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Polling Place: Do voters believe the Cubs’ Kris Bryant will keep building on his strong start?Steve Greenbergon April 24, 2021 at 5:00 pm

New York Mets v Chicago Cubs
Bryant is on fire for the Cubs. | Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

A healthy Bryant is a comfortable Bryant, and a comfortable Bryant is … wait, where did all these skeptics and cynics come from?

Kris Bryant entered Saturday’s game against the Brewers with leads among all Cubs players in hits (20), extra-base hits (11), average (.313) and OPS (1.041). That, friends, is what’s known in the business as not stinking.

But will the good times last for a former NL Rookie of the Year and MVP whose stardom has dimmed over the last two-plus seasons — and whose contract with the Cubs is set to expire at season’s end? That question was front and center in this week’s “Polling Place,” your home for Sun-Times sports polls on Twitter.

“As long as he’s healthy, yes,” @TheBlogfines commented. “He’s always a star when healthy.”

That’s pretty much on the money.

“Not only is KB the best hitter on the Cubs when healthy,” @rljmb23 wrote, “he’s the most valuable offensive player in the National League when so.”

That might be a bit of an overstatement.

We also asked about White Sox sensation Yermin Mercedes and — try to stay awake during this last part — NL pitchers batting for themselves again. On to the polls:

Poll No. 1: The Cubs’ Kris Bryant is off to a strong start. Will he keep it up?

Upshot: A healthy Bryant is a comfortable Bryant, and a comfortable Bryant is … wait, where did all these skeptics and cynics come from? It seems some have made up their minds that Bryant is soft, injury prone, un-cutch, unhappy or an unflattering combination thereof. But there are still others who want to give him a full, 162-game chance before sizing him up — and the results could be mighty impressive.

Poll No. 2: White Sox DH Yermin Mercedes is hitting close to .400 and slugging well over 1.000. Who is this guy?

Upshot: At 28, he’s no kid. At 5-11, 250, he’s no Barishnykov. Nowhere near the top of MLB Pipeline’s Sox prospect rankings, he might fade into the background or even disappear. But — man — has it been fun to watch him so far. That swing, that smile, that fearlessness after taking such a long road to the big leagues? As @chi73girl put it, “He’s worked too hard to be a one-shot wonder.”

Poll No. 3: If you ruled baseball, would National League pitchers keep taking their turns at bat in 2022 and beyond?

Upshot: “If you’d rather watch a pitcher hit instead of a hitter hit,” @MSMS247 offered, “then you’re an idiot.” Yeah, well, maybe some of us like the strategic levers that must be pulled when the pitcher is in the lineup. Maybe some of us appreciate the quick at-bats that keep some of these interminable games moving. Maybe some of us don’t like change, are old and cranky and … oh, never mind.

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Polling Place: Do voters believe the Cubs’ Kris Bryant will keep building on his strong start?Steve Greenbergon April 24, 2021 at 5:00 pm Read More »

Chicago outdoors: A curious wood duck, Wisconsin sturgeon and native plants are in the notes packageon April 24, 2021 at 4:35 pm

Notes come from around Chicago outdoors and beyond.

WILD OF THE WEEK

John Heneghan spotted a wood duck peering into a box where a male screech owl roosts while the female rests in another box 50 feet away. He messaged that the woodie was looking for a nest box on Wednesday, April 21.

WOTW, the celebration of wild stories and photos around Chicago outdoors, runs most weeks in the special two-page outdoors section in the Sun-Times Sports Saturday. To make submissions, email ([email protected]) or contact me on Facebook (Dale Bowman), Twitter (@BowmanOutside) or Instagram (@BowmanOutside).

WILD TIMES

ILLINOIS PERMITS/SEASONS

Turkey hunting: Through Wednesday, April 28, third season, north zone; Thursday, April 29, to May 5, fourth season, north; Through Wednesday, April 28, fourth season, south; Thursday, April 29, to May 6, fifth season (final), south.

Friday, April 30: Final day, applications for first firearm deer season.

DALE’S MAILBAG

“I have a layout for a perennial pollinator garden in my yard. The problem is, I can’t seem to find the plants anywhere! Most places are either wholesale or sell seed only. Any idea where you can purchase general pollinator plants for a native garden here in Illinois?” Chris Hunger

A: The best resource is a master list by the Illinois Native Plant Society at illinoisplants.org/native-plant-sales/. The Forest Preserve District of DuPage County has a native plant sale remotely this year, see dupageforest.org/news/news-releases/native-plant-sale-2021

BIG NUMBER

170-10: Pounds-ounces of the Wisconsin hook-and-line record for lake sturgeon, caught on Sept. 22, 1979.

