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8 shot since Friday night in ChicagoSun-Times Wireon May 1, 2021 at 10:52 am

Eight people have been shot since 5 p.m. April 30, 2021 in Chicago.
Eight people have been shot since 5 p.m. April 30, 2021 in Chicago. | Sun-Times file photo

A 17-year-old boy was critically hurt in a shooting Friday in Lawndale on the West Side.

Eight people have been wounded in shootings across Chicago so far this weekend, including a 17-year-old boy critically hurt in an attack in Lawndale.

The teen was standing in front of a home about 7:35 p.m. in the 1900 block of South Drake Avenue when someone approached him and fired shots, Chicago police said.

He suffered gunshot wounds to both legs and was transported to Mount Sinai in critical condition, police said.

Early Saturday, a 25-year-old man was critically wounded in a shooting in Englewood.

About 12:45 a.m., he was standing outside on a sidewalk on the 6300 block of South Honore Street when he heard shots and felt pain, police said. He suffered a gunshot wound to the abdomen and was transported to the University of Chicago Medical Center in critical condition, police said.

Two people were hurt, one critically, in a shooting late Friday in Brighton Park on the Southwest Side.

A man and a woman, both 27, were sitting in a parked car about 11:50 p.m. in the 3900 block of South Kedzie Avenue when a male got out of a black sedan and fired shots at them, police said.

The man suffered gunshot wounds to the torso and transported to Mount Sinai Hospital in critical condition, police said. The woman was struck in the left arm and right shoulder, police said. She was taken to Stroger Hospital in fair condition, according to police.

A man was dropped off at a South Side hospital Friday night after being shot, but would not tell police anything about the attack.

The 46-year-old man was dropped off at Jackson Park Hospital about 11:45 p.m. with a gunshot wound to the left leg and right foot, police said. He was listed in critical condition and transferred to the University of Chicago Medical Center, police said.

Earlier Friday night, two people were shot in Washington Park on the South Side.

They were standing in an alley about 9:05 p.m. in the 5200 block of South Michigan Avenue when a male suspect approached them and fired shots, police said.

A 21-year-old man was struck in the leg and was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was listed in fair condition, police said.

A woman, 51, was also struck by gunfire and was taken to the same hospital, where she was listed in fair condition, police said. She was shot in both legs and sustained a graze wound to the chest.

About 7:35 p.m., a 20-year-old man was wounded in a shooting in Gage Park on the Southwest Side.

The man was sitting in a parked vehicle in the 5200 block of South Maplewood Avenue when someone fired shots from the sidewalk, Chicago police said.

He was shot in the leg and was transported to Mount Sinai in fair condition, police said.

Last weekend four people were killed and 21 others wounded in shootings across Chicago.

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8 shot since Friday night in ChicagoSun-Times Wireon May 1, 2021 at 10:52 am Read More »

Blackhawks’ Brett Connolly hopes to stabilize career, rediscover 2018 magic in ChicagoBen Popeon May 1, 2021 at 11:30 am

Brett Connolly has played eight games with the Blackhawks since being traded from the Panthers. | AP Photo/Mark Humphrey

Connolly enjoyed the best three years of his otherwise tumultuous NHL tenure in Washington, where he won the Stanley Cup in 2018. Might the Blackhawks provide Connolly a comparable comfort zone?

Before arriving in Washington, Brett Connolly was considered a first-round bust. Since leaving Washington, Connolly’s reputation has become marred by his albatross contract.

But for three blissful years with the Capitals, Connolly — in the right environment, with the right expectations, filling the right role — demonstrated how much he can contribute to a winning NHL team. He has a Stanley Cup ring from 2018 to prove it.

“It was just such an amazing ride,” the Canadian forward said this week, reminiscing. “It was amazing to be on a team like that where everybody seemed to enjoy each other’s company. [It was] just such a close team, which is something I’ll never forget. We obviously grew closer with the championship. I’m just very fortunate to be part of that.”

