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When he’s not backing big-time rockers, Chicago guitarist Steve Gerlach surfs the stratosphere with Outronaut

Outronaut bandleader and guitarist Steve Gerlach probably reaches more ears as a sideman than he does with his own outfit. For nearly a decade he’s played in Sons of the Silent Age, Matt Walker and Chris Connelly’s nine-member David Bowie tribute group; that gig got Gerlach work on Connelly’s solo material. In a 2021 interview […] The post <strong>When he’s not backing big-time rockers, Chicago guitarist Steve Gerlach surfs the stratosphere with Outronaut</strong> appeared first on Chicago Reader.Read More

When he’s not backing big-time rockers, Chicago guitarist Steve Gerlach surfs the stratosphere with Outronaut Read More »

When he’s not backing big-time rockers, Chicago guitarist Steve Gerlach surfs the stratosphere with OutronautLeor Galilon December 20, 2022 at 12:00 pm

Outronaut bandleader and guitarist Steve Gerlach probably reaches more ears as a sideman than he does with his own outfit. For nearly a decade he’s played in Sons of the Silent Age, Matt Walker and Chris Connelly’s nine-member David Bowie tribute group; that gig got Gerlach work on Connelly’s solo material. In a 2021 interview […] The post <strong>When he’s not backing big-time rockers, Chicago guitarist Steve Gerlach surfs the stratosphere with Outronaut</strong> appeared first on Chicago Reader.Read More

When he’s not backing big-time rockers, Chicago guitarist Steve Gerlach surfs the stratosphere with OutronautLeor Galilon December 20, 2022 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Blackhawks satisfied with box-plus-one defensive structure, just not with execution

When Seth Jones mentioned the Blackhawks need to “play a system that’s good for all of us” after another discouraging loss Sunday, it was worth asking the question.

Does he believe in the Hawks’ current system? Is it just the execution, not the system itself, letting them down?

“It’s the execution, for sure,” Jones said.

That answer aligns with what coach Luke Richardson has said as well as with the eye test.

Richardson’s switch from Jeremy Colliton’s controversial “hybrid man-on-man” defensive structure to a more conventional, zone-like “box-plus-one” structure in training camp seemed like a much-needed change.

Even now, after 15 losses in 16 games, it’s difficult to argue any other structure would be better. This is exclusively a lack-of-talent problem. Imagining this patchwork, mistake-prone roster attempting to follow Colliton’s frequently mistake-prompting approach triggers instant nightmares.

“We could go man-on-man, but if we’re not strong enough to kill the play, people are going to slide off, and then there’s people leaving people to go to that guy, so everything is not going to work,” Richardson said recently. “That’s what we’re harping on. Focus on a ‘hit and a pin’ with your guy, and then we’ll get some help. It did work.”

After all, when the Hawks commit turnovers, lose track of their marks, double up on opponents pointlessly, get caught flat-footed while puck-watching or make risky dives to steal the puck, they’ll get burned. The structure is just a starting point, Richardson said.

“When it’s your chance to engage, you have to hit and pin and kill the play and get the puck and move it forward,” he added. “[If you don’t], it doesn’t matter what system you play, you’re breaking down.

“Then there’s a five-on-four or there’s a two-on-one somewhere in the D-zone, so nothing is going to work. You have to have a special goalie to make a big save. We’ve put our goalies in that position too much.”

On Friday, the Wild’s first goal came after the Hawks pursued the puck around their defensive zone without killing the play for nearly a minute. The constant movement eventually opened up lanes for three consecutive cross-ice passes and a tap-in goal.

The Hawks’ structure actually held up well throughout the shift, making it a perfect example of execution letting them down.

On Sunday, conversely, almost every Rangers five-on-five goal happened off an odd-man rush, and the one that didn’t — Filip Chytil’s opener — was jump-started by Jack Johnson’s turnover that gave the Hawks no time to set up their structure.

“We have to trust that what we were doing the first part of the first period is going to work for 60 minutes,” he said. “But we didn’t, and I don’t think we trust it. So we somehow have to get back to that.”

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Chicago Bulls: The scary, yet true, reality of another rebuildAnish Puligillaon December 20, 2022 at 12:00 pm

Well, the Chicago Bulls have gone and done it. They have proved the haters right. The fans didn’t want it to be true – I certainly was a believer. Yet, in the end, the issues that most critics of AK foresaw are the exact issues that plague this team. No identity, no shooting, no defense, and most telling: no effort.

While a few feel-good wins earlier in the season against Boston and Milwaukee extended their runway, their most recent performances against the Knicks and Timberwolves have all but dissolved whatever goodwill remained between this team and its fans.