LAST WORD

“The spawning season this year was short, intense and early! By April 13, most sturgeon on the Wolf and Upper Fox Rivers had stopped spawning. In early April, the unseasonably warm temperatures warmed the rivers into the high 50s and low 60s, causing the sturgeon to spawn early”

Wisconsin DNR, describing the spawning season during which staff handled more than 1,300 sturgeon (measuring, looking for tags or tagging). For more information on sturgeon spawning, visit the DNR webpage here.

Spawning sturgeon in Wisconsin. Credit: Bob Rashid
Spawning sturgeon in Wisconsin.
Bob Rashid

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Chicago outdoors: A curious wood duck, Wisconsin sturgeon and native plants are in the notes packageon April 24, 2021 at 4:35 pm Read More »

1 verdict, then 6 police killings across America in 24 hourson April 24, 2021 at 4:36 pm

Even as the Derek Chauvin case was fresh in memory — the reading of the verdict in a Minneapolis courtroom, the shackling of the former police officer, the jubilation at what many saw as justice in the death of George Floyd — even then, blood flowed on America’s streets.

And even then, some of that blood was shed at the hands of law enforcement.

At least six people were fatally shot by officers across the United States in the 24 hours after jurors reached a verdict in the murder case against Chauvin on Tuesday. The roll call of the dead is distressing:

A 16-year-old girl in Columbus, Ohio.

A man in Escondido, California.

A 42-year-old man in eastern North Carolina.

The deaths, in some cases, sparked new cries for justice. Some said they reflect an urgent need for radical changes to American policing — a need that the Chauvin verdict cannot paper over. For others, the shootings are a tragic reminder of the difficult and dangerous decisions law enforcement face daily.

An unidentified man in San Antonio.

Another man, killed in the same city within hours of the first.

A 31-year-old man in central Massachusetts.

The circumstances surrounding each death differ widely. Some happened while officers investigated serious crimes. Police say some of the people were armed with a gun, knife or a metal pole. One man claimed to have a bomb that he threatened to detonate. In several cases, little is known about the lives of those killed and what happened in their final moments.

The deadly encounters are only a small snapshot of the thousands of interactions between American police officers and civilians every day, most of which end safely. Uneventful encounters between the police and the populace, however, are not an issue.

It’s a very different story when a weapon is drawn and a life is ended.

Columbus, Ohio

As the nation watched the judge read the verdict against Chavuin on Tuesday afternoon, an officer hundreds of miles away was listening over his patrol car radio in a neighborhood in Columbus, Ohio. Minutes earlier, a colleague fatally shot a teenage girl.

Police had been called to the house after someone called 911 and reported being physically threatened. Body camera footage shows an officer approaching a group of people in the driveway as the teenager, Ma’Khia Bryant, swings a knife wildly. Moments later, the girl charges at a young woman pinned against a car.

The officer fires four shots before Bryant slumps to the ground. A black-handled blade, similar to a kitchen or steak knife, lies on the sidewalk next to her.

“You didn’t have to shoot her! She’s just a kid, man!” a man shouted at the officer.

The officer responds, “She had a knife. She just went at her.”

Later, an anguished neighbor yells at officers: “Do you see why Black lives matter? Do you get it now?”

Bryant, who was in foster care at the time, was a shy, quiet girl who liked making hair and dance videos on TikTok, her grandmother, Debra Wilcox, told The Associated Press. Her family says her actions that day were out of character.

“I don’t know what happened there unless she was fearful for her life,” Wilcox said.

Though officials have said Bryant’s death was a tragedy, they point to laws allowing police to use deadly force to protect themselves and others.

The officer’s actions were “an act of heroism” with tragic results, said the National Fraternal Order of Police president, “yet another demonstration of the impossible situations” police face.

San Antonio, Texas

About the same time the radio brought the news of Chauvin’s verdict to Columbus, two officers in San Antonio were confronting a man on a bus. Exactly how the encounter started remains unclear, but police say the unidentified man was armed. It ended with officers firing fatal shots.

