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This offseason, the Chicago Bears have to add talent across their offensive line. What Justin Fields endured last year was unacceptable, and although some of his hits were his own fault, the majority of them came because of a lack of protection.

With the most cap space in the NFL, the Bears are set to make an impact via free agency. And, there is going to be one specific option at guard which could be a perfect fit.

The Philadelphia Eagles had arguably the best offensive line in football this season, and with a similar offense that features a ton of running from both the quarterback and running backs, grabbing a starter from this unit would make a ton of sense.

When the new league year hits, Eagles starting guard Isaac Seumalo will become a free agent. The 29-year-old is one of the more underrated free agent linemen in this year’s crop, and the Bears should definitely make a run at him.

Isaac Seumalo would give the Chicago Bears a surefire starter up front, taking one need off the board right away

This past season, Seumalo was graded out strongly via Pro Football Focus, earning a phenomenal 79.1 pass blocking grade and an overall grade of 75.2. That’s an incredible mark, for those familiar with PFF grading.

To make things even more impressive and put it into easier terms, Seumalo played 1,135 offensive snaps across the regular season.

He only gave up one sack.

That is outstanding. In addition, Seumalo only allowed three quarterback hits all year on Jalen Hurts. If he came to Chicago and could give Fields similar protection, Seumalo would immediately become one of the Bears’ best free agent signings in quite some time.

While he played every game this year, except one, Seumalo’s lone red flag is his injury history. Between 2020 and 2021, he only appeared in 12 games total. That is a concern, but the fact he was able to stay healthy in 2022 is a plus.

Again, with the Eagles running the ball a lot and featuring a rushing quarterback, Seumalo is a great fit in Chicago. He would allow the Bears to potentially move on from Cody Whitehair and then the only decision to make would be regarding whether Teven Jenkins can be a full-time starter.

At the very least, they’d know Seumalo gives them a strong starter, and that’s something the Bears have not had many of in recent years.

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Is it April yet? The 2023 NFL Draft is one of the most highly-anticipated drafts in history for the Chicago Bears, and we could see a ton of movement prior to Chicago actually making a selection.

With what we already know, we understand there could be a Battle Royale for the Bears’ no. 1 pick between the Houston Texans and Indianapolis Colts. Colts general manager Chris Ballard went on record saying he’d do “whatever it takes” to get the pick, while the Texans are rumored to want to prevent that from happening.

This could not be going any better for the Bears. Ryan Poles‘ phone is going to be blowing up, and may the highest bidder win.

In the end, though, it’s very possible for the Bears to trade down twice in the first round. It’s rarely done, but Chicago could very well see a scenario where that happens. Let’s take a look at what that perfect scenario would be.

The Chicago Bears could execute a double trade-down in the 2023 NFL Draft

Bears Get
No. 2 Pick
2023 2nd Round Pick (No. 34)
2023 6th Round Pick (No. 201)
2024 1st Round Pick
Texans Get
No. 1 Pick

When it’s all said and done, the Texans could outbid the Colts for that no. 1 pick. It would be a hefty price to pay in order to move up just one spot, but you have to remember that they do not want the Colts ending up being able to draft Alabama quarterback Bryce Young.

The Texans overpay to move up just a single spot, but they are able to land Young, which is what matters in the end.

From there, the Colts could be looking at Ohio State quarterback CJ Stroud or Kentucky’s Will Levis as “their guy,” but don’t want to risk a team taking him (or moving up to select him) at three or four. At this stage, the Colts are desperate. So, the Bears win big yet again, moving back a couple of spots and netting an enormous haul of draft capital.

Bears Get
No. 4 Pick,
2024 1st Round Pick,
2023 2nd Round Pick (No. 36), 2023 3rd Round Pick (No. 80)
2023 6th Round Pick (No. 205), 2023 7th Round Pick (No. 223)
Colts Get
No. 2 Pick
2023 5th Round Pick (No. 149)

Let’s recap.

The Bears trade back a total of just three spots, but they are able to net two extra first-round picks, two second-round picks, a third-round pick, two sixth-round picks, and a seventh rounder.

After giving up just a fifth to the Colts, that’s an additional seven picks for the Bears, with five of them coming in the top three rounds.

Just imagine the possibilities for the Bears, not only this year, but next year. This year, they could address some huge needs like the offensive and defensive line. Next year, they’d have three first rounders to work with and very well may end up with a guy like Marvin Harrison Jr. if they did everything they could to land him.

Once again, is it April yet?

