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‘A Complete Unknown’ review: Timothée Chalamet brilliantly plays a Bob Dylan hard to grasp, easy to believe

The road to the Oscars in the last two decades has often traveled through films about 20th century entertainment figures. Jamie Foxx (“Ray”) and Rami Malek (“Bohemian Rhapsody”) won best actor, while Reese Witherspoon (“Walk the Line”), Marion Cotillard (“La Vie En Rose”) and Renée Zellweger (“Judy”) have taken home best actress.

The list of nominees includes Joaquin Phoenix for “Walk the Line,” Austin Butler for “Elvis,” Bradley Cooper for “Maestro,” Andra Day for “The United States vs. Billie Holliday,” Meryl Streep for “Julie & Julia” (and as “Florence Foster Jenkins” if you want to stretch the category a bit), Viola Davis for “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom,” Michelle Williams in “My Week with Marilyn,” Carey Mulligan in “Maestro,” Nicole Kidman and Javier Bardem in “Being the Ricardos” and Ana de Armas in “Blonde.”

Expect the trend to continue this year, as Angelina Jolie will most likely be nominated for best actress for her magnificent and haunting portrayal of Maria Callas in “Maria” — and it would be a monumental upset if Timothée Chalamet isn’t nominated for his brilliant, layered and at times downright astonishing work as Bob Dylan in “A Complete Unknown.” (I think he should win; we’ll probably talk more about that down the line.)

The sing-song, gravelly cadences of Dylan are so instantly recognizable that it’s nearly impossible for any of us to resist diving into a quick impersonation (you see that title and think, “A compleeeeeeete Un-KNOWN” as you hear Dylan’s voice in your head), but Chalamet pulls off an acting hat trick here: He sounds like Dylan without ever coming across like he’s in an ”SNL” skit, he handles the guitar and harmonica-playing with undeniable skills, and he creates a fictionalized version of Dylan that steers away from easy clichés and almost always carries the ring of essential truth.

Director James Mangold (maker of the Johnny Cash biopic “Walk the Line”), who along with the skilled veteran Jay Cocks co-wrote the screenplay based on Elijah Wald’s book “Dylan Goes Electric!,” wisely favors a no-fuss, relatively straightforward approach to the material as he covers Dylan’s meteoric rise to Spokesman for a Generation status from the early to mid-1960s. Shooting on digital but through vintage anamorphic lenses, Mangold and cinematographer Phedon Papamichael do a beautiful job of transporting us back to the streets, pubs, coffeehouses and apartments of 1960s Greenwich Village, which was re-created in various New Jersey locations. (Production design, costumes and hair in this film are exquisite.)

Edward Norton steals scenes as Pete Seeger, the veteran folk singer who was an early Dylan cheerleader.

Edward Norton steals scenes as Pete Seeger, the veteran folk singer who was an early Dylan cheerleader.

In the first of many scenes that are based on the historical record but turned into a made-for-the-movies moment, Chalamet’s Bob Dylan née Robert Zimmerman, gently crashes the hospice room where Pete Seeger (a low-key scene-stealing Edward Norton) keeps a regular vigil over his ailing friend and fellow American folk music pioneer Woody Guthrie (Scoot McNairy). Dylan takes out his guitar and plays “Song to Woody,” and in that moment, the mumbling, shuffling, skinny kid from Hibbing, Minnesota, transforms into BOB DYLAN. Instantly, the veteran troubadours Seeger and Guthrie both know it: This young fellow has the potential to take their kind of music to a whole new level.

In many a music biopic, we see the shy and unassuming nice guy or gal turn into an egomaniacal monster after they’ve achieved spectacular success and won the adoration of millions. With “A Complete Unknown,” we see a Bob Dylan who’s already brimming with self-confidence and ego and isn’t particularly interested in social niceties even before he becomes famous.

When Elle Fanning’s Sylvie Russo (based on the real-life artist and activist Suze Rotolo, who appears with Dylan in the famous photo on the album cover of 1963’s “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan”) and Monica Barbaro’s Joan Baez separately call him out for his carefully manufactured persona and his cavalier mistreatment of their feelings, Dylan doesn’t even bother to disagree or apologize. At one point, Baez says, “You’re a kind of a——, Bob,” and he has no counterargument. Dylan crafted enduring and memorable songs about humanity but seemed keen on cornering the market on aloofness offstage, to wit, wearing his sunglasses indoors and at night. Chalamet deftly mirrors the elusive side of Dylan’s persona.

