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Lance Lynn, White Sox agree to two-year contract extensionBrian Sandalowon July 17, 2021 at 5:50 pm

Lance Lynn had the option to wait until this winter to cash in. A pending free agent, Lynn would’ve been one of baseball’s most sought-after starters and could’ve driven up his price tag with a strong second half and perhaps a deep playoff run.

But Lynn is in a place he likes, so he didn’t see why he had to enter free agency.

“The big thing was knowing where you want to be,” Lynn said. “There’s no point in me going into free agency if you know where you want to be. We were able to talk. We both wanted to make a deal, so when that’s the case it’s easy, it’s a no-brainer.”

On Saturday,the Sox announced Lynn has signed a two-year contract extension. The pact is for $38 million which includes a 2024 club option. Lynn is owed $18.5 million in both 2022 and 2023, and the Sox hold an $18 million option for 2024 with a buyout for $1 million.

Acquired from Texas over the offseason for pitchers Dane Dunning and Avery Weems, Lynn was named an all-star and has gone 9-3 with a 1.99 ERA as the rotation has pushed the Sox to first place in the AL Central. Because of his strong first half and what he means to the staff, Lynn’s status was going to be one of the big offseason tasks for general manager Rick Hahn and the front office.

Now with Lynn in the fold, the Sox have four-fifths of their rotation (plus Michael Kopech) locked up for next year with only Carlos Rodon a pending free agent.

“It’s mutual commitment, mutual promises that you share,” manager Tony La Russa said. “It’s very healthy. It’s a perfect message to send to the players that they recognize that we’re getting closer and closer to being an October club and Lance will be a part of it.”

The 34-year-old righty made it clear he wants to be a part of what the Sox are building.

Lynn said he wasn’t surprised an agreement was reached in the middle of the season because both sides were open to the conversation. In fact, Lynn said it was a “very smooth” deal.

It also allows Lynn to stay in a place he clearly likes. He’s talked in the past about how snug the fit is for him with the Sox, and he reiterated that Saturday.

“Over the first half of the season, just being able to see how everybody goes about their business here, the group that’s here and the group that’s going to be here for the next couple of years, it seemed like a pretty easy fit,” Lynn said. “And then when you started to play in front of these fans and enjoy it like I’ve been able to enjoy it, it was a no-doubter. So we were able to make a deal and it was the best for both sides, I feel like.”

Now with his contract out of the way, Lynn has one less thing to think about as the Sox gear up for what could be a memorable second half. Not that it would’ve bothered him, but Lynn doesn’t have to wonder what could be coming this winter.

“It’s nice not to worry about free agency and know where you are going to be but also knowing this is where you want to be and this is the group you want to be with to try to achieve something,” Lynn said. “It’s a good feeling and I’m really excited about being here for the foreseeable future.”

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Lance Lynn, White Sox agree to two-year contract extensionBrian Sandalowon July 17, 2021 at 5:50 pm Read More »

Spike Lee mistakenly reveals big winner at Cannes Film FestivalAssociated Presson July 17, 2021 at 6:35 pm

The awards ceremony for the 74th Cannes Film Festival has started where it should have ended, with jury president Spike Lee mistakenly announcing that the serial killer odyssey “Titane” as the winner of the festival’s top honor, the Palme d’Or.

If confirmed at the end of the show, it would make French director Julia Ducournau only the second female filmmaker to win the festival’s top honor.

Shouting and several moments of confusion ensued after Lee announced “Titane,” but Ducournau did not come to the stage to accept. The ceremony continued and other awards were handed out while Lee was seen with his head in his hands.

Nadav Lapid’s “Ahed’s Knee” won the jury prize, while Caleb Landry Jones took home the best actor prize.

The Croatian coming-of-age drama “Murina,” by Antoneta Alamat Kusijanovic, took the Camera d’Or award, a non-jury prize, for best first feature. Kusijanovic was absent from the ceremony after giving birth a day earlier.

Cannes’ closing ceremony caps 12 days of red-carpet premieres, regular COVID-19 testing for many attendees and the first major film festival to be held since the pandemic began in almost its usual form. With smaller crowds and mandated mask-wearing in theaters, Cannes pushed forward with an ambitious slate of global cinema. Last year’s Cannes was completely canceled by the pandemic.

Twenty-four movies are in contention for the Palme. The jury’s deliberations are private and unknown, but that never stops a wide spectrum of predictions, guesses and betting odds. This year featured a strong slate of many top international filmmakers, but no movie was viewed as the clear favorite.

