Chicago Sports

Chicago Fire Department ambulances are once again taking patients to Insight Hospital after being turned away for a year

Ambulances from the Chicago Fire Department are once again transporting critically ill and injured patients to the emergency department of Insight Hospital & Medical Center in Bronzeville on the Near South Side.

Those ambulance rides stopped about a year ago — in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic — during a dire nursing shortage in the hospital’s ER.

Insight had been working to restore city ambulance services ever since the company bought Mercy Hospital, which was the oldest chartered hospital in Chicago, in the 11th hour last year. That rescue prevented the hospital’s closure. The fire department resumed ambulance transports to Insight on Feb. 16, said fire department spokesperson Larry Langford.

“One of the first requests we received from community residents after assuming operational control of the hospital was to allow ambulances to return to the emergency room,” Insight Hospital CEO Atif Bawahab said in a statement. “We heard the request loud and clear, and immediately began addressing staffing levels necessary to ensure we could safely handle the increase in patients once ambulance runs resumed.”

Mercy treated mostly low-income, elderly and Black patients. But it also was part of the fabric of Chinatown and other nearby Chinese-speaking neighborhoods.

Mercy had one of the busiest ERs in Chicago with some 50,000 visits a year, in an area where hospitals and medical services have vanished over the years. But a nursing shortage had gotten so bad, Mercy’s ER was downgraded and could no longer accept city ambulances.

That meant people who called 911 were taken to other hospitals, which already were slammed with patients during the COVID-19 pandemic. The next closest hospital is at least a 10-minute drive from Insight — precious time, depending on a patient’s injury or illness.

WBEZ documented the frenzy last fall and traced where ambulances that most often went to Mercy had to go instead.

According to a federal inspection obtained by WBEZ, for 15 days in late January to early February in 2021, Mercy’s ER was at times short up to six nurses during shifts. At one point, there were dozens of patients waiting to be treated or waiting for a bed upstairs because they needed to be hospitalized.

“The deficiencies are so serious they constitute an immediate threat to patient health and safety,” Anna Olson, a branch manager at the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, wrote to Mercy’s CEO on Feb. 10, 2021.

The city ambulance transports stopped. They were estimated to make up about 25% of patients who came to Mercy, the inspection report said.

This was a sign that Mercy’s doors were closing fast. Mercy’s parent company was in the middle of closing the hospital before ultimately selling to Insight for $1.

Even without transports from city ambulances, Insight treated nearly 12,000 people who showed up at the hospital on their own, from June when Insight took over the hospital through December, Dr. Anita Goyal said in a statement. She leads emergency medicine at Insight.

“This is significantly lower than the 25,000 patients we have typically seen in the emergency room during that same period, but we are very excited to resume receiving patients brought by ambulance to our critical care emergency department,” Goyal said in the statement.

In an interview, Goyal and Insight Chief Medical Officer Dr. Dillon Bannis would not go into detail about how many people they’ve hired to make sure there are enough providers to treat patients.

But they say they have built up capacity in terms of workers and medical services they offer, after Insight took over a shell of what Mercy had been.

“Our No. 1 goal is to make sure that our patients are safe,” Bannis said.

He would not say how many patients are admitted to the hospital these days but said Insight has seen an increase since a hospital’s emergency department is typically its front door. And with Chicago ambulances resuming transports to Insight, that means more patients who might need to be admitted and stay overnight.

Both Goyal and Bannis each worked at Mercy for about a decade and stayed when Insight took over.

“We’re very excited, very just grateful for everyone coming together to be able to get us to this point to be able to deliver care to our community,” Goyal said.

Kristen Schorsch covers public health and Cook County on WBEZ’s government and politics desk. Follow her on Twitter at @kschorsch.

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Chicago Bears Free Agent Target Report: OL Ryan Jensen

The 2022 NFL Free Agency period opens up in March and the Chicago Bears are a team that has some big needs to address. Among those needs is offensive line where General Manager Ryan Poles has hinted they will start building the roster from.

With the struggles of Sam Mustipher at center, the Bears could look to replace him and if they don’t move Cody Whitehair there, they could make a big splash there. And that splash would be Tampa Bay Buccaneers center Ryan Jensen.

