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The Chicago Blackhawks have a lot of great prospects playing around the world that they are excited about. There are also a few prospects that they haven’t drafted that will be in heavy consideration at the 2023 NHL Draft depending on where they select.

To watch one Blackhawks prospect in particular, fans might have tuned into the game on Saturday afternoon between Michigan and Ohio State. The two teams took their rivalry outside as they played at First Energy Stadium, the home of the Cleveland Browns.

In this game, Blackhawks fans had their eye on Frank Nazar who they selected in the first round of the 2022 NHL Draft. This is looking like a really nice selection because he is a very good player when he is healthy.

Unfortunately for him, his Michigan team lost this big game to Ohio State by a final score of 4-2. They were never able to stay in the game as every time Michigan scored, they allowed the Buckeyes to get another one right away. That includes an OSU short-handed goal.

The Chicago Blackhawks have a lot of faith in Frank Nazar going forward.

Nazar did get on the scoresheet, however, as he had an assist on the second Michigan goal. This was a big moment for him in his collegiate career because he was able to collect a point on such a big stage.

Now that this big matchup on a big stage is over, Nazar has a huge second half ahead of him. He didn’t play for most of the first half because of the season because of an injury but he has come back and made an impact right away. He has all of the talent in the world needed to succeed.

Michigan has great players on the team that will help elevate Nazar. Guys like Luke Hughes, Seamus Casey, and Adam Fantilli are all going to be NHL stars. He is in a great situation that will help him develop ahead of his NHL debut.

In the case of Fantilli, he will be the second overall pick in June which could be made by the Blackhawks. That is something to keep an eye on as well as Nazar when you watch Michigan hockey for the rest of the year.

Nazar is one of many good Blackhawks prospects to be excited about right now. The cool thing is that they aren’t even close to being done rebuilding so he has a chance to be part of a very special prospect farm. If he keeps playing and developing as he has up to this point, he can be an NHL star.

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White Sox’ Lucas Giolito doesn’t need contract year for incentive — but it can’t hurt

GLENDALE, Ariz. — This very could well be Lucas Giolito’s last season in a White Sox uniform.

There’s no avoiding the reality of that probability, and that Giolito will be pitching for a new contract as he hits free agency after the season. For the Sox, that might be a good thing, knowing Giolito will be motivated to the nines knowing a nine-figure contract would be in reach should he return to his staff ace form of 2019-21.

But knowing Giolito is to also know he’s not the sort who needs a contract year for incentive. Giolito beat himself up after every poor outing of his disappointing 2022 season, when he posted an 11-9 record and 4.90 ERA.

“He’s the type of guy if something he’s not happy with, he’s the first one in my office the very next day,” pitching coach Ethan Katz said. “He’s very hard on himself. And he works extremely hard and that’s why he’s probably so hard on himself. He wants to be really good and he wants the results now.”

Believing a bigger body would benefit him, the 6-6 Giolito gained 20 pounds came to camp at a bulked up 280 pounds last spring. He suffered a lower abdominal strain on Opening Day.

Wanting to be “more athletic” this season, Giolito ate better, cutting down on fatty foods and hit the gym.

“His body is in a much better spot than it was last year after everything we went through,” pitching coach Ethan Katz said. “That was the goal, to get it back to where it’s been. And he’s in phenomenal shape. His strength numbers are as good as they were last year with all that weight.”

Now it’s a matter of the Sox making sure Giolito doesn’t overwork himself during camp.

“He’s coming in great shape. He looks the part,” Katz said.

Whether it translates into a cleaner delivery and mechanics and upticks in velocity remains to be seen. There are numerous factors involved.

“It’s still early. Guys are still building up,” Katz said.

The Sox collectively say they’re motivated after last season’s 81-81 disappointment. Giolito is part of large pack of individuals in that regard.

“I just took last year’s failure as big time motivation,” said Giolito, who finished sixth, seventh and 11th in America League Cy Young voting in 2019, 2020 and 2020, “so I worked really hard in the gym, kind of revamped, just the focus and attention to every little area when it comes to getting my body in the correct shape so my muscles are strong, loose, and I’m able to explode when I want to.”

As for the next contract, Giolito — who will be paid $10.4 million this season — isn’t dwelling on it.

“If that’s something that’s on my mind I can start to add pressure on myself that I don’t really want to add,” he said. “We already have enough in the sense of what we want to do as an organization, as a team, coming after such a disappointment last season.

