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Damar Hamlin’s on-field collapse reminds us of the human toll of professional football

Americans consider themselves innocents. Pure, noble, removed from the degraded world outside our borders, both physical and mental.

True, that pose takes considerable effort to maintain: our own brutal history must be whitewashed, ignored or suppressed. Teachers squelched, books banned, libraries purged. Faith-fueled prudes, at least when it comes to the conduct of others, we simply banish entire realms of human behavior, and if those outside of our beloved norms are not guilty of crimes, then crimes are imagined for them.

This leads to lives of constant surprises, as the white-hot fervor of our imagined purity hits the cold waters of reality. We are continually indignant, aghast, vibrating with shock when forced to confront the obvious.

Take Monday night. As you no doubt know by now, during a game between the Buffalo Bills and the Cincinnati Bengals, 24-year-old Bills safety Damar Hamlin collapsed after an ordinary tackle, nearly dead on the field, as medical technicians struggled to get his heart started.

Fans wept, prayed. Pundits cogitated, then delivered the awful news.

“Football is a violent sport,” revealed a headline in the Times of Northwest Indiana. “And we love it.”

True enough. And sincere, like the prayers after mass shootings, the pious noise that masks our inability to change in any substantial way.

Even concern about violence on the field misses the point. Football players don’t die on the field; they die off it. The average life expectancy of an American man is 79, if he’s white; 68, if he’s Black. If he played in the NFL, however, that falls to 59.6 years, according to a Harvard study of thousands of players over decades. Most of those ex-football players die from heart disease, at a rate 2.4 times that of Major League Baseball players, who as a group live seven years longer.

The researchers behind the study point out that football is “a safer sport now” than it was in era when the athletes it studied were active, and you do have to give the NFL points for trying, albeit grudgingly.

“The rules only soften the most glaring viciousness,” my colleague Rick Telander wrote, in a thoughtful reflection. comparing football to war — both are meat grinders young men eagerly throw their bodies into. “And the rules only have been tightened because of all the demented, damaged old players lurching about and the younger ones committing suicide (also from the chronic traumatic encephalopathy that affected their elders). This became embarrassing to the powers that be.”

Not too embarrassing, though. Yes, the NFL canceled Monday night’s game. But play will continue, after the requisite obscuring fog of thoughts and prayers.

I didn’t watch Monday night’s game because I never watch football — OK, one game a year, maybe, usually the Super Bowl — and should confess that. Nothing is easier than to dismiss the unshared passions of others. But an outsider’s perspective can be useful.

Consider the damage football does. Not last Monday night, but in general. Consider how it deforms college life, the tail that wags the dog in school after school. Consider the high school players who are hurt, or squander valuable years chasing an impossible dream. Imagine if the time spent playing football were spent learning carpentry.

Consider football as a time sink. Forty-eight of the most popular TV programs in 2021 were football games. Do the math. The average football game takes about 3 hours, and is watched, according to the NFL, by 17 million viewers. That’s 51 million hours spent watching any given football game. A year is 8,760 hours, so the average lifetime (about 80 years) is 700,800 hours.

Which means every football game broadcast on television flushes away the equivalent of 72 human lifetimes. That’s a lot.

A cameraman films the second half of an NFL football game between the Chicago Bears and the Washington Redskins in 2019. Football is by far the most-watched programming on television.

Patrick Semansky/Associated Press

True, they’re doing something they love, something offering them drama and apparently meaning. Football isn’t just entertainment; it’s religion. Fans could turn around and say that a man whose read “War and Peace,” twice, shouldn’t lecture anybody about wasting time. To each his own, but to me, sports are the same thing happening over and over.

Enough. Damar Hamlin seems a fine young man, popular among friends and fans. I hope he has a full recovery. But given what a marvelous individual he is, do we not owe it to him to pause and ask what his health and possibly his life, not to forget the health and lives of so many others to come, were sacrificed for?

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Moving on from QB Justin Fields would be epic mistake by Bears

It didn’t take much for Justin Fields’ footing as the Bears’ franchise quarterback to slip a little, and that’s not surprising here.