“A Complete Unknown” is filled with signature performance moments, with Chalamet channeling Dylan on classics including “Masters of War,” “Blowin’ in the Wind” and “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right.” (We often see visual cues reminding us of the gravity of the time period, e.g., a news report about the Cuban missile crisis, and the moment when JFK’s assassination is reported on TV, with Sylvie overcome with emotion while Dylan seems … enigmatic, as always.)

The duets with Baez are highlights as well; even though Dylan criticizes Joan for sounding too perfect and too polished, and he chafes at doing a polished and programmed “greatest hits” tour with her, they are magical onstage together. Monica Barbaro has done fine work on the shows “Chicago P.D.” and “Chicago Justice” and in a supporting role in “Top Gun: Maverick,” but this is a star-making performance. She has movie star chops.

Monica Barbaro shows movie star chops as Joan Baez, Dylan's friend and duet partner.

Monica Barbaro shows movie star chops as Joan Baez, Dylan’s friend and duet partner.

Much of the second half of “A Complete Unknown” is a buildup to Dylan’s controversial appearance at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965, when he ignored pleas from the traditionalists to stick to acoustic music and plugged in for electric and groundbreaking performances of “Maggie’s Farm” and “Like a Rolling Stone.” (In a hilarious and spot-on cameo, Boyd Holbrook as Johnny Cash exhorts Dylan to “Make some noise, B.D., track some mud on the floor.”) An acoustic v. electric dustup might seem almost trivial as viewed through the long lens of history, but it was a pivotal episode for modern music and a key moment for Bob Dylan, who was once again telling the world that he was going to do things his way, and you could either come along for the ride or don’t.

Dylan remains one of the most famous and most chronicled figures in modern music history, but in some ways he’s STILL a complete unknown. Just the way he always wanted it. Timothée Chalamet gives an Oscar-worthy performance in one of the best films of 2024.



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Illinois Senate President Don Harmon must act quickly to protect nursing home residents

In recent years, Illinois has been rated near the back of the pack in the quality of patient care at its nursing homes.

That should encourage the Legislature to find ways to improve nursing home care.

It’s a challenge, because nursing homes are still suffering from the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The industry reports it’s harder to retain and hire qualified staff members. And there has been a trend among wealthier patients to turn to aging at home, which leaves nursing homes with a higher percentage of patients who rely on government-funded care, which provides leaner margins.

The vulnerable patients need protection. One way to do that, as reported in the Chicago Sun-Times by Mitchell Armentrout, is with Senate Bill 3559, which would allow residents to sue facilities for at least two months rent, attorneys fees and damages if they feel they were retaliated against for making complaints.

That would be one way to help prevent nursing homes from cutting back on necessary care. Some residents say they are afraid to speak up even when they experience or witness substandard care because they fear a facility will retaliate against them.

As Armentrout reported, one nursing home resident who objected after witnessing staff members tie another patient to a chair with a bed sheet around his waist was forced out of the facility.

The need for quality nursing home care is substantial. About 100,000 residents, from the young to the elderly, live in some 1,200 long-term care facilities around the state, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health, which licenses, regulates and inspects nursing homes.

It’s likely more protections will be needed. In Washington, some lawmakers are working to weaken guardrails rather than strengthen them. The Trump administration is expected to overturn a Biden rule that is supposed to be phased in starting in 2026 that would require every resident to have at least 3.48 hours of nursing care a day, including at least 0.55 hours of care from a registered nurse and 2.45 hours of care from a nurse aide. The rule also would require a registered nurse to be on site 24/7.

Reasons to worry about nursing home care

Moreover, some advocates worry about private equity firms buying nursing homes and cutting costs to increase profits. Last year, the U.S. Government Accountability Office said data showed at least 5% of nursing homes nationwide were owned by private equity firms and that the real number is probably higher.

In May, researchers at the University of Chicago, Penn and New York University found when private equity firms buy nursing homes, some 1,000 additional resident deaths occur every year, a mortality rate that’s 10% higher than average. On June 6, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul said in a statement, “Health care consolidation, which is often driven by private equity, can lead to higher prices for health care services while quality of care worsens or remains stagnant.”

