Videos

Blackhawks dominated by Alex Ovechkin on historic night: ‘It didn’t feel great’

Alex Ovechkin was celebrated like an honorary Blackhawk in the United Center on Tuesday.

After the Capitals superstar scored his third goal of the night to reach 800 for his career — becoming just the third player all-time to reach that milestone, pulling within one of Gordie Howe for second-most ever — Hawks hats showered the ice. The crowd of 16,181 chanted, “Ovi, Ovi, Ovi.” PA announcer Gene Honda made an announcement with enough fervor to make any uninformed observer probably assume the Hawks had scored.

On the Hawks’ bench, Jonathan Toews didn’t love watching it.

“It’s a pretty incredible milestone — one of a kind,” Toews said later. “In some sense, when we’re out of this moment, it’s one of those things you’ll look back on. He’s one of the great players of all time, so all due to respect to him, and [for] scoring three goals to do it.

“Getting himself an ovation and the “Ovi” chant in our building tonight and all that aside from the milestone, it didn’t feel great on our side. But lots of respect for him.”

Ovechkin’s hat trick also lifted the Capitals to an easy 7-3 blowout win, dealing the Hawks their 18th loss in their last 21 games, which likely contributed to Toews’ bitterness.

ESPN had picked up the game a few weeks ago — flexing out Flyers-Avalanche, its originally scheduled broadcast — once it became clear how quickly Ovechkin was trending to the milestone. His goal-scoring has been otherworldly throughout his career, but it has only picked up steam lately. He has scored 49, 51, 48 and 50 goals each of his last four full seasons, and he’s now on pace for 53 this season — at 37 years old. At this rate, he could tie Wayne Gretzky for the all-time record in less than two more years.

But the Russian winger has long been famed for his eccentricity almost as much as for his talent, and that was on equal display during this once-a-year Chicago visit.

He watched Hawks morning skate from the Capitals bench while wearing a jacket that haphazardly read, “Well I’m not Michael Jordan.”

The Hawks’ loose, sloppy, mistake-prone defensive coverage did not make life difficult for him. His first goal involved impressively knocking the puck out of midair, but the other two were easy tap-ins along the goal line.

He will seek one more goal to tie Howe on Thursday, when the Capitals host the Stars.

Alex Ovechkin celebrates his milestone goal.

Michael Reaves/Getty Images

Johnson healthy at last

Nearly a month after he initially thought he would return, Blackhawks forward Tyler Johnson finally slotted back into the Hawks’ lineup Tuesday.

His ankle having held up through contact at practice the past few days — the hurdle which attempting to cross in November led to his setback — Johnson skated on the third-line wing and scored in the first period.

Johnson missed 20 games this time, meaning he has now played in only 33 of a possible 109 games since joining the Hawks in summer 2021. Between his collapsed disc, concussion and ankle injury, he hasn’t been able to catch a break, health-wise.

“Ankles are tough, especially in hockey,” he said Monday. “If I was playing basketball, football or any other sport [that didn’t involve] putting your ankle in a boot, I would have been back a long time ago.

“Guys that have it playing hockey, they always say it’s one of the worst injuries to have. I never really understood that until I had it, and it’s really annoying. Some days you just don’t really know. So it just lingers a little bit.”

Read More

Blackhawks dominated by Alex Ovechkin on historic night: ‘It didn’t feel great’ Read More »

High school basketball: Michael O’Brien’s notebook

The schedule this week is a bit odd. There aren’t any big games, which is fine with me, I enjoy checking out new teams and places. But nothing really caught my eye on Tuesday’s slate as much as Romeoville at Brother Rice.

The Spartans were one of the only preseason ranked teams that I hadn’t seen yet. And the Southwest Prairie vs. Catholic Leaguematchup is a rare happening.