The Bears’ exasperating history at the position makes it the most volatile job in Chicago sports: The public is overly eager to declare you a hero, and unless you can immediately live up to that, the clock starts ticking on your exit. Mitch Trubisky was overzealously celebrated as the answer in 2018, then got booed off the field halfway through the next season.

Fields, who will sit out the final game Sunday against the Vikings, has put together the second-greatest rushing season by a quarterback in franchise history and improved most of his key passing stats despite the Bears putting minimal talent around him.

Yet the idea of general manager Ryan Poles trading him and rebooting the position with the No. 1 or 2 pick in the draft keeps coming up. There have been entire segments about it on both sports radio stations this week.

It’d be an epic mistake.

Fields differs from past Bears’ hopefuls in that he has a sustainable skill as a runner and has progressed as a passer without any help. He’s the best running quarterback in the NFL, and it’s been a while since any Bears quarterback was the best at anything.

When Giants owner John Mara assessed quarterback Daniel Jones a year ago, coming out of his third season, he said, “We’ve done everything possible to screw this kid up.” The Bears could say the same of Fields after his first two seasons.

First, they put him through the counterproductive ordeal of playing in Matt Nagy’s offense and under his and Ryan Pace’s ill-conceived plan to take an elite college quarterback and glue him to the bench for his rookie season as though he was a project.

Then they cleaned up all of those issues and saddled him with new ones. While coach Matt Eberflus and offensive coordinator Luke Getsy have done far better matching their scheme to Fields’ strengths, every fear about the personnel Poles put around Fields has come true.

Some of it has even been scarier than expected.

It is routine to see Fields face pressure the moment he finishes his drop back, and since defenses can get to him with just a four-man rush, that leaves a spy to help contain his running. All of that might be navigable if he had options downfield, but often nobody’s open. It’s impossible.

Fields can’t ask for perfect circumstances. That’s unrealistic. And virtually any quarterback can thrive when everything around him is in place. That’s not special. But Fields has managed to make discernible strides when everything around him has been wrong.

He bumped his passer rating by 13 points from his rookie season to 85.2 and made modest improvements in completion percentage (58.9 to 60.4), touchdown percentage (2.6 to 5.3) and interception percentage (down from 3.7 to 3.5) — all while being sacked a league-high 55 times.

There’s still tons of room to improve — he averaged a league-low 149.5 yards per game and threw for just 75 last week — but his improved efficiency suggests that he’ll be capable of more production once he gets better protection and better targets.

If the Bears ever wanted to trade him, this would be the time to do it. His stock is high, and if they get the No. 1 pick in the draft, they’d have their choice of Alabama’s Bryce Young and Ohio State’s C.J. Stroud. But they’d be unraveling one of the few boxes they’ve actually checked this season.

Fields hasn’t made a case that he’s headed toward being a top-five quarterback, but there have been sufficient signs that he’ll be good, at minimum. The Bears are best served leaving that problem solved and continuing to work through what looks like an endless to-do list with the rest of the roster.

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Chicago Bears rumored trade destination for former struggling All-Pro WR

The Chicago Bears need more help at WR than any other team in the NFL.  Darnell Mooney was injured and out for the season, Chase Claypool hasn’t lived up to expectations and the rest of the roster is just garbage.

So the Chicago Bears are rumored to be a target for DeAndre Hopkins who is on the outs in Arizona after two consecutive injury-plagued seasons.

The @ChicagoBears should trade a haul for DeAndre Hopkins. Josh Allen’s Bills and Jalen Hurts’ Eagles do not regret giving up a haul for Diggs or AJ Brown. The Bears have the capital, cap space, and QB prospect to make a huge splash.

Trading for Hopkins would cost a lot of in draft capital because prior to his injury season, Hopkins was on pace to have a Hall of Fame career.  The Chicago Bears will likely have more draft capital if they trade back from the number one or two overall spot as expected which could give them more flexibility.  As of right now they only have one pick in the Top-50 making a deal highly unlikely.

