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How drug overdose deaths have plagued one generation of Black men nationally for decades

Young Black men in cities across America died of drug overdoses at high rates in the 1980s and 1990s. During the recent fentanyl crisis, older Black men in many cities have been dying at unusually high rates.

They’re all from the same generation.

An investigation of millions of death records — in a partnership of The New York Times, The Baltimore Banner, the Chicago Sun-Times, Big Local News at Stanford University and eight other newsrooms across the country — reveals the extent to which drug overdose deaths have affected one group of Black men in dozens of cities across America at nearly every stage of their adult lives.

In recent years, the opioid epidemic has brought dangerous drugs to every corner of the country, and overdoses have risen among younger, whiter and more rural populations.

That huge tide now appears to be ebbing — but not for this group of Black men. In the 10 cities examined in this partnership, including Chicago, Baltimore, San Francisco, Newark, Washington, Milwaukee and Philadelphia, Black men ages 54 to 73 have been dying from overdoses at more than four times the rate of men of other races.

“They were resilient enough to live through a bunch of other epidemics — H.I.V., crack, COVID, multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis — only to be killed by fentanyl,” said Tracie M. Gardner, executive director of the National Black Harm Reduction Network and a former New York State health official.

The analysis identified dozens of cities, mostly in the Midwest and the Northeast, where a generation of Black men have been at higher risk of overdose deaths throughout their lives. In many of those places, cities have done little to distribute resources to this population:

  • In Chicago, there is no focused effort in a nearly $1.3 billion state opioid settlement to help older Black men, despite a heavy death toll for this group, the Sun-Times found.
  • In Pittsburgh, Black men in jail with opioid use disorders have been less likely to receive medications to combat their addictions than white men, a PublicSource investigation found, though officials are working to close the gap.
  • In San Francisco, many of the men vulnerable to overdoses use both opioids and cocaine, a combination that can make treating their addictions more complex, according to an analysis of mortality data by The San Francisco Standard.
  • In Newark, NJ.com/The Star-Ledger also found that overdose victims were using both opioids and cocaine.
  • In Baltimore, hundreds of men have been dying in senior housing, The Baltimore Banner found.
  • In Philadelphia, older Black men were actually less likely to die than their white peers — until recently. Since 2018, their death rate has shot up, according to a Philadelphia Inquirer analysis.
  • In Washington, local regulations and insurers have prevented doctors from giving longtime opioid users effective doses of drugs meant to curb their cravings, reporters for The 51st found.

‘Dying for decades’

Black men of this generation, born from 1951 to 1970, came of age at a time of wide economic disparities between Black and white people in their cities. Some of them served in Vietnam, where they were first exposed to heroin. In cities where heroin was available, others started using the drug closer to home in the 1970s and 1980s and became addicted.

Many have continued to use drugs on and off for decades. Though some managed their addictions safely, the risk of overdose was always there.

Mark Robinson, 66, grew up in Washington and now runs a syringe exchange program there. He estimates he knows 50 people who have died over the years from overdoses, including one of his best friends.

“Black men didn’t just start dying,” Robinson said. “We’ve been dying for decades as a direct result of opioid use disorder.”

The cities with this pattern of drug deaths tend to be places with large Black populations, intense residential segregation and heroin markets that were active in the 1970s, when the oldest of these men were young and first became exposed to illicit drugs, according to Dr. Dan Ciccarone, a professor of family and community medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.

“Heroin has become an endemic problem,” Ciccarone said. “It never went away.”

In addition to the risk of overdose, men of this generation lived through convulsions in public health and criminal justice. In the 1980s, some became exposed to H.I.V. through drug injections. In the 1990s, more aggressive sentences for drug crimes meant many of them spent time in jails or prisons.

Several public health researchers said widespread incarceration might have reduced these men’s chances of staying clean.

“You’re basically disarming them from having a good life,” said Ricky Bluthenthal, a professor of public health at the University of Southern California who has studied injection drug users for decades. “They lose girlfriends, they lose houses, they lose connections to their children.”

They have lived through the social upheavals of COVID-19, a period of isolation that coincided with an increase in the overdose rate for nearly all groups.

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They also stand to benefit from the recent embrace of more medical approaches to drug addiction. Drugs that can reverse an overdose are widely distributed in many cities now. And more doctors are willing to prescribe medications that can curb drug cravings for people who want to quit.

But, in many of the cities where older Black men are dying at high rates, those innovations might not be reaching this group.

Decades of drug use, criminal risk and stigma have made some reluctant to discuss their addictions. Kendra Brooks, a Philadelphia council member, said she recently learned about nine overdoses among older Black residents in her neighborhood. The overdoses had happened quietly, in private homes.

“In this generation, you don’t get high in public,” Brooks said. “It’s something very private and personal. Amongst folks that I know, it’s like a secret disease.”

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Older Black drug users have been less likely than white ones to receive prescription medicines that are now the gold standard for addiction treatment.

