Kris Bryant is heading west. The Cubs traded the third baseman to the San Francisco Giants.
The Cubs were busy on trade deadline day, dealing Craig Kimbrel and Javy Baez. In one other deal, they sent outfielder Jake Marisnick to the Padres for RHP Anderson Espinoza. They traded Anthony Rizzo to the Yankees on Thursday.
“All good things come to an end,” Rizzo told reporters after he was dealt. “I’m just focused on going to be a Yankee now. It’s just another really cool opportunity to play for another historic franchise. This will always be home for me, but like I’ve said, my best friend leaving, Jon Lester, he did the same thing. He has two special places in his heart.
“But for these next three months, it’s going to be fun. You go right into a race. Seeing the Yankees pull the triggers like this — get (Joey) Gallo, me now, obviously — that’s what they do. And they’re excited.”
COVID-19 hospitalizations increased by 35% across Illinois during a week that saw cases jump 46%, public health officials reported Friday.
The state averaged 1,669 new cases per day over the past week, a rate that has ballooned to a level six times higher than seen just a month ago, according to the latest figures released by the Illinois Department of Public Health. The agency reported 2,348 new cases were diagnosed Thursday, the most in a day since May 7.
City health officials said they’d adopt new indoor masking guidelines set by the US. Center for Disease Control and Prevention as cases spike in Chicago, too.
Hospitals are now feeling the brunt of that spike, which experts attribute to the more infectious Delta variant of the coronavirus and its devastating spread through unvaccinated populations.
More than 900 hospital beds were occupied by COVID-19 patients across the state Thursday night, the most since early June. That number had dipped below 400 over the Fourth of July holiday weekend, the lowest mark of the pandemic.
And more of those cases are developing into severe ones. Intensive care admissions for coronavirus patients are up 24% over last week and ventilator usage is up 41%, officials said.
After more than a month of increases, the average statewide case positivity rate has held steady for three straight days, but it has soared over 9% across southern regions of the state. Chicago is up to 3% for the first time since late May.
New COVID-19 cases by day
Graphic by Jesse Howe and Caroline Hurley | Sun-Times
The state is still averaging about six COVID-19 deaths per day, which — like the other statewide metrics — is low compared to the peak of the crisis last year.
But any sustained move in the wrong direction is “extremely worrisome,” according to Dr. Rachel Rubin, co-lead of the Cook County Department of Public Health.
“We’re not seeing a significant number of deaths, especially compared to the same time a year ago, for sure. And this is because, generally speaking, healthier individuals are getting infected with COVID. But that doesn’t mean that they can’t spread it to somebody else that is potentially at risk for getting severe complications,” Rubin said.
The county has adopted masking recommendations advised a day earlier by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which considers Cook to be at a “substantial” risk level for COVID-19 transmission — like the vast majority of Illinois’ 101 other counties.
The Chicago Department of Public Health said Friday it would follow the new CDC guidelines, too.
“We are taking this step to prevent further spread of the very contagious Delta variant and to protect public health,” city public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady said in a statement. “This isn’t forever, but it is necessary to help decrease the risk for all Chicagoans right now.”
Under the guidelines, people are advised to wear a mask in indoor public places regardless of vaccination status, but “eventually we may end up having to make it a mandate,” Rubin said.
“That is the next step. That takes a little bit more time. It takes writing an official order, getting the appropriate legal backing in order to be able to do that,” she said. “It’s really a daunting task to be able to monitor all of these facilities, so we’re really hoping for appropriate community support from employers and management and workers and clients and guests in all of the open venues … to cooperate and to follow this guidance.”
More importantly, the CDC’s designation underscores the need to get more people vaccinated, Rubin said.
Just over 72% of eligible Illinoisans have gotten at least one dose, and 56% are fully vaccinated. Vaccination rates are barely half that in some downstate counties.
Any Chicagoan can request an in-home vaccination by calling (312) 746-4835.