Much of Connolly’s now-10-year NHL career has not gone as anyone, especially he, hoped.

The Lightning, expecting immediate domination from their 2010 sixth overall pick, rushed him to the NHL, then banished him to the AHL when the immediate domination didn’t happen. The Bruins didn’t give him much time to get settled, either.

More recently, the Panthers phased him out of their rotation when he hit a “cold streak” earlier this season, then jettisoned him as a negative-value asset to the Blackhawks in an April 8 trade.

With the Caps, however, Connolly thrived. He scored at least 15 goals in each of his three regular seasons there, topping out at an impressive 22 goals and 24 assists in 2018-19.

“My role was defined on the team,” he said. “There wasn’t a ton of pressure to score every night. I signed there to just play a third-line role and got really comfortable with the group. I was playing with a lot of confidence. They gave me an opportunity to just go out there and play and not think too much, and it worked out.”

Connolly added six goals and three assists during the 2018 championship run, but earned more attention for his kindness than for his solid secondary production.

A video of him tossing 6-year-old Caps fan Keelan Moxley three pucks during warmups — until she finally caught one — went viral and started a conversation over gender and age equality in hockey fandom.

“Anytime we can put a smile on young kids’ faces, that’s what it’s all about,” he later told reporters.

Another video of him chugging a Bud Light in seven seconds on stage at the Caps’ victory parade was perhaps less kid-friendly but equally exemplified Connolly’s down-to-earth personality.

Ask a Hawks fan which Cup winners are currently playing for the Hawks, and most will correctly name Patrick Kane and Duncan Keith. But Connolly, who turns 29 on Sunday, has actually upped the total to three, and it turns out the trio has already talked about it.

“Theirs was three in five years, so that’s a little different, and both guys won Conn Smythe [Trophies],” Connolly said. “But it’s definitely cool to hear little stories about their runs and the differences and similarities to [mine]. It’s been great to get to know those guys.”

Coach Jeremy Colliton has also appreciated learning about Connolly’s journey while integrating him into the team.

“I try to spend extra time early on to get him prepared to play,” Colliton said. “It’s always nice to pick his brain, [hear] how they were doing it in Washington.”


AP Photos
Brett Connolly, who turns 29 on Sunday, hopes to stay in Chicago the next two seasons.

Connolly’s best skill is his finishing. His career 14.0% shooting percentage ranks 10th among all active players with 500-plus appearances.

But he’s never been a major puck-mover or playmaker, so he fell out of Joel Quenneville’s favor in Florida earlier this season when his accuracy dropped off (his on-goal shooting percentage went from 56.6% to 44.4%), his possession numbers slumped (46.9% on-ice scoring chance ratio) and his production lagged (two goals, two assists in 21 games).

“You go through stretches where you don’t score, and you press a little harder, press a little harder, and sometimes that isn’t the best way to go about it,” Connolly said. “Once that happens and there’s lots of options for ‘Q,’ something that was pretty quickly in their minds was that they were going to try and move me.

“It’s the business side of it, and you’ve got to move on.”

But the same contract that tanked Connolly’s value in Florida — he has two years left on a four-year deal with a $3.5 million cap hit — now may actually give him more stability with the Hawks.

He still could be moved or bought out this summer, but his hefty cap hit makes that relatively unlikely compared to other players. General manager Stan Bowman, the day he acquired Connolly, Riley Stillman and the rights to Henrik Borgstrom, spoke about Connolly like he’ll be sticking around.

“We think he’s someone who can fit in with this group,” Bowman said. “[I] wasn’t too concerned about his contract. It was really the combination of what we saw in Connolly plus the other pieces that was attractive to us.”

And that stability is exactly what Connolly needs.

“It’s a couple years for me to prove myself and [prove] I want to be part of the process going forward with this organization,” he said “I’m looking to finish this year strong. But whatever happens at the end of this year, [I will] hit the reset button and focusing on having a good next two years of my career here.”