Jensen has spent 8 seasons in the league, the first four with Baltimore and the previous four with Tampa Bay. In that span, he’s become one of the best centers in the league and brings a certain toughness to the offensive line that could help out the Bears.

He’s projected to be the top free agent center available and for a team that wants to build in the trenches, he would make sense for the Bears.

CBS Sports’ take:

Ryan Jensen hasn’t missed a game in five years, and he’s been a good starting center for that entire run. The Buccaneers could run into some salary-cap issues this offseason with all of their free agents, so Jensen might be available for the taking. Much like the Chargers did with Corey Linsley last offseason, a team with a young quarterback would be wise to target Jensen.

Contract Projection via Pro Football Focus: Three years, $39 million ($24.5 million guaranteed)

Film:

Will the Bears be interested?

If the Bears want to spend big money this offseason, doing so to sure up the offensive line and protect Justin Fields would be smart. Center was a position that they struggled with last season and getting a Pro Bowl caliber type player would be a good start.

It would also allow Cody Whitehair to play guard and the Bears could then focus on where is a good fit for Larry Borom and Teven Jenkins. Jensen would be an anchor on the line with his mean, nasty play that sets the tone in the trenches. That’s an underrated aspect of his game that doesn’t always show up when building a team. He’d also bring a veteran presence to help protect a young quarterback.

Prediction: Signs with Cincinnati

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International sports organizations move to punish Russia for Ukraine invasion

UEFA will move the Champions League final from St. Petersburg after Russia launched a wide-ranging attack on Ukraine on Thursday, the Associated Press has learned.

An extraordinary meeting of the UEFA executive committee will be held on Friday to discuss the geopolitical crisis and when officials are set to confirm taking the May 28 showpiece game out of Russia, a person with knowledge of the process said on Thursday. The person spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private talks.

UEFA did publicly rebuke Russia and said it was dealing with the “situation with the utmost seriousness and urgency” while confirming the meeting.

“UEFA shares the international community’s significant concern for the security situation developing in Europe and strongly condemns the ongoing Russian military invasion in Ukraine,” the governing body said in a statement.

“We remain resolute in our solidarity with the football community in Ukraine and stand ready to extend our hand to the Ukrainian people.”

As Russia’s threats toward Ukraine had grown through the week, the British government and fan groups had already called for the final not to be played in St. Petersburg, where the stadium is sponsored by Russian state-owned energy giant Gazprom.

The company is also the main sponsor of Schalke, but the German second-division club said on Thursday that the Gazprom logo was being removed from its jerseys.

A senior Gazprom executive also quit the supervisory board of the Gelsenkirchen-based club after being a target of U.S. sanctions. Matthias Warnig is CEO of the newly built but never operated Russia-to-Germany Nord Stream 2 pipeline which is a multibillion-dollar project of Gazprom and European companies.

Critics said Schalke was used to popularize Gazprom in Germany as it pushed to construct the gas pipelines under the Baltic Sea, which bypassed Ukraine. Gazprom has been a sponsor since 2006 and provided the cash that fueled a run to the Champions League semifinals in 2011.

German newspaper Bild this week began covering the Gazprom logos on Schalke jerseys with “Freedom for Ukraine” to protest against Russia’s deepening military intervention in Ukraine.

UEFA’s sponsorship by Gazprom is also under scrutiny with its branding having a significant profile this week at Champions League round of 16 games.

UEFA’s leadership had held off making a call on the Champions League final venue until Russia on Thursday started to target cities and military bases in Ukraine with airstrikes and shelling as tanks and troops rolled across the border.

The International Olympic Committee said it “strongly condemns the breach of the Olympic Truce by the Russian government,” days after the end of the closing of the Beijing Winter Olympics.

The truce is intended to secure safe passage for athletes during the Games and, in the long term, promote the idea of working toward world peace. It runs until the end of the Paralympics, which are due to open in Beijing on March 4.

The International Paralympic Committee condemned Russia and said it held talks with sports officials in Ukraine, which still plans to compete in Beijing and requires safe passage for its athletes.