Among the best-received films at the festival were: Iranian director Asghar Farhadi’s portrait of honor and social media “A Hero”; Chadian filmmaker Mahamat-Saleh Haroun’s abortion drama “Lingui”; Thai director Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s meditative, Tilda Swinton-led “Memoria”; French director Julia Ducournau’s wild, high-octane serial-killer odyssey “Titane”; Sean Baker’s “The Florida Project” follow-up, “Red Rocket”; Japan’s Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s Haruki Murakami adaptation, “Drive My Car”; and Russian director Kirill Serebennikov’s influenza tale “Petrov’s Flu.”

In 2019, the Palme went to Bong Joon Ho’s “Parasite,” which later took best picture at the Academy Awards, too. Only one female filmmaker has ever won Cannes top award (Jane Campion for “The Piano”), so a win for Ducournau or Mia Hansen-Love (“Berman Island”) would be history making. If Haroun were victorious, it would be the second time a film from Africa won.

Lee is the first Black jury president at Cannes. His fellow jury members are: Maggie Gyllenhaal, Melanie Laurent, Song Kang-ho, Tahar Rahim, Mati Diop, Jessica Hausner, Kleber Mendonca Filho and Mylene Farmer.

Before the ceremony, Lee and the jury posed for photographers holding hands on the red carpet.

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Spike Lee mistakenly reveals big winner at Cannes Film FestivalAssociated Presson July 17, 2021 at 6:35 pm Read More »

Chicago-born bishop talks of Catholic church’s ‘racial divide’Associated Presson July 17, 2021 at 3:58 pm

BELLEVILLE, Ill. — Rev. Edward K. Braxton, one of the few African American bishops in the Roman Catholic Church, rarely talks to the press. He says he doesn’t live in a “yes or no” world, and instead makes statements in pastoral letters and other writings.

“My thinking is more nuanced than something you put on the 5 o’clock news,” said Braxton, 77. “I write as I speak. I have a moving viewpoint from many experiences.”

His parents, Baptists from Mississippi, migrated to the south side of Chicago in 1941. Catholic schools motivated their conversion. Braxton said he went on to be the only African American in his graduating class at a high school preparatory seminary. There, he chose Aristotle over basketball.

Ordained a priest in 1970, he became a post-graduate student in Belgium, earning doctoral degrees in theology and religious studies. He taught at Harvard, the University of Notre Dame and other places but ultimately realized he wouldn’t be happy as a priest “exclusively focused on the life of the mind.”

His formal demeanor followed him to his role as a pastor and bishop. To some, he seems distant, most at ease surrounded by books and art. His ringtone is set to the Lord’s Prayer sung in Latin. Last summer, after 15 years at the helm, he became bishop emeritus of the Belleville Diocese. He’d formerly served as a bishop in Louisiana and auxiliary bishop in St. Louis.

He recently agreed to visit at length on his new book, “The Church and the Racial Divide,” which details some of the things he’s been thinking about all these years. He wrote that clergy sex abuse has been the greatest crisis in the history of the Catholic Church in the United States since he was ordained, followed by the “reticence to speak up in the public square about systemic racial bias in society and in the practices of the church.”

He makes the latter argument across 208 pages dedicated to African American Catholics, “who, remarkably, have remained steadfast in their commitment to the Catholic Church, even though the racial divide continues to manifest itself within the church in many ways to this day.”

Q: Why did you name your book, “The Church and the Racial Divide” instead of “The Church and Racism”?

A: The racial divide is much more complex and widespread. The racial divide embraces the vague biases and negative feelings that many people have toward people of other races that are not hatred, that would not lead to violence or harming people. All people, unconsciously live with bias — religious, racial, sexual, social — but it would never be acted out in attacks on individuals or groups. Racism, to me, is overt. The overt psychological and mental attitude of “I hate those people. I wish them harm.” I have much more to say about this.

Q: What was it about the Michael Brown shooting that motivated you to write this book?

A: It simply provided an occasion for me to organize things that I’ve been thinking for many years. It wasn’t the first time I heard of a bad, painful story about an altercation between an African American man and a police officer that resulted in the death of a young person. I’ve heard many of those. My experience goes back to Emmett Till and beyond, but it became the occasion for me to take the time and organize my thoughts in a way to be of service to the church.

Q: Your book mentioned personal instances of being stopped and questioned for walking and driving through white neighborhoods. Why not say when and where this happened?

A: It’s just meant to be an instance to make the reader aware that I know where I speak. I could have written the whole book on personal experiences of unkind things said and done to me and my family. I never would write such a book.

Q: As a boy, when you went to Emmett Till’s visitation in Chicago, your uncle warned you to stay away from such hatred. Though St. Clair County wasn’t technically part of the South, it had more reported lynchings than any other part of Illinois. How has the racial divide affected your ability to lead the flock here?

A: I have heard that some people may have said unkind things about me because of the racial divide, but I’ve never had any direct confrontation with anyone. If anything, some people may have thought we are a rural farming area, we really are not looking for someone who is a professor of theology. I brought missionary priests called fidei donum priests from Nigeria and Uganda who are still here. There were some instances there where people seemed unwelcoming.