Medicare, the government program that insures older Americans, tends to cover fewer addiction services than insurance for younger people.

More generally, many outreach programs are aimed at younger populations.

“If you go to a harm-reduction program, it’s not typically set up with older folks in mind,” said Brendan Saloner, a professor of health policy at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore who studies access to health care among people who use drugs. “They’re not in any way unwelcome, but they’re not generally the target.”

‘Not any real heroin’

This generation’s experience also highlights how much more dangerous the drug supply has become. Despite better treatment and more resources to combat addiction, the overdose death rate among older Black men in these cities has risen in recent years, as heroin has been replaced by the more potent fentanyl.

“There is not any real heroin being sold in the streets, period,” said Joe Henery, 77.

Joe Heney, 88, who lives in Washington, D.C., and used heroin for 30 years before getting clean.

Joe Heney, 88, who lives in Washington, D.C., used heroin for 30 years before getting clean.

Henery, who lives in Washington, D.C., used heroin for 30 years before getting clean. He said his friends who are still alive were “fortunate enough to survive the epidemics of all sorts.” But he worries about the risk of overdose for those who are still using. What was once heroin in Washington is now almost all either replaced by or mixed with fentanyl.

Fentanyl is easier for cartels to manufacture in labs and smuggle into the country. But the high doesn’t last as long as heroin’s, which often means drug users take more doses a day to avoid withdrawal symptoms. And its variable strength makes it more likely for even experienced users to take a fatal dose accidentally.

Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse at the National Institutes of Health, said the pattern of deaths in Baltimore reported by The Times and The Banner has caused her to seek new research on why these men are dying and how to prevent it.

Volkow acknowledged that their drug addiction has long placed them at risk, but she said fentanyl has greatly intensified that risk.

“If you were, in the past, using heroin, your chances of dying were much, much lower than your chances of dying now,” she said. “The key element now is the dangerousness of the drugs.”

Contributeing: Cheryl Phillips, Eric Sagara, Sarah Cohen and Justin Mayo of Big Local News; Frank Main, Elvia Malagón and Erica Thompson of the Chicago Sun-Times; Aubrey Whelan and Joe Yerardi of The Philadelphia Inquirer; Venuri Siriwardane and Jamie Wiggan of PublicSource; Abigail Higgins and Colleen Grablick of The 51st; Ryan Little of The Baltimore Banner; David Sjostedt, Noah Baustin and George Kelly of The San Francisco Standard; and Steve Strunsky and Riley Yates of NJ.com/The Star-Ledger.



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Horoscope for Friday, December 20, 2024

Moon Alert

After 2 a.m. Chicago time, there are no restrictions to shopping or important decisions. The moon is in Virgo.

Aries (March 21-April 19)

An average day

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Today you might have to put your emotional considerations and needs second to those of someone else. In other words, you might have to perform a service for someone or help them out. In your free time, you’ll appreciate a chance to get better organized and catch up on personal details.

Taurus (April 20-May 20)

A positive day

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Your feelings are pretty obvious today. In fact, some of you are wearing your heart on your sleeve. This is why you will project yourself more forcefully, especially in romance. Be careful not to be so wrapped up in your own feelings that you forget to see what’s going on with someone else.

Gemini (May 21-June 20)

An average day

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Today you’re happy to retire to your home and relax among familiar surroundings if you can do this. You need a little downtime with good food and drink so that you can ponder profundity or watch daytime TV. You might notice how much your habits control your world.

Cancer (June 21-July 22)

A positive day

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Today you have a strong need to speak up about something. You want to be heard by someone. You don’t want to get tied up in superficial conversations about the weather that are meaningless. Therefore, pick and choose whom you decide to talk to. Find someone willing to listen.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)

An average day

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You might identify more than usual with your possessions today, which is why you won’t want to part with anything. (“My precious!”) For some reason, you might feel you have to defend yourself about something that doesn’t really matter.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

A positive day

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Today you have a heightened emotions along with increased self-awareness because the moon is in your sign. You might also feel emotionally vulnerable. This is why you need some nurturing from others and yourself. Focus on your personal needs. Get some pampering. (Send out for dark chocolate.)

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

An average day

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Even though you’re the most sociable sign in the zodiac, today you crave privacy and solitude. This is why you will try to withdraw from the craziness around you so that you can pull your act together. Look for ways to relax in a quiet environment. Take food.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

An average day

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Today your emotional contact with your friends is important. You might want a discussion with a friend or a member of a group. You might also feel more protective and supportive to a friend. You might even feel jealous if that friend pays attention to someone else.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

An average day

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The moon is at the top of your chart today, which happens for 2 1/2 days every month. When it occurs, it can encourage scrutiny from others. You are noticed more than usual. In fact, some people will even know personal details about your private life.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

A positive day

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Today you have a strong urge to get away from all this. Travel or explore your own city. Basically, it’s important to do something different. Shake up your routine. This way you’ll feel stimulated by some tiny adventure!