I wrote previously about what would need to go right for the Chicago Bulls to stay in contention for a top 6 seed. Checking in on those expectations, none of the three have panned out. Zach LaVine continues to be woefully inconsistent with his shot and compounds those issues with the lackluster effort, if any, on the defensive end.

Patrick Williams has his moments, his sparks on both ends of the floor, but has not solidified himself as the 15-point, 7-rebound guy this team needs him to be. Ayo Dosunmu, to this point, hasn’t shown he can be anything more than an elite transition scorer and spotty three-point shooter at best.

Overall, the Chicago Bulls have been disappointing in every possible facet of their game.

With all this, and even before this recent run of games, analysts had been clamoring for the Chicago Bulls to blow it up from Charles Barkley to Bill Simmons and Kevin O’Connor at the Ringer.

Yet, the prospect of trading DeRozan and Vucevic for Westbrook and two unprotected firsts half a decade from now seemed ludicrous a week ago. Today though? Not so much.

Now, even a good proportion of Bulls fans believe it’s time for AKME to press reset and firesale this roster. With Billy Donovan extended, it’s clear that AK is more committed to him as a coach than they are to this nucleus of players they assembled around Zach LaVine.

However, there is one alarmingly scary reality of the Chicago Bulls potentially undergoing yet another rebuild: the people in charge.

In the aftermath of the GarPax regime, anyone that replaced him who showed even the slightest interest in bringing the Bulls back to relevancy was gonna be given the longest of leashes and the warmest of welcomes from this fanbase. Though, if we really consider what a rebuild would mean for this regime, the results are scary.

If AKME decides to press reset on this team, not even two full seasons into assembling the core, it would mean they have failed to build a quality, contending roster – which is the only way anyone could describe their goals upon trading for Nikola Vucevic in early 2021.

Now, consider the draft picks. Patrick Williams, Marko Simonovic, Ayo Dosunmu, Dalen Terry. This group includes a top-4 pick, another pick in the late teens, and two second rounders. Is it an inspiring group? Not by my estimation.

Dalen is an unknown, which is fine – in theory, but as far as evaluating AK’s drafting he’s a complete wildcard. Ayo seems like a solid rotation piece, but is being asked to develop at a much faster rate than is appropriate. Patrick Williams, despite being the most talented piece on this team, is still too deferential to his veteran teammates – making him a massive question mark too.

Then there’s Marko, who has somehow managed to not get a main roster spot on the same team as Tony Bradley.

So what exactly has AK proven as a drafter? Factor in that any rebuild involves a change in approach to build through the draft, and is this a route that would inspire any confidence?

Ultimately what we have is organizational management that is showing they have failed to build a championship team through free agency and trades, and struggle to identify impactful contributors in the draft. Yikes.

The Chicago Bulls are in an extremely precarious situation. The players have the ability to turn their own season around. The front office has objectively been uninspiring since that first summer, unable to pick a lane. Now, they may be left in a spot where doubling down on “winning now” or pressing reset present equally risky situations.

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Chicago Bulls: The scary, yet true, reality of another rebuildAnish Puligillaon December 20, 2022 at 12:00 pm Read More »

For Bears, it’s time to make a tank call

Tanking.

It’s a dirty word, one that implies deviousness and cowardliness and something one step above cheating.

It’s a pity that tanking by a sports team ever makes sense. I hate it. Always have. So, I can guarantee, do all athletes.

But you can’t argue with the rules of a sports league, even — rather — the lack of rules by that league. And if the NFL says the worse your team’s record, the higher your pick in the upcoming draft, well, if a decent season and playoffs are lost, why not tank away? The best college players go at the top of the draft. If you’re bad, you can get one.

That’s where the Bears are now. At 3-11 with three games left, they are a nowhere team headed nowhere, except to the drawing board for the 2023 season and beyond.

We don’t need to see more from electric young quarterback Justin Fields to know his future, with talent around him, is unlimited. It took the Bears 40 years to draft a quarterback with as much potential as their only Super Bowl-winning QB, Jim McMahon. And Fields is the one.

If you think Fields’ “development” for three more games matters for next season, it’s possible. But little that’s learned now will translate to an advantage nine months away.

The only thing that translates for sure is a devastating injury. Such a needless thing would be a stone-cold disaster for this fleet, elusive athlete who has taken a beating but whose legs are yet undamaged.

Blow out an ACL or rip an Achilles tendon, and Fields might not even be ready for next season. One is reminded here of sad cases such as once-electric Bears running back Tarik Cohen, likely done with football after suffering a blown knee on a fair catch in 2020.

