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Bad outweighs the good for Bears special teams in loss to Vikings

After botching a punt that helped the Vikings build a two-touchdown lead late in the third quarter Sunday, DeAndre Carter returned a kickoff 55 yards to fuel the Bears’ mad-dash rally that sent the game into overtime. But he knew he was far, far from even for the day.

“I wouldn’t say that was redeeming myself — we lost the game,” Carter said after the Bears’ 30-27 overtime loss to the Vikings at Soldier Field.

Indeed, Carter’s gaffe on a punt return looked like the biggest blow in the Bears’ fifth-consecutive loss. Linebacker Tremaine Edmunds’ pass break-up on third-and-four from the Bears’ 49-yard line forced the Vikings to punt with 4:20 left in the third quarter and the Bears trailing 17-10.

Carter let the punt bounce at the Bears’ 13 and signaled for everyone to stay away and avoid getting inadvertently hit by the bouncing football. As Bears fate would have it, he was the only one who failed to do that. The ball deflected off the turf and hit him in the leg, and Vikings linebacker Bo Richter recovered at the Bears 15.

Five plays later, running back Aaron Jones scored on a two-yard run to give the Vikings a 24-10 lead.

“That’s on me, I’ve gotta be better,” said Carter, a seven-year veteran who has been the Bears’ lone punt returner this season. “I tried to call a “Peter” call. Gotta get out of the way of the ball. That’s on me. I let the team down. The game shouldn’t have been in the situation it was in. I felt bad for the guys. I felt bad for HT [special teams coordinator Richard Hightower]. He’s a heluva coordinator. Does a great job. And for me to put the team in a bad situation like that, [I’m] very disappointed in myself.”

It was that kind of day for Hightower and the Bears’ special teams — the highlights weren’t enough to atone for the lowlights.

Cairo Santos’ felt Carter’s pain. After Caleb Williams threw a one-yard touchdown pass to Keenan Allen to cut the Vikings’ lead to 27-24 with 22 seconds left, Santos executed a picture-perfect onside kick that teammate Tarvarious Moore recovered at the Bears’ 43. Two plays later, Santos kicked a 48-yard field goal as time expired to send the game into overtime.

It capped an unlikely comeback and sent the Soldier Field crowd into a delirious frenzy. But ultimately it didn’t atone for another hard-to-believe moment. Santos’ 48-yard field goal attempt in the second quarter was blocked — a week after the Packers blocked his 46-yard attempt as time expired that would have won the game.

“I take the blame in kind of the stink that we have on our field goal unit right now,” said. Santos, who had had one kick of 46 yards or longer blocked since made 124 of 137 (90.5%) of his field goals — with two blocked — since 2020 prior to last week. “We’ve gone so many kicks in a row without getting kicks blocked — 16 50-yarders the last two years [without] getting a kick blocked. And sometimes they happen like that, back to back.”

The Bears worked on improving their interior protection after last week’s failure. But the Vikings found another weakness.

“I don’t even know what to say about that,” lineman Matt Pryor said. Obviously once you see it, they’re gonna start attacking it. Green Bay, they kind of hit the “A” gap. So we made sure we made corrections to be more firm inside. I think [the Vikings] hit it from the outside. That’s stuff we’ve got to correct this week.”

“Whenever that happens two games in a row,” Bears coach Matt Eberflus said, “we got to take a hard look in terms of the protection, the technique, then who we have in there. It’s going to be a big thing to look at today.”

The Bears did that last week. By now, even Eberflus has to know he’s running out of time.



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Law enforcement raises warning over so-called pink cocaine

Law enforcement raises warning over so-called pink cocaine – CBS News

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Law enforcement is raising alarm bells over a drug called pink cocaine. It doesn’t actually contain cocaine, but is instead a combination of other substances. Tom Hanson has more on the spread of the potentially deadly drug.

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A gallant comeback, yes, but another loss that’s a poor reflection on Bears coach Matt Eberflus

You can celebrate a valiant but ultimately failed comeback effort by the Bears in a 30-27 overtime loss to the Vikings on Sunday.

Or you can face facts.

If I were you, I’d go with Option 2. The facts are that the Bears’ lack of discipline and lack of brainpower cost them another game. Let me count the misplays:

– A blocked Cairo Santos field-goal attempt in the second quarter, giving him and his team the distinction of having kicks blocked in consecutive weeks.