It turned out to be a solid decision, but not for the reasons I anticipated. I’d seen Brother Rice twice over the weekend and while the Crusaders were clearly a top team, the offense didn’t flow as well as I expected. Honestly, it left me less than enthused about the team’s prospects this season. Brother Rice isn’t stacked with talent, it has several good players but to really succeed it needed to be, well, Brother Rice.

It turns out new coach Conte Stamas agreed. And he thought all along that it might take a month or so for the offense to really click. It happened tonight and I’m glad I was there to see it.

Read all about that here:

Tuesday’s top games

Niles North 77, Niles West 64: Ok, I’m glad I saw Romeoville-Brother Rice tonight but this is the other place I was considering going. And after seeing the tweets I kinda wish I had been there. Looked like a great atmosphere and and Yaris Irby scored 38 points.

Hyde Park 72, Phillips 71: This is one of those scores that says good things about both teams. The Thunderbirds continue to get it done. Jerrel Oliver is off to a really nice start. And the big three produced again. Cam Williford had 18 points, 10 rebounds and six assists. Da’Marion Morris scored 22 and Jurrell Baldwin added 15 points and 13 rebounds. Great sign for Phillips though to play one of the best teams in the Red this close. Excited to get over there and see the team and the new gym.

St. Patrick 53, Marian Catholic 46 3 OT: Game of the night for sure, although I wonder if this was one of those games where the teams held the ball the majority of the overtimes. I wouldn’t blame them, four minute overtimes are super dumb. Sophomore EJ Breland scored 17 and junior Harper Krolak added 14. The Shamrocks are now 7-2.

Kenwood 79, Morgan Park 29: Another dominant win for the Broncos. Dai Dai Ames scored 26.

Marmion 58, Leo 28: Trevon Roots turns in a monster performance with 22 points, nine blocks and eight rebounds. Jabe Haith added 15 points, 10 rebounds and five assists. I’m starting to get intrigued by the Cadets. Not sure if I’ve ever covered a game at Marmion. I don’t think so.

Marist 54, Carmel 43: Another nice balanced scoring win from the RedHawks. Kaden White had 11, Keshaun Vaval 10 and Adoni Vassilakis nine points. Marist has a big showdown vs. St. Patrick on Friday.

Lindblom 75, Perspectives-Leadership 67: Lindblom’s tweet crowed about “Protecting the Nest” which is pretty cool. I wondered if the Eagles would be able to turn their strange little gym into a real home court advantage in the Red and it looks like that might be the case. Je’Shawn Stevenson scored 38 points and fellow junior Quentin McCoy added 14 points, 10 rebounds, seven assists and five steals. Jakeem Cole scored 20 for the Warriors.

Evergreen Park 76, Eisenhower 74: Nolan Sexton led the Mustangs with 23 and Lonnie Mosley added 21 points. Eisenhower guard AJ Abrams scored 25.

Beecher 79, St. Anne 52: These Adyn McGinley numbers keep getting the Bobcats into the notebook. Tonight the junior had 31 points, nine rebounds and five steals.

Oswego East 43, Metea Valley 33: Joe Henricksen and I talked about the interesting DuPage Valley conference on No Shot Clock this week and this score is kind of exactly what we meant. Ok, Meta Valley didn’t win but that’s a very respectable score against one of the best teams in the entire area.

Read More

High school basketball: Michael O’Brien’s notebook Read More »

High school basketball: Brother Rice finds its offensive spark, beats Romeoville

Brother Rice has relied on star guard Ahmad Henderson to carry the load offensively this season. The Niagara recruit has regularly posted big scoring numbers.

That looks good in the highlights, but it was unrealistic to expect the No. 6 Crusaders to continue beating good teams with such a heavy weight on the shoulders of one player.

Brother Rice’s offense had a much different look on Tuesday against visiting Romeoville. Junior point guard Cale Cosme was inserted into the starting lineup and helped lead a more balanced scoring effort on the way to a 68-49 win.

Henderson and Cosme expertly picked apart Romeoville’s defense.