Connolly scored in his first game with the Hawks, immediately checking off that sometimes anxiety-inducing box.

He hasn’t recorded a point in seven games since — mainly in a fourth-line role — but has generated strong underlying numbers, including 55.6% shot-attempt and 50.9% scoring-chance ratios.

And there’s something in the Chicago air bringing back the sense of optimism and opportunity he felt in Washington. Both Connolly and the Hawks’ organization are far from those Capitals-in-2018 heights currently, but he smells potential on both fronts.

“You drive around the city and you see all the Blackhawks bars and logos and people wearing hats and jerseys,” he said. “You drive around and envision yourself winning here and being part of a good team here, and that definitely excites you. It’d be a lot of fun to be a part of that.”

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Blackhawks’ Brett Connolly hopes to stabilize career, rediscover 2018 magic in ChicagoBen Popeon May 1, 2021 at 11:30 am Read More »

Chicago Bears: Justin Fields changes everything foreveron May 1, 2021 at 11:00 am

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Chicago Bears: Justin Fields changes everything foreveron May 1, 2021 at 11:00 am Read More »

Chicago Bears: Here’s how Ryan Pace can keep the ball rolling in the NFL Drafton May 1, 2021 at 11:30 am

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Chicago Bears: Here’s how Ryan Pace can keep the ball rolling in the NFL Drafton May 1, 2021 at 11:30 am Read More »

Salukis confront top seed in national quarterfinalon May 1, 2021 at 11:45 am

Prairie State Pigskin

Salukis confront top seed in national quarterfinal

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Salukis confront top seed in national quarterfinalon May 1, 2021 at 11:45 am Read More »

Bears’ Justin Fields: ‘I expect myself to be a franchise QB’on May 1, 2021 at 10:00 am

The shock of Thursday night faded on Friday into something that felt almost like fate.

Ohio State’s Justin Fields, the latest candidate to snap the Bears’ 71-year quarterback drought, sat down at Halas Hall on Friday and explained whom he wants to pattern his game after: Russell Wilson. Yes, the same Seahawks star that the Bears tried — and failed — to trade for in March.

The franchise that angered its fans by once touting Andy Dalton as “QB1” on Twitter announced that Fields will wear — you guessed it — No. 1. And general manager Ryan Pace, who might never live down passing on Patrick Mahomes four years ago, talked openly of putting Fields on the same apprenticeship program that the Chiefs set up for their rookie in 2017.

Soon, the pressure will start: for the 22-year-old Fields to justify his draft selection and the haul the Bears had to trade to move up to No. 11. To win a starting spot –and to save the careers of Pace and head coach Matt Nagy, who need to show progress in 2021.

Wearing a crimson suit that matched his old Ohio State jersey, the soft-spoken Fields was clear on Friday: bring it on.

“I don’t think there’s pressure at all on me because I expect myself to be a franchise quarterback … and one day, hopefully, a top-five quarterback in this league,” Fields said. “That’s what I’m going out to do. I’m going to work every day to reach my goal and reach new heights.”

He’s done it before.

ooo

Matt Dickmann, the former football coach at Harrison High School in Kennesaw, Georgia, first saw Fields play when the quarterback was in seventh grade. It was on a highlight film sent by Pablo Fields, whose son was dominating a junior league.

“An impressive little video,” Dickmann said. “But you just never know. You see a lot of kids and you don’t know what their work ethic is like, what they’re going to be like academically.”

Academics? Fields had a 4.0 grade-point average by the time he graduated Harrison, DIckmann said. Work ethic? As a junior, Fields did a 285-pound clean-and-jerk over his head. Dickmann banned him from trying such a heavy weight again.

Athleticism? Fields played four sports growing up and was a standout shortstop. Harrison put in a read-option offense for Fields to take advantage of his speed; on the first power read play they called, he ran for a 60-yard touchdown.

As a sophomore, Fields approached Ron Veal, his personal quarterbacks coach since sixth grade, with one request.