Q: Do you think you were sent here to fix a flaw in the foundation?

A: No.

Q: Regardless, have you moved the needle on race?

A: Yes. At the same time I would say that was not my primary goal. My primary goal was to serve the people of God as a good and faithful priest, and bishop, and to build up the church by helping people to grow in their Catholic identity and education. A phrase I use almost every time I visited a parish was the phrase: “Learn your faith, love your faith, live your faith.” And within that context, part of learning your faith is learning about the dignity and value of every human person, which within that addresses racial prejudice, racism, the dignity, the value of unborn life, the value of the life of a person on death row. If you are doing that, you will see that your faith impels you not to support bias and prejudice or racism.

Q: Yet your book is dedicated to the late Congressman John Lewis and African American Catholics, “who, remarkably, have remained steadfast in their commitment to the Catholic Church, even though the racial divide continues to manifest itself within the church in many ways to this day.” What are a few examples of that?

A: You are trying to get me to wallow in the mud which is something I don’t care to do.

Q: A main point in your book is to not be silent.

A: I haven’t been silent. Everything I have to say is in that book.

Q: Your father was refused entry to the Knights of Columbus, the Catholic fraternal organization. Instead, he was referred to the Knights of Peter Claver, named after the patron saint of slaves. Do rejections like that still happen in southern Illinois?

A: The human condition being what it is, certainly possible. Nothing that was ever reported to me. But don’t forget for a person of color to be refused entry to the Knights of Columbus, there has to be a person of color that’s there. The parishes of this diocese are racially very monochromatic for the most part.

Q: Why aren’t there more African American Catholics? They got you …

A: More my parents, you might say. I became a Catholic as a very young child. The schools attracted my mother. The world has turned now.

Q: Has being Catholic limited the activism that you could do on the issue of race?

A: I discussed this with Jesse Jackson years ago. My temperament is somewhat introspective and highly refined or highly nuanced. It holds in tension many complex ideas. I read a lot, and I’ve traveled the world a lot. So I can’t so easily say, “This is it. You guys are all white racists, and that’s the end of the story.” I can’t do that because I don’t believe that.

Q: What church practices still reinforce bias?

A: The fact that people have very little contact with people of very different racial backgrounds can reinforce existing biases. We have wonderful Catholic schools in the diocese. We have wonderful teachers, and the history texts that we use are good and better than they were in the past, but they don’t cover in a clear and full way the magnitude of the racial divide. It’s very hard for the Catholic Church not to appear Eurocentric.

Q: You write about sacred art not being reflective of diverse society.

A: If you want to invite people of color into the world of the church, couldn’t some part of it look like them? Yet I am not advocating that you go into churches built by German immigrants and take black paint and spray it all over the saints and angels. I am not proposing anything as simple as that. But there is a reason I chose the cover of my book myself. I wanted to show an Afrocentric Jesus washing the feet of an Afrocentric Peter.

Q: Did you curate more inclusive art in the diocese?

A: I did in the sense that every time we had printed programs, I put more diverse art. Pastorally, I am very sensitive to people are where they are.

Q: It seems like low hanging fruit for the Catholic Church to make a meaningful change.

A: People have written about it and talked about it for decades now and it hasn’t happened. I think there is a sensitivity towards not wanting to seem accusatory of the people who are actually in church on Sunday. We are still building churches around the country to this day in all neighborhoods and all the angels, all the stained glass windows are people who look like Europeans.

Q: Didn’t you have something to do with the sculpture outside the Cathedral Basilica of St. Louis that has a diverse group of children playing around the base of a tall, African American “Angel of Harmony”?

A: Sculptor Wiktor Szostalo designed and created it. I made suggestions, including using the image of my brother Lawrence, who had recently died of cancer, as the face of the angel. The archbishop at that time was Justin Rigali. He was supportive. We got Mrs. (Adelaide) Schlafly to fund that in honor of her husband.

Q: Safe to say that was something you’ve done to try to make the Catholic Church more welcoming to people of color?

A: Well, yes and no, because not many people go to the basilica. But I tried, by using art, to help people to see an image different than all the angels inside the basilica. There are all kinds of angels inside the basilica. Beautiful angels in the splendid mosaics that are there.

Q: One takeaway from your book is there is a need to do more instead of make more statements.

A: That’s true of most things. The Catholic Church is very good at issuing statements because that is something we can do. It’s easier to write a book about the racial divide than it actually is to overcome it. It’s by encounter that bridges are built.

Q: The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops recently made news for its debate to deny President Joe Biden communion for his stance on abortion.

