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Chicago alternative hip-hop group Bonelang shoot for the moon with <i>Nervous Oracle</i>Leor Galilon December 20, 2022 at 6:00 pm

Chicago alternative hip-hop group Bonelang seem to want to make hip-hop that sounds like anything but hip-hop. The core duo, MC Samy.Language and producer-vocalist Matt Bones, both split the difference between rapping and singing—they often enunciate their pristine, staccato verses like they’re delivering a solo in choir or talk-singing in a Broadway musical. They also embellish their complex beats with percussion flourishes—vibraphone, hand claps, marching-band drums—fit for a symphonic indie-rock album. Bonelang temper this creative audacity with urbane polish, so that even when an idea doesn’t quite hit the mark they at least sound good trying to make it work. Their chutzpah comes through clearly on May’s self-released Nervous Oracle EP, which opens with an appearance from former G-Unit rapper the Game; Bonelang catalyze a strange joy by combining his grizzled voice with their twisted Beach Boys harmonizing on the hook for “Gluten-Free Gluttony,” though the rest of the song doesn’t always clear that very high bar. Bonelang sometimes get distracted by silly wordplay, which is bound to happen with a group more interested in sound than sense, but their songwriting always has a profound emotional core. Even as they dazzle you with bold stylistic acrobatics, they don’t forget what it’s all for. The bittersweet, cinematic “Sleepy Lion” demonstrates this directly, stripping away the ostentatious touches so you can feel the heartbeat in their music.

Bonelang Aaron Day and friends open. Thu 12/29, 8 PM, Schubas, 3159 N. Southport, $20 in advance, two-day passes sold out, 18+

Bonelang Kweku Collins and Carlile open. Fri 12/30, 9 PM, Schubas, 3159 N. Southport, $20, two-day passes sold out, 18+

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Chicago alternative hip-hop group Bonelang shoot for the moon with <i>Nervous Oracle</i>Leor Galilon December 20, 2022 at 6:00 pm Read More »

Bears rookie LB Jack Sanborn out for season with ankle injury

Bears rookie linebacker Jack Sanborn, one of the team’s bigger developmental success stories, is out for the rest of the season after suffering a left ankle injury against the Eagles.

The Bears have three games left, starting Saturday against the Bills. Coach Matt Eberflus downplayed the severity of the injury Tuesday, saying if it had happened earlier in the season, Sanborn would’ve been expected to return.

Sanborn, from Lake Zurich High School, made the team as an undrafted free agent out of Wisconsin and played 14 games, including six starts. He replaced Roquan Smith in the lineup when the Bears traded him to the Ravens midseason.

Sanborn is fifth on the team with 64 tackles and has two sacks and a fumble recovery.

“Just his maturity, his ability to handle that space,” Eberflus said when asked what impressed him about Sanborn. “He had a lot of tackling production. He’s an impactful player, and we’re excited to have him.”

The Bears played journeyman Joe Thomas in Sanborn’s place when he got hurt Sunday, and he had six tackles, including the team’s only sack.

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Bears rookie LB Jack Sanborn out for season with ankle injury Read More »

High school basketball podcast: No Shot Clock, Ep. 144 Answering listener questions

Joe Henricksen and Michael O’Brien take on a big mailbag, answering questions from the listeners. They also give their Two Takes.

Topics include which teams still have something to prove, what the future holds for several prominent holiday tournaments, which schools have potential to be basketball powers, Jeremiah Fears and Jordan vs. Plumbers.

The podcast is on Apple Podcasts and Spotify, so please subscribe.

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High school basketball podcast: No Shot Clock, Ep. 144 Answering listener questions Read More »

‘I’ve been playing against pros for a long time:’ Why Paolo Banchero isn’t your average NBA rookieon December 20, 2022 at 1:42 pm

ORLANDO, FLA. — PAOLO BANCHERO was only five years old when the SuperSonics left his hometown of Seattle to become the Oklahoma City Thunder. Still, despite growing up in a city without an NBA team, Banchero was raised by the NBA.

