”

They’ve got the numbers but made sure to cover their patooties. Just in case.

One final question: Why was Lollapalooza allowed to go forward? That one is easy. It’s about the money, honey.

Follow Laura Washington on Twitter @mediadervish

Send letters to [email protected]

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Why did Lollapalooza go forward in a pandemic? It’s about the moneyLaura Washingtonon August 1, 2021 at 10:00 am Read More »

3 wounded in West Side shootingSun-Times Wireon August 1, 2021 at 8:54 am

Three people were wounded in a shooting late Saturday in The Island neighborhood on the West Side.

About 11:40 p.m., the group was standing on a porch in the 1100 block of South Mason Avenue when two males approached from the sidewalk and opened fire, Chicago police said.

A 49-year-old woman suffered a gunshot wound to the arm and was taken to Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood where her condition was stabilized, police said.

A man, 39, and another man, 35, were both struck in the leg, police said. The older man was transported to Loretto Hospital and the younger was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, according to police. Their conditions have not yet been released.

There was no one in custody.

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3 wounded in West Side shootingSun-Times Wireon August 1, 2021 at 8:54 am Read More »

15-year-old boy shot in South Side drive-bySun-Times Wireon August 1, 2021 at 4:19 am

A 15-year-old boy was wounded in a drive-by shooting Saturday night in Bronzeville on the South Side.

The teenager was standing in an alley about 8:30 p.m. in the 500 block of East 41st Street when a dark-colored vehicle drove by and someone inside opened fire, Chicago police said.

He was shot in the hand and took himself to Comer Children’s Hospital, where he was stabilized, police said.

Area One detectives are investigating.

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15-year-old boy shot in South Side drive-bySun-Times Wireon August 1, 2021 at 4:19 am Read More »