– A ball of confusion on a fourth-and-4 early in the third quarter. Coach Matt Eberflus initially sent out his kick team, then kept the offense in, resulting in a rushed play and a failed conversion.

– A third-quarter punt that bounced off returner DeAndre Carter, who shouldn’t have been anywhere near the ball. The Viking recovered at the Bears’ 15 and eventually scored.

— An ill-fated decision by Eberflus. After Bears receiver DJ Moore had scored a touchdown with 7:22 left in the game, the coach decided to go for two. It failed. Even though it was the right call according to analytics, whoever they are, it was the wrong decision in a game that ended up going to overtime.

– A fourth-quarter failure to stop the Vikings on a third-and-13, with a backup quarterback taking his first snap of the game. Feel free to tack on a failure to stop the Vikings on another third-and-12 in the fourth and a third-and-10 in overtime.

– A 12-yard sack taken by Bears quarterback Caleb Williams in overtime, which occurred because he held onto the ball too long. That was followed by a delay-of-game penalty.

Bad things, man. If I have to relive them, so do you.

“I don’t think we expect things like that to happen,’’ Eberflus said. “I just believe we have to execute better down the stretch. We’ve got to coach better down the stretch. It’s an everybody thing.’’

If he means it’s a Bears thing, decades of it, then he’s right.

If he means it’s a McCaskey thing, the result of an ownership group that doesn’t know how to pick head coaches, then he’s right.

But much of what’s going on this season is an Eberflus thing.

An undisciplined team is a reflection of an undisciplined coach. That’s no secret to anyone who has been watching the Bears this season. The latest stop in the Eberflus Farewell Tour saw the befuddled coach throwing more stink bombs at a suspecting Soldier Field audience. But just because Bears fans are used to a sloppy team making mistake after mistake doesn’t make it any more OK.

Eberflus lost a challenge in the third quarter Sunday. He was correct in arguing that Vikings receiver Jordan Addison had stepped out of bounds during a 69-yard reception. But, given that these are the Bears, the one camera angle that proved Eberflus right can’t be used during coaches’ challenges this season.

“We’re losing in the most unreal situations,’’ Moore said. “Now it’s like the luck’s got to go in our favor at some point.’’

If only this were about luck.

All that mess spoiled an excellent game by Williams, who, with strong efforts two weeks in a row, put to rest any talk that he’s only successful against poor competition. He was incredible at times Sunday. He had two passes in the first quarter that Bears fans have seen only in their dreams. One was a bullet to Keenan Allen for 40 yards. The other was a perfectly placed pass to D’Andre Swift as he rolled right under pressure. That was good for 30 yards.

Williams finished 32 of 47 for 340 yards with two touchdowns and a passer rating of 103.1.

Even when things went right for the Bears, they subsequently went wrong. After roaring back from a two-touchdown deficit, they recovered an onsides kick with 21 seconds left in the game and the Vikings up 27-24. Santos nailed a 48-yard field goal with no time left. Overtime. For a moment, it looked as if Santos might make people forget the 48-yarder that was blocked earlier in the game and the 46-yarder that was blocked last week with no time left, giving the Packers a victory.

Alas, no. The Bears stumbled in overtime. The Vikings didn’t.

It’s no coincidence this season started falling apart in Week 8 with Tyrique Stevenson’s boneheaded taunting of Commanders fans while Jayden Daniels’ Hail Mary pass was in the air. He should have been pass defending. He arrived on the scene of his crime late, allowing Noah Brown to catch the ball in the end zone, giving Washington a stunning victory.

That was the first of five straight losses for the Bears, and it was the beginning of the end for Eberflus. Stevenson’s foolishness was a reflection of a shortage of self-control that’s going to be the downfall of the coach.

So the story Sunday, for all the good the Bears did, was dumb mistakes, none bigger than Carter’s muffed punt.

“I just didn’t get out of the way of the ball,’’ he said.

There’s no time to cry, Eberflus insisted afterward.

“Ninety-six hours until we play our next game,’’ he said.

Plenty of time to not prepare for something that might cost the Bears another game.



