Videos

Chicago Bears Rumors: Aaron Rodgers might be retiringAdam Rosenon July 24, 2021 at 12:00 pm

Read More

Chicago Bears Rumors: Aaron Rodgers might be retiringAdam Rosenon July 24, 2021 at 12:00 pm Read More »

2 shot, including 17-year-old boy, in EnglewoodSun-Times Wireon July 24, 2021 at 10:51 am

Two people were shot, including a 17-year-old boy, Saturday in the Englewood neighborhood.

The pair were standing in the street about 12:45 a.m. in the 7100 block of South Ada Street when someone inside a black-colored vehicle fired shots, Chicago police said.

The teen boy, 17, was struck in the leg and was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn in serious condition, police said. A man, 21, was also shot in the leg and was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center in fair condition.

Area One detectives are investigating.

Read More

2 shot, including 17-year-old boy, in EnglewoodSun-Times Wireon July 24, 2021 at 10:51 am Read More »

Get in the spirit of trading season with this Chicago baseball quizBill Chuckon July 24, 2021 at 11:00 am

There was a huge box-office hit in 1983 starring Dan Aykroyd and Eddie Murphy called “Trading Places.” This quiz has nothing to do with that movie.

Theo Epstein and brother Paul created a wonderful charitable organization called “The Foundation To Be Named Later,” a nod to the baseball trade term “player to be named later.” This quiz has nothing to do with that, either.

This quiz has to do with trades made by our two teams. And out of respect to those involved, there are no questions pertaining to Lou Brock.

Get trading on the Chicago Nine.

1. Anthony Rizzo has been traded twice in his MLB career. For which team did he make his MLB debut?

a. Cubs c. Padres

b. Red Sox d. Braves

2. Which current Cub was involved in a trade that included Mark Buehrle?

a. Eric Sogard c. Jake Marisnick

b. Jason Hayward d. Ian Happ

3. Craig Kimbrel has been traded a couple of times in his career. Which one of these players was involved in a trade for Kimbrel?

a. Tommy La Stella c. Cameron Maybin

b. Rafael Devers d. Jason Heyward

4. The White Sox generously got Dylan Cease and Eloy Jimenez from the Cubs in exchange for which of the following?

a. Addison Russell c. Jose Quintana

b. Wade Davis d. Steve Cishek

5. Here’s a Cubs-Sox deal: On Dec. 11, 1973, the Cubs traded Ron Santo to the White Sox. Which one of these players was in the package that went to the Cubs?

a. Jerry Hairston c. Steve Stone

b. Randy Hundley d. Bill Madlock

6. There are many reasons why Matt Stairs was a memorable ballplayer. One is that he had 23 pinch-hit homers, the most ever. Another is that he played for 12 franchises, the most-ever for a position player, including being traded to which Chicago team?

a. White Sox

b. Cubs

7. Which of these Juniors was not traded by a Chicago team?

a. Lance McCullers, Jr. c. Sandy Alomar Jr.

b. Fernando Tatis Jr. d. Jerry Hairston Jr.

8. Who did the White Sox trade to get Paul Konerko from the Reds in 1998?

a. Magglio Ordonez c. Ray Durham

b. James Baldwin d. Mike Cameron

9. The Cubs and Phillies have made some pretty spectacular trades. Who is the Cub on this list the team did not get in a trade with Philadelphia?