Long before the Orlando Magic made Banchero the No. 1 overall pick out of Duke, he learned to be a pro from the many NBA players who’ve come from Seattle and still provide the city with a vibrant basketball scene during the NBA offseason.

Jamal Crawford, a 20-year NBA veteran and fellow Seattleite, first noticed something special in Banchero when he was 14 years old.

At the time, Crawford was 37 years old and finishing the last of his five seasons with the LA Clippers. He was entering the twilight of his career but continued his passion for helping out younger Seattle athletes with Banchero, then a 6-foot-5, 200-pound eighth grader.

“Because he was really tall, most guys that size rely on their athleticism and being bigger and stronger,” Crawford told ESPN about the No. 1 overall pick in this year’s draft, who just turned 20 on Nov. 12.

“But I saw the fundamental foundation that he had coming from his parents and the workouts. You could tell he put a lot of time in this game, and being big was an extra. I’m like, ‘Whoa, if he’s developing that game, you’re already ahead of the curve.'”

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When Banchero, whose mother played in the WNBA and whose father played college football for the University of Washington, started his rookie season with Orlando, he looked like he was the veteran among a roster that only has two players with more than five years of NBA experience.

In 25 games, he’s averaging 21.8 points and 6.6 rebounds a game. On Nov. 7 against the Houston Rockets, he dropped 30 points while going 12-of-14 from the free throw line. That performance came one day after he had 33 points and 16 rebounds against the Sacramento Kings — his first career 30-point performance.

That made Banchero the third rookie in Magic history to have 30 points in consecutive games, joining Shaquille O’Neal and Dennis Scott, according to ESPN Stats & Information research.

Thanks to Crawford and a number of other Seattle-based players, Banchero is rising to the occasion in his rookie season. That experience growing up in Seattle prepared him for the NBA and gave him all the confidence in the world long before he stepped on the court in Orlando.

“Not to toot my own horn,” Banchero told ESPN, “but I’ve been playing against pros for a long time.”

Paolo Banchero played high school ball at O’Dea in Seattle, but it was the city’s summer pickup runs with NBA players that accelerated his development. Michael Reaves/Getty Images

THE FIRST TIME Spencer Hawes heard the name Paolo Banchero, it wasn’t about his basketball skills.

“I don’t think he gets enough credit for how good of a football player he was,” Hawes told ESPN.

Hawes, who played 10 seasons in the NBA after coming out of Seattle and the University of Washington, remembers hearing about Banchero the quarterback before he heard about Banchero the basketball player. Banchero was an FBU 8th grade All-American quarterback before attending O’Dea High School in Seattle and playing both football and basketball as a freshman. On the field, he was a backup quarterback for the 3A Washington state champions. On the court, he averaged a double-double.

Banchero was 6-foot-9 by the end of his freshman season, so as he continued to grow, basketball became his primary sport, and his success continued all the way to becoming a top-rated player in the country.

But before he went to Duke for his lone year of college ball, Banchero tested his skill against the best Seattle had to offer.

Hawes, who attended Seattle Prep — a rival of Banchero’s O’Dea — last played in the NBA in 2017, but still played pickup games in the summer and worked out with the rest of the area’s professionals. Hawes said he remembers Banchero trying to learn as much as possible about the nuances of the game.

“But Paolo wanted to be in the gym to get better,” Hawes said. “Like, he didn’t just want to play pickup. He wanted one on zero. He wanted one-on-one coaching. Show me this trick. Just all the intricacies of really working on skill development.

“If he were that size and weren’t nearly as skilled as he was, he still probably would’ve been a lottery pick. But his attention to detail in that department is a reason he went No. 1. And I think the first couple months of the season have only validated that.”

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Others have noticed Banchero’s football background working for him. Tim Manson, a strength and conditioning trainer who has worked with a number of professional athletes in the Seattle area, said Banchero not specializing in one sport growing up helped him become the player he is today.