“He came to me and he said, “I want to be a good quarterback,'” said Veal, a former University of Arizona quarterback. “And then he said, ‘Nah, I want to be a great quarterback.'”

They’d meet on the Harrison football field at 7 a.m. When it was too dark, the school would turn the field lights on. Veal would run Fields through his high school team’s route tree, then ball fakes, rollouts and sprint-outs.

“We’d go over it until he felt like he got it,” Veal said.

At the end of the hour, Fields would walk off the field and go to class.

ooo

By the end of his junior year, Fields was rated by most recruiting services the No. 2 high school prospect in America — but not the best in suburban Atlanta. He wasn’t even the highest-rated quarterback coached by Veal.

Trevor Lawrence, the future Clemson star and the Jaguars’ No. 1 pick Thursday night, lived about 25 minutes away in Cartersville. He was the nation’s top prospect.

Lawrence began private training sessions with Veal in seventh grade. Lawrence and Fields didn’t meet until high school, though, and didn’t train together until just before they headed off to college. In 2017, they both attended Elite 11, a camp and competition for the best high school players in America. Thirteen of the last 14 quarterbacks to win the Heisman Trophy are alumni of the event.

Fields — not Lawrence — was named camp MVP.

“If he’s No. 2 at something, he’s gonna strive to be No. 1,” Dickmann said.

Veal prefers to think of the two as competitive people, as opposed to rivals.

“I think [Lawrence] and me are used to this, really,” Fields said. “We’ve been at it for so long now … I think me and him, of course, are both great quarterbacks and I think we love this game. I think we both want to be great. So I’m not really saying that I’m necessarily trying to be better than him in this particular area.”

Fields isn’t the type to explain his motivation.

“He kinda burns hot on the inside, but you can’t always see it …” Ohio State coach Ryan Day said. “His competitive fire gets lit quickly.”

Half of Fields’ college losses came to Lawrence. Clemson beat the Buckeyes in the 2019 semifinal before Ohio State got its revenge in this year’s semis. On New Year’s Day, Fields outplayed Lawrence. Despite taking a shot to the rib cage in the second quarter that led to a Clemson ejection, Fields went 22-for-28 for 385 yards and a whopping six touchdowns.

Ohio State offensive coordinator Kevin Wilson said Fields has the physicality of a linebacker or safety, but with the intellect and calmness of a quarterback.

“His greatest strength is his mind,” he said.

On a toughness scale of 1-10, Bears general manager Ryan Pace gave Fields an 11.

“You just love that about him,” Pace said. “Oh, and then by the way, he runs a 4.44 [40-yard dash].”

If the Fields-Lawrence rivalry extends into the NFL, it will have to be from afar. The two teams won’t play often.

“I’m going to be looking at everybody to see how they did — and not just Trevor,” Fields said. “It’s just not a one-on-one thing.”

ooo

The defining characteristics of Fields’ high school and college career — hard work and toughness — made what happened this offseason all that much more bizarre. In late March, ESPN analyst Dan Orlovsky said he heard from teams questioning Fields’ work ethic. Some were left to wonder if those criticisms were rooted in racial stereotypes.

Orlovsky later apologized, both publicly and privately to Fields. He said that he later talked to teams that vouched for Fields’ work ethic.

The quarterback was and is, frustrated by the criticism.

“I really can’t do anything about it,” Fields said. “There were some things that, of course, weren’t true.”

Fields has been through controversy before. He spent his freshman year at Georgia before transferring to Ohio State. He was ruled immediately eligible after another Bulldogs athlete was caught using a racial slur while cheering for Fields at a football game. The transfer stirred emotions from two of college football’s most passionate fan bases.

In another odd turn — as if some team was trying to get Fields to fall in the draft — word leaked earlier this week that he told teams he suffered from epilepsy. Fields was diagnosed in ninth grade after he had a seizure and woke up in an ambulance. He said he’s been taking four pills per night to manage it ever since.

