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Bears’ Justin Fields has another prove-it game, this time against the Eagles’ Jalen Hurts

Some of us (who, me?) seem to be constantly erecting challenges for Justin Fields. He runs the ball like few quarterbacks ever have, and we want to know if he can pass. He completes 70% of his passes in a game, and we want to know if he’s ever going to go deep. He sets the NFL on fire with his talent, and we say, “Is it too much to ask for the kid to lead a fourth-quarter comeback?”

Completely unfair, totally unrealistic and … well, sure, Fields had a strong game against Miami star Tua Tagovailoa last month, but can he keep up with Jalen Hurts on Sunday?

It’s not what you would call a level playing field, with the running-and-passing Hurts leading the 12-1 Eagles and the running-and-passing Fields leading the 3-10 Bears. The Eagles have a great defense, the Bears don’t. The Eagles lead the NFL in points, the Bears are 19th.

And, yet, the question is on its knees, begging to be asked: Is this a prove-it game for Fields?

Hurts is what Fields wants to be when he grows up in a hurry. The conventional thinking is that all he needs is a team around him to do it. But that’s an injustice to Hurts, who is one of the leading candidates for league MVP. In his third season in the league, he’s thrown 22 touchdowns and three interceptions. Fields’ numbers in his second season are 13 and 10. Touchdown-to-interception ratio mostly falls on a quarterback, not on whom he has around him.

For Fields to take the next step, a step closer to Hurts, he needs to become a better passer. It’s why Sunday at Soldier Field has such a feeling of possibility to it. If he can go toe to toe and arm to arm with Hurts, it would be a huge leap for the 23-year-old quarterback.

He obviously has the running part down. He’s been a gift to a city that had no reason to expect one this season. It feels greedy to want more after you’ve seen what he can do with his legs, but unless we’re witnessing a revolution at the quarterback position, Fields is going to have to improve his passing.

Hurts has completed 68% of his passes this season and is averaging 8.1 yards an attempt. Fields is at 61.7% and 7.5 yards an attempt. There’s a big disparity in accuracy. Now, you’ll argue that Hurts completed 61.3% of his passes last season, his second in the league, but it doesn’t logically follow that Fields will reach Hurts’ level next year. If we’re playing that game, you can argue that because John Elway struggled in his second season, Fields will become a Hall of Famer. And all of Chicago shouts back: Exactly!!!

The converse to my initial assertion, that some of us are constantly raising the bar for Fields without taking the time to fully appreciate him, is that others are in a major hurry to turn him into the best quarterback in the league. Maybe he will be someday, but as of right now, a flag would be thrown for piling on with the expectations.

That’s why we pay particular attention to games like Sunday’s. That’s why it’s a prove-it game for Fields, no matter what Bears coach Matt Eberflus might be tempted to say about quarterbacks not actually playing against quarterbacks. Fields has proven he can run the ball. I wish he would stop proving it so much, both to prevent injury and to force him to keep progressing as a passer.

That might be like taking the paint brush from Michelangelo and handing him a violin. But Fields eventually will have to do both things well if he’s to become what so many people already think he is. I don’t think that’s putting up an unreasonable challenge for the him, nor do I think it’s missing the point of the sensation that he already is. We can ooh and aah over his running (a league-leading 7.1 yards a carry) and still expect a lot more out of his passing. By the way, Hurts has rushed for 10 touchdowns this season, Fields eight.

A column for another day is whether Hurts, Fields and Lamar Jackson are what quarterbacking will look like in 20 years or whether the brutality of football makes a long career for a running quarterback impossible.

For now, let’s put Fields up against Hurts and see what happens. Let’s see if he can take that next step, a big one. His fan club thinks he already has.

Let’s see him prove it.

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Bears’ Justin Fields has another prove-it game, this time against the Eagles’ Jalen Hurts Read More »

New York Knicks at Chicago Bulls: 1 Best Bet

The Chicago Bulls return to the United Center on Wednesday night to face Tom Thibodeau and the New York Knicks.