“Those two guards just ate us up,” Spartans coach Marc Howard said. “They were penetrating and making great decisions. They weren’t forcing shots. They were finding the open man, finding the slow rotations on our end and they just outplayed us.”

Henderson finished with 13 points. Senior Jimmy Navarrete also scored 13. Khalil Ross, a 6-7 senior, added 12 points, seven rebounds and four blocks for Brother Rice.

The Crusaders (10-1) took control with a 13-3 run in the second quarter and never looked back.

“They wanted it more than us,” Howard said. “And they were extremely unselfish.”

Junior Meyoh Swansey led Romeoville (7-3) with 19 points and senior Troy Cicero Jr. added 11 points and 11 rebounds.

Brother Rice had a challenging lead-up to the season. Bobby Frasor stepped down as basketball coach on July 30 and veteran coach Conte Stamas was hired a month later.

“I knew that because I took over so late that the offense would take awhile and it finally started clicking today,” Stamas said. “We started moving without the ball and Cosme was a spark.”

This is the season Brother Rice had been building toward for a couple of years, so new coach or not, expectations were high from the start.

“It hasn’t all been rainbows but we are learning every day in practice and getting to know Coach Stamas,” Henderson said. “He wants us to succeed and he knows what he’s talking about.”

The early returns are very good. The Crusaders’ only loss was a close game to St. Rita. They’ve knocked off Bloom and Curie.

“I’m happy all the boys stayed,” Henderson said. “Last year we had a team full of juniors and now we are seniors and ready to make a run.”

Romeoville opened the season in the Super 25 and was expected to be one of the better teams in the suburbs. While the Spartans haven’t had a disappointing start to the season, they haven’t managed to win any of their three big games, losing to the Crusaders, Joliet West and Lemont.

It’s a big week for Romeoville, which faces a good Plainfield East team on the road Friday and then takes on No. 21 Hyde Park at Triton on Saturday.

Read More

High school basketball: Brother Rice finds its offensive spark, beats Romeoville Read More »

High school basketball: Tuesday’s scores

Tuesday, December 13, 2022

BIG NORTHERN

Byron at Winnebago, 7:00

Rock Falls at Stillman Valley, 7:00

CATHOLIC LEAGUE – CROSSOVER

Fenwick at Providence, 7:00

Leo at Marmion, 7:15

Mount Carmel at Montini, 7:00

St. Ignatius at Providence-St. Mel, 7:00

St. Rita at St. Laurence, 7:00

DU KANE

Batavia at Glenbard North, 7:00

EAST SUBURBAN CATHOLIC

Benet at Notre Dame, 7:00

Carmel at Marist, 7:00

St. Patrick at Marian Catholic, 7:00

St. Viator at Nazareth, 7:00

ILLINOIS CENTRAL EIGHT

Coal City at Herscher, 6:45

Peotone at Lisle, 6:45

Streator at Manteno, 7:00

Wilmington at Reed-Custer, 6:45

INTERSTATE EIGHT

LaSalle-Peru at Sycamore, 7:00

LAKE SHORE ATHLETIC

Intrinsic-Downtown at British School, 6:30

Lycee Francais at Roycemore, 5:30

NOBLE LEAGUE – GOLD

Butler at Noble Academy, 5:30

Comer at Johnson, 5:30

ITW-Speer at Bulls Prep, 7:00

NORTH SUBURBAN

Lake Zurich at Libertyville, 7:00

NORTHEASTERN ATHLETIC

Christian Life at Alden-Hebron, 7:30

Mooseheart at Schaumburg Christian, 7:30

NORTHERN LAKE COUNTY

Round Lake at Lakes, 7:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE RED-SOUTH / CENTRAL

