The Bulls have played down to short-handed competition before, specifically the first two games out of the All-Star Break. With a new-look starting group, however, LaVine & Co. made sure that wasn’t going to happen.
Every game doesn’t need to be close.
After all, with 34 regular-season games still left to play, fingernails grow back only so quickly.
That’s why on a night that the Oklahoma City Thunder limped into the United Center severely short-handed, it was about time the home team treated a visitor rudely.
Thanks to Zach LaVine registering his third 40-plus point game of the season, as well as the new-look starting lineup putting the Thunder in a huge first-quarter hole, the Bulls (18-20) won their second straight game, beating coach Billy Donovan’s former team 123-102.
“The guy was unbelievable,’’ Donovan said of LaVine. “He scored 40 points in [31] minutes. … And listen, I don’t want to get into the short-handed stuff because we’ve got to play to a certain standard because you know what? We’re no different than any other team. We’ve been short-handed too. … Everybody is dealing with this, so for me it’s not necessarily who’s playing for a team or not playing, it’s how we’re playing.’’
How they played was making sure the ball moved offensively, but also LaVine and Lauri Markkanen got into a flow early.
“You want to get your two best scorers going and we did that,’’ guard Tomas Satoransky said. “It opens up everything. We were all running really well right from the beginning, and when that happens guys have good games.’’
That they did.
In a nice mix of going with a familiar formula of allowing LaVine to play aggressively but efficiently (15-for-20 from the field), as well as the new look first team that had Thaddeus Young and Satoransky in for Wendell Carter Jr. and Coby White, the Bulls appeared to be poised to end the rematch with the Thunder (17-23) quickly.
Not only was LaVine on fire in that opening stanza, but the entire starting unit was in sync. Just another reminder why Donovan made the change after the loss to Miami, looking to get his team off to quicker starts.
Satoransky and Young made sure to help that process along, as the two combined for nine of the 12 first-quarter assists, getting the Bulls out in front 42-28 after one.
While Donovan didn’t enjoy the bench unit spitting that lead back up in the second, the defense made sure that the Thunder would be put back in a corner for the second half, holding Oklahoma City to just 16 third-quarter points.
The big change? Carter was inserted back into the starting lineup to help combat the size of Moses Brown, and more than did his job.
“Moses Brown had I think six offensive rebounds in the first half,’’ Donovan said. “I wanted to start the same way [in the third] with the same group, but I think just putting Wendell out there against him was a bigger body.’’
If there was a cloud in the win, and a small cloud it was, rookie Patrick Williams scored a career-high 23 on Sunday against the Raptors, and it would have been nice to see the 19-year-old follow that performance up. Instead he scored just two points on 1-for-9 shooting, grabbing only three rebounds.
A collision with the rookie wall?
Tough to say, especially with the entire league in uncharted territory by playing so many games in this second half, let alone this rookie class dealing with it.
“The thing you always worry about with young players is the mental fatigue,’’ Donovan said. “Certainly that’s going to be the biggest challenge in my opinion, just with the loaded-up schedule on the back end. He hasn’t experienced anything like this at all in his life.’’
The Dingers crew interview Max Bain, Cubs pitching prospect, about his path through the Cubs farm system and more. Plus, the guys take questions from the Dingers fans.
The Bears signed Andy Dalton to a one-year deal Tuesday. | Emilee Chinn, AP Photos
The Bears wanted Russell Wilson. They’ll have to settle for Andy Dalton.
The Bears wanted Russell Wilson.
They’ll have to settle for Andy Dalton.
The question Bears general manager Ryan Pace must answer now is, “and who else?” After an offseason in which he claimed he’d exhaust every possibility to fix the most important position in sports, Dalton can’t be considered the final answer. Not in a season with Pace and coach Matt Nagy’s job on the line.
Even in the feel-good world of free agency, the most charitable thing that can be said about the Bears agreeing to sign Dalton on Tuesday is this: the contract is for one year. Adding Dalton doesn’t preclude the Bears from their next far-fetched trade idea for a disgruntled star, as unlikely as it to come to fruition, or from drafting a quarterback next month.
Without doing either, though, the Bears are precisely where they were at the start of the legal tampering period: in quarterback hell, with Nick Foles and Dalton — two passers who probably wouldn’t be a Week 1 starter anywhere else — fighting for the first snap of the season. Dalton has the edge; that the Bears felt the need to sign him is as damning of Foles as it is of Pace.