The Chicago Bulls dropped another chance to gain ground on a fellow Eastern Conference foe on Sunday, losing to the Atlanta Hawks in overtime. This week, they will have not one, but two chances to take down a 14-13 New York Knicks team at the United Center with games against New York on Wednesday and Friday evening.

The New York Knicks enter these games currently on a four-game winning streak, holding opponents to 102 points or less in all four of those contests, including games against Cleveland, Atlanta, Charlotte, and Sacramento. To see the Knicks as underdogs and the total remaining in the mid-220’s is a bit interesting and could be telling that the Chicago Bulls may have a strong showing tonight.

The injury report for both teams is fairly noteworthy. The Bulls’ includes a probable designation for Alex Caruso, and a questionable listing for Ayo Dosunmu. The Knicks is a bit more significant with Jalen Brunson currently labeled as questionable. 2020 first round pick, Obi Toppin is out for tonight’s game, and former Chicago Bulls guard Ryan Arcidiacano is listed as doubtful.

If Brunson is ruled out of this game, it could open the door for none other than Derrick Rose to play a significant role in these two games. Rose has missed time this month due to a toe injury, but his injury designations were removed in their recent games, only to not see time in the game via a coaching decision, seemingly available in case of emergency.

With Brunson potentially out, that emergency could come in the form of a two game set against the Chicago Bulls. Miles McBride could assume a starting role or increased time in the case of Brunson’s absence, but the absence could result in a fun 20-minute or so appearance from Rose. If Rose is deemed 100% healthy he may even start and play north of 30-minutes.

After taking these last two games off, I am jumping back in looking to end this nasty losing streak. If you’ve lost all faith and decide to fade me to the moon, be my guest, but if you believe in the bounce back and positive regression, you better buckle up and get ready for some winners coming your way. This losing streak has been beyond frustrating, but I’m determined to get it going in the right direction. Best of luck, let’s see some red, and GO BULLS!!

2022 Bulls Best Bet Record: 9-15 (Ice Cold 6L Streak)Last Pick: Bulls 3Q -1.5 (12/07) – L

Demar Derozan Over 26.5 Points (Sportsbook odds may vary)

We are headed to the ‘King of the Fourth’, Demar Derozan to end this nasty losing streak. After two cold shooting nights to open the month of December, Derozan is heating up, having scored 27, 28 and 34 in each of the last three games.

This Knicks team is an interesting case to crack when looking at their defensive output and success. They rank 4th in three point percentage allowed, while allowing the most three point attempts per game in the league. They rank 4th in 2-pt baskets allowed per game, giving you cause for concern with Derozan, however looking deeper, that ranking derives from allowing just the 6th most points per game in the paint area.

To put it briefly, they force teams out of the paint and aim to allow teams to take contested three point shots. Derozan is obviously a different type of player as his goal is to get strong mid-range opportunities, a rare breed in the NBA as we have seen in 2022.

Last season, the opportunities were prevalent for Demar as he averaged 30.5 points per game against the Knicks across four games. As mentioned in the intro, there could be cause for concern with the Knicks coming in with a hot defense, but with a game total in the 220’s and a Bulls team total at 114.5, regression could be a fair assumption for the Knicks’ defense.

Give me a big performance from Demar to lead the Bulls to a potential victory tonight! Let’s see some red, and GO BULLS!!

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Follow us on Twitter at @chicitysports23 for more great content. We appreciate you taking time to read our articles. To interact more with our community and keep up to date on the latest in Chicago sports news, JOIN OUR FREE FACEBOOK GROUP by CLICKING HERE

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Purchasing power

Almost everything is more expensive. Prices in Chicago have risen 7.7 percent over the past year. We’re paying more for basic needs like food, rent, and transportation. Some of the highest increases have been in utilities and gasoline. 