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)

An average day

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Issues related to shared property, inheritances, banking matters, insurance situations and the like will be a focus for you today. This stuff can be boring and frequently involves forms and government speak. Do what you can to tie up some loose details.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)

An average day

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Be prepared to go more than halfway when dealing with others today. This is not a big deal. It simply requires a patient, cordial, friendly approach to others. If someone is speaking to you, by all means listen — politely.

If your birthday is today

Actor Jonah Hill (1983) shares your birthday. You’re idealistic and fun-loving, but also careful. You strive to help others as well as yourself. This was a year of hard work and building. 2025 will be a time of exciting change and increased personal freedom. Seek out new opportunities and trust your intuition. Expect to travel.

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Blackhawks ride Ilya Mikheyev-Teuvo Teravainen connection to third consecutive win

File this as a sentence that would’ve been hard to imagine a month ago: Ilya Mikheyev and Teuvo Teravainen just propelled the Blackhawks to their first three-game winning streak since Patrick Kane’s tenure.

“The Finnish-Russian connection is solid right now,” captain Nick Foligno said.

Teravainen set up two Mikheyev goals, Nolan Allan added his first NHL goal for insurance and goalie Arvid Soderblom made 27 saves as the Hawks beat the Kraken 3-1 on Thursday.

That completed a homestand sweep and gave the Hawks their first three-game run since February 2023 — Kane’s final week in a Hawks uniform, back when Connor Bedard hadn’t even been drafted yet. The previous five times they had won back-to-back games since then, they subsequently lost the next game.

“It was a big step for the group,” interim coach Anders Sorensen said. “We’re hanging onto more pucks, we’re making more plays and we’re more on the rush, which has been good. We’re coming out of our [defensive] zone with numbers, and we’re connected coming out.”

Teravainen and Mikheyev, among many other Hawks, have both improved enormously since Sorensen arrived and slotted them on the wings of Jason Dickinson’s third line. They’re also playing together on the red-hot penalty kill.

Mikheyev has scored four goals in three games after potting only two goals in his first 28. His speed has always made him an effective defensive forward, but he seems to be rediscovering some of the offensive touch he demonstrated a few years ago in Vancouver.

Teravainen, meanwhile, is playing his best hockey since the opening road trip of the season. He has eight points in his last three games, dramatically breaking out of a slump in which he tallied only six points in 25 games. He followed up back-to-back three-point outings against the Islanders and Capitals with his two assists Thursday.

“They’re playing off each other,” Foligno said. “‘Turbo’ is so smart and understands players so well. He sees how ‘Mikky’ plays the game. … They’ve been a huge momentum boost for us. They’re probably looked at to be a defensive-minded line, but when you play that good defense and you get those opportunities offensively, they all have the skill to make plays. And they’re that for us right now.”

Said Sorensen: “There’s a lot of hockey sense [in] both of them.”

Perfect storm

Petr Mrazek’s December has been a perfect storm of disruptions so far. The 32-year-old goalie suffered a minor groin injury, got the flu and dealt with a family health issue, which all combined to make his 12-day absence partly miserable and partly a much-needed break.

“Everything came together; everything was in one,” Mrazek said Thursday. “I’ve been through a lot the last couple of weeks, so it’s nice to get everything done and focus on hockey again.”

Mrazek was activated off injured reserve and backed up Soderblom on Thursday. Prospect Drew Commesso was reassigned to Rockford. Mrazek will likely start Saturday against the Flames. The Hawks have one more game after that — Monday in Minnesota — before the NHL’s three-day Christmas break.

His relatively speedy return is relieving news, considering his history of more serious groin injuries. Soderblom did clear the 60-career-game threshold and become waiver-eligible during his absence, though, so the Hawks are now trending again toward a goalie logjam if Laurent Brossoit finally returns in January or February.

Sorensen said the Mrazek-Soderblom tandem could resemble a “1A-1B” workload split moving forward.

Notes

Sorensen said Seth Jones, who hasn’t played since Nov. 14 due to a foot injury, is “close” to returning. It’s unclear if that could happen before the Christmas break. He has skated individually with Alec Martinez (neck) before Hawks practices this week.

Jeremy Roenick was honored Thursday at the United Center for his recent induction into the Hockey Hall of Fame. His presence added extra energy to a buzzing pre-holiday crowd of 18,991.

The Bruins moved Thursday to terminate ex-Hawks forward Tyler Johnson’s contract. Things have not gone well for Johnson: He waited weeks into the season to get a contract at all and then sat out seven of the Bruins’ last eight games as a healthy scratch.



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LSU rolls UIC in Aneesah Morrow’s homecoming

Quarter-sized snowflakes fell outside of Credit Union 1 Arena Thursday night as a throng of fans dressed in purple and gold stood on the corner of Racine and Harrison.