Paying Dalton $10 million makes trading for the Seahawks’ Wilson or the Texans’ Deshaun Watson only slightly more unlikely now than it was 24 hours ago — but that speaks more to the long odds of each endeavor.
The Bears let the world, and the Seahawks, know that they wanted Wilson, the Super Bowl champion, reigning Walter Payton Man of the Year and a likely Hall of Famer. Wilson sparked their trade pursuit — which ESPN called “very aggressive” — when he put them on a list of four teams to which he’d approve the trade.
Pace couldn’t offer enough to compel the Seahawks to start over. They weren’t prepared to swallow $39 million in dead money by moving him before June 1 — almost a quarter of their entire salary cap — for the privilege of trading the greatest player in franchise history. That stance doesn’t figure to change before the draft, unless Wilson’s public frustration with the franchise ratchets up to a degree never seen before in his career.
If the Bears didn’t have the firepower to make the Seahawks contemplate a trade, they certainly won’t be able to outbid more than half the league for Watson if the Texans make their frustrated star available before the draft.
More realistically, the next quarterback to join the Bears’ roster will come from college — though the Bears will likely have to trade up from No. 20 to land one of the five projected first-round passers late next month.
The Jaguars are certain to take Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence first overall. It’s unlikely the Bears can move into the top five, where BYU’s Zach Wilson and Ohio State’s Justin Fields are expected to be picked. Pace and Nagy attended North Dakota quarterback Trey Lance’s pro day last month; Alabama quarterback Mac Jones will throw next week.
The Bears could draft one and sell them as the future of the franchise.
If not, they’ll be back in the same spot next year — in quarterback hell, and, possibly, with different decision-makers at the helm.
Rayneesha Dotson was among two people killed in a shooting early Sunday at a makeshift nightclub in Park Manor that wounded 13 others. | GoFundMe
“She wasn’t out here harming anyone. And for her to be out enjoying herself to get gunned down like that I think is just outrageous,” said the aunt of Rayneesha Dotson, who was killed in the early Sunday shooting at a makeshift nightclub on the South Side.
After relocating to Texas as the pandemic wore on, Rayneesha Dotson decided to return home to the South Side for a visit.
With her trip winding down this past weekend, Dotson’s aunt said she decided to spend her last days in Chicago “enjoying her friends” as she prepared to head back to the Houston area Tuesday.
Dotson, 30, suffered multiple gunshot wounds and was pronounced dead at the scene, according to Chicago police and the Cook County medical examiner’s office. Lionel Darling, 39, was also killed.
“For her to go out like that, it just makes you sick to your stomach. She needs justice, and her voice needs to be heard,” Dotson’s aunt, Beverly Grinnage, said in an interview. “She’s not here, but I see her face and her name. And that’s all I see on TV.
“Nobody’s saying this was a loving, caring sister [and] auntie. She was a wonderful granddaughter to her grandparents before they passed on. So she is someone besides that face that everyone sees that got killed.”
After watching videos of the chaotic scene that transpired after the shooting, Grinnage said it was a “shame” the response to the mass shooting wasn’t swifter. After all, she noted, there’s both police and fire stations nearby.
“I don’t know maybe she would have survived. Maybe she wouldn’t have survived due to her gunshot wounds,” said Grinnage. “But we would never know because she didn’t get the help.”
Grinnage said her niece moved to Texas three or four months ago, hoping to “do better.”
Dotson’s aunt remembered her as a compassionate soul who made her own music and aspired to become a successful rapper. Above all though, Grinnage said Dotson “always loved to be around her family.”
“Regardless if we had arguments, she still wanted us to be a family,” Grinnage said. “She made sure she was at every function, every family gathering — just there with a big smile. If you see Rayneesha, you’ll see this big old smile. And she’s hugging you and telling you how much she loves you.”
Grinnage likened Dotson’s death to “losing a kid,” noting that she helped raise her along with her own children. She has now set up a GoFundMe campaign to help finance her niece’s funeral services, one of two such pages that have appeared on the crowdfunding site in recent days.
Days after the mass shooting claimed Dotson’s life, Grinnage said she still has no indication of what really happened at the after-hours spot set up inside a nondescript garage known for housing illegal businesses. On Tuesday, a police spokesman said no arrests have been made and the investigation is ongoing.