“I’m not going to try to hide it,” Fields said. “It’s who I am.”

ooo

It’s ironic: Fields might have been the No. 2 overall pick — and not so nitpicked — had he not pushed so hard to play a college football season. In August, he started an online petition to get the Big Ten to reinstate football after the conference decided to postpone the sport because of the coronavirus.

Fields took initiative because of his giant social media presence — he has more than a quarter-million Twitter followers. His beloved French bulldog, Uno, has more than 40,000 Instagram followers.

“Seeing the amount of work my teammates put in in the offseason, me knowing how much they wanted to get back in that position, to be able to play Clemson again …” he said. “I was going to do everything that I could to help get our season back.”

The push was successful. He got his rematch — but after a hiccup. He played one of the worst games of his career, going 18-for-30 for 300 yards, two touchdowns and three interceptions against Indiana. The Buckeyes eked out a seven-point win.

“I think there were a few plays in that game where I was just trying to be Superman,” he said.

Fields doesn’t have to be Superman. Or Lawrence. Or Wilson. Or Sid Luckman.

“Just be Justin,” said Veal, the quarterbacks coach. “Allow the game to come to him. Learn to be a pro. Keep himself centered and grounded in his thoughts and his beliefs. And continue to work.”

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Bears’ Justin Fields: ‘I expect myself to be a franchise QB’on May 1, 2021 at 10:00 am Read More »

White Sox end encouraging April with 5-3 loss to ClevelandBrian Sandalowon May 1, 2021 at 3:59 am

Jose Abreu breaks his bat during Friday’s game. | Getty

The Sox hold a 14-11 record entering May and despite the defeat Friday, have been looking something like the team that had so much hype entering the year. 

April was the month of Yermin Mercedes.

It was also a pretty decent 30 days for the White Sox.

Friday night’s 5-3 loss to Cleveland marked the end of the first month of the season. The Sox hold a 14-11 record entering May and despite the defeat, have been looking something like the team that had so much hype entering the year.

“It’s a good first step for a six-month season,” manager Tony La Russa said before the game.

Though a hiccup or two has occurred, there have been positive steps on both offense and the mound . Despite losing Eloy Jimenez for maybe the entire season and a slow start for reigning AL MVP Jose Abreu, the Sox offense has lived up to its preseason billing.

Before facing Bieber, the Sox led the AL in runs per game (5.17), on-base plus slugging (.759) and batting average (.267), while compiling a league-best plus-31 run differential. After the game, the Sox chose to focus on the three runs they got against Bieber.

“Scoring three against one of the league’s best pitchers certainly doesn’t count in my mind as an offense that wasn’t taking good at-bats and making things happen,” La Russa said.

In general, the Sox made things happen in April. Rookie outfielder Andrew Vaughn said it’s a “special group” and has never been around a team like these Sox.

“Guys top to bottom, everybody here has the same mindset,” Vaughn said. “We want to win and winning is the most important thing. Going out there and picking up your teammates. If you have a bad at-bat, you know the next guy behind you has got you. It’s a really good feeling.”

Nobody has given the Sox, or their fans, more good feelings than Mercedes, who started the night hitting .423 and was attempting to become the fifth rookie in history to lead baseball in average entering the month of May. One of the most pleasant surprises in baseball, Mercedes has quickly become a fan favorite, as evidenced by the ovation he received after his second-inning single off Bieber.

Beyond becoming a cult hero, Mercedes has added a dynamic bat to a deep lineup and had one of the most memorable debut months of any player in Sox history.

“It’s incredibly impressive to watch,” Vaughn said. “He goes up there and he’s going to do damage every single pitch he sees. So, it’s pretty cool and it’s helping the team win. Everybody is trying to follow suit and get in there and take good [at-bats] and do some damage.”

The offense has been supplemented by a rotation that’s more than held up its end of the bargain.

