Videos

Get ready for football: Explaining the nuts and bolts of the upcoming seasonon March 15, 2021 at 3:00 pm

There will be prep football in Illinois this school year.

For months, as the state’s COVID-19 fortunes ebbed and flowed, no one knew if we’d get to this point.

But teams began practice in early March, and the first games of a delayed, abbreviated season are scheduled for this weekend.

Here’s a few questions and answers to get you up to speed for the strangest high school football season in state history.

How did we get here?

As with most questions during the past year, the short answer is: the pandemic.

Last year’s boys basketball playoffs were abruptly canceled on the eve of the small-school state tournaments and during the big-school sectionals as the gravity of COVID-19 became apparent.

From March till August, there were no high school sports in Illinois, with the entire spring 2020 season canceled.

Last fall, state health officials gave the green light to lower-risk fall sports to compete: boys and girls cross country, boys and girls golf, girls swimming and girls tennis.

Other traditional fall sports like football, boys soccer and girls volleyball were punted to the spring in hopes the pandemic would be on the wane by then. Then, IHSA officials projected a Feb. 15 start date for practice with games to begin March 5.

That didn’t happen, and a good thing too, in light of the 1-2 punch of extreme cold and heavy snow most of Illinois experienced through much of February.

A late fall COVID surge again put all prep sports on hold. That led to rallies and at least one failed lawsuit as athletes and parents pushed the IHSA and state officials to allow a return to play.

Finally, in late January, state officials announced sports could resume, first with an abbreviated basketball season followed by a similarly shortened football schedule with games starting in mid-March.

So how long is the season?

It’s six weeks, beginning the weekend of March 19-20. The last day for games will be Saturday, April 24.

As it did for basketball, the Public League will start a week later. But while the IHSA granted Public League basketball teams an extra week of play after the rest of the state wraps up, it did not grant the same exemption for football.

That means CPS football teams will play a five-game schedule.

Will there be state playoffs?

No. That’s been the standard so far this school year, though traditional spring sports such as baseball, softball and track and field will have state series including state finals.

Is every football team participating in the spring season?

Not quite, but almost all are. Joliet Herald-News sports editor Steve Soucie, who has been tracking schedules, says only six schools have opted out: Back of the Yards, Christ the King, Urban Prep Englewood, Litchfield, Pinckneyville and Rockford Christian.

Some schools have elected not to play a full schedule for a variety of reasons, including concern about stretching athletes too thin during the transitions from basketball to football and from football to spring sports.

What will schedules look like? Will we have any of the marquee nonconference games that traditionally highlight the first two weeks of the season?

Almost all teams will play exclusively within their conference, or crossing over with opponents in other divisions of their conference.

There are a few nonconference matchups. Some are the result of leagues like the Southland having an odd number of schools, and some are the result of schools needing a new opponent after the original one opted not to play a full schedule.

One of the more interesting nonconference games will be on March 27 when Marian Catholic hosts Crete-Monee in a matchup of returning playoff qualifiers.

Without playoffs, what is there to play for?

Different conferences are attacking this question in different ways.

Some like the Central Suburban, Mid-Suburban and Fox Valley are playing five conference games, with Week 6 reserved for crossovers between division champs, runners-up, third-place finishers and so on.

DuPage Valley teams will play five league games followed by final week matchups pitting the No. 1 and 2 teams, the No. 3 and 4 teams and the No. 5 and 6 teams.

Then there is the DuKane, which will play three conference games followed by a three-week, bracketed tournament.

It’s not like the usual five weeks of playoffs culminating in a weekend of state finals in Champaign or DeKalb. But in a pandemic year, football teams — and fans — will take what they can get.