“This is a truly horrible situation, and we are greatly concerned about our National Paralympic Committee and Para athletes from Ukraine,” IPC President Andrew Parsons said. “Our top priority right now is the safety and well-being of the Ukrainian delegation, with whom we are in regular dialogue.”

Russia’s name, flag and anthem are already barred from the March 4-13 Paralympics in Beijing over previous doping disputes. Its team is due to compete as RPC, short for Russian Paralympic Committee.

Russia has violated the Olympic Truce three times in 14 years, fighting a war with Georgia over the disputed territory of South Ossetia during the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics and launching a military takeover that annexed the Crimean peninsula of Ukraine after the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics closed.

Focus is turning to Russia hosting other major sports events in the coming months.

In basketball, Barcelona said its team would not fly to Russia for two games against Russian teams — Zenit St. Petersburg and CSKA Moscow — on Friday and Sunday in the Euroleague.

In rugby, European organizers postponed Georgia’s match with Russia on Sunday in Tbilisi in the Rugby Europe Championship. The women’s game between Spain and Russia on Saturday in Madrid was still on.

Formula One said it was “closely watching the very fluid developments” but made no further comment on whether its race in Sochi would be canceled in September. Four-time F1 champion Sebastian Vettel said he would not compete at the Russian Grand Prix.

“I will not go,” the German driver said. “I think it’s wrong to race in the country. I’m sorry for the innocent people that are losing their lives, that are getting killed (for) stupid reasons and a very strange and mad leadership.”

In domestic sport in Ukraine, soccer’s Ukrainian Premier League suspended operations on Thursday due to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s decision to impose martial law. The league has been on a two-month winter break and was due to resume on Friday. It did not give any planned date to restart.

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Back from injury, Blackhawks’ Kevin Lankinen needs stellar stretch to end rocky season

Finally back from an unlucky hand injury, Blackhawks backup goalie Kevin Lankinen has declared himself the “happiest guy on the team right now.”

He actually might be able to drop those last two words. If starting goalie Marc-Andre Fleury doesn’t hold the prize himself, Lankinen may well be the happiest Hawk at all times.

“You’d have to ask everybody else,” he said Tuesday with a grin. “But I try to be.”

The fact Lankinen’s attitude remains so positive demonstrates all anyone needs to know about the resilience and authenticity of his personality, because Lankinen has endured a season that would’ve eroded the confidence of many of his teammates.

Just as many things have gone wrong for Lankinen in 2021-22 as went right in 2020-21. The 26-year-old Finn has been limited to only 11 starts and 13 appearances by Fleury’s presence, a long bout with COVID-19 in December and January and the boxer’s fracture he suffered in his right (blocker-side) hand Jan. 22 against the Wild. He has only played 92 minutes of hockey over the last two-plus months, and he has only won two games all season.

“Every season has its own challenges, and this season has been different,” Lankinen said. “There are so many things you can’t control, whether it’s a virus or an injury or whatever. You can’t dwell on that too much. It sucks and you’ve got to go through the motions, but you’ve got to see the other side of it.

“For me, it has been a year of a lot of growth. There is still a lot of hockey left, and I’m pumped to be back and show my best — because I know that, for sure, I’m a better goalie now than I was a year ago.”

His hand injury took Derek King by surprise — the Hawks interim coach didn’t learn about it until well after the game — but it sounds like Lankinen felt the pain in-game but simply held off on telling anyone.

“You always get a couple bumps and bruises throughout the game, and you always want to finish the game if there’s any chance you can do that,” he explained. “We had a good chance to win, and I wanted to finish the game and see afterward how it was.”

His recovery took even longer than the initial two-to-three week estimate, but he was able to keep skating and conditioning throughout that time and feels “great” now as a result.

He resumed facing shots in team practice Tuesday, was activated off injured reserve Wednesday and then will start one of the Hawks’ two games this weekend against the Devils and Blues.

Lankinen desperately needs a quality start to jumpstart a strong closing run this spring. His play so far this year, albeit in limited action as described, has been surprisingly poor: his .889 save percentage ranks 66th among 68 goalies league-wide (ahead of only Seattle’s Philipp Grubauer and Columbus’ Joonas Korpisalo) and his minus-7.4 goals-saved-above-average metric ranks 63rd.