A: Which isn’t going to happen. What the bishops really were discussing was a pastoral letter on the importance of the Eucharist. Some have suggested there be a chapter on receiving communion worthily — if you are sinful you shouldn’t receive communion without going to confession. In that context, some would like to discuss the idea of should there be a ban on giving communion to people who support abortion, including the president. The idea of a universal ban doesn’t exist. And it’s not going to be created.

Q: Do you think he should be denied communion?

A: No. I think that President Biden should be reminded that he is a Catholic and why is he so vigorously supporting a policy that is directly contrary to this clear teaching that developing human life in the womb should be protected and have a conversation with him. But he’s not in my diocese, and I have no control over that. I understand why bishops have different opinions on this.

Q: Would you give the USCCB an “A” for trying to protect the unborn?

A: Pro-life is one of the central themes of the Catholic bishops. Sure, why not?

Q: What grade would you give them on bridging the racial divide?

A: They know that they are doing more in favor to deal with the complex moral issue of abortion than they are with the racial divide, though the most recent pastoral statements have been very strong and very good. It would be very difficult for the bishops to say all Catholics who are white supremacists in their thinking shouldn’t go to communion because it’s not a legal statement like Roe v. Wade.

Q: You designate a chapter of your book to the new National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C., and suggest that bishops spend some time there, perhaps when they are in town for a nearby USCCB meeting.

A: I don’t want you to paint the bishops in one stroke. All the bishops are different kinds of people and they are all in different kinds of dioceses. Different ones are doing more on the racial divide than others. Just like different ones are doing more on abortion.

Q: What are a few things that regular people can do to bridge the racial divide?

A: One of the things that I think is so hard for people to do is to seek accurate information. To read more. If you give a talk and you say in passing, “Of course this has been the case ever since the Jim Crow laws, or this has been the case ever since the Dred Scott decision,” and you have people afterwards who say, “Bishop, who is Jim Crow? Who is Dred Scott? What was the Middle Passage across the Atlantic Ocean? How could it be that Roger Taney, the chief justice of the Supreme Court, who wrote the Dred Scott decision, was really Catholic?” I had people get up and say he wasn’t Catholic. And he was. I am sorry. You can’t

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Chicago-born bishop talks of Catholic church’s ‘racial divide’Associated Presson July 17, 2021 at 3:58 pm Read More »

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Hermosillo, Hill, Susnara, Artis and Hearn all homer; Draft signing updateon July 17, 2021 at 4:10 pm

Cubs Den

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Hermosillo, Hill, Susnara, Artis and Hearn all homer; Draft signing update

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Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Hermosillo, Hill, Susnara, Artis and Hearn all homer; Draft signing updateon July 17, 2021 at 4:10 pm Read More »

Derek Stevens provides service with a smile in Las VegasRob Miechon July 17, 2021 at 1:00 pm

LAS VEGAS — As if Derek Stevens himself had choreographed the theatrics one month ago Saturday, Cincinnati tallied two in the top of the ninth for a 4-2 lead at Petco Park in San Diego.

In the bottom of the inning, the Padres smacked a pair of two-run homers for the victory. Circa Sports and Stadium Swim, the Stevens entities that occupy Petco’s ninth-inning signage behind home plate, made every highlight, too.

“He was very happy how that inning played out,” Circa Sports director Matt Metcalf said.

More precious Petco exposure materialized July 8. Down 8-0, the Padres beat the Nationals 9-8. With two outs and two strikes in the bottom of the ninth, Trent Grisham singled in Tommy Pham with the winner at 9:50 p.m.

Four minutes later, Scott Van Pelt showed Grisham’s clutch hit — and Circa Sports and Stadium Swim — to a national ESPN “SportsCenter” audience. As did Linda Cohn 19 minutes later.

“We’ve gotten a lot of notoriety by owning the ninth inning in San Diego,” Stevens said. “The Padres are a helluva lot of fun to watch. We make sure we don’t miss the ninth.”

The 53-year-old native of Grosse Pointe, Michigan, is on such a roll he is pondering a gubernatorial run next year.

His new adults-only, 35-story downtown Circa is all the rage. That it created about 1,500 jobs at the lowest point in the city’s history made its October opening “uniquely special,” Stevens said.

His Circa Sports sportsbook and extravagant theater have raised industry standards. His Vegas impact might best be encapsulated by Michael “Roxy” Roxborough, who has worn every possible sports-betting hat in the city.

“I thought I would never see another Jackie Gaughan,” said Roxborough, 70. “I am glad he is here when I can enjoy his efforts.”

LOW HOLDS, HIGH LIMITS

Gaughan, the late Vegas legend, placed customers on a pedestal. That philosophy governs his son Michael, who owns the South Point, and Stevens, among the city’s few independent hotel-casino moguls.

Stevens often strolls the casino floors of his three properties. He engages visitors, chats about wagers, discusses games. Only the seasoned, however, should joust with him drink for drink at his Long Bar at The D.