And if you want to move to another sport, consider that Bulls guard Lonzo Ball still is not able to play after a seemingly minor meniscus injury from almost a year ago, one that doctors initially thought would take four to six weeks to heal.

Yes, we’d miss watching Fields make magic. And, yes, he could add to his astounding, league-leading 1,000 rushing yards. He could go for Lamar Jackson’s NFL quarterback record for a season of 1,206 yards. But it would be a hollow crown, even if the Bears won out. They’d be only 6-11.

Former Bears quarterback Bobby Douglass set an NFL quarterback rushing record with 968 yards in only 14 games back in 1972, a mark that stood for 34 years. The Bears’ record that season? A miserable 4-9-1.

To take full advantage of the NFL’s tolerance for tanking, the Bears could rest Fields, knowing his backup, Nathan Peterman, makes losing simple.

Looking at this as it stands right now, without the scruples of morality or, I suppose, the dictum of fair play, the Bears could make sure to lose out and be assured of no worse than the second pick in the draft. Win the last three games, and they drop to 14th.

Draft position matters. It could be the difference between taking Peyton Manning or Ryan Leaf, Troy Aikman or Tony Mandarich.

The likely first pick this year will be Ohio State quarterback C.J. Stroud. But the Bears don’t need a starting quarterback, so the No. 2 spot is dandy. It means they could take either of two star defensive linemen, Georgia’s Jalen Carter or Alabama’s Will Anderson. Or anybody else they please. They could also trade down and snag more picks. The possibilities are huge.

Don’t forget, the Bears could easily lose the last three games without trying. A deeply flawed team can’t suddenly change.

It’s understood, and welcome, that NFL players and coaches hate to lose. No coach or general manager could even hint to players that they give less than their all.

The idea is so contrary to the football code that former Browns coach Hue Jackson ripped owner Jimmy Haslam for supposedly offering Jackson a bonus to lose. This was just after Jackson had been fired, and he was mad. He pulled back his statement later.

But for a league that oddly tolerates tanking — no Ping-Pong balls or lottery for these fellows — it makes you think. The Bears won’t tank. Can’t do it. But, man, you wonder if they should.

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High school basketball schedule: Dec. 19 to Dec. 25

Monday, December 19, 2022

NOBLE LEAGUE – BLUE

Golder at Noble Street, 7:00

NOBLE LEAGUE – GOLD

Butler at Bulls Prep, 7:00

NON CONFERENCE

Addison Trail at Stagg, 6:00

Agricultural Science at Bremen, 6:00

Christian Liberty at Mooseheart, 6:00

Crane at UC-Woodlawn, 5:00

DRW Prep at Collins, 6:30

Eisenhower at Catalyst-Maria, 5:00

Elgin Academy at Beacon, 7:00

Ellison at South Shore, 5:00

Englewood STEM at Brooks, 5:00

EPIC at Roosevelt, 5:00

Excel-Englewood at Horizon-McKinley, 5:30

Genoa-Kingston at Woodstock, 7:00

Hampshire at Buffalo Grove, 7:00

Herscher at Clifton Central, PPD

Julian at Schurz, 5:00

Lake View at Maine South, 7:00

Leo at Phillips, 7:00

Lincoln-Way West at Tinley Park, 6:00

Maine West at Niles West, 6:30

Marian Central at Cary-Grove, 1:30

McHenry at Belvidere North, 7:30

Midland at DePue, 6:45

Muchin at Rowe-Clark, 7:00

Normal West at Yorkville Christian, 7:00

Northtown at North Shore, 6:00

Perspectives-Lead at Thornridge, 6:30

Phoenix at Dyett, 5:00

Reed-Custer at Somonauk, 5:30

Richards (Chgo) at Clemente, 5:00

Rock County Christian (WI) at Our Lady Sacred Hea

Round Lake at Mundelein, 7:00

St. Francis de Sales at Homewood-Flossmoor, 6:30

UIC Prep at Solorio, 6:30

KANSAS CITY – HYVEE ARENA (MO)

Hyde Park vs. Savannah (MO), 6:00

FORRESTON

Aquin vs. Eastland, 6:00

Milledgeville vs. Polo, 7:30

Pecatonica vs. Dakota, 7:30

Lena-Winslow vs. Winnebago, 6:00

MESA MOUNTAIN VIEW (AZ)

Benet vs. Jefferson (NY), 2:30M

WATSEKA

Tri-Point vs. Illinois Lutheran, 5:00

Donovan vs. St. Anne, 6:15

Cissna Park vs. Horizon-Southwest, 7:30

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

CATHOLIC LEAGUE – BLUE

Loyola at Mount Carmel, 7:00

INTERSTATE EIGHT

Plano at Kaneland, 7:00

Sandwich at LaSalle-Peru, 6:00

Sycamore at Morris, 7:00

NOBLE LEAGUE – GOLD

Noble Academy at Johnson, 5:30

Rowe-Clark at ITW-Speer, 7:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-SOUTH

Carver at Hirsch, 5:00

RIVER VALLEY

Grant Park at Gardner-So. Wilmington, 6:45

SOUTHLAND

Thornridge at Thornton, 6:30

Thornwood at Rich, 6:30

UPSTATE EIGHT

Bartlett at Glenbard South, 7:00

East Aurora at Glenbard East, 6:30

Elgin at West Chicago, 7:00

Fenton at South Elgin, 7:00

Streamwood at Larkin, 7:00

NON CONFERENCE

Amboy at Leland, 5:30

Beecher at Coal City, 6:45

Bogan at Evergreen Park, 6:00

Bradley-Bourbonnais at Morgan Park, 7:00

Bremen at Lincoln-Way East, 5:00

Bulls Prep at Fenwick, 7:00

Chicago Military at Perspectives-MSA, 5:00

Chicago Tech at Ellison, 6:30

Clifton Central at Prairie Central, 7:00

Collins at Tilden, 5:00

Comer at Marist, 7:00

Crete-Monee at Andrew, 5:30

Cristo Rey-St. Martin at Waldorf, 5:30

Disney at Raby, 7:00

Farragut at Kenwood, 5:30

Fenger at Dunbar, 5:00

Glenbrook South at Lake Forest, 7:00

Hancock at Goode, 5:00

Harlan at Jones, 6:30

Harvard at Belvidere, 6:30

Herscher at Kankakee, 6:00

Illinois Valley Central at Dixon, 7:00

Intrinsic-Downtown at Washington, 6:30

Juarez at DuSable, 5:00

Lakes at Cary-Grove, 7:00

Lisle at Aurora Central, 7:00

Marian Central at Warren, 7:00

MCC Prep at Steinmetz, 5:00

Momence at Wilmington, 6:45

Newark at Seneca, 7:00

North Boone at Durand, 7:00

North-Grand at Manley, 5:00

Perspectives-MSA at Chicago Military, 5:00

Prospect at Glenbrook North, 6:30

Proviso West at Bowen, 5:00

Rauner at Excel-Englewood, 5:30

Richards at St. Laurence, 7:00

Ridgeview at Dwight, 7:00

Shepard at Manteno, 7:00

Southland at Reavis, 4:30

St. Edward at Riverside-Brookfield, 6:00

St. Ignatius at Lane, 5:00

St. Viator at Crystal Lake South, 7:00

Tilden at Collins, 5:00

UC-Woodlawn at Little Village, 5:00

UIC Prep at Kennedy, 6:30

Urban Prep-West at Longwood, 5:00

Vocational at Julian, 5:00

Wheaton Academy at Christ the King, 6:30

Woodland at Lexington, 7:00

FORRESTON

Pearl City vs. Forreston, 6:00

River Ridge vs. Orangeville, 7:30

Newman vs. Oregon, 7:30

Stockton vs. Byron, 6:00

MESA MOUNTAIN VIEW (AZ)

Benet vs. Pinnacle (AZ), 2:30M

WATSEKA

Westville vs. Hoopeston, 5:00

Iroquois West vs. Watseka, 6:15

McNamara vs. Milford, 7:30

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

NOBLE LEAGUE – BLUE

Baker at Mansueto, 7:00

DRW Prep at Pritzker, 7:00

Muchin at Hansberry, 7:00

Rauner at UIC Prep, 7:00

RIVER VALLEY

Beecher at Tri-Point, 7:00

NON CONFERENCE

Ashton-Franklin Center at Hinckley-Big Rock, 7:00

Bulls Prep at De La Salle, 6:00

Collins at Schurz, 5:00

Eisenhower at Amundsen, 6:30

Excel-Englewood at Leo, 6:00

Farragut at Lindblom, 5:00

Golder at Washington, 5:00

Hancock at Reavis, 3:00

Lockport at Minooka, 5:30

Lowpoint-Washburn at Leland, 5:30

Maine West at Waukegan, 7:00

Marmion at Marquette, 7:00

Mather at Crane, 5:00

North Shore at Beacon, 6:30

Northside at Chicago Academy, 5:00

Phoenix at Clark, 5:00

Proviso West at Horizon-Southwest, 12:30

Putnam County at Yorkville Christian, 7:00

Reed-Custer at Gardner-So. Wilmington, 6:15

Richards (Chgo) at Manley, 5:00

Somonauk at Sandwich, 7:00

South Shore at Perspectives-MSA, 5:00

Stark County at Midland, 7:00

Sterling at DeKalb, 7:00

Sullivan at Uplift, 5:00

York at Lake Zurich, 7:00

FORRESTON

13th Place Semi-Final, 5:00

13th Place Semi-Final, 6:30

Consolation Semi-Final, 8:00

Consolation Semi-Final, 8:00

5th Place Semi-Final, 6:30

5th Place Semi-Final, 5:00

MESA MOUNTAIN VIEW (AZ)

Benet vs. Higley (AZ), 2:30M

Thursday, December 22, 2022

CENTRAL SUBURBAN – SOUTH

Evanston vs. New Trier, at Northwestern U, 7:00

CHICAGO PREP

Holy Trinity at Rochelle Zell, 8:00

DU KANE

Batavia at Wheaton-Warr. South, 7:00

Glenbard North at Wheaton North, 7:15

St. Charles North at Lake Park, 7:00

MID-SUBURBAN – EAST

Elk Grove at Rolling Meadows, 7:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE RED-SOUTH / CENTRAL

Curie at Perspectives-Lead, 6:30

NON CONFERENCE

Antioch at Legal Prep, 1:30

Bloom at Proviso East, 6:00

Cary-Grove at Grayslake Central, 7:00

Catalyst-Maria at Brooks, 5:00

Christ the King at Detoit Jesuit (MI), 6:00

Coal City at Plano, 6:45

Comer at Kennedy, 7:00

Crane at Julian, 5:00

Deerfield at Naperville Central, 7:00

Dixon at Princeton, 7:00

DRW Prep at Harlan, 5:00

Dundee-Crown at Elgin, 7:00

Farragut vs. Austin, at North Lawndale, 5:00

Fenger at Rich, 7:00

Fremd at South Elgin, 7:00

Grant at Schurz, 5:00

ITW-Speer at Prosser, 7:00

Jones at Dunbar, 6:30

Lake View at North Shore, 6:00

Lane at Northside, 5:00

Little Village at Dyett, 5:00

Loyola at Notre Dame, 7:00

Metea Valley at Geneva, 6:00

Newark at Aurora Christian, 7:30

Noble Street at Kelly, 5:00

Northridge at IC Catholic, 7:00

Palatine at Highland Park, 5:30

Plainfield North at Lincoln-Way West, 6:30

Raby at YCCS-Innovations, 5:00

Schaumburg at Buffalo Grove, 7:00

St. Laurence at Mather, 5:00

St. Patrick at Lakes, 3:30

Taft at Hoffman Estates, 7:00

UC-Woodlawn at DuSable, 5:00

FORRESTON

Semi-Final, 6:30

Semi-Final, 8:00

15th Place, 5:00

13th Place, 6:30

11th Place, 8:00

7th Place, 5:00

MARENGO

Genoa-Kingston vs. Harvest Christian, 10:30

Sycamore vs. Rockford Christian, 12:00

Woodstock North vs. Fenton, 1:30

Stillman Valley vs. Wauconda, 3:00

Grayslake North vs. Freeport, 4:30

Rochelle vs. Richmond-Burton, 6:00

Woodstock vs. Crystal Lake Central, 7:30

Marengo (BYE)

MESA MOUNTAIN VIEW (AZ)

Benet vs. TBA

Friday, December 23, 2022

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-NORTH

Amundsen at Senn, 1:00

NON CONFERENCE

Baker at Bowen, TBA

Burlington Central at Glenbard West, 5:00

DRW Prep at Thornwood, 6:30

Hansberry at Ellison, 2:30

Lake Park at Mundelein, 5:30

Libertyville at Vernon Hills, 5:30

Lindblom at Naperville North, 2:30

North Chicago at Niles West, 6:30

St. Francis de Sales at Sandburg, 5:00

Timothy Christian at Ridgewood, 6:00

CREDIT UNION 1 ARENA (UIC)