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Not only is Alex Caruso not on the block, but he is Bulls “culture”

ORLANDO – Billy Donovan mockingly pushed the final box score off to the side.

That’s usually a good practice for the Bulls coach when discussing what Alex Caruso does.

It’s not there in black and white, and it’s not something novice watchers of the game pick up on. There’s dirt under Caruso’s nails when the final horn sounds most nights, even if it can’t be seen.

“He’s one of those classic guys that if you’re watching the game and you really understand the game, then you look at the stat sheet, you’re like, ‘You know what, don’t tell me about the stat sheet. That guy impacts the game, he impacts winning,’ ” Donovan said of his guard. “To me the stat sheet never really tells the story about the guys that are really impacting the outcome of the game with different things they do.”

And there’s no doubt that Caruso is a different cat, capable of doing those different things for the Bulls.

Here’s just a glance at what he means when he’s on the floor this season: The Bulls have a top five defensive rating of 110.7 when Caruso is playing, and when he’s not that rating drops to 116.8 – near the bottom of the league.

He’s first in plus/minus at plus-117, with the next closest being Javonte Green at plus-55.

Caruso is second in the league in defensive box plus/minus with a 3.4 rating, his 164 deflections are second to only Toronto’s O.G. Anunoby, and he averages 1.7 steals per game.

All of that was felt in the win over the Magic on Saturday, even with a very pedestrian-looking box score of seven points and two steals.

Whether it was a deflection or just physically getting into Orlando’s ball-handlers, possession after possession was disrupted by Caruso.

“That’s kind of what I try to do every night,” Caruso said. “Some nights I’m just a little better at it than others.”

What does that truly mean to the Bulls right now?

Considering where they are in the standings and what the expectations were, it means everything.

That’s why a member of the organization shot down the idea of Caruso being on the trading block like one report recently said.

In fact, when the Bulls have received calls on Caruso, the asking price has been so astronomical, it reiterated a Sun-Times report that Caruso is basically deemed untouchable.

“He’s the culture,” one source said. Actually, not a bad nickname for Caruso, considering his hustle plays are often plastered throughout the game film.

“High-IQ, knows what’s happening, what’s coming, what he’s going to do, where his man is, is he going over, under?” Donovan said. “He really reacts pretty spontaneously and he has such a good feel for it. And then like we’ve all talked about, he throws his body into everything all the time.”

What he won’t throw himself into? Concerns that he’s a trade piece.

“They also said I was getting traded in December,” Caruso said of the rumor mill. “I lived in LA for four years [playing for the Lakers], and that’s kind of what happens there. You just play basketball games and be a good teammate until something changes, and if nothing changes you just keep doing what you’re doing.”

That’s also why Caruso has no plans to take advantage of the open-door policy of executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas, and find out where he stands as the Feb. 9 trade deadline approaches.

“No, because I came into the league just hoping to be on a team, so for me just being part of a team is good enough, wherever that is,” Caruso said. “Obviously I want to keep wearing the red and white, I love my teammates here, the city, and I’m going to give all I can to whatever team I’m on. It’s just kind of my MO.”

And why he’s so valuable to the Bulls. No matter what the box score reads.

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High school basketball: Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 rankings for Jan. 29, 2023

Simeon remains on top. That is a bit of a surprise based on what I was thinking last night, but when I sat down this morning and set everything out in front of me it was an easy decision.

The three contenders for the No. 1 spot were Simeon, Benet and Kenwood.

The Wolverines have beaten five teams that have been ranked this season (St. Rita, Perspectives-Leadership, Curie, Benet and Hyde Park). The overall resume is even more impressive with wins against Moline and seven out of state opponents that are ranked quality teams, including Philadelphia Imhotep, one of the best teams in the country.

It’s also hard to forget that Simeon’s win against Benet was very lopsided for three quarters. The Wolverines had an 18-point lead after three and led by 20 at halftime.

Both of Simeon’s losses came down to the final shot. The Wolverines lost to Kenwood 46-43 and on the road at Curie this week 50-48.

Benet and Kenwood both have seven wins against ranked teams. The Broncos have a slightly stronger overall resume, but Benet beat them last week so stays at No. 2.

Bloom lost to Thornwood this week and drops out. The Blazing Trojans have a high ceiling but are young at some key positions and are learning how to get by without Jayden Watson, who is injured and out for the season.

Marian Catholic returns. The Spartans cracked 20 wins and have put together a strong overall season. They have a huge test against Benet this week.