The NCAA Board of Governors on Friday called for a constitutional convention in November, the first step toward launching dramatic reform in the governance of college sports.
Stung for years by criticism that it is too heavy handed and out of touch, the NCAA said it wants to “reimagine” how to more effectively manage the needs of its more than 450,000 athletes at more than 1,100 schools.
“As the national landscape changes, college sports must also quickly adapt to become more responsive to the needs of college athletes and current member schools,” Jack DeGioia, chair of the Board of Governors and president of Georgetown, said in a statement. “This effort will position the NCAA to continue providing meaningful opportunities for current college athletes and those for generations to come.”
A 22-person Constitution Review Committee with university presidents, conference commissioners, athletics directors and students from Divisions I, II and III will be created to redraft the NCAA’s constitutional articles.
“This is not about tweaking the model we have now,” NCAA President Mark Emmert said. “This is about wholesale transformation so we can set a sustainable course for college sports for decades to come. We need to stay focused on the thing that matters most — helping students be as successful as they can be as both students and athletes.”
Two weeks ago, Emmert made headlines when he said it was time to consider a decentralized and deregulated version of college sports that shifted power to conferences and campuses and away from the NCAA. The idea is a sea change for an organization formed 115 years ago that is part of the bedrock of collegiate atletics.
Some conference commissioners, most notably Greg Sankey of the Southeastern Conference, followed with similar statements and said they were ready to begin the process of taking on those tasks.
The willingness to discuss an overhaul of the NCAA comes about a month after the Supreme Court ruled against the organization in what was seen as a bombshell unanimous decision, upholding a lower court ruling in an antitrust case related to caps on education-related compensation.
The Supreme Court also threw open the door for more legal challenges to the NCAA’s rules. Legal experts and college sports observers immediately wondered if the NCAA would look at other approaches to governing college sports.
Keep in mind there are numerous COVID safety restrictions in place for the fest. You’ll need proof of vaccination or proof a a negative COVID-19 test for entry to the festival grounds. Lolla is the largest public event to date held in Chicago since the emergence of the coronavirus last March. Despite worries over the virus’ Delta variant and rising caseloads nationally, the show will go on this weekend.
We’ve got the festival covered from every angle. For a complete guide to all things Lolla, check out our guide here. If you want our tips of the acts to catch, you can find our Top 10 pickshere. And keep in mind, there are gobs of street closures in place; you can find the details here.
Mick Jenkins performs on the second day of Lollapalooza at Grant Park, Friday afternoon, July 30, 2021. Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
Mick Jenkins performs on the second day of Lollapalooza at Grant Park, Friday afternoon, July 30, 2021. Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
People line up to buy band t-shirts on the second day of Lollapalooza at Grant Park, Friday afternoon, July 30, 2021.Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
Lollapalooza merchandise is seen at Grant Park, Friday afternoon, July 30, 2021.Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
A festival goer walks through a metal detector as people enter Lollapalooza 2021.Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
A group of friends take photos in front of Buckingham Fountain on Day 2 of Lollapalooza 2021.Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
The band Rookie plays on Day 2 of Lollapalooza 2021.Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
The crowd watches Rookie perform on Day 2 of Lollapalooza 2021.Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
Tobi Lou performs on Day 2 of Lollapalooza 2021.Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
People dance in the crowd as Tobi Lou performs on Day 2 of Lollapalooza 2021.Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
People watch Tobi Lou perform on the second day of Lollapalooza at Grant Park, Friday afternoon, July 30, 2021. Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
The invitation came without ceremony, just like the note that uninvited us.
Sometime this past spring I received a request from a local morning television news show for me and one of my students to talk about the “Unforgotten 51” — the case of 51 mostly African-American women murdered in Chicago since 2001.
The cases, which remain largely unsolved, were the focus of a project by my journalism class last year at Roosevelt University.
In-depth political coverage, sports analysis, entertainment reviews and cultural commentary.
