Videos

Cubs add 3 players to 40-man roster; Sign 7 MiLB free agents this weekon November 21, 2020 at 2:44 pm

Cubs Den

Cubs add 3 players to 40-man roster; Sign 7 MiLB free agents this week

Read More

Cubs add 3 players to 40-man roster; Sign 7 MiLB free agents this weekon November 21, 2020 at 2:44 pm Read More »

Whiteness Protected My Parents Each Time the Police Were Calledon November 21, 2020 at 3:37 pm

Portrait of an Adoption

Whiteness Protected My Parents Each Time the Police Were Called

Read More

Whiteness Protected My Parents Each Time the Police Were Calledon November 21, 2020 at 3:37 pm Read More »

With passion for fans, Night Train Veeck eager to build new Chicago soccer franchiseon November 21, 2020 at 2:00 pm

The Veeck name is synonymous with a passion for sports fans. William Night Train Veeck doesn’t need to be reminded of his family lore, though his love of those sports fans isn’t just a product of his genealogy.

“Obviously, (the Veeck name) comes with a healthy dose of history, but I did kind of roll the genetic dice and come out the way that I am,” Veeck told the Chicago Sun-Times. “There is a little bit there behind it and behind the name Veeck, but at the same time, I think at the other end of that double-edged sword, my love for the fan and sports in general has really come to fruition.

“I started and learned it at a very young age,” he added. “There’s a lot of healthy love for that there already.”

Now Veeck, the 34-year-old grandson of the legendary Bill Veeck, will apply that love to his role as COO of the new Chicago franchise in the National Independent Soccer Association. A third-division league, the NISA was founded in 2017 and stresses its openness and independence. Teams own their marks and have freedom to operate as they please, and there are no territorial restrictions stopping clubs from setting up shop where they want.

Aiming to begin playing in Aug. 2021, the Chicago franchise is helmed by Peter Wilt, who launched the Fire and Red Stars among others. Veeck said he was drawn to the project by Wilt’s background in the game, how they share a belief in transparency with fans, and a desire to build a franchise.

It helped, Veeck said, that the opportunity came to work with the “Johnny Appleseed” of US soccer.

“Night Train is a passionate man of the fan, and I look forward to him rededicating that passion back into the Chicago community,” Wilt told the team website. “He lives and breathes the fan experience and is a massive believer in delivering that experience to everyone that enters the gates. Train has successfully implemented numerous fan-centric campaigns on two continents and is no stranger to rolling a tarp, which I appreciate.”

Veeck indeed has a diverse set of experiences.

He spent 6 1/2 years with the White Sox, working in group sales and as manager of fan engagement. He broke into baseball when he was hired by the South Atlantic League’s Charleston RiverDogs, becoming the fourth generation of his family to work in the sport. More recently, Veeck was employed by Cricket Australia, serving as league fan engagement specialist for their Big Bash League.

From all of those stops, Veeck said he learned he has an ability to engage with fans in their areas and levels while generating communities. He’ll be tasked to do the same in Chicago for a startup franchise trying to gain traction during a pandemic.

“If I can go to Australia and work with cricket fans in a sport I didn’t know and now have grown to love as well,” Veeck said, “I think I can probably do pretty well over here back in Chicago.”

Read More

With passion for fans, Night Train Veeck eager to build new Chicago soccer franchiseon November 21, 2020 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears: Ryan Pace continues to fool the McCaskeyson November 21, 2020 at 1:00 pm

Read More

Chicago Bears: Ryan Pace continues to fool the McCaskeyson November 21, 2020 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears: What to watch for during team’s bye weekon November 21, 2020 at 2:00 pm

Read More

Chicago Bears: What to watch for during team’s bye weekon November 21, 2020 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Thanksgiving Craft Beer Week, November 23-26on November 21, 2020 at 5:59 am

The Beeronaut

Chicago Thanksgiving Craft Beer Week, November 23-26

Read More

Chicago Thanksgiving Craft Beer Week, November 23-26on November 21, 2020 at 5:59 am Read More »

Opening day: A snapshot from opening day of Illinois’ first firearm deer seasonon November 21, 2020 at 1:47 am

By 8 a.m. Friday, I debated shucking my bibs and considered hunting the afternoon in sneakers. Opening day for Illinois’ first firearm deer season came in almost too nice. But today and Sunday will be different with rain (maybe snow spits) and cooler temperatures.

By noon Friday, hunters had reported 6,669 deer, said Dan Skinner, forest wildlife program manager for the Illinois Department of Natural Resources.

“Last year through Friday noon, we were at 5,377,” he texted. “Had a lot of standing corn in Illinois last year to start firearm season.”

This year was different.

“We had pretty good conditions across the state, though some hunters might think it is too warm,” he said.

The warmth was notable.

Curt Pazdro messaged a photo of a big 11-point buck shot out of the stand of his son, All-American bass angler Wyatt, who was in class at McKendree.

Gary Bloom messaged a photo of Erin Henne with a 12-point buck shot early Friday in Edwards County. Bloom, the great all-around outdoorsman in Chicago, missed the season with a mild case of COVID.

