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Bulls rookie Dalen Terry trying his best to patiently wait his turn

WASHINGTON – Dalen Terry thought he could help.

Nothing new from the 18th overall pick from last summer’s NBA draft, because Terry always feels like he could have helped.

After every game, and every DNP [Did Not Play] Coach’s Decision.

But Wednesday was different. The Bulls were without veteran DeMar DeRozan (right quadriceps) and Javonte Green (right knee surgery), still managed to build a double-digit lead going into the halftime locker room, only to see it painfully evaporate and end up being a three-point loss.

Meanwhile, Terry was a spectator for all 48 minutes … again.

“I’m definitely anxious to get playing time,” Terry said. “I always want my name to be called. As a competitor and just me being a rookie, I’m never gonna stop until I feel like I’m somebody in this league.

“With the position I’m in right now, it’s just like you’ve gotta embrace it, but you can’t ever get comfortable. I can’t get comfortable with learning every day and not playing. I just have to find that balance.”

No easy task for Terry.

To call Terry high energy is an understatement. He’s not only like the kid in class that devoured way too much sugar and was told to try and sit quietly, but he also got a hall pass and snuck a quick can of Red Bull.

Unfortunately for the guard out of Arizona, that same energy is also why the game hasn’t slowed down enough for him where the coaching staff is comfortable making Terry a regular in the rotation.

By all accounts, his jumper continues to improve in practice and scrimmages, he’s shown glimpses of being an electric passer and play-maker, and his defense is rotation ready, but until he can dial back the RPMs on what he’s seeing on the floor, he remains a work in progress.

Evident by the fact he’s only played in 14 games so far, and mostly in mop-up duty.

“Never,” Terry said, when asked if he’s ever been on the bench like this at any level of his basketball career. “I’ve never sat like this in my life.”

That’s why he finds himself talking to so many people about it. He joked that they all give him the same answer and he knows what the response will be, but he still needs to hear it.

“You just always want to know why,” Terry said. “So just talking to some of the vets – obviously you guys know my relationship with DeMar – and he just always tells me like, ‘Kobe [Bryant] didn’t play a bunch his first three years.’ He’s always sending me videos on how Kobe channeled the why he’s not playing and used it to get better, do the things the coach wanted him to do, and he’s one of the greatest of all times.

“Just lean on guys in my corner, like NBA players I grew up around, they all tell me like, ‘This is normal for rookies to go through this.’ If you’re not a top five pick, there’s a chance you go through something like this. My freshman year in college, I went from starting and playing like 25 minutes, to coming off the bench and playing like 18 minutes, and it was hard for me to even do that.”

So how does he channel all that energy during games? Just watch Terry during timeouts or key baskets, especially if it’s a DeRozan basket. DeRozan has taken Terry under his wing as a mentor, and in return there’s no bigger DeRozan hype-man on the roster than the Rook.

Whether it’s choreographed dances or just yelling from the sideline, Terry has embraced trying to be the best teammate he can be as he waits for his name to be called.

“Just keep working and getting my game more polished,” Terry said. “Just waiting for my time.”

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What if the Chicago Blackhawks land the number one pick?James Mackeyon January 12, 2023 at 5:16 pm

It’s no surprise that after an abysmal first half, the Chicago Blackhawks are in the running for the highest odds to land the number 1 overall pick in the 2023 NHL Entry Draft. What if they actually land it?

If the Blackhawks land the top pick in the draft, the list of ‘What ifs’ and ‘Who to draft?’ is longer than a hot summer day in the sweltering Arizona heat but it’s an important issue to address.

Here are the top 3 scenarios of what should happen if the Hawks land the spot.

#1 – Not the pick you expect…?

Sure, his projected 138 points in the WHL is ridiculous and his 23-point Gold Medal run with Canada in the World Juniors showed his bright spots as a player but the size of Connor Bedard’s head isn’t the only way he’s challenged in size.

With 5 foot – 10 inches and 187 pounds of pure Canadian man, Bedard belongs in a locker room with guys who aren’t looking for a menacing puck carrier and has silky hands to make defenders look like they have their ankles tied together.

I see your Connor Bedard hype and raise you a 6 foot – 3 inch “Captain Serious” dumb to pass up on type of player. Adam Fantilli, University of Michigan.

He is a consensus top 2 pick and overlooked because Bedard’s bedazzling puck skills have mesmerized scouts. Fantilli is in a roster flooded with talent at Michigan and is still standing out with 11 goals and 15 assists for 26 points in 16 games played for Mel Pearson’s Maize and Blue.

