MILWAUKEE — The reeling Cubs took the field Tuesday with star shortstop Javy Baez joined by Eric Sogard at third base, Sergio Alcantara at second and Patrick Wisdom at first. There’s a word for an infield like that, and it’s: “Who?”
What kind of team are the Cubs when Anthony Rizzo is out with a bad back, Kris Bryant is out with a sore side, Willson Contreras is catching with a painful glove hand, the Injured List Hotel is already overbooked and losses are multiplying like cups in a beer snake?
They’re not a good one, that’s for sure.
But are they a bad one? Is the writing already on the wall? Are they weathering a storm or are they a motley crew of hopelessness?
It’s too soon for such questions, manager David Ross would attest. The season reaches merely its numerical midpoint — Game No. 81 — Wednesday against the division-leading Brewers.
“We’ve played the tougher part of our schedule [or] are in the back end of that right now,” he said. “So I think, you know, in theory, the second half is a little bit easier. I take it with a grain of salt. The record is what it is.
“Are we playing good baseball? Do we feel we’ve got a chance to do real damage on a nightly basis? I think we’re in a lot of baseball games. I think we know where our strengths and weaknesses are, and we’re trying to improve all those things. We’re only at the halfway point.”
I’m more inclined to push the panic button, though perhaps I should know better. In 2015, the Cubs were only 44-37 after 81 games but went 53-28 from there. In 2017, the Cubs were 40-41 after 81 games and 52-29 the rest of the way.
Halfway through, the 2017 team was an absolute mess. Bryant had just been helped off the field with a sprained ankle, joining Kyle Hendricks, Jason Heyward and Ben Zobrist on the injured list. Kyle Schwarber was at Triple-A Iowa after a demotion. Miguel Montero had been shipped out. Addison Russell had allegations of domestic violence swirling around him. Then-president Theo Epstein questioned the team’s edge. There were whispers that manager Joe Maddon wasn’t doing enough to get his team locked in.
When Jon Lester gave up 10 runs in the first inning to the Pirates in Game 81, I was convinced the 2017 Cubs were going nowhere. And that team, coming off a World Series championship, still had all its foundational pieces in the starting rotation, primarily Lester and Jake Arrieta — who is not to be confused with the Arrieta who will take the ball in Game 81 here on Wednesday.
Ross says these Cubs are good at “resetting” no matter what comes their way. Maybe a second-half reset is all they really need. It’s a better strategy than panicking, I’ll give the man that.
JUST SAYIN’
Meanwhile, how serious is Major League Baseball about this sticky-stuff business? So serious, umpires checked Sogard’s glove Monday after the infielder came in to get the final out of the Brewers’ 10-run eighth inning. Talk about overly officious foolishness.
On the other hand, it probably wouldn’t be the worst thing in the world for somebody to check Sogard’s bat for traces of big-league hitting ability.
o In a wonderful development, White Sox center fielder Luis Robert has been medically cleared to “increase his level of baseball activities” at the team’s complex in Arizona. Just shy of two months with the dazzling Robert in the lineup would beat the heck out of zero months with Robert in the lineup.
Now if only the Sox can get Yermin Mercedes — hitting below .200 since April — to increase the level of his baseball activities.
o Who’s tougher than Sox first baseman Jose Abreu?
Two days after being hit in the knee with a fastball, Abreu was in Tuesday’s lineup. But first he had to pass a test from head trainer James Kruk and manager Tony La Russa.
“It really came down to [whether] he could run without limping,” La Russa said.
Let’s face it, the big fella can’t really run, limp or no limp. It only adds to his charm.
Loyola University men’s basketball player Lucas Williamson — like other college athletes across Illinois — said Tuesday he feels “nothing but excitement for the world of opportunities” that will soon be offered to student athletes under legislation signed into law by Gov. J.B. Pritzker.
The Student-Athlete Endorsement Rights Act, allows college and university athletes to be compensated for their name or image and allows them to retain agents. The law goes into effect Thursday.
The legislation allows student athletes to “take control of their destiny when it comes to their own name, image likeness and voice,” Gov. J.B. Pritzker said at the bill-signing ceremony at the State Farm Center on the campus of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
“With this law, Illinois is at the forefront of taking some pressure off of talented kids who are torn between finishing their degree or cashing in on the big leagues,” Pritzker said. “But to be clear, the benefits of this law don’t stop with kids bound for the NFL, or the NBA.
“Any student athlete can partner with businesses in their college towns, as well as brands big and small, to see a financial benefit from the hours they pour into their craft. … This isn’t just a win for student athletes, it’s a win for the future of our entire state.”
Loyola Chicago guard Lucas Williamson plays against Illinois during the second half of a men’s college basketball game in the second round of the NCAA tournament at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Sunday, March 21, 2021. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya) ORG XMIT: NYOTKPaul Sancya/AP
Pritzker was joined by state legislators and the athletic directors from U. of I., as well as Northwestern University and DePaul University.
State Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago, said the bill is about “autonomy” and fairness.
A former defensive lineman on the football team at Illinois, Buckner sponsored the legislation in the House and said the “long overdue” law modernizes the college athletics landscape.
“This is not just a win for the star quarterback or the star point guard. This gives the women’s tennis player an opportunity to be compensated for teaching lessons back in her hometown during summer breaks. This creates an apparatus for the women’s softball player to lend her image to the local pizzeria for fair market value,” Buckner said.
“This is the dawn of a new day, and today we have created the change that our student athletes deserve.”
The law also bars organizations, such as the National Collegiate Athletic Association, from preventing student athletes from being paid for the use of their name or image.
It also allows higher education institutions to set “reasonable limitations” on the dates and times that a student competitor might participate in endorsement or promotional activities.
Eva Rubin, who plays on U. of I.’s women’s basketball team, said as a student athlete she and others spend many hours in class and on the sport “that you get to watch us play on television.”
The new law will likely allow her to do more for her community.
