John Schultz, one of winningest coaches in Tilden basketball history, dead at 87Madeline Kenneyon February 12, 2021 at 3:55 pm

“He was without a doubt one of the best coaches ever in Chicago,” said former Tilden player Tim Hutchison.
Longtime Tilden basketball coach John Schultz, a Hall of Fame coach who won more than 320 games during his two decades at the South Side high school, died Wednesday. He was 87.
Mr. Schultz was surrounded by family at his home when he succumbed to kidney failure one day after entering hospice, his son, Patrick Schultz, said.
Inducted into the Chicago Public League Hall of Fame and Illinois Basketball Coaches Association (IBCA) Hall of Fame, Mr. Schultz is one of the winningest boys basketball coaches in Tilden history. He won five conference titles and led the Blue Devils to 15 winning seasons over his two stints spanning 26 years at the Canaryville school.
“He was without a doubt one of the best coaches ever in Chicago,” said former Tilden player Tim Hutchison.
Raymond Adams, another former Tilden star, agreed with Hutchison, saying: “Of all great coaches they got Chicago, I would put him up there… Schultz should be at the top tier for coaches of that period of time.”
Mr. Schultz, a founding member of the IBCA, is credited with putting Tilden basketball back on the map. After finishing 7-14 in his first season (1966-67), he coached them to a Public League city title in the second-tier blue division in 1970.
/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/22298369/Screen_Shot_2021_02_11_at_1.52.12_PM.png)
Provided
Arguably his best team took the court the following season. Led by Adams, Tilden went 21-4 en route to the 1971 Public League championship game, where they ultimately lost to Harlan.
After taking a three-year break from Tilden to coach Northeastern Illinois University, Mr. Schultz returned before the 1982-83 season. He had several successful teams in the 80s, including the 1984-85 season when the Blue Devils pulled off one of the biggest upsets in Illinois high school basketball history, beating No. 1 King in the first round of the city playoffs.
Despite Mr. Schultz’ accomplishments, Tilden was often overshadowed by other basketball powerhouses in the city, including Hirsch, Morgan Park and Phillips in the 70s and then Simeon and King in the 80s. But former Sun-Times high school editor Taylor Bell said Mr. Schultz never minded being overlooked.
“He just thrived on the competition, the opportunity for his kids to play these other good programs,” Bell recalled. “He enjoyed the opportunity to compete against them and … he was very successful even though he never won a state title, never won a [red division] city title.”
/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/22298150/Screen_Shot_2021_02_11_at_1.50.56_PM.png)
Provided
Mr. Schultz was a father figure to some of his players, including Hutchinson, who graduated from Tilden in 1969.
“He was huge in my life,” said Hutchinson, whose father died when he was young. “When I went to high school, I was like, ‘Do I really want to be doing this?’ And he got hold of me and grabbed me by the ear and said, ‘Quit feeling sorry for yourself, you got to go to class, want to be a basketball player [and so on.]’ And that’s just the kind of person he was.”
Tough love was Mr. Schultz’ specialty. Adams remembers Mr. Schultz would give a pair of boxing gloves to any of his players who were acting “too tough” at practice.
Mr. Schultz was also very caring and always trying to help people — often driving players to and from practices and games or taking them on college visits. He remained invested in his players’ lives even well after they graduated high school.
Though coaching basketball was Mr. Schultz’ passion, family always came first. When the coaches would go out for beers after the games, Mr. Schultz always invited his wife, Barbara Schultz, whom he met as a student at Chicago Teachers College, now known as Chicago State University.
“He was cute,” Barbara recalled, with a laugh. “He was tall and blonde and blue-eyed and I kind of think that was maybe my idea of an ideal guy. But he was… you know, a smart a—.”
Mr. Schultz, a devoted Catholic, started to walk Barbara to the bus stop after classes before baseball practice.
“He would walk me to the bus and then he’d say, ‘Oh let this bus go.’ And then we talk and then we’d let another bus go, and I’d say, ‘I’m going to be late for work, I have to go,’” Barbara said. “And then he asked me out on a date.”
/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/22298376/Maddie.jpg)
Provided
When Mr. Schultz was drafted to the U.S. Army for the Korean War, the two penned letters to one another for 18 months while he was stationed in Germany. They got married in 1956 and had eight children.
“He’s a great father, and I only hope to be as good a father as he was,” Patrick said. “… The man is my hero.”
Mr. Schultz left Tilden in 1992 to teach and coach girls basketball at Lincoln Park High School. He retired in 1996.
Mr. Schultz and Barbara traveled the world over the last two decades, tracing their family roots throughout Europe and even stopping at his Army base in Germany.
Mr. Schultz was preceded in death by his daughter, Elizabeth Schultz. He is survived by his wife, Barbara (nee Gornick); in addition to his children, John (Nancy) Schultz, Timothy (Pamela) Schultz, Katherine (Dick Messino) Schultz, Thomas Schultz, Mary Schultz, Terrence (Jennifer) Schultz and Patrick (Lisa) Schultz, along with numerous grandchildren and great grandchildren.
Visitation will be held from 3 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at Vandenberg Funeral Home in Mokena. A memorial mass is scheduled for Thursday at 10 a.m. at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Mokena.
The Handoff That Wasn’ton February 12, 2021 at 3:46 pm