“I think he’s one of those guys that brought over the mentality of a football player into basketball,” Manson said. “His strength to body mass ratio is really high. And he moves like somebody that’s 6-foot-4 that might be 200 pounds. He moves very well. He can get low. He can get high. He can leverage his body. He can do all the things a smaller guy can do but he’s still a big man. And he’s still only 20 years old.”

Banchero not only credits those hours-long pick-up games in various Seattle gyms for helping him hone his shooting touch, but he says those long summer hours of boxing out NBA pros “became the norm.”

“Playing with them in the summer, obviously I knew it wasn’t the real thing,” Banchero said. “But I knew that once I got better and went through college and eventually got to my first year in the NBA that I should be comfortable and be able to hold my own.”

When Banchero first started playing with Crawford, Hawes & Co. at 15 and 16 years old, he was mostly just asked to set screens, rebound and pass them the ball. But as time went on — and Banchero’s game got sharper — the NBA players started to trust him.

Crawford said that was how it was going to be until Banchero proved himself.

“Hey, you’re on the court with us, you’re on with Zach LaVine, you’re on the court with Dejounte (Murray), you’re on the court with Kyrie Irving, you’re on the court with myself. So you’re gonna fit a role and you’re gonna fit a feel,” Crawford said.

Friday’s game

Grizzlies-Suns, 10 p.m.

Sunday’s games

Knicks-76ers, NoonLakers-Mavericks, 2:30 p.m. (on ABC)Bucks-Celtics, 5 p.m. (on ABC)Grizzlies-Warriors, 8 p.m.Suns-Nuggets, 10:30 p.m.

*All times Eastern

Crawford said Banchero was on his team most of the time. As Banchero got older, Crawford said he started to give Banchero more leeway.

“OK, now you’re gonna be Robin, so now you’re gonna be second with me,” Crawford recalled. “I’ll do most of the scoring. And then you’ll go. Then it got to the point where it’s like, ‘Hey, you’re the feature guy. We’re going through you and I’m gonna play off of you.’ And just the progressions I gave to him as I saw he was ready for it. That, to me, that’s the best training method.”

Mike Knight, a basketball skills trainer from Seattle who calls Banchero his big little brother, said he first noticed Banchero in the sixth grade when he coached against him. As Banchero got older, the two connected when Banchero was in high school, and they’ve worked on his game on the court and how he handles things off the court as well.

“We work on it from a movement standpoint, work on it from a mental standpoint and how to be a person who understands how to implement their skill within a team like concept,” Knight said. “And he had been so dialed in on that. And then from there he was improving because he’s around that energy. He’s around NBA vets, he’s around the culture of Seattle basketball.”

That culture taught Banchero at a young age what it was going to take to make it to the next level and prepared him for the physical nature of the NBA — and how to work that aggressiveness to his advantage. Banchero’s 8.5 free throws attempted per game are sixth in the league, just ahead of Chicago Bulls wing DeMar DeRozan.

The last rookie to finish in the top 10 in free throw attempts was Luka Doncic during the 2018-19 season. The last rookie to be in the top five was Blake Griffin (2010-11). Banchero is one of six qualified players drawing two fouls per game on drives this season, according to Second Spectrum tracking.

“I mean all those summer games are really competitive,” Banchero said. ” It just motivated me being around those guys every summer and just watching them compete, competing against them, it helped me a lot.”

play1:59

Top draft picks Paolo Banchero and Chet Holmgren team up and ball out in Jamal Crawford’s pro-am in Seattle.

Banchero also got a crash course in the NBA during his brief stint at the NBA Summer League in Las Vegas, where the Magic experimented with the 6-foot-10, 250-pounder at point guard.

Banchero averaged 20 points, six assists and five rebounds in two games in Las Vegas before the Magic shut him down. Two games were all they needed to get a sense of how bright the team’s future could be.

Magic coach Jamahl Mosley said the team’s veterans would stop by to get workouts in during Orlando’s summer league practices, and that was really when they saw Banchero as an expert ballhandler.

“He’s got a great basketball mind, he’s got great instincts and so with that, you just have to find different areas to put him in,” Mosley told ESPN. “Obviously, being around some of the great players, you just have to give them that canvas and allow them to paint it.”