“I’m actually a Type 1 diabetic and, with my small platform that I’ve been able to kind of build for myself here at the University of Illinois, I’ve had many opportunities to work with diabetes research foundations,” Rubin said. “With the [bill] being passed, I can only imagine the opportunities that I’ll be able to create for myself and build for myself and ways that will help me give back to my community.”
Sisters Aneesah and Nazlah Morrow, both women’s basketball players at DePaul University, said they’re thrilled the legislation would soon go into effect.
“Now to be able to benefit off doing what I’ve been doing this whole time, it makes me very excited,” Nazlah said.
The Morrow sisters’ parents were both athletes at Nebraska. Their mother, Nafeesah Brown, described as “one of the most explosive Huskers ever,” played women’s basketball and their father, Ed Morrow, was on the 1994 National Championship football team.
“In the past, I couldn’t imagine how helpful it would be for athletes, considering that my father was a national champion and my mother was a hall-of-famer at Nebraska,” Aneesah said.
Joe Spivak, a Northwestern University football player, said he’s also excited about the new law but is approaching the newfound opportunity with caution.
“I think definitely when the time is right and I have that plan and the right guidance, I’d be silly not to pursue it,” Spivak said.
Joe Spivak, a defensive tackle for Northwestern University’s football team.Northwestern Athletics
Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court decided in a 9-0 opinion that the NCAA can’t enforce rules limiting education-related benefits — such as computers and paid internships — that colleges offer to student athletes but didn’t make a ruling on whether students can be paid salaries.
Buckner said that decision is a sign that things are changing for college athletes.
“We don’t know what everything will look like in the coming months and years, but I think what this signals is that we’re poised and ready to be at the vanguard and be at the front of the charge” for making things more equitable for college athletes, the South Side Democrat said.
Michael Majeski’s beaming smile and “infectious energy” left an immediate — and lasting — impression.
“Mike was the type of person that you only had to meet once or twice and you were treated like his family,” his friend Hunter Stromquist told the Sun-Times Tuesday.
On Friday, Majeski was stabbed over two dozen times in a vicious daytime attack outside a Wendy’s on the Northwest Side. A resident of the Belmont Terrace neighborhood, Majeski was just 24.
Michael Dabrowski, 25, of Norwood Park, was detained nearby by witnesses and neighbors and taken into custody. He was charged with first-degree murder and ordered held without bail Sunday.
“I have no idea why or how this came about — in the middle of the day, too,” Stromquist said. “There’s a lot of things I don’t understand.”
Prosecutors say Majeski and Dabrowski arrived separately at the Wendy’s and met in the parking lot in the 3900 block of North Harlem. Majeski got into Dabrowski’s car and Dabrowski began stabbing him, prosecutors say. Majeski jumped out and Dabrowski chased him and stabbed him several times in the back.
The attack was witnessed by multiple people and captured on cellphone video, prosecutors say. A witness asked Dabrowski what was happening and he responded, “He ‘f’d’ me over,” according to Assistant State’s Attorney Susanna Bucaro, noting he used an expletive.
Stromquist said she didn’t know anything about the relationship between Majeski and Dabrowski.
She said she first met Majeski at the Summer Camp Music Festival in central Illinois in 2018 and the two became fast friends, bonding over their love of electronic music.
Majeski was regarded on the local scene as a gracious figure who often went to bat for artists and record labels, said Stromquist, who works for the Denver-based label Electric Hawk.
She attributed the imprint’s significant growth during the pandemic to Majeski’s donations and online evangelism, noting that he also worked with Spicy Bois, another label based in Denver and Chicago.
“He was almost like a super fan but we valued him way more than that, obviously,” she said.
Stromquist and another friend are now raising $5,000 for Majeski’s family through a GoFundMe page. As of Tuesday afternoon, the campaign had already netted nearly $2,800 in donations.
“Honestly I feel that it will help the family with legal fees because I want this dude that did this to rot,” she said. “I want him put away and I don’t want anything to stop the justice that needs to be had.
“I knew that the community would be called to take care of him the same way he took care of us,” added Stromquist, who’s also considering throwing a benefit show in his honor in the Chicago area.
Very good fishing for boaters on Lake Michigan, steelhead in Indiana, catfish inland, the coming holiday weekend and the impact of our recent rains lead this sprawling raw-file Midwest Fishing Report.
ILLINOIS CLOSURES
As of Tuesday midday, here are some closures and restrictions related to recent weather: Middle Fork Vermilion River remains closed to boating; Lower Dells and Upper Dells are closed at Matthiessen State Park; at Starved Rock SP, the main parking lot, launch and picnic area in between remain closed.
Probably a good week to stay tuned to IDNR social media in case other closures (or openings) come.
ILLINOIS FROG SEASON
Illinois’ bullfrog (only) season runs through Oct. 15. A fishing license is required. “Bullfrogs may be taken by hook and line, gig, pitchfork, spear, bow and arrow, hand, or landing net.” Daily bag limits eight, possession limit 16.
LAKEFRONT PARKING
Chicago Park District’s parking passes for the fisherman’s parking lots at DuSable and Burnham harbors are on sale at Henry’s Sports and Bait in Bridgeport and Park Bait at Montrose Harbor.
Readers suggest SpotHero app downtown. Otherwise, here are some basics: Foster (free street parking or pay lot); Montrose (now a mix of metered and free street parking); Belmont (pay lots on north and south sides); Diversey (pay lot or street parking); DuSable Harbor (pay lot or fisherman’s lot); Northerly Island/Burnham Harbor (meters, pay lot or fisherman’s lot); 31st/Burnham (meter parking between McCormick Place and 31st Street Harbor); Oakwood/39th (meters); 63rd Street/Casino Pier (pay lot); Steelworkers Park (free street parking at east end of 87th); Cal Park (free parking).
AREA LAKES
I think the holiday weekend focus will be on bluegill and largemouth bass, even with the high water on some ponds and lakes. Especially for bass, it helps to focus on inflow areas after the rains.