Despite the recent minimum wage increase, Chicagoans’ wages haven’t kept up with the rising cost of living. Yet, mainstream commentators have mostly blamed workers for the cost of living crisis by claiming  demands for higher wages and increased spending from pandemic-era benefits and stimulus checks, combined with supply chain shortages, have created an economy with too much money chasing too few goods, bidding up prices. 

In response, the Federal Reserve, a group of officials responsible for keeping inflation low and employment levels high, has increased interest rates six times this year, making it more expensive for people to borrow money and pay off debt. The Fed hopes that, as a result, people will spend less money, and inflation will eventually go down, even if that means creating a recession

In “A Left Answer to Inflation,” Hadas Thier, a New York-based writer and activist, argues that the Fed’s monetary policy forces working-class people to pay the ultimate price for inflation. And in a recent Reader interview, Thier explains why Chicago is the birthplace of conservative economic policy and discusses alternative government responses to inflation that prioritize the economic well-being of workers—a break from the Chicago school of economics.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Sky Patterson: What is inflation?

Hadas Thier: The basic definition of inflation is a rise in prices that’s somewhat generalized in the economy. I think people have seen the effects of that pretty clearly just in our day-to-day lives. People are feeling it at the grocery store, in their rent, and when they put gas in their cars. The way inflation is often talked about in the mainstream media is just to talk about the rate of inflation, without talking about the rate of wages going up. Unless, of course, it’s in order to blame wages. What’s left out of these mainstream analyses is that what impacts our purchasing power is how much inflation rises relative to our wages. Over the last few decades, even while inflation has been up (until recently), wages have risen at an even lower rate. That’s what it means when wages don’t keep up with inflation.

Your article says “It is time to forsake the Chicago school of economics.” What do you mean by that?

The Chicago school of economics was basically a bunch of economists at the University of Chicago, and they had a very conservative economic philosophy, which is, in a nutshell, that the market is always right. And we should always allow the free market to rip, no matter what. So somebody like Milton Friedman, who is kind of the most well-known economist to come out of the Chicago school, was against things like rent control, minimum wage, and national parks. To him, all of these things stood in the way of the free market. And those free market ideas were really a minority position for much of the 40s and 50s; with the Great Depression and the failures of the market, the dominant economic discourse at the time was known as Keynesianism (based on the ideas of economist John Keynes). Keynesian ideas emphasize maintaining full employment, having the government play a very active role in borrowing and spending in order to keep the economy humming, and so on and so forth. 

The ideas percolating at the University of Chicago’s economics department were, in Friedman’s words, part of a derided minority. And what changed things for them was the inflationary crisis of the 1970s. It was really a turning point for the U.S. economy: It meant the end of the post-war boom in the United States. There was a lot of competitive pressure from Western Europe and Japan, there was a militant labor movement at home, and the American economy was suffering in various ways. So the response of the capitalist class was to raise prices and unleash this inflationary spiral.

The Federal Reserve’s response was basically to take up a lot of the ideas of Milton Friedman and the Chicago school of economics and engineer an unprecedented hike in interest rates and therefore a recession. This was very explicitly not just an economic attack, but a political attack. It raised interest rates, essentially creating mass unemployment, which peaked at over 10 percent in 1982. It was coupled with President Ronald Reagan making an assault on the labor movement, famously firing 11,000 striking air traffic controllers to end that strike, making the point to the American labor movement that you’re not going to be able to fight and win because you will have the crushing weight of the federal government against you. And that was the way that not only inflation was curbed in the 1970s, but a militant labor movement was tamed in the 1970s. 

What has been the Chicago school of economics’s influence on how the government currently responds to inflation?

Milton Friedman saw Keynesian policies as being largely to blame for inflation. For Friedman, the full or high employment that the Keynesians were supporting exacerbated this problem because when workers aren’t sufficiently afraid of losing their jobs, they will tend to demand higher wages. And when there’s too much money in the system chasing not enough goods, that will cause inflation.

For Friedman and the Chicago school, the best way to fight inflation is to constrict the money supply, pull back government spending, increase unemployment to curb workers’ bargaining power, and so on. Friedman believed if you let the market do what it does, it will always reward the best ideas with profits.Those ideas are certainly very dominant today. 