“She wasn’t out here harming anyone. And for her to be out enjoying herself to get gunned down like that I think is just outrageous,” said Grinnage. “And I think she has a voice, and we are her voice.”
Andy Dalton #14 of the Dallas Cowboys reacts in the second half against the Philadelphia Eagles at AT&T Stadium on December 27, 2020 in Arlington, Texas. | Ronald Martinez/Getty Images
Our Bears beat writers discuss the team’s signing of Dalton to a one-year deal.
Patrick Finley and Jason Lieser are underwhelmed by the Bears’ signing of Andy Dalton to a one-year deal Tuesday.
Demi Lovato performs the national anthem before the NFL Super Bowl 54 football game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Kansas City Chiefs in 2020. | David J. Phillip, AP
The four-part documentary on her life premiered at the virtual South by Southwest festival Tuesday night. Her wholesome image, coupled with her Christian upbringing, made it so that Lovato felt she had to stay silent when she was raped as a teen.
Demi Lovato isn’t holding back.
The pop singer has bravely spoken about her struggles with depression, self-harm, sobriety and an eating disorder in MTV’s 2012 documentary “Stay Strong” and YouTube’s 2017 doc “Simply Complicated.” But neither film can prepare viewers for the vulnerability and candor on display in her harrowing new YouTube docuseries ”Dancing with the Devil,” which details the leadup and aftermath of her near-fatal 2018 overdose.
The four-part documentary premiered at the virtual South by Southwest festival Tuesday night. The first two episodes will stream for free on YouTube March 23, and new episodes will be released weekly on each of the next two Tuesdays. And on April 2, Lovato will release her first new album since 2017, “Dancing with the Devil … The Art of Starting Over,” which she described as a “non-official soundtrack to the documentary” in a Clubhouse livestream with fans Monday night.
Here are some of the biggest revelations from the heartbreaking yet cautiously hopeful new film:
Demi Lovato reveals she lost ‘virginity in a rape’
Throughout “Dancing with the Devil,” Lovato, 28, tries to reconcile childhood trauma brought on by her late addict father who was abusive to her mother, as well as the pressures of young fame.
Lovato had her breakthrough in Disney Channel movie “Camp Rock” with the Jonas Brothers, which premiered in June 2008 when she was just 15. Around that time, Lovato and fellow Disney stars Selena Gomez, Miley Cyrus and the Jonas Brothers all famously wore purity rings, symbolizing they wouldn’t have sex until marriage.
Her wholesome image, coupled with her Christian upbringing, made it so that Lovato felt she had to stay silent when she was raped as a teen.
“I lost my virginity in a rape,” Lovato says in the doc. “We were hooking up but I said, ‘Hey, this is not going any farther, I’m a virgin and I don’t want to lose it this way.’ And that didn’t matter to them, they did it anyways. And I internalized it and I told myself it was my fault because I still went in the room with him, I still hooked up with him.
“I was a part of that Disney crowd that publicly said they were waiting till marriage,” she continues. “I didn’t have the romantic first time with anybody, that was not it for me and that sucked. And then I had to see this person all the time, and so I stopped eating and coped in other ways: cutting, throwing up, whatever. And my bulimia got so bad that I started throwing up blood for the first time.”
Lovato says she never went public with her experience, partly because of how Rihanna was blamed after Chris Brown assaulted her in 2009. She says she tried telling someone about what happened to her, but her rapist was never held accountable.
“Women are typically more oppressed than men, especially at 15 years old and especially as a little child-star role model,” Lovato says. “My Me Too story is me telling somebody that someone did this to me, and they never got in trouble for it. They never got taken out of the movie they were in.”
‘Discarded and abandoned’: Lovato was sexually assaulted on morning of overdose
Lovato was forced to relive her sexual trauma in summer 2018, when she was sexually assaulted the morning of her overdose. The singer had relapsed a few months earlier, after celebrating six years of sobriety in March 2018. Feeling “miserable” and overwhelmed, she attended a party where she tried meth for the first time, which she mixed with cocaine, molly, oxycontin, marijuana and alcohol.
“I’m surprised I didn’t OD that night,” Lovato says.