Dicky’s Bait Shop in Montgomery reported some decent largemouth bass on ponds, best on leeches or basic night crawler.
Jeff Brown’s daughter caught a notable largemouth in Frankfort Square.Provided
Jeff Brown emailed the photo above and this:
Hi Dale,
I took my daughter fishing in Frankfort Square, IL at a neighborhood pond. 6 inches of rain over 3 days had the water up and this ~5 lb largemouth took our zoom u-tail worm! Released her back into the water after capturing this memory! Thanks for your weekly articles and fishing updates.
Sincerely,
Jeff Brown, Frankfort, IL
Ken “Husker” O’Malley with local largemouth bass from the high local waters.Provided
Ken “Husker” O’Malley emailed the photo above and this:
Hey Dale,
Here is a recap of this past weeks fishing.
Area lakes-The much needed rain for some lakes finally came. Problem is it was too much. However it is allowing some predictable fishing if your timing is right.
Bass have been very good. Focus on areas of current in-between down pours. Chatterbaits and crankbaits have been best with the stained water. Switch to topwater baits in the same areas during evening hours.
. . .
TTYL
—
Ken “Husker” O’Malley
Husker Outdoors Waterwerks fishing team
Isaac Biggerstaff catches many good and varied fish, but this is something different.Provided by Lou DiNicola
Lou DiNicola of Libertyville Fishing Club emailed the photo above and this:
14 year old Isaac Biggerstaff of the Libertyville Fishing Club not only catches big northerns, bass, and salmon, but he recently caught this fat gizzard shad from Lake Minear. What the fish lacks in beauty, it makes up in size!
Lou DiNicola
Libertyville Fishing Club
The young man is somebody to keep an eye on,
BRAIDWOOD LAKE
Open daily 6 a.m. to sunset. Click here for the preview.
CHAIN O’LAKES AREA
Tucker at Triangle Sports and Marine in Antioch said catfish, as usual, are on fire (stinkbait is favored); bass are pretty good, females are starting to bite; lots of walleye on main lake, fairly shallow for summer, look for weeds or wood; bluegill and crappie are on main lake docks.
NOTE: Probably a good week to remind to check updates on water conditions at foxwaterway.com or (847) 587-8540.
NOTE 2: The Stratton Lock and Dam is open 8 a.m. to midnight through Sept. 30.
DELAVAN LAKE, WISCONSIN
Dave Duwe emailed:
Delavan Lake 6/28/21 through 7/5/21
Fishing remains excellent. With the warmer weather, the northern pike have been biting very well.
Northern Pike have been great. The fish are off the weedline anywhere between 20-25 ft of water. Look for the fish by the gray condos, willow Point or the west end by the island. The best approach is lindy rigging suckers. I fish the suckers on a 6500 Abu Garcia with a bait clicker, so when the fish bites, it will click out line and indicate that a fish is on.
Walleye fishing has been average. The fish are on the weedline in 15-24 ft of water. The fish I’m catching are on nightcrawlers fished on either a lindy rig or a split shot rig. This week it was kind of a battle to catch a legal fish. Every trip out I caught a couple but nothing to brag about. The best locations are by Browns Channel or west of the Yacht Club.
Largemouth bass can be either caught on the deep weedline in 17-20 ft or on top water lures first thing in the a.m. The best bait is chug bugs or white buzz baits. It’s best to work a depth of 8-10 ft. The fish I’ve been catching on the deep weedline, I’m catching on split shot rigged nightcrawlers. You want to concentrate on inside turns or the points on the weedline. A few fish have also been caught drop shotting Berkeley Gulp.
Bluegills are done spawning. They have moved out on the deep weedline. The nicer fish are in the 22-26 ft depth. Fishing so many nightcrawlers, I catch many right off the weedline. Some of the fish are in excess of 10 inches. Nightcrawlers or small leaf worms are the best approach.
Crappies have pulled off the weedline. They are suspending in 15 ft of water. The best approach has been purple plastic. Look for the fish over by Browns Channel or west of the Yacht club. I use a 1/32 oz Arkie Jig and a 3/0 split shot 1 ft above the jig. That allows you to cast a good distance and the fall rate is very effective.
Good luck and I hope to see you on the water. For guide parties, please call Dave Duwe at 608-883-2050
DOWNSTATE
POWERTON: Hours are 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. through Sept. 30.
EMIQUON: Access permits and liability waivers are again required. They are available Tuesday to Saturday at Dickson Mounts Museum, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Matt Dlouhy caught a fine smallmouth bass from the Fox River, a trend who hopes continues.Provided
Matt Dlouhy emailed the photo above and this:
Wanted to send this off to you. Before the first wave of rain on the fox. Probably close to 4-4.5lbs. Caught on 3″ swimbait below the dam. Fox river has been producing some real nice fish these past couple years. Let’s hope the trend continues!
From his typing fingers, the truth of “Let’s hope the trend continues!”
Dicky’s Bait Shop in Montgomery reported the river went up nine inches, then dropped eight inches; sort of quiet other than good flatheads and channel catfish (goldfish or cutbait).
Pete Lamar emailed:
Hi Dale,
I’ve got an update from the north woods of Wisconsin this week too. First, a local report. I was on the Fox in Aurora last night. It was surprisingly low and clear, about normal conditions for this time of year. Of course, one brief cloudburst, especially upstream, could change all that. On Saturday in the rain it had been flowing high and fast, a big change from recent weeks. I tried to fish a tributary, in the hope that maybe it had risen fast and then dropped and cleared just as quickly. No such luck: it was high, fast and off-color. I should’ve gone home at that point, but instead tried a few casts to slack water near shore. On my last cast of the day, the line stopped and I felt what I thought was a rock or tree limb. Then it shook its head and ran slowly and steadily upstream. If it had gone downstream, I wouldn’t have had a chance in the fast water. I couldn’t turn whatever it was or even slow it down; after a short time, it threw the hook. It didn’t fight like any channel cat or smallmouth I’d ever caught, so I keep telling myself it was a carp or sucker (I’d hate to think I never even got a look at what could’ve been a heavy game fish).