Inside No. 5 LSU prepared to meet UIC. The game appeared to be nothing more than a tune-up for an LSU team poised to make another deep run in March. But for coach Kim Mulkey, it was a purposefully planned matchup to give another one of her seniors a chance to play at home.

Last year, she scheduled a game against Coppin State, giving NCAA champion and Sky rookie Angel Reese a true “home” game. Thursday night, it was senior forward Aneesah Morrow’s turn. She finished with 19 points and 133 rebounds in LSU’s 91-73 win over UIC.

Morrow’s last game in Chicago was nearly 22 months ago — against UConn, ranked No. 4 at the time — during her sophomore season at DePaul. A month after that season ended — during which she averaged 25.7 points and 12.2 rebounds per game — Morrow entered the transfer portal.

“Family is the biggest thing for me,” Morrow said. “But I knew at some point in time I would have to grow up.”

To Morrow, “growing up” meant moving away from everything she knew for an opportunity to accomplish more.

At that point, Morrow had already made a decent bit of history in a Blue Demon jersey. She broke DePaul’s single-game scoring record, putting up 45 points against Northwestern her sophomore season and set the single-season scoring record with 848 points. She was a two-time AP All-American at DePaul and a two-time All-Big East first-team selection.

Still, she believed more opportunities awaited her beyond Chicago’s city limits.

“The first thing you ask a player when they enter the portal is ‘Why are you leaving?’” Mulkey said. “I’ll never forget it. She said, ‘I won all these awards. All of that is great but I feel like I’m missing something in my career.’”

That something Morrow was missing was an opportunity to experience March Madness.

She didn’t just want a taste of it, either. Morrow wanted to be a contributor on a team with real championship aspirations. That’s exactly what she did last year averaging a double-double with 16.4 points and 10 rebounds per game, helping LSU return to the Elite Eight where they were eliminated by Iowa. This year, her averages have improved to 18.2 points and 14.1 rebounds per game.

She currently leads the NCAA in total rebounds and rebounds per game.

Morrow’s gameday routine looked a bit different on Thursday. It began with Simeon hosting a jersey retirement ceremony. Hours later, she was welcomed to the court with a standing ovation as she was introduced in the starting lineup. She had over 40 friends and family in attendance.

As a sophomore at DePaul, Morrow said she wasn’t sure if she’d play in the WNBA one day. Maybe it was her youth, or that she hadn’t yet opened her mind to a future outside of Chicago. Her tune has since changed. Now, Morrow knows a career in the WNBA awaits her this Spring. She’s currently projected as a top-10 pick in several mock drafts.

Whether the Sky would draft her with the No. 10 pick has crossed everyone’s mind, but it’s unlikely that she’ll fall that low. Even if she does, being selected by the Sky isn’t a strong possibility at this point,
considering the team’s need for outside shooting.

Regardless, Morrow’s future is in the WNBA.

“I want to like I said be the best,” Morrow said. “I want to work hard to be the best that I can be. Of course, [that means] going to the W. I would be the first in my family to accomplish that. The first from my high school and elementary school. I’m always keeping that in mind because you have to remember your roots and where you come from.”



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Tanking? Not these Bulls, as Zach LaVine & Co. down the Celtics 117-108

BOSTON – The Bulls aren’t interested in all-world college prospect Cooper Flagg.

Dylan Harper, Ace Bailey? Pfff … who needs them?

Tanking isn’t anywhere on the agenda for this Bulls roster, according to coach Billy Donovan, and he watched his team go out and play like that against the defending NBA Champions on Thursday, running away with the game late and beating Boston 117-108.

“One thing, as players and from what I know about Billy, we’re very competitive,” guard Zach LaVine said, fresh off a game-high 36-point performance. “Players and coaches never tank. That’s just not going to happen. We’re a good team. From all the predictions early on in the year, like we’re better than what people predicted us to be off the talent we have here.

“We’re competitive, man. You go out there and play like we did, we can beat anybody.”

That they did, handing the Celtics just their sixth loss of the season. Meanwhile, the Bulls (13-15) have now won three straight, and have done so under a smoldering cloud of trade rumors.

LaVine, as well as the likes of a Nikola Vucevic and Lonzo Ball have had their names out there, but that hasn’t been relayed to Donovan as anything serious, and he admittedly speaks to executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas almost daily in some capacity.

“The one thing I respect about the organization, and this was even in the summer from exit interviews, meetings, things like that, is I think collectively inside the organization there is an expectation about the integrity of competition and to go out there and put our best foot forward,” Donovan said. “Certainly, we have things we’re trying to overcome. We’ve had some injuries, had size differential, played four guards, certainly some defensive challenges, but everything has been about going out and keeping the integrity of competition. Nothing has ever been said, ‘Listen, we’ve got to keep this pick so do this and this.’ That is not happening, and I respect that as a coach. I feel like everything we’re doing each and every day is how do we put these guys, ourselves, in the best position to compete and win.”