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Bears’ disarray continues under coach Matt Eberflus in 30-27 loss to Vikings

Buried beneath the Bears’ furious fourth-quarter rally against the Vikings on Sunday before falling flat in overtime, the game was littered with more red flags on coach Matt Eberflus.

Long before rookie quarterback Caleb Williams’ heroics to tie it at the end of regulation and the Vikings’ chip-shot field goal to win 30-27 in overtime, Eberflus’ Bears did plenty to hinder their chances. He loves to talk about “staying together” in tough times, but rarely mentions that the adversity usually is a mess of their own making.

Of all the errors, the most egregious was on a crucial play in the third quarter. For a coach already on the brink with a 14-31 record and a lot of negative marks on his ledger, this might have been the tipping point for his bosses.

Down 17-10 and facing fourth-and-four at the Vikings’ 27-yard line, Eberflus chose correctly to go for it. But even when he happens to get it right, he still gets it wrong.

Confusion ensued as Bears kicker Cairo Santos and long snapper Scott Daly ran onto the field thinking they were kicking a field goal, and that sparked disarray as the play clock dwindled.

“I don’t know what was going on right there,” wide receiver DJ Moore said. “We all were looking like, ‘Why is Cairo running out here?’

“I was looking at them like, ‘Are we getting off or no? Why are we all not on the same page?’”

Great question.

An offensive lineman waved at Santos and Daly to go back, and they returned to the sideline with 25 seconds on the play clock. Williams to the huddle with 15 seconds left, was still adjusting the formation at the line of scrimmage with three to go and barely got the snap off before he would’ve been flagged for delay of game.

All the disorder and hurry culminated in Williams running the wrong play because he didn’t hear the call clearly from offensive coordinator Thomas Brown and throwing an incomplete pass to Keenan Allen.

“In those moments, you don’t really want to run up against the clock because you want to get set and have your play and be able to see what’s going on,” Williams said. “The confusion had the play come in a little bit later. We got to the huddle and were trying to scramble, and I end up mishearing what T.B. said, and from there it went down downhill.”

Total disorganization under the direction of a coach who promised everything about the Bears would be well run once he was in charge. It’s inexcusable.

Eberflus, of course, was a fountain of apologies after the game.

“I have to do a better job of communicating everything to everybody,” Eberflus said. “I might have been late and then he was maybe late giving the call… I just have to do a better job of communicating that. I wasn’t as clear as I usually am.”

Coaches who constantly have to talk about doing a better job usually lose theirs.

Eberflus said he was thinking four-down territory when the Bears snapped the ball on third-and-nine the play before, but apparently didn’t share that with everyone.

One option would’ve been for Williams or Eberflus to call a timeout, but Eberflus had burned one unsuccessfully challenging a 69-yard pass from Sam Darnold to Jordan Addison — the biggest play the Bears have allowed this season — on the first play of the second half. He’s 0 for 4 on challenges this season.

Williams didn’t want to call a timeout because he knew the Bears already were down one and he anticipated needing it later in a tight game.

Williams was great, by the way, and lit them up for 340 yards, two touchdowns and a 103.1 passer rating. But he seems to be shining in spite of Eberflus, not because of him.



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Bears’ next opponent: Lions beat Colts 24-6 for 9th straight win

INDIANAPOLIS — Jahmyr Gibbs rushed for two scores and David Montgomery added a third touchdown run Sunday, leading the Detroit Lions to a 24-6 victory at the Indianapolis Colts.

Gibbs finished with 21 carries for 90 yards as the Lions (10-1) extended their league-high winning streak to nine straight. Detroit has its been 11-game record since the franchise’s inaugural season in 1934.

Jared Goff continued his sensational season, too, completing 26 of 36 throws for 269 yards.

The Colts (5-7) lost their second straight home game and for the fourth time in their past five games. Anthony Richardson was 11 of 28 with 172 yards while rushing 10 times for 61 yards.

While Indy managed to hold the NFL’s highest-scoring offense largely in check Sunday, it was doomed by its inability to finish drives with touchdowns.

That problem happened right from the start when Richardson took the Colts inside the Lions 5-yard line on the game’s first series before settling for a short field goal.

Detroit answered on its second series, getting a 1-yard TD run from Gibbs to take a 7-3 lead early in the second quarter. Then, after Indy settled for another short field goal, Montgomery spun his way across the goal line for a 6-yard scoring run and a 14-6 lead.