Two weeks later, she was introduced to heroin and crack cocaine, which she started using recreationally but quickly became physically dependent on. She also began drinking heavily on tour, while attempting to hide her hard drug use from her friends and team.
On the night of her overdose, July 23, 2018, Lovato went to several bars with her friends and the party continued at her Los Angeles home. Once everyone left, around 5:30 a.m., she drunkenly called one of her dealers, who gave her oxycodone that she now believes was laced with fentanyl.
“I didn’t just overdose – I also was taken advantage of,” Lovato says. “I’ve had my fair share of sexual trauma throughout childhood, teenage years. And when they found me, I was naked, I was blue. I was literally left for dead after he took advantage of me.
“When I woke up in the hospital, they asked if I had had consensual sex,” she continues. “There was one flash that I had of him on top of me. I saw that flash and I said, ‘Yes.’ It wasn’t until a month after my overdose when I realized, ‘Hey, you weren’t in any state of mind to make a consensual decision.’ That kind of trauma doesn’t go away overnight.
“I was literally discarded and abandoned.”
She was ‘legally blind’ in hospital, later relapsed again
On the morning of July 24, Lovato’s now-former assistant Jordan Jackson and security guard Max Lea found her unconscious in bed and called 911. After being rushed to the hospital, she suffered three strokes and a heart attack, as well as pneumonia and multiple organ failure.
“I was legally blind when I woke up,” says Lovato, who suffered brain damage from the strokes and has since regained eyesight.
“I can’t drive anymore and I have blind spots in my vision,” she says. “So sometimes when I go to pour a glass of water, I totally miss the cup because I can’t see it anymore.”
Following her near-death experience in 2018, Lovato relapsed after she attended a weeklong intensive trauma retreat. The day she returned home, she called her abuser from the night she overdosed.
“I wish I could say the last night that I ever touched heroin was the night of my overdose, but it wasn’t,” Lovato says. By seeing her abuser again, “I wanted to rewrite his choice of violating me. I wanted it now to be my choice, and he also had something that I wanted, which were drugs. I ended up getting high. I thought, ‘How did I pick up the same drugs that put me in the hospital?’ I was mortified with my decisions.
“It didn’t fix anything, it just made me feel worse,” she adds. “But that, for some reason, was my way of taking the power back.”
She now smokes weed, drinks in moderation
The documentary’s fourth chapter ends with Lovato breaking off her engagement to actor Max Ehrich last September after six months of dating.
“I rushed into something that I thought I was supposed to do,” Lovato says, telling her friends that “the hardest part of the breakup was mourning the person I thought he was.”
But the relationship’s end offered some clarity for the singer about her sexuality.
“I actually think I’m too queer to marry a man in my life right now,” says Lovato, who came out to her parents in 2017. Her new album is about “me embracing my queer self. Going for it fearlessly is where I’m at today, and what I want my music to represent, too.”
As for her mental and physical health, Lovato now receives Vivitrol injections to help curb cravings for alcohol and opioids. She also recently learned that she was misdiagnosed as bipolar when she was 18.
“I was acting out when I was 18 for many reasons, but I know now from multiple different doctors that it was not because I was bipolar,” Lovato says. “I had to grow up.”
She now chooses to smoke weed and drinks in moderation, which admittedly worries some members of her new team (including Justin Bieber’s manager Scooter Braun).
“I have full faith you’re not going to open up TMZ and see another overdose headline,” Lovato says. “But I also say this with humility that this is a very powerful disease. I’m not going to pretend like I’m invincible. I have to work every day to make sure that I’m in a good place so I don’t go to those things. Time and trust is the only thing that will work for people, and over time you’ll see that I’m good.”
City planners are advancing a proposed $30 million arena devoted to esports and virtual reality on the Near South Side.
The zoning proposal from a Lincolnshire-based developer promises an immersive experience for up to 1,040 people, including game participants and spectators. Called Surge, it would be built at 2500-2548 S. Wabash Ave., just across I-55 from McCormick Place.
Such a crowd generator would need an improvement in the pandemic before it can operate. But city approval of the zoning would allow the developer, Scott Greenberg, president of ECD, to start construction.
“At this time when we need to return to some type of normalcy, this is an exciting project and something to look forward to,” said Bonnie Sanchez-Carlson, president of the Near South Planning Board.