No one likes to think they or a loved one might wind up in a facility in which they are sitting unattended in a wheelchair, left in bed with bed sores or seriously injure themselves trying to walk to a bathroom because no one answers a call light. People deserve not only the care they need but also the opportunity to age with dignity.

Under legislative rules, SB 3559 needs to pass before the new Legislature is seated or it will be back to square one.

Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, said in a statement, “We’re still working on some sticking points and hope to come to an agreement that is suitable for everyone involved. This is a complex issue, and it’s always better to take the time necessary to produce a good bill.”

But because Harmon controls political committees that have received more than $2 million from the Health Care Council of Illinois’ political action committee since he was elected Senate president in 2020, some advocates of the bill worry Harmon might slow-walk it. The Health Care Council represents more than 300 licensed skilled nursing facilities in the state.

It’s important to ensure residents of nursing homes get quality care they and their loved ones can depend on. It’s up to not only the Illinois Department of Public Health but also the Legislature to make sure that happens.

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‘Aaron Rodgers: Enigma’ review: Netflix doc presents the QB in all his smart, smug glory

A couple of weeks back, Aaron Rodgers was making his weekly appearance on “The Pat McAfee Show” on ESPN when he opined, “There are a lot of people talking about the game now. Both non-former players and former players who are trying to stay relevant fame-wise. … I’m talking about these experts who nobody remembers what they did in their career. So, in order for them to stay relevant, they have to make comments that keep them in the conversation. … They believe they’re the celebrities now, they’re the stars …”

Rodgers made a point to tell McAfee he wasn’t talking about him, but the irony was rich. Here was Rodgers criticizing the cult of sports personality on a show hosted by a guy who was a one of the best punters of his generation in the NFL but is exponentially more famous as a breakthrough personality with a five-year, $85 million deal with ESPN. It was like walking into a McDonald’s, ordering and downing a McRib and then criticizing them for having meat on the menu.

Now comes the three-part Netflix documentary series “Aaron Rodgers: Enigma,” with a total running time that is 39 minutes longer than “Wicked” Part 1. Although Rodgers didn’t have editorial control over this well-filmed project and it’s fascinating to have a front-row seat as he goes through the grueling rehab process after tearing his Achilles or he goes on a three-day ayahuasca binge in Costa Rica, the series suffers from a lack of balance. There’s almost no pushback, no criticism of Rodgers, save for a few audio snippets of negative remarks from those darn personality-driven media types on radio or TV. Even as Rodgers talks about his quest for self-discovery and shedding ego and blah blah blah, he often comes across as an off-the-charts narcissist who always thinks he’s the smartest person in the room.

From the opening moments of “Part One: Becoming,” with Rodgers getting a tattoo and explaining, “Eight sideways is infinity … then I woke up this morning and I had an intuition about a dragon, and then it just came together from there,” there’s no denying that Rodgers is a different kind of cat. Even when you’re rolling your eyes at some of his half-baked pearls of wisdom, at least he’s never a soundbite robot athlete.

“Enigma” hops back and forth from recent events of 2023-24 to Rodgers’ upbringing and his high school and college career, to his glory days with the Packers and then back to the present and then back again. In the 2023 season opener, with talk of the Jets as a Super Bowl contender, Rodgers takes the field hoisting an American flag, looking like a superhero as the crowd goes into a frenzy. Four offensive plays later, Rodgers is sacked by Leonard Floyd and tears his Achilles. The rehab process begins, with Rodgers determined to heal at a record pace, and therapists and physicians expressing astonishment at his progress.

A physical therapist helps Aaron Rodgers recover from his 2023 Achilles tear in a scene from "Enigma."

A physical therapist helps Aaron Rodgers recover from his 2023 Achilles tear in a scene from “Enigma.”

Flashback to Chico, California, where a young Aaron Rodgers has a sparkling high school career as a talented but undersized QB. In Michael Jordan-esque fashion, he talks about a rejection letter from Purdue that told him he didn’t compare favorably to their recruits: “I took that as a major slight.”

After starring in junior college and putting up gaudy numbers while showing next-level talent at Cal, it was a shock when Rodgers fell to 24th in the NFL draft. He joined the Green Bay Packers, where he was welcomed with folded arms by Brett Favre, who famously said, “My contract doesn’t say I have to get Aaron Rodgers ready to play.” (Later in the series, Rodgers visits Favre in Mississippi in present day for a semi-friendly, semi-reconciliation.) More motivation for Rodgers. More fuel for the fire inside him.