a. Ryne Sandberg c. Ferguson Jenkins

b. Steve Trout d. Keith Moreland

QUIZ ANSWERS

1. Drafted by the Red Sox, Rizzo debuted with the Padres in 2011. 2. On Nov. 19, 2012, Jake Marisnick was traded by the Toronto Blue Jays with Henderson Alvarez III, Anthony DeSclafani, Yunel Escobar, Adeiny Hechavarria, Jeff Mathis and Justin Nicolino to the Miami Marlins for Mark Buehrle, Emilio Bonifacio, John Buck, Josh Johnson, Jose Reyes and cash. 3. Cameron Maybin was one of the players the Braves got from the -Padres for Kimbrel. 4. On July 13, 2017, the Sox traded Jose Quintana to the Cubs for Dylan Cease, Eloy Jimenez and a pair of minor-leaguers. 5. Steve Stone went from the South Side to Wrigleyville. 6. Matt Stairs was traded by the A’s to the Cubs. He hit 17 homers for the 2001 Cubs (none as a pinch hitter). 7. Lance McCullers Jr. was never traded by Chicago. The Sox traded Tatis and Alomar, and the Cubs traded Hairston. 8. Mike Cameron went to the Reds. Two years later, he was part of the deal that brought Ken Griffey Jr. from Seattle. 9. Trout joined the Cubs from the White Sox in a 1983 trade.

Read More

Get in the spirit of trading season with this Chicago baseball quizBill Chuckon July 24, 2021 at 11:00 am Read More »

Chicago Bears: Davante Adams news means he could be fair game in 2022Ryan Heckmanon July 24, 2021 at 11:00 am

Read More

Chicago Bears: Davante Adams news means he could be fair game in 2022Ryan Heckmanon July 24, 2021 at 11:00 am Read More »

Bears’ Top 10 list: who will make or break the 2021 seasonPatrick Finleyon July 24, 2021 at 10:00 am

As Bears veterans prepare to report to training camp Tuesday at Halas Hall, here’s a look at the 10 people whose performance will make or break the team’s 2021 season:

1. Head coach Matt Nagy

This season will determine whether the Bears fire Nagy or hand him a contract extension. They hired him in 2018 to be a quarterback whisperer, yet Mitch Trubisky flopped. They signed him to call plays, but the Bears rank 27th in both yards per pass and yards per run during his three-year career. He’s eight games over .500, but the entire differential came three seasons ago. The man best-known for mentoring quarterback Patrick Mahomes behind the scenes will try to do the same for Justin Fields this season, but those results will be hard to evaluate so long as Fields holds a clipboard. Nagy’s play-calling won’t. Under Nagy last year, the Bears had the league’s 29th-best scoring offense. Once he handed control to coordinator Bill Lazor, it ranked eighth. Still, Nagy re-claimed play-calling duties this offseason, wanting to put his future in his own hands.

2. Quarterback Justin Fields

Nagy has already ruled out the Ohio State rookie starting in Week 1. But no person inside Halas Hall is more important to the trajectory of the franchise than Fields, for whom the Bears traded up to draft in April. If developed the right way, Fields has the skillset to be the greatest quarterback in franchise history — a significant, if limbo-low, bar. If Fields is promising this season — be it on the backfields or in games — he’ll buy his bosses at least another year of employment. If he struggles, though, the franchise will be staring at major changes. No pressure, kid.

3. Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers

No one has a greater influence on the Bears’ fate without wearing the wishbone C. Rodgers is 21-5 in the regular season against the Bears — one of his losses came after he broke his collarbone during the first drive — and 1-0 in the playoffs, winning at Soldier Field to reach the Super Bowl in January 2011. If Rodgers forces his way out of Green Bay, George McCaskey should volunteer to carry him to the airport. It would be the greatest change to the NFC North’s balance of power since Rodgers replaced Brett Favre.

4. Defensive coordinator Sean Desai

To fix a defense that allowed a league-low 17.7 points in 2018 but slid backward the past two years, Nagy interviewed nine coordinator candidates — and picked a 37-year-old in-house safeties coach who’s never called plays before. Whether the most out-of-the-box hire of Nagy’s career works should be apparent in the first month of the season — and will depend in part on whether safety Eddie Jackson, defensive tackle Akiem Hicks and inside linebacker Danny Trevathan return to the level they played at during the magical 2018 season.