“Looking around camp, seeing so many guys show up in great shape and watching bullpens and just unreal stuff right now, our focus is on righting the ship from last year and going out and playing really good White Sox baseball. If I do my part doing that, then everything else will take care of itself.”

Manager Pedro Grifol, who is eyeballing the Sox roster up close for the first time, says Giolito looks very confident in camp. On Saturday, Giolito pitched to live hitters.

“He toed that rubber and he was in command,” Grifol said. “He did a great job this offseason in putting himself in tremendous shape. He looks strong, he feels strong. Now it’s just a matter of building his work capacity up, and his baseball work capacity. He’s going to be in a really good spot.”

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White Sox pitching coach Ethan Katz on Liam Hendriks: ‘The guy is unbelievable’

White Sox pitching coach Ethan Katz got choked up talking about closer Liam Hendriks Saturday.

“It’s amazing. It brought a lot of joy to be able to see him,” Katz said of Hendriks, who is undergoing treatment for cancer but is checking in regularly at the Sox spring training complex almost daily. “He’s a special person, and having him around is great.”

Hendriks threw a bullpen on Friday, Katz said.

“This guy’s unbelievable. He really is,” Katz said. “He’ll be back on the field as soon as he can.”

In the meantime, the Sox will open the season using multiple ninth-inning options.

“We’ll figure it out as it goes,” Katz said. “We’ve got a long time to kind of piece this together. You can’t replace him. But we’re going to be creative, match up as best we can, and we have a lot of good options down there. So we’ll figure it out.”

*The Sox will televise six Cactus League games on NBC Sports Chicago, including the opener Feb. 25 vs. San Diego from Camelback Ranch (2:05 p.m. CST) and home game vs. Cubs Feb. 17.

ESPN Radio Chicago (AM-1000) will air 10 Cactus League games, beginning with the opener.

*Also on Feb. 17, former Sox organist Nancy Faust will play organ at Camelback Ranch.

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Third base position battle gives Cubs’ David Ross plenty of directions to consider

MESA, ARIZ. – When the Cubs signed Edwin R?os to a one-year deal Friday, the position battle at third base got a little tighter.

“We’re going to try to line everybody up for success,” manager David Ross said Saturday. “Defense is going to matter for sure; we’re built on defense. But adding some power to the lineup always helps. Good at-bats, base hits, how it matches up with the pitcher that day, all those things are [factors].”

On the 40-man roster, the Cubs have five third base options with different hitting profiles. Patrick Wisdom is a right-handed power hitter who led the team in home runs (25) last season – but also in strikeouts (183).

Nick Madrigal is a right-handed hitter whose strength has traditionally been contact. But in his first season with the Cubs, returning from a hamstring surgery that cut his 2021 season short, he hit a career-worst .249 and landed on the IL with a series of injuries.

“Looking back, it all kind of stemmed from the hamstring not being totally ready,” Madrigal said of those injuries. “But there’s not a doubt in my mind right now, I feel great overall.”

Christopher Morel started his MLB career with a debut home run and franchise-record 22-game on-base streak when he jumped from Double-A to the big-leagues last year, showing that at his best he can do both. But his bat cooled off as the season progressed, making consistency the next step in his development.

Zach McKinstry added a left-handed bat to the Cubs’ utility player mix when they acquired him from the Dodgers at the trade deadline last year. With more consistent playing time, he started to find his rhythm at the plate.

R?os is a left-handed power hitter whose playing time also suffered on a deep Dodgers team.

“He’s got a really, really natural, solid swing,” said new Cubs outfielder Cody Bellinger, who played with R?os in Los Angeles. “He’s shown that it’s played. And I’m excited to see him healthy again because I’ve seen him. When he’s healthy, he’s very, very good.”

Miles Mastrobuoni has also played some third base but is primarily a middle infielder and corner outfielder.

Wisdom, Madrigal, Morel, McKinstry and R?os can also play multiple positions.

Head start

Most Cubs position players have already reported to camp, days before the first official full squad workout on Monday.

“Coming in a couple days early, before things officially start, it’s always nice to just get acclimated,” new Cubs first baseman Eric Hosmer said. “So, once the first official day gets going, it doesn’t feel like it’s a rush. And you’re kind of settled in and settled down a little bit. So, that’s been extremely helpful so far.”

Said Bellinger: “It’s been really fun. The environment, the coaches, the players, … it’s super fun and super refreshing.”

Extra BP

On Saturday, six pitchers threw live batting practice: Javier Assad, Mark Leiter Jr., Brad Boxberger, Vinny Nittoli and Tyler Duffey. The workout featured the most live sessions of any day of camp so far.