The Bulls will keep their first-round pick for the loaded ’25 draft class only if they finish in the bottom 10, otherwise it goes to San Antonio.

They have been walking that fine line in the standings for weeks and now are currently residing outside that low bar.

The other side of this, however, is coaches are often on a need-to-know basis. There have been multiple national reports that back Sun-Times reports that the Bulls have been actively shopping LaVine, Vucevic and Ball, with the latest being talks between Denver – Karnisovas’ former organization – and the Bulls about LaVine.

A source described the LaVine talks as “light momentum,” however.

The way he played in the Garden definitely didn’t hurt that momentum, especially in the first half when LaVine’s 20 points kept the visiting team afloat.

“Zach kept kind of playing the right way, picked his spots, took his shots when they were there,” Donovan said. “I thought he played a great game all the way around.”

The game didn’t end without a little controversy, as Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla had words for official Justin Van Duyne that escalated quickly into Mazzulla having to be restrained by his coaching staff and security, taken off the floor while apparently challenging Van Duyne.

That was all the talk in the Bulls locker room after, especially in the wake of three technical fouls handed out to the home team.

Just more intrigue for the two teams in the rematch on Saturday at the United Center.

“We’ll see what the next game is going to look like,” LaVine added. “I think (Boston’s) going to be a little more on their game.”



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Kamari Hamlin’s clutch free throws clinch Simeon’s win against Lincoln Park

The Simeon crowd started celebrating as soon as Kamari Hamlin was fouled. The junior doesn’t have much varsity basketball experience. But he’s one of their own and every Wolverines fan in the gym seemed confident that Hamlin would make the two free throws Simeon desperately needed.

“[Hamlin] has been around the program since he was a baby,” Simeon coach Tim Flowers said. “He just knows.”

Hamlin stayed on the ground for a while. His shoulder was hurt when he hit the floor after driving to the basket, but he picked himself up and trotted to the free-throw line. The Wolverines trailed Lincoln Park by one point with 0.4 seconds left.

“I knew it was money,” Simeon senior Lorenzo Shields said.

Hamlin lived up to the expectations of his coach, his teammates and his father Andre, a longtime Simeon assistant coach. He made both shots to give No. 12 Simeon a 70-69 win against No. 6 Lincoln Park on Thursday.

“It feels special,” Hamlin said. “I’m comfortable at the line but I was nervous because I hurt my shoulder. But I played it off and knocked them down for my team. My dad won four state championships here. I’d like to get two of my own to have something to brag about.”

Hamlin’s heroics were possible due to Shields’ tremendous fourth quarter. He scored 17 points to keep Simeon in the game. Lincoln Park, led by junior Ahmad Lee, kept answering and led 65-56 with 1:07 left.

“Charles Smith and Jaylen Hutchinson made the difference in that last minute,” Flowers said. “Hutchinson got some big stops for us and was impressive getting into Lee. And Charles brought the energy we needed.”

Lincoln Park (9-2, 4-0 Red Shield) had the ball and a 69-66 lead with three seconds left. The win was in the Lions’ hands. Then Larry Harris picked up a technical foul near center court.

“The guy said something and Larry pushed him,” Lincoln Park coach Josh Anderson said.

Shields made both technical free throws to set up Hamlin’s moment. Shields finished with 25 points and seven rebounds. Hamlin scored 19 and Julien Doyle added 14 points and 11 rebounds.

Simeon (5-3, 3-2) has been without star junior Andre Tyler all week. Tyler has been away from the team due to illness. Kassidy Nelson, another starter, was injured late in the third quarter and didn’t return.

“I had to show up for my team,” Shields said. “We are missing [Tyler] and then [Nelson] went down. I had to get the job done. We had lost three in a row and were hungry to get one. We know our potential. Winning a big game like this without [Tyler] shows what type of team we are.”

Simeon lost to three good teams: Kenwood, Niles North and Young. Still, the Wolverines didn’t want to head to the Pontiac Holiday Tournament on a four-game skid.

“Shields has been here four years,” Flowers said. “He’s been downstate. He’s won city championships. So when we get moments like that he has to step up and that’s what he did.

“That’s what you want to be, a team that figures out how to win games. It doesn’t have to be pretty.”

Lee led Lincoln Park with 24 points and nine rebounds. Senior Chayse Turner had 16 points and eight rebounds. Harris added 11 points and five rebounds.

“That was bad officiating,” Anderson said. “Phantom calls. Just real bad. [Chicago Public Schools] has to do a better job of assigning [referees to] games. They ask us as coaches to be better. The officials should do the same.”



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Video released of West Ridge shootout between police, hate crime suspect

The Civilian Office of Police Accountability released videos Thursday showing Chicago police officers engaging in a shootout with the now-deceased suspect in an October hate crime shooting in West Ridge.

Police have said that a 39-year-old Orthodox Jewish man was walking about 9:30 a.m. Oct. 26 in the 2600 block of West Farwell Avenue when a man following him opened fire, striking the victim in the shoulder.

Body-worn camera footage shows officers on scene of the initial shooting when the suspect, 22-year-old Sidi Mohamed Abdallahi, walks out of an alley and opens fire on an officer and a Chicago Fire Department ambulance.

Several more gunshots can be heard moments later, followed by a pause and then a barrage of gunfire before the suspect is seen lying on a sidewalk. The shootout happened within about three minutes.

COPA’s report of the shooting indicates five of the 10 responding officers fired their weapons.

Abdallahi suffered multiple gunshot wounds to his body and was treated at a hospital. He was charged with committing a hate crime, attempted murder, aggravated discharge of a firearm and aggravated battery.

Abdallahi died Nov. 30 while in custody at the Cook County Jail. Sheriff’s staff found him unresponsive in his cell in an “apparent suicide attempt,” the Cook County sheriff’s office has said.

As of Thursday, the cause and manner of death has not been determined by the Cook County medical examiner’s office.



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Lions LB Jack Campbell: Hit on Bears QB Caleb Williams wasn’t malicious

ALLEN PARK, Mich. — The last time they played the Bears, Lions coaches told their players to make sure to hit a scrambling Caleb Williams unless he was clearly out of bounds.

It was nothing personal.

“If you’re in bounds,” defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn said Thursday, “we’re gonna hit you.”

Williams took umbrage with one particular tackle, saying he “didn’t appreciate” when linebacker Jack Campbell hit his knee when he scrambled toward the right sideline on Thanksgiving.

“If he’s toeing the line, I’m going to toe the line with him,” Campbell told the Sun-Times on Thursday. “It’s no disrespect. I’m just trying to respect the game, honestly. There’s no intent. …

“If [Williams] didn’t like it, I can see where he’s coming from. But I’m not gonna ever have the intent to hurt someone. … If people don’t like that, then it’s on me I guess. They can hate me.”

Cornerback Terrion Arnold said Glenn preaches an old-school attacking style.

“We’re going to instill fear into our opponents by the way we play,” Arnold said.

Glenn figures to be targeted for head coaching interviews this offseason, though giving up 48 points to the Bills on Sunday undoubtedly hurt the buzz surrounding him.

Asked about Williams, Glenn shook his head at what he said were unfair narratives.

“He’s very resilient,” he said. “There’s no quit in that player. It’s that the narrative that so many people want to put on someone when they don’t really know who they are. That’s funny to me, and that happens to a lot of these young quarterbacks that’s in this league. They get beat down so much that people really don’t see the things they go through to be a top player — especially a No. 1 pick.”



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Bulls feeling like they avoided a major injury to guard Josh Giddey

BOSTON – It doesn’t seem possible knowing the Bulls’ recent history, but they may have dodged a much more serious injury than first anticipated.

Guard Josh Giddey crumbled to the court in the second-half win over the Raptors on Monday, injuring the same right ankle that cost him most of the summer after the Olympics.

It initially looked like the type of setback that would cost Giddey weeks, but according to coach Billy Donovan, the starter could be looking at days.

“Not as bad as we originally thought,” Donovan said before the Thursday game with the Celtics. “Did have some swelling, has some soreness right now. We don’t think it’s going to be a long-term situation where he’s going to be out like he was this summer (at the Olympics) when he sprained it and it took him a long time to get back. We’re not there. It is the same ankle so we’re going to be careful, but coming out of the game the next morning there was a lot of optimism that it certainly wasn’t as bad as we initially thought.”

The unknown for right now is what kind of timetable Giddey would be looking at, but until he can get on the floor and start running that will remain unknown.

Giddey had started the first 27 games of the season for the Bulls, and was averaging 11.9 points, 6.9 assists and 6.4 rebounds per game.

“The timeline is going to be difficult to say when he’d be back, but if he continues to progress like this we would hope soon,” Donovan added.

The Bulls were also without Dalen Terry, who was still dealing with a right knee contusion. Terry has started practicing, however.

Case of the humbles

It was announced on Thursday by the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame that Donovan was among those eligible for the Class of 2025.

“Obviously I’m incredibly honored,” Donovan, who was a first-time nominee, said. “I’m a big, big believer that you’re only as good as the people around you. I’ve been really fortunate in terms of the people that coached me throughout my time playing, and then obviously assistant coaches that I’ve worked with. Athletic directors, front offices, and most importantly the players that I’ve had a chance to coach. From a very, very young age all the way through, just great people around me.”

Other nominees included Carmelo Anthony, Sue Bird, Maya Moore, Dwight Howard, Doc Rivers, Sylvia Fowles, Chamique Holdsclaw, Mark Few, Lisa Bluder, Marc Gasol, and Micky Arison.

“The nominees on the official ballot for the Class of 2025 represent a broad cross-section of our game,” Hall of Fame President and CEO John L. Doleva said in a statement. “From Olympic Gold Medals to NBA and WNBA titles to collegiate championships, these nominees epitomize the career of a Hall of Famer.”

Donovan won back-to-back National Championships with the Florida Gators, taking them to the Final Four four times as well.

Thumbs up

The Bulls were able to spend three days in Boston after the game in Toronto, and rather than let his teammates do their own thing or have too much downtime, two-time All-Star Zach LaVine decided to have a night at the movies.

LaVine rented out a Boston movie theater and paid for the entire travelling party to go see “Gladiator II.”



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The cheat sheet: Patrick Mahomes is the real deal — and the real heal — for the Chiefs

Best Bet

TEXANS at CHIEFS

Time: Noon, Saturday, NBC 5.

Line: Chiefs by 3½.

Total: 41½.

Records (overall/ATS): Texans 9-5/6-6-2; Chiefs 13-1/6-8.

Durability is one of those quarterback qualities that is hard to project, probably because there’s so much luck involved.

Caleb Williams is three games from becoming the first Bears quarterback to play an entire season without missing a game because of injury since Jay Cutler in 2014 — and he has been pushing the limit recently. The Bengals’ Joe Burrow had two season-ending injuries in his first four seasons. The Bills’ Josh Allen hasn’t missed a game because of injury since his rookie season in 2018 — he has started 102 consecutive games, the longest active streak among quarterbacks in the NFL.

The Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes might be in a category of his own, with his ability to play through pain and recuperate quickly. Mahomes has missed two games for injury since he became the Chiefs’ starting quarterback in 2018. He suffered a knee injury on a fourth-and-one sneak against the Broncos and missed the next two games.

But it’s those recuperative powers that are most notable. Mahomes suffered what was described as a high ankle sprain in the Chiefs’ divisional playoff game against the Jaguars in 2023. That’s often a six-week injury and rarely less than two games. Mahomes missed one series. (And, typical of the Chiefs’ resilience, backup Chad Henne drove the Chiefs 98 yards on 12 plays for a touchdown that made the difference in a 27-20 victory.)

Mahomes returned the next week against the Bengals in the AFC Championship Game and was clearly hobbling but gutted it out in a 23-20 victory and then beat the Eagles in the Super Bowl.

It was similar to the divisional-round game against the Browns in 2021, when Mahomes was knocked out with a concussion. The Chiefs held on with Henne, and Mahomes returned the next week to beat the Bills before losing to Tom Brady and the Buccaneers in the Super Bowl.

So there was little panic when Mahomes limped off the field after suffering a high ankle sprain against the Browns last week, with Carson Wentz finishing a 21-7 victory.

And sure enough, Mahomes practiced all week on the bum ankle and is expected to start Saturday against the Texans with the Chiefs (13-1) needing one victory to clinch the No. 1 seed in the AFC.

Mahomes has a high ankle sprain but no injury designation for the game. That’s another reason why he’s Patrick Mahomes.

Pick: Chiefs 20, Texans 16.

Top plays

VIKINGS at SEAHAWKS

Time: 3:05 p.m.

Line: Vikings by 3.

Total: 43½.

Records (overall/ATS): Vikings 12-2/9-4-1; Seahawks 8-6/6-7-1.

Outlook: Vikings have won seven straight (4-3 ATS) and have a shot at the No. 1 seed in the NFC after a 30-12 home win over the Bears. But they have their flaws — they had nine penalties and a punt blocked vs. the Bears. Still, the Seahawks are not great at home — losing 30-13 to the Packers last week —and QB Geno Smith has a bum ankle.

Pick: Vikings 20,
Seahawks 13.

BROWNS at BENGALS

Time: Noon.

Line: Bengals by 7½.

Total: 47.

Records (overall/ATS): Browns 3-11/4-10; Bengals 6-8/8-6.

Outlook: Browns are always a threat in this rivalry regardless of their record but probably not so much at the end of the season, especially with Nick Chubb out. Bengals still have a chance at the playoffs and QB Joe Burrow is driven to make the most of it. Bengals are 4-4 SU, but 7-1 ATS in the last eight vs. the Browns.

Pick: Bengals 31, Browns 20.

RAMS at JETS

Time: Noon.

Line: Rams by 3.

Total: 46½.

Records (overall/ATS): Rams 8-6/7-7; Jets 4-10/5-9.

Outlook: Aaron Rodgers is always dangerous when he’s locked in with Davante Adams, who had nine catches for 198 yards and two touchdowns, plus a two-point conversion — all in the second half — vs. the Jaguars. Sean McVay’s Rams are on a roll. In back-to-back games, they allowed 42 points vs. the Bills and scored 12 vs. the 49ers — and won both.

Pick: Rams 27, Jets 23.

The rest of the games

LIONS at BEARS

Time: Noon, Fox 32.