Hyde Park vs. Mount Carmel, 4:00

Joliet West vs. Sacred Heart-Giffin, 5:30

Simeon vs. Young, 7:00

St. Rita vs. Cathedral (IN), 9:30

FORRESTON

Consolation Championship, 5:00

5th Place, 6:30

3rd Place, 5:00

Championship, 6:30

HINSDALE CENTRAL

Stevenson vs. Glenbard East, 9:30

Oswego East vs. Lincoln-Way Central, 11:00

Morgan Park vs. Richards, 12:30

DePaul vs. Morton, 2:00

Marian Catholic vs. Maine South, 3:45

Auburn vs. Willowbrook, 5:15

Hinsdale Central vs. Oak Forest, 7:00

Homewood-Flossmoor vs. St. Charles East, 8:30

MARENGO

Consolation Quarter-Final, 10:30

Consolation Quarter-Final, 12:00

Consolation Quarter-Final, 1:30

Consolation Quarter-Final (BYE)

Quarter-Final, 3:00

Quarter-Final, 4:30

Quarter-Final, 6:00

Quarter-Final, 7:30

Saturday, December 24, 2022

No games scheduled

Sunday, December 25, 2022

No games scheduled

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Inside the meeting that set the Cubs apart in their pursuit of Jameson Taillon

Right-hander Jameson Taillon and Cubs vice president of pitching Craig Breslow carved out about 30 minutes for lunch at Zero Bond in New York last month. They stayed for over two hours, and if Taillon hadn’t had other engagements that day, they might have talked for longer.

“I left that meeting feeling like this could be a really great fit,” Taillon said in his introductory Zoom press conference Monday.

The Cubs made Taillon’s four-year deal official on Monday. His contract is worth $68 million, a source confirmed two weeks ago when the parties agreed to terms. For Taillon, that in-person meeting — along with the individualized videos the Cubs sent — became a separator in his free agency decision.

“Everyone I talked to, it just felt easy,” Taillon said of the Cubs. “It felt right. I was impressed with every team, for sure. But the Cubs felt genuine in that regard, that they reached out early, they reached out often.”

The Cubs had other advantages as they pursued Taillon, who said he talked to “a lot” of teams. From his time with the Pirates, Taillon knew what it was like to pitch at Wrigley Field when the Cubs were playoff contenders. And the club assured him they were going to spend to improve.

Taillon sought input from ex-Cubs: his Yankees teammates Anthony Rizzo and Scott Efross, and former Pirates teammate Trevor Williams.

“All the feedback I got was like, ‘Dude, if you have the opportunity to play there, you really have to take it,'” Taillon said.

Early on, the Cubs sent him custom videos about the Wrigley Field experience, history of the team and the fan base. He said he loved the videos so much that he watched them every day for a couple weeks. No other teams had done that. And no other team met with Taillon in person.

Some free agent meetings are more formal. Others, like Breslow’s one-on-one lunch with Taillon last month, are free flowing. Breslow came armed with a tablet loaded with a series of slides on the pitching infrastructure’s insights, but those augmented the natural conversation.

“I was struck by his aptitude and curiosity,” Breslow said in a conversation with the Sun-Times.

They talked about changes Taillon made coming back from injury. Since his second Tommy John surgery, in 2019, Taillon’s mechanical adjustments have given him more ride on his four-seam fastball. He’s also separated his cutter and slider.

They talked about tweaks Taillon still wants to make to his delivery and pitch usage. He hopes to throw his curveball more and fine-tune the consistency of his cutter and slider.

Taillon impressed Breslow with his desire to take on a leadership role and help build the pitching staff’s camaraderie. From the other side of the field, Taillon had noticed Cubs veteran pitchers Kyle Hendricks and Marcus Stroman cheering on their teammates.

“There’s a level of detail and engagement and awareness to that,” Breslow said, “that goes beyond just saying things on their face.”

Taillon and Breslow “nerd[ed] out on pitching,”as Taillon put it. They discussed Taillon’s career path, the advantages of playing in Chicago, restaurant recommendations. They looked up at the clock, and two and a half hours had passed.

On Breslow’s way back from New York, president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer reached out to see how the meeting went. The Cubs had received so many positive reviews on Taillon’s makeup that Breslow wasn’t quite sure.

He couldn’t say whether it went so well because Taillon was as interested in the Cubs as they were in him, or because “he just seems like a great guy who’s super easy to talk to.”

About two weeks ago, Taillon’s commitment answered that question.

“I feel like I still have some untapped potential that I’m really trying to hunt down,” Taillon said Monday, “And I felt like this was a great fit to help me find that.”