As much as any guest, he enjoys his 16,000-square-foot Stadium Swim — its six pools on three levels, its 41-by-135-foot, 14 million-pixel LED screen — at Circa, especially when holding a cold one.

In his pinstriped suits, Stevens can be shrewd in the boardroom. In public, he’s affable and approachable.

“You can find him at the bar,” Metcalf said. “He’s excited to talk with anybody, establishes that connection. Those are the people that help make him successful, so he gives back however he can.”

That desire to cater to customers compelled Stevens to lure Metcalf from the other side of the counter. Metcalf had worked with Jay Kornegay at the Imperial Palace and the Westgate SuperBook. In 2010, Metcalf went out on his own to bet and fared well. He “got lucky,” he said, when he met Stevens in 2018. They talked for a few hours, and their visions matched. Stevens hired Metcalf.

Metcalf hails the further enlistment of Chris Bennett (assistant manager/oddsman) and Jeffrey Benson (operations) as vital to the Circa Sports dynamics.

They all bristle at the competition’s increasing penchant to ban those who win, even just $300 to $500.

“We wanted to embrace the professional, or sharp, bettors,” Stevens said. “They were being squeezed out, but we’re trying to utilize them and their networks. The guy that gets the information first deserves to make a living off of that.”

They offer yes/no propositions, allow cross-sports future parlays and unveil the first college football lines late Sunday mornings.

They released alternate NFL regular-season victory totals July 3. At 6 1/2 victories for the Bears, the Over is -195 (bet $195 to win $100), Under +170 (risk $100 to earn $170). Over 7 1/2 -115, Under -105. Over 8 1/2 +155, Under -180.

“I just like to take bets,” said Metcalf, 42. “Derek’s really helped lead that charge, letting us do what we want to do, whether it’s creating yes/no’s or having lower holds and higher limits.”

SHOW EARLY, STAY LATE

A year ago, Stevens guaranteed $3 million in his Circa Millions II NFL contest, at $1,000 per entry. Circa would be responsible for any shortfall, but it covered that nut in the final weekend before games started.

Stevens pressed his guarantees, concocting this year’s $4 million Circa Millions III and $6 million Circa Survivor contests. As of Wednesday, 394 had entered the former (creating a $3.606 million overlay) and 329 the latter ($5.671 million overlay).

“He’s willing to put himself out there … [but we] are sweating them!” Metcalf said.

“I wanted to push it,” Stevens said. “But, yeah, you always think about, ‘Oh, man. How did I screw this up?’ “

They believe both will again be covered by the final sign-up weekend.

What has keyed all that choreography going so well for maybe the lone billionaire who, en route home, is prone to popping into the Taco Bell drive-thru? Stevens laughed.

“Maybe I got lucky,” he said. “I don’t take myself too seriously. Surround yourself with people who are a helluva lot smarter than you, show up early and stay late, and you’ll be all right.”

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Derek Stevens provides service with a smile in Las VegasRob Miechon July 17, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Take a break for some trivia with our latest baseball quizBill Chuckon July 17, 2021 at 1:00 pm

In this quiz, we will shake things up a bit. Each of the questions offers the same three answers: over, under or the same. Sounds easy, right? I’m no oddsmaker, but I’m going to say the over/under for correct answers is seven. Email me or tweet me and tell me how you did.

Here’s the Chicago Nine:

1. Jose Abreu had 15 home runs at the All-Star break. How does that compare with his per-season average at the break in the last six seasons?

a. Over b. Under c. Same

2. At the All-Star break, the Cubs were below .500 at 44-46 (sigh). In the eight seasons since 2013 (excluding 2020 and including 2021), which is true?

a. The Cubs have had more seasons above .500 than below at the break.

b. The Cubs have had more seasons below .500 than above at the break.

c. The Cubs have had the same number of seasons above and below .500 at the break.

3. Since 2010, Addison Reed has had the most saves for the Sox at the break. Liam Hendriks has 23 this season. How does that total compare with Reed’s?

a. Over b. Under c. Same

4. This season at the break, the Sox had allowed 339 runs. The last time the Sox won the World Series was in 2005. How do the 2021 Sox’ runs allowed compare with the 2005 Sox’ runs allowed at the break?

a. Over b. Under c. Same

5. Like this season, Kris Bryant was an All-Star in 2015, 2016 and 2019. This season, he had walked 33 times before the break. How does that compare with his lowest total in his previous All-Star seasons?

a. Over b. Under c. Same

6. At the break in 2007, David Ross was hitting .196 (41-for-209). While he wasn’t an All-Star, it was the most hits Rossy had before the break. How do those 41 hits compare with Tony La Russa’s career hit total in his 132 games?