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Chicago Bears Deandre Hopkins NFL trade rumors

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Bears coach: Devin Hester revolutionized football like Elway or Manning

Devin Hester revolutionized the NFL the same way that John Elway and Peyton Manning did, Bears special teams coordinator Richard Hightower said Thursday.

For the second time in as many years, the former Bears return star was named one of 15 finalists for the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Wednesday. His 20 return touchdowns are an NFL record, and he’s the only player to start a Super Bowl with a kickoff return for a touchdown.

“If you want to talk what the Hall of Fame is supposed to represent, it’s supposed to represent being the best players at their positions — the best players to ever play the game,” Hightower said. “I don’t think that there’s a question that Devin Hester is the best player at the return position, in the combo return position, with all the records that he holds, everything he did his rookie year, everything he has done not only at the Bears, even when he went somewhere else. He revolutionized the game of football and how coaches cover kicks.”

Hester returned three punts and two kickoffs for touchdowns in 2006, his first of eight seasons with the Bears.

“Who changed the game in the kick return game in the way he did?” Hightower asked. “Other than a quarterback like a John Elway or a Peyton Manning at their position, who did it in the kick return position? There’s not enough attention or credit to go to Devin. It’s phenomenal what he was able to do, and it’s still mind-boggling to see how good he was when you sit down and you study it. So, I just think that’s a no-brainer and I hope it happens.”

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NBA hires HP exec as new chief diversity officeron January 5, 2023 at 6:39 pm

NEW YORK — The NBA has hired Lesley Slaton Brown as its new chief diversity, equity and inclusion officer, a role that she will begin Feb. 1.

She comes to the NBA from HP, where she was a vice president and oversaw diversity.

Her role at the NBA will be to work with the league office and the 30 teams “to implement and advance DEI processes, including the recruitment and retention of diverse talent, the development and enhancement of employee resource programs, and setting and assessing metrics for success,” the league said.

“I’m honored to join the NBA at such an impactful time for a business that has a unique influence on our culture,” Slaton Brown said. “I’m excited to bring my passion, knowledge and deep understanding of best-in-class strategies to the industry.”

Part of her list of accomplishments at HP was establishing a racial equality task force as part of the company’s response to the murder of George Floyd in 2020.

Slaton Brown also has basketball in her background, playing collegiately at Boise State.

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High school basketball: AP Illinois rankings

The boys prep basketball polls with rank, team, first-place votes, record and total points.

Class 4ASchool W-L Pts Prv

1. Young (14) 12-4 140 4

2. Kenwood (1) 12-2 134 1

3. Benet 16-1 110 8

4. Rolling Meadows 16-1 103 6

5. Moline 12-2 90 2

6. Joliet West 11-4 46 3

7. Curie 11-4 40 NR

8. Lyons 11-1 35 NR

9. Brother Rice 14-2 24 5

10. Quincy 12-2 23 9

Others receiving votes: Lincoln-Way East 15. St. Rita 14. Belleville East 14. Glenbrook North 13. Proviso East 5. Barrington 4. New Trier 4. Hinsdale Central 3. Bloom 3. Geneva 2. Libertyville 2. Proviso West 1.

Class 3ASchool W-L Pts Prv

1. Simeon (11) 12-0 155 1

2. Sacred Heart-Griffin (5) 11-0 146 2

3. Hillcrest 15-1 107 T3

4. Mount Carmel 15-1 96 NR

5. Decatur MacArthur 14-0 85 7

6. Metamora 11-2 79 5

7. East St. Louis 8-1 66 T3

8. St. Ignatius 13-3 43 6

9. Hyde Park 14-2 36 NR

10. Lemont 12-2 27 8

Others receiving votes: Grayslake Central 20. Kankakee 7. Mt. Zion 2. St. Patrick 2. Crystal Lake South 2. Burlington Central 2. Centralia 1. Marian Catholic 1. Marmion 1. Richwoods 1. Rock Island 1.