Read More

Get ready for football: Explaining the nuts and bolts of the upcoming seasonon March 15, 2021 at 3:00 pm Read More »

This week’s high school basketball scheduleon March 15, 2021 at 2:52 pm

Please send additions and corrections to [email protected]

Monday, March 15, 2021

PUBLIC LEAGUE RED WEST-NORTH

Orr at Lincoln Park, 5:00

Young at Clark, PPD/CNL

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-CENTRAL

Catalyst-Maria at Kennedy, 5:00

Dunbar at Solorio, 5:00

Kennedy at Hubbard, 5:00

Urban Prep-Englewood at Lindblom, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-NORTH

Lake View at Sullivan, 5:00

Prosser at Senn, 5:00

Senn at Mather, 6:30

Von Steuben at Uplift, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-SOUTH

Vocational at Julian, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-CENTRAL

Back of the Yards at Kelly, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-NORTH

Marine at Chicago Academy, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-WEST

Douglass at Little Village, 5:00

NON CONFERENCE

Bowen at Fenger, 5:00

Clemente at Curie, 5:00

Jones at Schurz, 7:00

King at Amundsen, 7:00

Ogden at Steinmetz, 5:00

Perspectives-MSA at Englewood-STEM, 6:00

Tuesday, March 16, 2021

PUBLIC LEAGUE RED SOUTH-CENTRAL

Brooks at Simeon, 5:00

Corliss at Curie, 5:00

Hyde Park at Bogan, 5:00

Phillips at Morgan Park, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-CENTRAL

Catalyst-Maria at Tilden, 5:00

Kennedy at Dunbar, 6:30

King at Richards (Chgo), 5:00

Lindblom at Hubbard, 5:00

Solorio at Urban Prep-Englewood, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-SOUTH

Agricultural Science at Dyett, 5:00

Carver at Perspectives-Lead, 5:00

South Shore at Vocational, 5:00

Urban Prep-Bronzeville at Fenger, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-WEST

Perspectives-MSA at Jones, 6:30

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-CENTRAL

Acero-Soto at Arcero-Garcia, 5:00

Englewood STEM at Back of the Yards, 5:00

Harper at Hancock, 5:00

Horizon-Southwest at Kelly, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-SOUTH

Bowen at Washington, 5:00

Goode at Julian, 5:00

NON CONFERENCE

Lincoln Park at Kenwod, 5:00

Wednesday, March 17, 2021

PUBLIC LEAGUE RED WEST-NORTH

Clark at Lincoln Park, 5:00

Farragut at Westinghouse, 5:00

Lane at Young, 7:00

Marshall at Orr, 5:00

North Lawndale at Schurz, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-NORTH

Prosser at Sullivan, 5:00

Senn at Lake View, 5:00

Taft at Foreman, 7:00

Uplift at Northside, 5:00

Von Steuben at Mather, 6:30

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-WEST

Crane at Clemente, 5:00

Jones at Raby, 5:00

Perspectives-MSA at Collins, 7:00

Wells at Payton, 7:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-NORTH

Amundsen at DuSable, 5:00

Rickover at Chicago Academy, 5:00

Steinmetz at North Grand, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-WEST

Chicago Tech at Little Village, 5:00

NON CONFERENCE

Comer at Catalyst-Maria, 5:00

Perspectives-Lead at Bowen, 5:00

Thursday, March 18, 2021

PUBLIC LEAGUE RED SOUTH-CENTRAL

Bogan at Morgan Park, 5:00

Curie at Brooks, 7:00

Kenwood at Corliss, 5:00

Simeon at Phillips, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-CENTRAL

Dunbar at Catalyst-Maria, 5:00

King at Urban Prep-Englewood, 5:00

Lindblom at Solorio, 5:00

Richards (Chgo) at Kennedy, 6:30

Tilden at Hubbard, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-SOUTH

Carver at South Shore, 5:00

Dyett at Harlan, 5:00

Fenger at Urban Prep-Bronzeville, 5:00

Perspectives-Lead at Agricultural Science, 7:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-CENTRAL

Hancock at Kelly, 5:00

Horizon-Southwest at Harper, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-SOUTH