Jameson Taillon, Roenis El?as, Rowan Wick, Michael Rucker, Justin Steele and Adrian Sampson have also thrown live BP this spring training.

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Former Sun-Times baseball writer Joe Goddard dies

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Joe Goddard, a long-time baseball writer affectionately known as “Young Joe” around baseball press boxes while he covered the White Sox and Cubs for the Chicago Sun-Times, died peacefully surrounded by his family Friday. He was 85.

Goddard, who was twice nominated for induction into the writers’ wing of the National Baseball Hall of Fame, was a Cubs and White Sox beat writer for the Sun-Times for 27 years. He worked at the paper from 1964 to 2006.

“We called him ‘Young Joe’ because he acted young and thought young and always had that little dickens smile. He was a joy to be around, both in and out of the press box,” said Hall of Fame baseball writer Dick Kaegel, who covered the Kansas City Royals and St. Louis Cardinals while Goddard was on the baseball beat for the Sun-Times.

Goddard started his career at the Indianapolis Times in 1961 and spent one year covering the Indianapolis Indians, then a Triple-A affiliate of the White Sox.

He spent nine years working on the Sun-Times copy desk before taking over the Cubs beat at the end of the 1973 season from Hall of Fame writer Edgar Munzel.

“I met Joe in the 1980s. Every baseball writer in the country knew and liked Joe,” Sun-Times sports editor Chris De Luca said. “He was a different breed from a different era. It’s hard to imagine Joe without a smile. He will be missed.”

Goddard was emotional when he received the nomination for the J.G. Taylor Spink Award in 2003.

“Everybody who is in there is an idol of mine,” Goddard said at the time of the writers’ wing. “I worked with many of those guys when I first started. I’m sort of the last of the gentlemen era, where everybody wore ties–and I did, too.”

Goddard grew up in Iverness and attended Palatine High School and DePauw University, and grew up a fan of the Cubs.

“Then the ‘Go-Go’ Sox came along [in the 1950s] and really swept me away,” he once said.

Goddard attended his final Sox game last summer with his wife, Carol and other family members as a guest of Sox chairman Jerry Reinsdorf.

“Joe Goddard was the classic, old-time baseball beat reporter,” Reinsdorf said. “They truly don’t make them like Joe anymore. His coverage of Chicago baseball went back decades. Joe loved the game, the travel, the life, was a reporter who developed relationships across clubhouses and front offices and broke story after story, all while scribbling his notes on tightly folded pieces of paper. He will be missed and his byline always remembered.”

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Blackhawks prospect Samuel Savoie modeling Max Domi while preparing for NHL future

Realistically, Blackhawks forward prospect Samuel Savoie is at least a couple years away from the NHL.

But he’s already mindful of the steps he needs to take — including those he can take right now — to eventually get there. In contrast to the masses of prospects who harp on taking things day-by-day and focusing solely on their current junior (or college) team, Savoie is simultaneously doing that and looking toward the future.

“The self-awareness he has to realize the type of player he is, and how he needs to play to be most effective, is good to see,” Hawks assistant general manager Mark Eaton said.

Savoie’s feisty, relentless style naturally lends itself to comparisons, and Andrew Shaw is one that has already been thrown around a lot. Even Eaton mentioned it unprompted.

But Savoie, being an 18-year-old just drafted by the Hawks in the third round last summer, thinks of Max Domi instead. He looked up to Domi at NHL training camp back in September — during which he played in two preseason games — and tried to learn from Domi’s approach.

“I took some tools from [the pro players] and some little things they do and how they act,” Savoie said. “It’s the tiny things all those pros did. They stretch; they take care of their body; they’re in the cold bath; they’re in the hot tub; they’re eating well. All that kind of stuff is really important for me, especially the way I play.

“I play super competitive with an edge, and I need a lot of fuel and energy. So to see a guy like Max Domi, the way he treats himself, [was influential]. He also needs that energy and he has been doing great. That kind of stuff he was doing, I try to bring to my game.”

It turns out Savoie made an impression on Domi, too.

“I loved that kid,” Domi said. “He worked so hard every shift. I really enjoyed getting to know him. … He’s pretty fearless out there, and he can shoot a puck, too. He’s going to have a great career.”

Domi does indeed place a heavy emphasis on taking care of his body at all times — be it before or after a practice or game, or even at home on an off-day — so Savoie picked a good role model for that.

Savoie’s forward-looking mindset doesn’t seem to be detracting from his current play, either.