5. Outside linebacker Robert Quinn

The Bears gave Quinn a five-year, $70 million contract last offseason, and watched him produce only two sacks en route to becoming the biggest flop of the league’s free-agent class. They hope a somewhat-normal offseason will help Quinn look a lot more like the man who had 11 1/2 sacks in 2019. Either way, he’s likely playing his last season with the team — the Bears can walk away after two years and $30.2 million.

6. Quarterback Andy Dalton

Was Mitch Trubisky the problem the last two years? Dalton’s performance should show us right away. With the same main offensive weapons returning in 2021 — running back David Montgomery, receivers Allen Robinson and Darnell Mooney,and tight ends Cole Kmet and Jimmy Graham combined to miss one regular-season game last year — the Bears hope that more consistent decision-making at quarterback yields better results. If they’re wrong, we’ll see Fields early in the season, the same way Trubisky was forced to start after only four games in 2017.

7. Left tackle Teven Jenkins

Many around the league viewed Jenkins as a prototypical right tackle — and so did Oklahoma State coaches, who put him at left tackle for only 18 percent of his career plays. The Bears, though, are trusting their quarterback’s blindside to a rookie who played all of 32 snaps at left tackle last season, all against Tulsa. They believe their second-round pick can be a standout left tackle; just one rookie mistake by him, though, could be calamitous for the health of their quarterbacks.

8. Outside linebacker Khalil Mack

Mack’s nine sacks last year and 8 1/2 in 2019 are his two lowest marks since his rookie year. His impact is greater — Pro Football Focus graded Mack as the best edge rusher in the NFL last year — but the Bears still need to an uptick in counting stats from the man they paid better than any defender in league history. Like Leonard Floyd before him, Quinn didn’t do Mack any favors on the opposite side last year.

9. Nose tackle Eddie Goldman

The Bears had the ninth-best rush defense, in terms of yards allowed per game, in 2019. Last year, with Goldman opting out because of the coronavirus, they finished 14th. The Bears hope to welcome him back next week — finally — after he skipped mandatory minicamp in June.

10. Inside linebacker Roquan Smith

The Bears’ best player last year, Smith finished second in the NFL in solo tackles, sixth in combined tackles and second — behind only the Steelers’ T.J. Watt — in tackles for loss. Smith is contract extension-eligible and figures to be the centerpiece of the defense for the next five years.

Read More

Bears’ Top 10 list: who will make or break the 2021 seasonPatrick Finleyon July 24, 2021 at 10:00 am Read More »

Civilian oversight of Chicago police is nothing but politicsLetters to the Editoron July 24, 2021 at 9:00 am

I see that Chicago politicians have voted in favor of a civilian police oversight ordinance. I have lived in this city for 60 years and its politics never cease to amaze me.

There are thousands of shootings in this city every year that has destroyed the reputation of this great city. In my humble opinion, the problem is not police misconduct, but more drugs and illegal firearms. Elected officials should focus on solutions to those problems, not the police.

Most police officers in this city are honest and hard-working. They are being stigmatized by the actions of a few bad apples. How is this oversight committee going to affect how police do their jobs when every microsecond of their words and actions is being reviewed and critiqued by people who have likely never done their job? At times, police have to make split-second decisions on matters that sometimes may make the difference between life and death.

I fear that such over-scrutinizing may make police less aggressive in protecting the community.

Antonio Acevedo, West Town

SEND LETTERS TO: [email protected]. Please include your neighborhood or hometown and a phone number for verification purposes. Letters should be approximately 350 words or less.

Protect the elderly and disabled who rely on SSI

More than 250,000 of our fellow Illinoisans are older adults and people with disabilities who are struggling to get by on a mere $794 per month in Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits. We witness this struggle in the lives of hundreds of clients every year. SSI tops out at about three-quarters of the federal poverty line. That simply isn’t enough to keep a roof over your head, food on your table, and shoes on your feet.