Chicago Military at Goode, 5:00

Julian at Washington, 7:00

NON CONFERENCE

Hyde Park at Bowen, 5:30

Friday, March 19, 2021

PUBLIC LEAGUE RED WEST-NORTH

Lincoln Park at Schurz, 5:00

North Lawndale at Lane, 7:00

Orr at Farragut, 5:00

Westinghouse at Clark, 5:00

Young at Marshall, 7:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-CENTRAL

Urban Prep-Englewood at Tilden, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-NORTH

Foreman at Sullivan, 5:00

Lake View at Taft, 7:00

Mather at Uplift, 6:30

Northside at Senn, 5:00

Prosser at Von Steuben, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-SOUTH

Vocational at Carver, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-WEST

Clemente at Wells, 5:00

Collins at Crane, 7:00

Payton at Raby, 7:00

Perspectives-MSA at Austin, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-NORTH

Amundsen at Steinmetz, 5:00

Chicago Academy at North Grand, 5:00

Marine at DuSable, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-WEST

Ogden at Chicago Tech, 5:00

NON CONFERENCE

Englewood STEM at Brooks, 5:00

Saturday, March 20, 2021

PUBLIC LEAGUE RED SOUTH-CENTRAL

Simeon at Corliss, 4:30

PUBLIC LEAGUE RED WEST-NORTH

Young at North Lawndale, 7:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-SOUTH

Carver at Agricultural Science, 1:00

NON CONFERENCE

Goode at Catalyst-Maria, 12:30

Hyde Park at South Shore, 2:30

King at Schurz, 12:00

Northside at Payton, 1:00

Ogden at Lake View, 11:30

Perspectives-MSA at Pespectives-Lead, 5:00

Read More

This week’s high school basketball scheduleon March 15, 2021 at 2:52 pm Read More »

Chicago theater veteran Paul Raci nominated for Oscaron March 15, 2021 at 12:29 pm

Paul Raci, a journeyman actor who got his start in Chicago theater, won an Academy Award nomination on Monday for his breakout role in “Sound of Metal.”

The local native, who grew up in the 2300 block of West Potomac Avenue in Humboldt Park, is a best supporting actor nominee for his performance as Joe, the owner of a substance abuse treatment facility for the deaf.

Joe advises a punk-metal drummer, played by Riz Ahmed, who abruptly loses his hearing while on tour. Ahmed is a best actor nominee, and the film is nominated for best picture.

At the April 25 Oscars, Raci will be up against the two stars of “Judas and the Black Messiah”, Daniel Kaluuya and LaKeith Stanfield, as well as Leslie Odom Jr. of “One Night in Miami” and Sacha Baron Cohen of “The Trial of the Chicago 7.”

Another former Chicagoan in the running is Steven Yeun, nominated in the best actor category for his work as a would-be farmer who transplants his family to Arkansas in “Minari.” The South Korean native, best known for “The Walking Dead,” used to perform improv in Chicago with Stir-Friday Night and The Second City.

For Raci, the nomination follows decades of unsung character work for Raci, 72.

Making “Sound of Metal,” he told the Sun-Times last month, was “the opportunity of a lifetime — it was great. I loved the writing. I love the character. Having deaf parents shaped my whole life because back in the day there was no technology that could help them.”

Read More

Chicago theater veteran Paul Raci nominated for Oscaron March 15, 2021 at 12:29 pm Read More »

Chicago Bulls: 3 takeaways from new starters versus Toronto Raptorson March 15, 2021 at 12:49 pm

Read More

Chicago Bulls: 3 takeaways from new starters versus Toronto Raptorson March 15, 2021 at 12:49 pm Read More »

9 teams out of Big Ten impressive tournament featMike Berardinoon March 15, 2021 at 4:08 am

Illinois hoist the trophy after defeating Ohio State 91-88 in overtime in a NCAA college basketball championship game at the Big Ten Conference tournament, Sunday, March 14, 2021, in Indianapolis. | Michael Conroy/AP

No other conference received more than seven bids to the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.