Super 25 for Jan. 29, 2023

1. Simeon (21-2) 1Still the best resume

2. Benet (23-1) 2Only loss is Simeon

3. Kenwood (19-5) 3Can Broncos win the city?

4. Joliet West (19-5) 4Fears is a burger boy

5. Young (19-5) 5Beat Chaminade

6. Hillcrest (24-2) 6Survived H-F

7. Curie (16-9) 15Upset Simeon

8. Brother Rice (22-3) 7Hosts Caravan Friday

9. Mount Carmel (21-2) 10Dominant Moline win looking good

10. Rolling Meadows (21-4) 8Couldn’t handle Moline

11. Hinsdale Central (22-3) 12Area’s longest win streak at 14

12. Bolingbrook (19-6) 11Challenging week ahead

13. Hyde Park (20-5) 9Lost to Perspectives-Leadership

14. Oswego East (20-5) 13At Yorkville Friday

15. Lyons (19-3) 16Beat Riverside-Brookfield

16. New Trier (21-4) 22Handled Glenbrook South

17. Lincoln-Way East (20-3) 19Lost to Hinsdale Central, beat H-F

18. Proviso East (16-5) 14Upset by rival Proviso West

19. Downers Grove North (20-3) 23Huge week ahead

20. Marist (20-5) 24Beat St. Viator

21. St. Rita (14-10) 17Couldn’t hang with Mount Carmel

22. Glenbrook South (19-6) 18Lost to Trevians, Prospect

23. Glenbrook North (21-3) 21Lost to Evanston

24. Loyola (20-7) 25Lost to Bolingbrook

25. Marian Catholic (20-6) NRHosts Benet Friday

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Now that we’re in full offseason mode, all of the takes and opinions are flying. The Chicago Bears enter a pivotal offseason which they hold a lot of power, and there’s a ton of positive belief around this team.

But, one specific story continues to be a stain on Chicago’s early offseason, and that’s the “what could have been” question when it comes to the Chase Claypool trade last season.

The Bears dealt their own second-round pick to the Pittsburgh Steelers in exchange for Claypool, which ended up being the 32nd pick in the draft. Remember, Miami forfeits their first rounder, therefore the first pick of the second round becomes no. 32.

While Claypool’s numbers as a Bear don’t tell a pretty story, one would be right to say that it is entirely too early to say that the Steelers won this trade.

Time will tell if the Chicago Bears or Pittsburgh Steelers won the Chase Claypool trade

If you thought the Bears were going to trade a second rounder for a guy who would only end up with 14 catches in Chicago last year, go buy yourself a lottery ticket. Yes, his final numbers in Chicago were not ideal.

Claypool wasn’t even used as often as fans would have liked to see. However, that can also be attributed to a few factors. Most importantly, the Bears very well could be playing the long game with Claypool. Bringing him along slowly and integrating him into the offense in time could be part of the plan.

Let’s be real, here. If Claypool had come in and been utilized heavily, the Bears could have won another game or two. He has the big play ability. We know that.

But, if the Bears had won another game or two, then they wouldn’t be in this position to draft no. 1 overall.

This is all part of a slowly-developing plan. Just like last offseason, when people complained Ryan Poles didn’t do enough to help Justin Fields, they didn’t understand this was going to be about 2023, not the current league year.

Poles’ plan has always lined up with going big in 2023, and that’s what he’s going to do. He now has the ammunition both in cap space and the draft to make huge ripples across the league. The offseason, in essence, runs through Chicago now.

To call the Steelers a winner in this trade would be entirely too soon. We haven’t seen what Claypool can do when fully immersed. We also haven’t seen who the Steelers take with that draft pick. Let’s calm down with these early overreactions and allow the process to play out.

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Chicago Bears fans have been accustomed to quarterback purgatory for quite some time now. It has seemed, at times, that this franchise would never reach a point where they can feel great about their quarterback situation going into the future.

Then, Justin Fields happened.

In his second season, Fields put on a show for Bears fans. Despite having an underperforming offensive line and not having nearly enough weapons around him, Fields did everything he could, week-in and week-out, to not only try and win, but give fans something to cheer for.

Fields made history on multiple occasions, finishing the season with three 50-plus-yard touchdown runs (in the span of a month, mind you) and breaking the single-game rushing record for a quarterback.

Putting all of that aside, now that the Bears have the number one pick in the 2023 NFL Draft, we’re starting to see plenty of smoke around a Justin Fields trade, and one ex-NFL player decided to add fuel to the fire this past week.