Paolo Banchero has stepped right in and played like an experienced pro. Mike Watters-USA TODAY Sports

MOSLEY IS ONLY in his second season as a head coach, but in nearly two decades on NBA benches he has seen his fair share of phenoms.

Mosley worked with a young Carmelo Anthony during his time with the Denver Nuggets. He joined the Cleveland Cavaliers a year before they drafted Irving. In his last stop before landing in Orlando, he worked with Doncic after the perennial MVP candidate was drafted by the Dallas Mavericks.

So he knows what a star looks like and how one plays, and he’s seen early signs of Banchero’s growth, particularly in his ability to process what he’s seeing each game and learning from it.

“There’s a different level of things that happen,” Mosley said. “He’s finding different angles to drive the lane, he’s finding different ways to get fouled. He’s finding different passing angles.

“Those are big keys for a guy that they can recognize it in each step of the game and each game is getting better and better and better because now not only does it slow down for him, he can obviously pick and choose the time that he’s going to do it.”

For the first time ever, the NBA’s Christmas Day quintupleheader will be simulcast on ESPN and ABC. In addition, the Noon ET game between the 76ers and Knicks will feature an alternate NBA in Stephen A’s World broadcast available on ESPN2 and ESPN+.

76ers at Knicks, Noon ETLakers at Mavericks, 2:30 p.m. ETBucks at Celtics, 5 p.m. ETGrizzlies at Warriors, 8 p.m. ETSuns at Nuggets, 10:30 p.m. ET

For Banchero, he says the Magic have given him something that wasn’t going to come as a teenager playing over the summer with NBA veterans: freedom.

“Just being able to play however I want to play, play all over the floor,” Banchero said. “Just the trust that my coaches and teammates put in me. I mean high school and college, I think I was always asked to play a certain position. Here, they just tell me, ‘Yo, explore your game.'”

Orlando had the fourth-youngest team in the NBA by age on opening day according to the league’s roster survey at 23.94 years old. Experience wise, only Gary Harris and Terrence Ross have been in the league longer than five seasons.

Consider Ross impressed by what Banchero has been able to accomplish so far.

“He has game, man,” Ross said. “He plays with a lot of poise, confidence. His shot-making ability is crazy. His IQ is very good at 6-11, 260. The dude can handle the ball, throw lobs, finish at the bucket. He can play like a big man, play like a guard. I think his versatility is something that is definitely special.”

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‘I’ve been playing against pros for a long time:’ Why Paolo Banchero isn’t your average NBA rookieon December 20, 2022 at 1:42 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.


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.


The Chicagoans

The People Issue’s class of 2022

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Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon December 20, 2022 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.


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.


The Chicagoans

The People Issue’s class of 2022

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Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon December 20, 2022 at 8:01 am Read More »

Reds pitcher Tom Browning, who once left a game at Wrigley to sit with Cubs fans, dies at 62

CINCINNATI — Tom Browning, an All-Star pitcher who threw the only perfect game in Cincinnati Reds history and helped them win a World Series title, died on Monday. He was 62.

The Boone County Sheriff’s Office announced Browning’s death on Twitter, saying he died at his home in Union, Kentucky. No cause was given.

Sheriff’s Office deputies responded to Browning’s home about 1 p.m. after receiving a report of a man found not breathing. They discovered him unresponsive on a couch, and efforts by deputies and EMS personnel to resuscitate him were unsuccessful. Browning was pronounced dead at 1:13 p.m. Foul play is not suspected, the Sheriff’s Office said.

The Reds issued a statement after being in contact with a member of his family, team spokesman Rob Butcher said.

“The entire Reds family is stunned and deeply saddened to hear of the passing of Tom Browning. Affectionately referred to as ‘Mr. Perfect,’ Tom was a true Red who after his playing days made the Cincinnati area his home and remained heavily involved with the organization,” the club said.