Class 2ASchool W-L Pts Prv

1. Fairbury Prairie Central (8) 15-0 142 2

2. Princeton (2) 14-0 135 3

3. Columbia (1) 13-2 99 4

4. St. Joseph-Ogden 11-1 92 5

5. Perspectives-Leadership (3) 12-5 84 6

6. Rockford Christian (2) 15-0 72 NR

7. Breese Central 14-2 65 8

8. DePaul Prep (1) 7-6 62 1

9. Teutopolis 12-2 37 NR

10. Rockridge 10-3 32 7

Others receiving votes: Bloomington Central Catholic 18. Normal U-High 17. Pinckneyville 16. Williamsville 10. Beecher 10. Benton 7. Seneca 6. Eureka 4. Rockford Lutheran 4. Massac County 4. Momence 2. Pleasant Plains 2. Freeburg 2. Clark 1.

Class 1ASchool W-L Pts Prv

1. Routt (9) 11-1 130 3

2. Pecatonica (3) 12-1 109 NR

3. Decatur Lutheran (LSA) 14-0 82 6

4. Scales Mound (2) 13-1 62 5

5. Augusta Southeastern (1) 12-2 59 1

6. New Berlin 11-3 46 2

(tie) Camp Point Central 10-3 46 NR

8. Waterloo Gibault 11-3 45 10

9. Tuscola 14-1 40 NR

10. Altamont 11-3 33 NR

Others receiving votes: Illini Bluffs 23. Catlin (Salt Fork) 21. Casey-Westfield 21. South Beloit 18. North Clay 16. Winchester-West Central 13. Centralia Christ Our Rock 13. Marshall 10. Aurora Christian 7. Serena 6. Yorkville Christian 6. Farina South Central 4. Effingham St. Anthony 4. Midland 3. Windsor/Stewardson-Strasburg 1.

Girls basketball

The girls prep basketball polls with rank, team, first-place votes, record and total points.

Class 4ASchool W-L Pts Prv

1. Fremd (1) 15-1 91 3

2. Geneva (5) 12-2 89 10

3. Hersey 15-3 78 1

4. Bolingbrook (2) 13-1 77 4

5. Normal (2) 16-0 54 8

6. Alton (1) 15-0 46 NR

7. Maine South 13-3 39 NR

8. Benet 11-4 25 2

8. Kenwood 12-2 25 T6

10. Naperville North 11-6 23 NR

Others receiving votes: O’Fallon 18. Loyola 13. Lake Zurich 13. Barrington 4. Young 4. Lyons 3. Libertyville 3.

Class 3ASchool W-L Pts Prv

1. Nazareth (9) 14-1 117 1

2. Peoria Central 14-2 86 8

3. Peoria Notre Dame 14-1 85 3

4. Lincoln (3) 18-0 81 T6

5. Montini 11-3 77 5

6. Carmel 13-3 71 2

7. Washington 13-2 53 4

8. Marian Catholic 13-3 21 NR

9. Geneseo 13-3 12 10

(tie) Galesburg 16-4 12 9

Others receiving votes: Deerfield 11. Rockford Boylan 10. Hyde Park 9. Mahomet-Seymour 6. Dixon 3. St. Ignatius 3. Taylorville 1. Burlington Central 1. Dunlap 1.

Class 2ASchool W-L Pts Prv

1. Quincy Notre Dame (12) 17-1 128 1

2. Fieldcrest 16-0 99 2

3. Butler 18-3 77 4

4. Teutopolis 14-2 60 6

5. Byron 13-2 58 5

6. Paris 17-1 56 8

7. Peotone (1) 14-0 54 NR

8. Camp Point Central 12-2 41 NR

9. Princeton 14-2 35 7

10. Petersburg PORTA 14-0 20 NR

Others receiving votes: Sherrard 16. Althoff Catholic 14. Stillman Valley 12. Hamilton County 9. Breese Mater Dei 9. Deer Creek-Mackinaw 6. Monmouth-Roseville 6. Pleasant Plains 5. Winnebago 3. Tolono Unity 2. DePaul Prep 2. Pana 2. Canton 1.