Brooks at Longwood, 6:30

Morgan Park at Kenwood, 5:00

Perspectives-Lead at Lindblom, 6:30

Phillips at Hyde Park, 6:30

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-CENTRAL

Bogan at Richards (Chgo), 5:00

Dunbar at King, 5:00

DuSable at Kennedy, 5:00

Englewood STEM at Catalyst-Maria, 5:00

Urban Prep-Englewood at Hubbard, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE WHITE-SOUTH

Agricultural Science at ACE Amandla, 5:00

Corliss at UC-Woodlawn, 5:00

Dyett at Urban Prep-Bronzeville, 5:00

Harlan at Vocational, 5:00

South Shore at Fenger, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-CENTRAL

ACERO-Soto at Horizon-Southwest, 5:00

Gage Park at ACERO-Garcia, 5:00

Hancock at Kelly, 5:00

Solorio at Excel-Englewood, 5:00

Tilden at Instituto Health, 5:00

PUBLIC LEAGUE BLUE-SOUTH

Air Force at Washington, 5:00

Chicago Military at EPIC, 5:00

Goode at Carver, 5:00

Hirsch at Excel-South Shore, 5:00

Julian at Bowen, 5:00

RIVER VALLEY

Beecher at St. Anne, 7:00

Tri-Point at Grace Christian, 7:00

SOUTH SUBURBAN – RED

Evergreen Park at Eisenhower, 6:30

SOUTH SUBURBAN – CROSSOVER

Argo at Hillcrest. 6:30

SOUTHWEST SUBURBAN – CROSSOVER

Andrew at Lincoln-Way East, 6:30

Lincoln-Way West at Sandburg, 6:00

UPSTATE EIGHT

East Aurora at Glenbard South, 7:00

Elgin at Bartlett, 7:00

Fenton at Larkin, 7:00

Streamwood at South Elgin, 7:00

West Chicago at Glenbard East, 7:00

NON CONFERENCE

Aurora Christian at Ridgewood, 5:30

Chicago Christian at Westmont, 7:30

Clemente at Ellison, 6:30

Comer at Bremen, 6:00

Downers Grove North at Hersey, 7:00

Elk Grove at Lake Park, 7:00

Geneva at Hoffman Estates, 7:00

Harvest Christian at Marian Central, 7:00

Henry-Senachwine at Annawan, 6:00

Hinsdale South at York, 7:00

IC Catholic at St. Edward, 7:00

IMSA at Yorkville, 6:30

Indian Creek at Marquette, 7:00

Keith at Westminster Christian, 7:00

LaMoille at Woodland, 5:30

Lowpoint-Washburn at DePue, 7:00

Maine West at Buffalo Grove, 7:00

Marengo at Rockford Christian, 7:00

McHenry at Richmond-Burton, 7:00

Metea Valley at Oswego East, 6:30

Midland at Princeville, 7:30

Morgan Park Academy at Illinois Lutheran, 6:00

Neuqua Valley at Yorkville Christian, 7:00

Niles West at Niles North, 7:00

Oregon at Polo, 7:00

Richards at Rich, 6:30

Roanoke-Benson at Peoria Heights, 7:00

Romeoville at Brother Rice, 7:00

Sandwich at Serena, 7:00

Schaumburg at St. Charles East, 7:00

Seneca at Gardner-So. Wilmington, 6:45

Somonauk at Putnam County, 7:00

Southland at Kankakee, 6:30

St. Francis at Elmwood Park, 7:00

St. Francis de Sales at Lincoln-Way Central, 6:30

Timothy Christian at McNamara, 7:30

Vernon Hills at Woodstock North, 7:00

Wheaton Academy at Aurora Central, 7:30

Read More

High school basketball: Tuesday’s scores Read More »