“A fan favorite, the Reds Hall of Famer touched fans’ hearts at team events, Reds Hall of Fame festivities and Reds Community Fund activities. We join Reds Country in mourning the loss of one of our all-time greats, who created so many memories and magical moments for us all. Our deepest condolences to Tom’s family during this difficult time.”

Known as a colorful character, Browning once bolted from the Wrigley Field bullpen and sat in full Cincinnati uniform with Chicago fans atop a rooftop across the street during a Reds-Cubs game in July 1993. He was fined $500 for that stunt, according to The Cincinnati Enquirer.

Cincinnati Reds pitcher Tom Browning waves from a rooftop on Sheffield Avenue across from Wrigley Field as he watches the Reds’ game against the Cubs on July 7, 1993.

John Swart/AP

The left-hander’s biggest individual moment on the mound, however, came when he retired all 27 batters he faced in a 1-0 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers at Riverfront Stadium on Sept. 16, 1988.

Following a two-hour rain delay, the game started at 10:02 p.m. and took only 1 hour, 51 minutes. It came a little more than three months after Browning lost a no-hit bid in San Diego in the ninth inning on a one-out single by Hall of Famer Tony Gwynn.

Browning’s gem against the Dodgers was one of just 23 perfect games in major league history and the only one for the Reds, baseball’s oldest professional franchise.

Just more than a month later, the Dodgers won the World Series — making Browning the lone pitcher to toss a perfecto against the team that won the championship that same year.

“RIP my friend Mr. Perfect Tom Browning,” tweeted Hall of Fame shortstop and former Reds teammate Barry Larkin. “We shared some great times as well as the same birthdate 4/28. You will be missed.”

Browning was 18-5 with a 3.41 ERA in 1988 and made the National League All-Star team in 1991. He went 20-9 with a 3.55 ERA in 1985, finishing second to St. Louis Cardinals speedster Vince Coleman for NL Rookie of the Year and sixth in NL Cy Young Award voting.

Six times Browning won at least 14 games. He led the NL in starts on four occasions, had six years with more than 225 innings pitched and gave up the most home runs in the league three times.

Browning went 15-9 with a 3.80 ERA in 1990 to help the Reds win their most recent pennant and World Series crown. He was 2-1 with a 3.71 ERA in three starts that postseason, beating the powerhouse Oakland Athletics 8-3 on the road in Game 3 of the World Series to help the Reds pull off a stunning four-game sweep.

“He was just a wonderful person. He was as beloved a Cincinnati Red as there’s been in the city,” said Butcher, the Reds’ longtime vice president of media relations. “Everybody who’d ever met him just loved the guy. He was fun. I guess that’s the word — he was fun.”

Browning spent 11 seasons with Cincinnati from 1984-94. He broke a bone in his arm during a game in 1994 and finished his career by pitching in two games for the Kansas City Royals in 1995.

In 12 big league seasons, he was 123-90 with a 3.94 ERA in 302 games (300 starts).

“I would go on our winter caravan with him and he was just — we’d be on the bus for hours and the stories he would tell were just spectacularly funny,” Butcher said. “You could tell his teammates loved him. I mean, when he was around our other Hall of Famers and around his old teammates, you could just tell they just adored the guy.”

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Reds pitcher Tom Browning, who once left a game at Wrigley to sit with Cubs fans, dies at 62 Read More »

Chicago Bears News: Draft positioning after Week 15 loss to EaglesRyan Heckmanon December 20, 2022 at 3:58 pm

Week 15 was an entertaining matchup between two of the young, mobile quarterbacks in today’s NFL. Chicago Bears second-year quarterback Justin Fields took on Philadelphia Eagles starter and MVP candidate, Jalen Hurts.

While the Bears didn’t come out victorious, they sure put up a valiant effort, only losing 30-25 in the end.

What the Bears did gain, however, was the privilege of sitting still at the number 2 overall pick in next year’s draft.

Here’s how the top of the 2023 NFL Draft order shakes out after Week 15:

1. Houston Texans 1-12-1

2. Chicago Bears 3-11

3. Denver Broncos 4-10 (Pick goes to Seattle)

4. Los Angeles Rams 4-10 (Pick goes to Detroit)

5. Arizona Cardinals 4-10

The Chicago Bears are in great position to finish the season with the number 2 overall pick in the 2023 NFL Draft.

