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No more meshing around: Bulls’ Big Three just isn’t getting it done

Here we are approaching the NBA trade deadline on Feb. 9 and it’s just not working for the Bulls. They have been the MC Skat Cat of the NBA since January 2022: Two steps forward, two steps back.

That might be too old of a reference, but those who get it, well, get it. The Bulls have had games where you can trick yourself into thinking they could win a playoff series — with the right matchup. Then there are games when you watch them play and wonder if they deserve to be in the play-in tournament.

This team has a collection of talented players. The problem is that they’re flawed in ways that don’t complement the rest of the team. DeMar DeRozan has been a breath of fresh air for the Bulls franchise. He’s smart, tough, resourceful and not afraid of the big moment. His flaw is that his game can’t work unless he’s on a team with consistent three-point shooting.

DeRozan deserves his moniker of “King of the Mid-Range.” He’s proved that he can get to a spot, pump-fake a defender and score. If this were the ’90s, he’s unstoppable. Alas, while DeRozan works his butt off to get two-point buckets, Bulls’ opponents come back and shoot threes. Bad exchange rate.

Zach Lavine has superstar talent. He’s fun to watch and there’s not many things he can’t do offensively. His flaw is that he’s still figuring out that having a max contract doesn’t automatically make you a max player. Late-game situations have haunted him this season, with costly turnovers and bad decisions in the moments when the Bulls can’t afford it.

Nikola Vucevic is an ideal “Big” in the modern game. Sure, he can play in the post, but his game is diverse enough that he can step outside, extend a defense and hit an occasional three. His flaw is that he’s not as good on the defensive end and still needs others to put him in a position to succeed.

Theoretically, you have three All-Star-caliber players. Practically, the styles haven’t meshed. And coach Billy Donovan has a hard time getting this team to mesh their games consistently. If we count the playoff series against Milwaukee, the Bulls have been below .500 since last January. Which brings me to one of the bigger Bulls issues.

It’s no secret part of the Bulls second-half collapse last season had to do with Lonzo Ball getting injured. He’s supposed to be the guy that makes this whole thing work. His mysterious knee injury must be as frustrating as hell for him and I’m sure he’s thinking beyond just his Bulls contract and about his NBA survival.

It doesn’t look like he’s going to make a triumphant comeback this season. That means the Bulls have some hard decisions ahead.

With the current roster of active players, what’s the best possible scenario? Bulls fight their way out of the bottom of the play-in portion of the Eastern Conference and end up as a sixth seed? That’s probably the rosiest picture I can paint and it still doesn’t scream contender to win the conference.

Vooch will be a free agent at the end of the season and DeRozan can exit a year later. This was the time DeRozan’s ability to get buckets was supposed to be maximized. And it doesn’t look like this roster is going to be able to do that.

There are no good answers. Any trade the Bulls complete will make this group worse, but it’s not like they’ve earned the right to go out on their shields. After a year and half, this squad looks like the first half of last season was the outlier. Who they’ve been since is reality.

It would also be nice to hear honestly what Bulls management thinks is the path forward, but they’ve been harder to get on the record than Prince when he changed his name.

It’s been an ugly, mostly frustrating and often boring season. Last season, we thought: Who could the Bulls add to put them on par with teams like Milwaukee? Unfortunately, we’ve returned to the place where we wonder which one of the good, likable players the Bulls must trade to start rebuilding, again.

You can hear Laurence Holmes talk Chicago sports Monday to Friday from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. on 670 The Score with Dan Bernstein.

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Luke Getsy, assistants give Bears inside track on Senior Bowl draft prospects

MOBILE, Ala. — The Senior Bowl is the most prestigious college all-star game, but this isn’t where the Bears will look for someone to draft in the first round. None of the players in the mix to go No. 1 overall — or even in the top 10, assuming the Bears trade back — are here.

But for a team that needs almost everything, they must nail their mid-round picks. The Bears have a second-rounder (No. 56), a third (No. 65) and two fourths (Nos. 103 and 134), and the Senior Bowl is the perfect place to pursue those prospects and ideally identify some gems who will slip to the late rounds or even go undrafted.

They have a full delegation in Mobile, including coach Matt Eberflus watching from the sideline at practice Tuesday, and it’s advantageous that offensive coordinator Luke Getsy is head coach of the American team.

It’s a chance for Getsy to showcase his ability to run a team in front of every personnel department in the league, but more vitally to the Bears, it’s like having a spy embedded among the players they’re considering.

“That’s the most important reason I’m here,” Getsy said after practice at South Alabama’s Hancock Whitney Stadium. “This gives you a great opportunity to dive into the type of men they are … and we get to find that out when you get to be so hands-on.”

Bears linebackers coach Dave Borgonzi and assistant tight ends coach Tim Zetts also are on the American staff, and assistant special teams coach Carlos Polk is with the National team.

Bears general manager Ryan Poles and assistant Ian Cunningham are working through their own evaluations of college tape and will glean a lot from the combine in February, pro days in March and visits to Halas Hall, but their coaches’ reports this week are equally valuable.

“Is this guy a baller or not?” Getsy said. “You get to see the subtle movements, how they handle change, how fast they can learn something and then go out and perform it. That’s the world we live in [in the NFL]. We can’t do the same thing every week; you’ve got to be able to adapt.”

Teams can hit snags after they’ve drafted a player because he struggles to pick up the playbook or misses things in meetings, and it’ll be easy for Getsy to tell if that’s happening this week. The Raiders are getting a similar view, by the way, with defensive coordinator Patrick Graham coaching the National team.

It’s a loaded week for Getsy between planning practices and relaying insight to Poles’ staff.

“I even catch myself in the middle of practice taking a second to step back and actually evaluate a little bit rather than trying to coach,” Getsy said. “Just trying to collect all the information that we can.”

Many players on Getsy’s team are of interest to the Bears, including Auburn pass rusher Derick Hall and Houston wide receiver Tank Dell. Hall is one of several players here that Getsy recruited when he was Mississippi State’s offensive coordinator in 2018.

“It was cool to see him again,” Hall said. “He really walked around and got together with everybody during practice. His intensity level in the meetings and the practice speaks volumes.”

The Bears’ biggest needs are pass rushers and offensive linemen, and their staff saw strong candidates throughout the afternoon. Players also went through a whirlwind of interviews Monday, which Army pass rusher Andre Carter — a possible second-round target — called “a lot to process.”

Ohio State tackle Dawand Jones, a former teammate of Justin Fields, dominated some of the top pass rushers. Many analysts projected him as a second-round pick, but at 6-foot-8, 360 pounds, he could climb into the first round.

The Bears still have nearly three months to arrange their draft board, but this week is a valuable early step in the process.

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Come eat rice and curry (and more) with Thattu at the next Monday Night Foodball

When Margaret Pak and her husband Vinod Kalathil visit his hometown in northern Kerala, his mom summons the couple to lunch with the expression “Chorum kariyum kazhikkam,” or “Let’s eat rice and curry,” even if there’s no curry on the table.

“It’s funny,” says Kalathil, “So many people say ‘Oh, we don’t use the word curry in India, but if you go to southern India pretty much everybody says curry—for anything and everything.”

For sure there will be rice and curry on the table on February 6 when Thattu calls you to the table for the next Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s weekly chef pop up at Ludlow Liquors. Ahead of the delayed opening of their long awaited brick and mortar restaurant, Foodball vets Pak and Kalathil, are popping up with a taste of what’s for lunch and dinner when the juice starts flowing and the city inspectors give the thumbs up on their future 2900-square foot space.

Pak’s showcasing chemmeen and kappa, shrimp curry with coconut broth and mashed yucca, tarted up with sun-dried cambodge, aka Malabar tamarind, a souring agent her mother-in-law typically uses with tiny fish. She’s also reprising her pinquinto bean curry with cuminy jeera rice, a riff on the black chickpea kadala curry—a staple from Thattu’s Politan Row days—here made with heirloom legumes native to her native northern California.

But it ain’t just curry and rice. Her fiery batter-free Kerala fried chicken sandwich is on the menu. Pair that with a side of chaat masala-seasoned tots (chaattertots, of course), and you’ve got a bite of a signature from the brick and mortar’s lunchtime menu. And you’ll find the yogurt-marinated chicken biryani with basmati rice on the future dinner menu. Finish off with sweet cardamom-kissed, deep fried plantains with creme anglaise, and an essential masala biscuit, the cookie that started it all.

Ludlow barkeeps Joel and Grace will be mixing up Thattu’s Lime Sarbath, a citrusy Collins riff with sherry and Indian sarsaparilla syrup.

Come eat rice and curry—and anything and everything else—with Thattu, starting at 6 PM, Monday, February 6, at Ludlow Liquors, 2959 N. California in Avondale. No preorders. Just walk in and place your order with Kalathil, posted up at the turntables at the back of the bar.

Meanwhile, block out your future Mondays by scrolling down for the full Foodball schedule:

Margaret Pak, Vinod Kalathil Credit: Monica Kass RogersRead More

Come eat rice and curry (and more) with Thattu at the next Monday Night Foodball Read More »

South Asians are helping build Chicago’s progressive movement 

Somebody organized Mueze Bawany’s mom. He doesn’t know who it was — maybe Matt Ginsberg-Jaeckle, a longtime community organizer who had been trying to convince Bawany to run for alderperson of the 50th Ward. 

Bawany and his family immigrated to Chicago’s West Ridge neighborhood from Pakistan when he was three years old. He’s a high school teacher, community organizer, and member of the Chicago Teachers Union. He’s also someone who wasn’t interested in running for alderperson. He prefers being under the radar. So Ginsberg-Jaeckle brought in some help to try to convince Bawany. 

“My friend Nash texted me and I was like, ‘Why are you trying to ruin my life?’ I’ll frame that text if we win, InSha’Allah, on the wall,” Bawany said.  “But once my mom found out, it was game over.”

Bawany’s mom didn’t necessarily know what the role of alderperson entailed, but after he explained to her she was proud that someone was asking her son to do something.“For people who felt really small in this city and in this community and in this country, for them to know that their kids and their grandkids are loved and supported and appreciated, it means the world to them,” he said. 

50th Ward aldermanic candidate Mueze Bawany Ankur Singh

The election will be “a referendum on how we trust the public sector and how we reinvest in and rebuild it after the pandemic,” Dasgupta said. “This is an opportunity  . . . I can literally imagine the way that we will work together in the council.”

Over a cup of chai at Spinzer, a Pakistani fast-food restaurant on Devon, Bawany said the city’s budget reflects “a lack of moral imagination. So for me personally it doesn’t stop me from imagining what can happen.” 

If elected, Bawany would be the first South Asian alderperson to represent West Ridge, a neighborhood with a large population of immigrants from countries such as India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Afghanistan, Bhutan, and more. 

Bawany’s love for his community is evident the moment you meet him. He arrived at our interview at Spinzer a little bit late. He was helping a neighbor who had just been hit by a car while riding their bike. As he walked in, he ran into an old childhood friend who immediately began making jokes about the campaign. “I love this place because the characters always crack me up,” he said.

Another restaurant he recommends is Pak Sweets, across the street from Spinzer. “The owner there is one of the most ridiculous human beings. Hilarious.” He also loves Anmol, partly because it’s on the non-busy side of Devon and it’s easy to find parking. House of Biryani is also a favorite.

And then he threw a curveball: he loves Levinson’s Bakery, which is located right next to Anmol. “Everybody jokes that this is the future liberals want,” he said.”It’s like, man, you got the Jewish bakery and then some Desi folks making really good meals side by side.”

According to Bawany, regardless of whatever geopolitical tensions might be happening between the various countries whose food can be found on Devon, “we’re all family here.” 

Over a veg thali at Ghareeb Nawaz, Dasgupta said that building solidarity and diverse coalitions has long been a big part of South Asian history and culture. 

Dasgupta’s mother was Catholic, and her father was a Hindu communist who protested the Vietnam war as a student. She recalls growing up with images of Hindu warrior goddesses and how it informs her idea of motherhood. “Being a mother is not being a mom,” she said. “It’s not just about stewarding your own children but stewarding the children of your community. That to me is tied up in the idea of motherhood because I learned that from my own mother who learned it in a communal culture that was one generation off the farm.”

Bawany echoed that sentiment. “I think what the Sikh community, the Muslim community, the Hindu community, there’s so much in our faith-based traditions about service, right?” he said. “Understanding the importance of feeding people, of sheltering people . . . we can fundraise a lot, but imagine wielding the budget of the city of Chicago to address inequity.”

When she first started working as an organizer in Chicago, Patel didn’t see many other South Asians in the progressive movement. She worked for many years as a union organizer with SEIU Local 73 and then later became executive director of Grassroots Collaborative, a coalition of unions and community groups focused on economic and environmental justice.

According to Patel, whose mother was a factory worker in the Chicago suburbs, what feels different now is that many South Asian organizers and activists are rooted in multiracial, working-class communities.

“Any visible South Asians are often positioned as model minorities . . . the reality is there’s a lot of working-class South Asians; they’re just not who people know,” she said. “How do people who come from our communities play a leadership role that not only represents our communities but also does it in a way that has very clear values? It’s definitely exciting with Denali and Mueze to see the possibility of that in their beliefs, their platform, their orientation. Because I think that there’s just tremendous power in building an Asian, Black, Latine, white coalition that is rooted in that context.”

Building solidarity both within and outside the South Asian community is central to the mission of Chicago Desi Youth Rising (CDYR), a collective that works to educate and organize young South Asians across the Chicagoland area in an effort to have youth leadership at the center of larger fights for social, economic, and racial justice in Chicago. 

The group organizes an annual summer leadership retreat where young people examine their own diverse identities and cultural history in conversations that span caste, class, communalism, religion, and hypernationalism within the South Asian diaspora. 

“There are so many ways in which we can understand our connections to other communities by understanding our own experiences,” said Himabindu Poroori, a member of CDYR. 

During the summer of 2020, CDYR members participated in many solidarity actions with the prison and police abolition movement. They organized a virtual workshop with uncles and aunties on anti-Blackness in the South Asian community where they also discussed their own experiences with police. The group also worked with many community organizations on a campaign to get police officers out of Chicago Public Schools (CPS). That same summer they held an event with Pilsen Alliance outside the southwest-side home of Sendhil Revoluri, a member of the CPS board, calling on him to vote to remove police officers from CPS. The festive event featured food, music, and dance. 

“Taking time to cultivate solidarity is very important,” Poroori said.

Both Bawany and Dasgupta draw upon personal experiences that inform both how they connect with the diverse peoples in their communities as well as their policy platforms.

Bawany was six years old the first time his family was evicted from their apartment. The family came home to find all their belongings sprawled out on the lawn. 

“My first reaction was, ‘Are my parents reorganizing?’ My second reaction was this elation that maybe we’re tossing all the shit out and getting new furniture,” Bawany said. 

He then began going through the piles of stuff and pulling out his stuffed animals and other things that he loved.  

“I was like, I don’t want mom throwing this out . . . And then my brother was like, ‘Put it on the ground, it’s not going anywhere.’ I’m like, ‘Where’s it going?’ My brother says ‘Wherever we’re going.’ And I understood,” Bawany recalled.

His family was evicted two more times throughout his childhood. After the third time, Bawany’s two older brothers started working to help the family make ends meet. One brother began selling shirts on the south side. The other was working in IT while their mother sold samosas and pursued catering gigs and their father worked as a taxi driver. 

Years later when Bawany became a teacher in Humboldt Park he had many students who were going through similar struggles with housing instability. 

“I had students who would open up about being unhoused as a means of saying, you know, please cut me some slack,” Bawany said. “‘I know you keep yelling at me, about homework, homework, homework, homework, homework, and all these things, but can I tell you about my living situation?’ And that stuff used to crush me.”

If elected, he says he’ll fight for more affordable housing in the 50th Ward. He also plans to make ward democracy a big priority with initiatives like participatory budgeting, creating a youth council, providing ward services, and translating all materials into the forty-plus languages that are spoken in West Ridge. He hopes to do listening tours of the neighborhood by connecting with schools, religious groups, and local business owners to learn more about what their needs are and how the aldermanic office can support them.

“The story of my father and my mother and their struggles in the ward exists all throughout this neighborhood,” he said.

Dasgupta also wants more affordable housing in her neighborhood. She also supports Treatment Not Trauma, a campaign that would redirect 911 calls for mental health crises from police responders and instead send teams of social workers and paramedics. 

Her support for this comes in part from her own experience with trauma as a survivor of gun violence. 

In 1986 Pan American Flight 73 left from Mumbai to New York with a layover in Karachi. When the flight landed in Karachi it was immediately hijacked by four armed Palestinian men who had dressed as Pakistani security personnel. The men were members of the Abu Nidal Organisation, a militant group that was fighting for the liberation of Palestine from the Israeli occupation.

Members of the cabin crew were able to warn the airplane’s pilots of the hijacking, who then escaped and left the plane grounded. The hijacking, which lasted nearly 16 hours, ended with a mass shooting that killed about 20 people and injured over 100.

Dasgupta and her family were on that plane and were taken hostage. She was three years old. 

“We survived and we came home and we just pretended like nothing happened,” she said. “That was the advice my parents were given. And having grown up to be somebody who studies Child Development Studies, Child Trauma, themes about developmental arcs—it’s utterly wild to me.

“My mom thinks about it all the time. She’s like, ‘I can’t believe that I listened to that.’ But it just felt easier to move forward,” Dasgupta continued.

When her middle son was three years old Dasgupta says she was horrified because she got to see as an adult where he was at developmentally. 

“It feels profoundly unfair that some people get left behind. Because there were moments where that was us,” Dasgupta said. “A trauma to your community, a trauma to your family — it happens to a whole system . . . . We were just really struggling and we didn’t know how to ask for help. And we didn’t know that we needed help. And we didn’t know what we needed. And it was infused into every way that we related to each other and related to the world. That’s what happens.” 

According to Dasgupta, this experience has profoundly shaped how she approaches public safety. She often works with violence interrupters throughout Chicago and is able to easily build rapport with them, even though her experience is very different.

“So when someone comes in and says we’re gonna spray paint your catalytic converter and everything’s gonna be fine—it’s like ‘no,’” Dasgupta said.

According to Pawar, today there is more of a space for the South Asian experience than there ever had been. “It feels less lonely. When you’re the first it’s always that way,” he said.

Patel recalled being a young South Asian organizer in Chicago nearly 30 years ago and having a lot of insecurity about where she fit in the progressive movement, despite coming from a working-class family. “With time that really shifted,” she said. “I just got more grounded and more connected and confident and secure in who I am and the values that I have and the work and the role that I was playing in the movements.”

For Bawany, feeling grounded happens when he speaks with uncles, aunties, and youth in the neighborhood who support his campaign.

“Yesterday I met with a bunch of youth at Centro Romero, and you can picture how much winning this will change their lives,” he said.

One youth who Bawany has already made an impression upon is Dasgupta’s own son.

“My son had a Mueze button on his backpack before he had a Denali For 39th button on,” Dasgupta said with a laugh. “Mueze is their favorite.”


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The 47th Ward alderman and gubernatorial hopeful conjures up FDR in a run against Rauner.

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South Asians are helping build Chicago’s progressive movement  Read More »

Come eat rice and curry (and more) with Thattu at the next Monday Night Foodball

When Margaret Pak and her husband Vinod Kalathil visit his hometown in northern Kerala, his mom summons the couple to lunch with the expression “Chorum kariyum kazhikkam,” or “Let’s eat rice and curry,” even if there’s no curry on the table.

“It’s funny,” says Kalathil, “So many people say ‘Oh, we don’t use the word curry in India, but if you go to southern India pretty much everybody says curry—for anything and everything.”

For sure there will be rice and curry on the table on February 6 when Thattu calls you to the table for the next Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s weekly chef pop up at Ludlow Liquors. Ahead of the delayed opening of their long awaited brick and mortar restaurant, Foodball vets Pak and Kalathil, are popping up with a taste of what’s for lunch and dinner when the juice starts flowing and the city inspectors give the thumbs up on their future 2900-square foot space.

Pak’s showcasing chemmeen and kappa, shrimp curry with coconut broth and mashed yucca, tarted up with sun-dried cambodge, aka Malabar tamarind, a souring agent her mother-in-law typically uses with tiny fish. She’s also reprising her pinquinto bean curry with cuminy jeera rice, a riff on the black chickpea kadala curry—a staple from Thattu’s Politan Row days—here made with heirloom legumes native to her native northern California.

But it ain’t just curry and rice. Her fiery batter-free Kerala fried chicken sandwich is on the menu. Pair that with a side of chaat masala-seasoned tots (chaattertots, of course), and you’ve got a bite of a signature from the brick and mortar’s lunchtime menu. And you’ll find the yogurt-marinated chicken biryani with basmati rice on the future dinner menu. Finish off with sweet cardamom-kissed, deep fried plantains with creme anglaise, and an essential masala biscuit, the cookie that started it all.

Ludlow barkeeps Joel and Grace will be mixing up Thattu’s Lime Sarbath, a citrusy Collins riff with sherry and Indian sarsaparilla syrup.

Come eat rice and curry—and anything and everything else—with Thattu, starting at 6 PM, Monday, February 6, at Ludlow Liquors, 2959 N. California in Avondale. No preorders. Just walk in and place your order with Kalathil, posted up at the turntables at the back of the bar.

Meanwhile, block out your future Mondays by scrolling down for the full Foodball schedule:

Margaret Pak, Vinod Kalathil Credit: Monica Kass RogersRead More

Come eat rice and curry (and more) with Thattu at the next Monday Night Foodball Read More »

South Asians are helping build Chicago’s progressive movement 

Somebody organized Mueze Bawany’s mom. He doesn’t know who it was — maybe Matt Ginsberg-Jaeckle, a longtime community organizer who had been trying to convince Bawany to run for alderperson of the 50th Ward. 

Bawany and his family immigrated to Chicago’s West Ridge neighborhood from Pakistan when he was three years old. He’s a high school teacher, community organizer, and member of the Chicago Teachers Union. He’s also someone who wasn’t interested in running for alderperson. He prefers being under the radar. So Ginsberg-Jaeckle brought in some help to try to convince Bawany. 

“My friend Nash texted me and I was like, ‘Why are you trying to ruin my life?’ I’ll frame that text if we win, InSha’Allah, on the wall,” Bawany said.  “But once my mom found out, it was game over.”

Bawany’s mom didn’t necessarily know what the role of alderperson entailed, but after he explained to her she was proud that someone was asking her son to do something.“For people who felt really small in this city and in this community and in this country, for them to know that their kids and their grandkids are loved and supported and appreciated, it means the world to them,” he said. 

50th Ward aldermanic candidate Mueze Bawany Ankur Singh

His mom told him the family had been through a lot, observing that making sure other people don’t have to go through the same struggles fuels him. He said she asked him, “‘Can this election help you support people in ways that we wish we would have been supported? If so, it’s more of an obligation on you to try.’’’

Bawany is one of two South Asians running for Chicago City Council in the February 28  election. The other, Denali Dasgupta, is a mother of three, a foster parent, and a policy researcher with a background in data science. She was born and raised in the suburbs of New York City with parents who immigrated from India and is running for alderperson in the 39th ward on the city’s northwest side. 

Their campaigns are indicative of the growing presence and power of South Asian Americans in Chicago’s progressive grassroots movements that take on issues such as immigrant rights, prison and police abolition, and economic justice. 

“I’ve really loved that there are South Asian organizers and artists and people who are visible in different kinds of ways in different parts of the work than there ever was,” said Amisha Patel, who has been an organizer in Chicago for over 30 years. “Having two really progressive lefty candidates for City Council that come from the South Asian community is very exciting.” 

According to the South Asian American Policy & Research Institute, South Asians are one of the fastest-growing ethnic groups in Illinois. The impact South Asians have made in Chicago can be seen, literally, from anywhere in the city. One only has to look up at the skyline and see the Willis and Hancock towers. Both were designed by Fazlur Rahman Khan, an immigrant from Bangladesh. The mile-long strip along Devon Avenue with its countless shops, restaurants, clothing, and jewelry stores has been nicknamed Little India. 

In 2011, Chicago elected Ameya Pawar to City Council; he was the first South Asian to win city or state office in Illinois. 

“After I won I felt a tremendous responsibility to represent the Asian community at large,” Pawar said. “I felt the pressure to be successful because I didn’t want to be the first and last.”

With the February 28 election approaching (early voting started at the Loop supersite in January and will open in all 50 wards on February 13), Chicago is at a unique juncture. Sixteen alderpersons decided not to run for reelection. Across the city, progressive community organizers, activists, and policy makers are running for City Council.

39th Ward aldermanic candidate Denali Dasgupta

South Asians are helping build Chicago’s progressive movement  Read More »

High school basketball: Tuesday’s scores

Tuesday, January 31, 2023

BIG NORTHERN

Byron at Dixon, 7:00

Genoa-Kingston at Winnebago, 7:00

North Boone at Stillman Valley, 7:00

Oregon at Rockford Lutheran, 7:00

Rock Falls at Rockford Christian, 7:00

CATHOLIC LEAGUE – CROSSOVER

Brother Rice at De La Salle, 6:30

DePaul at Providence-St. Mel, 7:00

Fenwick at St. Laurence, 7:00

Leo at Montini, 7:00

Mount Carmel at Marmion, 7:00

St. Rita at Providence, 7:00

CENTRAL SUBURBAN – NORTH

Deerfield at Maine West, 7:00

Highland Park at Maine East, 7:00

Vernon Hills at Niles North, 7:00

CENTRAL SUBURBAN – SOUTH

Evanston at Maine South, 7:30

Glenbrook South at Glenbrook North, 7:00

New Trier at Niles West, 6:30

DU KANE

Geneva at St. Charles North, 7:00

Glenbard North at Batavia, 7:00

Lake Park at Wheaton North, 7:15

Wheaton-Warr. South at St. Charles East, 7:00

EAST SUBURBAN CATHOLIC

Marian Catholic at St. Patrick, 7:00

Marist at Carmel, 7:00

Nazareth at St. Viator, 7:00

Notre Dame at Benet, 7:00

FOX VALLEY

Burlington Central at Prairie Ridge, 7:00

Crystal Lake South at Jacobs, 7:00

Dundee-Crown at Crystal Lake Central, 7:00

Hampshire at Huntley, 7:00

McHenry at Cary-Grove, 7:00

ILLINOIS CENTRAL EIGHT

Coal City at Streator, 6:45

Herscher at Wilmington, 7:00

Lisle at Manteno, 7:00

INDEPENDENT SCHOOL

Morgan Park Academy at University High, 4:30

North Shore at Elgin Academy, 6:00

INTERSTATE EIGHT

Sycamore at LaSalle-Peru, 7:00

KISHWAUKEE RIVER

Woodstock at Johnsburg, 7:00

METRO PREP

CPSA at Universal, 5:30

METRO SUBURBAN – BLUE

Chicago Christian at Wheaton Academy, 7:30

Riverside-Brookfield at St. Francis, 7:00

Timothy Christian at IC Catholic, 7:30

MID-SUBURBAN – EAST

Buffalo Grove at Rolling Meadows, 7:30

Prospect at Elk Grove, 7:30

Wheeling at Hersey, 7:30

MID-SUBURBAN – WEST

Barrington at Schaumburg, 7:30

Fremd at Hoffman Estates, 7:30

Palatine at Conant, 7:30

NOBLE LEAGUE – BLUE

Golder at Pritzker, 5:30

NOBLE LEAGUE – GOLD

Bulls Prep at Butler, 5:30

ITW-Speer at Rowe-Clark, 5:30

Johnson at Noble Academy, 7:00

NORTH SUBURBAN

Libertyville at Lake Zurich, 7:00

Mundelein at Warren, 7:00

Stevenson at Lake Forest, 7:00

Waukegan at Zion-Benton, 7:00

NORTHERN LAKE COUNTY

Grayslake Central at Antioch, 7:00

Grayslake North at Grant, 7:00

Round Lake at North Chicago, 7:00

Wauconda at Lakes, 7:00

RIVER VALLEY

Momence at Donovan, 7:00

SOUTHLAND

Kankakee at Bloom, 6:30

Rich at Thornwood, 6:30

Thornton at Thornridge, 6:30

SOUTHWEST PRAIRIE – EAST

Joliet West at Romeoville, 6:30

Plainfield East at Plainfield Central, 6:30

Plainfield South at Joliet Central, 6:30

SOUTHWEST PRAIRIE – WEST

Minooka at Oswego East, 6:30

Plainfield North at Oswego, 6:30

Yorkville at West Aurora, 6:30

SOUTHWEST SUBURBAN – BLUE

Homewood-Flossmoor at Bolingbrook, 6:30

Sandburg at Lincoln-Way East, 6:30

SOUTHWEST SUBURBAN – RED

Andrew at Lincoln-Way Central, 6:00

Lincoln-Way West at Stagg, 6:15

UPSTATE EIGHT

East Aurora at Larkin, 7:00

Elgin at Glenbard South, 7:00

Fenton at Glenbard East, 7:00

Streamwood at Bartlett, 7:00

West Chicago at South Elgin, 7:00

WEST SUBURBAN – GOLD

Addison Trail at Hinsdale South, 7:30

Leyden at Willowbrook, 6:00

Proviso East at Morton, 7:00

WEST SUBURBAN – SILVER

Glenbard West at York, 7:30

Lyons at Downers Grove North, 7:30

Proviso West at Oak Park-River Forest, 6:30

NON CONFERENCE

ACERO-Garcia at Catalyst-Maria, 5:00

Agricultural Science at Oak Forest, 6:00

ASPIRA-Bus&Fin at ACERO-Soto, 5:00

Aurora Christian at St. Edward, 7:30

Beecher at Seneca, 7:00

Bowen at Lake View, 5:00

Brimfield at Putnam County, 7:00

Christian Liberty at Islamic Foundation, 5:30

Excel-Englewood at Hansberry, 5:30

Foreman at Wells, 5:00

Grant Park at McNamara, 7:00

Heritage Christian (IN) at Illinois Lutheran, 7:30

Hinsdale Adventist at Lycee Francais, 6:30

King at Fenger, 5:00

Latin at Lake Forest Academy, 6:30

Lexington at Woodland, 7:00

Marian Central at Westlake Christian, 7:00

Raby at Muchin, 7:00

Rauner at Wolcott, 5:30

Richards at Harlan, 6:30

Roanoke-Benson at Ridgeview, 7:00

Rochelle at Sterling, 7:00

Schaumburg Christian at Rochelle Zell, 7:00

St. Francis de Sales at St. Ignatius, 7:00

St. Thomas More at Clifton Central, 7:00

Westmont at Westminster Christian, 7:00

LITTLE TEN TOURNAMENT

at Somonauk

Hinckley-Big Rock vs. Indian Creek, 5:30

Earlville vs. Somonauk, 7:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE PLAYOFFS – CONSOLATION

Senn at Ogden, 5:00

Austin at Von Steuben, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE TOURNAMENT – BLUE 8

Quarter-Finals

Air Force at Washington, 5:00

Chicago Tech at Chicago Military, 5:00

Goode at Back of the Yards, 5:30

Chicago Math & Science at Douglass, 5:00

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Blackhawks’ penalty kill rejuvenated by switch to diamond formation

Diamonds are the key to the heart — and also the key to killing off power plays, the Blackhawks have learned.

Since changing their penalty-killing structure within the defensive zone from an amorphous square formation to a diamond formation over Christmas, the Hawks have completely reversed their PK fortunes.

“We looked at other teams’ setups and wanted to give this a go,” coach Luke Richardson said. “The guys really have taken to it.”

The alteration was made during the Dec. 24-26 break, which the Hawks entered having allowed a power-play goal in eight consecutive games — tied for their longest such streak since 2007-08. They had killed only 25 of 40 opponent PPs since Nov. 19, a 62.5% kill rate that ranked second-worst in the NHL during that span.

Per 60 minutes shorthanded during that span, they had allowed 134.4 shot attempts (the most in the NHL), 85.3 scoring chances (second-most) and 10.2 expected goals (seventh-most).

Their amorphous square was technically a “piston” formation, Jason Dickinson said, where one player at a time would come out to challenge the puck-carrier and try to cut off his passing angles. But the piston was not exactly running smoothly.

After the break, however, the Hawks’ reshaped PK went six-for-six combined against the Hurricanes and Blues. Their video work with assistant coach Kevin Dean, who oversees the unit, immediately yielded fruit.

They then experienced some growing pains but really found their stride when they killed all five Avalanche PPs during an upset win Jan. 12. That started a stretch in which they went 22-for-23 — before finally succumbing twice Saturday against the Oilers’ overwhelming PP.

Overall since Christmas, the Hawks’ PK boasts a 84.8% kill rate (which ranks 10th in the NHL) and has allowed 88.5 shot attempts (sixth-fewest), 52.2 scoring chances (ninth-fewest) and 7.5 expected goals (11th-fewest) per 60 minutes.

The diamond formation works by positioning one forward up top, one forward and one defenseman on the sides and one defenseman in front of the net.

If a puck comes loose alongside the boards, they can break shape to try to pin the puck, gain possession and clear it. But if they fail with that, they reassemble the diamond.

“It gives us a little bit more predictability,” forward Jason Dickinson said. “It gives us an ability to dictate where we want the puck more, and where we don’t want it to be.

“We can lock off a certain side. It doesn’t really matter to us necessarily what side we lock off, but we just know that this is the look we’re giving. It’s easy for me to read off of [fellow forward Sam Lafferty] and for the ‘D’ to read off the forwards in this set-up. We can be like, ‘OK, we’ve dictated a side. This is where our pressure is going to come from.'”

Considering many teams place their most dangerous shooters on the flanks — think Alex Ovechkin at the top of the faceoff circle for the Capitals, for example — having one side locked down can make a big difference.

And it’s much tougher to find horizontal lanes through a diamond than a square, which has reduced the number of often-deadly seam passes that opposing PPs have been able to connect.

This improved in-zone structure — combined with their league-best 52.3% shorthanded faceoff percentage, which leads to many clears right off the bat — has also created a snowball effect. Up the ice, the Hawks’ penalty killers have rejuvenated their aggressive two-man forechecking that was such a bright spot early in the season.

“Why not take a chance and give a little bit of pressure up-ice, to try to discourage them from the drop [pass] and to have a chance to kill plays at the blue line?” Richardson said. “That has worked really well for us, which gives us a lot less time in the ‘D’-zone.”

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Protected: New publisher and CEO hired for Chicago Reader

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One of Chicago’s best singer-songwriters drops a new EP

Isabel “Izzy” Olive, aka Half Gringa Credit: Isabel Olive

Isabel “Izzy” Olive of Half Gringa is one of Chicago’s finest singer-songwriters and most dynamic performers, so it’s always a red-letter day when she drops new jams into the universe. Gossip Wolf is especially fond of the gently searing rocker “Miranda” and the outstanding ballad “Sevenwater,” the two singles Half Gringa released in 2021 and 2022—the one thing wrong with them is that they’ve been the only new music she’s put out since her acclaimed 2020 album, Force to Reckon. Thankfully, Half Gringa dropped a new EP, Ancestral Home, on Friday, January 27. It collects both of those singles and three new tracks, including “Some Curse,” a sparse lament with the intimate feel of a quiet conversation in a room lit by slowly dying firelight. On Sunday, April 30, Half Gringa will celebrate with a record-release show at Sleeping Village, so put that on your calendar now! 

The new Half Gringa EP, Ancestral Home, includes two previously released singles.

In November 2022, local indie-rock trio Patter caught Gossip Wolf’s attention when YouTube music-performance channel Puddle Splashers posted a three-song live session from the band. Guitarist Wilson Brehmer, bassist Joe Suihkonen, and drummer Seth Engel adroitly blend cyclical guitar patterns, unobtrusive math-rock rhythms, and ringing choruses that sparkle with a touch of emo grandeur almost in spite of themselves. Their five-song debut EP, Patter Theme, which dropped January 20, is already sold out on cassette via Bandcamp, but downloads are still available for five bucks. Brehmer is the son of late WXRT host Lin Brehmer, and last week Patter canceled their Empty Bottle show so the two of them could spend their last time together. Patter don’t have a future gig posted yet on Bandcamp or Instagram, but it’s definitely worth the effort to keep checking for the next one.

Patter play three songs live in the studio for a Puddle Splashers session in November 2022.

Patter Theme came out on cassette less than two weeks ago, but the tapes are already sold out through Bandcamp.

This winter, veteran Chicago rapper and promoter Aztec Dinero has been filming a romantic comedy, and he aims to wrap it up in the spring. On Saturday, February 4, he’s throwing a fundraiser at Subterranean for his production company, Malcolm Mex Pictures, and to fill out the lineup he’s called on his friends—some of whom have been shaping the Chicago hip-hop scene for 30 years or more. Triple Darkness rapper DaWreck, Newsense of Psychodrama, D.A. Smart, Akbar of Mental Giants, E.Y.E, Color One, and DJ Ceez will join Aztec Dinero onstage. If that lineup doesn’t get you out of your seat, you definitely need to brush up on your local hip-hop history. Tickets are $20, and the show starts at 10 PM.

The 2011 video for D.A. Smart’s best-known track, “Walk Wit Me,” originally released in 1997

Got a tip? Tweet @Gossip_Wolf or email [email protected].

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Chicago hip-hop legends celebrate the debut album of their collaborative project, Scattered Bodies


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One of Chicago’s best singer-songwriters drops a new EP Read More »