When state Sen. Heather Steans announced she was quitting just two weeks into a new term, her successor seemed like a foregone conclusion: State Rep. Kelly Cassidy was already a member of the committee that would name Steans’s replacement, and she had the senator’s endorsement.
But what looked like a classic Chicago-style handoff didn’t happen. Instead, North Side committeepeople chose Mike Simmons, a 37-year-old former Rahm Emanuel policy director and the founder of Blue Sky Strategies, a political consulting firm specializing in anti-racist public policy.
A lifelong North Sider who grew up in public housing in Lincoln Square, Simmons made the case at a Zoom forum last month that he has the lived experience to best represent Illinois’s most diverse Senate district. He is, he adds, one of just three Black and openly gay state senators in the United States. Chicago has the first print interview with a legislator the likes of which Springfield has never seen.
A lot of people were surprised that you got the appointment. Were you surprised, and why do you think the committeepeople chose you?
I talked about the people that live in this district, I talked about the diversity in this district, I talked about the historic opportunity we have here to appoint a state senator who comes directly from those lived experiences of tens of thousands of people, and I think that message resonated in the public forum. I think it resonated with the committeepeople as well. We’re at a moment of racial reckoning in this country. The argument around diverse representation for the most diverse Senate district and region in the state would be compelling to anybody who was making that choice.
A lot of the interest in this appointment was because of the process — the fact that your predecessor resigned at the beginning of her term, and it looked like there was going to be a handoff to a handpicked insider. Do you favor any reforms to the appointment process?
I am looking at new ways to make the appointment process more open and accessible. Some things can be required: that there be some public forum component to the appointment process. Can there be a minimum number of weeks between when the resignation occurs and when a decision is made on who the successor is going to be? Can we require that the deliberation on who the successor is be made open to the public, like we do for committee hearings and subcommittee hearings under the Open Meetings Act?
Would you like to see special elections, or do you feel the committeeperson process is such an entrenched part of Illinois’s political culture that all you can really do is reform it?
In spirit, I would like to see special elections be a part of the debate. But the reputation of that proposal is that it would replicate the status quo, because you still have a short period of time to mobilize and put a campaign together and raise the money to put out a message. That would benefit people who are already insiders.
Illinois Indivisible, one of the groups that pushed for a more fair appointment process, was asking that the appointee not run in 2022. Are you planning to?
I am, yes. The argument around having a person of color, an LGBTQ person to become the state senator on the merits of representation was a compelling one. It would be a disservice to people who have never had a voice representing them the way I can to just be there for two years. Half the people in this district are people of color, and I think it’s long overdue for that population to have a voice.
How did your family come to live in Lincoln Square, and how has that influenced your positions on housing?
My family was the first family to move into scattered-site public housing that had just been built for the first time on the North Side of Chicago in 1981, at Foster and Lincoln. Prior to that, public housing residents were isolated in poor areas, and typically they were in high rises. The Supreme Court made a decision that said you can’t continue to segregate poor people and Black people in low-income housing. The court pushed the Chicago Housing Authority to create this pilot, so they started building these three flats around Lincoln Square, Rogers Park, Humboldt Park, Logan Square. That’s how I grew up. I was the result of good policy and programming. Growing up in Lincoln Square allowed me to have access to a grocery store. River Park was right down the street. I went to Budlong Elementary School, and I was assaulted by a security guard for being gay. That’s what put me on a path to going to Catholic school. I went to high school at St. Ignatius.
Right now, deadline on the eviction moratorium is March 6. Do you favor extending that, and if so, how much further?