Later that evening in the same city, authorities say a man killed a person working in a shed outside his home. As officers arrived, the suspect started shooting at police. They returned fired, killing him. Officials have not released his name.

Worcester, Massachusetts

As the nation digested the news from Minneapolis, the day wore on and daily life unspooled. In Worcester, Massachusetts, the night was punctuated by a standoff with police that ended in gunfire.

Phet Gouvonvong, 31, called 911 and claimed to have a bomb he threatened to set off, police said. Officers found him on the street. They said he was wearing body armor and had a backpack and what appeared to be a rifle.

A police SWAT team joined negotiators. One reached Gouvonvong by phone to try to calm him, officials say.

Around midnight, officials say, Gouvonvong moved toward police, and an officer opened fire.

Gouvonvong was pronounced dead at the scene. Police have not said whether he actually had an explosive device.

Gouvonvong had run-ins with police over the years, including a conviction for assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, but an aunt said he turned his life around, the Telegram & Gazette newspaper reported.

On Thursday, his mother crumpled onto the street in tears where flowers had been laid at the site of his killing. Marie Gonzalez told the newspaper she had called police Tuesday night to try to connect with her son but they wouldn’t put her through. She believed she could have prevented it.

“They had no right taking my son’s life,” she said. “They had no right.”

Elizabeth City, North Carolina

The next morning, as people in Minneapolis awakened to a city boarded up for unrest that never materialized, a 42-year-old Black man in eastern North Carolina was shot and killed when deputy sheriffs tried to serve drug-related search and arrest warrants.

An eyewitness has said Andrew Brown Jr. was shot dead in his car in Elizabeth City as he tried to drive away. A car authorities removed from the scene appeared to have multiple bullet holes and a shattered back window.

His slaying sparked an outcry as hundreds demanded the release of body camera footage. Seven deputies have been placed on leave.

Relatives described Brown as a doting father who always had a joke to tell. He also had a difficult life. His mother was killed when he was young, he was partially paralyzed on his right side by an accidental shooting and lost an eye in a stabbing, according to an aunt, Glenda Brown Thomas.

He also had troubles with the law, including a misdemeanor drug possession conviction and some pending felony drug charges. The day before he was killed, two arrest warrants were issued for him on drug-related charges including possession with intent to sell cocaine, court records show.

Officers have so far said little about why they fired, but his family is determined to get answers.

“The police didn’t have to shoot my baby,” said another aunt, Martha McCullen.

Escondido, California

That same morning, police in Southern California got a call about someone hitting cars with a metal pole. The man ran off when police arrived, but another officer spotted him carrying a 2-foot metal pole in the street.

The white man charged at the officer, who ordered him to drop the pole before opening fire, police said.

Police in Escondido, near San Diego, have not released the man’s name, but did say he had been arrested nearly 200 times over the past two decades for violent assaults on police and the public, drug charges and other crimes. Efforts to get him help from mental health professionals hadn’t worked, the police chief said.

The aftermath

Whether any officers will face charges in these shootings remains to be seen.

Chauvin was largely convicted based on video that showed him pressing his knee into Floyd’s neck for more than nine minutes. Police shootings in a heated moment are notoriously difficult to prosecute. Juries have generally been reluctant to second-guess officers when they claim to have acted in life-or-death situations.

In the aftermath of Tuesday’s verdict, prosecutors on opposite coasts announced opposite decisions on whether to advance charges against law enforcement who killed.

A Florida prosecutor announced Wednesday he would not pursue charges against a Brevard County Sheriff’s deputy who shot and killed two Black teenagers; a California prosecutor announced manslaughter and assault charges against a deputy in the eastern San Francisco Bay area in the shooting of an unarmed Filipino man.

None of these cases has focused attention like the trial that came to a conclusion Tuesday. Some people hold out hope that the Chauvin verdict might be a crucial juncture in the national conversation about race, policing and the use of force.

“We are in a moment of reckoning,” said Rachael Rollins, district attorney for Boston and surrounding communities and the first woman of color to serve as a top county prosecutor in Massachusetts.

“If we can be strategic and come together,” she said, “we can make profound changes, profound.”

____

Associated Press writers Michael Kunzelman in College Park, Maryland, Jill Bleed in Little Rock, Arkansas, Julie Watson in San Diego and Juliet Williams in San Francisco contributed to this report, as did Farnoush Amiri in Columbus, Ohio. Amiri a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative.