Worsening the problem, under current law, SSI beneficiaries are legally prohibited from having even modest emergency savings, pushing seniors and people with disabilities even deeper into poverty. Long-outdated asset limits have been stuck at $2,000 for individuals and $3,000 for couples for more than three decades, intentionally preventing people from providing modest personal safety nets for unexpected expenses or hardship. Updated for inflation, those limits would be $9,500 and $12,675 respectively today.

The program likewise punishes family and community safety nets. The “in-kind support and maintenance” rule ensures that a bag of groceries from family to help someone have food through the month, or a place to stay to help get off the street, can trigger a one-third reduction in SSI income.

Illinois’s older adults and people with disabilities deserve to live with dignity and security. Congress has a once-in-a generation opportunity to update this program and ensure a fairer, more just society, by passing the Supplemental Security Income Restoration Act of 2021 or including its provisions in the reconciliation bill being negotiated in Congress.

Shame on us if we let three decades of neglect of our neighbors, our friends, and our families continue.

Caroline Chapman, Amy Marinacci and Thomas Yates
Legal Council for Health Justice

Carbon fees and climate change

The city has unveiled its strategic plan for transportation that, while met warmly, leaves residents wondering how we will pay for it. Meanwhile, lawmakers in the nation’s capitol are building the next budget reconciliation package, poised to help overhaul infrastructure. This budget reconciliation, however, has larger stakes than the quality of our roads and public transportation.

Democrats have recently suggested this bill will address not just transportation infrastructure, but also include a methane fee and a border import fee for high-polluting goods. This dances around the larger question of a domestic carbon fee and dividend policy, a likely precondition needed by the World Trade Organization to make a carbon import tax viable. More importantly, a price on carbon is the best tool out there to help us reduce our emissions overall, and reduce the impacts of climate change.

If the reconciliation includes carbon pricing as outlined in Sen. Dick Durbin’s bill (America’s Clean Future Fund Act), we’ll not just have access to federal funds to help make Mayor Lightfoot’s ambitious transportation plan a reality. We’ll also secure a cleaner, safer, and cooler future for everyone.

Michael Holler, Montclare

The Olympics and nationalism

The great Jewish-American scientist, Albert Einstein, once called nationalism ” the measles of mankind.” Einstein knew that nationalism — extreme pride in one’s nation — played a major role in causing both world wars. Like measles, Einstein realized that nationalism could be highly infectious and take the lives of millions of people.

Let countries express their nationalism through non-violent competition in various athletic events. We should be thankful that, after much consternation caused by the pandemic, the Olympic Games will continue in Tokyo.

Peter Grafner, Edgebrook

Vaccination lotteries misuse money

Instead of having a raffle for people who are just now getting their COVID-19 vaccinations, why doesn’t the governor put that money into education?

Where did he ‘find’ this money, and why can’t it be appropriated to programs that deal with children? Why do people have to be rewarded for doing something that the majority of people did because it was the right thing to do?

Janice Montgomery, Clearing

Read More

Civilian oversight of Chicago police is nothing but politicsLetters to the Editoron July 24, 2021 at 9:00 am Read More »

Man fatally shot in Austin drive-by: policeSun-Times Wireon July 24, 2021 at 9:14 am

A man was shot to death in a drive-by early Saturday in Austin on the Northwest Side.

The 37-year-old was standing in the sidewalk with a group of people about 1:15 a.m. in the 1700 block of North Moody Avenue when someone inside a blue-colored vehicle fired shots, Chicago police said.

He was shot in the head and was taken to Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood, where he was pronounced dead, police said.

The Cook County medical examiner’s office hasn’t identified him.

Area Five detectives are investigating.

Read More

Man fatally shot in Austin drive-by: policeSun-Times Wireon July 24, 2021 at 9:14 am Read More »

2 teen boys shot, 1 fatally, in Englewood: policeSun-Times Wireon July 24, 2021 at 8:19 am

A teenage boy was killed and another seriously wounded in a shooting early Saturday in Englewood on the South Side.