Now that Illinois has completed its impressive run through the Big Ten Tournament, coach Brad Underwood knows his packing skills are about to be tested during what projects as an extended stay in Indianapolis.

“I just hope I have enough socks, underwear and that there’s a damn good dry cleaner in Indianapolis,” he said recently. “I hope we’re there for a long time.”

Seeded first in the Midwest Region of the NCAA Tournament bubble, Illinois (23-6) was one of nine Big Ten teams to get good news on Selection Sunday. No other conference received more than seven bids.

Winners of 14 of their last 15 games since suffering back-to-back home losses in mid-January, the Illini haven’t been seeded this high since 2005, when they fell to North Carolina in the championship game. A dangerous potential second-round matchup looms with eighth-seeded Loyola or ACC Tournament champion Georgia Tech.

“Being a [No.] 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament is a big deal,” Underwood said recently. “It doesn’t mean you’re exempt from losing and going home. You’ve got to go do your job. But I think our résumé speaks for itself. It’s a pretty impressive résumé.”

Michigan, which faces uncertainty over the status of forward Isaiah Livers (stress injury in his right foot), is the top seed in the East. The Wolverines (20-4) must contend with No. 2 seed Alabama, the SEC Tournament champion; No. 3 seed Texas, the Big 12 Tournament champion; and No. 4 seed Florida State, which lost in the ACC Tournament final.

With a stacked bracket and Livers’ availability in question, the Wolverines appear to be the most vulnerable of the No. 1 seeds.

Ohio State and Iowa earned No. 2 seeds. The Buckeyes, who rallied from a 17-point first-half hole in Sunday’s Big Ten final before losing 91-88, are in the same South Region as top-seeded Baylor. The Bears, who dropped two of their last seven games after a three-week COVID-19 pause, haven’t reached the Final Four since 1950.

Iowa was placed in the West Region with top overall seed Gonzaga, which is trying to become the first unbeaten national champion since Indiana in 1976. The Hawkeyes fell 99-88 to Gonzaga on Dec. 19 in South Dakota despite 30 points from center Luka Garza, the two-time Big Ten Player of the Year.

Other Big Ten teams to make the field of 68 were Wisconsin (No. 9 seed in the South), Rutgers (No. 10 in the Midwest), Maryland (No. 10 in the East) and Michigan State. The Spartans must face UCLA in a play-in game for the 11th seed in the East.

Expectations are high that the Big Ten will dominate the NCAA bubble during the next three weeks.

“The toughest conference in all of college basketball,” CBS analyst Grant Hill said on-air from the Big Ten Tournament, “I think it’s safe to say at least one will be here [at the Final Four].”

The Big Ten has sent multiple teams to the Final Four eight times in the modern era of the NCAA Tournament. It first happened in 1976, when Indiana beat Michigan in the championship game.

It also happened in 1980 (Purdue over Iowa in the third-place game), 1989 (Michigan over Illinois in the semifinals), 1992 (Michigan and Indiana), 1999 (Michigan State and Ohio State), 2000 (Michigan State over Wisconsin in the semifinals), 2005 (Michigan State and Illinois) and 2015 (Michigan State and Wisconsin).

Since the Spartans’ title in 2000, the Big Ten has gone 0-7 in national championship games, with losses by Indiana (2002), Illinois (2005), Ohio State (2007), Michigan State (2009), Michigan (2013), Wisconsin (2015) and Michigan (2018).

Going back to Michigan’s 1989 championship run, the Big Ten is 1-9 in its last 10 trips to the national title game.

The Illini, behind versatile guard Ayo Dosunmu (Morgan Park High School), could be the team to reverse that trend.

Read More

9 teams out of Big Ten impressive tournament featMike Berardinoon March 15, 2021 at 4:08 am Read More »