This building in the 2500 block of South Wabash Avenue would be incorporated into a $30 million esports arena on the Near South Side. It would be combined with a new structure built on the now-vacant land to the south.Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times
The facility would cover more than 108,000 square feet and would include restaurant and bar service, free-roaming space for virtual reality gamers and the ability to broadcast events. Greenberg has told community groups he can build it without city subsidies.
He also has promised partnerships with local schools and universities to help them educate students in esports technology and design.
The project has been placed on the agenda of Thursday’s Chicago Plan Commission meeting, indicating the city’s planning department recommends it. Approval by the commission, which reviews larger zoning proposals, would send the matter to the City Council.
Greenberg could not be reached for comment. He has produced several commercial and residential projects around town, but is perhaps best known for building the Wit Hotel at 201 N. State St., with the angled lights on its front facade that suggest a lightning bolt. The hotel was the work of Chicago architect Jackie Koo, whose firm is listed as designer of the esports arena.
City planning documents indicate some flashier elements of the esports building, such as signs, have been toned down after meetings with community groups. The project would reuse an existing two-story building, formerly Kozy’s Cyclery, while constructing space next door on property that had been used to store semi-trailers. The developer also plans parking for 90 cars and retail space down the block, at 2601 S. Wabash Ave.
Sanchez-Carlson, whose community group backs the proposal, said Greenberg’s term has worked hard on traffic and parking. She hopes the attention will encourage other development and help the nearby Motor Row historic district. “Right now, it’s just very quiet over there. That area needs a jump start,” she said.
Ald. Pat Dowell, whose 3rd Ward includes the project, said the arena appears financially viable and will involve minority-owned contractors and funding sources. She said the developer has pledged to offer programs that benefit Drake Elementary School, Phillips Academy High School and the National Teachers Academy, all nearby.
Greenberg has formed a company, Smash Interactive, to handle the venture. He has asserted that esports are becoming mainstream, with an audience soon to exceed that of most athletic events, except the National Football League.
The plan commission also is scheduled to review three other proposals Thursday:
o A 27-story residential building containing 375 units, from developer Michael Moceri and architect Thomas Roszak.
o A 12-story, 96-unit building for affordable housing at 1939 W. Lake St., by affiliates of Northbrook-based Brinshore Development. It’s part of Westhaven Park on the site of the old Henry Horner Homes.
o A nine-story office and retail building at 1229 W. Randolph St., by New York-based Thor Equities.
Berkowitz w/GOP GOV Candidate & former State Senator Paul Schimpf, part 2, in Chicago and the N & NW Chicago suburbs, Cable tonight; in Aurora, tmw night & in Rockford, Thur night; And the Web, Always
Tonight’s Public Affairs’ show in Chicago features Paul Schimpf, who became one month ago, the first announced candidate in the GOP 2022 Republican Primary for Governor. The program airs at 9:03 pm on Cable Ch 21 (CAN TV).
You can also watch here the show featuring GOP GOV candidate and Lt. Col. Paul Schimpf (Ret.) in Part 2 of his interview by show host Berkowitz.
You can also watch Part 1 of Berkowitz’s interview of Schimpf 24/7 by clicking here.
Watch this evening’s “Public Affairs,” in 25 Chicago Metro N and NW suburbs with show host Berkowitz interviewing GOP GOV candidate and former Senator Paul Schimpf (Part 2) 8:30 pm on:
—Comcast Cable Ch. 19 in Buffalo Grove, Elk Grove Village, Hoffman Estates, parts of Inverness, Lincolnwood, Morton Grove, Niles, Northfield, Palatine, Rolling Meadows and Wilmette and on
—Comcast Cable Ch. 35 in Arlington Heights, Bartlett, Glenview, Golf, Des Plaines, Hanover Park, Mt. Prospect, Northbrook, Park Ridge, Prospect Heights, Schaumburg, Skokie, Streamwood and Wheeling.
The program featuring Schimpf also airs in Aurora tomorrow, this Saturday and next Monday at 6 pm on ACTV-10, also known as Cable Ch 10 and Aurora Community Television.
The program featuring GOP GOV candidate Schimpf also airs in Rockford this Thursday night, 8:30 pm on Comcast Cable Ch 17.
Paul Schimpf (R-Waterloo) , who graduated from the Naval Academy and spent 20 years in the U. S. Marine Corps, retired in 2013 as a Lt. Col. and soon thereafter was the 2014 Republican nominee for Attorney General, taking on Lisa Madigan, a 12 year incumbent, and getting outspent and beat handily.