Let’s break down the remaining schedule for these teams, quick.

Houston

Week 16: @ Tennessee Titans

Week 17: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars

Week 18: @ Indianapolis Colts

The Titans are fighting for their playoff lives at the moment, with the Jaguars right on their heels. In fact, if the Jaguars win-out, then they’ll win the AFC South. That’s astonishing, considering how Jacksonville started the year.

Houston will likely lose to Tennessee and Jacksonville, with the Indianapolis game up in the air. In all likelihood, the Texans are locked into that number one spot.

Chicago

Week 16: vs. Buffalo Bills

Week 17: @ Detroit Lions

Week 18: vs. Minnesota Vikings

Let’s be real, folks. All three of these very well could be losses. The Bills are the AFC’s elite, and that won’t be a pretty ending. The Lions, meanwhile, are one of the hottest teams in football and are somehow fighting for a playoff spot still. Then, there’s the Vikings, who just pulled off the greatest regular season comeback in NFL history. Minnesota and Detroit have already beaten the Bears once each this season.

Denver

Week 16: @ Los Angeles Rams

Week 17: @ Kansas City Chiefs

Week 18: vs. Los Angeles Chargers

First of all, the fact that Denver and Los Angeles have to play each other still works in the Bears’ favor. One of those teams has to win — you would think. As long as they don’t tie, it’s a huge positive for the Bears.

While the Broncos played the Chiefs tough a couple of weeks ago, they might be without Russell Wilson — and maybe that’s a good thing? Who knows. But, the Chiefs should roll in that one. Then, there’s the Chargers who are also a talented team and still fighting for the postseason. The Broncos might win one of their three remaining games, giving them five wins in total.

Los Angeles

Week 16: vs. Denver Broncos

Week 17: @ Los Angeles Chargers

Week 18: @ Seattle Seahawks

We’ve already covered the Week 16 matchup being a plus for the Bears. Week 17 against the Chargers could be an interesting one, but again, the Chargers have much to play for still. The Seahawks do too, even though they’ve fallen off. The Rams may not win another game this year, but that’s fine if the Bears do the same.

Arizona

Week 16: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Week 17: @ Atlanta Falcons

Week 18: @ San Francisco 49ers

The Cardinals are now without Kyler Murray for the rest of the year, and maybe even Colt McCoy, depending on his status. The only game they could possibly win is against Atlanta, otherwise they’ll lose the other two. Most likely, Arizona finishes with four or five wins on the season.

If the Bears lose-out, they’ll have the number two spot locked up. And, in the end, that’s all that matters. They control their own destiny to that extent, as odd as it might sound to say something like that.

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Chicago Bears News: Draft positioning after Week 15 loss to EaglesRyan Heckmanon December 20, 2022 at 3:58 pm Read More »

Kaplan: Rangers’ rebound, latest on Blackhawks and more around the NHLon December 20, 2022 at 2:17 pm

On Dec. 3, the New York Rangers were nearing an abyss. Things came to a pressure point during the home game against the Chicago Blackhawks, one of the worst teams in the league. En route to another loss, captain Jacob Trouba had enough. The defenseman laid out two massive hits, got into two fights, and as he was escorted off the ice for a five-minute roughing major on the latter, threw his helmet into the boards. Along the way, he appeared to yell at his teammates on the bench: “Wake the f— up!”

Did they ever.

Since then, New York has rattled off seven straight wins and is starting to look like the team that made it to the Eastern Conference Final last year. Coach Gerard Gallant admitted to our broadcast crew before Sunday’s rematch against the Blackhawks (a 7-1 Rangers win) that his team suffered from a hangover to start the season. Because of what they achieved last season, they believed things would come easy to start this year. Instead, they had to work for it. His players agree.