Class 1ASchool W-L Pts Prv

1. Galena (10) 15-0 119 1

2. Mendon Unity (1) 17-1 98 4

3. Okawville 14-2 96 2

4. Tuscola (1) 18-0 90 6

5. Neoga 17-1 75 3

6. Havana (1) 15-2 53 5

7. Brown County 14-2 46 NR

8. Effingham St. Anthony 14-4 34 7

9. Christopher 14-1 24 8

10. Calhoun 3-1 14 NR

Others receiving votes: Orangeville 12. Nokomis 10. Father McGivney Catholic 9. Hardin County 7. Lena-Winslow 7. Brimfield 5. Morgan Park Academy 4. Elmwood 4. Tri-County 3. River Ridge 2. Carrollton 2. Amboy 1.

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Bears predictions: Week 18 vs. Vikings

The Sun-Times’ experts offer their picks for the Bears’ season finale Sunday against the Vikings:

RICK MORRISSEY

Vikings, 31-13

Justin Fields is out because of a hip strain, raising the philosophical question, “Is there really a Bears game Sunday?” The Vikings are certain there is. They still have a chance at a No. 2 seed in the playoffs. They’re overrated, but they’re going to look Super Bowl-bound against weak competition at Soldier Field. Season: 11-5.

RICK TELANDER

Vikings, 38-12

Has anybody thought recently about the fact 17 regular season games are too many for the human body? The league and players agreed on it. For more money. Result? Everybody injured. Next man up. And games like this. Season: 10-6.

LAURENCE HOLMES

Vikings, 35-3

We have reached the end of the exercise. Last week it seemed as if the Bears let go of the rope. Those of us here at the Sun-Times watch the games so you don’t have to and with the announcement that Fields isn’t playing, the Bears told you-you don’t have to. Hopefully there will be less of these games going forward. Season: 10-6.

PATRICK FINLEY

Vikings, 31-4

The Bears’ decision to sit Fields rings hollow after listening to head coach Matt Eberflus claim the importance of culture and building “championship habits” all season. The H.I.T.S. principle apparently stands for Hi, I’m Tanking Sunday. Season: 9-7.

JASON LIESER

Vikings, 38-9

The Vikings are angry after getting drubbed by the Packers and need the win to secure home field for the first two rounds. The Bears are dispirited and need the loss for a shot at landing the No. 1 pick. Everyone gets what they want — except the audience. Season: 8-8.

MARK POTASH

Vikings, 23-17

The Bears seem pretty intent on losing this game for a shot at the No. 1 overall pick. Stranger things have happened, especially against the Vikings. But losing is one thing the Bears have done well this season. Season: 10-6.

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The evolution of Bulls forward Patrick Williams is slow, but happening

Patrick Williams isn’t going to develop at the rate that anyone first expected him to.

For that, however, the former No. 4 overall pick from the 2020 NBA Draft won’t apologize.

Because in his mind, for the first time in a long time – undoubtedly his first time as a Bull – the 6-foot-7 power forward feels like he’s starting to get it. More importantly, his teammates are starting to get him.

“I’m just maturing in this league,” Williams said. “That [wrist] surgery last year cost me, what? Sixty-some [65] games? But where it cost me was the experience, playing. So I’m trying to learn on the fly and get better. And to be honest with you, I’m enjoying this maturation process. Maybe not everyone else is enjoying how quickly it’s happening, but my mindset has changed a lot lately and I feel like so has the mindset of my teammates.”

That’s the trust that Williams has been building. The trust that he will not only be a shot maker, but a taker.

Finally.

If there was one major knock on Williams it was too many “Passive Pat” moments.

Coach Billy Donovan and the Bulls veterans have all harped on Williams since last season about trusting his scoring ability and being more aggressive, but since early December there has been a conscious effort to run sets and actions to get Williams the ball – either for a corner three-pointer or getting him going downhill – off of the tip.