As a pending unrestricted free agent playing for a franchise entering a period of upheaval, his future in Chicago — even in the NHL — will be tenuous if he doesn’t improve those statistics by April. But as is typical for him, he hasn’t let that uncertainty and urgency affect his approach.

“I try to prove myself every day,” Lankinen said. “It hasn’t changed my mindset really. Every time I get a chance to play I’m going to put my best foot forward. Eventually, all the other stuff is going to fall into place.”

King sees the same thing.

“He never bats an eye, never has a bad attitude, always brings positive energy…and that’s what I’m seeing now, especially going through these little speed bumps of his career,” King said. “Hopefully he can stay here, and we can keep him here, because he’s going to be a really good NHL goalie.”

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Girls basketball IHSA state playoff schedule

Thursday, Feb. 24, 2022

Class 4A Sectional Finals

GLENBROOK SOUTH

Loyola vs. Maine South, 7

WARREN

Stevenson vs. Lake Zurich, 7

EAST AURORA

Benet vs. Naperville North, 7

LYONS

Lyons vs. Young, 7

BOLINGBROOK

Bolingbrook vs. Homewood-Flossmoor, 7

JOLIET CENTRAL

Edwardsville vs Normal, 7

BARTLETT

St. Charles East vs. Wheaton North, 7

DEKALB

South Elgin vs. Barrington, 7

Class 3A Sectional Finals

CIVIC MEMORIAL

Mattoon vs. Civic Memorial (moved to Fri.)

LINCOLN

Lincoln vs. Mahomet-Symour

GRAYSLAKE CENTRAL

Carmel vs. Deerfield

KANELAND

Sycamore vs. Montini

KANKAKEE

Marian Catholic vs. Oak Forest, 7

LA SALLE-PERU

Morton vs. Washington, 7

DE LA SALLE

Nazareth vs. De La Salle, 7

FENWICK

Trinity vs. Fenwick, 7

Class 2A Sectional Finals

MONTICELLO

Pana vs. Paris, 7

NASHVILLE

Carterville vs. Mater Dei, 7

IVC

Normal U-High vs. Canton, 7

WAVERLY

Marquette vs. Quincy Notre Dame, 7

CHRIST THE KING

Regina vs. DePaul Prep, 7

TIMOTHY CHRISTIAN

IC Catholic vs. Butler, 7

PEOTONE

St. Joseph-Ogden vs. Fieldcrest (moved to Fri.)

Class 1 Sectional Finals

BRIMFIELD

Unity vs. Brimfield, 7

BUNKER HILL

Routt vs. Okawville (moved to Fri.)

SESSER-VALIER

St. Anthony vs. Neoga, 7

BLUE RIDGE

Ridgeview vs. St. Thomas More, 7

HINCKLEY-BIG ROCK

Serena vs. Neward, 7

ORR

Hope Academy vs. Orr, 7

FORRESTON

Stockton vs. Galena, 7

Monday, Feb. 28, 2022

Supersectionals

Thursday, March 3, 2022

State semifinals

Friday, March 4, 2022

State semifinals

Saturday, March 5, 2022

State championships

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Former Bears GM Ryan Pace lands with Falcons

Ryan Pace, whom the Bears fired as general manager last month, has a new job — he’ll be one of three senior personnel directors with the Falcons, the team announced Thursday.

Pace connects to the Falcons through general manager Terry Fontenot, with whom he spent 13 years in the Saints organization. The Falcons hired Fontenot a year ago; Pace left the Saints to be the Bears general manager in 2015.

Pace will be working alongside the man he replaced — former Bears GM Phil Emery is also a senior personnel executive, as is former Titans GM Ruston Webster. Emery spent three years as the Bears GM, failing to reach the postseason. Pace made the playoffs twice in his tenure; the Bears lost to the Eagles on Cody Parkey’s double-doink at the end of the 2018 season and were blown out by the Saints’ as the NFC’s first-ever No. 7 seed after the 2020 season.

Pace will find a lot of former Bears coaches in his new home: offensive coordinator Dave Ragone, quarterbacks coach Charles London, outside linebackers coach Ted Monachino and running backs coach Michael Pitre all worked under Pace at Halas Hall.