Our aim was to humanize the women whose unsolved murders have become police cold case files and who have been publicly categorized as street sex workers and/or drug addicts. They are the kind of labels that dehumanize.
That allow us to separate “them” from “us.” To somehow digest, if not justify, their demise, even the absence of their story from mainstream news media.
They are the kinds of insidious mischaracterizations that reduce humans to being villains, or inanimate objects. That makes some among us disposable, subhuman, or deserving of having crossed paths with a killer who extinguished their life.
The tantalizing meat of the story was that these women — as theorized by the Murder Accountability Project in Alexandria, Virginia — were the victims of at least one serial killer and also the sordid details. Strangled or asphyxiated, their bodies were discarded in vacant lots, alleys or trashcans mainly on the West and South Sides, sometimes set on fire or dismembered.
The serial killer theory, according to Thomas Hargrove, the Murder Accountability Project’s founder, is based on a computer algorithm. It’s not mere conjecture, he has asserted, simply science.
Lost in the numbers and the heinous details and the media’s interest in a sensational case, however, was the women’s humanity. That is why I suggested my students take on the project. To bring flesh and blood and heart and soul to the story.
To tell the story of these women — someone’s mother, someone’s sister, someone’s aunt, someone’s daughter…
To discover truth and facts about their lives. Among them Nancie Walker, Gwendolyn Williams, Reo Renee Holyfield, Diamond Turner and others… To show that their lives mattered. And that their lives and deaths still ripple upon the psyches and souls of families and communities that still long for justice.
In our reportorial search for truth, we found that the characterization of all the victims as street sex workers or drug addicts was false. In our humanity, we declared, “So what, if they were. None of them deserved to die like this.”
And from beginning to end, we maintained our focus: To tell their story, to make them human so that perhaps all of Chicago would take note and choose to remember and never forget.
The morning news show invitation was another opportunity to tell their stories.
“I am reaching out to see if you and Samantha Latson would be interested in a Zoom interview next week on our morning show to discuss the Unforgotten 51,” read the email from a local producer. “Please let me know if we can set something up…”
We were set. Then a week later, a day before we were to be interviewed, I received a follow-up email:
“I’m really sorry — but the news director has decided the segment is too grim for morning TV.”
Too grim? Grimmer than the daily homicidal body count, mass shootings nationwide and COVID-19 death tally, and the various and sundry catastrophes to which we awaken daily on the morning news? Too grim for women slain in Chicago and for whom there is still no justice?
Too grim, really? For who? Maybe for you, Dear News Director.
But even without ceremony or your help, I vow to keep telling their story.
Festivals are beginning to announce their future plans for 2021.Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times
With coronavirus case numbers and positivity rates on the decline, the summer festival season in Chicago is in much better shape than last year.
The city has given the green light for festivals and “general admission outdoor spectator events” to welcome 15 people for every 1,000 square feet.
Lea este articulo en espanol en La Voz Chicago, un servicio presentado por AARP Chicago.
The city has debated various ways to bolster vaccination rates among young people most likely to attend outdoor music events like Lollapalooza and Riot Fest. Mayor Lori Lightfoot said a proposal to create a coronavirus vaccine passport for Chicago events is “very much a work in progress” but that preferred seating at those events could be one way to urge vaccination.
Some festivals have already announced their return and concerts are starting to be rescheduled.
We’re tracking the status of the city’s festival and major events throughout the area as new cancellations and postponements are announced. Check back for updates.
ONGOING
In this Feb. 12, 2018, file photo, former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama stand on stage together as their official portraits are unveiled at a ceremony at the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery in Washington. The portraits will begin a five-city national tour in Chicago on June 18, 2021.AP
Hello Helios: The warming suns of Chicago’s Greektown, 24 artworks in a public art installation along Halsted Street from Madison St. to Van Buren. Beginning June 5.