To Williams’ credit, he’s finally taking advantage of that.

While his scoring average since Dec. 1 was still a pedestrian 10.5 points per game, almost half his damage comes in that first quarter. Williams was averaging 4.5 points in that opening stanza, and doing so with a high efficiency of 60.8% from the field and 64.7% from three-point range.

That included a season-best 12-point showing in the opening quarter against the Nets on Wednesday. A game in which Williams finished with a season-high 22 points, playing his most complete game of the 2022-23 campaign.

“Whether it’s been me just more aggressive, or Coach actually drawing up a couple of plays for me, or my teammates finding me in the actions we have, so it’s kind of been a combination of all those,” Williams said of his first-quarter mindset. “Now it’s about building off of that.”

Which is the next evolution of Williams’ game.

There’s a long list of skills Williams needs to improve on, and throw rebounding – especially for his size – right at the top. But a lot of that will be solved when he starts understanding how to read the game. That’s what Donovan has been stressing to him.

In the last few weeks alone, there were specific plays that Donovan pointed out as Williams still not understanding how to read the game.

The missed box out on Donovan Mitchell – lane violation or not – was one of them, as well as a Kevin Love closeout, and a missed opportunity to take advantage of Milwaukee big man Brook Lopez in a two-on-one break.

“If you look at guys like DeMar for instance, like a lot of times he’s surveying the game in terms of how he’s being guarded,” Donovan said. “When you put [Williams] in stuff and tell him, ‘Hey, this is what we’re doing.’ He’s really good. But the flow of the game is what he’s got to figure out, ‘OK, this is who is guarding me, this is the coverage they’re in, this will be open, this is how I’ve got to screen, this is how I’ve got to pop.’ It’s when the scouting report is off the table and it’s random stuff that just happens, and you’ve got to just react to it.”

Williams was confident he would get there.

Of course, at his own pace.

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REPORT: Chicago Bears make flurry of season defining roster moves; extend wide receiver

Chicago Bears moved a lot of pieces around in Week 18

The Chicago Bears have given up on winning in Week 18. Head coach Matt Eberflus, who stubbornly kept injured players in games after the Bears had been mathematically eliminated from the playoffs because he was trying to win, announced quarterback Justin Fields was ruled out in Week 18. The Bears sent another two offensive linemen to the injured reserve Wednesday.

According to a statement by the Bears, offensive linemen Teven Jenkins and Michael Schofield III are on injured reserve. Cornerback Josh Blackwell was sent to injured reserve as well. This should help the Bears improve their chances of getting a number one overall draft pick. Nathan Peterman should be frightened before his next NFL start on Sunday.

We have placed Teven Jenkins, Michael Schofield III and Josh Blackwell on IR
@Hyundai #DaBears
https://t.co/eQXswmk9YC

The Bears announced they signed long snapper Kameron Canaday to the practice squad this week. This makes sense with Patrick Scales’ injury.

#Bears roster move:
We have signed LS Kameron Canaday to the Practice Squad.

Wednesday’s injury report

The Bears had several major DNPs (for this team, anyways) on the Week 18 injury report. Jaquan Brisker did not practice for personal reasons. Jaylon Jones was out for a concussion in Wednesday’s practice.

Bears’ DNP Wednesday

DB Jaquan Brisker, personalQB Justin Fields, “hip”DB Jaylon Jones, concussionLB Sterling Weatherford, illness

Bears limited Wednesday

LS Patrick Scales, neckTE Trevon Wesco, ankle

Chicago Bears extend Equanimeous St. Brown

According to a statement by the Chicago Bears, they signed St. Brown to a one-year extension. Like most Bears wide receivers this season, he didn’t do much in the passing game. But he was a solid target for Fields. St. Brown has 320 yards receiving and one touchdown this season. Not an exciting extension and his production in 2022 didn’t have me wanting to type out his first name next year. Oh well.

We have signed Equanimeous St. Brown to a one-year contract extension.
Let’s get it, @Equanimeous! 🐻⬇️

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