“We weren’t playing good hockey. We were in a little bit of a lull. We had expectations that we were just supposed to win games because of last year,” Adam Fox told me on Sunday. “[Trouba] brought energy. Obviously he did what he had to do to get us going. Some emotion is what we needed to respond pretty well.”

Added Vincent Trocheck: “Whenever your captain shows that much emotion, and he goes out of his way to make a hit or get in a fight to get the guys going, it’s a message sent to our team that something’s not right. After that game, we had a talk, and everything we talked about has kicked in.”

During the second intermission of Sunday’s game, Rangers assistant Gord Murphy told me he liked that his team was “finding a way” — something that wasn’t a guarantee for them a few weeks ago. “Our players are in a good place,” Murphy said.

After the game, I asked Trocheck to describe the confidence level of the Rangers right now.

This season will include 103 exclusive regular-season games across ESPN, ESPN+, Hulu and ABC. More than 1,000 out-of-market games will be available to ESPN+ subscribers via NHL Power Play on ESPN+.o How to watch o Subscribe to ESPN+ o Stream the NHL on ESPN

“It’s higher than it was,” Trocheck said. “I think it was pretty low at one point. But we’ve done a lot recently, and worked at doing everything the right way so that we can be more predictable on the ice. And our confidence is starting to build more and more.”

A SIDE STORY brewed in that Dec 3 Blackhawks game: Blackhawks forward Andreas Athanasiou, the recipient of a massive Trouba hit, questioned the captain’s role on the team calling him “an $8 million player with zero goals.”

“It didn’t really bother me,” Trouba told me before Sundays game, with a laugh. But he clearly remembered the moment. After scoring his first goal of the season a night earlier — on an empty net — Trouba doubled his total with a goal in the 7-1 blowout win against Chicago. Athanasiou was also on the ice, and Trouba immediately made eye contact with him, and appeared to mouth: “Do you want the puck?”

The rebuild in Chicago

After being between the benches for two Chicago Blackhawks games this past week, it’s been tough to see the team in this way. They’ve picked up just three points since Nov. 14 (1-14-1 record) getting outscored 72-30 in that span. For context, the next closest teams in that span are Philadelphia and Arizona with 11 points.

This is all part of the Chicago front office’s grand plan — conduct a rebuild in earnest, leverage this season for future sustained success. But none of it has been easy on the players or coaching staff, who take pride in putting in a good effort. You can see the frustration on Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews nearly every shift. Kane has the lowest shooting percentage of his career; it’s sub 4 percent, and his career average is 11.5. And after scoring seven goals in his first 11 games, Toews has just three in the 18 since. While they’re frustrated, they’re still committed to the team.

Coach Luke Richardson shared a great story about Toews making two mistakes in a game against the Oilers last month. Toews asked Richardson to show those clips in the video session with the team. Richardson didn’t, but let the players know the captain had asked to, setting an example for accountability. The Blackhawks are expecting Kane and Toews to come to them sometime in the new year letting them know which direction they’d like to go at the trade deadline. Neither player is rushing into a decision, and it’s not guaranteed they will be traded.

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GENERAL MANAGER KYLE DAVIDSON told me on Friday that he hasn’t had any specific trade discussions on any of his players yet. The trade market has been slow this season. As one GM told me at the Board of Governors meetings, “It’s impossible to get a trade done right now. Nobody can get anything done.” Things are expected to pick up after the holiday freeze. Aside from Kane and Toews, Davidson has told his GM peers that all of his UFAs will be available. But while the Blackhawks are looking to accumulate as many picks and prospects as possible — and ideally spread them over the next few draft classes — Davidson says he isn’t just trading players for the sake of trading players. In other words, he’s not giving away players for sixth-round picks just to say he did it.

ONE OF THE BLACKHAWKS players I believe has been generating value is defenseman Jarred Tinordi, who was an important waiver claim by Chicago in October. If he’s healthy at the deadline, he would be a solid sixth or seventh defenseman pick up for a contender. But it was tough to see Tinordi leave the ice on Sunday leaking blood after taking a puck to the face. He was placed on IR with a facial fracture.