Line: Lions by 6½. Total: 47.

Records (overall/ATS): Lions 12-2/9-5; Bears 4-10/6-6-2.

Outlook: The Bears have lost eight straight (3-5 ATS) and have shown no spunk since the firing of coach Matt Eberflus. But the Lions’ defense is withering because of injuries — allowing 13 TDs on its last 25 drives since halftime of Thanksgiving game vs. the Bears.

Pick: Lions 30, Bears 24.

STEELERS at RAVENS

Time: 3:30 p.m. Saturday, Fox 32.

Line: Ravens by 6½. Total: 45½.

Records (overall/ATS): Steelers 10-4/10-4; Ravens 9-5/7-6-1.

Outlook: The Steelers are Lamar Jackson’s kryptonite. Jackson has a 128.5 rating (32 TDs, two INTs) in his last 12 games, with a 100+ rating in 11 — except for a clunker (66.1) in an 18-15 loss to the Steelers. But Steelers’ injuries make this a tougher call.

Pick: Ravens 23, Steelers 17.

TITANS at COLTS

Time: Noon.

Line: Colts by 3½. Total: 42½.

Records (overall/ATS): Titans 3-11/2-12; Colts 6-8/8-6.

Outlook: The Colts will be going all out to keep their slim playoff hopes alive. After going 6-1-1 ATS in their 4-4 start, they’re 1-5 ATS in their last six (2-4 SU). The Titans’ only two covers this season are on the road.

Pick: Colts 26, Titans 21.

EAGLES at COMMANDERS

Time: Noon.

Line: Eagles by 3½. Total: 45.

Records (overall/ATS): Eagles 12-2/9-5; Commanders 9-5/8-5-1.

Outlook: The Eagles have won 10 straight (7-3 ATS) and are eyeing the No. 1 seed in the NFC, especially with the Lions’ spate of injuries. The Commanders led the Eagles 10-6 in the fourth quarter on the road before losing 26-18.

Pick: Eagles 23, Commanders 18.

GIANTS at FALCONS

Time: Noon

Line: Falcons by 9. Total: 42.

Records (overall/ATS): Giants 2-12/3-10-1; Falcons 7-7/5-8-1.

Outlook: Falcons rookie QB Michael Penix has a big number to cover in his first NFL start, but the Falcons’ offense could be rejuvenated by the change after Kirk Cousins floundered in his last five games (one TD, nine INTs).

Pick: Falcons 24, Giants 13.

CARDINALS at PANTHERS

Time: Noon.

Line: Cardinals by 3½. Total: 46½.

Records (overall/ATS): Cardinals 7-7/9-5; Panthers 3-11/6-8.

Outlook: A week after nearly beating the Eagles on the road, the Panthers lost 30-14 to the Cowboys at home. Cardinals are motivated to win but not necessarily cover.

Pick: Cardinals 24, Panthers 16.

JAGUARS at RAIDERS

Time: 3:25 p.m.

Line: Raiders by 1. Total: 40.

Records (overall/ATS): Jaguars 3-11/7-6-1; Raiders 2-12/5-8-1.

Outlook: This game should be postponed until both of these platoons are better rested.

Pick: Jaguars 19, Raiders 17.

49ERS at DOLPHINS

Time: 3:25 p.m.

Line: Dolphins by 1½. Total: 44½.

Records (overall/ATS): 49ers 6-8/5-9; Dolphins 6-8/5-9.

Outlook: The 49ers have lost 4 of their last 5 (1-4 ATS), beating only the Bears. The Dolphins haven’t been much better lately.

Pick: 49ers 24, Dolphins 20.

PATRIOTS at BILLS

Time: 3:25 p.m., CBS 2.

Line: Bills by 14. Total: 46½.

Records (overall/ATS): Patriots 3-11/5-8-1; Bills 11-3/9-5.

Outlook: After allowing 44 points to the Rams and 42 to the Lions, the Bills’ defense will take it out on the Patriots.

Pick: Bills 34, Patriots 10.

BUCCANEERS at COWBOYS

Time: 7:20 p.m., NBC 5.

Line: Buccaneers by 3½. Total: 48½.

Records (overall/ATS): Buccaneers 8-6/9-5; Cowboys 6-8/5-8-1.

Outlook: The Buccaneers have won four straight, but Mike McCarthy has the Cowboys playing well despite being out of the playoffs.

Pick: Buccaneers 34, Cowboys 31.

SAINTS at PACKERS

Time: 7:15 p.m. Monday, ABC 7, ESPN.

Line: Packers by 14. Total: 42½.

Records (overall/ATS): Saints 5-9/6-8; Packers 10-4/8-6.

Outlook: That’s a big number, but the Packers have won by 17, 13 and 18 in their last four games (losing only to the Lions, 34-31) and now face a dome team at Lambeau.

Pick: Packers 34, Saints 17.



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