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High school basketball: Monday’s scores

Monday, December 19, 2022

NOBLE LEAGUE – BLUE

Golder at Noble Street, 7:00

NOBLE LEAGUE – GOLD

Butler at Bulls Prep, 7:00

NON CONFERENCE

Addison Trail at Stagg, 6:00

Agricultural Science at Bremen, 6:00

Christian Liberty at Mooseheart, 6:00

Crane at UC-Woodlawn, 5:00

DRW Prep at Collins, 6:30

Eisenhower at Catalyst-Maria, 5:00

Elgin Academy at Beacon, 7:00

Ellison at South Shore, 5:00

Englewood STEM at Brooks, 5:00

EPIC at Roosevelt, 5:00

Excel-Englewood at Horizon-McKinley, 5:30

Genoa-Kingston at Woodstock, 7:00

Hampshire at Buffalo Grove, 7:00

Herscher at Clifton Central, PPD

Julian at Schurz, 5:00

Lake View at Maine South, 7:00

Leo at Phillips, 7:00

Lincoln-Way West at Tinley Park, 6:00

Maine West at Niles West, 6:30

Marian Central at Cary-Grove, 1:30

McHenry at Belvidere North, 7:30

Midland at DePue, 6:45

Muchin at Rowe-Clark, 7:00

Normal West at Yorkville Christian, 7:00

Northtown at North Shore, 6:00

Perspectives-Lead at Thornridge, 6:30

Phoenix at Dyett, 5:00

Reed-Custer at Somonauk, 5:30

Richards (Chgo) at Clemente, 5:00

Rock County Christian (WI) at Our Lady Sacred Hea

Round Lake at Mundelein, 7:00

St. Francis de Sales at Homewood-Flossmoor, 6:30

UIC Prep at Solorio, 6:30

KANSAS CITY – HYVEE ARENA (MO)

Hyde Park vs. Savannah (MO), 6:00

FORRESTON

Aquin vs. Eastland, 6:00

Milledgeville vs. Polo, 7:30

Pecatonica vs. Dakota, 7:30

Lena-Winslow vs. Winnebago, 6:00

MESA MOUNTAIN VIEW (AZ)

Benet vs. Jefferson (NY), 2:30M

WATSEKA

Tri-Point vs. Illinois Lutheran, 5:00

Donovan vs. St. Anne, 6:15

Cissna Park vs. Horizon-Southwest, 7:30

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Bears film study: Justin Fields’ incredible running — and room to grow in passing

It took just 13 games for Justin Fields to break the 1,000-yard rushing mark for the season, and he now needs to average 69 per game over the final three weeks to set the single-season record for a quarterback. It’s very doable, considering that he is averaging 76.9 for the season and 100.8 over his last eight games.

He has established himself as the best running quarterback in the NFL, which is a tremendous accomplishment in his development and incredibly promising for the Bears during their rebuild.

But Fields often downplays that aspect of his game and did so again after running all over the field in the loss to the Eagles, saying he doesn’t intend to be a 1,000-yard rusher regularly.

Why not?

Being a runner doesn’t mean he can’t also be a passer. Lamar Jackson, Josh Allen and Jalen Hurts have established ideal balances that make them extraordinarily challenging to defend.

Fields has half of that nailed down, and he’s well on his way as a passer. He has been efficient, though far from prolific. The more yards he can get by throwing, the fewer are needed on the ground, and that would enable him to find the right mix like Jackson.

That endeavor will be easier if the Bears fortify their offensive line and bolster their pass-catching crew. There was a third-and-10 late in the first quarter, for example, when the Eagles got immediate pressure with just four pass rushers, had a spy waiting for Fields if he took off running and none of his receivers were open whatsoever. What’s he supposed to do with that?

Nonetheless, Fields looked good overall as a thrower and runner Sunday, completing 14 of 21 passes for 152 yards with two touchdowns for a 119.5 passer rating and running for 95 yards on 15 carries. Here’s a look at what he did well and what needs improvement:

Impossible escape on run

Great quarterbacks are magicians. They can turn any disaster into a success. Whether that’s Patrick Mahomes treating third-and-seven like it’s backyard football or Justin Herbert seemingly never being out of a game, it’s an art.

Fields has that potential with his legs. He has gotten 23% of his yardage after contact, and it has become routine to see him turn losses into gains. He bailed the Bears out of a second-and-27 from the Eagles’ 48-yard line midway through the second quarterback by doing that. It was his best play of the game.

Eagles linebacker Haason Reddick, one of the NFL’s top rushers, beat right tackle Alex Leatherwood off the line and dived at Fields’ feet at the Bears’ 44-yard line. That would’ve been an eight-yard loss, but Fields sidestepped it. Reddick sprung up and wrapped his arm around Fields’ neck at the Bears’ 46 and was on the brink of sacking him, but Fields ducked out of it, changed direction from right to left and was gone for a 39-yard run.