It’s not necessarily the case that Friedman’s particular brand of the Chicago school of economics is the most dominant within the mainstream discussion, but they do play a hugely influential role. 

The Federal Reserve is the central banking system of the United States. Set up in response to the Great Depression, the Fed was charged with maintaining the stability of the financial system, prices, and employment. When choosing between price stability or full employment (or anything close to full employment), the Federal Reserve tends to side with price stability and fight inflation. They’re an institution of bankers and the financial elite; that is ultimately the class that they represent. 

So, the main way that the Federal Reserve has responded to inflation is to raise interest rates. At best, that is a kind of blunt instrument because when you raise interest rates, you make it harder to borrow money by making credit more expensive. It means that it’s harder for businesses to borrow money because credit is expensive. So there’s less production and less employment. Meaning when you raise interest rates you can have the impact of raising unemployment and possibly inducing a recession. 

It’s not a side effect that raising interest rates increases unemployment—it’s actually the intended goal.

Why do you call inflation a site of class conflict where one class benefits at the other’s expense?

The heart of this question is: who pays for a rise in the cost of production? In theory under capitalism, if the cost of production is too high, it should reward the capitalists that can do it more efficiently, or their profits should suffer if not. But that isn’t how it goes. Instead, companies are bailed out. They’re allowed to raise their prices as far as they can get away with—there are just no caps or regulations. So it’s workers that have to pay the price through higher unemployment and higher costs of living, rather than having any kind of political and social protections in place for our purchasing power and our pockets.

What’s a more worker-friendly response to inflation?

I think that’s a really important question for the left to get its head around because we have to have an answer to inflation. It hurts working people and there is a better solution. 

How do we address inflation in ways that protect our purchasing power, rather than profits? One way is price controls. They have fallen out of favor in the mainstream discussion because they do away with the whole concept that the free market should be allowed to reign, no matter what. But they have been used at different times in history and sometimes quite effectively. 

The United States, under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, was kind of a wartime economy. Prices and controls played a very critical role in the price Stabilization Act. Rent control was a big part of that because companies just couldn’t get away with taking advantage of the state of the economy to drive up prices. There are different aspects of price controls that still exist in some places. Medicare being able to negotiate prices is a form of price control. The more you expand Medicare, the more you can impact drug prices.

We can decrease prices through public spending and investing in things like public housing, public school systems, and public colleges. When you socialize costs, you decrease people’s actual cost of living. Another important response is to support social safety nets, like food stamps. These mitigate costs specifically for the people that need the most. The government could also play a more interventionist role in actually supporting investment in the supply chain. Although it has a more long-term effect, it is an important part of having more democratic control over the economy. The Federal Reserve is an unelected and not transparent part of the government, so democratic control is essential. 

Supporting the labor movement, any demands for higher wages, and unionization efforts have a tremendous role to play in making sure that the working class isn’t made to pay for the crisis in the way that the government and the federal reserve have it set up to pay.

They tell us that we shouldn’t raise the minimum wage because bosses will fire people if they have to raise their wages. Well, that’s a big problem if our economy can only function on the basis of extremely low wages. So we need to be able to fight on several fronts at once and have a holistic approach. 


City Bureau answers questions from workers who rely on staffing agencies.


The push to solve poverty through government-backed cash grants is nearly 100 years old.


Taylor Hanna taught herself to cook on the job. “I don’t have formal training,” says the 17-year veteran of nine restaurant kitchen lines, and one half of the pickling power duo Vargo Brother Ferments. “Chefs would give me tasks to do and I wouldn’t know what they were talking about. I’d go into the walk-in…

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Purchasing power Read More »

Purchasing powerSky Pattersonon December 14, 2022 at 6:34 pm

Almost everything is more expensive. Prices in Chicago have risen 7.7 percent over the past year. We’re paying more for basic needs like food, rent, and transportation. Some of the highest increases have been in utilities and gasoline. 