Lucia walking, Manasseh at MCA, Secret History of Chicago Music in person

Join Andersonville residents and celebrate the holidays the Swedish way, with St. Lucia and the Lucia Procession. Lucia girls, in white robes and candle crowns, were crowned at noon at the temporary Nordic House in the Wrigley building downtown. This afternoon a procession walks up Clark Street in Andersonville (starting at the Swedish American Museum, 5211 N. Clark, at 4:45 PM) followed by a 5 PM musical performance near the Christmas tree at 1500 W. Catalpa. More music, readings, and a final St. Lucia procession starts at 7 PM at Ebenezer Lutheran Church (1650 W. Foster). All events are free with no tickets required. (TA)

Last week Gossip Wolf let us know that south-side native Manasseh plays the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (220 E. Chicago) tonight as part of their Soundtrack series, which asks local musicians to perform in response to the themes explored in a current exhibit. Manasseh will be backed by the ensemble the Fam, featuring Brandon Cameron, Blake Davis, Lisha Denise, Lamonté Norwood, and Remon Sanders as they explore original arrangements in response to work of artist Martine Syms. It starts at 6 PM and the performance is free with admission to the museum (and residents of Illinois enjoy free admission on Tuesdays). (SCJ)

Manasseh recorded this performance at the Chicago Public Media Jim and Kay Mabie Performance Studio.

Reader contributor Steve Krakow’s Secret History of Chicago Music visits our music pages on a regular basis with deep research into overlooked Chicago musicians and bands complete with original illustrations. Tonight you can enjoy a live version of the column as Krakow hosts soul singer Renaldo Domino (whose 60s discography has been reissued by Numero Group), as well as Reader contributor Aaron Cohen, the author of Move On Up: Chicago Soul Music and Black Cultural Power. The three gents will discuss pivotal Chicago soul and R&B music starting at 7:30 PM at Gman Tavern (3740 N. Clark); tickets are $15 and can be purchased at the door or in advance at Etix. (SCJ)

Read More

Lucia walking, Manasseh at MCA, Secret History of Chicago Music in person Read More »

Lucia walking, Manasseh at MCA, Secret History of Chicago Music in person

Join Andersonville residents and celebrate the holidays the Swedish way, with St. Lucia and the Lucia Procession. Lucia girls, in white robes and candle crowns, were crowned at noon at the temporary Nordic House in the Wrigley building downtown. This afternoon a procession walks up Clark Street in Andersonville (starting at the Swedish American Museum, 5211 N. Clark, at 4:45 PM) followed by a 5 PM musical performance near the Christmas tree at 1500 W. Catalpa. More music, readings, and a final St. Lucia procession starts at 7 PM at Ebenezer Lutheran Church (1650 W. Foster). All events are free with no tickets required. (TA)

Last week Gossip Wolf let us know that south-side native Manasseh plays the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (220 E. Chicago) tonight as part of their Soundtrack series, which asks local musicians to perform in response to the themes explored in a current exhibit. Manasseh will be backed by the ensemble the Fam, featuring Brandon Cameron, Blake Davis, Lisha Denise, Lamonté Norwood, and Remon Sanders as they explore original arrangements in response to work of artist Martine Syms. It starts at 6 PM and the performance is free with admission to the museum (and residents of Illinois enjoy free admission on Tuesdays). (SCJ)

Manasseh recorded this performance at the Chicago Public Media Jim and Kay Mabie Performance Studio.

Reader contributor Steve Krakow’s Secret History of Chicago Music visits our music pages on a regular basis with deep research into overlooked Chicago musicians and bands complete with original illustrations. Tonight you can enjoy a live version of the column as Krakow hosts soul singer Renaldo Domino (whose 60s discography has been reissued by Numero Group), as well as Reader contributor Aaron Cohen, the author of Move On Up: Chicago Soul Music and Black Cultural Power. The three gents will discuss pivotal Chicago soul and R&B music starting at 7:30 PM at Gman Tavern (3740 N. Clark); tickets are $15 and can be purchased at the door or in advance at Etix. (SCJ)

Read More

Lucia walking, Manasseh at MCA, Secret History of Chicago Music in person Read More »