The Ravinia Festival announced it will reopen in July 1 for 64 concerts through Sept. 26 with a slate of outdoor concerts including a six-week residency by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Also slated to appear are: Cynthia Erivo, Kurt Elling, Brian McKnight, Ides of March, Madeleine Peyroux, Midori, Joshua Bell, Pinchas Zukerman, the Chicago Sinfonietta and the Joffrey Ballet.
Grant Park Music Festival, Millennium Park. All concerts are free with reserved seats for all concertgoers and will take place Wednesday, Fridays and Saturdays at 6:30 p.m. Run time will be 90 minutes, without intermission. July 2-Aug. 21.
Bud Billiken Parade: Aug. 14. the parade will return to the South Side for the 92nd time on Saturday, Aug. 14. The event attracts tens of thousands of spectators and marchers to Washington Park.
Summerfest: Milwaukee. The festival will take place over three weekends, Sept. 2-4, 9-11 and 16-18. More than 100 artists are slated to perform including Chance the Rapper, Miley Cyrus, Luke Bryan, Pixies, Rise Against, Wilco, Diplo, and Fitz and the Tantrums.
Chicago’s most important news of the day, delivered every weekday afternoon. Plus, a bonus issue on Saturdays that dives into the city’s storied history.
This afternoon will be partly sunny with a high near 74 degrees. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a low around 62. Tomorrow will be sunny with a high near 81 while Sunday will be mostly sunny with a slim chance of showers and a high around 77.
More than 100 drinking water systems across Illinois, including some in the Chicago area, have tested positive for measurable levels of harmful contaminants known as “forever chemicals” that are linked to cancer, liver damage, high blood pressure and other health threats.
In the Chicago area, Lake Forest, Waukegan, North Chicago, South Elgin and Crest Hill near Joliet are among the water systems that are showing readings of a class of chemicals known as PFAS, short for perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances. In most cases, the levels are very low though the widespread presence is a concern, environmental and health advocates say.
“These findings confirm our fears that drinking water is a source of PFAS exposure for thousands of Illinois residents,” said Sonya Lunder, a Sierra Club toxics expert who has worked on the issue nationally. “The state needs to urgently address these harmful exposures.”
Although local officials can’t pinpoint exactly where the contamination is entering their water systems, PFAS chemicals have been around for decades and are ubiquitous, used in stain-resistant clothing, waterproof products, non-stick pans, polishes, waxes and fire-fighting foam.
It’s a complex problem that potentially can cost some local water departments millions of dollars to correct to protect public health. The chemicals are so prevalent that federal officials say most people have some level of them in their bodies. Nicknamed “forever chemicals,” they don’t break down and remain an environmental and human health threat indefinitely.
A former Cook County prosecutor will be allowed to represent former “Empire” actor Jussie Smollett, a judge ruled today after Special Prosecutor Dan Webb had objected earlier this year over a conflict of interest. Matthew Hendrickson has more on the latest turn in the Smollett case.
Just after 10 a.m. on a Monday in late July, a group of eight teenagers is clearing brush in Possum Hollow Woods in LaGrange Park as temperatures approach 90 degrees.
Jamiyah Morgan, 18, a recent grad from Proviso West High School, holds out her gloved hand to show a leaf from a common buckthorn. She then turns back to retrieve another leaf — this one a Japanese honeysuckle — noting the pointed tip. Both plants are invasive species and, as Morgan explains, they are crowding out a group of ash tree saplings that she and the other teens are trying to help survive.
The crew is part of a program run by the Forest Preserve District of Cook County in partnership with the Housing Authority of Cook County, which employs teens for five weeks, at $10.50 an hour for 25 hours a week, introducing them to conservation work.
Tramaine Davis, 17, right, prepares to cut down a tree as part of an effort to clear invasive plants and small trees as part of the Forest Preserve Experience at the Possum Hollow Woods Forest Preserve in La Grange Park. Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times
The group working in Possum Hollow Woods is one of seven groups made up of teens who receive services from the housing authority. In all, 116 graduated from the program this week.