I love the mystery tales.
GENEVA LAKE, WISCONSIN
Roger Klass with a largemouth bass from Geneva Lake.Provided
Roger Klass emailed the photo above and this:
Good morning mister Bowman,
I wanted to send you a picture of this largemouth bass I caught in Lake Geneva this Monday. This is the biggest largemouth bass I have caught to this date, and I have been catching some good ones in Lake Zurich and a few other places. Lake Geneva is where I also caught my first muskie, which was on Columbus Day 2019. In case you want that picture I can send it as well. Have a great weekend.
Roger Klass
Arden Katz said, “You can’t keep the rock bass off the hook. If you want to take a kid out, now is the time for action.” For smallmouth and largemouth, he said they are on summer patterns in 14-18 feet, best drop-shotting at night; bluegill are in the same range.
Dave Duwe emailed:
Lake Geneva 6/28/21 through 7/5/21
Fishing is excellent on Lake Geneva. There are literally fish to be caught almost anywhere on the lake, which makes it very nice when the winds are strong because you still have choices. The water temp has finally warmed up to about 75-76 degrees. With the warmer water, the pleasure boat traffic is increasing.
Smallmouth bass can be caught in the 20-22 ft depth range. The best bait has been either drop shotting small 4 inch worms in green pumpkin color or drifting nightcrawlers. Some of the best locations have been by Knollwood or by Belvidere Park in Fontana. The warmer weather will continue to make the fish go deeper.
Largemouth bass are now being caught on the weed flats. Try by Trinkes or in Williams Bay. Most Success is coming by drop shotting 4 inch worms or drifting nightcrawlers. With the warmer temperatures you can once again catch fish on the top water. Chrome/Blue or Chrome/Black Chug bugs are my favorite choices. have also been some reports of success while fishing around docks. Most people are casting spider grubs on a jig. A good choice of spider grub is the Arkie Crawlin Grub.
Rock bass have slowed a little but are still plentiful pretty much any place you fish. They seem to still be in the 6-8 ft depth range. The best choice of bait remains the nightcrawlers.
Yellow Perch have also slowed a bit. Last week I didn’t catch any of the real big ones like I did the prior week. The little ones that I did catch were on pieces of nightcrawlers. The best locations are by Colemans Point or Knollwood.
Lake Trout are still being caught in the main lake basin. Some success is coming on large chrome/blue Rapalas or chrome/black Rapalas fished on a down rigger. The best success has been coming on the suspended fish, 80 ft down in 110 ft of water.
Good luck and I hope to see you on the water. For guide parties, please call Dave Duwe at 608-883-2050
GREEN LAKE AREA, WISCONSIN
Guide Mike Norris emailed:
Fishing Report 6/27/2021
Mike Norris
Big Green Lake – Smallmouth bass fishing is exceptionally good right now. The smallmouth bass are post spawn and hungry and are biting on a variety of different lures. My clients are catching them on Senko’s, Ned Rigs, Drop Shot Rigs and Swim Jigs. Look for active fish in the 8 to 12 depth range.
Little Green Lake – Muskie fishing continues to be good with reports of several anglers catching up to three muskies per outing. Try working bucktails along the weed edges. Crappies have moved out to the central basin of the lake and can be caught with minnows suspended from a slip float.
Fox Lake – Fishing for all species has slowed due to dirty water from recent wind and rain. Look for the shallow water bass bite to return as the water clears. Also try trolling crankbaits for northern pike in 10 to 12 feet of water.
To book a guide trip reach out to me via my Facebook page at mike.norris.7773 or email me through my website at www.comecatchsmallmouth.com
GREEN/STURGEON BAYS, WISCONSIN
Rob Abouchar with a smallmouth bass from Door County in Wisconsin.Provided
Rob Abouchar sent the photo above and this:
Hi Dale
I wanted to get away to some different scenery so I headed to the end of the road in Door County. I hit Rowleys bay and stayed at Rowleys Bay resort. I had been there years ago and did well in the Mink River. The weather was beautiful but very windy and Lake Michigan was still a cool 62 degrees. The smallmouth were pushed off somewhere in the lake and the ones I did see were very shy. I was able to connect with a Strike King Rodent on Football head jig in some cattails before being blown off the big lake. This trip was more about rest and relaxation which I was able to do on a nice lakeside balcony. The boats i did see limp into the mink river had to battle the swellls to get back to safety. I figured discretion and a lake view was better than battling 5 footers.
On the music front we have secured a gig at the Dancing In The Streets Festival at the On Tour Brewing Company in Chicago. The festival features some of the top Grateful Dead bands, like Terrapin Flyer and Paradise Waits. Seems appropriate as I used to play in a fantastic Dead band in the 90’s called Fat Banana. Reggae and Grateful dead…What a long strange trip it’s been.
Tight Lines and Good Health
Rob
I love his music side notes almost as much as his reports.
Bob Johnson with a fine crappie from Heidecke Lake.Provided
Bob Johnson emailed the photo above and this;
Hi Dale –
Made it back out to Heidecke Sunday again. It’s been a few weeks however the bite has not slowed down! Got a variety today Walleye, Crappie, White Bass, large and Smallmouth on chatterbaits and plastics mainly off rocks. Water temps were at 75 and clarity was good even after heavy rains. I was expecting some stain from rainstorms. The Smallmouth bite was really aggressive and shows no sign of slowing down!
Open 6 a.m. (6:30 bank fishing) to sunset.
ILLINOIS RIVER
As of Tuesday, the river is projected to be in flood into the weekend at Starved Rock and LaSalle.
KANKAKEE RIVER
River is high, fast and stained, but, as of Tuesday, generally within its banks.
The conditions led to a postponement of the Kankakee River Fishing Derby to July 9-18. Click here to check updates.