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1 verdict, then 6 police killings across America in 24 hourson April 24, 2021 at 4:36 pm Read More »

1 hurt in Fuller Park fireon April 24, 2021 at 4:37 pm

A person was hurt in a fire that also left three people displaced Saturday morning in Fuller Park on the South Side.

The blaze broke out at a home in the 4700 block of South Wells Street and was extinguished by 8:40 a.m., Chicago fire officials said.

One person was taken to a hospital with minor burns to their hands, officials said.

Three people were displaced from their homes, officials said.

The cause of the fire was unknown.

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1 hurt in Fuller Park fireon April 24, 2021 at 4:37 pm Read More »

Recordings show chaos surrounding Ma’Khia Bryant shooting in Columbuson April 24, 2021 at 4:49 pm

COLUMBUS, Ohio — A chaotic 911 call. A convulsive 11 seconds of violence ending in the death of an Ohio teen. A historic verdict being broadcast in the police cruiser.

A routine day in a quiet Columbus neighborhood was shattered instantly Tuesday when a police officer fired four shots at 16-year-old Ma’Khia Bryant as she swung a knife at a young woman.

“She was just a kid!” a man shouts within a second of Bryant falling to the ground.

Less than 30 minutes before the man charged with killing George Floyd was pronounced guilty, yet another Black person was dead at the hands of police in the U.S., and a city facing immense pressure to change its law enforcement patterns was once again on the defensive.

While the events leading up to the fateful 911 call that set the shooting in motion remain unclear, hours of official police footage and bystander videos detail how one of the country’s latest deadly police shootings unfolded.

At 4:32 p.m., a male dispatcher receives a call from a female caller. It remains unclear who called 911, but Bryant’s family members told The Associated Press that she herself summoned law enforcement.

“We got these grown girls over here trying to fight us. Trying to stab us. Trying to put their hands on our grandma,” the caller says as the background filled with female voices screaming and arguing. “Get here now!”

Officer Nicholas Reardon, who has been on the force since December 2019, was dispatched three minutes later. Two other officers, Eric Channel and Serge Akpalo, followed shortly behind.

“Hey, what’s going on?” Reardon asks upon exiting his vehicle at 4:44 p.m. In those next 11 seconds, Bryant was seen charging at 20-year-old Shai-Onta Lana Craig-Watkins with a kitchen knife and then moving on to 22-year-old Tionna Bonner before Reardon he yelled, “Get down!” and fired four consecutive shots into her chest.

The teenager’s body collapsed to the ground.

While officers took turns rendering CPR, several neighbors filled the residential street. Others stood in their driveways and doorways, shaking their heads. Some had heard the gunfire from their backyards while others were in the middle of unloading groceries from their car.

But almost every single witness that day stopped to film the aftermath of an incident they are now all too familiar with: the killing of another Black person in America at the hands of law enforcement.

This undated selfie photo provided by family members Don Bryant and Paula Bryant shows Ma’Khia Bryant.
AP

“No! You ain’t shoot my (expletive) baby!” an unidentified Black man screams at the officer. “You shot my (expletive) baby!”

Reardon, who is white, responds, “She had a knife. She just went at her.”

“You have no respect for life,” another Black man, who lives across the street, can be heard yelling. “No, actually, you have no respect for Black life.”

Another neighbor was heard on body camera footage saying, “You ever hear of de-escalating? No, you guys just shoot.”

While Reardon faced recrimination at the scene, his split-second decision to shoot was commended by the national Fraternal Order of Police, who called it “an act of heroism, but one with tragic results.”

Meanwhile, Akpalo, the only Black officer who responded, began to gather and separate the various witnesses and placed them in police vehicles.

Craig-Watkins, the first woman to be attacked by Bryant, was put in the backseat where dashcam footage showed her weeping for several minutes as dozens of officers from a neighboring department arrived on the scene.

An ambulance arrived at 4:52 p.m. — 20 minutes after the initial 911 call — and left seven minutes later.

Around 5:05 p.m., as Craig-Watkins remained in the backseat, waiting to be interviewed by state investigators, audio of a judge speaking interrupts the flow of dispatches from the police radio.

The exact source of the audio wasn’t clear, but a live reading of the guilty verdict in the murder trial of Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis police officer who killed Floyd, is heard streaming through the cruiser.