a. Over b. Under c. Same

7. Shohei Ohtani and Anthony Rizzo are both left-handed hitters. At the break, Ohtani had 33 homers and Rizzo 10 (and they both pitched well). How do Ohtani’s homers against lefties compare with Rizzo’s overall homer total?

a. Over b. Under c. Same

8. Dylan Cease, Lucas Giolito, Dallas Keuchel and Carlos Rodon each had seven victories at the break, and Lance Lynn had nine. That’s five pitchers with seven-plus victories. How does five compare with the total number of pitchers with at least seven victories in the rest of the American League Central?

a. Over b. Under c. Same

9. Is it just my imagination, or does Javy Baez strike out a lot? It does feel that 115 times is excessive — or is it? How does it compare with the highest total of any Cub at the break?

a. Over b. Under c. Same

ANSWERS

1. UNDER – Abreu averaged 17.33 dingers. 2. SAME – The Cubs were above .500 in 2015, 2016, 2018 and 2019 and below .500 in the other four seasons. 3. UNDER – In 2013, Reed had 24 saves. 4. SAME – They each allowed 339 runs. 5. UNDER – It’s the fewest walks Bryant has had at any season at the break. 6. OVER – La Russa went 35-for-176 (.199) in his career. 7. OVER – Ohtani hit 11 homers against lefties. 8. OVER – The Indians had Shane Bieber and Aaron Civale, the Twins had Jose Berrios and the Royals and the Tigers had none. 9. OVER – Baez exceeded his 2019 total of 108, which was the previous high. Since 2016, Baez’s whiff total has been higher at the break in every season: 54, 68, 91, 108 and 115.

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Take a break for some trivia with our latest baseball quizBill Chuckon July 17, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Cubs: 3 polarizing Kris Bryant trades with New York MetsRyan Heckmanon July 17, 2021 at 1:00 pm

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Chicago Cubs: 3 polarizing Kris Bryant trades with New York MetsRyan Heckmanon July 17, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Former Notre Dame offensive lineman putting NIL money to good useMike Berardinoon July 17, 2021 at 12:00 pm

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Long before Dillan Gibbons launched the ”Take Timothy to Tally” fundraising campaign in honor of his friend and biggest fan, Timothy Donovan, Florida State’s visionary offensive lineman took an unsettling glimpse into the future.

As he patiently waited his turn at Notre Dame, Gibbons found himself in discussions with some of his Irish teammates about how allowing NCAA student-athletes to profit from their name, image and likeness might play out.

”I was kind of appalled by some of the things I was hearing, some of the predictions of things that were going to happen,” Gibbons told reporters this week. ”I had the picture in my head of the star player on the team rolling up in an Escalade or a really fancy car the first day. Just imagine how the rest of the team would feel and what kind of separation that would cause in the locker room.”

Gibbons, a graduate transfer, decided to take NIL in a different direction, one that ultimately would allow the Donovan family to travel from Dayton, Ohio, for an unforgettable Labor Day weekend around Gibbons’ debut with the Seminoles against his former team.

His brainstorming began long before July 1 and the national rollout of open season in the NIL arena. While his former mates on the offensive line at Notre Dame recently signed a sponsorship deal with a barbecue chain, Gibbons launched a GoFundMe initiative for Donovan, who suffers from a rare medical condition that has required numerous surgeries.

They had met in the fall of 2017 outside Notre Dame Stadium, Gibbons’ gaze naturally falling on the frail teenager hunched over in a wheelchair. Gibbons, a 6-4, 309-pound product of Clearwater (Florida) Central Catholic High School, signed a pair of his gloves, kneeled down for a few photos and exchanged contact information.

The relationship grew steadily from there. Gibbons, 21, would try to inspire Donovan through his health struggles, and Donovan would try to motivate Gibbons to remain optimistic through multiple foot injuries that slowed his progress.

”Once I made a connection with him, I made a very distinct decision in my life to engage with him and not just have a one-off relationship or a one-off day where I gave him a pair of gloves and walked away,” Gibbons said. ”I wanted to do as much as I possibly could.”

About a year ago, Gibbons was in a class on strategic business decisions at Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business when he had a revelation. With the NIL doors about to be flung open, why not devise an initiative that would have a life-changing effect on someone less fortunate?

What began with a modest goal of a few thousand dollars to pay for Donovan’s travel expenses since has blossomed into a national cause that has raised $49,000 toward a mountain of family medical expenses. About a third of that sum came from a single company, Super Coffee.

Gibbons had to pull over to compose himself when he heard the news as he made the drive home from Tallahassee.

”I’m completely overwhelmed; my family is overwhelmed,” Gibbons said. ”The Donovan family can’t even see straight.”

Paula Donovan has been keeping a scrapbook of all the articles and social-media posts recognizing her son’s long-running fight. His latest surgery this summer increased his height by 4 or 5 inches while straightening a 90-degree bend in his spine to about 40 degrees.