George Peters with a Kankakee River smallmouth bass before the high waters came.Provided
George Peters emailed the photo above and this:
Dear Dale, fishing Midwest rivers has always been a challenge. This year has been among the hardest. Early cold and drought caused irregular spawning. Now massive floods. Will take weeks to stabilize, this 18″ fish was caught the day before the big rain started. Without additional rain things should be OK by mid July. George Peters.
Just in time for the holiday weekend, some of the best boat fishing is going on Lake Michigan.
Best action from shore is within the harbors for those trying for rock bass and bluegill, though a few perch reports come.
Capt. Tim Frey and “Bluegill Bill” led a very successful morning Tuesday with a young group on the Massive Confusion out of Chicago.Provided by Confusion Charters
Capt. Bob Poteshman of Confusion Charters said that out of North Point on Monday, the fishing “was outstanding, not good, outstanding” for “big chunky” coho; early starts are best. Out of Chicago, there are lots of coho in 50-90 feet off Navy Pier and lakers are very good on the bottom in 100-130.
Stacey Greene at Park Bait at Montrose Harbor texted:
Good morning Dale
There is not much to report around here. There are a few guys that are finding some perch but you have to work for them. Been some really nice rock bass at the mouth of the harbor.
We have our regular hours through the holiday weekend the only thing I will mention is that Chicago Police have been doing a lot of weekend traffic control down here so once the parking fills up and traffic starts to get heavy they’ve been closing the entrances for a couple hours in the afternoon to get a handle on traffic. I’m trying to get a solution for our customers I just haven’t got there yet.Have a fun safe weekend.
Getting some perch off the pier, along with some browns on the bottom. Boat guys are all over the place, fish are scattered anywhere from 50 to 150 feet
Capt. Scott Wolfe emailed:
We had the best fishing of the year this week off Waukegan. Limit catches almost every trip. Mostly coho and they are averaging about 6 pounds. We had kings to 22 pounds, steelhead, including some in the 13-14 pound range and lake trout in the mix too. The most consistent depth has been 85 to 115 feet. On a couple of days when the West wind was strong, we had coho going as shallow as 40 feet of water. Some of the coho had gobies in addition to the alewife in their stomachs. Most fish have been taken on Jimmy fly slider style flies in Spectra, Blue Liz and Green Liz patterns. Purple and dark green pattern of Warrior lures were also good in patterns called Voodoo and Forrest Gump. Any presentation in the top 40 feet, from yellowbirds, short leads, shallow divers and shallow downriggers worked.
This now the third or fourth year in a row where we have seen fast coho fishing we are used to in April and May happening in late-June. This will likely last until mid-August. Also, afternoon has been as good or better than the morning. This again is becoming the norm.
I didn’t see any fishing going on in the harbor this week. One last note, after a dry spring, the rains are flushing out the rivers and there is a massive amount of debris out there. Everyone needs to cruise slow enough to veer off. I personally had a couple of very close calls in the past few days.
Justin Lederer checking in from McQuoids Inn Lake Mille Lacs. Walleye are still being caught in 28-30′ of water leech and slip bobber are still producing the best. Work the gravel flats and deep rock to mud transitions. Smallmouth are in 20′ live bait on lindy rigs and drop shots are producing the best. Either night crawlers or leeches. Emerson was the star of the boat he beat out his brother dad and grandpa with 10 walleye on the night. Have a great 4th of July weekend everyone.
NORTHERN WISCONSIN
Pete Lamar’s daughter with a fine smallmouth bass from northern Wisconsin.Provided
Pete Lamar sent the photo above and below and this:
Hi Dale,
I’ve got an update from the north woods of Wisconsin this week too.
. . .
North central Wisconsin is one of the few parts of the region not experiencing drought-they’ve been getting a lot of rain. On Sunday, we drove through rain all the way from Madison to Minocqua. I think it was in the 40s when we arrived; daytime highs on Monday were in the low 50s. One of my turkey hunting partners spends much of the Summer in the area, so on Monday he took me to a stream-which I couldn’t find again if my life depended on it-in the nearby national forest. We hooked a lot of brook trout [photo below] of all sizes and landed a few. This was not long casts with drag-free drifts; it was short and accurate roll casting and bow-and-arrow casts to get the fly to likely holding water.
The other photo is my daughter [above] with a nice smallmouth she caught. I was rowing a boat slowly around whatever structure we could find-this is a deep and fairly featureless lake, so her usual Tenkara approach is not effective here-when the bass hit her deep diving crankbait. It was a good battle with the fish making several runs and dives. A quick photo and the fish was released in good shape.
A brook trout from northern Wisconsin.Provided by Pete Lamar
Lamar knows that small brook trout from streams are one of my favorite fish.
Settling into the summer season. Anglers finding weed growth up and thicker than usual, most likely due to earlier heat waves. A few cool mornings and some weather has accounted for some “off” bites here and there, but overall good reports.
Northern Pike: Very Good-Good – Best working spinner baits, chatter baits and #3 & #4 Mepps over weed tops in 5-9′ of water. Chubs or suckers in the 4-6″ range on jigs or under slip-floats using light wire leaders to prevent bite offs.
Musky: Very Good-Good – Reports strong with fish working same weed beds as Pike. Large spinner baits, top-water lures and 7″ twitch baits ripped over weed tops. Some big fish moving in the shallows with the recent cloud cover.
Largemouth Bass: Very Good-Good – Wacky worming very effective as has been jig and creatures, tubes and Ned rigging. Evenings for top-water with Zara Spooks, Jitterbugs, plastic frogs and Whopper Ploppers providing good action and a lot of fun!
Bluegills: Very Good-Good – Small leeches, thunderbugs and worms – even small minnows entice nicer Gills of 7 1/2 -10″ on larger lakes in tobacco cabbage beds of 5-8′. Tiny tubes, Mini Mites and Gapen Shrimp tipped with waxies also hot!
Crappies: Good – Typical of the summer, takes some searching casting weed tops of narrow leaf cabbage using Kalin Crappie Scrubs, #0 Mepps, small beetle spins or twitching tube jigs (1-1 1/2 ” long) to locate active Crappies, then go back and set up with small minnows below floats set just below weed top level.
Smallmouth Bass: Good – Many still utilizing weed lines, hunting minnows and craws. Lipless cranks worked parallel with weed edges, tube jigs and Ned rigs working. Casting X-Raps and Shadow Raps along similar edges also producing.
Walleye: Good – Still a decent weed bite if you’re willing to fish early or late. Redtails, crawlers and leeches on 1/16-1/8 oz weedless jigs. On large lakes work depths of 14-22′ using whole crawlers of big leeches on 1/8-1/4 oz jigs on Lindy Rigs. Night bite on lighted slip-floats and leeches picking up.
Yellow Perch: Good – Anglers reporting nice “eaters” of 8-10″ using medium fats or parts of crawlers in weeds of 6-10′. Cabbage, due to its wider spacing, easier to maneuver into pockets to find Perch.
Forecast of clouds for the early part of the week making fishing conditions pleasant, then sun and heat and crowds planned for the Holiday weekend, be prepared to key on early and late for your best fishing times.
Kurt Justice
Kurt’s Island Sport Shop Like us on FaceBook
NORTHWEST INDIANA
Capt. Rich Sleziak posted on the Facebook page of Triplecatch Lake Michigan Sportfishing Charters of the Hall family doing well Sunday in Skamania Mania.Provided
Hi, Dale. Ready for those fireworks? I know I am; when I was a kid, I used to swear everyone was celebrating just for me…Even though it’s my birthday, we’ll be open from 5AM until 3PM on the holiday. Enjoy your weekend.
Salmon Fishing on Lake Michigan remains strong, from the Chicago lakefront to Michigan City & Saint Joseph; Steelhead & Coho are being caught steadily; the best waters have been from 100-140 FOW in the top 50 feet, using small spoons & dodgers & flies.
Perch fishing is picking up in 35-42 FOW; beemoths, smaller minnows, & leaf worms are doing well.
Catfish have been steady; shad & hornworms have been favorites. Pine Lake, Lake Etta, & Dowling Park have been having good reports of success.
Walleye fishing has been moderately good at Wolf Lake & Hammond Marina; leeches & nightcrawlers the baits of choice. Some anglers have been successful using golden roaches as well recently.
River fishing has come to a screeching halt due to high waters from all the rain.
Carp have been doing well, specifically in the Calumet Park area & at Wolf Lake. Dough bait & corn are the baits of choice.
Bluegill are still going strong, with Crappie being more hit or miss. Smaller leeches, spikes, & beemoths have been successful; liver has been a backup that has proven useful also. Oak Ridge Prairie & Dowling Park have been successful spots as of late.
ROOT RIVER, WISCONSIN
Click here for the Wisconsin DNR’s report, usually on Tuesday or Wednesday.
SHABBONA LAKE
Staff at Boondocks reported weather really slowed effort, but the basics of crappie and walleye with a few hybrids and a few catfish will be the main targets for the holiday weekend, lake came up about a foot but clarity is OK. Adam Honiotes said the bait shop and restaurant will have a BBQ on July 4.
Site hours through Oct. 31 are 6 a.m.-10 p.m. daily
SOUTHEAST WISCONSIN LAKEFRONT
Click here for the southern Lake Michigan reports from the Wisconsin DNR.
WOLF RIVER, WISCONSIN
Guide Bill Stoeger in Fremont texted:
Fishing may be a bit slow. We had over 4″ of rain in 3 days. Water levels are still rising, and fish are relocating with the increased current. The fish are still there, you may need to look in different spots then last week.
Mark Hoppus, the longtime bassist and vocalist for pop-punk band Blink-182, is undergoing chemotherapy for cancer.
The musician, 49, has been going through treatment for the past three months, he revealed in a June 24 social media post.
“I have cancer. It sucks and I’m scared, and at the same time I’m blessed with incredible doctors and family and friends to get me through this,” Hoppus wrote, adding he still has “months of treatment ahead” but is “trying to remain hopeful and positive.”
“Can’t wait to be cancer free and see you all at a concert in the near future,” he concluded. “Love you all.”
“Love you @markhoppus,” his bandmate Travis Barker wrote on his Instagram story with a black heart emoji, sharing an old photo of the two hugging.
On Sunday, Hoppus provided an update on his health while dropping into a game of online Bingo on Twitch.
“How am I feeling today? I feel much better than yesterday,” Hoppus said. “Yesterday was hellish for me and I woke up today feeling better I went for a walk, and I had a decent breakfast, and I haven’t felt like I was going to throw up today, so we’ll take it as a win.”
Hoppus is the only remaining original member of Blink-182, which is currently comprised of vocalist/guitarist Matt Skiba and drummer Travis Barker. The group, which rose to stardom in the ’90s as a key player in developing the pop-punk genre, is best known for hits including “What’s My Age Again?,” “First Date,” “All The Small Things,” and “Adam’s Song.”
Earlier this month, Hoppus celebrated the 20-year anniversary of the band’s fourth studio album, “Take Off Your Pants and Jacket.”
“After the overwhelming and unexpected success of Enema of the State we wanted to write a darker, harder album that pushed the boundaries of what blink-182 could do,” he reflected on June 12. “I love this record. Thank you to everyone who listened to it then and continues to put it on two decades later. … Endless love to @travisbarker @tomdelonge and Jerry Finn.”
In 2018, the band set up shop in Las Vegas for a residency at the Palms Casino and Resort. The following year, they headed back out on the road on tour, co-headlining with rapper Lil Wayne.
Michael Majeski’s beaming smile and “infectious energy” left an immediate — and lasting — impression.
“Mike was the type of person that you only had to meet once or twice and you were treated like his family,” his friend Hunter Stromquist told the Sun-Times Tuesday.
On Friday, Majeski was stabbed over two dozen times in a vicious daytime attack outside a Wendy’s on the Northwest Side. A resident of the Belmont Terrace neighborhood, Majeski was just 24.