Lucia walking, Manasseh at MCA, Secret History of Chicago Music in personTaryn Allen and Salem Collo-Julinon December 13, 2022 at 11:04 pm

Join Andersonville residents and celebrate the holidays the Swedish way, with St. Lucia and the Lucia Procession. Lucia girls, in white robes and candle crowns, were crowned at noon at the temporary Nordic House in the Wrigley building downtown. This afternoon a procession walks up Clark Street in Andersonville (starting at the Swedish American Museum, 5211 N. Clark, at 4:45 PM) followed by a 5 PM musical performance near the Christmas tree at 1500 W. Catalpa. More music, readings, and a final St. Lucia procession starts at 7 PM at Ebenezer Lutheran Church (1650 W. Foster). All events are free with no tickets required. (TA)

Last week Gossip Wolf let us know that south-side native Manasseh plays the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (220 E. Chicago) tonight as part of their Soundtrack series, which asks local musicians to perform in response to the themes explored in a current exhibit. Manasseh will be backed by the ensemble the Fam, featuring Brandon Cameron, Blake Davis, Lisha Denise, Lamonté Norwood, and Remon Sanders as they explore original arrangements in response to work of artist Martine Syms. It starts at 6 PM and the performance is free with admission to the museum (and residents of Illinois enjoy free admission on Tuesdays). (SCJ)

Manasseh recorded this performance at the Chicago Public Media Jim and Kay Mabie Performance Studio.

Reader contributor Steve Krakow’s Secret History of Chicago Music visits our music pages on a regular basis with deep research into overlooked Chicago musicians and bands complete with original illustrations. Tonight you can enjoy a live version of the column as Krakow hosts soul singer Renaldo Domino (whose 60s discography has been reissued by Numero Group), as well as Reader contributor Aaron Cohen, the author of Move On Up: Chicago Soul Music and Black Cultural Power. The three gents will discuss pivotal Chicago soul and R&B music starting at 7:30 PM at Gman Tavern (3740 N. Clark); tickets are $15 and can be purchased at the door or in advance at Etix. (SCJ)

Read More

Lucia walking, Manasseh at MCA, Secret History of Chicago Music in personTaryn Allen and Salem Collo-Julinon December 13, 2022 at 11:04 pm Read More »

Lucia walking, Manasseh at MCA, Secret History of Chicago Music in personTaryn Allen and Salem Collo-Julinon December 13, 2022 at 11:04 pm

Join Andersonville residents and celebrate the holidays the Swedish way, with St. Lucia and the Lucia Procession. Lucia girls, in white robes and candle crowns, were crowned at noon at the temporary Nordic House in the Wrigley building downtown. This afternoon a procession walks up Clark Street in Andersonville (starting at the Swedish American Museum, 5211 N. Clark, at 4:45 PM) followed by a 5 PM musical performance near the Christmas tree at 1500 W. Catalpa. More music, readings, and a final St. Lucia procession starts at 7 PM at Ebenezer Lutheran Church (1650 W. Foster). All events are free with no tickets required. (TA)

Last week Gossip Wolf let us know that south-side native Manasseh plays the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (220 E. Chicago) tonight as part of their Soundtrack series, which asks local musicians to perform in response to the themes explored in a current exhibit. Manasseh will be backed by the ensemble the Fam, featuring Brandon Cameron, Blake Davis, Lisha Denise, Lamonté Norwood, and Remon Sanders as they explore original arrangements in response to work of artist Martine Syms. It starts at 6 PM and the performance is free with admission to the museum (and residents of Illinois enjoy free admission on Tuesdays). (SCJ)

Manasseh recorded this performance at the Chicago Public Media Jim and Kay Mabie Performance Studio.