The Lions extended the margin with Gibbs’ 5-yard TD run late in the third quarter and sealed it with a 56-yard field goal midway through the fourth.

Detroit improved to 6-0 on the road as Amon-Ra St. Brown caught six passes for 62 yards.

Michael Pittman Jr. had six catches for 96 yards for the Colts despite leaving briefly in the first half with a injured shoulder.

Milestones

Gibbs’ first score extended Detroit’s league record to 25 consecutive games with a TD run, including the playoffs. He’s also the third Lions player with 1,000 scrimmage yards and 10 TDs in each of his first two pro seasons with Detroit, joining Billy Sims and Barry Sanders. Gibbs and Montgomery have each scored at least one TD in the same game nine times.

Injuries

Lions: Things got ugly during a third-quarter flurry. Receiver-punt returner Kalif Raymond (foot), left tackle Taylor Decker (right leg) and Montgomery (shoulder) all left in quick succession. Raymond and Montgomery did not return. Decker did. CB Carlton Davis II left early in the fourth with what appeared to be a left knee injury.

Colts: Indy deactivated left tackle Bernhard Raimann (knee), forcing the Colts to again use three rookie linemen. Receivers Ashton Dulin (ankle) and Josh Downs (shoulder) both left in the second half. Downs returned, Dulin did not.

Up next

Lions: Host the Bears in its traditional Thanksgiving Day game.

Colts: Visit New England next Sunday.



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Northwestern wins second women’s field hockey national championship

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Maddie Zimmer and Ilse Tromp both had two goals and an assist in the first half and Northwestern beat Saint Joseph’s 5-0 in the championship match of the NCAA Division I women’s field hockey tournament at Phyllis Ocker Field on Sunday.

It was the second championship for the second-seeded Wildcats (23-1-0), who have played for the title in four straight seasons. Northwestern beat Liberty 2-0 in 2021 before losing to North Carolina the past two seasons.

No. 4 seed Saint Joseph’s (20-4-0) was in uncharted waters with its first trip to the final. The Hawks eliminated top-seeded North Carolina in the semifinals to advance. The Tar Heels have won the championship in half of their 22 trips to the final.

Northwestern grabbed the lead 6:25 into the first quarter when Zimmer used an assist from Tromp to score. Zimmer had an assist on Olivia Bent-Cole’s eighth goal of the season for a 2-0 advantage, and Tromp found the net with 25 seconds left with assists from Lauren Hunter and Ashley Sessa for a 3-0 lead.

Hunter and Sessa again had the helpers on Zimmer’s 10th goal of the campaign, and Hunter and Regan Cornelius assisted on Tromp’s 11th goal of the season 2:42 later for a 5-0 lead at halftime and that was that.

Annabel Skubisz finished with her school-record 14th shutout of the season for Northwestern. Zimmer and Tromp are the second duo to score multiple goals for their school in a championship match. Zimmer was named the tournament MVP.

It was the second championship for Wildcats coach Tracey Fuchs.

Northwestern joins North Carolina and Old Dominion as the only schools to reach the championship match in four straight seasons. Six schools have won multiple titles.



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20 questions and answers on the upcoming high school basketball season

Twenty questions and answers about the upcoming high school basketball season.

1. Who is the best player in the area?

This is a much tougher question than usual, but the nod goes to Warren’s Jaxson Davis. It’s rare for a sophomore to be considered the best player in the state. But Davis’ play as a freshman was undeniably special.

2. Which players are on the preseason All-State team?

Davis, Bolingbrook’s Davion Thompson, Metamora’s Matthew Zobrist, Waubonsie Valley’s Tyreek Coleman and big man Nick Allen of Bradley-Bourbonnais.

3. Which local teams are the favorites to win Class 4A?

Bolingbrook, Warren, Rich, Benet and defending champion Homewood-Flossmoor make up the top tier of contenders.

4. Is there a team that might make a Cinderella run?

Waubonsie Valley has several new faces and should improve throughout the season. Coleman and senior Moses Wilson are a dangerous, dependable combination. Kenwood has as much talent as any team in Class 4A and it is possible sophomore Devin Cleveland establishes himself as the best player in the state this season.

5. Who are the local favorites in Class 3A?

Defending champion DePaul Prep opens the season as a heavy favorite with Simeon and Mount Carmel up next.

6. What’s the most interesting development for this season?

Has the Public League left the spotlight? There isn’t a Public League team in the top five of the rankings. Young’s Antonio Munoz appears to be the only senior in the conference with a shot at Player of the Year honors. Keep an eye on Cleveland though. If he lives up to expectations that will keep a Public League team firmly in the state title conversation.

7. Which players have improved the most since last season?

Glenbard West’s TJ Williams and Hinsdale Central’s Vincas Buzelis played their way onto the preseason list of the area’s top 50 players. Also keep an eye on Oswego East junior Mason Lockett, who could become a star.

8. Which players are worth traveling to see?

The three sophomores, Cleveland, Davis and Thompson, are the area’s star attractions.

9. What are the top teams from outside the area?

Quincy and Moline are state title contenders in Class 4A. The Blue Devils have three excellent seniors in Bradley Longcor (Santa Clara), Dom Clay (Austin Peay) and 6-5 Keshaun Thomas. Moline features 6-4 Trey Taylor and 6-5 Braden Freeman (Cal-Poly). Metamora, led by Zobrist, and Mt. Zion, with Lyncoln Koester and 6-7 JC Anderson are the early Class 3A contenders.

10. Who is the most important transfer?

There were several hundred transfers, but not many that were major. Al Brooks Jr. leaving Hansberry for Rich turned the Raptors into serious contenders in 4A. Gabe Sularski’s move from Benet to Lemont took the Redwings out of the conversation for the preseason No. 1 ranking and raised Lemont’s profile for the next two seasons.

11. Who is the most under-appreciated player in the area?

Oak Lawn senior Donte Montgomery. The 6-2 guard averaged 21 points, 5 rebounds, 3 assists and two steals last season and posted games of 38 and 36 points. Montgomery is also a fun player to watch, scoring with style and daring.

12. Which teams were overlooked in the preseason Super 25?

DeKalb, Lake Forest, Glenbard West and Waukegan are the top teams outside the preseason rankings. Marist deserves a special mention. The RedHawks were poised to be one of the top 15 teams in the area before Achilles Anderson and Stephen Brown were injured during football. Anderson is out for the year while Brown is expected to miss around two months.

13. What is the must-see game of the year?

Mark Jan. 25 on the calendar. Preseason No. 1 Bolingbrook and No. 2 Warren will face off in a shootout at Benet. Any matchup of Thompson vs. Davis will fill seats for the next three years.

14. What is the strongest conference in the area?

The Public League’s newly constructed Red Shield conference takes the title away from the Catholic League Blue. There isn’t a top-five preseason team, but Simeon, Kenwood, Young, Lincoln Park and Curie are ranked. Lane and Westinghouse are both solid as well.

15. What is going on with the shot clock?

This season will be the same as the last two, with the shot clock used at approved regular-season tournaments and shootouts. The Illinois High School Association will require the 35-second shot clock to be used in all varsity games starting in the 2026-27 season.

16. Are there any changes to the state tournament this season?

The three-day state finals format remains, but the third place and semifinal times and days have moved around. The Class 3A semifinals are now on Thursday night and the 4A semis are on Friday night.

17. Who are the new coaches to watch?

After a few years of major turnover there are just two new names in the preseason Super 25. Kenwood assistant principal Joseph Mason has taken over for Mike Irvin this season. Roshawn Russell, the former St. Rita coach, is the new coach at St. Laurence.

18. Which sophomores will emerge?

This will be one of the season’s most intriguing questions. Keep an eye on West Aurora’s Travis Brown, Kaneland’s 6-9 Jeffrey Hassan, Jamarri Fears of Romeoville and Glenbrook South’s Jacob Fuller.

19. Who are the best big men in the area?

It’s a very down year for bigs. ISU recruit Nick Allen (6-10) should put up impressive numbers at Bradley-Bourbonnais. Lane’s Dalton Scantlebury (6-9) had an excellent summer and Benet seven-footer Colin Stack has an intriguing all-around game. Niles North’s Hunter Gawron (6-5) and Bolingbrook’s JT Pettigrew (6-7) are undersized but excellent rebounders.