The teens, 15 and 17, were in the backyard of a home about 1:15 a.m. in the 6800 block of South Peoria Street when someone opened fire, Chicago police said.

The 17-year-old was shot in the chest and was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead, police said. He hasn’t been identified.

The other, 15, was struck in the stomach and taken to the same hospital in serious condition, police said.

No one is in custody as Area One detectives investigate.

Read More

2 teen boys shot, 1 fatally, in Englewood: policeSun-Times Wireon July 24, 2021 at 8:19 am Read More »

Blackhawks pick defenseman Nolan Allan with 32nd pick in NHL draftBen Popeon July 24, 2021 at 4:03 am

The Blackhawks finished the first round of the NHL draft Friday by selecting a player many expected to go closer to the end of the second round.

After trading down from 12th to 32nd in the Seth Jones trade, the Hawks picked Canadian defenseman Nolan Allan. Allan was ranked 40th among North American skaters in the Central Scouting Service’s final rankings and 59th among all players in TSN’s final rankings.

But the 18-year-old defenseman does boast a lanky frame (6-2, 195 pounds) and good instincts in his own zone. Scouting reports describe him as a stay-at-home defenseman and penalty-killing specialist who covers opposing forwards well but contributes little offense.

A Saskatchewan native, Allan has played the last two and a half seasons with the Prince Albert Raiders of the Western Hockey League, tallying 11 points in 81 games. He also played for Canada at the Under-18 World Championships — an event the Hawks scouted closely — in April and May, tallying two points in seven games.

The Hawks likely see Allan and 2019 second-round pick Alex Vlasic, a towering 6-6 defensive defenseman entering his junior year at Boston University, as the conservative complements to the more offensively-inclined likes of Nicolas Beaudin and Ian Mitchell among their young defensemen.

A number of more well-known players — ranked higher on public lists, although clearly not on the Hawks’ internal board — were passed over, though, including defenseman Daniil Chayka and forwards Aatu Raty, Nikita Chibrikov, Francisco Pinelli and Colton Dach (Kirby’s brother).

Steel alum Power goes first

The Sabres choosing defenseman Owen Power with the first overall pick started banner nights for both of his two recent teams.

For the Chicago Steel, the Geneva-based junior hockey powerhouse where Power played in 2019-20, he was one of three alums to hear their names called as Matthew Coronato went 13th to the Flames and Mackie Samoskevich went 24th to the Panthers.

And for the University of Michigan, where Power was a freshman in 2020-21, he started an incredible run in which four of the top five overall picks were Wolverines. Forward Matthew Beniers went second to the Kraken, defensive recruit Luke Hughes went fourth to the Devils and forward Kent Johnson went fifth to the Blue Jackets.

“It’s pretty special,” Power told ESPN. “It’s something I’ve dreamed about my whole life. I don’t know if my younger self would’ve really believed it.”

Forward Mason McTavish, a Canadian juniors product, went third to the Ducks.

Top goalies Sebastian Cossa and Jesper Wallstedt, rumored to be on the Hawks’ radar before they traded the 12th pick, eventually landed with the Red Wings at 15th and Wild at 20th, respectively.

Hawks hold six Saturday picks

The Blackhawks enter Saturday’s second round with six more selections to make.

They own one second-round pick (62nd), two fourth-round picks (105th and 108th), one sixth-round pick (172nd) and two seventh-round picks (204th and 216th).

Read More

Blackhawks pick defenseman Nolan Allan with 32nd pick in NHL draftBen Popeon July 24, 2021 at 4:03 am Read More »

Moon Men Will Visit Us: Chicago Tribune Coverage During the Apollo 11 Missionon July 24, 2021 at 4:41 am

Cosmic Chicago

Moon Men Will Visit Us: Chicago Tribune Coverage During the Apollo 11 Mission

Read More

Moon Men Will Visit Us: Chicago Tribune Coverage During the Apollo 11 Missionon July 24, 2021 at 4:41 am Read More »