*EXCLUSIVE* pro football #hof‘er @WarrenSapp says the #Bears will be looking to trade that first pick AND Justin Fields! #BoonePodcast whole episode available tomorrow! @theboone29 pic.twitter.com/fcmmmJvI93

— Dan ‘Bass’ Levy (@bassonair) January 26, 2023

Ex-NFL player Warren Sapp foolishly predicted that the Chicago Bears will indeed trade Justin Fields, but couldn’t be more off-base

First of all, Warren Sapp has no connection with the Chicago Bears media. It’s hard to believe he has any inside information whatsoever.

At this point, he’s simply following some of the social media and national media trends of creating storylines out of nothing. Sure, the Bears own the first overall pick and could opt to draft Bryce Young while trading Fields. Yes, that’s a possibility.

It’s also a possibility that Fields comes out tomorrow, retires from the NFL, grows a beard, buys the best overalls Fleet Farm has on the shelf, and decides to leave football and go into full-time farming.

Come on, man. Let’s get real for a moment.

All of the smoke around a Fields trade is exactly that — smoke. That’s it. The Bears finally have something to cheer about under center, with a guy who can single-handedly flip the script in a game, and now you’re talking about trading him?

Chicago led the NFL last year in rushing and put up the fifth-most yardage by any team in the history of the league. Guess who led the way? Fields.

Why on earth would the Bears want to ruin the only good thing they have on offense right now? Instead of building off an excellent rushing attack, and around a quarterback with a big arm, you think they’d ship him off and start over again?

Look around at some of the best football minds right now. Many of them are calling this rumor out to be a hoax. Many of them have even said they would put Fields as the number one quarterback in this year’s class, above Young.

Listen to the guys who have been in this thing for a while. Listen to logic. Listen to your heart, I don’t care.

Just don’t listen to Warren Sapp.

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Seth Jones powering Blackhawks’ offense but struggling with zone-entry defense

EDMONTON, Alberta — It’s funny how the timing of Blackhawks defenseman Seth Jones getting the splint removed from his previously injured right thumb aligned with a sudden spike in his production.

”I’m not going to make an excuse for anything,” Jones said with a sly grin Friday. ”But it’s kind of weird how that set up.”

The splint finally came off about three weeks ago. Jones said his thumb doesn’t feel 100% yet, but it’s ”good enough.” And from Jan. 3 through Thursday, he broke for 12 points — three goals, nine assists — in 11 games, more than doubling his season total.

The points came in different ways. Jones made some smart breakout passes, jump-starting chain reactions that have led to goals by Jason Dickinson on Jan. 21 and Sam Lafferty on Jan. 24.

He drove to the net, positioning himself to score the Hawks’ first power-play goal by a defenseman in two seasons Jan. 3 and to score the overtime winner Jan. 17. Jones’ backdoor presence also forced Kraken defenseman Jamie Oleksiak to stand in the crease Jan. 14, allowing Jonathan Toews to score by deflecting the puck in off him.

Most notably, he got shots cleanly through traffic, scoring the tying goal Jan. 17 by doing so and setting up Lukas Reichel, Philipp Kurashev and Toews for tip-in goals on Jan. 8, Jan. 17 and Jan. 19, respectively.

”Obviously, I’m playing better overall,” Jones said. ”I’m just trying to move my feet, take opportunities when they’re there and get the puck in some guys’ hands.”

The continued steadiness of his pairing with Jake McCabe also has freed him to take more chances offensively, some of which inevitably pay off.

”I try to jump when I see the opportunity,” Jones said. ”There’s not a lot of opportunity in our [team] game sometimes to jump up and make things happen. But when I get the puck at the blue line, I try to get pucks to the net and try to shoot quicker, [try] not to take so long to shoot it. When I can be that ‘second wave,’ that third or fourth guy in the rush, it’s nice to know someone’s back there and can handle weird situations.”

That was Jones’ most productive 11-game stretch since the spring of 2018 with the Blue Jackets. He exploded for 16 points in his final 11 appearances that season, powering the Jackets’ 13-2-2 season-ending run that pushed them into a playoff spot.

Coincidentally, his shot volume of 12.0 attempts per 60 minutes this season is the second-highest of his career, trailing only 2017-18 (15.1 per 60). He’s not kidding about shooting more.

Seasons such as 2017-18 helped to build Jones’ reputation as one of the NHL’s elite defensemen, and times such as these offer glimpses of what former Hawks general manager Stan Bowman daydreamed about when acquiring him, as misguided as Bowman’s plan was.