20. Will high-profile players continue to skip their senior year?

High school and college coaches aren’t sure. Jeremiah Fears is having tremendous success at Oklahoma and Bryce Heard is off to a nice start at North Carolina State. They could both be at Illinois high schools this season.



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Couple charged for allegedly stealing $1 million from Lululemon in convoluted retail theft scheme

A couple from Connecticut faces charges for allegedly taking part in an intricate retail theft operation targeting the apparel company Lululemon that may have amounted to $1 million worth of stolen items, according to a criminal complaint.

The couple, Jadion Anthony Richards, 44, and Akwele Nickeisha Lawes-Richards, 45, were arrested Nov. 14 in Woodbury, Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapolis-St. Paul. Richards and Lawes-Richards have been charged with one count each of organized retail theft, which is a felony, the Ramsey County Attorney’s Office said. They are from Danbury, Connecticut.

The alleged operation impacted Lululemon stores in multiple states, including Minnesota. 

“Because of the outstanding work of the Roseville Police investigators — including their new Retail Crime Unit — as well as other law enforcement agencies, these individuals accused of this massive retail theft operation have been caught,” a spokesperson for the attorney’s office said in a statement on Nov. 18. “We will do everything in our power to hold these defendants accountable and continue to work with our law enforcement partners and retail merchants to put a stop to retail theft in our community.”

Both Richards and Lawes-Richards have posted bond as of Sunday and agreed to the terms of a court-ordered conditional release, according to the county attorney. For Richards, the court had set bail at $100,000 with conditional release, including weekly check-ins, or $600,000 with unconditional release. For Lawes-Richards, bail was set at $30,000 with conditional release and weekly check-ins or $200,000 with unconditional release. They are scheduled to appear again in court Dec. 16.

Prosecutors had asked for $1 million bond to be placed on each half of the couple, the attorney’s office said.

Richards and Lawes-Richards are accused by authorities of orchestrating a convoluted retail theft scheme that dates back to at least September. Their joint arrests came one day after the couple allegedly set off store alarms while trying to leave a Lululemon in Roseville, Minnesota, and an organized retail crime investigator, identified in charging documents by the initials R.P., recognized them.  

The couple were allowed to leave the Roseville store. But the investigator later told an officer who responded to the incident that Richards and Lawes-Richards were seasoned shoplifters, who apparently stole close to $5,000 worth of Lululemon items just that day and were potentially “responsible for hundreds of thousands of dollars in loss to the store across the country,” according to the complaint. That number was eventually estimated by an investigator for the brand to be even higher, with the criminal complaint placing it at as much as $1 million.

Richards and Lawes-Richards allegedly involved other individuals in their shoplifting pursuits, but none were identified by name in the complaint. Authorities said they were able to successfully pull off the thefts by distracting store employees and later committing fraudulent returns with the stolen items at different Lululemon stores.

“Between October 29, 2024 and October 30, 2024, RP documented eight theft incidents in Colorado involving Richards and Lawes-Richards and an unidentified woman,” authorities wrote in the complaint, describing an example of how the operation would allegedly unfold. 

“The group worked together using specific organized retail crime tactics such as blocking and distraction of associates to commit large thefts,” the complaint said. “They selected coats and jackets and held them up as if they were looking at them in a manner that blocked the view of staff and other guests while they selected and concealed items. They removed security sensors using a tool of some sort at multiple stores.”

CBS News contacted Lululemon for comment but did not receive an immediate reply.

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Alex Caruso’s departure still leaving hard knock life for Bulls defense

For a Bulls team that is badly in need of a few hard weeks of practice time, there hasn’t been a lot of relief in sight.

Thanks, NBA schedule.

That’s why Bulls coach Billy Donovan was looking forward to the calendar flipping over to December. As of now, there are just 10 games scheduled for that month, with two in-season tournament games the likely scenario to be added on the week of Dec. 8.

A much different feel than what November offered up, with the Bulls having 16 games, including four back-to-backs.

Since the end of October, the Bulls have actually had less than a handful of real practices, instead getting their work done in morning shootarounds and film sessions.

The Memphis loss on Saturday was a clear reminder that it’s not working.

It was the third game over their last six that the Bulls defense allowed 140 points or more. Donovan has watched his defense go from ranked 9th in overall defensive efficiency on Nov. 2 to now sitting 28th.

It was a group that finished 21st last season, and that was with Andre Drummond and of course All-NBA First-Team defender Alex Caruso.

Drummond left via free agency and Caruso was traded to Oklahoma City for Josh Giddey. Subtraction by addition on that side of the ball.

And oh, by the way, the top team in efficiency as of Sunday? Caruso’s Thunder of course. And while Caruso was only averaging five points a game, he was second in individual defensive efficiency, while also drawing five charges and leading the team with 51 deflections.

The Bulls have drawn two charges total as a team, and Patrick Williams leads them in deflections with 33, despite missing the last three games.

That’s why Donovan is searching for answers and is hoping to find them in the sweat equity that a good, hard practice will provide.

“It’s being addressed every single day,” Donovan said of all the defensive breakdowns.

Even in the win over Atlanta a night earlier, Donovan saw head-scratching moments.

“We had matchups against Jalen Johnson and (De’Andre) Hunter, and we’re actually having to think about going double in the post,” Donovan said. “We have to be able to positionally and technique-wise just not get physically overwhelmed. There are times the ball is in space and we’ve got to be able to sit down and guard the ball.”

And whether all of that is just want-to or a poorly constructed defensive team, Donovan doesn’t have the time to examine that. In his mind what they need is work.

“I don’t necessarily know other than getting back to practice where we can actually start working one-on-one and ball containment,” he said. “I do think we’ve tried harder and executed better in pick-and-roll. More physical there. It’s been more just the space where the guy has the ball and spins, and spins, and spins all the way to the basket. At some point we’ve got to hold our ground.

“We’ve got to work at it, we’ve got to get better. I think we can be better. We have to be one of those teams that cuts out the margin of error completely.”

In other words, be more like Caruso.

“There were times last year where it was like, ‘Oh my God, this is bad,’ and Caruso fixes it,” Donovan said. “We don’t have that. They know it’s something we’ve got to get better at.”



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Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 high school football rankings for Week 14

Thirteen weeks of football are over, and the top four teams in the Super 25 are the exact same as they were in the preseason rankings.

This week, based on the semifinal results, there was some minor rearranging. York’s run in Class 8A continued, and the Dukes are up to No. 7.

DePaul Prep makes its Super 25 debut for the season and likely in school history. The Rams were fun to watch on Saturday in Coal City.

Lincoln-Way East drops just one spot. The Griffins played Loyola much closer than Mount Carmel did, so that was an easy decision.

Nazareth over Geneva for the No. 4 spot was the toughest decision of the week. The Roadrunners’ resume made the difference. Nazareth has wins against Kankakee, Joliet Catholic, St. Rita and St. Francis.

Super 25 high school football rankings for Week 14
With record and last week’s ranking

1. Loyola (11-2) 2
8A: vs. York

2. Lincoln-Way East (12-1) 1
Season complete

3. Mount Carmel (10-3) 3
7A: vs. Batavia

4. Nazareth (11-2) 6
5A: vs. Joliet Catholic

5. Geneva (12-1) 9
6A: vs. East St. Louis

6. Batavia (12-1) 10
7A: vs. Mount Carmel

7. York (11-2) 14
8A: vs. Loyola

8. Joliet Catholic (10-3) 11
5A: vs. Nazareth

9. Naperville Central (11-2) 4
Season complete

10. Cary-Grove (12-1) 5
Season complete

11. Lyons (11-1) 12
Season complete

12. Downers Grove North (10-2) 13
Season complete

13. St. Rita (10-3) 7
Season complete

14. St. Francis (10-3) 8
Season complete

15. Marist (9-2) 15
Season complete

16. Fremd (9-2) 16
Season complete

17. Oswego (10-1) 17
Season complete

18. Maine South (8-4) NR
Season complete

19. Kankakee (10-2) 19
Season complete

20. Prairie Ridge (8-3) 20
Season complete

21. Lincoln-Way Central (9-4) 21
Season complete

22. Sycamore (11-2) 22
Season complete

23. Montini (11-2) 23
3A: vs. Monticello

24. Warren (7-5) NR
Season complete

25. DePaul Prep (10-3) NR
4A: vs. Mt. Zion



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