“Members of the jury, I am now going to ask you individually if these are your true and correct verdicts,” Judge Peter Cahill is heard saying on the audio. One by one the jurors begin to say yes. “Juror number 19, are these your true and correct verdicts?”

The audio is suddenly interrupted by Akpalo, who comes in to check on the witness.

“You still doing okay?” he asks.

“Yeah,” Craig-Watkins replies wearily as the officer shuts off the audio at 5:07 p.m. — with one police killing aftermath’s end colliding with the beginning of another.

___

Farnoush Amiri is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative.

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Recordings show chaos surrounding Ma’Khia Bryant shooting in Columbuson April 24, 2021 at 4:49 pm Read More »

2021 NFL Draft: Chicago Bears setup to fail in finding improvementon April 24, 2021 at 1:00 pm

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2021 NFL Draft: Chicago Bears setup to fail in finding improvementon April 24, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Cubs: Javier Baez’s uncommon problem at the plateon April 24, 2021 at 2:00 pm

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Chicago Cubs: Javier Baez’s uncommon problem at the plateon April 24, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Instant replay? More like an instant turnoffSteve Greenbergon April 24, 2021 at 2:00 pm

San Diego Padres v St. Louis Cardinals
Baseball umps getting their replay on. | Photo by Michael B. Thomas/Getty Images

Upon further review, sports dearly misses the human-error element to officiating — especially those biggest blunders, worn like noble scars by teams and fans and passed down through generations.

Do you ever wonder what the umpires are saying to one another as they huddle up — the crew chief having donned a clunky, ill-fitting headset — and wait for the no-goodniks at baseball’s Replay Command Center in New York to render their latest time-sucking, momentum-killing, inevitably anticlimactic decision?

I suspect it goes something like this:

“Are you sure you got a good look at that play, Tom?”

“I don’t know, Frank. These games have gotten so long, I’m not sure I could tell you what day it is.”

“How about you, Russ?”

“Huh?”

“Did you get a good look at that play, Russ?”

“What play, Frank?”

The truth is, I don’t even want to know. It’s nothing against the umps, mind you. My beef is with instant replay — in all sports, and in all applications. What’s a mature, reasoned way to put it? I can’t flippin’ stand it.

If mistakes made by umpires, referees and all other game officials are wrong, I don’t want those maddeningly imperfect sons of guns to be right.

Players and coaches make mistakes all the time, don’t they? It used to make sick, twisted sense when the stripes made mistakes, too. And most of us could handle it. On some level, most of us probably appreciated it. Officiating mistakes could make you very happy or, more likely, mad enough to curse at your great-aunt Dotty, but either way they made you feel something. And feeling something is the key to coming back to watch again and again.

It’s not worth the painstaking evaluation for every call to be right, and not only because games never stop seeming to suffer more interruptions that make them drag on longer. Human error is a great — yes, great — part of sports. It ignites passion. The biggest mistakes are worn like noble scars by teams and fans and passed down through generations. This is true — as true as a ball through Bill Buckner’s legs — when it comes to officiating blunders, too.

If umpire Don Denkinger hadn’t preposterously ruled the Royals’ Jorge Orta safe at first base in Game 6 of the 1985 World Series — essentially costing the Cardinals a championship — there wouldn’t be a wonderful baseball rivalry in Missouri. There’d be cardboard pizza, barbecue sauce, Sen. Josh Hawley and did I mention the cardboard pizza?

Think of Colorado’s “Fifth Down” college football win at Missouri in 1990, still almost impossible to believe. In the ultimate clown act, the refs forgot to count a down — enabling the Buffs to score on fifth-and-goal, win a game and go on to share the national championship. Who doesn’t love a good clown act?

Think of fan Jeffrey Maier reaching way over the outfield fence in the 1996 American League Championship Series to royally screw over the Orioles and help turn Yankees rookie Derek Jeter — a home run!? — into a blockbuster superstar. Or Brett Hull’s skate in the crease on his Stanley Cup-clinching goal for Dallas against Buffalo in 1999. Or the perfect game stolen from Tigers pitcher Armando Galarraga in 2010 on an egregiously wrong call by ump Jim Joyce.

Each of them was cruel, cringeworthy, heinous and horrible. Thank goodness and God bless America.