Not only that, he posted as many assists as goals in 2 years for the Chicago Steel (55-55-110). That was also a loaded roster of NHL Prospects like Josh Doan, Sam Lipkin, Zam Plante, and Joe Miller, which is impressive.

His size and ability to make plays with the puck show his extreme ability to be a difference-maker in the future.

The Chicago Blackhawks have a lot of decisions to make this off-season.

#2 – Use Patrick Kane as leverage to pull in a high pick in the 1st round, and start the future there

The clock is ticking and the grains of time are draining on Kane in the Windy City, but don’t wastefully dump him. Dealing Kane is all but written in stone and needs to be done correctly.

He should get dealt at the deadline and the front office needs to make sure they have a strong base to start a draft in which they are guaranteed a top 5 pick.

They should make a deal with a team that has a lot to give and can make you look better than you did on the ice. They should be able to trade Kane away for a 15th or higher pick, be able to get 2 top players early on, and start there.

#3 – Make them forfeit the pick

Look, let’s all be honest here. No one wants to talk about it, but the way Rocky Wirtz and the entire circus handled the Kyle Beach situation, and what they allowed to happen to a player who wanted to make it big as an atrocity to the name of the franchise.

It also harmed the league as a whole and a worthy punishment needs to be handed down. There should be more than a $2 Million fine and a settlement. There has been no accountability.

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What if the Chicago Blackhawks land the number one pick?James Mackeyon January 12, 2023 at 5:16 pm Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


Baby steps

The good news about 2022 is that it could have been worse.


Good riddance

The best thing Alderperson Ed Burke ever did for Chicago was to leave office.


The Florida strategy

MAGA’s attempt to scare white voters into voting against Pritzker didn’t work so well, to put it mildly.

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Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon January 12, 2023 at 8:01 am

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


Baby steps

The good news about 2022 is that it could have been worse.


Good riddance

The best thing Alderperson Ed Burke ever did for Chicago was to leave office.


The Florida strategy

MAGA’s attempt to scare white voters into voting against Pritzker didn’t work so well, to put it mildly.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon January 12, 2023 at 8:01 am Read More »

Bears name Kevin Warren president/CEO

The Bears are naming Big Ten commissioner Kevin Warren their president/CEO, sources confirmed Thursday morning.

Warren will replace Ted Phillips, who announced in September that he would retire at the end of the season after 23 years in the role.

He will be the fifth president in Bears history, following founder George Halas, his son “Mugs,” eldest grandson Michael McCaskey and Phillips. Phillips replaced Michael McCaskey in 1999 after serving as the Bears’ controller, finance director and vice president of operations for a combined 16 years.

Warren, who turned 59 in November, is just the second Bears president — alongside Phillips — not related to Halas.

Warren is appealing to the Bears because of his experience in not only the Big Ten but as the chief operating officer of the Vikings when they built U.S. Bank Stadium. Some inside Halas Hall believe the stadium, which opened in 2016, to be a model for the Bears’ Arlington Heights project. The Bears are in escrow on the 326-acre Arlington International Racecourse property and hope to close soon.

Warren, who has 18 months left on his Big Ten contract, interviewed with the Bears in December. At the time, the Big Ten released a statement saying he “regularly receives unique opportunities and interest for his expertise.”

He lives in the Chicago area; the Big Ten is based in Rosemont.

A Phoenix native, Warren played college basketball at Penn and Grand Canyon. He averaged 20 points per game at GCU from 1984-86 and was put in their Hall of Fame in 2012.

He’s a 1990 Notre Dame Law School grad and former agent who worked for the Rams and Lions — and later a law firm — before joining the Vikings in 2005. He was named COO 10 years later and then, in 2019, the first African American Power 5 commissioner.

One of his first duties as commissioner was unprecedented — dealing with the coronavirus. He postponed the 2020 fall season amid blowback from players, coaches and then-Ohio State star Justin Fields. Fields, who is now the Bears’ quarterback, launched a petition to reinstate sports in the conference. Warren reinstated them a month later and the Big Ten played an abridged season.

Warren shocked the college sports world last summer when he lured UCLA and USC to the Big Ten from the Pac-12 — they will join in 2024. Buoyed by the attractiveness of the Los Angeles market, the Big Ten negotiated a lucrative media rights deal less than two months later.

The Bears’ executive structure under Warren will be telling. Currently, general manager Ryan Poles reports directly to chairman George McCaskey, a change that he enacted a year ago, knowing Phillips’ retirement was likely near.