Despite the recent minimum wage increase, Chicagoans’ wages haven’t kept up with the rising cost of living. Yet, mainstream commentators have mostly blamed workers for the cost of living crisis by claiming  demands for higher wages and increased spending from pandemic-era benefits and stimulus checks, combined with supply chain shortages, have created an economy with too much money chasing too few goods, bidding up prices. 

In response, the Federal Reserve, a group of officials responsible for keeping inflation low and employment levels high, has increased interest rates six times this year, making it more expensive for people to borrow money and pay off debt. The Fed hopes that, as a result, people will spend less money, and inflation will eventually go down, even if that means creating a recession

In “A Left Answer to Inflation,” Hadas Thier, a New York-based writer and activist, argues that the Fed’s monetary policy forces working-class people to pay the ultimate price for inflation. And in a recent Reader interview, Thier explains why Chicago is the birthplace of conservative economic policy and discusses alternative government responses to inflation that prioritize the economic well-being of workers—a break from the Chicago school of economics.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Sky Patterson: What is inflation?

Hadas Thier: The basic definition of inflation is a rise in prices that’s somewhat generalized in the economy. I think people have seen the effects of that pretty clearly just in our day-to-day lives. People are feeling it at the grocery store, in their rent, and when they put gas in their cars. The way inflation is often talked about in the mainstream media is just to talk about the rate of inflation, without talking about the rate of wages going up. Unless, of course, it’s in order to blame wages. What’s left out of these mainstream analyses is that what impacts our purchasing power is how much inflation rises relative to our wages. Over the last few decades, even while inflation has been up (until recently), wages have risen at an even lower rate. That’s what it means when wages don’t keep up with inflation.

Your article says “It is time to forsake the Chicago school of economics.” What do you mean by that?

The Chicago school of economics was basically a bunch of economists at the University of Chicago, and they had a very conservative economic philosophy, which is, in a nutshell, that the market is always right. And we should always allow the free market to rip, no matter what. So somebody like Milton Friedman, who is kind of the most well-known economist to come out of the Chicago school, was against things like rent control, minimum wage, and national parks. To him, all of these things stood in the way of the free market. And those free market ideas were really a minority position for much of the 40s and 50s; with the Great Depression and the failures of the market, the dominant economic discourse at the time was known as Keynesianism (based on the ideas of economist John Keynes). Keynesian ideas emphasize maintaining full employment, having the government play a very active role in borrowing and spending in order to keep the economy humming, and so on and so forth. 

The ideas percolating at the University of Chicago’s economics department were, in Friedman’s words, part of a derided minority. And what changed things for them was the inflationary crisis of the 1970s. It was really a turning point for the U.S. economy: It meant the end of the post-war boom in the United States. There was a lot of competitive pressure from Western Europe and Japan, there was a militant labor movement at home, and the American economy was suffering in various ways. So the response of the capitalist class was to raise prices and unleash this inflationary spiral.

The Federal Reserve’s response was basically to take up a lot of the ideas of Milton Friedman and the Chicago school of economics and engineer an unprecedented hike in interest rates and therefore a recession. This was very explicitly not just an economic attack, but a political attack. It raised interest rates, essentially creating mass unemployment, which peaked at over 10 percent in 1982. It was coupled with President Ronald Reagan making an assault on the labor movement, famously firing 11,000 striking air traffic controllers to end that strike, making the point to the American labor movement that you’re not going to be able to fight and win because you will have the crushing weight of the federal government against you. And that was the way that not only inflation was curbed in the 1970s, but a militant labor movement was tamed in the 1970s. 

What has been the Chicago school of economics’s influence on how the government currently responds to inflation?

Milton Friedman saw Keynesian policies as being largely to blame for inflation. For Friedman, the full or high employment that the Keynesians were supporting exacerbated this problem because when workers aren’t sufficiently afraid of losing their jobs, they will tend to demand higher wages. And when there’s too much money in the system chasing not enough goods, that will cause inflation.

For Friedman and the Chicago school, the best way to fight inflation is to constrict the money supply, pull back government spending, increase unemployment to curb workers’ bargaining power, and so on. Friedman believed if you let the market do what it does, it will always reward the best ideas with profits.Those ideas are certainly very dominant today. 

It’s not necessarily the case that Friedman’s particular brand of the Chicago school of economics is the most dominant within the mainstream discussion, but they do play a hugely influential role. 

The Federal Reserve is the central banking system of the United States. Set up in response to the Great Depression, the Fed was charged with maintaining the stability of the financial system, prices, and employment. When choosing between price stability or full employment (or anything close to full employment), the Federal Reserve tends to side with price stability and fight inflation. They’re an institution of bankers and the financial elite; that is ultimately the class that they represent. 

So, the main way that the Federal Reserve has responded to inflation is to raise interest rates. At best, that is a kind of blunt instrument because when you raise interest rates, you make it harder to borrow money by making credit more expensive. It means that it’s harder for businesses to borrow money because credit is expensive. So there’s less production and less employment. Meaning when you raise interest rates you can have the impact of raising unemployment and possibly inducing a recession. 

It’s not a side effect that raising interest rates increases unemployment—it’s actually the intended goal.

Why do you call inflation a site of class conflict where one class benefits at the other’s expense?

The heart of this question is: who pays for a rise in the cost of production? In theory under capitalism, if the cost of production is too high, it should reward the capitalists that can do it more efficiently, or their profits should suffer if not. But that isn’t how it goes. Instead, companies are bailed out. They’re allowed to raise their prices as far as they can get away with—there are just no caps or regulations. So it’s workers that have to pay the price through higher unemployment and higher costs of living, rather than having any kind of political and social protections in place for our purchasing power and our pockets.

What’s a more worker-friendly response to inflation?

I think that’s a really important question for the left to get its head around because we have to have an answer to inflation. It hurts working people and there is a better solution. 

How do we address inflation in ways that protect our purchasing power, rather than profits? One way is price controls. They have fallen out of favor in the mainstream discussion because they do away with the whole concept that the free market should be allowed to reign, no matter what. But they have been used at different times in history and sometimes quite effectively. 

The United States, under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, was kind of a wartime economy. Prices and controls played a very critical role in the price Stabilization Act. Rent control was a big part of that because companies just couldn’t get away with taking advantage of the state of the economy to drive up prices. There are different aspects of price controls that still exist in some places. Medicare being able to negotiate prices is a form of price control. The more you expand Medicare, the more you can impact drug prices.

We can decrease prices through public spending and investing in things like public housing, public school systems, and public colleges. When you socialize costs, you decrease people’s actual cost of living. Another important response is to support social safety nets, like food stamps. These mitigate costs specifically for the people that need the most. The government could also play a more interventionist role in actually supporting investment in the supply chain. Although it has a more long-term effect, it is an important part of having more democratic control over the economy. The Federal Reserve is an unelected and not transparent part of the government, so democratic control is essential. 

Supporting the labor movement, any demands for higher wages, and unionization efforts have a tremendous role to play in making sure that the working class isn’t made to pay for the crisis in the way that the government and the federal reserve have it set up to pay.

They tell us that we shouldn’t raise the minimum wage because bosses will fire people if they have to raise their wages. Well, that’s a big problem if our economy can only function on the basis of extremely low wages. So we need to be able to fight on several fronts at once and have a holistic approach. 


City Bureau answers questions from workers who rely on staffing agencies.


The push to solve poverty through government-backed cash grants is nearly 100 years old.


Taylor Hanna taught herself to cook on the job. “I don’t have formal training,” says the 17-year veteran of nine restaurant kitchen lines, and one half of the pickling power duo Vargo Brother Ferments. “Chefs would give me tasks to do and I wouldn’t know what they were talking about. I’d go into the walk-in…

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Purchasing powerSky Pattersonon December 14, 2022 at 6:34 pm Read More »

CBA decision now day before NBA trade deadlineon December 14, 2022 at 7:09 pm

The NBA and its players’ union have agreed to extend the deadline to give notice of plans to opt out of the collective bargaining agreement to Feb. 8, the sides announced in a joint statement Wednesday.

Prior to Wednesday’s agreement, the opt-out deadline had been Thursday. Now it falls one day before this season’s trade deadline.

The league and union said in their statement that they are making “ongoing efforts to reach a new agreement.” The seven-year CBA would expire after the 2023-24 season, but if either side exercises the opt out, the agreement would end June 30, putting the NBA at risk of a possible work stoppage.

Sources told ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski last week that the NBA is pursuing the implementation of an upper spending limit that would replace the luxury tax with a hard limit that teams could not exceed to pay salaries. The league’s effort is in response to large-market contenders such as the Golden State Warriors, Brooklyn Nets and LA Clippers running up massive payrolls and luxury tax penalties, according to Wojnarowski.

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CBA decision now day before NBA trade deadlineon December 14, 2022 at 7:09 pm Read More »

REPORT: Bears To Practice Without Justin Fields Wednesday

Justin Fields will miss Wednesday’s practice

The Chicago Bears are heading into Week 15 trying to evaluate talent and possibly play spoiler. The Bears are 3-10 and currently hold the second pick in the 2023 draft. Quarterback Justin Fields is one player the Bears want to see progress before next season. His status for Sunday’s game against the Philadelphia Eagles is unclear on Wednesday.

According to Kevin Fishbain of The Athletic, head coach Matt Eberflus said Fields would not practice Wednesday. The second-year quarterback has an illness. Fields is considered day-to-day.

Per Bears head coach Matt Eberflus, QB Justin Fields will not practice today because of an illness.

“It’s day-to-day.” Eberflus said, adding that he anticipates Fields will be able to play Sunday.

Fields missed the Bears’ loss to the New York Jets with a shoulder injury he sustained against the Atlanta Falcons in Week 11. He played through it against the Green Bay Packers before the Bears’ bye week. The Bears could and should use this as an excuse to shut Fields down against the Eagles. Pro Football Focus grades the Eagles as having the NFL’s best pass rush. But knowing this staff, they’ll risk Fields’ shoulder to go 4-10 and cost the team draft position.

For More Great Chicago Sports Content

Follow us on Twitter at @chicitysports23 for more great content. We appreciate you taking time to read our articles. To interact more with our community and keep up to date on the latest in Chicago sports news, JOIN OUR FREE FACEBOOK GROUP by CLICKING HERE

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‘Ground Floor,’ movie trivia, and more

Art from Sofía Fernández Díaz, a recent master’s degree recipient at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago

Since 2010, the Hyde Park Art Center (5020 S. Cornell) has hosted “Ground Floor,” a biennial exhibition featuring work by “Chicago’s most promising emerging talent.” The show is assembled by an esteemed panel of judges including curators, educators, and artists, and it features work from artists who’ve graduated from one of Chicago’s five MFA programs in the past two years. If nothing else, “Ground Floor” is an excellent barometer of how artists are being trained in the city—and how they have been impacted by Chicago’s culture. The work allows us to see trends in materials and ideas, and wonder when and where might we see these trends pop up again. Hyde Park Art Center is free to visit and open today until 7 PM, but if you can’t make it on short notice, don’t worry. The exhibit is on view through March 5, 2023. Check out the center’s website to plan a time that works for you. (MC)

The Rat Pack is a civic and social organization based on the south side that has been gathering its members to financially support causes that benefit their communities (like Operation Push, the Urban League, and others) since its inception in 1984. Tonight, you can get in on the fun by stopping by the Pack’s annual Food Drive and donating non-perishable goods (“a case of canned goods” is suggested) and/or bringing a check payable to the Chicago Family Partnership. Members will be accepting your donations from 5-10 PM at the Room 43 events space (1039-1043 E. 43rd St.). (SCJ)