My position would be to extend it indefinitely until we have brought the coronavirus under control. That would mean that a sizable majority of our most vulnerable population is vaccinated.
Is there anything else you favor to help people who are rent stressed as a result of the pandemic?
We should be looking for ways to create rent abatements for families paying more than a third of their income on rent. Those are people who are not going to be able to spend money on food and groceries and medical bills, prescriptions. That would be something we could work with the Biden Administration on, to create a whole new policy initiative similar to the Earned Income Tax Credit. This could be a good candidate for a Community Development Block Grant, or Emergency Shelter Assistance. We can look to expand on some of those definitions of existing block grants.
Housing activists are campaigning to lift the state’s ban on rent control. Are you in favor of that?
I represent a district where gentrification is coming, and a number of residents have been pushed out or displaced. Uptown is ground zero for it. You’re starting to see it in Edgewater and Rogers Park. I would absolutely support rent control. I think we should regulate rent in the same way they do in New York and other municipalities, to prevent excessive upward pressure on rent.
Here’s an LGBTQ issue that’s come up in other states: Do you favor allowing transgender athletes to compete in high school sports? Some people believe it introduces an unfair advantage.
Absolutely. In this district, there are a number of people who are gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, non-binary, gender non-conforming. At the end of the day, there’s a sizable section of my constituency that believes that gender is an arbitrary social criteria. I will do anything to bring honor and dignity to that population.
The Fair Tax failed last November. Do you have any ideas for making the state’s tax system more progressive, given that we still have a flat tax?
We should look into closing corporate loopholes. For a longer structural issue, the graduated income tax may have to come back to the voters next year.
It lost pretty resoundingly. How could you come back and turn that around?
You need to engage some people that aren’t voting, that maybe didn’t vote in 2020 that would come out and vote in 2022. That requires good organization and good messaging. My feeling is that if most people understood the social justice implications of having a progressive income tax structure, they would be open to supporting it.
You took a sabbatical a few years ago and went to Africa to look at the source of the slave trade. What did you learn and how did that affect your policy outlook?
This really is a reflection of my intersectional heritage. My mom was a Black American woman; my dad is an Ethiopian immigrant. He came over after the Red Terror. I went to West Africa for several months and traveled from country to country because I wanted to see where my ancestors once lived.
Then I went to Europe, to see some of the less developed countries in Eastern Europe and get a sense of, What is injustice? What does oppression look like in other parts of the world? I went through the Balkan countries: Bosnia, Albania. When I got back to the States, Trump was in his sixth or seventh month in the White House. I almost didn’t want to come back. It really afforded me a great deal of agency that brought me to start my company, Blue Sky Strategies, and my work to develop anti-racist public policy.
What are the first bills you plan to introduce?
I am really interested in introducing legislation that will tackle economic insecurity in this district. I want to create tax credits that give single moms a better chance at raising their children and navigating the system, particularly on the North Side, where everything is really expensive. I know from my own experience growing up and watching my mother struggle, and a program like the Earned Income Tax Credit or [Children’s Health Insurance Program] can make the difference for people living on the brink.
You represent a diverse district, but the North Side is expensive. How do you make sure the district stays diverse despite the economic pressures?
We have to look at affordable housing. Some of those solutions are going to be about finding the right mix of block grants and public development. You asked me about rent control, or capping rent increases. These are things we’ve avoided for decades.
I wouldn’t have grown up in Lincoln Square if I wasn’t fortunate enough to grow up in public housing. I know a lot of people are ashamed of public housing. I’m not. I think integrated, scattered-site housing is good policy.
The Handoff That Wasn’ton February 12, 2021 at 3:46 pm Read More »
Chicago Bears should avoid temptation of signing J.J. Watton February 12, 2021 at 3:35 pm