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Friday’s IHSA state basketball playoff schedule

Friday, February 25, 2022

IHSA STATE TOURNAMENT – 4A

(Regional-Championship)

PROVISO WEST SECTIONAL

Young

Young vs. Downers Grove North, 7:00

Riverside-Brookfield

Riverside-Brookfield vs. Oak Park-River Forest, 7:0

Hinsdale Central

Curie vs. Hinsdale Central, 7:00

Proviso East

Lyons vs. Proviso East, 7:00

THORNWOOD SECTIONAL

Oak Lawn

Kenwood vs. Oak Lawn, 7:00

Brother Rice

Brother Rice vs. Bloom, 7:00

Homewood-Flossmoor

Homewood-Flossmoor vs. Marist, 7:00

St. Rita

St. Rita vs. Morgan Park, 7:00

BARRINGTON SECTIONAL

Buffalo Grove

Barrington vs. Buffalo Grove, 7:00

Hersey

Hersey vs. Fremd, 7:00

Libertyville

Libertyville vs. Warren, 7:00

Mundelein

Stevenson vs. Prospect, 7:00

GLENBROOK SOUTH SECTIONAL

Maine South

Glenbrook South vs. Niles North, 7:)0

Evanston

Glenbrook North vs. Evanston, 7:00

New Trier

New Trier vs. Conant, 7:00

Hoffman Estates

Rolling Meadows vs. Hoffman Estates, 7:00

COLLINSVILLE SECTIONAL

Granite City

Collinsville vs. Belleville East, 7:00

Alton

O’Fallon vs. Quincy, 7:00

Normal

Normal vs. Bradley-Bourbonnais, 7:00

Minooka

Moline vs. Minooka, 7:00

OSWEGO SECTIONAL

Joliet Central

Oswego East vs. West Aurora, 7:00

Neuqua Valley

Neuqua Valley vs. West Aurora, 7:00

Plainfield North

Bolingbrook vs. East Aurora, 7:00

Plainfield Central

Andrew vs. Plainfield Central, 7:00

BARTLETT SECTIONAL

Glenbard West

Glenbard West vs. York, 7:00

Naperville North

Lake Park vs. Naperville North, 7:00

Wheaton-Warr. South

Wheaton-Warr. South vs. Bartlett, 7:00

Batavia

Benet vs. Glenbard North, 7:00

HUNTLEY SECTIONAL

Larkin

Larkin vs. Dundee, 7:00

Jacobs

Huntley vs. Rockford East, 7:00

Jefferson

Auburn vs. Hononegah, 7:00

Hampshire

DeKalb vs. St. Charles North, 7:00

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

IHSA STATE TOURNAMENT – 3A

(Regional-Championship)

DANVILLE SECTIONAL

Sacred Heart-Griffin

Sacred Heart-Griffin vs. Lanphier, 7:00

Morton (IL)