Once in a while, replay serves a higher purpose by taking millions of viewers a full step beyond apoplectic. Remember Tom Brady’s “Tuck Rule” fumble being overturned in the 2001 playoffs, leading the Patriots past Oakland en route to their first Super Bowl win? Or the Lions losing a game at Soldier Field in 2010 after Calvin Johnson caught a ball in the end zone, got a foot down, then the other foot, then his butt, a knee, a hand — no one had ever been more down and in possession of a ball. But of course! Overturned. Or the Packers losing to the Seahawks on a Monday night in 2012 on a last-ditch play — upheld, pathetically — dubbed the “Fail Mary”?

Indeed, those refs’ colossal flubs were pretty awesome, too. I wouldn’t remember any of those games without them.

Mostly, though, replay is just lame. We saw it all season in college basketball, when close game after close game devolved into an annoying, interminable string of late stoppages to review possession, time on the clock, hard fouls, “Ted Lasso” — you name it. We see it in the NBA, too.

We saw it Thursday night at Wrigley Field, when Kris Bryant, as the potential winning run, attempted to steal second in the ninth inning and beat the throw to the bag by a mile. Only after an extensive review and a consultation with NASA and the NSA was it determined that Bryant was out — for coming off the bag so slightly, almost imperceptibly, while being tagged that every umpire in the history of the game before the age of replay would’ve gotten the call wrong.

And they would’ve been dead right.

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Instant replay? More like an instant turnoffSteve Greenbergon April 24, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Man arrested after police fire shots on 606 Trail charged with several feloniesSun-Times Wireon April 24, 2021 at 2:24 pm

A man was sentenced April 15, 2021, to 12 years in prison for selling guns to gang members in Chicago.
Adobe Stock Photo

Police fired gunshots after confronting Santiago Leon about 7 a.m. Thursday in the 3700 block of West Bloomingdale Avenue.

A man is facing several felony charges after he was arrested Thursday near the western end of the 606 Trail in Logan Square during a confrontation in which police fired gunshots.

Santiago Leon, 28, is charged with attempted murder, aggravated vehicular hijacking, aggravated assault of a peace officer, unlawful use of a weapon by a felon, armed robbery and aggravated discharge of a firearm, according to Chicago police.

Police said Leon participated in these incidents Thursday in Humboldt Park:

  • Attempted carjacking and shots fired in the 3700 block of West Hirsch Street;
  • Attempted armed carjacking in the 1500 block of North Avers Avenue;
  • Armed robbery in the 3800 block of West North Avenue; and
  • Carjacking and shots fired in the 1500 block of North Hamlin Avenue.

Officers confronted Leon about 7 a.m. that day in the 3700 block of West Bloomingdale Avenue after allegedly identifying him as a suspect in the crimes, police said.

After finding him on the trail, a “confrontation ensued and resulted in shots fired by police with no hits,” police said in a statement. Leon was arrested and a weapon was recovered. No one was hurt.

The officer or officers who fired the shots will be placed on routine administrative duty for 30 days while the shooting is investigated by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, police said.

Leon was expected to appear in court Saturday.

Contributing: David Struett

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Man arrested after police fire shots on 606 Trail charged with several feloniesSun-Times Wireon April 24, 2021 at 2:24 pm Read More »

How to avoid some daft picks on NFL Draft dayRob Miechon April 24, 2021 at 1:00 pm

Kyle Pitts
Tight end Kyle Pitts #84 of the Florida Gators tries to avoid a tackle by linebacker Nick Bolton #32 of the Missouri Tigers second quarter at Faurot Field/Memorial Stadium on November 16, 2019 in Columbia, Missouri. | Ed Zurga/Getty Images

If you think you know who teams are selecting, there’s money to be made on prop bets in Vegas

LAS VEGAS — One year ago, the NFL Draft represented an oasis to bettors thirsty for something other than Belarussian table tennis or Nicaraguan soccer for action.

More than a month into a pandemic that nearly halted all sports on the planet and would shutter the city’s hotels and casinos for 11 weeks, unprecedented attention engulfed that virtual draft.

The physical draft, and the thousands of visitors and millions of dollars it generates annually to fortunate hosts, had been scheduled for Vegas, where the Raiders’ landing in a shiny new dome was to be feted in grand fashion.

All of that being canceled, however, socked the city with another gut punch.

“It was definitely a double whammy,” said Circa Sports operations manager Jeffrey Benson. “A lot of books were closed, and people were trying to get money in and bet these props. It was kind of a once-in-a-lifetime experience.”