Michael Dabrowski, 25, of Norwood Park, was detained nearby by witnesses and neighbors and taken into custody. He was charged with first-degree murder and ordered held without bail Sunday.
“I have no idea why or how this came about — in the middle of the day, too,” Stromquist said. “There’s a lot of things I don’t understand.”
Prosecutors say Majeski and Dabrowski arrived separately at the Wendy’s and met in the parking lot in the 3900 block of North Harlem. Majeski got into Dabrowski’s car and Dabrowski began stabbing him, prosecutors say. Majeski jumped out and Dabrowski chased him and stabbed him several times in the back.
The attack was witnessed by multiple people and captured on cellphone video, prosecutors say. A witness asked Dabrowski what was happening and he responded, “He ‘f’d’ me over,” according to Assistant State’s Attorney Susanna Bucaro, noting he used an expletive.
Stromquist said she didn’t know anything about the relationship between Majeski and Dabrowski.
She said she first met Majeski at the Summer Camp Music Festival in central Illinois in 2018 and the two became fast friends, bonding over their love of electronic music.
Majeski was regarded on the local scene as a gracious figure who often went to bat for artists and record labels, said Stromquist, who works for the Denver-based label Electric Hawk.
She attributed the imprint’s significant growth during the pandemic to Majeski’s donations and online evangelism, noting that he also worked with Spicy Bois, another label based in Denver and Chicago.
“He was almost like a super fan but we valued him way more than that, obviously,” she said.
Stromquist and another friend are now raising $5,000 for Majeski’s family through a GoFundMe page. As of Tuesday afternoon, the campaign had already netted nearly $2,800 in donations.
“Honestly I feel that it will help the family with legal fees because I want this dude that did this to rot,” she said. “I want him put away and I don’t want anything to stop the justice that needs to be had.
“I knew that the community would be called to take care of him the same way he took care of us,” added Stromquist, who’s also considering throwing a benefit show in his honor in the Chicago area.
Twenty aldermen are threatening to call a special City Council meeting on police response to the bloodbath on Chicago streets — and compel testimony by Chicago Police Supt. David Brown — unless the Committee on Public Safety schedules immediate hearings on three crime-related resolutions.
One of the pending resolutions demands a hearing on police officer scheduling, deployment strategies and programs or incentives offered to address officer fatigue.
Another is a call to re-examine the Summer Mobile Unit and Community Safety teams — created by Brown last summer after civil unrest triggered by the death of George Floyd devolved into two rounds of looting — and what the resolution called the “reallocation of officers and resources from neighborhood districts” those units triggered.
The third resolution seeks hearings to examine the “success of technologies used by CPD in managing crime-fighting operations and personnel shortages.”
They’re demanding that Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29th), Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s hand-picked public safety committee chairman, schedule hearings on those resolutions.
If he doesn’t, the aldermen warn they will call a special Council meeting for this Friday and “compel” Brown to appear.
The letter was electronically signed by 20 aldermen, including several members of Lightfoot’s Council leadership team.
They include: Education Committee Chairman Michael Scott Jr. (24th); Aviation Committee Chairman Matt O’Shea (19th); Economic and Capital Development Committee Chairman Gilbert Villegas (36th), for mayor’s former Council floor leader; and Ald. Brendan Reilly (42nd), the Council’s president pro tempore.
O’Shea, whose Far Southwest Side ward is home to scores of police officers, said he signed the letter because he won’t risk another holiday weekend bloodbath.
“I want David Brown to sit before the Council and tell us, what’s the plan? What are we gonna do moving forward? As we continue to have these spikes in ugly violence and the mass shootings, we’re concerned about officers being pulled from districts. I want assurances that police officers aren’t gonna be pulled from communities. I want assurances that they’re looking after the well-being of their police officers,” O’Shea told the Sun-Times.
“Almost every day, I’m hearing from law enforcement families in my community. Partners and spouses worried about each other, their well-being. Our police officers are under a tremendous amount of stress. We’re under-manned as a police department right now and they’re over-worked. This is not sustainable.”
O’Shea noted last weekend’s mass shootings occurred despite a tornado warning and violent thunderstorms — and this weekend’s forecast is for clear skies.
“I’m very concerned with the level of violence we’ve seen in our city as we’re approaching a holiday weekend — and you look at the weather forecast — and what we’re expecting. At least, what I’m expecting,” O’Shea said.
Ald. Anthony Napolitano (41st) has been a firefighter and police officer in Chicago. His far Northwest Side ward is also home to scores of police officers.
Like O’Shea, Napolitano said the Council “needs answers” after back-to-back weekends marred by mass shootings.
“We can’t put the onus on just the officers. Fatigue is through the roof. Morale is completely gone. … And the amount of hours that they’re being forced to work constantly–and this is all being put on them to fix — is a powder keg. This is ready to explode,” Napolitano said.
“On top of that, these officers are being held accountable by a good portion of the City Council as being the evil empire. We need some answers now. … And I can’t be told that crime is caused by illegal guns anymore. Biggest bunch of b.s. I’ve ever heard in my entire life. We have the strictest gun laws in the entire country.”
Taliaferro, in a text message to the Sun-Times, wrote: “Our residents deserve to know what our department’s response has been to a violent past weekend in the city and the plan for this extended holiday weekend. As such, I am not opposed to having that conversation — whether it is by way of committee or special Council meeting.”
Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd) also signed the letter and said it’s no surprise 19 other aldermen did, too.
“All of our residents are demanding action from their city government on the crime wave. But we ‘re bystanders in this process. It’s saying, `We’re in this, too, mayor. You need to include us in these conversations,'” Hopkins said.
“It’s now well-established that, if we want to assert any leverage as a legislative branch of government, we have to be pro-active about it. This is an attempt by the aldermen to assert our position in this a little more firmly.”
Center fielder Luis Robert has been medically cleared to increase his level of baseball activities at the White Sox training complex in Glendale, Arizona, the team announced Tuesday.
Robert, 23, has been on the injured list with a grade 3 strain of his right hip flexor since May 4. He suffered the injury running to first base in a game against the Indians on May 2.
This phase of Robert’s rehabilitation process is expected to take approximately four weeks, the team said, after which Robert could be cleared for a rehabilitation assignment with a minor league affiliate. There is no set timetable for his return to the major league club.
A Gold Glove winner and runner-up in AL Rookie of the Year balloting in 2020, Robert was batting .316/.359/.463 with one homer, nine doubles, a triple and eight RBI in 25 games this season when he was injured.
The news comes 15 days after Eloy Jimenez was medically cleared to resume baseball activities in Glendale. Jimenez had surgery after he suffered a ruptured left pectoral muscle during spring training, and has completed about two weeks of a rehab process expected to take at least four weeks. The next phase for Jimenez will be a rehab assignment with a minor league team.
The Sox say there is no timetable for Jimenez’ return to the major league club, as well.
An industrial fire in Morris prompted forced Tuesday afternoon.
Crews responded to the fire in the 900 block of East Benton Street. Authorities evacuated East Street and the 900 blocks of Benton, Douglass and Armstrong streets, according to an alert from the Grundy County Emergency Management Agency.
There was no immediate word of injuries or the cause of the fire.
Authorities said evacuated residents could shelter in the Grundy County administration building at 1320 Union St.
Morris sits along the Illinois River about 60 miles southwest of Chicago.
The fire comes less than a month after an industrial fire at the Chemtool grease plant in Rockton prompted officials to evacuate residents.
When health care leaders in the heart of Pennsylvania Dutch country began laying out a strategy to distribute COVID-19 vaccines, they knew it would be a tough sell with the Amish, who tend to be wary of preventive shots and government intervention.
Early on, they posted flyers at farm supply stores and at auctions where the Amish sell handmade furniture and quilts. They sought advice from members of the deeply religious and conservative sect, who told them not to be pushy. And they asked three newspapers widely read by the Amish to publish ads promoting the vaccine. Two refused.
By May, two rural vaccination clinics had opened at a fire station and a social services center, both familiar places to the Amish in Lancaster County. During the first six weeks, 400 people showed up. Only 12 were Amish.
The vaccination drive is lagging far behind in many Amish communities across the U.S. following a wave of virus outbreaks that swept through their churches and homes during the past year. In Ohio’s Holmes County, home to the nation’s largest concentration of Amish, just 14% of the county’s overall population is fully vaccinated.
While their religious beliefs don’t forbid them to get vaccines, the Amish are generally less likely to be vaccinated for preventable diseases such as measles and whooping cough. Though vaccine acceptance varies by church district, the Amish often rely on family tradition and advice from church leaders, and a core part of their Christian faith is accepting God’s will in times of illness or death.
Many think they don’t need the COVID-19 vaccine now because they’ve already gotten sick and believe their communities have reached herd immunity, according to health care providers in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Indiana, home to nearly two-thirds of the estimated 345,000 Amish in the U.S.
“That’s the No. 1 reason we hear,” said Alice Yoder, executive director of community health at Penn Medicine Lancaster General Health, a network of hospitals and clinics.
Experts say the low vaccination rates are a reflection of both the nature of the Amish and the general vaccine hesitancy found in many rural parts of the country.
Because many Amish work and shop alongside their neighbors and hire them as drivers, they hear the skepticism, the worries about side effects and the misinformation surrounding the vaccine from the “English,” or non-Amish, world around them even though they shun most modern conveniences.
“They’re not getting that from the media. They’re not watching TV or reading it on the internet. They’re getting it from their English neighbors,” said Donald Kraybill, a leading expert on the Amish. “In many ways, they are simply reflecting rural America and the same attitudes.”
Public health officials trying to combat the confusion and hesitancy have put up billboards where the Amish travel by horse and buggy, sent letters to bishops and offered to take the vaccines into their homes and workplaces, all without much success.
Some health clinics that serve the Amish are hesitant to push the issue for fear of driving them away from getting blood pressure checks and routine exams.
One local business and the organizers of a community event told the health department in Holmes County that it would no longer be welcome if it brought the vaccine to them, said Michael Derr, the health commissioner in Holmes County, Ohio.
Staff members at the Parochial Medical Center, which serves the Amish and Mennonites in Pennsylvania’s Lancaster County, encourage patients to get the vaccine, but many have little fear of the virus, said Allen Hoover, the clinic’s administrator.
“Most of them listen and are respectful, but you can tell before you’re finished that they’ve already made up their mind,” he said.
The clinic, he said, hardly sees any virus cases now after dealing with as many as five a day last fall. “I would suspect we’ve gained some kind of immunity. I know that’s up for debate, but I think that’s why we’re seeing only a spattering right now,” Hoover said.
Relying on possible herd immunity when little testing has taken place among the Amish is risky, said Esther Chernak, director of the Center for Public Health Readiness and Communication at Drexel University in Philadelphia.
“It’s not a community living on an island, not interacting with other people,” she said. “They don’t have zero interaction with the outside world, so they’re still exposed.”
During the first months of the pandemic, the Amish followed social distancing guidelines and stopped gathering for church and funerals, said Steven Nolt, a scholar at the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies at Elizabethtown College in Pennsylvania.
But when non-Amish neighbors and local elected officials began pushing back against state and federal mandates, they resumed the gatherings, he said. What followed was a surge of outbreaks last summer, Nolt said.
Most now say they have already had the virus and don’t see a need to get vaccinated, said Mark Raber, who is Amish and a member of a settlement in Daviess County, Indiana, which has one of the state’s lowest vaccination rates. “As long as everything stays the same, I don’t think I’ll get it,” he said.
Changing those opinions will require building trusting relationships with the Amish, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in a report looking at outbreaks in those communities last year.
What won’t work, health care providers say, is bombarding the Amish with statistics and vaccine lotteries because of their general mistrust and rejection of government help. The Amish don’t accept Social Security benefits.