Morton (IL) vs. Centennial, 7:00

Mahomet-Seymour

Lincoln vs. Mahomet-Seymour

MacArthur

MacArthur vs. Springfield Southeast, 7:00

HIGHLAND SECTIONAL

Centralia

Centralia vs. Mt. Vernon, 7:00

Glenwood

Glenwood vs. Jacksonville, 7:00

Cahokia

East St. Louis vs. Highland, 7:00

Richland County

Richland County vs. TBD, 7:00

KING SECTIONAL

St. Ignatius

St. Ignatius vs. Lake View, 7:00

Prosser

Fenwick vs. Prosser, 7:00

Payton

Westinghouse vs. Payton, 7:00

De La Salle

De La Salle vs. Schurz, 7:00

NORTH CHICAGO SECTIONAL

Antioch

Lake Forest vs. Antioch, 7:00

Grayslake Central

Deerfield vs. Grayslake Central, 7:00

Vernon Hills

St. Patrick vs. Vernon Hills, 7:00

Notre Dame

Notre Dame vs. Carmel, 7:00

MARIAN CATHOLIC SECTIONAL

Hillcrest

Hillcrest vs. Tinley Park, 7:00

Morris

Lemont vs. Marian Catholic, 7:00

Evergreen Park

Thornton vs. Brooks, 7:00

Oak Forest

Oak Forest vs. Kankakee, 7:00

HINSDALE SOUTH SECTIONAL

St. Laurence

Simeon vs. St. Laurence, 7:00

Nazareth

Lindblom vs. Nazareth, 7:00

Glenbard South

Mount Carmel vs. Bogan, 7:00

Hyde Park

Hyde Park vs. Solorio, 7:00

CRYSTAL LAKE SOUTH SECTIONAL

Sycamore

Burlington Central vs. Kaneland, 7:00

Boylan

Boylan vs. Freeport, 7:00

Prairie Ridge

Wauconda vs. Prairie Ridge, 7:00

Marmion

St. Francis vs. Marmion, 7:00

PEORIA (BRADLEY UNIV) SECTIONAL

Richwoods

Metamora vs. Washington (IL), 7:)0

Rochelle

Sterling vs. Rochelle, 7:00

Rock Island

Rock Island vs. Ottawa, 7:00

Limestone

Notre Dame (Peoria) vs. Manual, 7:00

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

IHSA STATE TOURNAMENT – 2A

(Regional – Championship – Chicago Area)

MARENGO SECTIONAL

Timothy Christian

Northridge vs. Timothy Christian, 7:00

Aurora Christian

Wheaton Academy vs. Rockford Christian, 7:00

Marian Central

Rockford Lutheran vs. Marengo, 7:00

IC Catholic

IC Catholic vs. Montini, 7:00

MENDOTA SECTIONAL

Oregon

Eureka vs. Stillman Valley, 7:00

CLIFTON CENTRAL SECTIONAL

McNamara

Beecher vs. Herscher, 7:00

Wilmington

El Paso-Gridley vs. Seneca, 7:00

JULIAN SECTIONAL

Dunbar

Dunbar vs. Phillips, 7:00

Carver

Perspectives-Lead vs.Longwood, 7:00

Chicago Christian

Leo vs. Joliet Catholic, 7:00

University High

University High vs. Dyett, 7:00

NORTH LAWNDALE SECTIONAL

DePaul

DePaul vs. Latin, 7:00

Orr

Orr vs. North Lawndale, 7:00

Christ the King

Clark vs. Christ the King, 7:00

Wells

Wells vs. Noble Street, 7:00

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

IHSA STATE TOURNAMENT – 1A

(Regional – Championship – Chicago Area)

WOODLAND SECTIONAL

Serena

Yorkville Christian vs. Marquette, 7:00

Horizon-Southwest

Horizon-Southwest vs. Ellison, 7:00

Fenger

Fenger vs. Bowen, 7:00

St. Bede

Midland vs. Putnam County, 7:00

MARSHALL SECTIONAL

Walther Lutheran

Austin vs. Walther Lutheran, 7:00

Collins

Hope Academy vs. Matshall, 7:00

PECATONICA SECTIONAL

Indian Creek

Somonauk vs. Pecatonica, 7:00

Alden-Hebron

South Beloit vs. Hinckley-Big Rock, 7:00

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Troy Aikman, ESPN close to ‘Monday Night Football’ deal: report

Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback and longtime Fox Sports NFL analyst Troy Aikman is close to joining ESPN on a deal that would see him serve as the lead analyst for “Monday Night Football,” according to multiple reports.

Aikman’s not-yet-completed deal is expected to be for five years and big money, according to the New York Post, which first reported the news. The Athletic confirmed the Post’s report and noted that while the deal isn’t yet finalized “all signs point to Aikman heading to ESPN.”

The No. 1 overall pick in the 1989 NFL draft joined Fox in 2001 following a 12-year playing career that saw him win three Super Bowls and the Super Bowl 27 MVP with the Dallas Cowboys.

Moving from his broadcasting home of 20-plus years will have a big impact across the industry, starting first with Fox. Aikman has been part of Fox’s No. 1 NFL broadcasting team alongside play-by-play man Joe Buck since 2002, calling six Super Bowls in that span.