As Bears know all too well, when Rodgers was finally given his chance to start, he excelled at a level that puts him in the conversation as one of the top five quarterbacks of all time. He also comes as a brilliant strategist who’s like a second coach on the field, a tireless worker and a valued teammate. Time and again, we hear from former teammates and coaches who sing his praise.

The football stuff is great. The off-the-field adventures … well, it’s a little like taking a gummy and watching “Pineapple Express.” When Rodgers says, “I got the unseen world, and the whispers of the universe telling me I matter, I’m enough,” or talks about how “wisdom is stored in rocks,” you kind of want to back out of the room and wish him well. We see him hiking with then presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., after which he tells us, “I got asked by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., to be his vice-president, right after the hike we went on,” and you almost wish that had happened just for the debate possibilities.

The series also touches on the controversy surrounding Rodgers’ infamous “I’ve been immunized” answer about whether he had been vaccinated and follows Rodgers as he makes that trip to Costa Rica to take part in ayahuasca ceremonies. (“I’ve done ‘aya’ nine times,” he tells us.) It’s like an unchecked advertisement for a psychedelic.

The "Enigma" cameras watch as Aaron Rodgers participates in ayahuasca ceremonies in Costa Rica.

The “Enigma” cameras watch as Aaron Rodgers participates in ayahuasca ceremonies in Costa Rica.

Rodgers also seems a bit disingenuous when he says he never desired this level of fame, though he acknowledges that dating actresses and doing TV commercials isn’t the best way to keep a low profile. We also empathize with him when he addresses the rift between him and family members and points out he wasn’t the one who aired it out in public. (Spoiler alert: He’s not fond of his younger brother’s stint on “The Bachelorette.”)

Although it always feels like being around Aaron Rodgers means you’re going to be a supporting player in the Aaron Rodgers Show, you see his intelligence and his warmth, and you even find yourself nodding in agreement with him when he says, “Life really exists in millions of little moments. So just can we be present? To not miss out on the moments along the way that actually make the journey worthwhile.” That’s some Ferris Bueller, “Life moves pretty fast”-level wisdom right there! Aaron Rodgers makes sense — when he’s not uttering nonsense. Guess that DOES make him an enigma.



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Halas Intrigue Bears podcast: Uglier by the week

Patrick Finley and Jason Lieser break down Caleb Williams’ performance in another awful loss.

New episodes of “Halas Intrigue” will be published regularly with accompanying stories collected on the podcast’s hub page. You can also listen to “Halas Intrigue” wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple PodcastsLuminary, Spotify and Pandora.

Latest on the Bears

Caleb Williams #18 of the Chicago Bears reacts after being hit during the fourth quarter of a game against the Minnesota Vikings at U.S. Bank Stadium on December 16, 2024 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Halas Intrigue
Halas Intrigue podcast: Uglier by the week
The Bears are again steamrolled by their opponent.

Keenan Allen

Bears
Making the grade: Assessing Bears' players, coaches in loss to Vikings
Bears were scoreless in the first half (down 13-0) for the third consecutive game (outscored 53-0 total) but still had a chance in the second half against an 11-2 team on the road.

Coach Bill Belichick and the Patriots will host the Bears on Monday night.

Bears
A big decision on the next head coach — and bigger doubt about whether the Bears are up to it
Ignoring Bill Belichick isn’t what you’d call a good start.

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Bears coach: Jaylon Johnson is a captain, even if his patch wasn’t on

MINNEAPOLIS — Bears coach Thomas Brown said Monday that “of course” Jaylon Johnson is a captain despite the cornerback wearing a jersey without his regular captaincy patch against the Vikings.

“He’s definitely a captain,” Brown said. “He’s in every captain’s meeting and a guy that speaks for our group a lot. Actually did a really good job at Saturday’s practice … [I] left him get in the middle and did a great job of delivering a timely message. He’s definitely a captain on and off the field for us.”

Johnson seemed surprised when told in the Bears locker room after the game that his jersey didn’t have a patch. He then checked to discover that was true.

“That’s crazy,” he said.

He then said he needed to talk to equipment manager Tony Medlin.