Benson and his Circa colleagues provided curbside convenience for customers eager to register for the company’s mobile app and/or to fund those accounts, to wager on the 2020 draft from their couches.

The draft starts Thursday in Cleveland, and Las Vegas is on deck for next year. Last year’s fervor definitely has carried over to 2021. The NFL Draft is now much more than a novelty to Vegas sportsbooks.

“Even though that draft was virtual, we were able to place a huge emphasis on it because it was really the only sport or event outside of Russian Ping-Pong or Cactus Tour golf,” Benson said.

“Last year, our draft menu was more expansive than on a normal year. And I’d say, this year, we’ve taken it one step further. It’s probably the deepest menu of draft props that’s maybe ever been seen.”

A TACKLE WITH ATTITUDE

Circa’s draft proposition booklet is three pages, both sides covered with options. Many are player props, a draft spot where particular youngsters might be drafted, with corresponding Over and Under prices.

Florida tight end Kyle Pitts is 5½, an Over price of +140 (risk $100 to win $140), Under at -175. He will be of further interest to us.

Will the Bears’ first pick be an offensive lineman? Yes is +150, No -190. Who will draft Gators quarterback Kyle Trask? At +650, the Bears and Patriots are the favorites.

The two Circa options that had moved the most, Benson told me Tuesday, were Texas A&M quarterback Kellen Mond (draft position of 170½ to 91½) and Stanford quarterback Davis Mills (140½ to 68½).

“The player props on draft position are what we’ve written the most amount of tickets on,” Benson said. “Most of the moves we’ve taken early have been on Unders, with quarterbacks, and some wide receivers and offensive linemen.”

At No. 1, it’s a given that new Jaguars coach Urban Meyer will nab Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence.

Of the insiders and former scouts with whom Long Island handicapper Tom Barton has spoken, many believe Lawrence possesses more talent, at this stage, than John Elway, Peyton Manning and Andrew Luck.

With the Bears, Barton is in an odd position. He gathers information, which he dispenses on his syndicated SportsGarten radio show and bets accordingly, with profit the sole aim for his clients and him. Yet, the native New Yorker also is a lifelong Bears fan, since Jim McMahon, Sweetness and the Fridge.

“I hope they pick an offensive lineman, a tackle with attitude” in the first round, Barton said. “It’s a deep wide receiver draft and I think they can wait on one of them. I want the offensive lineman.”

Barton bet Over ½ on running backs taken in the first round, so anyone who thinks one will be selected should follow suit. He’s confident both Najee Harris of Alabama and Travis Etienne of Clemson will be among the first 32 picks.

For first-round quarterbacks, William Hill has set 5½ as the number, Over at +350, Under -430. There’s Lawrence first, then — in no order, Barton said — Trey Lance (North Dakota State), Justin Fields (Ohio State), Mac Jones (Alabama) and Zach Wilson (BYU).

Barton is on Over, for another favored wager, as he predicts either Mills or Trask going in the first round.

CONNECTING DOTS

The intriguing figure of the draft might be the Gators’ 6-6, 240-pound Pitts, whom Conner Streeter, the alias of a professional offshore bettor and former collegiate football player, calls “a freak athlete.”

In pondering why the 49ers moved up nine spots, to No. 3 overall, Streeter said this draft is not comprised of three generational quarterbacks. To guarantee getting one might justify dealing two future first-round picks and a third-rounder.

“That’s insane,” Streeter said, “unless you think you have identified a once-in-a-lifetime talent.”

Perhaps 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan does seek the draft’s third-best quarterback. But Streeter said maybe that generational figure is Pitts, who would pair with standout tight end George Kittle.

That could mirror the Patriots’ effective Rob Gronkowski-Aaron Hernandez scheme from 2010-12. Those Patriots won 39 of 48 regular-season games, but losing their lone Super Bowl.

With receivers Deebo Samuel and Brandon Aiyuk, Streeter envisions a dynamic double-team-proof receiving corps. Several outlets have Pitts going fourth to Atlanta, so Under 5½ on him presents another keen wager.

“Ridiculous talent,” Streeter said. “Maybe the Niners have positioned themselves to do something nobody would expect. Which, when you connect the dots, would be Pitts.”

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How to avoid some daft picks on NFL Draft dayRob Miechon April 24, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »