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Patrick Kane, Blackhawks both preparing for all possible trade scenarios

Patrick Kane hasn’t yet decided whether he’ll request or accept a trade away from the Blackhawks. He still plans to wait closer to the NHL’s March 3 trade deadline before making a firm decision.

But he is aware a few teams have reached out to his agent, Pat Brisson, to express interest. And he’s clearly not opposed to them doing so.

“We’ll figure out what team could be the best fit, but…it’s tough to decide if we’re getting to that point yet,” Kane said Monday. “There are definitely opportunities out there that are intriguing and could be exciting. We’ll see.”

One potential obstacle is Kane’s lingering lower-body injury. Various reports around the league have suggested some contenders are leery about it slowing him down. But Kane doesn’t share those concerns.

“When I get on the ice, it’s not like you’re thinking about anything else other than playing as well as you can,” he said. “That’s not something for me to worry about. [I’ll] just go about it the best I can.”

Kane has talked to Duncan Keith, who spent his final season with the Oilers after 16 with the Hawks, to get his perspective on the situation. Keith told Kane he’s “happy he got to experience being in a different organization” before he retired.

Kane has not yet talked to Hawks general manager Kyle Davidson, however, although he’s sure they’ll “at some point catch up.”

They most certainly will. On the other side of the aisle — within the front office — Davidson and everyone else are having “constant conversations” to plan for “every potential scenario, large to small,” CEO Danny Wirtz said.

Calls about possible trades spiked briefly after the Islanders and Canucks’ Bo Horvat blockbuster last week, coach Luke Richardson said, but have since quieted again.

The Hawks are nonetheless anticipating eventually moving some veterans out — whether or not Kane and Jonathan Toews are included in that exodus — to make room for their ready-to-graduate prospects in Rockford.

(Toews’ situation is no less confusing, after all. On Tuesday against the Ducks, he’ll miss a game due to illness for the third time in two months and second time in two weeks.)

“Everybody knows our plan moving forward is we have lots of young guys coming but they’re not here or maybe not ready yet,” Richardson said. “If there’s good hockey deals to be had that are going to help us to the next stage…they have a good plan.”

In the Hawks’ business and marketing branches, meanwhile, the outcome of the two trade sagas will also have major repercussions.

Tuesday marks the fifth-to-last home game before the deadline, with nine scheduled after it. They’ll host the Stars the last day before the deadline (March 2) and the Predators the first day after.

“How [Kane and Toews are] treated throughout the process, that’s going to be important to us,” business president Jaime Faulkner said. “They’re still on our team today; they’re still contributing in big ways. How do we continue to honor that with our fanbase?

“If they make decisions to leave, if things happen down the road, how do we make sure our fans get to say thank you, get to say goodbye? [How do we] celebrate if they stay? We need to be prepared for that. We’re trying to be as gracious as possible. They are the Blackhawks’ identity right now.”

If trades happen, the Hawks would need to “communicate very quickly” with fans to explain the decisions, Faulkner said.

They might need to hastily organize welcome-back ceremonies if the trades are with teams scheduled to visit the United Center before season’s end. And conversely, they might also need to make ticket-price adjustments to maintain steady attendance without their two biggest stars.

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Fire at Sims scrap metal yard in Pilsen sparks anger among neighbors

A fire at a controversial Pilsen scrap metal yard over the weekend is raising more concerns about the operation as it seeks a new city operating permit, Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th) said Monday.

Chicago firefighters were called to Sims Metal Management on Saturday afternoon after a fire started in a pile of scrap. It took more than an hour to put out the fire, and there were no reported injuries, a department spokesman said.

But Sigcho-Lopez is wary about a pattern of problems at Sims, which was sued by Illinois Atty. Gen. Kwame Raoul for alleged environmental violations in 2021. He’s seeking more information about the fire as well as air pollution monitoring.

“We’re really concerned about the safety of this operation,” Sigcho-Lopez said.

His office fielded complaints Saturday from neighbors who reported “strong chemical smells that are causing headaches and nausea.”

“My nostrils and my eyes watered immediately,” resident Roberto Monta?o told the Sun-Times.

The Chicago Fire Department was called to Sims Metal Management on Saturday after a fire started in pile of scrap. Nearby residents complained about strong chemical smells causing headaches and nausea.

Provided / Roberto Monta?o

Monta?o noticed the smell and the smoke as he was driving by the site, he said.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ordered Sims to install air monitors around its operation at 2500 S. Paulina last year. EPA gets monthly air data from Sims but asked that the company expedite its report for air quality readings for Saturday through Monday.

In 2021, Sims settled 15 city tickets for 30 violations issued the prior year, paying $18,000 and admitting no wrongdoing, records show. Among the accusations dropped were multiple citations for air pollution.

The Pilsen business is seeking what’s called a large recycling facility permit, similar to one denied for the relocated General Iron last year.

For decades, both General Iron and Sims shredded cars, large appliances and other scrap metal for reuse.

In a statement, Sims said it called the fire department “out of an abundance of caution” and apologized “for any concern this incident may have caused our community neighbors.”

City inspectors visited the site Monday.

“It’s very disturbing,” said Theresa McNamara, chairwoman of the Southwest Environmental Alliance.

Her coalition opposes Sims continuing to operate in Pilsen.

Brett Chase’s reporting on the environment and public health is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

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High school basketball: Monday’s scores

Monday, February 6, 2023

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL

University High at Francis Parker, 6:00

LITTLE TEN

IMSA at Serena, 7:00

NON CONFERENCE

Aquin at South Beloit, 7:00

Donovan at Milford, 7:15

Elmwood Park at Payton, 5:00

Foreman at Chicago Academy, 5:00

Glenbard West at St. Charles North, 7:00

Hancock at Ellison, 6:30

Henry-Senachwine at Stark County, 7:30

Herscher at Clifton Central, 7:00

Joliet Catholic at Lincoln-Way West, 6:30

Lake View at Steinmetz, 5:00

Lycee Francais at Ida Crown, 7:45

Marian Central at Harvest Christian, 7:00

Midland at Cornerstone Christian, 7:30

Mooseheart at Hiawatha, 7:00

Noble Academy at Collins, 5:30

Oak Forest at Rich, 6:30

Ridgewood at Wheeling, 7:00

Rochelle at Oregon, 7:15

Schaumburg Christian at Islamic Foundation, 6:30

LAKE SHORE ATHLETIC TOURNAMENT

Intrinsic-Downtown at Lycee Francais, 5:30

Wolcott at Horizon-McKinley, 5:30

PUBLIC LEAGUE PLAYOFFS – BLUE

Semi-Finals – at Dunbar

Manley vs. North Grand, 5:00

Little Village vs. Julian, 6:30

PUBLIC LEAGUE TOURNAMENT – BLUE 8

Championship

Carver vs. Goode

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The Chicago Bears are headed into this off-season with plenty of question marks. They have some assets that can help them make it happen.

That includes the most cap space in the NFL in addition to the first overall pick in the 2023 NFL Draft. Each of these things is going to very much help them build a better future.

The biggest thing that they need to do ahead of training camp is to make sure that Justin Fields is much more comfortable.

He needs better protection from his offensive line and he needs more weapons at his disposal. A better wide receiver room is one of the things.

Tee Higgins of the Cincinnati Bengals might be an option via trade this year. The Chicago Bears could absolutely use an elite receiver like that so if he is available, they should be all over it. They could land him in one of these three trades:

Bears Get
Tee Higgins
Bengals Get
Future Second-Round Pick
Future Sixth-Round Pick
Eddie Jackson

The Chicago Bears might be able to make this deal without a first involved.

The Chicago Bears might be able to get Tee Higgins for relatively cheap all things considered. If there was a deal that didn’t involve a future first-round pick, it might be a package like this.

A future second-round pick and a future sixth-round pick in addition to Eddie Jackson might be worth it for a receiver that can really help Justin Fields take it to the next level.

Jackson has been a great player for the Chicago Bears but he would be much better suited for a defense that is ready to win now and that is what the Bengals have. This trade would help him just as much as it helps the bears load up on offense.

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Chicago Bears should look to sign both of the top defensive tackles in free agency

Javon Hargrave and Daron Payne represent the top two defensive tackles in free agency, and the Chicago Bears should look to sign both of them.

The Chicago Bears can rebuild their defense in one off-season and can do it for a rather cheap cost.  The franchise tag money for a defensive tackle is $18.9-million.  If the Bears want to they can sign both Javon Hargrave and Daron Payne for the cost of one defensive tackle and Roquan Smith. A  Roqan Smith extension was in the price range of one defensive tackle and with Smith no longer a part of the equation and the Chicago Bears in need of defensive line help adding the top two free agents is within the range of what the Bears can afford while not ignoring other positions of importance.

In addition to signing the top two defensive tackles, the Bears could draft Will Anderson Jr.   This is not a knock on Jalen Carter, but a recognition that there isn’t a lot of free agency depth at the edge rusher spot.  The best edge rusher available likely isn’t as good as Will Anderson Jr coming out in the NFL draft.  The Chicago Bears could also bring back Justin Jones as a rotational defensive tackle in a backup role and truly solidify their front four in one off-season.

No it’s not advocating for a return to the defense being the primary driver of the Chicago Bears on Sunday, but a recognition of need, cost and value.  The WR market in free agency is slim and it’s just as slim in the draft.  The best receiver in the draft may not be better than Chase Claypool so it wouldn’t be an upgrade to trade down and then draft players you hope can contribute.

The Chicago Bears have only a three-year window left to compete with Justin Fields before he commands a large contract extension and needs to maximize cap space and value now.   Hoping to develop a player at the number nine overall spot or even further back doesn’t get as much value.  Waiting to draft and develop a player in 2024  does nothing to increase the odds of winning with Fields now.

So adding both Javon Hargrave and Daron Payne seem like the most logical step towards helping the Bears win within the window of Fields’ rookie deal.  The Bears are behind the curve on Fields in a big way.  Ryan Poles failed in a big way in trying to add players in Fields’ second year.  Now heading into Fields’ third year the hope is the Bears can develop enough chemistry on offense to bolster the odds of winning.  A tall task indeed.

So adding Hargrave as a 3-technique and Payne as a 1-technique in the 4-3 would be the best way to help bolster the Bears’ defense while hoping a healthy Claypool and Darnell Mooney and St. Brown can keep the Bears scoring points like they did from week 7-11.  Both defensive tackles went over 10 sacks on the season and would bolster both the run defense and the pass rush.

After adding Hargrave and Payne in free agency, the Bears can draft Will Anderson Jr first overall.  That would bolster their pass rush and help the young secondary to continue to build chemistry.  Unfortunately the 2023 NFL Draft is not deep at wide receiver or at the offensive line positions.  So the focus should be adding two starters on defense in free agency and then drafting the most impactful player in the draft in Will Anderson Jr.  Then by all means shift the focus to building up the offense with anything left over.

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RICJ Racial Justice Writers’ Room Launches

The Racial Justice Writers’ Room is part of RICJ’s Racial Justice Reporting Hub and Writers’ Room is funded by the Joseph and Bessie Feinberg Foundation. DePaul University’s Center for Communication Engagement is donating resources for the group’s in-person meetings.

The project was launched under former Chicago Reader co-publisher Karen Hawkins, who will be among eight mentors to support the first cohort. Reader editor in chief Enrique Limón will also serve as a mentor. Each applicant proposed a story for a project of their choice, and they will receive guidance and mentorship from other journalists throughout the reporting process. They will keep the rights to their work, and will be able to pitch their stories to any media outlet upon completion.

Judith McCray

Writers’ Room coordinator McCray is a multiple Emmy Award-winning broadcast journalist, documentary filmmaker, and media activist with more than 30 years of experience in television and media production. She has previously worked both full time and as an independent producer for public broadcasting stations WNET/New York, WTTW/Chicago, WBEZ/Chicago, WYCC/Chicago, WSIU/Carbondale, and on a weekly radio series on world affairs called Common Ground. She’s also written, directed and produced independent documentaries for PBS Primetime and national public television.

She is the Senior Professional in Residence in DePaul University’s journalism program, teaching documentary production, social justice reporting, media ethics, and broadcast writing.

Meet the  eight participants in the first Racial Justice Writers’ Room cohort, which starts Feb. 13.

Justin Agrelo

Justin Agrelo is a reporter from the northwest side of Chicago. He works as the Chicago community engagement reporter at The Trace, where he covers community-led responses to gun violence. In 2019, he earned his master’s from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism with a special focus on social justice and investigative reporting. 

Corli Jay

Corli Jay is a general assignment reporter for Crain’s Chicago Business. Corli also takes on the labor union and media beats for the legacy publication. Before coming to Crain’s in April, she was a part-time reporter at the Hyde Park Herald, Chicago’s oldest neighborhood newspaper, and a freelancer for various publications. Corli graduated from Chicago State University in 2018 where she majored in media arts.

Dilpreet Raju

Dilpreet Raju is a student journalist specializing in health, environment, and science reporting at Northwestern University Medill’s MSJ program. He came to graduate school from a varied background, with a B.S. in biochemistry and three-plus years of editorial experience at American University’s largest campus newspaper, The Eagle. There, he covered a variety of stories and fell in love with journalism as a mechanism for storytelling and a means to connect to one’s community, big or small.

Cam Rodriguez

Cam Rodriguez is a data and graphics reporter at Chalkbeat, a nonprofit newsroom covering education. Cam has worked as a Dow Jones News Fund intern with USA Today‘s national data team, as a Hearken ElectionSOS data fellow with the Detroit Free Press during the 2020 election cycle, and has chased down historical oddities with WTTW. Cam recently completed grad school at DePaul University, during which she worked as managing editor for the school’s online magazine 14 East, helping to develop hyperlocal news solutions for DePaul and Chicago while studying data journalism, investigative and community engagement reporting, and geography.

Reema Saleh

Reema Saleh is a writer, researcher, and multimedia producer. She writes for South Side Weekly and produces the Root of Conflict podcast for the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. At the University of Chicago, she studies public policy and specializes in race, immigration, and human rights.

Tajah Ware

Tajah Ware is a multi-hyphenate creative based in Chicago. She is deeply passionate about human connection and behavior. Whether she’s writing scripts, working as a journalist, creating films, or capturing moments on her film camera, Ware always looks for moments of realness, authenticity, and connection, and it shows in her work.

Wendy Wei

Wendy Wei is a Chicago-based journalist and writer exploring migration, diaspora, and solidarity between communities of color. Wendy’s work is informed by her lived experience as a migrant and former career evaluating humanitarian programs that serve forcibly displaced populations. Most recently she produced a Change Agents podcast episode about tackling anti-Blackness within immigrant communities on the south side. Wendy received her undergraduate degree in political science at the University of Chicago and her master’s degree in international development from Sciences Po Paris.

Chelsea Zhao

Chelsea Zhao is a graduate student of health, environment, and science journalism at Northwestern University. She is passionate about covering topics of environmental racism, health equity, and social justice in Chicago neighborhoods.

For more information on RICJ and the Chicago Reader, visit our about page.

Join the team! For current career openings visit our careers page.

Read More

RICJ Racial Justice Writers’ Room Launches Read More »

RICJ Racial Justice Writers’ Room Launches

The Racial Justice Writers’ Room is part of RICJ’s Racial Justice Reporting Hub and Writers’ Room is funded by the Joseph and Bessie Feinberg Foundation. DePaul University’s Center for Communication Engagement is donating resources for the group’s in-person meetings.

The project was launched under former Chicago Reader co-publisher Karen Hawkins, who will be among eight mentors to support the first cohort. Reader editor in chief Enrique Limón will also serve as a mentor. Each applicant proposed a story for a project of their choice, and they will receive guidance and mentorship from other journalists throughout the reporting process. They will keep the rights to their work, and will be able to pitch their stories to any media outlet upon completion.

Judith McCray

Writers’ Room coordinator McCray is a multiple Emmy Award-winning broadcast journalist, documentary filmmaker, and media activist with more than 30 years of experience in television and media production. She has previously worked both full time and as an independent producer for public broadcasting stations WNET/New York, WTTW/Chicago, WBEZ/Chicago, WYCC/Chicago, WSIU/Carbondale, and on a weekly radio series on world affairs called Common Ground. She’s also written, directed and produced independent documentaries for PBS Primetime and national public television.

She is the Senior Professional in Residence in DePaul University’s journalism program, teaching documentary production, social justice reporting, media ethics, and broadcast writing.

Meet the  eight participants in the first Racial Justice Writers’ Room cohort, which starts Feb. 13.

Justin Agrelo

Justin Agrelo is a reporter from the northwest side of Chicago. He works as the Chicago community engagement reporter at The Trace, where he covers community-led responses to gun violence. In 2019, he earned his master’s from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism with a special focus on social justice and investigative reporting. 

Corli Jay

Corli Jay is a general assignment reporter for Crain’s Chicago Business. Corli also takes on the labor union and media beats for the legacy publication. Before coming to Crain’s in April, she was a part-time reporter at the Hyde Park Herald, Chicago’s oldest neighborhood newspaper, and a freelancer for various publications. Corli graduated from Chicago State University in 2018 where she majored in media arts.

Dilpreet Raju

Dilpreet Raju is a student journalist specializing in health, environment, and science reporting at Northwestern University Medill’s MSJ program. He came to graduate school from a varied background, with a B.S. in biochemistry and three-plus years of editorial experience at American University’s largest campus newspaper, The Eagle. There, he covered a variety of stories and fell in love with journalism as a mechanism for storytelling and a means to connect to one’s community, big or small.

Cam Rodriguez

Cam Rodriguez is a data and graphics reporter at Chalkbeat, a nonprofit newsroom covering education. Cam has worked as a Dow Jones News Fund intern with USA Today‘s national data team, as a Hearken ElectionSOS data fellow with the Detroit Free Press during the 2020 election cycle, and has chased down historical oddities with WTTW. Cam recently completed grad school at DePaul University, during which she worked as managing editor for the school’s online magazine 14 East, helping to develop hyperlocal news solutions for DePaul and Chicago while studying data journalism, investigative and community engagement reporting, and geography.

Reema Saleh

Reema Saleh is a writer, researcher, and multimedia producer. She writes for South Side Weekly and produces the Root of Conflict podcast for the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. At the University of Chicago, she studies public policy and specializes in race, immigration, and human rights.

Tajah Ware

Tajah Ware is a multi-hyphenate creative based in Chicago. She is deeply passionate about human connection and behavior. Whether she’s writing scripts, working as a journalist, creating films, or capturing moments on her film camera, Ware always looks for moments of realness, authenticity, and connection, and it shows in her work.

Wendy Wei

Wendy Wei is a Chicago-based journalist and writer exploring migration, diaspora, and solidarity between communities of color. Wendy’s work is informed by her lived experience as a migrant and former career evaluating humanitarian programs that serve forcibly displaced populations. Most recently she produced a Change Agents podcast episode about tackling anti-Blackness within immigrant communities on the south side. Wendy received her undergraduate degree in political science at the University of Chicago and her master’s degree in international development from Sciences Po Paris.

Chelsea Zhao

Chelsea Zhao is a graduate student of health, environment, and science journalism at Northwestern University. She is passionate about covering topics of environmental racism, health equity, and social justice in Chicago neighborhoods.

For more information on RICJ and the Chicago Reader, visit our about page.

Join the team! For current career openings visit our careers page.

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RICJ Racial Justice Writers’ Room Launches Read More »

Minnesota-Illinois basketball game is postponed because of COVID-19 in Gophers program

MINNEAPOLIS — Minnesota’s game at Illinois that was scheduled for Tuesday has been postponed because of COVID-19 health and safety protocols within the Gophers’ program.

The announcement was made Monday by Minnesota, which didn’t specify how many players would have been unable to play.

The Gophers (7-15, 1-11) had only eight available scholarship players for their last game, an 81-46 loss to Maryland on Saturday. Dawson Garcia (ankle) has missed the last four games, and Braeden Carrington (leg) has missed the last six. Parker Fox and Isaiah Ihnen will not play this season while recovering from knee injuries.

The game will be rescheduled by the Big Ten, with input from both schools.

Minnesota is next scheduled to host Iowa on Sunday. Illinois (16-7, 7-5) will host No. 24 Rutgers on Saturday.

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The Chicago Blackhawks are for sure going to be sellers before the NHL trade deadline that is fastly approaching. It is a hard time for a lot of players but that is just the business side of the game. It isn’t always the easiest thing for fans or players to watch.

There are a lot of names being considered “available” right now. Anyone who can land them some great future assets should be considered options to trade. Guys like Andreas Athanasiou, Max Domi, Jake McCabe, and Connor Murphy amongst others are on the block.

Also, Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews are both on expiring contracts right now and could be moved very soon. Getting picks and prospects for the rebuild should be the most important thing. Those guys are amazing but it is time to move on for the betterment of the team.

It sounded like neither of them was going to be moved but now things might be starting to change. For Patrick Kane, there are lots of rumors out there right now when it comes to his status and his plans for the rest of this season.

The Chicago Blackhawks should really want to trade Patrick Kane ASAP.

Patrick Kane says his agent has come to him with some teams that have shown interest in trading for him but that he is still undecided about what to do for his future #Blackhawks

— Mario Tirabassi (@Mario_Tirabassi) February 6, 2023

NY Rangers, Dallas among them. https://t.co/jTYG5fuqkP

— David Pagnotta (@TheFourthPeriod) February 6, 2023

There have been reports of interested teams worrying about Kane’s nagging injury slowing him down, but he said he’s not thinking about that when he’s on the ice.

“That’s not really something for me to worry about. I just go about it the best I can.”

— Ben Pope (@BenPopeCST) February 6, 2023

Kane is the greatest player in the history of the franchise which makes this tough but it has to be done. If he blocks any trades to another team, that will be devastating to Chicago in the long term because then they’d be getting fewer assets.

This is also an elite player that isn’t having that good of a year. Well, for one, it doesn’t seem as if he is himself. It also is a product of how bad the team is. Kane is going to go to another team and start producing again and people are going to act surprised.

If he went to Dallas, New York, New Jersey, Colorado, or any of the good teams that want him, you can fully expect a much more productive Kane again and those teams know that. For that reason, the Hawks should be looking to move him for assets.

Kane might be undecided but the Hawks should put pressure on him to decide soon and choose to go play for another team. He could really go chose another Stanley Cup or two which would cement his legacy even more.

In addition to getting more picks and players for the future, the Hawks would also just become a much worse team without Kane which is a good thing too.

Connor Bedard is going to go first overall to the lottery winner and the Hawks would love for that to be them. This rebuild doesn’t have to last a long time.

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The Chicago Cubs are preparing for a very interesting season. They made a lot of moves this off-season but nobody knows if they are going to actually be a good team. There is no doubt that they will be better than they were last year but by how much exactly?

The National League is a monster at the top right now. It is going to be very hard for the Cubs to find a playoff berth but there is a chance. New faces like Cody Bellinger, Dansby Swanson, Eric Hosmer, and Trey Mancini amongst others are trying to make an impact.

Of course, people are going to be excited to see those guys perform in Cubs colors during spring training as they should. All of them bring something different that is going to help this baseball team in 2023.

Folks should also be excited about the non-roster invitees coming to Chicago Cubs’ spring training this year. All of these players are hoping to be noticed by the right people during the spring exhibition season.

The Chicago Cubs have their 2023 spring non-roster invitees selected.

The #Cubs have invited 32 non-roster players to #SpringTraining. pic.twitter.com/ZZMZncpicJ

— Chicago Cubs (@Cubs) February 6, 2023

There are players on this list that most Cubs fans will recognize for different reasons like Brailyn Marquez, David Bote, and Matt Mervis but Pete Crow-Armstrong highlights them all. He is the number one prospect in the Cubs organization and he should be a great player very soon.

He already made it clear that he is excited to watch and learn from other great outfielders on the team like Cody Bellinger. Even if Bellinger doesn’t live up to the hype with his bat (as he really shouldn’t expect to), he is valuable for that reason alone. People can learn a lot from him.

Crow-Armstrong is also an outfielder that has a ceiling as high as anyone they have. The Cubs acquired him from the New York Mets in the Javier Baez trade and now it is about to pay off for them.

It is unclear exactly when Peter Crow-Armstrong is going to make his Major League debut but you’d have to figure that it comes sometime in 2023. If he takes full advantage of this invite to spring training, it may be sooner than later.

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