There’s also the impact on “Monday Night Football,” which currently features Steve Levy in the play-by-play role with Louis Riddick and Brian Griese as the analysts. ESPN has also already committed to more alternative broadcasts with Peyton and Eli Manning, a highlight of this past NFL season.

Aikman certainly will not come cheap — the Post reported his deal is expected “to approach or exceed the neighborhood of Tony Romo’s $17.5 million per year contract” — a likely byproduct of a bidding war created in part by Amazon’s entry into the broadcasting space with “Thursday Night Football.” Aikman had publicly said he had spoken with Amazon prior to Wednesday night’s news about his pending move to ESPN.

Adding to the industry intrigue is Al Michaels, the legendary play-by-play announcer who is now a free agent after his contract with NBC expired.

Read more at usatoday.com

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Chicago Bulls guard Coby White is finding his stride here in year three

Stability has been hard to come by for Coby White since being selected by the Chicago Bulls with the seventh overall pick in the 2019 NBA Draft. As a rookie under head coach Jim Boylen, White came off the bench in all but one of 65 games for Chicago and saw significant fluctuations in minutes over the course of the year. He struggled to find consistency with his shot and posted just a 1.61 assist to turnover ratio, both problems to be expected from a 19-year-old rookie guard.

As a sophomore last year, White was thrust into the role of starting point guard under new head coach Billy Donovan, which proved to be too much, too soon.

The flashes of playmaking ability were few and far between before Donovan eventually pulled the plug after 36 games, replacing White in the starting lineup with Tomas Satoransky. White was inserted back into the first five for the final 18 games of the season and shot 43% from the field while averaging over 32 minutes per game.

With optimism surrounding that stretch, there was positive momentum ready to be carried into this year. Unfortunately, White tore the labrum in his left shoulder last June, bringing those good vibes to a screeching halt. In the same off-season, the Bulls acquired several high-profile guards in Demar DeRozan, Lonzo Ball, and Alex Caruso, while also drafting Ayo Dosunmo. With Ball providing the exact attributes that Chicago needed from a starting point guard in playmaking, spot-up shooting, and on-ball defense, White appeared headed for the role he’s always appeared best suited for; a score-first guard off the bench.

It seemed simple enough, but just as White was beginning to shake off the rust returning from his shoulder injury in November, he missed five games in the NBA’s health and safety protocols with COVID-19.

The roller coaster ride that has been his young career seemed destined to continue, but White has risen above it. Despite the early-season turmoil, White is enjoying the most productive season of his young career, thanks in part to a recent tear over his last five games. During this stretch, including four games as a starter filling-in for Dosunmo (concussion) and Zach LaVine (knee), White is shooting a blistering 53.6% from the field and 55.8% on 3FG, while racking up 21 assists to just six turnovers.

While five games is a minuscule sample size, especially for a player whose shot has historically been as up-and-down as White’s, the bigger picture numbers are even more encouraging. Through 39 games, his shooting numbers are by far the best marks he has posted in his career at 45.3% from the field and 40.1% on 3FG. Additionally, his shot selection is moving in the right direction; according to NBA.com, just 7.3% of his points have been scored in the mid-range area, while 51.1% have come from 3PFG and 30% have been scored in the paint, both career highs.

Thanks in large part to an exponentially more complete roster around him, things have been simplified for White, whether starting or coming off the bench. Caruso, Ball, Dosunmo, and Javonte Green can all help cover for White defensively, while the playmaking the Bulls added has taken that burden off his shoulders. The gravity demanded by DeRozan, LaVine, Ball, and Nikola Vucevic affords White more time and space to operate, all resulting in White’s strengths being highlighted and weaknesses mitigated.

In the clip below, Terrence Ross is concerned with a LaVine-Vucevic two-man game, providing White a half-step head start on Terrence Ross. He uses that window to create plenty of space on a step-back 3-pointer.

View post on imgur.com

Here, White spots-up on the strong side during a DeRozan-Vucevic pick-and-roll. When Aaron Wiggins rotates to step in front of a driving DeRozan to prevent a layup, White nails an easy catch-and-shoot corner 3-pointer.

View post on imgur.com

Better personnel is not the only reason for White’s improvement. The game is slowing down for him and he is consistently making better decisions when putting the ball on the floor, changing pace to keep defenders off balance, allowing him to get into the paint with room to finish.