McCaskey, Phillips and Tanesha Wade, the Bears’ senior vice president of diversity, equity and inclusion, interviewed candidates with help from search firm Nolan Partners. In September, George McCaskey said the team was open to candidates with different backgrounds but cited traits the team thought were essential: “leadership, vision, humility, [and] consensus-building.”

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Warren bolts Big Ten to become Bears prez, CEOon January 12, 2023 at 4:06 pm

CHICAGO — The Chicago Bears will name Big Ten commissioner Kevin Warren as their president and CEO, sources have confirmed to ESPN.

Warren will replace outgoing president and CEO Ted Phillips, who announced his retirement last September following the 2022 season. The Bears, who could announce the hiring as early as Thursday, interviewed Warren in person last month.

Warren has informed Illinois chancellor Robert Jones, chair of the Big Ten council of presidents/chancellors, of his departure, according to sources.

1 Related

The Big Ten presidents and chancellors are set to meet later Thursday morning. The Bears’ plan to hire Warren was first reported Thursday by NFL Network.

Warren has been with the Big Ten since June 2019 but recently was not given a contract extension by the conference, according to ESPN’s Pete Thamel. His extensive experience in the NFL includes stints with the Rams, Lions and Vikings, where he worked from 2005 to 2019. He spent 2005-14 as the Vikings’ executive vice president of legal affairs and chief administrative officer before being promoted to Minnesota’s chief operating officer in 2015.

Sources told ESPN that Warren’s impact in helping the Vikings build U.S. Bank Stadium in 2016 has been appealing to the Bears, who are also looking to construct a new stadium in the coming years after 50 seasons at Soldier Field. The Bears aim to close on their 326-acre purchase of Arlington Heights during the first quarter of 2023 and unveiled initial plans for the development, which is set to include a domed stadium, last fall.

The Bears have been under contract on the property since September 2021, when they signed a $197.2 million purchase and sale agreement.

Phillips spent 40 seasons with the Bears, including the last 23 in his role as president/CEO. He was only the fourth person to serve as president in the organization’s 102-year existence and the first outside of the Halas-McCaskey family to hold that post.

ESPN’s Adam Rittenberg contributed to this report.

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Warren bolts Big Ten to become Bears prez, CEOon January 12, 2023 at 4:06 pm Read More »

BREAKING: Chicago Bears reportedly found next CEO/President

The Chicago Bears have a new CEO/President lined up

The Chicago Bears have found their next CEO/President. Before the season, reports came out that longtime CEO/President Ted Phillips would be stepping down at the end of the season.

In a fitting end to his tenure, Phillips will be leaving the Bears after his final season, where the Bears finished 3-14, the most losses in a single season for the franchise. No matter to the team’s finances, the Bears averaged crowds of 59,823 for their 61,500-capacity stadium each home game this season. Justin Fields’ jersey sales were ranked fifth in the league around Christmas Time.

According to a report by Ian Rapoport of the NFL Network, the Bears are expected to name Kevin Warren as the next CEO/President of the Bears. Warren will be leaving his job as the Big Ten commissioner.

Sources: The #Bears are expected to name Big Ten commissioner Kevin Warren as their new president and CEO. A major hire for the organization and for Warren, who spent time in the NFL prior to college football as a top executive for the #Vikings.

Warren has decades of football experience. Before he accepted the Big Ten commissioner job, Warren worked with a couple of teams in administration. He was with the St. Louis Rams when they won a Super Bowl.

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Bears will name Kevin Warren president/CEO

The Bears are naming Big Ten commissioner Kevin Warren their president/CEO, sources confirmed Thursday morning.

Warren will replace Ted Phillips, who announced in September that he would retire at the end of the season after 23 years in the role.

He will be the fifth president in Bears history, following founder George Halas, his son “Mugs,” eldest grandson Michael McCaskey and Phillips. Phillips replaced Michael McCaskey in 1999 after serving as the Bears’ controller, finance director and vice president of operations for a combined 16 years.

Warren, who turned 59 in November, is just the second Bears president — alongside Phillips — not related to Halas.

Warren is appealing to the Bears because of his experience in not only the Big Ten but as the chief operating officer of the Vikings when they built U.S. Bank Stadium. Some inside Halas Hall believe the stadium, which opened in 2016, to be a model for the Bears’ Arlington Heights project. The Bears are in escrow on the 326-acre Arlington International Racecourse property and hope to close soon.