The pandemic brought the biggest change. The IDNR closed deer-check stations in CWD counties. But biologists stressed that hunters should still have deer tested for CWD and must report their harvest before 10 p.m.

“I want to take a moment and emphasize the NEED to still collect CWD samples!” hunter heritage biologist Nicky Strahl emailed. “We still do not recommend consuming CWD positive meat, and the only way to know if it is CWD positive is to get it tested. We have our biologists able to do that, several barrels, and of course our fantastic vendors that are working with us in sample collection.”

For CWD test drop-offs, go to www2.illinois.gov/dnr/programs/CWD/Documents/CWDSamplingLocations.pdf.

The other important reminder is that hunters used to checking their deer in at a check station must now report their deer by 10 p.m. by calling (866) 452-4325 or online at https://www.il.wildlifelicense.com/harvestReport/harvestReport.php.

First light on Friday, opening day of firearm deer season in Illinois, the finest hour of the year for many of us. Credit: Dale Bowman
First light on Friday, opening day of firearm deer season in Illinois, the finest hour of the year for many of us.
Dale Bowman

Read More

Opening day: A snapshot from opening day of Illinois’ first firearm deer seasonon November 21, 2020 at 1:47 am Read More »

Sam Smith sings through the pain on Love Goeson November 20, 2020 at 11:00 pm

It seems crazy to me that the new Love Goes is only Sam Smith’s third album. The UK singer-songwriter made their debut in 2014 with the international breakout In the Lonely Hour, but it feels like they’ve been a go-to modern torch singer for much longer. Perhaps that’s partly due to the strange passage of time during quarantine, where a month can simultaneously feel like a decade and like five minutes. Love Goes doesn’t make it much easier to tell how long it’s been, since on first listen it’s not a clear leap forward from Smith’s previous records; its moods and sounds are similar to those on The Lonely Hour, and its lyrics feel like reexaminations of relationships introduced there. But closer attention reveals that Smith’s perspective on the tangled web of love has evolved over the past six years–the themes haven’t changed, but the takes have matured. Their lush voice commands attention, even through the forest of dance-pop production on “Diamonds,” which Smith created with Swedish songwriter-producers Shellback and Oscar Gorres, aka OzGo (separately and together, the two of them have made music for the likes of Britney Spears and Pink). “Diamonds” isn’t an outlier here: every song inhabits that familiar contemporary pop space where mournful heartbreak mixes with gentle dance beats. The guest artists on Love Goes also help center the album in 2020: Nigerian singer Burna Boy brings welcome flavors of reggaeton and R&B to the otherwise straightforward pop of “My Oasis,” and UK singer-songwriter Labrinth enhances the title track’s majesty with vocal harmonies and symphonic production. Smith skillfully evokes the defensiveness and sadness of the devastated on the album’s minimalist but anthemic opener, “Young”: “I’ve done nothing wrong / I’m young,” they sing, their voice shadowed by synth harmonies that match the exact rhythm of their syllables. And on “Another One,” Smith begins with pointed mockery of an ex (“Oh congratulations / You found the one”) and continues with a raw piece of passive-aggressive advice (“I don’t want him to hurt like me / Just please treat him like he’s someone”). You can’t be so irredeemably cynical that Smith’s heartbreaks won’t resonate at least a little with your own experiences–and whether it’s 2014, 2020, or 2022, you better believe a bunch of us will be out here listening through the tears. v

Read More

Sam Smith sings through the pain on Love Goeson November 20, 2020 at 11:00 pm Read More »

Aya Nakamura delivers pure shots of intimate emotion on Ayaon November 20, 2020 at 9:50 pm

French-Malian singer Aya Nakamura expresses an effortless but firm candor in her lyrics (she sings in French) that’s cleanly mirrored in her music. Her breakout single, 2018’s “Djadja,” was a relentless kiss-off; its unwavering dancehall beat and bubbling synth percussion provided the perfect backdrop to Nakamura’s exhausted yet ferocious vocals. This synchronicity permeates her third LP, Aya (Warner). On opener “Plus Jamais” she sings, “I gave you my heart, I’ll never do it again,” then follows that confession with a spacious arrangement of pitch-shifted vocals, a soft synth wail, and a tumbling beat. On the forthright “Doudou” she calls out a lover while expressing a desire for more affection and honesty, and the song creates a fitting musical middle ground for exploring such mixed feelings: despite its shimmering steel-pan melodies and occasional burst of horn, it’s never quite boisterous. Fewer than half of the 15 tracks on Aya break the three-minute mark, and this brevity is crucial–it allows Nakamura’s emotions to come across undiluted, so that every song arrives like a pure shot of whatever feeling she’s eager to announce. Among the most potent is “Sentiments Grandissants,” where Nakamura sings amid gleefully fluttering arpeggiated percussion about the giddiness of having a crush. “Nirvana” is similarly sweet but more sensual; her voice drips with conviction and passion as the song’s nocturnal instrumental underlines her gratitude for her lover. Her previous album was titled Nakamura, and her choice of Aya here is fitting: it’s still all about her, but this more intimate portrait helps you feel like you’re on a first-name basis. v

Read More

Aya Nakamura delivers pure shots of intimate emotion on Ayaon November 20, 2020 at 9:50 pm Read More »