In addition to providing jobs to area teens and taking care of much-needed maintenance, the program has a broader mission to persuade young people of color to consider working in the field of forestry and related professions. Across the country, such jobs have largely been held by white men, and there’s been an effort in recent years nationally and locally to recruit more people of color.
“It’s the opinion of some people of color that this is not a field for them — these are white jobs,” said Alice Brandon, resource management programming manager for the Forest Preserves. “When you have this message that this is an exclusionary jobs field, they’re not going to be very excited about it.”
What’s your favorite memory from the “Bryzzo” era of Cubs baseball?
Reply to this email (please include your first name and where you live) and we might feature your answer in the next Afternoon Edition.
Yesterday, we asked you: If you could create your own Lollapalooza lineup, who would be the headliners? Here’s what some of you said…
“Talking Heads, Depeche Mode, Radiohead, Tool, Fleetwood Mac, Daft Punk, Kendrick Lamar, and Rage Against the Machine.” — TJ Bollinger
“Beyonce, Pink, Adele, Ariana Grande, H.E.R., Chloe x Halle, Ari Lennox, Lauryn Hill, Gwen Stefani, Lorde, Kelly Clarkson, Miley Cyrus, Florence and the Machine.” — Christa Janella
“Rolling Stones, Paul McCartney, Bob Dylan, Arcade Fire, The Black Keys, Kings of Leon, Greta Van Fleet, Arctic Monkeys, The Lumineers, Shannon + The Clams, Cheap Trick, Dave Matthews, Blondie, No Doubt. Never been so not sure how many headliners there can be, but my lineup already looks pretty expensive.” — Mickey Vincent
“Peter, Paul and Mary, Grateful Dead, Indigo Girls, Alice Cooper, Tom Petty, Meatloaf, The Boss.” — Sharon Maslona
“Isley Brothers, Earth Wind & Fire, The O’Jays.” — Gloria A. Veal
“Linkin Park, Green Day, Avril Lavigne, Depeche Mode, Beastie Boys, Aerosmith and Radiohead.” — Iris Velardo
“Prince … that’s all we need.” — KJ de Matteis
“Anyone that’s not an EDM DJ.” — Paul Albazi
Thanks for reading the Chicago Afternoon Edition. Got a story you think we missed? Email us here.
“All good things come to an end,” Rizzo told reporters after he was dealt Thursday to the Yankees. “I’m just focused on going to be a Yankee now. It’s just another really cool opportunity to play for another historic franchise. This will always be home for me, but like I’ve said, my best friend leaving, Jon Lester, he did the same thing. He has two special places in his heart.
“But for these next three months, it’s going to be fun. You go right into a race. Seeing the Yankees pull the triggers like this — get (Joey) Gallo, me now, obviously — that’s what they do. And they’re excited.”
The Cubs have traded third baseman Kris Bryant to the Giants. They’ll receive minor leaguer outfielder Alexander Canario and right-hander Caleb Killian, according to reports.
Bryant’s trade has been expected for some time and after the Cubs made the decision to be sellers at the deadline, it was only a matter of time.
The trade closes a chapter on what was the golden era of Cubs baseball and breaks up the team World Series core after first baseman Anthony Rizzo was traded to the Yankees on Thursday and Javy Baez sent to the Mets on Friday.
Bryant, 29, was the cornerstone of the Cubs’ rebuild and was the team’s No. 3 overall pick in 2013 before being on a fast track to the big leagues where he would take the baseball world by storm, winning Minor League Player of the Year in 2014, Rookie of the Year in 2015 and was named NL MVP in 2016.
The former MVP has been a staple in the Cubs’ lineup this season and has bounced back, leading the Cubs in nearly every offensive category. He’s slashing .267/.358/.503 with 18 homers, 51 RBI with a 132 wRC+ this season.
Bryant said that he’d always keep the door open to returning to the Cubs in free agency and that the city of Chicago always has a special place with him.
“Deep down in my heart, I know I’ve had some of the best memories here and some of the best times of my life,” Bryant said on Tuesday.