Post-surgery complications, however, led to pneumonia, which has landed Timothy back in the hospital.

”He’s in good spirits,” Gibbons said, ”but he’s definitely still struggling.”

With the season opener seven weeks away, planning has swept into overdrive. A Tallahassee-area hotel has donated rooms, a local bookstore will outfit the Donovans with Seminoles gear and program boosters have donated game tickets and parking passes.

Gibbons’ new vision is to give Timothy ”his day in the sun,” to make him feel like a five-star football recruit from the moment he and his family land at the airport. The pinnacle, Gibbons said, would be for the Donovans to make their way onto Bobby Bowden Field, so the crowd of 80,000 could cheer Timothy for his lifelong courage.

At that moment, it would be hard to imagine any NCAA student-athlete making better use of NIL.

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Former Notre Dame offensive lineman putting NIL money to good useMike Berardinoon July 17, 2021 at 12:00 pm Read More »

15 shot, 3 fatally, in Chicago since Friday nightSun-Times Wireon July 17, 2021 at 12:01 pm

Three people have been killed and at least 12 others wounded in shootings across Chicago since Friday night.

A man was fatally shot during an argument Saturday morning in East Garfield Park.

About 1:45 a.m., the 31-year-old was shot in the head by a man during an argument outside in the 2800 block of West Van Buren Street, Chicago police said. He was transported to Mount Sinai Hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said.

The shooter was on the scene when officers arrived and was taken to Area Four headquarters for further investigation, police said.

One man was killed and three others wounded in a shooting late Friday night in Austin on the West Side.

About 11:55 p.m., the four men were standing outside in the 700 block of North Lockwood Avenue when three people approached them and fired shots, police said. A 29-year-old man was struck in the head and back and pronounced dead at the scene, police said. He has not yet been identified.

A man, 40, suffered gunshot wounds to the hip and leg and another man, 45, was also struck in the leg, police said. Both men were transported to Stroger Hospital in serious condition. A fourth man, 62, suffered a graze wound to the back and was taken to the same hospital in good condition.

Friday evening, a man was shot to death in a drive-by in West Pullman on the Far South Side.

The 26-year-old was on the street about 6:50 p.m. in the 12000 block of South Union Avenue when a vehicle pulled up and someone from inside fired shots, police said. He was struck multiple times on the body and he was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where he was pronounced dead, police said. The Cook County medical examiner’s office identified him as Antwan Davis.

In nonfatal shootings, a 25-year-old man was critically wounded in an attack early Saturday in the Loop.

The man was arguing with a group of people just after 2 a.m. outside in the 200 block of West Adams Street when a female shot him in the chest and arm, Chicago police said. He was transported to Northwestern Memorial Hospital in critical condition, police said.

Another man was shot during an attempted robbery Friday night in Austin on the Northwest Side.

The 32-year-old was walking about 9:50 p.m. when three males approached him and announced a robbery in the 5800 block of West Huron Street, police said.

One of the suspects shot him in the arm before they fled the scene without his property, police said. The man self-transported to West Suburban Hospital in good condition, police said.

At least seven other people were wounded in shootings since 5 p.m. Friday.

Last weekend, 13 people were killed and 33 others wounded in shootings citywide.

Read more on crime, and track the city’s homicides.

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15 shot, 3 fatally, in Chicago since Friday nightSun-Times Wireon July 17, 2021 at 12:01 pm Read More »

Kahleah Copper’s All-Star debut just the beginning for young star from North PhillyAnnie Costabileon July 17, 2021 at 12:30 pm

Kahleah Copper grew up playing basketball on the corner of 33rd and Diamond Streets in Philadelphia.

She was the only girl from the neighborhood on the court with boys who were older and stronger players at the time. They held nothing back, and she kept returning to those courts.

That corner in North Philly is one of the places Copper earned her stripes and laid the foundation to become a WNBA All-Star. This week in Las Vegas, as she made her All-Star debut, the friends that became family from that corner park showed up to support her.

In their minds, she always has been an All-Star.

”About 30 people came to Las Vegas to support me,” Copper said.

Those 30 people included her mother, her sister, her old resident assistant from Girard College boarding school and several friends from the neighborhood. They all came with unique stories about whom Copper is, but one constant is that her friends mean everything to her.

Her grandma Bytia, who died in 2019, remains with Copper in a photo she wears on a chain around her neck everywhere she goes. Copper said her grandma always knew she would reach this moment in her career.

LAS VEGAS, NV – JULY 14: Sylvia Fowles defends Kahleah Copper during the AT&T WNBA All-Star Game 2021 on July 14, 2021 at Michelob ULTRA Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.
NBAE via Getty Images

Copper isn’t from Philadelphia, she’s from North Philly. And if you get it wrong, she’ll let you know. There’s a deep pride associated with what neighborhood you grew up in, and North Philly is known for its grit and hustle. Those are two characteristics that define Copper’s style of play.