Reader contributor Steve Krakow’s Secret History of Chicago Music visits our music pages on a regular basis with deep research into overlooked Chicago musicians and bands complete with original illustrations. Tonight you can enjoy a live version of the column as Krakow hosts soul singer Renaldo Domino (whose 60s discography has been reissued by Numero Group), as well as Reader contributor Aaron Cohen, the author of Move On Up: Chicago Soul Music and Black Cultural Power. The three gents will discuss pivotal Chicago soul and R&B music starting at 7:30 PM at Gman Tavern (3740 N. Clark); tickets are $15 and can be purchased at the door or in advance at Etix. (SCJ)

Read More

Lucia walking, Manasseh at MCA, Secret History of Chicago Music in personTaryn Allen and Salem Collo-Julinon December 13, 2022 at 11:04 pm Read More »

Witness a miracle of oil with Zeitlin’s Delicatessen and Schneider Provisions at the next Monday Night Foodball

164 BCE: The Maccabees have taken Jerusalem from the Seleucids and begun cleaning up the mess the occupiers left in the Second Temple. They’ve lit up the menorah, but there’s only enough sacred oil to last one day. Yet, on day two it keeps burning. And so it goes on days three, four, five, six, seven, and eight, until some fresh green EVOO is pressed, blessed, and resupplied.

They didn’t use that miraculous oil to fry up latkes and jelly donuts. Those came centuries later when the modern celebration of Hanukkah began to commemorate the world’s first successful armed rebellion with—sure, luminous menorahs, dreidels, and chocolate coins—but also foods fried crispy in hot, sizzling fat.  

December 19, 2022 CE: Zeitlin’s Delicatessen and Schneider Provisions have taken the kitchen at the Kedzie Inn on the second night of Hanukkah and lit up the fryer for Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s weekly chef pop-up.

Sam Zeitlin arrived in Chicago in 2018 looking for a proper bagel. He’d cooked in high-end Michelin-starred restaurants in D.C. after culinary school, and he landed at Galit when he got here. But he pined for the great Jewish American deli food he grew up with, and yet . . . bupkis.

That’s when Zeitlin, aka @bagelboy312, started making his own bagels, and during the pandemic began selling them out of his apartment to support melanoma research. “I missed the food I grew up eating as a kid,” he says. “I didn’t understand that it had such a profound effect on the way I see food and interact with food and culture. I dove into my Jewish identity and wanted to learn more about it because it was something that I didn’t even really know a whole lot about.”

Nearly three years later, Zeitlin’s Delicatessen is a powerhouse in Chicago’s deli renaissance, a farmers’ market and pop-up mainstay with a broad repertoire of traditional and innovative Jewish baked and preserved comestibles, from bagel dogs to bialys to babkas.

Sam Zeitlin’s reckoning with the Jewish American deli legacy aligned with a similar trajectory to that of Jake Schneider of Schneider Provisions, who packed the Kedzie at his own sandwich-oriented Foodball in October. That’s why they’re the ideal collaborators for Monday’s Hanukkah-inspired, family-style dinner that features latkes (withapplesauce, of course); and sugar-dusted jelly donuts, aka sufganiyot, with a fruity molten core cooked down from Oriana “The Pear Angel” Kruszewski’s Asian pears.

There will be other not-necessarily-Hanukkah-tied, Askenazi-style dishes on the table, such as an update on the 80s Silver Palate Cookbook’s classic chicken Marbella, braised with prunes, capers, and olives; a roasted veggie goulash ladled over egg noodles; a bitter green salad with maple sherry vinaigrette; Zeitlin’s bronzed, braided challah; and a pickle plate from Schneider.

This is a one-seating sit-down beginning at 6 PM at 4100 N. Kedzie, with very limited walk-in orders available. Venmo @Zeitlinsdeli for tickets. Don’t have Venmo? DM @zeitlinsdelicatessen.

It’s also a bittersweet night for myself and Kedzie owner Jon Pokorny, as Monday Night Foodball will leave its birthplace and relocate to a new kitchen-barroom stadium starting in January 2023. Details coming soon. Here’s a hint at our opener.