Johnson was perhaps the most frustrated Bears player in the moments after the Bears’ loss to the Lions, which led to head coach Matt Eberflus’ firing two weeks ago.



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Horoscope for Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Moon alert

Caution! Avoid shopping or big decisions from noon to 7 p.m. Chicago time. After that, the moon moves from Cancer Into Leo.

Aries (March 21-April 19)

An average day

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Today you might feel sympathetic to a family member. Nevertheless, be aware of the limitations of the moon alert today, and avoid spending money (except for food and gas) or making important decisions during this time. Forewarned is forearmed.

Taurus (April 20-May 20)

A positive day

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This is a dreamy, absent-minded day, and you might have some idealistic (but unrealistic) ideas. Be aware of the restrictions of the moon alert and don’t shop during this time (except for food or gas). Tread carefully.

Gemini (May 21-June 20)

An average day

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Today you’re focused on financial matters, cash flow and perhaps wanting to spend money. However, most of this day is a moon alert, which means it’s a poor day to spend money except for food and gas. Be aware of this.

Cancer (June 21-July 22)

A positive day

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For most of this day, you might feel more emotional than usual and probably indecisive. It will be hard to make decisions. One thing to know is to avoid shopping during this moon alert. Restrict your spending to food and gas.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)

A positive day

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Today you will seek out privacy and be happy to work alone or behind the scenes. Avoid important decisions. However, late in the day, (see moon alert) the moon will move into your sign, which will energize you. Suddenly, it’s all systems go!

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

A positive day

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Discussions with members and groups will interest you today. However, agree to nothing important because most of this day is a Moon Alert. (See above.) However, it’s a creative day. It’s a good time to kick around ideas and explore options.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

A positive day

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People notice you today. (In fact, some people know personal details about your private life.) Be aware of this in case you have to do some damage control. Postpone important decisions or shopping (except for food and gas) until after the moon alert is over.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

A positive day

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You might not get much done today. However, having said that, this is a potentially creative day for many people. That’s because you can think outside of the box. Nevertheless, don’t push yourself. Escape somewhere if you can. Check moon alert.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

An average day

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Although you might be focused on financial matters, especially something to do with taxes, debt, insurance issues or shared property, this is a poor day to make important decisions or spend money. See moon alert above. Do your homework. Get your facts. Wait tomorrow or until the moon alert is over.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

An average day

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For most of today, the moon is opposite your sign. Quite likely, you will feel sympathetic to someone close to you. However, because the moon alert is in effect for most of this day, it’s a poor time to make important decisions or spend money. Be aware of this.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)

A so-so day

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You might want to help a coworker today because you will feel sympathetic to others — if not a coworker, then perhaps someone related to your health or a pet? In any event, wait until the moon alert is over to make important decisions or spend money. (See above.)

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)

A dynamic day

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This is a fabulous, creative day for you! If you work in the arts or on any creative projects, or you need to develop your artistic talents, the energy of this day will support you. You will easily explore new ideas. Postpone spending money (except for food and gas) until the moon alert is over.

If your birthday is today

Actress Katheryne Winnick (1977) shares your birthday. You are strong, determined, organized and you have business savvy. You’re a natural leader. This year has been the beginning of a new nine-year cycle for you. It still offers opportunities for new directions and chances to explore new opportunities. Stay flexible so that you can act fast.

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Brother Rice off to hot start again

Brother Rice has started each of the last four seasons in impressive fashion. This year’s 8-0 start is in line with what the Crusaders have done the last three seasons, when they began 10-1 in 2021-22, 12-1 in 2022-23 and a sparkling 15-0 in 2023-24.

Can coach Conte Stamas’ team roll into next week’s Hinsdale Central Holiday Classic unbeaten for the second year in a row? Is this team capable of winning 30-plus games for a third straight year?

A big nonconference tilt awaits this weekend with a showdown against Bolingbrook. Although Brother Rice has nice wins over Joliet West, Fenwick, Loyola and Oak Lawn, matching up with Davion Thompson and Co. provides an ideal measuring stick.

Marcos Gonzales, who’s headed to The Citadel, is a four-year veteran and dependable senior guard. He has been a force, averaging 20.3 points and 5.5 rebounds per game.

Shooter Jack Weigus, a transfer from Hinsdale South who’s averaging just under 15 points, is another legit scoring option and spaces the floor with his shooting. Last year’s sixth man, 6-3 KJ Morris (9.3 points per game), and 6-5 Caden Workman (8.8) continue to make an impact in supporting roles.

Mundelein’s Bishop underrated

Although Mundelein pulled off an upset of Stevenson last weekend, the Mustangs aren’t projected to push league-favorite Warren in the North Suburban Conference. Waukegan, Lake Forest, Libertyville and Stevenson are considered to be those top challengers.

But as one of those teams found out last weekend, senior guard Derek Bishop carries Mundelein and gives them a fighting chance on any given night. He had 20 points, four assists and seven steals against Stevenson.

In the grand landscape of high school basketball, Bishop flies completely under the radar. The 6-1 guard averaged 23 points last season as quietly as one can. This season, he’s averaging 20.5 points, 3.5 -rebounds and 2.5 assists while shooting 39% from three.

Bishop’s career point total of 1,651 has him within reach of eclipsing career leader Robert Knar’s 2,003 career points.

“When he entered high school, Derek showed an ability to score that most freshmen dream to eventually develop,” Mundelein coach Matt Badgley said. “We immediately knew he had a chance of not only being a cornerstone during his career, but to join a list of really good players. He has lived up to those expectations.”

Struggling Upstate Eight

The revamped Upstate Eight Conference was expected to take a step up in 2024-2025. But three weeks into the season, just three of the 14 teams in the league have a winning record. And the records of those three teams — Ridgewood (6-3), Riverside-Brookfield -(5-4) and Glenbard East (4-3) — aren’t exactly glowing.

If you were to take out the conference wins and losses, the UEC’s combined nonconference record is 22-57.

Several additions, including R-B and West Aurora, upgraded the state of the ever-changing conference. West Aurora is a perennial basketball name in the state, while R-B has won 20-plus games regularly over the past decade. But neither has hit its normal stride.

Without Terrence Smith, West Aurora is struggling with a 2-6 record as it heads to the loaded Pontiac Holiday Tournament. R-B’s four losses are by an average of 20 points.



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Bears’ foolishness lives on long past Matt Eberflus

MINNEAPOLIS — The Bears’ foolishness outlasted Matt Eberflus. It attached itself to interim head coach Thomas Brown like a bad odor in Monday night’s 30-12 loss to the Vikings.

Just when you thought the Bears’ comedy of errors had run out of punchlines came one at U.S. Bank Stadium with all the ingredients of a good sequel: a character the audience had known from previous adventures performing in a new, yet familiar, location.

Remember Doug Kramer, the backup offensive lineman who lined up at fullback against the Commanders, somehow was given a handoff from the 1-yard line and fumbled the ball away? He ran out onto the field in the third quarter Monday night to play fullback with the ball at the same spot — the opposing 1. Quarterback Caleb Williams handed the ball to D’Andre Swift, who ran behind Kramer for a 1-yard touchdown.

Only it wasn’t.

Because he wore an offensive lineman’s number, Kramer was obligated to report as an eligible receiver to the official. He did not. The Bears had their touchdown wiped off the scoreboard and moved backward five yards.

A five-yard run by Swift on the next play gave the Bears the ball at the 1 again. Kramer entered the game again — this time, as an eligible receiver — and Swift lost two yards on a run. Rookie left tackle Kiran Amegadjie, having a brutal day in his first NFL start, was flagged for holding. The Bears moved back 10 yards.

Williams threw incompletions on second-and-goal and third-and-goal from the 11, and the Bears settled for a 29-yard field goal to go down by 10. The Vikings took the ball, drove for 70-yard touchdown drives on their next two possessions and buried the Bears.

This season has already been defined by mistakes that can be explained in shorthand: cornerback Tyrique Stevenson’s Fail Mary, Cardinals running back Emari Demercardo’s “Hail Emari” 53-yard touchdown run, kicker Cairo Santos’ blocked field goal that would have beaten the Packers and Eberflus’ brain freezing up as the clock ran out against the Lions.

The mistakes have been too numerous — across offense, defense and special teams — to be the sole fault of one man. A franchise that preached the value of culture for years sure seems to have found one now: a team most likely to end up on a blooper reel. It’s a wonder the Bears, who haven’t won a game since Oct. 13, are even capable of being embarrassed anymore.

Brown’s debut as the interim coach was never close last week, ending in a 25-point loss to the 49ers that felt like an even bigger blowout. His second act Sunday once again failed at the one thing the team’s offensive play-caller was supposed to be good at. For the third consecutive game, the Bears went into the locker room at halftime without a single point to their name.

Brown entered the game trying to be aggressive against a Vikings team that had lost just two games all year. The Bears didn’t oblige, though — they didn’t convert a third down until about 30 seconds into the fourth quarter. They went for it twice on fourth down, once in their own territory, and failed both times.

Two minutes into the game, Brown decided to hand off on fourth-and-1 at the Bears’ own 39 — and run behind Amegadjie, no less. Swift was stuffed at the line of scrimmage.

Brown went for it again on fourth-and-one with 2:39 to play in the first half. Rather than try for a 47-yard field goal, he again called for a handoff to Sweat. The running back plunged up the middle, and gained nothing.

In the third quarter came his goal line play running behind Kramer. And yet another gaffe in a season full of them.



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A big decision on the next head coach — and bigger doubt about whether the Bears are up to it

The Bears are facing the most momentous hiring decision in their history. Some might argue that they’re facing the most momentous decision, period, in their history. I would argue that that came before the 2017 draft, when they sized up quarterbacks Mitch Trubisky and Patrick Mahomes, and decided Trubisky was a giant-in-waiting. But that’s hindsight, and I don’t want to depress you any more than you already are as you sit in a dark room and gorge on Ho Hos.

The Bears are not off to a great start in their hunt to replace the discarded Matt Eberflus, the first head coach in team annals to be dumped during a season. According to ESPN’s Seth Wickersham, six-time Super Bowl champion Bill Belichick saw the Bears’ opening as the most attractive in the NFL. But he reportedly thought the team, hoping to get the best out of quarterback Caleb Williams, would pursue an offensive-minded coach. And so, having decided he had no shot in Chicago, he gave the University of North Carolina the old college try.

I don’t know if Belichick would have been the right choice at this point in his career and at this juncture in the franchise’s history. If you’re a Bears fan with a distrust of pretty much everything the organization does – a show of hands? – the frightening thing is that there doesn’t seem to have been much interest on the Bears’ end in one of the winningest coaches in league history.

I mean, who’d want a guy who wins?

At a minimum, bringing Belichick in for an interview and listening to him tell you what’s wrong with your franchise would be educational. Painful but educational. At this point, you’d think Bears chairman George McCaskey would drop the charade of erudition and eagerly take in what a coaching legend has to say about an NFL team that has been all but estranged from playoff victories the past 23 years.

What should really scare anyone who cares about this team is the hard-to-shake thought that McCaskey would much prefer to elevate interim head coach Thomas Brown than hire someone with as much knowledge as Belichick. The Bears lost to the Vikings on Monday night, but it gave the chairman three more hours to allow himself to fall in love with the idea of Brown as a head coach. History tells us he’s easily smitten by someone who A) doesn’t have much head coaching experience, B) would be relatively cheap and C) wouldn’t care about power.

Again, I’m not sure if Belichick would have been the right fit in Chicago, but I do suspect that if the Bears were so quick to ignore a man with 302 career victories, it can’t bode well for their search.

If they get this decision wrong, the way they’ve gotten so many of these hires wrong, it would leave a crater that’d take years to fill. That’s not hyperbole. That’s truth. They have Williams, a 23-year-old with more talent than any quarterback they’ve ever had. He needs coaching. He’s at a critical moment in his development. I see a potential superstar underneath all the growing pains. Doubters see a kid making the same mistakes week after week. One thing both sides can agree on: His ability is going to take him only so far.

I’d love for the decision-making to be taken out of the Bears’ hands. I’d love for there to be a candidate so obvious that the hire would be McCaskey-proof. I don’t see that candidate out there.

The Bears reportedly want a “leader of men,’’ but just because they want that doesn’t mean it should be the most crucial quality in their next head coach. It just means somebody at Halas Hall has been reading books about leadership.

Former Titans coach Mike Vrabel is one of the betting favorites to be the Bears’ next hire, but he’s also a defensive coach. That shouldn’t be an automatic disqualifier, not for a franchise as coach-needy as this franchise is.

It’s sort of like the draft. Do you take the best player available or do you draft for need? Are the Bears avoiding the best coaches available because those coaches happen to work on the wrong side of the ball? They shouldn’t be. We can have the great radio talk-show debate – was the Patriots’ phenomenal success due to Belichick’s coaching or Tom Brady’s passing? – or we can acknowledge that somehow Brady became what he was under Belichick. Williams just needs a good head coach.

If the loud, large Vrabel is the sort of leader team president Kevin Warren wants so badly, his defensive background shouldn’t disqualify him from serious consideration by the Bears. Nor should the fact that his Titans finished no better than 21st in passing yards in any of his six seasons in Tennessee – much of that had to do with having a star running back in Derrick Henry.

Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson is the hot candidate on that side of the ball. His squad scored 42 points against the Bills on Sunday night, and Bears fans likely were salivating at the thought of him on their sideline next year.

But if McCaskey does hire him, surely it would give those long-suffering fanatics pause. Old George is the man who gave the nod to the past four Bears head coaches – in order, Marc Trestman, John Fox, Matt Nagy and Eberflus. How’d that work out?

Scary times.

Chicago Bears quarterback Caleb Williams walks off the field after an incomplete third down pass during the first half of an NFL football game against the Minnesota Vikings, Monday, Dec. 16, 2024, in Minneapolis.

The Bears got little going offensively and were fortunate the score wasn’t more lopsided.

Chicago Bears v Minnesota Vikings

It attached itself to interim head coach Thomas Brown like a bad odor in Monday night’s blowout loss to the Vikings.

Pittsburgh Steelers v Philadelphia Eagles

The Bears knew his first start would be a trial by fire: playing in a loud stadium against the league’s most aggressive blitz defense.



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Bulls hold on late to beat Toronto as Coby White plays the long game

The first basket from Coby White didn’t come until the 8:42 mark of the opening quarter.

A three-pointer courtesy of a Patrick Williams assist.

The Bulls guard didn’t even score in the second quarter, taking just one shot against the Raptors on Monday.

An off night for White in the eventual 122-121 win for the Bulls?

Maybe, or maybe just White having a better understanding of the long game. An understanding of when to let the game come to him and when to go to the game and grab it.

By the time the third quarter ended, it was grabbed.

Thanks to White’s team-high plus-11 in the third, the Bulls put up 42 points to take control of the scoreboard, led by White scoring seven points, handing out two assists and even registering a steal in that stanza, all on a night that the starting backcourt was without Zach LaVine (back), the rotation was still without Dalen Terry (knee), and Josh Giddey eventually left the game with a rolled right ankle.

Old Coby White might have taken those absences as a chance for him to come out and have a three-point contest with him as the lone contestant.

But this is White with yet another lesson learned in his development. That there’s a long game to a game, a season, and a career. A lesson learned last year.

Playing heavy starting minutes for really the first time last season, White admittedly hit a wall. This for a player that always believed that more work fixes everything. The problem was he was physically worn down by the second half of the 2023-24 campaign. The numbers reflected that.

Entering the All-Star Break, White was averaging just under 20 points per game and doing so on 39.7% from three-point range and 46.3% from the field. After the break his scoring went down a bit to 18 points per game, but the efficiency was really the issue. White’s outside shooting dropped to 32.3% from three, while his overall field goal shooting was down to 41.3%.

That was the focus in the offseason. Make sure that wall isn’t hit, and if it is having the ability to run through it.

“I think the biggest thing that he is at least aware of is one, the length of the season,” coach Billy Donovan said of White. “He’s way more in tune with his body where he has to change his routine a little bit. Coby has always been kind of a worker, he just works. So if there’s something that’s not going well he’ll just keep working at it, working at it, and working at it, but I think there’s a balance for him in terms of his routine.

“I think when players get to that place where they’ve gone from this development stage to where they have kind of established themselves, and then they start to realize, ‘Man, this is a heck of a load to have to carry, not only every night but for 82 games,’ I think you start to evaluate and look at, ‘What are the things I need to do differently to take care of my body, make sure I’m somewhat fresh?’ I think he does have a better understanding of that.”

That’s why White isn’t overly concerned with stats and numbers through the first 27 games this season. He’s more concerned with consistency and finishing strong.

Even on a night up north where his team necessarily didn’t.

A 16-point fourth-quarter lead did shrink down to just a point with 2:28 left. White put the Bulls back up three with a finger roll and Nikola Vucevic all but iced the game with a baby hook off the White assist with 14 seconds left.



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