Warren, who has 18 months left on his Big Ten contract, interviewed with the Bears in December. At the time, the Big Ten released a statement saying he “regularly receives unique opportunities and interest for his expertise.”

He lives in the Chicago area; the Big Ten is based in Rosemont.

A Phoenix native, Warren played college basketball at Penn and Grand Canyon. He averaged 20 points per game at GCU from 1984-86 and was put in their Hall of Fame in 2012.

He’s a 1990 Notre Dame Law School grad and former agent who worked for the Rams and Lions — and later a law firm — before joining the Vikings in 2005. He was named COO 10 years later and then, in 2019, the first African American Power 5 commissioner.

One of his first duties as commissioner was unprecedented — dealing with the coronavirus. He postponed the 2020 fall season amid blowback from players, coaches and then-Ohio State star Justin Fields. Fields, who is now the Bears’ quarterback, launched a petition to reinstate sports in the conference. Warren reinstated them a month later and the Big Ten played an abridged season.

Warren shocked the college sports world last summer when he lured UCLA and USC to the Big Ten from the Pac-12 — they will join in 2024. Buoyed by the attractiveness of the Los Angeles market, the Big Ten negotiated a lucrative media rights deal less than two months later.

The Bears’ executive structure under Warren will be telling. Currently, general manager Ryan Poles reports directly to chairman George McCaskey, a change that he enacted a year ago, knowing Phillips’ retirement was likely near.

McCaskey, Phillips and Tanesha Wade, the Bears’ senior vice president of diversity, equity and inclusion, interviewed candidates with help from search firm Nolan Partners. In September, George McCaskey said the team was open to candidates with different backgrounds but cited traits the team thought were essential: “leadership, vision, humility, [and] consensus-building.”

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Northwestern opens investigation into alleged football hazing

Northwestern has hired an outside attorney to investigate alleged hazing within its football program.

The school said Wednesday in a statement it “immediately” hired attorney Maggie Hickey of law firm ArentFox Schiff to lead the investigation after it was made aware of the alleged hazing following this past season. The school said Hickey will likely interview players, coaches and staff members. ESPN first reported the investigation.

“While we do not yet know whether the allegations are true, hazing is prohibited by University policy, and we take these claims seriously,” Northwestern said in a statement. “The health, safety and well-being of our students is the first priority.”

Northwestern would not say if a player made the allegation, or if players, coaches or staff members were involved.

“The purpose of Ms. Hickey’s investigation is to find the underlying truth of the allegations — including the scope of any potential hazing activity or harmful culture,” Northwestern said.

The Wildcats finished 1-11 for their worst record since the 1989 team went 0-11. They’ve lost 17 of their past 18 games.

Coach Pat Fitzgerald is 110-101 in 17 seasons leading his alma mater and is by far the school’s winningest coach. He led the Wildcats to Big Ten West championships in 2018 and 2020 plus five bowl victories. But they are 4-20 over the past two seasons.

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Chicago Bears: 5 best free agent defensive linemen in 2023Tom Kavanaughon January 12, 2023 at 3:00 pm

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It feels like yesterday when the Chicago Bears defensive line was led by Khalil Mack, Akiem Hicks, Eddie Goldman and Robert Quinn. The unit was the driving force of the team.

Now, the Bears defensive line has arguably reached its all time lowest point. Their entire rotation only generated a meager 127 pressures (according to PFF). For reference, Max Crosby generated 108 on his own in 2021.

Having the 1st overall pick in a draft class that contains 2 generational defensive line prospects is very fortunate for the Bears. However, one player isn’t going to fix this mess.

The Chicago Bears need to spend wisely on the defensive line.

The Bears need to make much of their headway on their defensive front in free agency. While this isn’t a great free agency class as a whole, it’s pretty good on the d line.

In hopes that Ryan Poles doesn’t go full Jaguars mode and throw money at any defensive lineman that breathes, I went through and picked out 5 guys I would target.

$119 million in cap space definitely gives them some margin for error, but the goal should always be to extract the most value as possible.

As a disclaimer for the guys I have chosen, I will not focus much on sacks because I believe we are past using sacks as the measuring stick. There are much more effective ways to evaluate production that I go into detail about in my analysis.

I will stop beating around the bush and jump right into this thing. Here are the top 5 defensive linemen the Bears should pursue in free agency.

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Chicago Bears: 5 best free agent defensive linemen in 2023Tom Kavanaughon January 12, 2023 at 3:00 pm Read More »