A premium name just hit the free agent market in defensive end J.J. Watt, but the Chicago Bears should stay away.
After a fallout with the Houston Texans and their overly dysfunctional organization, Watt had asked for his release. The Texans did the right thing by obliging, and Watt will now be free to find a new team.
Chicago Blackhawks stunned in incredibly entertaining gameon February 12, 2021 at 12:00 pm

The Chicago Blackhawks and Columbus Blue Jackets gave all hockey fans a treat on Thursday night.
If you don’t have a team in the fight, you got what everyone wants in a hockey game. There was skill, energy, and awesome performances by many players on each team. If this was the first hockey game that anyone ever watched in their life, they are fans forever now. Both teams had a lot to be happy about but there are also plenty of things to work on.
Chicago Bears could consider these former superstar free agentson February 12, 2021 at 1:00 pm

High school basketball scoresSun-Times Staff Reporton February 11, 2021 at 11:37 pm

All the scores from around the area
Please send scores and corrections to [email protected]
Thursday, February 11, 2021
CATHOLIC – CROSSOVER
St. Ignatius at Loyola, 7:30
EAST SUBURBAN CATHOLIC
Nazareth at Notre Dame, 7:00
NIC – 10
Boylan at Auburn, 7:30
Freeport at Harlem, 7:30
Guilford at Belvidere, 7:30
Hononegah at Rockford East, 7:30
Jefferson at Belvidere North, 7:30
NORTHEASTERN ATHLETIC
Alden-Hebron at South Beloit, 6:00
Christian Life at Christian Liberty, 7:30
Our Lady Sacred Heart at Harvest Christian, 6:00
Parkview Christian at Schaumburg Christian, 7:30
NORTHERN LAKE COUNTY
Antioch at North Chicago, 7:00
Grant at Grayslake North, 7:15
Lakes at Round Lake, at Magee MS, 7:00
Wauconda at Grayslake Central, 7:15
SOUTH SUBURBAN – RED
Reavis at Eisenhower, 6:00
SOUTH SUBURBAN – CROSSOVER
Argo at Oak Forest, 5:30
Evergreen Park at Hillcrest, 5:00
Shepard at Lemont, 7:00
NON CONFERENCE
Donovan at Watseka, 7:30
Johnsburg at Elgin, 7:30
St. Charles East at Mundelein, 7:30
Wheaton-Warr. South at Metea Valley, CNL
Many schools livestream games on the NFHS Network, which often charges fans to watch. However, several local schools stream games on their own that are free to watch. Some schools do all the games, some just home games and some select games.
If your school streams games, please send a link to the channel or home page to [email protected]. Here’s a list of all the schools that have submitted links so far.
RELATED
High school basketball livestreams
High school basketball scoresSun-Times Staff Reporton February 11, 2021 at 11:37 pm Read More »
6 Safe Ways to Celebrate Valentine’s Day in Chicago, 2021Audrey Snyderon February 11, 2021 at 8:18 pm
While being with the people we love and finding connection in the world is difficult right now, we can find ways to mark special occasions and let our loved ones know that we care. Maybe you’ve spent way more time than you ever imagined hanging out indoors in your pajamas with your significant other in the past year, but it’s still possible to find reasons to dress up, show up, and spend some quality time together. Here are six ways you can celebrate the perfect Valentine’s Day in Chicago while still being safe and conscious of the times.
Go ice skating
There are several ice rinks maintained by the Chicago Park District, where you can wear your cutest winter hat and hold hands with your boo while you get used to your rented skates (available for a small fee). Just make sure you check the schedule for open skate times before you bundle up!
Get a couple’s massage
Considering the snow-shoveling tension (not to mention pandemic-related, existential tension) in your shoulders, you and your honey deserve a couple’s massage. Much-loved spots like Allyu Spa, Massage Evolved, and Hand & Stone Massage and Facial Spa all offer couple’s massage packages.
Go to a drive-in movie
ChiTown Movies in Pilsen offers a fun, unique movie-going experience that offers both classic cinematic hits and more contemporary selections. It’s all upgraded by a straight-to-you-car food delivery service that promises popcorn, wings, and all sorts of other goodies.
Enjoy some romantic music
Fulton Street Collective continues to facilitate live-streaming performances by some of Chicago’s best musicians, including a special Valentine’s Day show by the Myles Hayes Quintet. The livestream is free, but tipping the band is one way to show some love this Valentine’s Day.
Have a (safe) dinner for two
You can have a delicious meal with your cuddle buddy without putting on your coat and shoes! Order a special Valentine’s Day Dinner for Two from Uvae Kitchen and Wine Bar, a “Won’t You ‘Beef’ My Valentine?” Package from El Che Steakhouse, or endless combinations from the Valentine’s Day take-out menu at La Josie.
Make your own elixir of love
Play bartender(s) at home with to-go cocktails and kits! Follow provided recipes or go ham with an assortment of liquors, syrups, and other ingredients to create something that is sure to impress your S.O. Check out the goodies on offer at bars like The Whistler, The Violet Hour, and Lost Lake.
Featured Image Credit by Myriams-Fotos from Pixabay
The post 6 Safe Ways to Celebrate Valentine’s Day in Chicago, 2021 appeared first on UrbanMatter.



:strip_exif(true):strip_icc(true):no_upscale(true):quality(65)/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/gmg/CECDIFTDUJCDPBRLM3WAORZZRA.jpg)

Leave a comment