From the cozy taproom at Midwest Coast Brewing Co. (2137 W. Walnut) or from the comfort of your own home, check out Cinema/Chicago’s Hoppy Holidays Movie Trivia fundraiser. The hybrid event starts at 6:30 PM and will feature holiday film trivia with prizes up for grabs from local cinephile orgs. Join virtually for $10 as an individual or $20 as a group, or stop by in person for $25 and receive a complimentary raffle ticket and beer. (TA)

The ongoing series Pour One Out features unique stories from both beginning and established storytellers, and books their lineups with a commitment to “equitable inclusion and representation.” Tonight’s in-person gathering (starting at 7 PM at Volumes Bookcafe, 1373 N. Milwaukee) explores the theme of “pivotal moments” and features host Shelley A. Davis moderating a lineup including Ulupi Bodiwala, Andrea Change, Amber Drea, Caren Evans, Stephanie Guaman, Elizabeth Marino, and Pidgeon Pagonis. Masks are requested for attendees. It’s the last Pour One Out for the year. (SCJ)

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‘Ground Floor,’ movie trivia, and moreMicco Caporale, Taryn Allen and Salem Collo-Julinon December 14, 2022 at 5:47 pm

Art from Sofía Fernández Díaz, a recent master’s degree recipient at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago

Since 2010, the Hyde Park Art Center (5020 S. Cornell) has hosted “Ground Floor,” a biennial exhibition featuring work by “Chicago’s most promising emerging talent.” The show is assembled by an esteemed panel of judges including curators, educators, and artists, and it features work from artists who’ve graduated from one of Chicago’s five MFA programs in the past two years. If nothing else, “Ground Floor” is an excellent barometer of how artists are being trained in the city—and how they have been impacted by Chicago’s culture. The work allows us to see trends in materials and ideas, and wonder when and where might we see these trends pop up again. Hyde Park Art Center is free to visit and open today until 7 PM, but if you can’t make it on short notice, don’t worry. The exhibit is on view through March 5, 2023. Check out the center’s website to plan a time that works for you. (MC)

The Rat Pack is a civic and social organization based on the south side that has been gathering its members to financially support causes that benefit their communities (like Operation Push, the Urban League, and others) since its inception in 1984. Tonight, you can get in on the fun by stopping by the Pack’s annual Food Drive and donating non-perishable goods (“a case of canned goods” is suggested) and/or bringing a check payable to the Chicago Family Partnership. Members will be accepting your donations from 5-10 PM at the Room 43 events space (1039-1043 E. 43rd St.). (SCJ)

From the cozy taproom at Midwest Coast Brewing Co. (2137 W. Walnut) or from the comfort of your own home, check out Cinema/Chicago’s Hoppy Holidays Movie Trivia fundraiser. The hybrid event starts at 6:30 PM and will feature holiday film trivia with prizes up for grabs from local cinephile orgs. Join virtually for $10 as an individual or $20 as a group, or stop by in person for $25 and receive a complimentary raffle ticket and beer. (TA)

The ongoing series Pour One Out features unique stories from both beginning and established storytellers, and books their lineups with a commitment to “equitable inclusion and representation.” Tonight’s in-person gathering (starting at 7 PM at Volumes Bookcafe, 1373 N. Milwaukee) explores the theme of “pivotal moments” and features host Shelley A. Davis moderating a lineup including Ulupi Bodiwala, Andrea Change, Amber Drea, Caren Evans, Stephanie Guaman, Elizabeth Marino, and Pidgeon Pagonis. Masks are requested for attendees. It’s the last Pour One Out for the year. (SCJ)

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‘Ground Floor,’ movie trivia, and moreMicco Caporale, Taryn Allen and Salem Collo-Julinon December 14, 2022 at 5:47 pm Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon December 14, 2022 at 8:00 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.

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


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Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon December 14, 2022 at 8:00 am Read More »