Read More

Witness a miracle of oil with Zeitlin’s Delicatessen and Schneider Provisions at the next Monday Night Foodball Read More »

Mike Leach: a true original who made college football more fun

Mike Leach was no football coach.

It was his life’s work, of course, and he did it far better than most, leading 19 teams to bowl seasons and completing the 2022 regular season as the major-college ranks’ fifth-winningest active coach. But Leach couldn’t really be put into any box. He was a Bigfoot expert with a law degree, a pirate aficionado who taught college courses on insurgent warfare, an outdoorsman who passed hours at a time with his nose in a book, and an occasionally irascible man who more often was incredibly patient, especially when being interviewed, which, delightfully often, would turn into holding court.

Leach died Monday at 61, three weeks before he was to lead his Mississippi State team onto the field against Illinois in the ReliaQuest Bowl. He was with the Bulldogs at a Saturday practice. On Sunday, he suffered a massive heart attack at home in Starkville and was airlifted to a hospital in Jackson. By the following night, he was gone.

Defensive coordinator Zach Arnett will lead the Bulldogs on an interim basis. Leach’s players led the decision to play on against the Illini in Tampa.

“Today is a sad day for college football,” Illini coach Bret Bielema said in a statement. “We lost a great coach, a great person and one of the legendary personalities in our sport. Mike and I built a long friendship after first meeting at the Alamo Bowl in the early 2000s. We shared so many memories over the years. Rest in peace, Mike.”

Leach was widely enjoyed, especially by the media, for his loquacious storytelling and his extemporaneous rumination on things — Halloween candy, wedding preparations, weather patterns — having utterly nothing to do with his football teams. He didn’t play football in college and didn’t give a rip if anybody thought less of him for it. He was sharp enough to have given the “Air Raid” offense its name and prolific enough to have coached eight quarterbacks to 10 of the top 50 passing-yardage seasons in FBS history.

He also could get himself into trouble, small and big. Some of his social commentary came off as crass or insensitive, or at least politically incorrect. He was outspoken and unapologetic in his support of Donald Trump, which he pointed out more than once — correctly — was damn well up to him.

Leach was fired by Texas Tech after the 2009 season, a former player having accused him of mistreatment after a concussion. The school called Leach “defiantly insubordinate.” Leach sued unsuccessfully for wrongful termination and was, for more than a year, tangled in this legal web, unhirable.

It was during this period that I went and found him lying low in Key West, Florida, sort of at his invitation, sort of not.

“Sure, I’ll talk to you,” he texted, “as long as you can find me.”

Everybody who covered one or more of Leach’s teams, specifically, or college football nationally, as I did at the time, has a story like this one or even better. Mine involves finding my way to a Civil War-era fort named for Zachary Taylor and, a photographer in tow, waiting — for how long? — as instructed by Leach, who could be laissez-faire about the time. Perhaps 90 minutes went by. Eventually, up a path he pedaled on his bicycle, looking surprisingly fit in cargo shorts and a T-shirt, a completely at ease dude with absolutely nowhere else to be. We spent hours talking about football and other things, some of them ridiculous, his voice bouncing off the limestone and granite when he got excited.

The bottom line was he wanted to fight for his good name and coach again. He did just that, willing Washington State back into relevance before moving on to Mississippi State and the brutally difficult SEC West. At Texas Tech, he took aim at Oklahoma and Texas. At Wazzu, it was Oregon and Stanford. At Mississippi State, it was Alabama and LSU. Be the best? Maybe not. Beat the best? Leach lived for the opportunities.

His final tweet was for Bulldogs supporters who might make the trip to the bowl game:

“Just got word that cowbells WILL be allowed at the ReliaQuest Bowl! Let’s fill Raymond James Stadium with Maroon and White! Hail State.”

The bells shall toll for him.

Read More

Mike Leach: a true original who made college football more fun Read More »