”We had one play in middle school, and it was called, ‘Give the ball to Kahleah,’ ” said Michael Pinkney, Copper’s old coach and resident assistant at Girard.

Even back in those days, Copper was getting defensive rebounds and taking the ball from coast to coast. It’s something fans have come to expect from her this season, and it’s one of the reasons she was voted an All-Star. That, along with the fact she’s leading the Sky in scoring at 13.8 points per game.

A more important stat to her is her 4.9 rebounds per game. Entering this season, Copper wanted to establish herself as a rebounding guard who was a lockdown defender.

Copper often has been charged with guarding an opponent’s leading scorer this season. Her development on the defensive end of the court — something coach and general manager James Wade hounded her and teammate Diamond DeShields about — is a huge factor in why the Sky’s defensive rating is third in the league. Add it to the list of reasons she was voted an All-Star.

Copper’s All-Star nod made her the second woman from North Philly to earn the honor. Six-time All-Star Dawn Staley was the first.

”From year to year, she’s added more and more to her game,” Staley said. ”Her opponents have to really scheme for her. You’re seeing the evolution of her take form into a really, truly great Philadelphia guard.”

Staley and Copper always have been connected by North Philly. This year, that connection moved beyond the place they both call home when Copper was invited to participate in USA women’s basketball camps.

Copper’s most recent camp with Team USA was at the end of March, with teammates DeShields and Stefanie Dolson. Copper thought she performed well at the camp. Leading up to the announcement of the

Tokyo Olympics roster, she was confident she, DeShields or both would make the team.

After the Sky’s 91-81 victory against the Sun on June 19, Copper got a call from USA Basketball saying she didn’t make the team. DeShields was also left off the roster.

”Fall down nine times, get up 10,” Pinkney said. ”That’s her mentality.”

Copper was disappointed, but she maintained a positive perspective by acknowledging she’s just getting started.

Winning a gold medal is still a priority for Copper. She said her ultimate goal is to win at every level. The potential to win at the WNBA level is there this season, but a few things need to happen first.

Chicago Sky's Kahleah Copper (2) celebrates with Courtney Vandersloot after Vandersloot was fouled and scored in the act of shooting during the second half of a WNBA basketball game against the Connecticut Sun Thursday, June 17, 2021, in Chicago. The Sky won 81-75. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast) ORG XMIT: ILCA108
Chicago Sky’s Kahleah Copper (2) celebrates with Courtney Vandersloot after Vandersloot was fouled and scored in the act of shooting during the second half of a WNBA basketball game against the Connecticut Sun Thursday, June 17, 2021, in Chicago. The Sky won 81-75. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast) ORG XMIT: ILCA108
Charles Rex Arbogast, AP Photos

The Sky closed the first half with an overtime loss to the Mystics and will begin the second half with a 10-10 record. After losses such as that one, Copper is desperate to play another game to hit the refresh button. The closest she’ll get to game action, however, is when the Sky return to practice July 26.

The point of emphasis in the second half, which the Sky open against the Storm on Aug. 15 at Wintrust Arena, needs to be consistency. Copper said she thinks the Sky have all the pieces to find it.

Candace Parker is the voice of reason who reminds everyone to relax in high-pressure moments.

Courtney Vandersloot is the player who holds others accountable.

Dolson brings the humor, and DeShields and Copper are the sparkplugs.

Combine these defining characteristics of the starting five with a bench led by one of the best knockdown shooters in the WNBA in Allie Quigley, and you have a championship contender.

Still, to reach their full potential, the Sky must make adjustments before August.

”We have to learn how to win in those tight situations,” Copper said. ”Practice is going to help us get there because we’re fighting through possessions. We’re going to challenge ourselves by pushing ourselves to the limit when we’re tired.”

Every member of the Sky’s starting five but Parker will be a free agent at the end of the season. Quigley, Astou Ndour-Fall and Lexie Brown also will be free agents.

It’s a near guarantee that the Sky will look markedly different in 2022. Copper said that the players don’t discuss the potential changes to the roster, adding that they love one another and will try to make things work however they can.

”It’s going to be a tough one for Mr. Wade,” Copper joked.

This season has been a continuation of Copper’s breakout performance in the WNBA bubble last season that had her in the running for the league’s most improved player award.

People beyond the league have taken notice. Copper joined Adidas’ roster, which includes more than 25 WNBA athletes, before the season.

Copper’s current focus remains on the present and winning with the Sky. Still, there’s no denying what might be waiting for her as a free agent.

”Free agency is like being recruited all over again,” Copper said.

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Kahleah Copper’s All-Star debut just the beginning for young star from North PhillyAnnie Costabileon July 17, 2021 at 12:30 pm Read More »