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The chemistry that White and Dosunmo have developed is particularly encouraging. The young duo started the three final games leading-up to the all-star break, helping Chicago to wins against Oklahoma City, San Antonio, and Sacramento. In those contests, White averaged 23.7 points on 53.5% shooting in 36 minutes per game, while Dosunmo tallied 19 assists to just seven turnovers in 39 minutes per game. As Ball and LaVine eventually reclaim their spots in the starting lineup, White and Dosunmo should hopefully remain a potent tandem off the bench. Their games clearly complement each other well and with both recently turning just 22-years-old, the pair has intriguing potential.

The challenges for White never stop, and the next step will be continuing to earn his minutes during the stretch run of the season, as Chicago gets healthy and attempts to solidify its rotation before the playoffs begin. With the stakes increasing and the possibility that Caruso, Ball, and Patrick Williams all return in March, playing time will be harder to come by. Donovan will have a myriad of options to call on if White’s shooting cools off. For now, the organization, the fans, and Coby, can enjoy his contributions to winning in a role that fits him best.

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Bulls’ Billy Donovan finally gets his guy, even if it’s 13 years later

At times it sounds like Billy Donovan recruited anyone that could dribble a basketball.

That’s probably because he did.

After all, during his 19-year career as the head coach of Florida, Donovan turned the Gators into a powerhouse, winning back-to-back national titles in 2006 and ’07. That type of recognition not only made Gainesville a destination place for top players, but had Donovan eyeing up the country’s elite.

Tristan Thompson was no exception.

“My high school coach wanted me to go there,” Thompson told reporters on Wednesday, meeting with the media for the first time since his signing became official over All-Star Weekend.

“Another one I lost,” Donovan interrupted, as Thompson was telling the story of his recruitment.

“It worked out well for you,” Thompson answered. “It worked out for both of us. Everything comes around in full circle.”

That it has, almost 13 years later.

Thompson will make his Bulls debut on Thursday, with the organization hoping the veteran can not only back-up center Nikola Vucevic, but give the team another frontcourt physical presence for rim protection and rebounding.

The Bulls signed Thompson off the buyout market, after he was waived from the Pacers last week. They did so with the big picture in mind, knowing that there was still some uncertainty with Patrick Williams and his recovery from wrist surgery, and also surveying the playoff landscape.

The Cavaliers start three seven-footers, Milwaukee added Serge Ibaka to go along with elite forward Giannis Antetokounmpo, Philadelphia has Joel Embiid, Miami has a physical frontcourt with Bam Adebayo and P.J. Tucker, and Brooklyn is expected to get Kevin Durant (knee) back sooner than later.

Going into the postseason short-handed and small up front would have been a dangerous gamble for a Bulls team that will start the second-half push tied with the Heat on top of the Eastern Conference.

That’s why Zach LaVine reached out and called Thompson over the weekend, before the signing was even official, just to welcome him.

“I think he’s going to bring another championship-level guy where he’s been in these games before,” LaVine said. “He can help us in these situations. With AK [executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas] and [general manager] Marc [Eversley] obviously, they’re going for it. They trust in me, they trust in DeMar [DeRozan], they trust in this group, and it just means a lot going into the last year of my contract that they’re putting a team around us that can compete.”

Especially if they can continue to get healthy.

Donovan gave updates on all of his injured players, including the plan on LaVine and his left knee issues. It will remain an open line of communication with LaVine and the medical staff, and almost a game-by-game situation.

“How does he respond coming off a game the next day?” Donovan said of LaVine. “Does he feel back-to-backs are something he can do? I think in his meetings with the doctors, they’re all comfortable with him playing. It’s all really how he’s doing once he gets back to playing on a consistent basis. Right now, he feels good.”

As for the rest, Lonzo Ball (knee surgery) continued ramping up his running this week, and the hope is still a mid-to-late-March return. Alex Caruso (wrist surgery) still hadn’t been cleared for basketball activity with the right hand, but was continuing to condition and work on his left hand. And Williams continued progressing, but still hasn’t been cleared for practice.

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