Prior to Dallas Keuchel’s six-inning, four-run outing Friday, Sox starting pitchers led the AL with a 2.97 ERA. Carlos Rodon’s renaissance has been a highlight for a productive group of starters.

“It’s shaping out that we have a pretty good one through five,” pitcher Dylan Cease said.

On Friday, Keuchel was pretty good in five of his six innings. It was the four-run Cleveland third he’d like to have back, when he walked two and gave up three hits before regaining his feel for the rest of the night.

“I was very fortunate to go through six,” Keuchel said, “but very frustrated at the same time.”

As a team, there have been some frustrations to go with the generally good start.

The bullpen was expected to be one of the best in baseball but got off to a slower than anticipated start. Back in the dugout for the first time in a decade, La Russa, a controversial choice when he was hired, has had his decision-making and handling of pitchers questioned.

Obviously, drawing any conclusions after one month is foolish. There will be regressions and other peaks, but the Sox at least had a decent April that won’t make it harder for them to reach their October goals.

Shortstop Tim Anderson said the Sox are in a “great spot” despite missing Jimenez and Adam Engel. They can also improve.

“The first month was a good one,” Anderson said. “Hopefully we continue to build off this and learn from our mistakes this first month. Hopefully next month will be a lot cleaner and hopefully be better.”

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White Sox end encouraging April with 5-3 loss to ClevelandBrian Sandalowon May 1, 2021 at 3:59 am Read More »

Halas Intrigue Episode 161: Ryan Pace traded up again!Sun-Times staffon May 1, 2021 at 3:44 am

Boise State v Oklahoma State
Offensive lineman Teven Jenkins #73 of the Oklahoma State Cowboys looks at the Boise State Broncos defensive line at Boone Pickens Stadium on September 15, 2018 in Stillwater, Oklahoma. | Photo by Brett Deering/Getty Images

The Bears’ draft has came together well, first with Justin Fields on Day 1 then the move to land Teven Jenkins on Day 2. Our beat writers discuss it.

The Sun-Times’ Bears beat writers break down Ryan Pace’s second trade in as many days — and what’s shaping up to be a killer draft.

New episodes of “Halas Intrigue” will be published regularly with accompanying stories collected on the podcast’s hub page. You can also listen to “Halas Intrigue” wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Luminary, Spotify, and Stitcher.

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Halas Intrigue Episode 161: Ryan Pace traded up again!Sun-Times staffon May 1, 2021 at 3:44 am Read More »

Teenage boy critically hurt in Lawndale shootingSun-Times Wireon May 1, 2021 at 1:55 am

A 17-year-old boy was shot April 30, 2021 in Lawndale.
A 17-year-old boy was shot April 30, 2021 in Lawndale. | Adobe Stock Photo

The 17-year-old was shot Friday in the 1900 block of South Drake Avenue.

A 17-year-old boy was critically hurt in a shooting Friday in Lawndale on the West Side.

The teen was standing in front of a home about 7:35 p.m. in the 1900 block of South Drake Avenue when someone approached him and fired shots, Chicago police said.

He suffered gunshot wounds to both legs and was transported to Mount Sinai in critical condition, police said.

No one is in custody as are detectives investigate.

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Teenage boy critically hurt in Lawndale shootingSun-Times Wireon May 1, 2021 at 1:55 am Read More »

2021 NFL Draft: Chicago Bears Select Teven Jenkins with the 39th PickAlex Fusakon May 1, 2021 at 12:44 am

The Chicago Bears trade up and draft offensive tackle Teven Jenkins out of Oklahoma State in the second round of the 2021 NFL Draft.

The post 2021 NFL Draft: Chicago Bears Select Teven Jenkins with the 39th Pick first appeared on CHI CITY SPORTS l Chicago Sports Blog – News – Forum – Fans – Rumors.Read More

2021 NFL Draft: Chicago Bears Select Teven Jenkins with the 39th PickAlex Fusakon May 1, 2021 at 12:44 am Read More »