In his third season of Canadian junior hockey, playing for the QMJHL’s Gatineau Olympiques, his production has surged from 33 points in 64 games last season to 50 points in 44 games this season (entering Saturday).

November represented his true breakout month: he tallied at least one point in all 11 games during it, accumulating 19 total. He also, more recently, enjoyed a five-point game on Feb. 4.

“This year is to show what I’m all about — to show I can be an edgy guy, a guy that hits and all that, but I can also play on the top lines and score goals,” he said. “I’ve gotten a lot of chances, and my teammates are really helping me with that. I’ve been doing really good. It’s more [about having] confidence, the poise of making plays.”

On the Hawks’ side, development coaches Erik Condra and Kendall Coyne Schofield have worked most closely with Savoie, but Eaton has also been impressed.

“The sheer skating ability, power to his stride, the competitiveness and the energy he brings day-in and day-out, it’s contagious and made an immediate impression on everyone in Chicago,” Eaton said. “Every time you watch him play in the ‘Q,’ he brings that.

“He has a great sense of who he is, what he brings to the table and how he can most positively impact the game.”

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Our Favorite Chicago Sports Bromances Throughout the Years

Love is in the air! That’s right, Chicago sports fans, today is Valentine’s day and here at UrbanMatter Chicago we love celebrating love. If you’re spending time with a special someone this year then hopefully you’ve figured out a gift by now and made reservations for date night. But if not, don’t sweat it, because we’ve got you covered with our fool-proof Valentine’s day gift guide and list of 17 fun date ideas to get you back on track.You can thank us later.

For those of you who woke up a bit more prepared today – let’s kickoff V-day 2023 with some of our favorite Chicago sports bromances of all time!

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Thx man, seriously though what’s with the no-follow https://t.co/odMLlU0XWI

— Jonathan Toews (@JonathanToews) May 4, 2016

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Kane and Toews

If this Chicago sports bromance was a person, it’d be old enough to drive. We’re starting off our list with one of the strongest sports bromances in history: Patrick Kane and Johnathan Toews.

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This bromance started way back in the year 2007 when Kane was drafted to the Chicago Blackhawks a year after Toews was selected. Since then, the duo has gone on to win three Stanley Cup championships and five times the amount of NHL All-Star appearances combined. While their bromance started in the late 2000’s, it would take another ten years for the two to follow each other on Twitter (see above).

Just goes to show that every couple has their own unique love story.

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It’s a night of crying and pouring my feelings into ice cream now that Bryzzo is over 😢. JK congrats u 2 lovebirds💑 https://t.co/1dSo4JpLqf

— Anthony Rizzo (@ARizzo44) December 30, 2015

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Bryant and Rizzo

This next Chicago sports bromance is – or was – so official that it had its own cute pet name. Just like Bennifer and Brangelina, Kris Bryant and Anthony Rizzo formed their own super-sport couple in Bryzzo.

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Like Kane and Toews, the Bryzzo couple also won a championship together in the historic 106-year World Series drought winning season of 2015-2016. But for Bryzzo, things got even more serious when the two hooked up for their own Bryzzo ad campaign.

All good things gotta come to an end, and prior to both players being traded from the Cubs in 2021, the couple seemed to fizzle out after Bryant announced his engagement towards the end of 2015. Which, naturally, led to another entertaining Twitter thread (see above, again.)

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Kmet and Graham

Nothing appeared to be tighter than the love these two Chicago Bears tight ends had for each other just a few years ago. They may not have their own pet name, but for Cole Kmet and Jimmy Graham the bromance was real in the tight end room.

During an interview on NBC Sports Chicago’s Countdown to Kickoff, both players had nothing but positive things to say about one another and the veteran Graham said that he’d always be a mentor for the young Kmet. We like to believe he’s kept his word over the years because there’s no question that Cole Kmet has established himself as a strong receiving weapon on the Bears roster.

Mooney and Fields

Our final Chicago sports bromance is one of the fresher ones we’re featuring, but that doesn’t mean the connection isn’t as strong. Like seriously, what’s stronger than a connection between a quarterback and their wide receiver?

During their offseason last summer, Justin Fields and Darnell Mooney had plenty of time to workout together and build up their connection on and off the field. In an interview posted on the team’s Facebook page, both players spoke highly of each other’s work ethic as professionals and their qualities as people.

This past season saw the Mooney-Fields connection lead the team in big yardage receiving plays (20+ yards) with seven and yards per game at 41.1. We sure hope their connection stays strong for years to come!

Featured Image Credit: Chicago Bears Instagram

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