But, Schimpf recovered quickly, beating former Lt. Gov. Sheila Simon, the daughter of the late and storied U. S. Senator Paul Simon (also a former guest of Public Affairs), although Schimpf was again outspent big time, for a downstate Senate seat in 2016.
You can also watch here the show featuring GOP GOV candidate and Lt. Col. Schimpf (Ret.) a twenty year U. S. Marine Corps Vet, discuss his experience as an advisor to Iraqi prosecutors and also as a Marine who helped “Collect the witnesses” when in 2005 Saddam Hussein was tried for war crimes and other crimes against his people.
Schimpf also discusses how his military background in solving complex problems by balancing competing interests prepared him for being Governor of Illinois.
Substantively, Schimpf focuses on how he would prosecute politically, not legally, Gov. Pritzker during a campaign for Governor for his failure to protect the most vulnerable to Covid– the elderly, those often with pre-existing conditions in nursing, long-term care and retirement homes and Vets at long term care facilities, as at LaSalle.
Schimpf also indicts the Governor for overdoing (Too many, too much and too long) lock-downs. Schimpf argues that philosophy of the Governor was supported neither by the science, nor the data, as early as April, 2020. Moreover, Schimpf argues that mis-judgement by Gov. Pritzker hurt the health and economic well-being of the people of IL tremendously.
Schimpf, who is Pro-Life, talks of trying to change the culture in IL to make abortions unthinkable, even if they remain legal.
GOP GOV Candidate Schimpf is also critical of the Governor for the extremely long delays incurred by IL citizens when they seek to obtain FOID cards, necessary for them to possess guns lawfully.
Dec 20, 2020; Arlington, Texas, USA; Dallas Cowboys quarterback Andy Dalton (14) reacts after a touchdown against the San Francisco 49ers in the fourth quarter at AT&T Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Tim Heitman-USA TODAY Sports
The ChicagoBears may have found their new starting quarterback on Tuesday as the team has agreed to a deal with former Dallas Cowboys and Cincinnati Bengals starting quarterback Andy Dalton. Adam Schefter of ESPN was the first to report to the agreement.
With Jameis Winston re-signing with the New Orleans Saints and Ryan Fitzpatrick signing with the Washington Football Team on Monday, free-agent options at the quarterback position were quickly drying up for the Bears.
That would be the reason why the Bears moved quickly on Tuesday to sign Dalton. Dalton was uninspiring during the 2020 season with the Dallas Cowboys in place of the injured Dak Prescott. In 9 starts with the Cowboys last season, Dalton tossed for 14 touchdowns against 9 interceptions with a mediocre passer rating of 87.3.
As the roster is currently constructed, Dalton is likely penciled in so he can compete with Nick Foles as the team’s starting quarterback to begin the 2021 NFL Season. Under that scenario, the Bears will likely select a quarterback within the first two rounds of the 2021 NFL Draft.
The signing of Dalton was a tone-deaf move by Bears’ general manager Ryan Pace. The Bears’ front office has spent the first two months of the off-season throwing their quarterback position under the bus.
Whether it was Ted Phillips admitting that the Bears had not gotten the quarterback position right or head coach Matt Nagy insinuating that all the Bears needed was to fix the quarterback position, the Bears admitted to the league that they were desperate to find a quarterback this off-season.
Former Cowboys’ QB Andy Dalton is signing a one-year, $10 million deal, with the chance to earn another $3 million in incentives, with the Chicago Bears, per sources.
The Bears entered the start of the NFL Free Agency period with high hopes of trading for Houston Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson or Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson. Instead, the Bears gifted their fans with Dalton as their new quarterback.
In regards to what the Dalton signing means for the Bears’ pursuit of Watson or Wilson, it likely moves each of those trades into the highly unlikely category. While Dalton’s cap hit does not prevent the Bears from making further moves at the quarterback position this off-season, especially in the 2021 NFL Draft, it seems unlikely that the team would sign Dalton with Nick Foles on the roster still and then acquire Watson or Wilson.
The Chicago Bears made a move at the quarterback position on Tuesday with the signing of Dalton but it appears that this just the latest quarterback blunder by general manager Ryan Pace.
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