Instead of third-and-33, it was first-and-goal at the 9. Magic.

Fields’ escape of Reddick was so hard to believe that him shaking a few defenders a moment later was barely noticed. But when Eagles cornerback Darius Slay and linebacker T.J. Edwards closed in on him at the 33-yard line, Fields dodged both and left Edwards flailing as he briefly got one hand on him. Fields made it 29 yards on his own and got another 10 thanks in large part to good blocking by wide receivers Byron Pringle and Velus Jones.

Running back David Montgomery scored on the next play to put the Bears up 6-3. Not bad for a possession that seemed destined to end in a punt before Fields’ run.

Ups and downs passing

Fields’ completion percentage, yards per pass and passer rating were all good, but few quarterbacks win with just 152 yards passing. He’s averaging 157.5 this season, barely above what he did as a rookie, and that just isn’t good enough.

Take Jackson, for example. When he set the quarterback rushing record with 1,206 yards in 2019, he also averaged 208.5 yards passing. That’s overwhelming. That’s why he won MVP. Over his four seasons as full-time starter, he has averaged 203.9 yards passing and 69.3 rushing, and the Ravens have gone 39-15 in his starts.

The two ways for Fields to step up his passing is to recognize downfield opportunities faster and get better in obvious passing situations — the most difficult predicament for all quarterbacks — to extend drives. The Bears have run the 10th-fewest plays this season. More plays would mean more opportunities.

It’s on Bears general manager Ryan Poles to facilitate that with better personnel around Fields than who played with Sunday.

The good? Fields succeeded on both fronts on his 35-yard touchdown pass to Byron Pringle in the fourth quarter and his 20-yard strike over the middle to Equanimeous St. Brown on third-and-10 in the first quarter.

On the Pringle touchdown, Fields looked past shallower options in running back Darrynton Evans and wide receiver Dante Pettis to take advantage of a blown coverage and hit Pringle all alone near the end zone. On the third-down play, he hit St. Brown perfectly in stride so he could get another eight yards after the catch.

The bad? While at first it looked like a simple drop when Pettis didn’t catch Fields’ fourth-and-three throw in the flats early in the first quarter, which cost the Bears a scoring chance, his throw was significantly behind Pettis. That made it a tough catch and allowed cornerback Avonte Maddox to get back into the play. That hurt.

Another play Fields can fix happened late in the first quarter when he scrambled for seven yards (Eagles defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh clearly hit Fields unnecessarily on his slide, by the way). There’s nothing wrong with a seven-yard gain on first down, of course, but he could’ve hit Montgomery for at least 10 if he’d reacted quicker.

Those are two relatively forgettable plays, but they would’ve made a significant difference. If he starts making those, it’ll be a big boost to the Bears’ offense.

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3 blockbuster Patrick Kane trades with Detroit Red WingsVincent Pariseon December 19, 2022 at 11:51 pm

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The Chicago Blackhawks are having a terrible year but it is by design. They have their eyes on a rebuild that will make their future bright. Part of that is getting through this season with a good chance at the 2023 NHL Draft Lottery.

There are a lot of things that need to be done in order to rebuild the right way. Every second that Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews spend on this team is hurting their trade value because they can’t possibly produce at a high level in this situation.

When they get moved, the same people that wondered what happened to them are going to be surprised that they are scoring in bunches again.

Patrick Kane will be the easiest of the two to trade at this point. A team that could really use someone like this is the Detroit Red Wings. One of these blockbusters might get a deal done between these two:

Blackhawks Get
Filip Zadina
2023 Second-Round Pick (STL)
Red Wings Get
Patrick Kane

Patrick Kane might be able to help the Detroit Red Wings get back in it.

The Detroit Red Wings were firmly in a playoff spot a few weeks ago but have since slipped up. Now, they could use a scorer like Patrick Kane to help them get out of it. He would thrive playing with some of the young stars that they have there in Detroit.

Filip Zadina and a second-round pick in 2023 might be a little bit light for Kane but the way that he has produced this year might lower his price.

It isn’t his fault that he hasn’t produced as well as he isn’t in a good situation. Most players in the NHL wouldn’t be able to take full advantage of their skills on this team. Going to a team like the Red Wings would really help him.

Zadina is a former really high draft pick that needs a change of scenery and could join the group of young forwards that the Blackhawks have. The second-round pick pitched here is formerly of the St. Louis Blues who are having a terrible year so it won’t be a bad pick at all.

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3 blockbuster Patrick Kane trades with Detroit Red WingsVincent Pariseon December 19, 2022 at 11:51 pm Read More »