If you had asked me right after the 2016 World Series to describe how the next five years would play out for the Cubs, “long and tedious” wouldn’t have crossed my mind. With all that talent on the roster and all that brainpower in the baseball operations department, I expected fun, interesting things.
The metaphor for what happened to the Cubs’ purported “championship window” was the second half of the 2018 season, when the team forgot how to hit. In 22 games during that span, they scored one run or fewer, including a 3-1 loss to the Brewers to determine the National League Central champion and a 2-1, 13-inning loss to the Rockies in a wild-card playoff game. It was as if Phil Mickelson had looked at his golf clubs and said, “What are these things used for?”
It’s not even that the franchise didn’t win another World Series after 2016, though that was certainly disappointing. It’s that the whole idea of the Cubs As Special was being dismantled, first emotionally and eventually physically — but all of it so slowly that it took a long time to grasp that there wasn’t going to be anything close to the 2016 season again. They should have been better in the ensuing years. They just weren’t, and it played out like a time-lapse film of a building being neither built nor razed. Just standing there looking nice.
On Thursday, the Cubs traded first baseman Anthony Rizzo to the Yankees for two prospects. It was met with predictable fond farewells from Cubs fans. He had played a huge part in helping the franchise win a World Series for the first time in 108 years. He would be missed, the fans said, and they were right. He would be. But the past two years have been an exercise in waiting for some combination of Rizzo, Kris Bryant and Javy Baez to be traded. So it wasn’t a bombshell when Rizzo left for New York. It was a cigarette finally being snuffed out by a heel.
Then came Baez being traded to the Mets on Friday. Then Bryant to the Giants.
It was the longest, most-drawn-out sudden departure in recorded history.
Manager Joe Maddon, who saw things that only he could see, for better or worse, had been the first to go, shown the door following the 2019 season. In the three years after the World Series, the Cubs had lost in the N.L. Championship Series, lost a wild-card game and didn’t make the playoffs, respectively. President Theo Epstein thought complacency had set in after the 2018 season, and, as I think about it now, perhaps that feeling of self-satisfaction had been one of the culprits all along. That and ownership’s refusal to pursue additional talent. Whatever it was, it made for a slow, steady, unfulfilling descent.
Critics have gotten on Cubs fans for being ungrateful following the 2016 World Series, but I’m not sure what should have been expected of them. The Ricketts family had cut back on payroll spending while continuing to use Wrigleyville as a private cash machine. The franchise didn’t keep up with other contenders in terms of on-field talent. It settled for being very good instead of great. The idea, always, is to win. Cubs fans got that, which is why they were duly irritated when the club didn’t get a whiff of the World Series again.
Ah, but there were still Rizzo, Bryant and Baez. They were comfort food for the masses. They could distract you from the team’s decline, the way Ernie Banks, Ron Santo and Billy Williams could make you forget what 1969 was really about.
And there was still Epstein, a man with the ability to change everything with a few shrewd personnel decisions. Until there wasn’t Epstein anymore. He resigned in November 2020, and if there was any doubt an era was over, it was finally laid to rest.
The Cubs were already declining in those first few years after the 2016 World Series, even if few of us fully realized it at the time. Something like that had happened when the Cubs were rebuilding, too. There were those three or four dark years, and even though people hoped for good things ahead, all the losing made it hard to see sometimes. Then came 2015, when a young team won 24 more games than the season before and made it to the NLCS. Then we knew.
When Epstein left after the 2020 season, we knew it officially was The End. Seeing Rizzo get traded the other day, although sad, was inevitable. Cubs closer Craig Kimbrel getting traded to the White Sox was huge news for the Sox on Friday. It was a shrug for anyone associated with the team from the North Side. The operative word: Next.
I don’t know what happens with the Cubs from here, but I’m tired of it all. You know the sleepiness you paradoxically feel when you’ve slept too long? It’s kind of like that.