”Seth’s decision-making — on top of his ability and strength out there — is really getting back to where everybody is used to seeing [from] Seth Jones,” coach Luke Richardson said recently.

On the other hand…

Not every aspect of Jones’ game has been fixed this month, however. His zone-entry defense continues to be a significant weakness.

Opponents carry the puck into the offensive zone — rather than dump it in — on 61.3% of their five-on-five entry attempts against Jones, according to data from All Three Zones. That exceeds the NHL average of 58.2%.

He disrupts a respectable portion of those — his 12.9% entry denial rate is also better than the NHL average of 9.5% — but things often play out poorly when he doesn’t.

Jones allows 8.2 zone entries that lead directly to scoring chances per 60 minutes, which is by far the most in the league. The NHL average is 3.7. Only 11 other defensemen leaguewide allow more than 6.0.

”I’ve had a tendency to back up and not keep a good gap,” Jones said. ”There’s a lot of things that go into that.”

This isn’t a new problem. Opponents’ carry-in and entries-leading-to-chances rates against Jones have surpassed the league averages for years now, although not as excessively as they do now. In 2021-22, those rates against Jones were 65.0% and 4.7, respectively. In 2020-21 with the Blue Jackets, they were 66.0% and 4.1, respectively.

Jones said he reviewed a lot of video last summer in hopes of improving in this regard, but that work hasn’t proved fruitful yet. He admitted his instinct to back up on entry attempts is a ”habit that needs to be broken.”

”Maybe just being more aggressive on the entry [attempts could be beneficial],” he said. ”Trusting my feet, trusting my stick and making it tough for them. Sometimes on odd-man rushes, you can’t stay up. But if it’s a one-on-one situation or two-on-two situation, [I can] try to be more aggressive and make them chip it by me.”

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Blackhawks’ blowout loss to Oilers pushes them into bye week

EDMONTON, Alberta — If the Blackhawks have proven anything this season, it’s that they cannot defend the Oilers.

The Hawks traipsed into their bye week with a 7-3 loss Saturday, concluding a chaotic and fruitless three-game season series against Edmonton. The Hawks previously lost 6-5 on Oct. 27 and 5-4 on Nov. 30.

“We pre-scout them and know what they’re going to do, and they still seem to do it,” coach Luke Richardson said. “They’re really good at it.”

An onslaught of three goals in a span of 2:33 during the second period transformed a relatively tight 2-1 game into a blowout. The Oilers eventually racked up 46 scoring chances, tied for the second-most the Hawks have allowed this season.

“We played well the first period, and even the first half of the game, other than the two [Oilers] power-play goals,” Richardson added. “Then we got impatient with ourselves… When we don’t play patient and we get spread out, we lose our pace and our game and we don’t really get much accomplished.”

Oilers star Connor McDavid toyed with the Hawks much of the night and finally exploited Seth Jones for a pretty goal after being barely denied several times earlier. He tallied three points, finishing with nine against the Hawks alone this season and upping his overall total to an NHL-leading 92 in 50 games.

Of course, McDavid partner-in-crime Leon Draisaitl also tallied three points Saturday as well as nine total against the Hawks this season. He ranks second in the league with 76 points.

“They obviously have two of the best players in the world, and they can create stuff out of nothing,” Taylor Raddysh said. “We all have to be aware of it and be on top of them, make it hard on them. It’s tough when they find the scoresheet like that.”

Raddysh, Jason Dickinson and Jonathan Toews scored for the Hawks. Goalie Petr Mrazek stopped 36 of 43 shots.

The Hawks, sitting second-to-last in the league standings with a 15-29-4 record, will now enjoy nine days off during the bye week and All-Star break before hosting the Ducks on Feb. 7.

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Bulls still searching for late-game identity, but win over Magic helps

ORLANDO – Midway through his 15th NBA season, there hasn’t been a whole lot that Goran Dragic hasn’t seen.

“This is even a new one for me,” the veteran point guard said on Saturday.

Like many, Dragic feels this Bulls roster has playoff talent on it from top to bottom. What he couldn’t process was why this late in the season were they still searching for the missing ingredients?

“It is a little disturbing that the search is still going on with what, 30-some games left?” Dragic said. “This is something that as a player, as a team, you would have liked to already figure out those things because it’s coming close to the end of the season and every game matters for the playoffs. It’s not ideal.

“At the same time, where I think it’s positive is we have a lot of guys here that care. We’re trying to figure out the things that would benefit this team and get us on the same page. We still need to find that.”

Call the 128-109 win over Orlando at least a clue.

Yes, the Bulls built a seemingly insurmountable 25-point lead, and yes, like they did in losses to Indiana and Charlotte at the start of the road trip, they also blew those leads.

The difference was at least against the Magic, they found a way to bandage it up for a night.

After a 7-0 Orlando run cut the deficit to just eight with just over 10 minutes left, coach Billy Donovan called the timeout, settled things down, and watched his players react with five quick points.

That didn’t mean the young up-and-coming Magic were just going to go away, but neither were the Bulls (23-26).

Anytime Orlando looked to run down the visiting team, a big basket was made. DeMar DeRozan hit a clutch three-pointer at the 6:33 mark, and then quieted an eight-point run with a 12-footer from the baseline.

The Magic cut it to five, but Zach LaVine answered with a solid drive, and then 30 seconds later, Patrick Williams hit a clutch three.

There was give by the Bulls, but there was finally take.

“We just stayed together,” veteran center Nikola Vucevic said. “In every timeout, we just stayed calm.”

It didn’t hurt that the “Big Three” were able to flex their muscles all night either, as DeRozan and LaVine each finished with 32, and Vucevic had 26.

That doesn’t mean everything was solved on Saturday. It was a start, and one that Dragic hoped led to bigger things sooner than later.

“I would not say it’s a bad thing that guys in here are willing to search for those answers,” Dragic said. “It’s tough to say or point at names or by positions. I think we have a playoff team. But definitely I feel like most people would agree that we’ve underperformed.”

Eye on Ayo

Starting point guard Ayo Dosunmu only scored three points and handed out one assist in the win over the Magic, with Donovan admitting that he was still going through growing pains as he finds his way.

“There’s going to be nights he’s going to be good, and there’s going to be nights he’s not,” coach Billy Donovan said of Dosunmu. “But I think the growth part of it for him and the way he’s approached it, I appreciate it.”

Return of the “Dragon”

Dragic -nicknamed the “Dragon” from his Phoenix days – made the flight to Orlando on Friday, got in a workout with the backup players, and returned to the rotation against the Magic.

Dragic missed the first two games of the three-city road trip because of illness, and said, “I don’t know the last time I was that sick.”

Watching losses to Indiana and Charlotte probably didn’t help.

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High school basketball: Breakout junior Cam Cerese leads Lake Park past Fenton

Give Lake Park coach Billy Pitcher credit for honesty.

His first words after the Lancers knocked off Fenton 45-33: “That’s probably why people want the shot clock.”

It was a solid game for three quarters with two evenly matched teams going at it. Pitcher pulled things out in the fourth quarter and used a spread offense to run down the clock and hold on to an 11-point lead.

“We blew a 21-point lead last night against Batavia so we were extra cautious,” Pitcher said.

It worked. Lake Park made good decisions and saw the game out. It’s easy to see why killing off the game is so enticing for coaches.

“Our job is to win the game,” Pitcher said. “We forced a couple shots last night and let Batavia back in the game. We were not going to do that tonight.”

Lancers junior Cam Cerese is one of the season’s breakout players, averaging 23 points. He had 14 points and five rebounds against Fenton.

“I did not see [Cerese’s] breakout coming at all,” Pitcher said. “There is always a guy that surprises you every year but it is usually a sixth or seventh man.”

Cerese says it was simple, plain hard work that led to his improvement.

“I was up at 5 a.m. every day in the summer working as hard as I could,” Cerese said. “It’s definitely been rewarding seeing it pay off this season.”

Cerese said he’s definitely ready for the shot clock, which the IHSA has approved for use in shootouts and tournaments. It’s expected to be another few years before it is in place for every game.

“It really sucks when you are down and you have to watch the other team kinda do what we did tonight,” Cerese said.

Lake Park (15-8) led 18-10 after one quarter and never trailed. Fenton scored the first seven points of the second quarter to cut the lead to one but never mounted another significant threat.

Junior Dennasio LaGioia led the Lancers with 16 points and 6-5 junior Tommy Rochford added 10 points and 10 rebounds.

Junior Alejandro Diaz led Fenton with 15 points and Caleb Lewis added 10. The Bison (18-7) are having one of the best seasons in school history.

Fenton has never won a sectional and won just two regionals, in 1976 and 2011. The 18 wins this season is already good enough for third best in school history. The Bison won 21 games in 1976 and in 2020.

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