Tinrodi took a skate blade to the face in a Dec. 9 game against the Jets, and received between 50-100 stitches (the team doctor said he lost count). Tinordi had been wearing a protective cage in his games since, and Sunday was the first time he took it off. Brutal break.

Richardson and Davidson were both effusive about Tinordi when I asked about him before Sunday’s game, explaining how his role had grown. At age 30, this was the most regular role Tinordi has had in the NHL. He’s spent his career on six different NHL teams, bouncing up and down between the NHL and AHL, and takes pride in being a sound, physical defenseman, but also a leader. His maturity makes him a beloved teammate. (When he went down on Sunday, the Rangers, one of his former teams, showed a great level of concern as well). In the Friday game against Minnesota, goalie Petr Mrazek was disappointed by the second goal he let in, which trickled past him. At the TV timeout, it was Tinordi who came to chat with Mrazek, hyping him back up.

Wild find their game

BILL GUERIN HAS demonstrated, in his short time so far as GM of the Minnesota Wild, that he has a pulse for what his team needs. It began with his decision to buy out Zach Parise and Ryan Suter, knowing the locker room needed to turn over to new voices. It continued last year bringing in Marc-Andre Fleury, one of the most popular players in the NHL.

This year’s addition of Ryan Reaves can’t be understated. Reaves had his first signature moment last week, a massive open ice hit on Detroit’s Filip Hronek which sparked Minnesota to victory. His impact goes further than that. “Everybody says we got bigger and more firmness because of him, but I think his presence is more than physicality,” coach Dean Evason said. “He’s not going to run people every game. He’s very calm on the bench. He’s very mature. His work ethic — he’s ripped up — sets an example and he’s just a really good teammate. I think that’s more the impact.”

Evason said before Wild power plays, Reaves gets absolutely jacked up, screaming “Let’s go power play, pow pow!” before kicking the bench in front of him — fully aware he’s not going to go out there. Reaves is just pumped for the team, period. “Sure it’s nice to have a guy who can beat the heck out of anybody he wants at any time, it makes everyone a little firmer,” Evason said. “But he’s a great teammate, and he also can play. If Ryan can’t play the game, he’s not going to be on our hockey club just to fight.”

Alex Ovechkin is chasing down history, as goal No. 802 will put him second all time. Follow along on ESPN and ESPN+ as Ovi scores his way up the record books.

Upcoming Caps games:Dec. 22: at Ottawa Senators7 ET NHL Power Play on ESPN+Dec. 29: vs. Ottawa Senators7 ET

Kaplan: Rangers’ rebound, latest on Blackhawks and more around the NHLon December 20, 2022 at 2:17 pm Read More »

Predicting the final 3 Bears games with draft position on the lineVincent Pariseon December 20, 2022 at 1:00 pm

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The Chicago Bears are, as mentioned all year long, one of the worst teams in the National Football League. All that matters to them is that they develop their quarterback and see the team play hard under the new regime.

They are on a seven-game losing streak and have the second-worst record in the NFL. There is really nothing wrong with that at this point as that will help them more than hurt them in the long run. Up to this point, their record is not a reflection of their effort.

Over the weekend, that seventh loss in a row came against the Philadelphia Eagles who are one of the best teams in the NFL. They are now 13-1 and legit contenders for the Super Bowl from the NFC. There is a good chance that the championship runs through Philly.

The fact that the Bears stayed in that game speaks volumes as they only lost 25-20. Staying with a team like that is very hard and the Bears did it with very little talent on their side of the field. The quarterback, Justin Fields, is amazing and they just might be well-coached.

With three more games this season, all we want is to see them play well but still lose. They are so close to getting the second overall pick that you can taste it.

As long as the Houston Texans remain the only team ahead of them, the Bears would get whoever they want because they for sure won’t be taking a quarterback.

If they want to have the second overall pick as we’ve talked about, they might need to play a certain way to end this season. This is how the final three games are going to go:

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Predicting the final 3 Bears games with draft position on the lineVincent Pariseon December 20, 2022 at 1:00 pm Read More »